RATES OF ADVERTISING. lour MUM or less oonetitate half a spume. Ten lined Imre than four, sonttitate a ovum. eq., one day-- SO SO On* eq., one day.—.- $O OO I one week..-- 1 90 ee one week.... 2 00 1 € one month.. 800 cc one mo nth.. 000 4 7 three months SOO " three monthelo 00 u six nuntlue.. II 00 II six months.. 16 00 00 i one year..... 12 00 " one jeer —2O fa Business uotieesinserted in the Locesscoso vi, sr bsie re mariteges and destine, ?as Basra Tam Loa for ek imartion. To merchants and others advertising jr the year, liberal berms will be offered. lir The number of insertions mast be designated Oa he advertisement. gr Marriages and Destheerlil be imented atthelanie alas ea regular advertisements. Liusinos Cubs. SILAS WARD. NO. 11, NORTH THIILD BT., Etallatrilllllo. STEINWAY'S PIANOS, idsLODE O N B , VIOLINS, tiIIIITARII, Banjos, Flutes, Fifes, Drums, Accordeens, STRUM, WIEST AND SOON. 1111Mi0, ke. 7 Ace, pnoTootlarn FRAMES. ALBUMS, Large Pier and Mantle Mirrors., Square and Oval Primo of every description made to order. Reguilding don* Agency for Illowe's Sewing Machines. irr Sheet Music Bent by Mail. octl-1 JOHN W. GLOVER, ANT TAILOR! Has just received from New York, an &semi. ment of SEASONABLE GOODS, which he offers to hie customers and the public ai woven MODER/TS PRICES. of WHARRY WILLIA. sq . S, • CIAALXIIdr. 402 WALNUT STILICE parLADELPFiIii. General Claims for Saldiorg promptly cultectesi, Stat 4 Claims adjusted. Ac., &c. max2o-tilm ----- SMITH & EWING, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAN, THIRD sTREET, Harrisburg, Practice in the eeveral Omuta of Dauphin county. Col lections made promptly. A. 0. SMITH, J. B. SWING. JCOOK, Merchant Tailor, . 27 CHESNUT ST., between Second and front, Hos just returned Mantis. city with au woortment of CLOTHS, CA 531 SERFSAND YESTINN6", Which will be sold at moderate prices and made up to order; and, also, an anortment of 1111ADT MAD]. Clothing and GentleUienis Furnishing Goods. noir2l-19d D ENTISTRY. B. L 0411, D. D. 8., N 0 • 119 MR KET STREET, EBY & KUNKEL'S Bulimia, VP STAIRS. janB.tf - pp ELIGFIOUS BOOK STORE, TRACT ETD SUNDAY SCHDOL DEPOSITORY, E. S. GER AN, IT SOUTH 8300 ND STRUT, c 1 TN ONEBNIIT, NAZIIBIII7ZO, Dept for Missal. of glioreascopea, roosoopicTiOwo j Music and Musical inelstrosonts. co, snbpsolptions taken for religious publications. noBo-dy JOHN G. W. MA: TIN, FASHIONA'BL OAO ARE) WRI FAR. RD HOTEL, HilltlaBBUTAI PA. Allmanner of VISITING, WEDDING D BUSI - CARDS executed in the moat artis styles and moat reasonable terms. eel4dtf 11 N ION itidue Avenue, corner of Broad street, HARRISBURG, PA. The undersigned informs the public that he 111118 re cently renovated and refitted his w.ll-known ItTnion oa fridge avenue, near the Round Roine,,'and is - ire;. , red to swam (iodate citmens. at -angers atii travel cr. is the nest kyle, at moderate rtes His table will bs supplied wah the beet the nasketa afford, 413.1 at his bar vri I be found snootier billed!, of Hendee 014.. t heeeragee_ The very beat ancnimes dations for railroaders employed at the chops idthis [a34 dtfj HENRYBOSTRaI. F RANKLIN ROUSE, BALT/M4/4i,D - _ This pleasant and commodious Hotel has been the. I roughly re-fitted and re-furnished. It is pleiteantlY\ T. situated on North-West corner of Howard and. Franklin MASTIC WORKER streets, a few doors west of the Northern Central Rail way Depot. Every attention paid to the comfort of his guests. H. LELSENRING, Proprietor, tRACTICAL CEMENTER, jel2-tr (Late nif Selina Grove. Pa.) Illifeo62 4 ld gement the Warta? Buildings with he 'lmp York Improved Wster-Proof Mastic Cement. This 'sterial is different from all other Cements. It forms , . solid. durable adhesiveness to any surface, imperish'lne by the action of water or frost. Every good bnildikg should be coated with this Cement ; it is a perfect Paievver to the wails, and makes 6 beautiful, fine finish, lug to Eastern brown sandstone, or any color desired, Among otit for whom I have applied the Mastic Cement, I ref &t o the following gentlemen: 3. Bissell, resfence, Penn street, Pittsburg, finished five ears. ~ J. iilmellberfir, residence, Lawrenceville, finished five years. James BrOandlsa residence, Allegheny City,finished five year!. Gatlin Adams, rellente, Third at oat, finished four years. A. Hoeveler, residine, Lawrenceville, finished four year... J D M'Cord, Penn itreet, finished four years. Hon Thomas IrwinOiamond street, finished four years. St Cheales HOW And.Mrard Mouse, iniehed fire years. Kittanning Court House,nd Bank, for Barr & Moser, Architects, Pi ttsbn.g, finined five years. Orders received at the Vic of ft aPladowney, Paint Shop, 20 Seventh street, or lease address T. F WATSON, D• O_ , 134 • Pittsburg, Pa. THEO. F. SCHEFFER, BOK CARD AND JOB PRINTER, NO 18 MARKET STREET, HARRISBURG-. C' Partieniar attention paid to Printing, ruling and binding of Railroad Blanks, Manifests, Immense Poli• Olteelm, 0111-Ileads, &a_ Wedding, Visiting and Business Garde printed at wry l ow prices and in the best style. jan2l. R OBERT SNODGRASS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office North. Third street, thrrd door above Mar ket, fiarrilbtfrl, Pa. N. .11.