«?.'• .Vi-;e ip.yi ! *46tfWK,’ ■s*§&?<s*• reocOf the iupphid secret’ crganltaticm', cdfed “Kn?w ( Ndthlo'ai fJ&traUto' sdepial M« _. never waliUde to tr tlie .(t>nt>wfn2 l^drrid ,o’a^” of poßlialtj fdrtheVrhenefii) v”. , ’ ; '• il Br. ijow lo the presence of At mighty, Gbd, the Virgin, Mary, the blessed Michael IheArch-Angel the blessed St. Peter ahd Sf. Paul, and the saints and sa cred’hosla dF Heaven, and’, ybd my .Ghdstly Father' da’ declare from my 'heart; without rhem'Ar reservation!' Gregory, or and is the: true and only head of the Univer sal Church throughout the' world; and that by virtue’of'the*Jteya and - of binding and loosing add given to his Holiness by Jesus Christ' ho hath power to depose herfeiical Kings, Princes; Siafed, Commbnvflfeahhs and Governments, all being illegal without his sacred confirmation, and that they may safe ly- be-deslroyed; Therefore, to the utmost of sy;|io»erlwiH-dWhfld J lhis doctrine, and Kis .Holiness’rights against all usurpers, and all heretical or Protestant authority whatsoever, especially against the ne« pretended author ‘itj*nnd Church of England, and nil adher ents, id regard that they be usurped and he • relics!, opposing the Sacred Mother Church of Rome. ■ “I do denounce and disown King, Prince Of-State named Protestants, or obedience to any of their inferior magistrates or officers, J do 1 furthest }deola re the doctrines of the church of England, of the Calvinists, Hug enots, and other Protestants, to be damnable, and those to be damned who will not forsake the same. Ido further declare that I will help, assist and advise all or any of his Holi* ness’ agents in any place wherever I shall be, and do my utmost to extirpate tho heretical Protestants’ doctrine, and to destroy all their pretended power, legally or otherwise. . Lf ‘ I do further promise and declare, tfial notwithstanding 1 am dispensed to assume nny religion heretical for the propagation of tho Mother Church interests, to keep secret nnd private all her agents counsels as they entrust me, and not to divulge directly or indirectly, by word, writing ox otherwise, any matter or circumstance whatsoever, buttoex ecute all that shall be proposed, given in charge, or discovered uoto me by you my Ghostly Father, or by any of this covenant. “All which I, A. 8., do swear by the bles sed Trinity', and blessed Sacrament which I nm now about to receive, to pferform, and on my. part to keep inviolable, and do call the Heavehly and Glorious Host to witness my real intentions to keep my oath. In testimo ny whereof I lake this most Holy and Bles sed Sacrament of the Eucharist, and witness the same further with my hand and seal, in face of this Holy Covenant.” Excitement In Sew Hampshire. Bombardment of Washington Proposed. We fearn that a public meeting was held ai Lumberville, N. H., on the 9th inst., tq ex press the indignation of the people at the insult offered to the son of that Slate, the President, at Washington, on Saturday lost, by an egg-flufig from the hand of a chival rous Carolinian, whose name is Jeffurds. A correspondent has favored us with a reporl of the proceedings, from which it appears that the principal speech of the occasion was made by Jotham Peirce, Esq., (no relative of the General's, since his name is spelled different ly) and that Us eloquence was received with rapt attention and thunderous applauses. We give herewith the principal points of this remarkable speech : “An egg,' fellow-cilizens, has been cast upon the Hat. of our honored President! By this base act the valuable Hat of His Excel lency has been seriously damaged, but this instill has a deeper meaning and wider range ■ —the Government itself is insulted, and by whom? 1 ask, sir, by whom ? Will you tell me that tHe'wretch who threw the egg is the party’of wqm redress should be sought 1 I scorn the concmsipn. How would such pro ceedings be regnrdetKby foreign potentate,■j 7 What would iheEmpelorNicholas-say of it? The city of Washington, sir, is then respon sible-for (his insult. Her inhabitants are guilty of the crime, anti shall ihejl escape de serve punishment? /No. Let Washington, like Greytown, be blotted out. [lmmense ap plauses.'] Let (he world know that hats is tlot to bo insulted with impunity. It may be said (hat-some of the people of Washington are American citizens and innocent, of the crime. So welte they’6f Greytown. is there anything in. the character of the city which calls for mercy? Jt was said of Greytown that most of its iqfytbilaQts wore, peculators, disorderly persons nod niggers. Can that be denied.of Washington ? I ask, why should Greytdwnjbo desltoyei) qndWashiogion spa go, .oh?ip fo ,phap like Borland of highg| najiotjal.. importance than Ilj9 old Hfd of qur noqprefi President t •, Sr,. I offer ihe ,follow)ng resolution : . “Resolved, Iq view of (be outrage offered fopresident Ptprcp by.)he,Cily of Washing ton, ihaCSecrpiary .Dobbin should be direc tod to instruct Commander Hollins to proceed with the eloop;of-vy;ar Cyane to that city, and to open uppa it with all hjaguns fof two hours,. Without, flnd in case anything should then to land a party of mariners a.n<l burn and destroy (be residue pnd remainder, .yplpss the authorities shall h/ipnbly beg pardon of the President, and pur chase for him a new hat of such quality, and cost as he shall select and approve.!