—Peiniloii, Bounty sod Military dolma of All kinds raiment d and collected. Refer to Hone John 0. Kunkel, David Mamma. jr., and It. A. Lumberton WM. H. MILLER, .1111 D R. E. FE hafTSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. OFFICE IN SHOEMAKEK . :4 BUILDINGS SECuND STREET, BETWEEN LiN r and RFP' SQU RR, ap-29twad Nearly opposite the Buehler House HOS. C. MAaDoWELL, / 1 4,TTORNEY AT LAW, MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT AG ENT. , m the 2 c.4„..ens& Wanat xL , (U p Stntra_) Tleming formed a oonneetum with parties in Wastt• gton City, wno am reliable inudnemst men any imai , connected wish env .61 the .epartnomts will meet th immediate and careful Atention mei R. O. WEII'HEs., SURGEON AND O[•DLIST ISSIDINCI ?IMO a ARAB NORTE tITAULAT Reis now fully prepared to attend promptly to tb ties if profession in all Its branches. • • • • - - A LONG LOD vEllr BIIOONSOIRIIL 3INDIOAL aS2NOLGNO. lee hip in promising full and ample satisfaction ta who snayfavor him 'Vita 9 soll be, *lieuilsoisso Obioni • •nv other nature_ -algal? , say AILORING, . A. 32E.7-2 mr far gettonerit.-r la ready at 0. 94, 9149,1197' ST, four doors btin. r•tar h otreot, to molt. li'N S AND BO"- C any dewed stytta nil with nklh owl pr- un a nm. . so. 1.644444 &atlas iineut eau alum it 4., .1 the rteac petite ap27-ttly HARLEM F. v OLLMEP, UPHOLSTERER brut 'tow row 4nora 'Mow ileannd, (Oproutine W ,satuoirou Hogs House.) .reporrd to turrosh to orth.r_ to tom very bola Atyle o kroaaohio. -Irina and lair Mortmnso. Window Our • Loangenood all other twiwen or Furniture In ▪, on short notno. And atoditratv terms %wing es Anne in the hanliunt, h« hwil. warennt^d n askiwgs of D wain patriotism& monition. of it - inability to ,eivt faction. ILITARY (LA MS AND PEN- PIONS e undo. stigma leave entor.d into an *a•o lotion for eollw-Lea of Mil $ re ti fins awl the securing , of -lone for wound. , an -I disable., .01 ii. a Comm, - illuator-ost Ro officpr ' Pa. Pon % - •cc and r return& mud 111 pihtr - rs nada in. nieb. Ail th- lit.re service will he in As oat Ot•-totrly Weld Min llnditnlY n i b "s . &netts/sr Beid ng. Walnut between the seene of at Third streets, roar u Hot-1 Harris tens DUW LL, Harris it? him = THOMAS A. MASILICY. C Pat. Oa. . . . 1 . ,-. • _ . , 41 0 . ' I l l fr - - •.. . _ 7.-. 1 i -_ . . la * * 1 1 1 1 I -,.. • VOL. b —NO. 289. Aleitircii. Hit. SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT, THE GREAT EXTERNAL REMEDY, FOR RHEUMATISM, GOUT, NEURALGIA, LUMBAGO, STIPP NECK AND JOINTS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, CUTS Ar. WOUNDS, PILES, BEADAUFIE, and ALL RHEU MATIC and NERVOUS DLIORDERS. Dr. Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut, The great Natural Bone Setter. Dr. Stephen Swee, of Connecticut, Is known all over the United States. Dr. Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut, Is the author of " Dr. Sweet's Infaliale Liniment." Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Chsren Rhanmatiam and nailer fails_ Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment la a certain cure for Neuralgia. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Cures Burns and Scalds immediately. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment is the best known remedy . for Sprains and Bruises. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Cures Headache immediately and was never known to fail. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Affords immediate relief for Piles, and seldom fails to cure. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Cures Toothache in one minute. Dr. Sweet's infallible Liniment Cures Cuts and Wounds immedlitely and leaves no SPX. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Is the best remedy for Sores in the known world. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Eel Imo nod by more than a million people, and all praise it. Dr. Swe e t's Infallible Liniment Is truly a " friend in need," and every family should have it at hand. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Xe for sale by all Druggists. Price 25 cents. RICNARDSON 4 Cu., Sole Proprietors, Norwich, Ct. For vale by all Dealers. ap2o eoi►-ddcw ~~nttng. ILL WORK PIIOMISEL! 1:k ONE WEElit • Pl•tt. t 4 .014 7:4 4 • g 44,.. - 1; ' t •• • •:rkg4• *. 4 •'• • .. •-• 4 • 2.0. iEN . NSYLVANIA STEAM DYEING ESTABLISHMENT, 104 MARXIST 0 291-11.111 T, .BNTWEEN FOURTH AND FIFTH, DARRISDIFItg PA., Where every description of ladies' and gentlemen's torments, Piece Goode, &0., are Dyed, Clammed, and Misked in the oast manner and at the shortest notice. nos-d&wly DODGII & CO., Proprietors. WATSON) maylB-tf 'MESSRS. CHICIVRING & CO. !CI HAVE AGAIN OBTANED THE GOLD AT TH.II MECHANICS' FAILBOSTON, VELD 111 WIND'S IS bum tI B rR r F r COMPviiToßgi Wareroom.for the OHICHIBING Pi Nos at Merril 'erg, at 92 Market street, . 