* '.Cither, speeches were made in support of iliis resolution, after which, it was unanimous, (y; atjop/ed,and iheqrowd dispersed to their Y. Tribune , , Chbkbinc,—Not, a ri ,single.Whig or Free Soil paper has 1 ’ dis&nied’Yfom* the acudh' of theMaaiion Cbnveatton,While : llmse wfitch wera Belo.il Journal, Jarieiville Gazette and Mineral Point '^hri6wfia-^ , yfeld a hearty support (6 the new Republicih parly We ■ may.iherpfore/gay. lhat -the Republican pat;ty, ; ipaugprpied pl- Madison, has a-,hearty ■fu»P«jrJl frotp the AntirNebraska-AdminUtrs* Aiop pressee pf, apdLfbftl Jhey are 'PWjwl by.daierfninpd end epthpiastio people* . w-. „ ‘ “;Tfilg flrst Stinday SchoioV 'tiveh' established ’ lathi* country wait'fh 179i,‘ ■ ,r *; u > a - • ~g , I /v WELI^BO jr. ThargdayMornlng. Amy. 1%1884. THE AG _; . _ , fob jooyEßiidk, _ ... JABBER jp6tLpo^pf ; Hortliumbeiland. FOfifCANAL COMMISSIONER, GEORGE '. 'FOR SUPREME o6uRT, ~i K DANDSLIL BHYBER, of montgomery. PEOPLE’S CHOICE FOR CONGRESS: GALUBHA A. QROW, ofSttsqnehanna. ’ , Bon, G. Ai ttroW. Wo hoist Ihiigentloman’s nuns to the head of onr paper, firmly resolved to keep it there until the freemen, .of this Congressional DistriotahaU have mot, and decided at the balloUw*, to reward hia fi. delity to the causa of the North, and bis unshaken integiity in a dark hour of National adversity. We are that a necessity for bis return exists, and to aid in answering that demand, what Utile we can do will bo dono cheerfully and earnestly. In Mr. Gaow, we see a democrat in' principle— -not of party, merely. If he had not possossed tha .manly independence to stand apposed to the present rotten Administration and its infamous Slavery proclivities if ho ha<Tnot proved himself a democrat in some- Uiing hesidb the name, wo conid not speak in bis be half. Bat, happily, we are not to remain a silent looker-on while the North speaks to' the South this coming autumn, through the ballot-box, and com mends the} cause of those who were true to her in terests. | It almost certain that Mr. Grow will be renom inated by ,the Democratic party proper; the Whigs and Free'Democrats will go for. him en vnasxe (sil ver greys excepted) whether he is a regular nomi nee or a hplter, judging from- the feeling in Tioga. Men are listening more to the home convictions of duty, than to the weak, and vapid arguments of pat ty worshippers, who would sacrifice all, for the dog'a share of the spoils. The structures of adverse and distinctive parlyism are tumbling about the cars of party leaders, and Principle is cropping out on tbo battle-field of politics. Welcome, returning Reason t <3ov. Bigler and the Pardoning Power. There ire some human acta that strike the public mind with horror and disgust, and some that cause a thrill of surprise and indignation to pervade the besom of community. Of the first was the crime of the Easton Conspirators—men of standing and wealth-rwha conspired to rob an imbecile old man of his property by means the most infamous; and of the latter, is the recent act of Gov. Bigler, extend ing a full pardon to one of the principal conspire, tors. If the pardoning power is a proper power to be cxorcised-by the Executive of a State, then our Ex ecutivc'i/nd Judiciary functions clash horribly. The pardoning power, as it is now vested and used, is either a monstrous wrong, or our Judiciary, instead of being a safeguard, is not to bo trusted—is a ref up [One esn hardly see why one man— with perhaps no exact knowledge of the circumstan ces—should bo permitted to reverse the decision of twelve competent men in the absence of any infor mality- The Jadicjpjry should Jiavo-lU* power, and the sole power to reverse or correct-its decisions. 