0f:22-tf • IV * K "ell" Intro growl bDINg ' YOU KNOW ViltE YOU can get floe Note Paper, Bevelopee, haring and Woeiding filtrile At ISOFll'lirlitß 7 B 800 Frrows UPIi is FOR STOCK 0 IQU ►~S. b... 7 WM. DOCK, Ja., & CO.. are now able tt o tf or t o their rusto.ccrs and toe public at large, s stog of the purest liquors ever imparted into this marketi m m o cf. ling in part the following varieties : W H ISK Y —IRIS H. SCOTCH.OLD BotrmoN. wiNE-FORT, MERRY, OLD MADDILL f)TARD, DUPEY & CO. PALE BRANDY:\ JAMICA. SPIRII4. PRIME NEW ENGLAND RUM. • DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERI, These liquors can all be warranted ; and in addition these, Deck & Co. have on hand a large varlets o Winkle, Whisky and Brandy, to which they butte VI - particular sttedtioe of the public WEBSTER'S ARMY AND NAVY POiCELET DICTIONARY. /net roorired end for male at EVAlEFlrlifteel LACKING !-MASON'S "CHALLINGE BLkottina."-100 Gaon. assorted adze , jnet 0 1..41 and for sale, wholesale and serail. 4 .0 WM. DOOK. 3n., k WINDOW SHADES of linen, gilt bummed, and PULFIUi BLINDS of OA madam oorfetY of design and ornaments; alio, CURTAIN inannias ant TASSELS at very low Plieel• Call at _ SebetterPs Bookstore. WANTED.—S6O A MONTH I We want Agents at SOO a month, expense° paid. to Bell tear Eve r iarting Pencils, Origami Burners- and thirteen other new, +mini and carless articles. /Moo l OWA , / sent pee._ tu n " , m7-whca MAW & ()LABS, Biddeford, Maine. MOTIONS.—Quite a variety of used Li mad eatertidshig 69 / 1 "nli'll booiwrosi. M 1 D A. L ! KitISBURG. PA, TIM ESOA Y. AUGUST 6, ixess. ttt :1: atrial anion. THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 6, 1868_ THE NEGRO RACE The policy of the national administration having made the negro question prominent., we are 'forced to consider it in all its bearings, however distasteful the task may be. We cannot avoid deciding whether we will adopt or reject the doctrine presented to us by the Abolitionists, and interwoven with the policy of the President. "Liberty, Equality, PIP ternity"—the elevation of the negro to a perfect level with the white man—this is the doctrine of the dominant party upon which we are called to express our opinions. On this ques tion—the equality of the racee—the Journal of Commerce has broken ground, and we commend its sound and well-timed remarks to men of all parties. It says: " The negro question, which lies back of the slavery question, presents itself with rare im portance and becomes more and more pressing as time advances. The terrible outrages com mitted on poor negroes in this city by the mod two weeks ago, bring home to us with tremen dous force the simple question 'what are we to do with this race, which the wisdom of God has thrown upon our hands. Two solutions to the problem are,offered, the one by the Abo litionists, the other by the Southern Confed eracy. The first proposition is to admit them to full equality with the whites in all respects, so that the question would no longer be one for the white race to take care of, but would be the equal concern of the blacks. . . No longer inferior and dependent, they would then cease to be a charge on us as their superiors, and, it is promised, would amalgamate with us in a gefat, and peaceful race, to enter a political millennium. The other proposition is to keep the race in-a position of slavery. The word slavery is not accurately defined, hut it may be taken, in this propOsition, to mean a posi tion of forced labor for the white man, with laws compelling the white to give support and protettiOn as the equivalent of the labor. This involves the total negation of all ideas of equality, and rests on the basis of a conceded in equality in the races. There is still a third position for the colored race, and that is the position in which it is found in the free States, but one which is cer tainly very indefinite, and by no meane 00 well settled as to promise permanence, or to inure to the benefit of either race. This is in sub stance a position of acknowledged inequality in the races, and in general of dependence of the blacks on the whites. The black is pro tected in all his rights by the laws, may sue in the courts, has every claim to the police and other protection which the whites have, but. is not allowed to vote, unless to his other qualifications he adds the accumulation of property-to an extent sufficient to meet the requirements of the law. [le Peen aylvania he cannot vote under any circumstances.] The position of the free black man is, how ever, as we bave said, very indefinite. Even with property he does not become, in law, the equal of the white, since there is a law of cus tom, recognized in the courts, which keeps his rights, in some respects, below those of the white_ For example, he cannot claim the right of entry into all our public convey ances. He cannot, as the white man can, com pel a landlord to receive him into a hotel, or to give him a bed in a room with a white man; nor can he demand half a stat e • room on a North river steamboat, or even a berth in the public cabin. It must be admitted by all sensible men that this undefied statue of the free black man cannot always remain thus undefined, in a coun try like ours, and the more we look at the fu ture the more we become impressed with the conviction that the question what to do with the black man is the grand question, vastly more important than the slavery question, which demands the attention of the political economist and the patriot. Equality is impossible. Men may prate about it, may argue about it, may rave about it, but it cannot be. And there is one reason plain enough which is unanswera ble There is not a man in the radical party, except a small squad of crazy fanat ics, who would have a law passed compelling him to admit a black man to his slate-room, or to his bed in a crowded country inn, where the law and the custom oblige a landlord to give accommodation to all sho come, until his helve and his beds are full. Nor would one of the leaders of the equality party marry hie daugh ter or his sister to a black man. All the talk is for political effect, but the practical result of the talk is nothing. Nor will these convic tions, prejudices, or whatever else they may be called, cease for a century to come, if they ever cease. Political and social equality (one can not exist without the other) or black and wbite is a moral impossibility in this country. Nor, after all the agitation of the past twenty years, is there any desire on the part of the free blacks to attain any such equality. As a class they are content with inferiority, and there is ne such thing known among them as ambition, even to accumulate the small property neces sary to make them voters_ But their position must be defined, or they will be a political curse in the land. Can we sustain our institutions and have among us a race who are mere dependents, without any definite political status, and whose numbers are already millions ? This question is serious. We cannot make them are equals—then we must make them inferiors, or export them from among us. Of course every one perceives that the bar barities inflicted on this poor class of people a few days ago originated in the evil spirit Which Was elloited 4y the polttiolans whO have forced them on our attention as candidates for equality. Mr. Thurlow Weed stated this truth with great clearness and precision. The bad passions of human nature cannot be controlled always. The existence of the race among us, and the probability that we shall always have olitioal demagogues abiong us, paint to the 'angers in the future. What has occurred may 'gain occur. The tendency of public opinion, h,tead of being in favor of the equality plan, isapidly and' dangerously directed toward the mwcontrary idea- • There is more danger th&the majority of the people in the North wout be willing to restore the negro to sla- TerYtere, than they will admit him to equal ity n if the question came up equare ly, nit ro equality or negro slavery, there is as limner Of doubt that the vest majority would I. for slavery.. Now, we suggest to our radical 'uttemporaries that their course im plies tha this is the question, and that we have no aernative. In all that they are doing they &Talon the country 'the idea of negro equality. hey even take pains to tell us that negro eoldi are better soldiers than white. They WO he negro at the o*pectes of the white man. They constantly press on the public the idt of equality, and they drive the unthinking lases of the peeple into taking the radical opia te ground. This leads bad metJ tel attack hartdeei liegt66o. This eenrsa presents to the people the alternative of equal ity or such absolute inferiority as to be un mistakable and cleaily defined. Now, the true course, the sensible course, the politic and the Christian course, would be for good men to act together in devising a plan for regulating the status of the negro in this State, and for public journals, of whatever po litical cast, to endeavor always to keep beforp the people the real relations of superiority and inferiority which must always exist between the races. We do not wish the equality ideas to prevail, because they are false, pernicious, abominable in the sight of God and man. We devoutly pray that the opposite idea of slavery may never prevail again in our State. But we foresee that the course pursued by the deMls nant party In this matter of the negro is rais ing up such a feeling against the equality plan, that it may he impossible to prevent the future adoption of laws, which, if they do not restore slavery here, may reduce the negro to a posi tion much more painful and hopeless than a well regulated slave system might be. Let no one cast this aside in anger and say that there is no danger. . We speak for the good of the black snan—in the interests of hu manity. We most earnestly desire and shall labor for the removal of slavery from the land by such means as will bless both races. We fear , a great danger to the free blacks of the North, a danger that is increasing daily. We beg good men to look this danger in the face, and let us take means to save the poor negro from oppression by defining his real position, and protecting and defending him in it. The end of this war is likely to be a period of the gra vest importance