'Chat is. the higher branch slionld have the power to correct the errors of the lower, in all coses, and not the Governor, when subsequent evidence goes to throw doubt upon the J ustice of a sentence. The best of men may err for want of light, and when the light comes, a formal rehearing would set the in nocent free. But at present, the pardoning: power is degenera ted, or rctrogaded into its ancient narrowness. It was somewhat liberalized for modern use, perhaps, but it reveals its origin too plainly to deceive the true friend of the race. It is the relic of a barbar ous state of society, and of a governmental system which wc, as republicans, hiss tit. Absolute mon archs are said to have the lives and property of their subjects at their mercy; they may behead the inno cent and pardon men guilty of the most atrocious crimes, as evidence of especial favor. They may use their power for present aggrandizement, or to encoippaSs unworthy and wicked ends. In Pennsylvania, the Executive may render nuga tory the decisions of our courts and juries, as whim ot caprice dictates. Trial by jury is considered one of the chibf stones in the structure of human liberty. It is intended to protect community as well as to secure a just judgement of the acts of individuals, properly conducted it is the best safeguard of the dearest fights of the subject, and the best protect ive against the designs of the wicked, that human ingenuity has yet devised. But take from it one tithe of its excellence, cripple it in the slightest de-. groc, and ita virtue departs. It may hd legal, bat it is one of the most flagrant legal wrongs that’blot aWstatato book, to so cripple’ the working of a trial by jhry as to make the judg raent of one man superior to, and subversive of the combined judgment of twelve. men ; and especially' when the one, has not the same opportunity of aha-’ ping his decision that the twelve had. It la an in sult to the ’ (non who sit patiently,'hoar after hour informing themselves as- to the minutest facts in the case, and learning.lp distinguish between a lawyer’s exposition of the law and the law itself. They may. err—from from want of proper evidence, or from bo.) ing befogged by dishonest legal technicalities, or flam other causes,’bnf should they bo summarily defhced.ea by, the purdoniog, power without the for. mality of a hearing ? Or will any ope eonlood chat a just sentence may )ie set aside by the Executive Then the Executive the law, as.well os the sentence. Why should any more care be observed ip con. viclipga man, than in pardoning him after convic- ln the first instance, the accused ‘demands a (arrand Impartial hearing; in the latter, society de mands'iHe'- 1 “ ahy ”of the reverid of'their decision,' and the'thrusting back iipon it amember whom,if. ter a patient hearipg, they saw fit to reject And society is no Ices just in its demand,'than is the ac ensed in his. If a man is accused,of a high crime,' he should hive every ftcllity afforded him to die prove the charge. But if he fails lb prove his W qpceoce. If, after a careful comparing of the tights 1 and shodows of evidence by twelit totnpeUnt men, bis guilt appears pvident, it is not, and it cannot be shown to borightto permit their-decision to-be set aside wilhouiSubmilUngthe subsequent facts tb the consideration of twelve otheri competent men. •. One man power,!* (ho most dangerous of ill delegated powers. - - „ .... • ..r-i . fllhe pardoning power is a powerful engine in- Uio hands, of the. eviloftiner/than for] any,gsnerpl gpod. Ifwe do not: greatly mistake: the, sign* .limestti ha*;-r»cbsl.ibe- mtujdlJin ojr.its.povter and glory v Tha-pardoning .of t Drl Lptl (dapput Bigler, wjU do.ppre towards cur. porf pryUud, ali,thfl aasays and sgeinst iv Mm mfatot m* somewhere, all *ifl admit; but that it should be Iqdgijibeyond Ihojiiaeh of men m wSI use ijflo amimeture wtfejiiirti it a fact|||at the maSes will Ipfclp oar lePslalots to acknowledge bcftire V *•**- ■ **■“ The recent pardoning of Dr. Laehenour by Got. Satan immediate eninple oflEe abuselo* wbiib thWppawjSia subject io-thehandsof »;«»; iwhose public actaform'ko almoßlVribrokenctain of evidence that he helda place inftr higher esteem' that) he does the .the people oflhis Coin-, mahweaUh. Bat he lias made a gigantic stride to ward the peaceflil shades of Clearfleld in pardoning Dr. j The independent pa per I published at Eaatdn, and which supports the] DeihberaUo 'Slate nbmitfatiohs, says, that if Dr. DV ia felloi convicts are equally so; and in {hardening all, andthat. the people of Easton and vicinity will demand it of him. It says that the Cournot mutt extend his clemency to them, and not; suffer them toremain“injaU until afiet, election —tie time at which it is said he has agreed 'to liter etethem.” m The Rirm essays fhrtfier, though lbs pardoning of prJ Lacbenour may bavo conciliated the Whigs, the people wilt pronounce snob a judgement npon him (Bigler) at (be ballot-box, as will convince him that the 1 verdicts of. our. Juries and the sentences of our eoqrts.ara not,to be .trampled under foot—“ even by a governor !" But the bitterest, the roopt scathing thing said by that paper, was in relation to the pardoning power as I an engine for the Governor’s own advancement. It coolly recommends that the remaining conspire, low, as they happen to be good Democrat a, should be liberated before election, instead of waiting until after that interesting season shall have passed, as it will enable them to deposit an article in t!he bal lot-box, which the Governor will stand in need of, on' or about the 3d Tuesday in October. The Harrisburg Union attempts to show that the Governor is justified by the record. But its apoio. goticand cringing tone, ill accords with (be pretence of justification paraded at its bead. If, as the Un ion asserts, the verdict in Dr. L’s., cose was not jus. tilled by Bie evidence, why did not (he Governor re mit the fine, os well as the imprisonment 7—or did he conclude that the Doctor was about half guilty 7 (□" Our friend of the Wayne County Herald has found another hen's nest with a duck's egg in it— or rather, he thinks he has. Children must be hu mored in some of their whims—just as we let them believe that hooggers “ up in the garret do dwell.”- for all juveniles will believe in such things, remon strate as we will. However, we propose. to crack the “ egg," last discovered by friend Bcardslec, so that he can acquaint himself with the contents. He says that we deny publishing a whig paper, yet lately published sundry puffs of the Agitator, sill from Whig papers! Well, well, friend B.,Uial it one'of your knock-down arguments. Let us look at it: You made this charge once before. We told you to point to the article in which we advoca ted whig doctrine, or back down. Was it done'l— no! Why ? because it could not be. But our friend returns to to the charge after a two week's breathing spell, and asserts that hone but whig pa pers puffed us ! Now let us see what a veracious mah our friend is: He says the Coudcrsport Jour mi is s whig paper; it is not now, and neser teas. Neither is the Keene (N. H.) News. The Hones daie Democrat and the Tribune are neither of them distinctive party papers, and the Montrose Register kicked the Baltimore platform into a cocked hat sometime ago, like a sensible fellow, as be is. (We advise you to perform the same laudable acl,imme diatetyt) And now to crown all, no paper has puff ed us that does not teach. Uia dnnin«~- ™ Jtet soil, 'free~sj>eeeTT,and free MEN! and these ore our doc trines also. If they constitute whig principles par ezccellence, then we are whig. Wo learn from such papers os the Herald, that true democracy tends to perpetuate and extend Slavery. Wc once thought it meant to secure the blessings of liberty to every one of God’s creatures. Wo stand corrected—mod ern democracy aims at no such thing. Something in the tone of the Herald's paragraph, impels us to suggest to its exceedingly modest head that in future, whenever ho feels in the humor for discussing the subject ol publishing “puffs," be first sit calmly down and read a certain fable entitled “ The Fox and the Grapes,” take plenty of cold wa.' ter, and refrain from handling that 11 Begley ” for the space of an hour thereafter. This will giro him opportunity to conceal the spot where the "iboo pinches.” . We trust that our friend will take a reef in his ample imagination, and keep his eye on one ol the ten commandments in Allure,* when ho sits down to giro his brethren “ file." His excessive modesty reminds us of the yinng. lady who refused to use hooks to fasten her dress, because they hid eyes to match them. Kot So.—Spy, Brown. of Florida, at a recent whig meeting at Tallahassee, said that ho was in favor of the, principles of the Nebraska bill, but dep recaied its pasirfge, because the fruits will be dan. gerons to the perpetuity of our free ihslifulioni. Ho also elated what speechriiakers so often mis. stele—that the Compromise of 1850 had been ao. quiesced in by the whoie counlry, nsa final solllo mentof slavery agitation. ' Can possible that Gov. Brawn is so Ignorant of the true state of affairs 1 The North has never acquiesced in the Compromise of 1850, and’the diff. iculty—wo bad almost said, the impossibility of dx eculing the .Fugitive Slave Law; peacably, should teach Southern men that a msjurity ie hireling vote Ihatidfitthond measure a finality; Bat the North thunders back—“ NO” to the treason of public servants. . A- finality ! ..Why, that' Compromise was but the initiatory of a series of agressions by thoSla've power, the last of which shall canso the stupendous wrong to fall, crushed and |irdkeo beneath its: load of infamous trophies. The, very elements.of agitation were sol at variant by that Compromise t and the result has;been,and by. the a just God shall continue to be a source of nerhtiing un «*t to Ihe Slava power while it (shall curse’this iuk happy lamb ( T/ie “Jerry rescue’l affi.ir, the Wijkosbarre case, the forced] rendition of Burns, and in. fact nl. most every alive hnhl upon free soil, should be con. tinual reminders Ip the South that the. Acts of 1850 sfe acquiesced in now, and judging by present signs—-never will'be.' 1 : Hof toe: Bioix*!