with reference to the status of the negro race in the various States. What shall we do here to prevent a reaction in favor of oppreasion, which wilt be equivalent to or worse than slavery ? Let us be wise in time. THE LATE RIOTS IN NEW YORK. There is un unusual degree of sharpness and point, as well as of thought and research, in the following article, which we find in the En urns Union, devoted to the late troubles in New York. We commend it to the careful review of our readers : In our last we made a brief note of the re cent riots, produced by the draft in New York, and from the crowded state of our columns have scarcely the space at command even now to consider all the causes that tended to these disgraceful scenes. But the avid ity with which the Republican press seeks to escape the responsibility of these mobs by calling them "Copperhead riots," seems to justify a hasty glance at the demoraliza tion produced by the fell spirit of Abolition ism and which finds vent in "treason, strategy and spoils." The mob In New York was but the legitimate result of ;that disregard of law inculcated by leading Republicans on the breaking• out of the war.' Even here, a promi nent Republican lawyer said to us in an appa rent spirit of friendship, when a mob threat ened cur own proper ty, "You must remember, Mr. Hantium, the civil law is silent during war, and you should be careful in what you say and do " [his is thefipirit that, after two years' trial of war, bee culminated in opposi tion to the corruptions it has bred. There iet a les'on is al' „his that it would have been well for the administration and its party friends to have learned, heard and heeded a long time ago. But it seems as if that party never could understand the temper sad impul ses of the American people, and hence it is that they always make a failure in the exercise of power. They have been admonished for years and years that the course of policy they pro posed would inevitably land the country in civil war, but they would not heed nor hear. On, onward they flashed, reckless of all reason, till they finally awoke, when too late to retrace their otos to, the dread reality of a war more vast in its proportions and more destructive in its elements than any that ever took place in any portion of the world. No sooner had the war broke out than the same misguided taunt icism—the same frenzied and unbridled ha tred and passions that had brought about the war by its contempt of legal and constitutional rights, persistent and long continued, showed itself in the open and unblushing advocacy of mob vtole,nce, making themselves the patrons of the perpetrators and the defenders of their outrages. Democrats who had grown gray in defense of the Union and the Corietitution against the assaults of Abolitionism were as saulted in their persons, ridden upon rails, amid the encouraging cheers of the leading spirits of the Black Republican party, their houses sacked, their papers seized and the sanctity of their families violated. Printing offices were demolished, and their owners 'seized and thrown into prisons, or transported to government font-testa without crime or ac cuser. The whole Republican press of the country upheld and applauded these proceed ings, and the administration never uttered even one word of rebuke or condemnation ; but, on the contrary, established its own system of lawless and arbitrary power more wanton, more cruel and more despotic than has dis graced the history of any nation of modern times. Private citizens were seized in the night time, dragged 1l•om their terror stricken families by the thousands, immured in bastiles. without crime, accuser or accusation, left to suffer and languish for months and then turned loose without the forms of trial. Courts were forbidden to administer the relief that the Con stitution and laws throw around the humblest citizen, and when Judge Carmichel, of Mary land, in obedience to his oath of office, at tempted to inquire into the complaint of a citizen, he was dragged from the Bench by the minions of arbitrary power and beaten till his gray hairs dripped with his own warm blood. And this proceeding was never rebuked by the President of the Utf.ted States. Nor did these outrages upon the rights of peaceful citi zens end here. The President made every petty policeman over the country and every constable even, a spy to overawe the people, spy out their very thoughts, and clothed them with absolute power over the most sacred rights of citizenship and property. The Con stitution was abrogated, the habeas corpus sus pended, and the jurisdiction of the courts set naught at the very nod of those upstart offi cials. No person against whom some partizan or personal enmity was cherished by some one who belonged to the party in power was safe anywhere, or for one moment. More than two years have a large majority of the people of the Nora' submitted with pa tience and without resistance to the outrages we have encountered. They have protested, reasoned and admonished alike in vain.