— The following ii a trans cript of «noter wriUon;Dn: lhe wrapper of a paper returned to this office: M»; AorriTOH Sir I return Your paper ts I km Ao(i nor Whig. But am in favor of Bigler Sb Governor. » » » , Sfland o'er.the wholp Pejmsylva. nj» ofeatrop.X} ye.Bigler ahd band. S? and let ite |*oind, wake.dp ue sleeping echoes pf [ Who, :“s■WS‘sW*- l '-. Wa no ? i %-the Jao r jc Ketclj: of:fejierapm;efiop'Bfei.jWSdrl Opw U» wmdow Staao, : amMpt th"£ K ‘ • ’ : *T- f —rV *- i ;. 37 Nothing Is tronblesome that we do wHUngly. r-fcrarr-e-."- -^CCSTJIfTff ... .. Slew jwibllcalloni. , l «Sn.i£ Csaton Barron ra or No-. Ctnrgt W. B * boain'Wuod-by Dewitt & Davehport, New York, end forme one of the moet entertaining bookv h'avff'cdUe-'acf das lot S lorijf Urns.’ Dr. fal,hamoroa«inaufflcpebMnt'this rook 1 presents off-hand pen-portraits of the-meat'-distinguished men of ,the delineation of their of character. The author hit* away tight and leli’at poliitoal llone, as if they were w&a's tlieyreajly arei-piep With faults and failings, ji contains 19 engravings < n steel, executed in thd highest atyle of art,of aneb nieh as Greeley, Cha. 'pin, BeecHe'r,' John'Mitchell, Douglas, and others. : Thh aketcliei are vivid and .'lifelike, and-those of Greeley, Halo, Beecher and Chapin, era so true that to read them is to .see and hear the originals. One is brovgbt.senaiUy near to the 1 notable-men of the day in tending this book. - It is .well got up, and cheap at 91,50. Foley & Richards have them for sole. Seen Minute* Aro'urii N«c York" —ly G. G. Dewitt & Davenport,,New York. • ' Who has not rood “ Now York ia Slices ?” The book before us Is by the ssmo graphic pfn, and will add new luster le the already brilliant of its author. jThe sketch of the editor of the N'. Y. Htrald will be recognised .by all as an excellent por trait. For sale by Foley & Richards. Fount I —Gerrilt Smith, at the close of the recent session of Congress, refused to take of his mileage, more than jnst enough to bear his actual expenses. A correspondent of! a Philadelphia daily, deprecates this action and says that it will excite ollicrs to em ulate bis example, until at last, poor men will be virtually debarred tram membership in Congress. This is the first time that wo ever beard of any danger threatening the rights and privileges ot poor men from the emulation of virtuous' actions. by members of Congress 1 But if every M. C-, should refuse his surplus mileage, the balance could be thrown into a common fund, for the purpose of granting life annuities to the President and those gallant tars who participated in the storming of the city of Greytown. (nr The Carhondale Democrat, is the name of a Hoe, healthy looking sheet, published at Carbondale City, byT. J, Alleges & J, B.Adabk, the first No., of which is before os. Mr. Adams is lately of the Milford Herald, and Mr. Alleger of the Monroe Democrat, They arc both good fellows, industrious and deserving of pecuniary success. Success to you friends, in the matter of aiding in the triumph of true democratic principles. If you support Bigler, look out for a Waterloo defeat next October. (Can’t raise the back-numbers, ftiend Alleger.) Fine!—We are informed that the dwelling house of Mr. Levi Lovell, in Sullivan township, was des. troyed by fire on Monday of last week, together with all its contents. Mr. Lovell and family were abseht from home at the time-. Mr. Lovell is a so ber, industrious and honest man, illy able to endure such a sweeping loss. We hope the public will take a generous portiop of the burden from his shoulders. tC The new Prohibitory Liquor Law of Connect icut is working finely. The Select men of Hart ford have refused to license, or appoint an agent in that city, to sell for mechanical, medicinal or sacra mental purposes. That’s the true doctrine. D* Thd Philad^lphia Daify Register is publishing an interesting and valuable statement of the distrib ution of offices under the U. S. Government. The Register is a valuable paper, end eminently worthy of tiio yalrnnntrft nf all whn admire a.tpsrlp.ss .and independent newspaper. The Tributte gives the following account of a horrible murder: We have only lime and space briefly (o re cord a most dreadful murder in South Brook lin last night. It seems that Mr. J. N. T. Tucker,, the editor of The Daily Advertiser, lately called. The Brooklyn' Freeman, pad just returned from a walk with his wife when his manner suddenly changed, and she, be coming alarmed at his actions, rushed into the house and up stairs, whither hesoun after followed.but went into another room where lay two of his children, a girl ageiebbut ten years and a,boy about three. Here he de liberately look a razor - from a drawer,, and nearly severed the youngest chi Id’s head from its body-. The mother nOw rushed in, when lie attacked her,'hut had happily only inflict ed three or four slight wounds whfih he was secured by officer Carroll .of the Third Dis triot. ' > .There is little doubt that the unfortunate man was laboring under the effects of intem perance,-which-had -distempered Ijis mind. -The .victim is described as a lovely little boy. The -frightful deed was peprelr tied about- 10 o’clock last night in , Atlantic-sl. pear Nov ins., , ,- -,r , The Brakd'of Cain ! — The editor of the Philadelphia Courier says ;—While a( the' “ Burning Springs,’’ near Niagra, L a''few days ago, wo were requested to enter the hatnes of our pftrly in the Visitor’s Register, and while complying, we observed that the registry h'nd - been suapended at about two-thirds' |down u on the 10rt ; hand page, : ami' then continued at the topoflho right." On Seeking the -cause, we found the last ohlry ns follows';— “ Malt. F. F, ’Ward, Brother and Servant.” Of course the name had cast a blight upon the page for ever ; iito honest man wonld add his < name beneath that of th'ejjCalti-braride'dTugilive, but underneath was-written, ns by the hand of eflfhe recording 'angel,' or ■ crime-pursuing Nemesis— •' - - - -• : ■ ' " THE MT3HDEREB. ” Aspther Vicxlw.—The body of Jesse KillVcuiV,was, ; discovered in" the Merritpnck River pf N.'H., 'on Saturday last, 20ih nit. Mr. K. had been rtiissing since Monday morning; when ligWas sufferihg dr/-' derah alia'clt.of, deljiiuip trertens, having but from a drunken spfee. He will prqb'ably be mjssdd at,the rum holes of Mahcheafeyiiyhb're is' peddled‘discord, de lirium trepipns and.deaih. ' -In the, lima of Oljver:Cromwell,ihq magistrates in the north, pprt:pf Englandpu.nishpd. drupkarda byma kipgtheni carry ,vyha(. ig ,“,Ths Drun kard’s cloak,’’- This wag,g large barrelwith one end out; andi« hole Jn;tha olh?r, through which (he offender was made lo pul his head, wbifehisiiandd weredfAwn ihroughuA'ogmall holgs, one oneaph Aide ;:w|th tbwjhe, waaooms t pelted (o march along (he public strict*.- ■ r What!a >Woth all tbMJrunfatjdainow*a-<lasBoornpdllad l (o march coats.- ...... j Make hay while the sun shirtis, ' J '.(jITATOj'Bjg Bum’s Doings. rsraiKt<r^A'rsae» - «r<«B%v*^*j W f "-IS L* || .p. up for fa Agitai STBiSGTB|oF THE SIaVE POWER.—; ndus% Mirror , a Democratic paper, series of articles showing the propondert Slavery! under the National j y'f In bound numbers thdre are appointed at City, who remain there, Heads' of Bureau?, Clerks,- Inspectors,. Exapai lers, Messengers, &c,, in all to the number oft bom two thousand, Ohio is about one-tenthol the, Whiieipopoalition of the Union.■ Hence, ac cprdingl q equality and justice, two Jim dred of the-number should be from Ohio. Bill how stands the fact 7 There are just eighteen from this Slate, and more than one-half of their aggregate amount of salaries go that pi rtion of them who arc Whigs. Hepce, the pat ronage'of General Government, confin sd to the District employes, for this! Slate, is truly and Shamefully small. How itfinds the mai ler with little Maryland, not one-tAi»ta. of Ohio. In round numbers Maryland has hree hundred in the District, and Eastern Virginia over two; hundred of these two thousand. While Maryland and Eastern Virginia are about two-thirds of they hnVeJfee hundred receiving Government pap in Washington City, while Ohio—oite-third larger than both—has eighteen —all told. This is sectionalism that tells.' If we go to the foreign appointments it is still worse. Out of about three hundred representatives abroad, Ministers, Consuls, Commisioners, Secretaries of Legation, Commercial Agents, &c.—in which Ohio should be represented by thirty, sjie has jive! — one-sixth of the number to which.she is entitled. Is this equality T Is there no injustice, no fusion and southern Sectionalism in all this 1 Who answers 7 The Danville Advertiser sug' “Inasmuch as the old lint have, according to the ndmissio their leaders, been in the bal men in office who have no qua any office under the sun,’ wool for all who desire to see the ’ filled by honest and capable m of said parly 7” The Danville Advertiser, in Nebraska effort of a Douglasili says that he used the words party” 213 lipaes, “ Abolition!: “ sore heads” 98 times, and “ 55 times. These epithets con i pie of (he effort. Another speaker at the same proved himself to he a knave ous falsities and denuncintio ance men, Quakers and clerg distinguished champions of Fi gress. The opponents of the iquity he stigmatized as sort seekers aed wooly-headed Ah told his auditors .that the K( law forbids the introduction i those Territories, by specifyir ry shall not go there.” The Whigs of North Dm 271h0f July for the purpose o gales to the the Southern As Convention. After the eleqlic the Committee on Resolulioj Muoois,- la. -Or rnJTnnr, ; Endress, A. T. Wood and J. ted the following series, whi mously adopted : Resolved, That the-act of izing the Territories of Kansi is a violation on the part of solemn agreement of more ll duration, is a gross insult to I as an outrage upon Ihe rig Stales, and is an obstacle to liberty, civilization and relig Resolved, That the Fugiii called) inasmuch us it remat without trial by jury,, to a cci has not equal legal rights, i all ideas of justice, fair dual i ought to be repealed. A Free Fight.