— Through' the press, public assemblies, State conventions, committers, and through the ballot-box they have thundered in the ears of Mr. Lincoln and his party their most earnest remonstrances. They have been warned that violenoe would beget violence, disregard of law beget a disregard of law, mobs beget mobs, and that sooner or later human forbearance would make a stand, and place the hitter, burn ing chalice to their own lips. But these ad monitions have been met only with jeers from the multitude, and by fresh outrages from the administration. They seem to forget that the PRI(114; TM, i'EN TS. first inspiration of an American citizen is re sistance to arbitrary power. It is a national characteristic, drank in our very mother's milk, and read on every page of the history of our father's deeds. But the administration could not realize nor understand the temper of the people. They believed they could crush out the spirit of freedom by an arbitrary policy. Misguided men ! Every act of arbitrary pow er, every disregard of personal rights and con stitutional security, has fallen down deep in the heaths or the people, nourishing and nurs ing there a spirit of hatred and vindictiveness that only waited an opportunity to strike home at the oppressors. When those stalwart, hard-working men of New York, having learned their fate at the drafting wheel, looked upon their wives and helpless children, when they thought of their starving condition, should they go to the field of battle and perhaps of death—when they refieJted that more than a million and a half of men had been placed at the disposal of the administration, and that 'still the ent-mies' can non were nearer the national capital than when the war broke out—when they saw their rich neighbors exempted by the payment of a paltry sum of money—is it any wonder that they went forth into the streets prepared for des perate deeds? They have been taught for two years that mob law was right, and when they found themselves without the pale of all other law they appealed to that. Let those who have indoctrinated the people with these pt-rnicious teachings, and that too against ail warnings and all remonstrance, now stand aghast. and themselves be answerable for their works.— The feeling in New Milt is but an index of the whole country; and, if the administration would avoid revolution in the Nortb, and thus live out the days of its power, let it heed the people, conciliate them by respecting their rights and by itself setting an example of obedience to the Constitution and laws of the country. THE LATE JOHN J. CRITTENDEN. Sketch of His Life and Particulars of His Death. John Jordon Crittenden departed this life at three o'clock, a. m., on the 26th of July, at his residence in Frankfort, Ky., in the midst of his family—calmly, peacefully retaining his consciousness to the last. Though he had been quite feeble for some weeks, and apparently much exhausted, his death was unexpected by the most of his friends. The absent members of his family had been summoned home, with the exception of a daughter residing in Balti more, and his youngest son and child, Colonel E. H Crittenden, of the Twelfth Keno ueky oav-. airy, now with General -Hobson and Shackle ford, in pursuit of Morgan in Ohio. His sec ond son, Major General Thomas L. Crittenden, one of the most distinguished officers of the Army of the Cumberland, was by his bedside when ho linathed his last. His death was the consequence of a general exhaustion of the vital powers of the system, and not the result of any specific disease. He was spared the paiu which falls to the lot of strong men meeting death. Some weeks ago he went to Louisville, as well to be near a favorite physician, at whose house he was a guest, as for a change of scene; and he and his friends honed, after_s, short so joarn th , -re, that be was improving. This hope was not well grounded, for he gradually de clineA after his return home a few days ago. Mr. Crittenden was born in Woodford coun• ty, Kentucky. about two miles from Venialles, the county town, on the 10 , h of September, 1786, and was, consequently, very nearly sev enty-seven years of age at the time of his death. Though himself the most distinguished of the family, yet his brothers, all of whom tare dead, were no ordinary men, being all remark able for happy manners, personal spirit, and courage, elevation of character, and the gift of eloquence. MT. Crittenden first sought his fortune in a new country, and accompanied his friend, Judge Edwards, of Kentucky, to Illinois. be having been appointed Federal Judge, as Mr. C. had been appointed Federal Attorney, upon the organization of that territory. lie re mained en that country but a short time and returned to Kentucky, locating himself at Russellville, in the county of Logan. At the breaking out of the war with Great Britain in 1812, he, with John Adair and Wm. T. Barry. entered the army as a volunteer aid to the hero of the revolutionary battle of 'Omen Mountain, Isaac Shelby, then Governor of Kentucky, and the leader of her brave and hardy eons of the field. In this capacity be bore iimself so as to win the lasting