—The C says that the Whigs of i I lint making party nominations and “ in favor of n free fighl to the highest office.” The Gazette (one of the most co papers in the North-West) lows upon the declaration : “ It looks very much no Whigs of Illinois would not action. There seems to be a of iho Free Slates to let al| main quiescent till a decisiol from (he peopld.'whefhfer SI is to be longer tolerated or i issue presented by the Ma and if the same spirit condi that characterized thtj delibe vention, \ve need not fear people are thoroughly nrous arid their strength only n to insure their triumph.” Spurning tiie Platfori hanna Register, Mom rose,] political platforms' after this • cCin give assurance that th section of the State have lo the rickety Baltimore Plalfd their feet, and ,notv stand fi that Heaven gave os an ini (free. The same spirit of || 'lion,'so boldlybrealhe.d fort] published letters of Judge P braska fraud, iit rouse'd in II and oil ore ready ftp unite w of the and greedy i grPat brotherhood, standing of Freedom.' Xbkt platfor their counlrynnd kind ty or placo must uhile upon' its ttir Slavery,’and ‘Regaii Freedom/ must bo our (poll flog we, fight/ 1 . ' as Hero,<?p San -J* Hpuston is’sustainqd jo his ' Nebraska, ,bill ,by, ; the ihi? r, ; , Bastrop Adt>ertis;er, i tagr Colorado.fyibune, Bonhai [naqa Register, ?nA‘ severe Xflperg,,.,,,Thp l .lfourtp» 1 (hat ,“ : if ihe ,WU:Ayere npvy 'depended upon |he people never-hecomd e Jew.”. - ' A ed at Harrisburg 1 . 1 1 a-ajjansintf -.1. tests Democracy a of some of it of placing ifications ‘for it not be well arious offices in, to get out analyzing (he 3 at the place, “ Democratic Is” 176 limes, wooly heads” tinned (he sta- demonsi ration jy his nu met is of Temper ymen and Ihe eedom in Con- Nebraska in- (-headed office i dilionisls.' He i nsas-Nebraska if Slavery into g “ that Slave- ville met on the ' electing Dele semhly District in of Delegates, is, composed of tv. cmintip I. Li. jprague, repor ib were unam Congress organ s and Nebraska the South of a ian thirty years le North as well hts of the free the progress of on. e Slave law, (so ds a black man, untry where he is subversive of ng and law, and bicago Tribune iis are opposed to the coming fall, from the lowest fnnesville(Wis.) nservative Whig remarks as fol- iv ns though liife be alone in such tendency in most other issues re i is hod directly wery aggression iot. Such is the iison resolutions, els the campaign alionsof thecnn the result. The id in tho matter, ;ds concentrating i.'—The Susque- Pa., lalks about i fashion : " We Whigs of thia ng since kicked rm from under mly on the soil eritance for the nlrioiio indigna i in ihe recently illoqk <jn ihe Ne e breast? of till, ih.tho opponents lavocracy in one on Iho Platform m, nil who love befier than par ‘No widerjim. i all \ve can' 1 for )es. Under, that! w O'.V): » oiktq.—Senator opposition Uf.lhe •ton, Telegrqph, 'ulerTelegrqphi mge. Monument, i A(fqertiier,,La .Olhe^ipflueniial ekgrqpk psseris; p iOfpusage, and f,Te?aBiit would jpol' is .tobo ejr^ct- » .f£j] & Hon. DaTli Pro -The in a atihg Ad- De/VhSib ;4-Your favor of the 27tb haa just come-to hajod.-Iwould bo much grati. fled to be' with youon the sth proximo, [and to raise my fedble voice in an . earnest appeal lo your citizebft lo' nnited sotion in defence of our free' fojilllUlibhs of Govtrnment. I am tinder an’ Mgagemebt to address llie citi. zena ofTiogalcouniy ODi the subject’ of. the Nebraska outrage,' on the 4th, and* shall g 0 from there to natler?Co. j „„ .• I rejoice that you are fo bare with you so abls'and zealot s ajchampion of Freedom as Mr. Greely. b making theftUspuiesbf par. ty, mjbotdinaU to the interests of freedom and humanity, lie has nobly fitted himself to render the raos t eminent service to bis Coun try in this crisis; The people must come up lo the like high and patriotic elevation of pur. pose, or there is no hope for our Country’s Liberties. Th s policy of Slavery cannot/be mistaken—indited it is boldly proclaimed.