confi dence and affection of his veteran General lie was in the hauls of the Thames, and won dittinotion by the pitrt be played in that. mem • orable engagement. Such of the friends of Mr. Crittenden as have had the rare good for tune to bear him in his old see relate the in cidents of Governor Shelby's campaign. can never forget with what pride and with whet a charming manner he "fought his battles o'er again." At the conclusion of the war he resumed the pursuit of his profession at Ru.sellville, rr sing rapidly into eminence as a lawyer and orator, so that he soon became the leading man f that extensive portion of the Sate known as "the Green river country," while his reputation was co-extensive with the State- In 1811. he, for the first time, bec4me a can didate before the people, and wa' elected to represent this county in the lower House of the Kentucky Legislature. The sessions of the Legislature were. at thst titar,lannual, and he was eleotrd to the came House fur six successive years. At the se'-elon of 1817 he was chosen Speaker of the House, and, during the same session, was elected member of the Senate of the United tir=ties Colonel Richard M Johnson, since Vice Pres ident of the United States, being his a mpe titor. Entering, upon this new theatre, the young . est member of that august body, hs• a once took rank with the very highest—a rank tr. , m which he never descended, though holding seat there for many years with the m .tt bril liant men of the nation. After a service of two years in the 'Senate, he retired to private life and the piirsuit4 of his profession, and, with this ()Ned in view, settled in Frankfort, the capital of his S ate. During the great excitement oceast ,,,, ed by the celebrated struggle oetween tar 0 I uud New Court parties, he was thrice e:eineil io the House of Representatives from Fr.fliel n county, and was once again chosen Sue iker In 1835 he was again eleotai a 'newt) r of the Senate of the United States, and coma u d there until the inauguration of Pr , olden , G risen, into whose Cabinet be entered ..a Att. r ney General. Upon the death ofll urei. s n, occurred that celebrated disrupt ion of 'he Cabinet by the voluntary and i , digo•int re tirement of all the members save Mr. Weta.t.en In 1842 Mr. Crittenden wee re-elected to , he sonatis, and served until 1848, at which dine he resigned to canvass the state fur G., verm ,,, for which office he had been nominated the Whig party. He was elected in August tit t hat year, over Lazarus W. Powell, subsequently a PM 8U In9ULY • mantra. SITINDAII azaarris BY 0. BARRETT & VS Ws Dour Pastor AM Moos will be moot to sob. oortliota residing in the Borough for six amps rot trim, mbilo to OW Oanier. Nail oatooribers, nut "omial AMOK Tall 1111 " 7 'tumor ABB UllOll is publisnad 'WO DOLL AMP ran ainnot, torartably In adeetioe. Tea olio , to one sobireso,fiftscs dollars 0. needed with this establielmen• n eztenaive JOB ORIFICE. containing %variety of plain and fancy eppe, amsgnalled by any establishment in the interior of the State, for Which the patronage of the publie is so - Belted. anootleful Califidate for Governor, and now a Senator in Congress. Ile was inaugurated Governor of the State in September, 1898, but at the incoming of President Taylor's administration he resigned, and accepted the position of Attorney General in the Cabinet, •which place he held, adorning it by his talents, learning, and character, until the close of Mr. Fillmore's administra tion. In 1355 Mr. Crittenden again took his seat lit the Setiltit, having been elected thereto by the General Assembly at the session of 1853-4. He served during the full term, which expired on the 4th of March, 1861, John C. Breckin ridge having been elected his successor by the Democratic party then in power in the State. But the people, having tried him long, and found him true at all times, and the crisis be ing the most important known to our history as a nation, were unwilling that he should re main in retirement. Accordingly they elected him in June, 1861, to the Lower House of Congress by an overwhelming msjoriiy. Re took his seat at the called seesion in July, 1861, entertaining that body for the first time, at the age of seventy-five, risking, thereby, as others had done, a Senatorial reptitation, which, at that time, among living men, was unsurpassed. But that reputation suffered no eclipse! It is fresh in the minds of the nation how nobly, how lofily he bore himself in this new station. His lame was not only undimi nished, but increased by his career as a Rep resentative. Still the people were. unwilling to give him up, and at the time of his death he was, as it were, standing with his head unco vered, while the people of the Ashland district were in the act of placing fresh laurels in the wreath already on his brow. Death has strick en down the man, but the wreath will never wither. GUNPOWDER. The principal mills in the United States, are Du Pont's in Delaware; Hazard's at. Enfield, Connecticut; Laffin, Smith & Boies, at Saug erties ; the Oriental gunpowder company of Boston; and the Schaghticoke gunpowder company at Schaghticoke. Previous to the seceesion of South Carolina; there were but two mills in all the Southern States ; since that time two more have been erected—one in Georgia, the other in Arkansas. The materials and propotions of which gun powder is composed, are--seventy-five parts of saltpetre to twelve and one-half parts of sulphur, and twelve and one-half parts .of charcoal. 'these proportions vary slightiy in different varieties of powder; and the standard proportions of different governments vary also; but the proportions generally deemed best, or "standard," are as we have given them. Saltpetre is almost entirely imported from hidia, where it is found in large quantities, and transported thence to various parts of the world. Its price in the New York market, varies from five to fifteen cents per pound; its average price is, perhaps, nine cents. But, of course, our Southern friends get none from the New York market, or any other market, while the blockade is effectual; and they are dependent upon the supply which they can gather from their own soil. The Hazard company state that when the saltpetre is received by them, it contains from six to-eight per cent. et foreign substances, but., after passing through the cleansing pro cess, it does not contain one hundred thou sandth per cent. of impurities as tested by chemical analysis. It is the nicety of prepara tion that constitutes much of the difference in the qualities of powder. Sulphur is almost entirely imported; and mostly from the island of Sicily. It is also found in the craters of volcanoes; and the re bels may succeed in getting some from Mexi co ; they may also gather it in small quantities in the neighborhood of mineral springs, from which sulphuretted hydrogen is evolved. The other ingredient., charcoal, is more readily ob tained, hut great care is requisite in selecting the wood, and in charring it atter selection. In England. black dog-wood is used for ma king sporting powder, but willow and elder is generally used by our government. They should be charred at. a temperature of about five hundred degrees, when the coal will readily enter into combustion when heated to six hun dred and eighty degrees. The saltpetre and sulphur having been re fined, and the charcoal made from the right wood and properly charred, they are mixed together in the proportions already stated. The mixture is then put on an iron bed and sprinkled with water, to prevent an explosion, and subjected to large wheels, weighing seven or eight tons each, by 'Beane of which it iB solid+ d into a hard, brittle cake. It is then passed through a mill, which reduces it to any size ri quired—that mow used in firing cannon is very coarse. some of the pieces being nearly as large as dove's eggs. It is then taken to the dry house and dried by the heat of steam or fire. Afterwards it is bolted to free it from dust, glazed by means of friction, and packed in diarious qeentities from half-pound canister to kegs of one hundred pounds each. Gucipowder seldom explodes after having been peeked The danger lies in the process of manta eture ; and even here the danger is in the liability of the workmen from familiarity with the proce-s to become negligent of duty. E 404 pro •esv has its peculiar danger. The std screw-'Tess was abolished and the by dreulic press substituted in its place, because the friction of the Ger w generated the heat, which at any time was liable to explode the mill Tenn nails in the shoes of employees are carefully avoided; nor are they used in con fieieg the heads et the kegs•in which the pow er was packed—wooden ones being used in 13. it' place Althoegh danger necessarily and always ac companies the menuteeture of powder, the em ployees receive no higher compensation for the labor on this account. and workmen are read ily found at a &Mar a day. Not wit Nita riding the amount respire& for the present war, the whbuftictom tome us that the huei tt ,-e now doll, less being used by the army than is ordinarily employed for sporting purpn-es and in the arts of peace. Our mills produce ennu illy a surplus for export, amount ing in mime years in two or three millions of El o ri nfoi Their ordinary production is more than the Gov roment can possibly require, and the supply now on nand would suffice to send a hulter to the heeert of every traitor in our lend. .a A SUBATITUTS FOR teaTHEß.—Leather, to a gr.. t d arse, is to he superseded The London Tl'loB endor 4o 6 the claims of an invention owned by a Mr Az .relnay, of England, which, ti , coniini to the description of the article, pos-rennn every 44 lathy of the real leather, or 15 14 8 ly vaned. IV to if. on many aCOOLUOIII- It will 0-it crick.. is tougher, will wear longer, andwilt re-ist water as effectually as rubber. The leather cloth can be of any color, and a pair of how taps' which costs, of calf skin, $1 59, will cast of this material only twenty five rents. The invention is Of immense value. Wendell Philips Garrison was among the &stun 00.18 Apts. He paid hie commutation mousy. [0: course he did.]