— The recent hi) h-handed outrage, is but iha precursor of c series of measures, designed to give the Slo re Oligarchy absolute dominn tion—tp crush out forever the policy and prin. eiples of Freedom in this Government, and to establish on the American Continent the most nighty Slave Empire known in the- world. • Submission—at. le policy of Slavery is fatal; reaches it, preaches treason to powerful and the- history’ol quiesenco in i and he who t Liberty. Acquiesence in the legislation of 1850, emboldened Slavery; to ( invade inJB54, the guarantied rights of‘Freedom in Kansas and Nebraskat and to-day, Slavery loots for ward with’exulting confidence, to (be acquisj. lion of Cuba-Mhe absorption of more Alexi can States—the re-establishment of Slavery in San Domingo—the revival of the foreign Slave to an alliance offensive and defensive with Brazil,' for (he protection and aggrandizement of Slavery, and to enable it to defy the public opinion and "powerpf the world, in propf of all this, I have but Iq point to the proceedings in Congress, and to tpe lea ding pubiib Journals of the South. In this vast programme of Slavery, where do the sub missionists of so-day, prepare to make a stand 1 It [ must be made now— to-day. The freemefi of the Republic, thank God, have still left in their "hands a peaceful and Constitutional remedy, if they will use it wise ly and firmly—the ballot box. The power and designs Of Slavery must be checked, and the original policy of the Government on this subject resiofed. To this end we must lay aside—postpone for a time, the strifes of par ly over minor points of controverted policy, and unite in this great work of preserving our free Inst tutions from impending destruct ion. The fi-st blow must be aimed for the overthrow of the present National Adminis tration—the mere tool and puppet of the Slave Povyei. Through the competing influ ence of its patronage upon the people’s Rep- Freedom has been betrayed. It must be Overwhelmed at every point with ignominious defeat, VVe cannot shorten us ConsUluilonal term of office, hut we must strike downi its allies in every Stale, District and Countyl—lt must have no props in the which to lean for the support ot lobs policy. No man should be responsible office—Governor, mem igress, Representative, whose re/a rimdship nod alliance with the Na -0 nislralion are open to suspicion, a icept of nothing, in thecandidates 'or our suffrages, short of un -1 ostility to the ultra pro-slavery rVashington. Anything short ot h, idle trifling shilly-shalley non it designed in the end, to lead me p dry step into acquiesence in the I plans of slavery. Let no ennui nl to condemn the recent legisla '(ingress, and yet hold himself m ijee with the present administration. I be (rutted ; and so sure as he it > sure will the jieople, and their •ain be betrayed. The man who ece in open and manly resistance, ressions of the slave power to-day, relied upon to do so, on the occa future provocation. He is hope ion—unsound to the core, and will lis Country’s highest,interest anil dome paltry parlizari considerations, (is deaf to the voice of our-rernon- In vain we point to (he history of y—in vain We'invoke the names oi m, Jefferson, Madison ahd then s, in defence of the early- policy I maxims of the Government—in vain wo t ppeal to the eternal principles 01 justice am right—all, are unheeded, unavail ing. In tte absorbing selfishness op a great interest, Slavery pushes onwardi'in its bar barous ni d destructive policy ; subverting every principle 1 that gave life, vigor, apd suc cess to our Revolutionary struggle, and de feating all the great ends for whidh the Gov ernment wws established. It has broken down the highest precedents of 'Constitutional law. in opening to its ingress, the territories of 'ho nation. To-day, Slavery is prostituting- the holiest find ions of Government I—endangering 1 —endanger- ing the public peace, and provoking on iho country tie horrors of war,' for its extension and nggn ndizemenl. Now, at this present writing, it is.insidiously undermining, one of the most Valuable and sacred Constitutional ihe people, in its efforts to put the reasirfy, through iHotreity.making tMlie virtual dispoasl of the Exccu- Senate. The Constitution designed mmediate Representatives of the per* ild be the especial guardians of the if the nation ; now (as a mere mai ns) they ard called upoh to vote in enormous sums of money,' in fulfill reaties for the acquisition of foreign jtpnd States, without, even having e them, the. mstrutstiofis and corrca under Which - the treaty was nego- rights of National power, olj live and a that the in ple ? shou treasury, tter'offo the dark .ment of province! : laid befo i pondencf tinted. When Tngoinerjqoire, are thesmtcroach merlis - at ed. ifnO H6W; The Consiinnion ded*i-isuejected to Idfinstatat chimgei'io the vio lent IntejtprfiHUions pul upon itJrorn dime, to tints; 16 beet the growing -demands ;and an daoity of Slavery, arid enforced upon (he countfyj under threats of disunion and the cttrfUpting appliances of PresidentialpatroD agef Tbe independeneai of - tlys Hriuse of Representatives is-'uotririSbiogly assailed, by prtiiriiwp iof - Ejicculive fovor to such members WlW»bl'» l«tter to Richardson. 'o^Vpi,JuTO'39,lBs4,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers