'none . anew As, Elm:tinny for Member* of Congress, kil o will be held &midi the !steering *smith* taeett trail'lltsitis a.. the ..Union, the Plod of Managers hes,e deemed it their duly fis Wpm:Judgestor Cottiniasinit• era who may be appointed to take the hal. Imo of the voters, to put up hoses at the d decent !noddle, where clectiona will hit held, for the purpose ol r•tectving each contrilettiona as the admirers of the Hag• trious Father of his Comitry may 'think jtroptir to deposit in aid of the great I,llott. timent. now in course of erection in tea city told, meitiory. l'ney feel 'tailored that when this noble 1914..flistrtonic purpose is presented to the people, they will out hesitate to give their tatte (or such alt ehjeat j arid it stow be. climes more miceinstry, es the [wide ante society are rapidly • diminishing and may ern sormbeadeqriaie tocarry no the work, A em*lteuntritiotiori frion-each.ettisrit for voter throughout the United Slake., would Le siollsnent to complete the monument,— * work intended so add. to-their glory as well Lt ta , linsinr the memory ot itie Bloc. tennis dead. A half dime is hut to iinion adderable•aum,aind yet a half thine cots, tributed be every auliabitant of our noun. try, would rear the .grand etrantore, now iii.progress. In ha destined completion.-- ltt be •nitsfol. wondrous pineal, if out' sifswenty-fire millions of souls who illy hshittiaie green country, i'corlered indepera. alma, pritapawins and happy mainly by his exertions nod devntiam to its cause. the ram necessary to erect a Mouutnent of such a nava could not lie completed for the want of that small pecuniary aid which every Afrieriran should. Inal it tilts pride, ass wens. his duty to and. Aro you. Aftmessie At the lest l'residentist elerttidn, thel plan of obtaining contributions at thei arßemt.mbet, Whigs. to (thtr seating the pioriotiom and lin- morrow is the last day on Wit)Ch reality am. ?filers sat I others.) was ut . l.nssessments -can be made. i If tompted.ll gls the precious arrangements ; not assessed see to it at once.. were not such as lo Mims.' • very collection, the retook was as viatiefeetory at Tau Waznor Moot Mochas than. could, under- the circumstances, bevel:wee god. espectest.• •By a 'Jotter front the State Tempetanias it is therefore desirable that this aye-ft Agent, the timeitir this Mass Meedog is fain should he continued in the thircrent chr.nged Irons the 611 to she 4th day of , Stater at all ' future elenti.ms of !oral or general flatout anal the Board of Mane. ticl"ber• ('Tuesday.) at 10 17.01 clekr At. Mi. gees indulge the hope that on Miemienaion, I its Gettysburg. at the electimot to he held in the respect-1 ire Bones of Maine, Yerincint.Massaeltu- Odlts, New York, New Jer•ey, !- situ; DeiamaSe. rdarylanil, South !Arm lina, Crorgin. Ohm. lifrhi pit..Misetinsin. Idioms, Louisiana, and Smiths, contributions , will be made its aid of the filaintortent,; ninthly of the country men of Muir iliostrions henrfeetor •• • • GEO. ATEBSTON, • 'ttel;rit 104 ol the Al. S. :TRW I ) I6ITESTS or EIVOLAND- AND TRAI/ijr.r...ritt. New York Express learns (min a prrann said to be i 0 dote con.mo tikn°►ith thosit who know what is going on at' llib Capittll. that the atmementin re gard tri the armannetrannew of France. and -England; 'touching Capt. Ingraham and Kolas, ii True. The Express says: Mr. (-Ira ton, the atkl Itri ;11tnistrr, t Macey.wail tilf l 4rst o call rioi 31r. Macey. Mr: Sortie* had hie. instructions some 1111141 since •tti MI on the Secretary. of State.—.. These instrtictiona were very sperifia and , poiorted,but their delivery in person wi t :, delayed until' Thuraday. the 22l inno...' uwitos to the absence tot the French Min ister ate Newport Until 11 - Morin:Ay te t o t .,l inir, Oben he returned to the Illaftitul,-- The Citiverturient knew that ilocmi hiettlii•-, tnins were to citrue Croon France, and lied keen s'o • iliflirmo spec:die:illy some time i shire, . The reonoustrance is in urine that, C4l. lograimin's condom was a violation tot rue law of nations. Mr. Marry has had his reply really for. 'rune dote. hot it has, to undergo some eieglitiestions. . Austria, he. says, having apPeated to the world to 'notify its rim. duet. di . ..Vetted Statue will also make ill itoiii, to, 1 4 world in behalf of Cant. tin frioliant'scorlotnt in saving Kosts. It Svoultl, seem, therefore, that each of the firtrEuropean powers load concluded to bike ground against the Voitiol 'Slalom' to regard •to Irmatik. • But we • apprehend no reel Osollision of mains from this paper warfare. The- United States hold to one seistiprineiplea anti will maintain them, sad, the power* of Europe tu quite -another • eel. Untivesupptoie will minntaiu them ohm., . !'.SlateTbs of ilaine" newspaper save *granite. boulder f the etimmit of Mt Wi k atiksoni-4-evidently deposited there during i•the draft timid', while the moult. tahre wereinthinerged"—has been selected and net ewide for the apex or crOWllingsione of the Washington Monument, and ex elainti.—••Mtste fit a termination of that milooteal vtruettire, now rising to his name tit the vity of.hie own creatttm„ would be think a t i me, now bidding closest column• molt` with the ehtuds n; heaven, Inansfer red melte glare, hundreds of miles distant Bain that higheat mountain punk, diet now uplifts his name !" ImmazaisT or QuAtcees..—The Interim-' Esigonoi reveal the singular ' fat fil et the everoge axe attained by this Pali* efei sect is firiy.-one years lwo months sinfl . treloysaue tie's, w halt ef Me pop therapy' ty! %hie country die before reaching the sage a twenty-nue, sod the drerage du. irntpw of the worhi‘irer is hut t h irty-three Mare., goskers, therefore, live it train!, loup,ey Mint the rest of us, Retry UM, tlis well-known rattan misr- ittanitiand liberal. hearted Metlasiist. is a• loot building a .Mtlicoliat tsbrrnarlit at N.*Odesna. in an eligible rotation. at a eclat 015140,000. It ill to be capable of twat* dim 'Wound persons', and occu pied tor preambles Alone. '.o,l4tbrti man died, iu Georgia recently who , evittgred "648 putrid's. When 22 pore old. he weighed 565 pmmds. Flia dot* was caused by ais accumulation. of eiloatid die Imam Imisapnetnful dealt thrown into the tinittilwill mitten front Oiree to lout puts of hod water-.4t0 sore. the Maine rillitiks sitsted`that• its Ilisilpsquistise or the eV it. &Wm/atm 0 14 4 14 1*.mtber rapt t. rep in Malaita, die fpLt art, in a worse CiVldUlnfl *um *vow aloes *Ad relished theta from oth• Istuttieretirretieri is inevitable. tor i's. ith ti!JIL ba Wimilit.Oxist Mai 'ado from_ grad entitled, hiallia! • ito4 • hi* 111044 tads the 0 1 0 SibviorK Will' , l ise 'rag* 110304 *MO 40, lismottorwa****!‘.l. ot IND 13)111/' vO-17) Friday Evening, Sept. 30 1553. 'WHIG *MITE TICKET. FOR JODOZ OF SUPattilt 001raT, TRO3AS A. BZJI)D, of Philaiolphis rift CANSist,, COMMISSIONER, MUSES POIVNALL, of Dam:tour FOR AUDITOR GENERAL. A. K. M'CLURE, of Fraul:lin. FOR RURVEVOR GENERAL. CEIRISTIAN MEYER:S, of Clarion. WERIQ COUVIIIe FOR. Tax SENATE, Dr. DAVID MELLINGER. AMILIBLY, • JOHN 0. ELLIS.. • COMMISSIONIcit, 011.13, J. WILLS. APPiToit., Dr, EDMUND 10.. SHORE. DIRECTOR OF 711/ POOR, JOSEPH BAYLY. REASIM7II .I GEORGE ARNOLD. Pigmie' ATT'OItrIET, JAMES G. REED. SURVEY:OO, GEORGE B. HEWITT. - - OPPOsition Noniin *Hun. k7The opposition confess:nice mot at Grteffeuburg on . Monday lust, and after I one or two ballots nominated J. WTETII Dortmass, of Chambersbnrg, for State 1 Senate, ovir Ron, Mr.tra - ill'eLtax, the, nominee of this county. 'We Lelievo it was the impresebn of Mr. Ill'elesn's friends that ilia name would strengthen the opposition ticket in the',,oonnty, and it ' undoubtedly would hart, idone so. %%It Mr. 31)Clesn had enemies to deal with at home, stiujirro,their intlueuco in favor of his rival, and his nomination was of course out of the question. As to Mr. Douglass, se know little or nothing about him, except what has reached es through his partisan friends—and, if half of that be 1 true, be is the last man that should be sent to Ilarriaburg. We 'believe it is un• derstnod that Mr Douglassiadead against Prohibition in evert eltept and form. Decl orßlr. Chambers. ne„.The : "Maine Low" Committee, ap pAinted to announce ._to, . Boa. %collat. Om:imam 11.4 ii.ruiritinn as a candidate f tr Senator, hive returned with a peremp tar-11 ducal on, his part to accept Miriam inatioa. We believe the committee have not yet determined:whether to try another nomination or not. Sir. Chan:Limns has acted lie is a. thorough going friend. of Prebilaltion, but thinl;a nothing enuhl be gained. by an indepeddeut move ment at this hate lour i !Rid we think our frieude would do well to take a lesson from him and hositate• before, throwing their votc4 away., 11.UNTERS'f0W111 ACADEMY.—ne stioond Senti.ennunl Exhibition of thia In stitution took place on Wednesday evening inrtip the Ilunterstown eh Groh. We oude'r stand• that the exercises passed of quite creditably,, and to , the gratineation of the large auditory 'ambled on the 000140. speuehes were delivered by Messrs. J, U. 11. Neely; 3. Graft, 8 : M. Neely, 3 B. King, G. M. P. Miuigh w It. 11. King, J.. C. Neely, C. W. Meteor, G. it.Brantkoa, t. J. Reed, G. C. Brandon, H. Bidainger, J. K. blellhenny, and J. E. Garretaon. Ilsuiaos er nailroad. The Directors have just published their annual statement for the put year—from which it appears that the rees-ipts during' the year bun been $14,82$ 13. Deduct for corking the Roads, nue. half, tem/ the net Raceipts 136'j. The other ex. penreas includingilie interest on loans. sal. aries of (officers; repairs, Atm.. sr is 60,2!95 95—leaving a balance of $2.05141, to be approPriated either in making further im provementth if necessary, or in cancelling the . debt. CIU)SEIMit} TELE STREET.—At one of the city engirt' in Cincinnati, a few days sinoe. a drivelr was finsd' $25 for running' lits wagon against a pedestria' n who watt crossing the street. The Judge decided that on all regular street crossings pedes trians have the right of way, and that the law requires a driver to hold op when he sow foot passengers amusing in front of his team. The aurae principle of law holds good elsewhere, and is worthy the notice of both drivers and pedestrians. • OtT"..kahland," the home of Henry Clay, which was sold at public sale last week, was purchased by Jas. B. Clay, his son;iit 11140 pon pre. The tract contains 387 scree. New Dlall Houle. 11CrThe Poet-offtee Departmunt bas or dered a con tract with Mr,. PVIDERICK Wotr, for earryirg the mail three times a week between Abbotstown and East Berlin. or Messrs. &tom & Jaatnarr, the Whig candidates for tho Legislature in Pi'Win county, here published a Card ninsonuelluttbeir intention to vote for an ustuularibi4 the question of Prohibition II 0 rralar v°ll'k 'The - Prebiblllietu 10leen:mg en - 1541- , ' urduy bad. •A WORD FOR nErtscrxxo WlllOB. PCPThe pmeoedings of the mooting of I do filen& of Prohibition, in this place, on : Saturday last, will , bo found in another; column, teith the answersof the eandidates to the interrogatories propounded to thorn. The meeting was a respectable cue, corn- ' pod of some of the most intelligent and worthy of our eititens, and thrir proceed-1 ings are deserving of attention. . Dissent- i ing entirely from die policy which thee° ,i of our Temperanee friends who participa- I led in the deltberations of the Convention Lave seen fit to adopt, and utterly at a loss to disoover how the cause of Probibition, is to be subierved by tho policy thus mark ed out---we feel it a duty to ()ermine, td, to our readers, and to the cause, to give some of the grounds of our entire and un qualified dissent from' the action of the Convention. Vrio profess to be earitery l eitteere adro - lilt' Law Ilnarely de catea of a Prohibitory Law—etneerely announce theme) e fever of submit terries to procure the enactment of a law which will break up the Rum traffic and ting, the question , _lnhibition to a pope relieve society front the terrible and count- lnr !ale. This is the oily way of 'getting ges evils whiCh the traffic ever does mid Ilhe ques tion " out 401"lica'" It itit the ever will carry in its trail. but we have ; true po licy—a policy upon which the friends and opponent:l4 Prohibition can labonel long enough its the Temperance unite; and certainly the friends . muse, and have learned enough of the , prejudice, misconception, misrepresents.: of Temperance witouldnot decline the is- sue thus tendered theft. tine and bitter apposition, that attend its eroeee ... to be sarisfiedsisattritsneb is But t rend stands Mr. MYERS in ono to ZiTs:hiered by say spasmodic e r hoh.. this mailer P eonvention endorsed position as sound Ind acceptable. Let lition of seat The cause of Temperance 1 ! Vie Rita been making glans _ amides within„ the. us see what it is. lenk at hisletter. Ile blunts equare up to tie interrogatory pro. last few rare—last ill making giant strides pounded to bite, ad pledges himself to —and we believe the day-is not far distant "favor and (if the qttetion is brought up,) when full triumph will crown our lone, I ; to vote for a Prohibittry Liquor Law, with liborions, and at times doubtful efforts.— Prohibition hes teem° a demi a proviso that said lay shell be referrereferrer(to . "menifest the vote of the people for their approval or . nee” But ;cast amount, ofpopu. I ar pre. '°isaPPmtai." N owef we understand this. judiee and misconception still remains to Mr. MYERS stands "hedged" to vote, in be combatted - before a salutary legisl t • ' ve the first place,for a Lill,of oho unenesti enectment can be secured ; and what the tutionality of which here can be no doubt. cause now wants is a calm, fair, honest But fleet is not all. ele stands "pledged" canvass cf its merit -.a cane:tee in which to vote for a Prohibenry Liquor Law, "if the issue of "Proldbe ion," or "No Prole. the question is brotigle up." without know• bitioo," shall bee brought fairly before the inr, the shape in thhith it may be brought people; stripped of false side issues, and details the most ! unincumbered by partisan attachments.— e,p lt may be membered by unconste l ,With rack an issue we shall be prepared I tutional provisions na obnoxious and unjust—provisions and de. : for victory. With any thing snore (*lees : tails which 'neither his julgment ner co re thee that;, as Temperance mon, wel should science may approve—end yet he statute gerelootantly into the can - wise. litlettged" to 11* sur d nut, provided it con- ' Besides, this it the issue which the ene -I..tains a claw that it "shall bo referred . to mica of Prohibition themselves now pro. the vote of the people fee their approval re pose - letthe people decide whether they I want a prohibitory enactment er not. If: disapproval" i s it to do Mr. MT- I 6 „ it an ! Ea ? a majority decide in favor of Prohibition, We h ave no O En injustice. We believe - I.im to he an it will be the duty of all good, law 'Aiding citizens to submit. If a majnrite ( lie honest, well-mm , nin. Nor do we tide against a Prohibitory hie-, Wei shall: suppose he designee to pledge himself to he content. We have an abiding confi- any such absurdite. We allude to the' matter, simply to show the ebsurd pose deuce in the ultimate triumph of our cease : —an abiding confidence in the at:mai:lnm thew in welch his *ply has placed him.] of the popular mind, when that min I shall ' We are not willing to believe that el r.e stems deliberately took this veil ion, in bo brought to a fair expression upon tee: the hope of securing a he "Maine Law" vote Rune question. If Prohibition =net, in popular tncreby. That would be utichatitable. It a fair issue, bo sustained by a vote; tiershitlf net ask it —ltetter do te fume aety Mat no am not con, m e lee, the- full extent of the pledge he was eiv- 1 law until it can be sustained, ing. But that does net cure its utter el ly, nor (lees it j ice. the unreeseuable de-; nuncia l timf of tlr. efeeetenen and Mr. ELLI 3, because they did not see fit to cow.' mit the same blunder. Dr. elremeoer. and Mr. teem both agree to leave this decision of the matter to the people, and express a willingness to be boned by that, decision, 'whether favor.' able or adverse. Now, who can object to that? Every voter in the State will thus' be enabled to oxprees Lis wishes on the ; question. It is the only mode of settling it without disturbing present party rein- Lions—the only mode of securing a fair expression of the popular will. And we, caution our Whig friends against any move-'I ment which looks to more than this, as either designed or calculated to disorgan ise the Whig ranks in this district, and se cure the triumph of Lawfoetoism in the State Senate. We know that some of the 'Opposition' leaders- in this county, whose hearts are not and never were in the Temperance cause, have been urging OD this independ ent movement, with an anxious solicitude that betrays the motivatbat prompts them. Are oar Whig friends willing to be caught in the trap,thus cunningly laid for thew ? It is well sometimes to learn lessons of wisdom from an enemy. much as to our own position—now a or two on the doing's of last Satur- day's Convention. And, Grin, wo remark that most manifest injustice was done to the Whig candidates, Pr. Mxrziworat and Mr.. ELLts—vro do not say inteniional injustice, so for at least as concerns a largo portion of the intelli gent and worthy gentlemen who participa ted in the proceedings. Nevertheless, from the very organization down to the close, an nnti.Mollinger atmosphere was most pal pable—is disposition to. break him down or all haterds—and this before the Conven tion hod any guaranty as to what his an swer to the Committee might be. But let that pass. The Convention foliaged pledges from the several Legislative and Senatorial eau.] didatea, to favor and votetur a Prohibitory Liquor Law Bill, ' , with a proviso that such bill shall be submitted to the people for their adoption or rejection." The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, the Supreme Court of New York, se also I the Courts of other States, have long since decided such mode of enacting laws to be torten itifutional---that Legisture has no right to devolve the law-making power up- on any body other than itself. But a side from- the unconstitutional feature, there are other fatal difficulties to such a pledge—difficulties that must:strike every reflecting mind, and which no reflecting mind-eould possibly overcome. Bethought Dr. DiEttartorit and Mr. ELLis ; and the Convention saw fit to "blackball" those gentlemen. while Mr. DiTens was endors-.1 ed as '"the only sound candidate in the held." Now let to examine the letters in to defic paper—printed, verbatim el Marat ha, air they were read before Convention. Dr. MIELLINOM and'Mr. Eats both de cline to ••pledge" themselves to vote for any law in advance of a. kuowledge of its provisions ; and for the very best of rea sons. They both say in effeet—"Why, gentlemen, it is unreasonable in.you to ,ex pent us to give a pledge of that kind. We can't pledge ourselves to the support of any bill, until we see what the bill is like. It may contain, provisions which neither our consciences nor our judgments can approve—it may contain provisions which you yourselves could not approve ; and if you would not vote for such a bill, why ask us to pledge ourselves to vote for it." Is not that good reasoning:? But sup pose they hed gone a step further,,and said, as they might have said, "Why, gentlemen, if we answer your interrogatory affirmative ly we may be "pledged" to vote for a bill that would inevitably defeat the very ob• jest you base is view. We might be call ed to vote for another mcwgrel 80 gallon . bill—or possibly a bill prepared• by theta ; mks of Pnthibitbm, inslieh all manner lof obnosioes• and t t neontitutional provis ions nrty have beta piacil Jrh the purpose of killing it on a pepait iltue., Now we enn't do any such thing: We haven high j er sense of the dignity MI responsibility attaching to the Logislatieoffioe, than thus to embarrass ourselves." Is not that good eerorsing also T Does j it not show that Dr. MiLuxar.n and Mr. ELLTB have a just and tae Appreciation of ' the duties of an honest sad Intelligent leg islator. The bait beltbmt to them wenn tempting one. gad tby aimed only at securing the votes of tilt friends of Prohi bition, and beensless rcsardful of duty, it would have been int tidy Matter for them , ,„1 to say "yes,' to sucuotamittee. But' they declined to &no-4d webelieve they will be sustained, by he intelligent, re. fleeting men of lig paries, not excepting the members of;` theestrention which so Ott flatly ,denotincted Both 'Dr. Mx eta and Mr. Etats 1 Irr Let every Whig bear, in mind that, we have , a good State Ticket in the" field—that we hove a county ticket com posed of men eminently worthy of support, and, above all, bear, io mind that every vote given in favor of. the Whig State and county ticket will be sot down as a vote in favor of Retrenchment, Reform, and Economy ; while every vote for the other aide will be used to signify, the re .. verse. Mark Onset 11:7*Tho Bedford Gazette giree a re markable instance of the uncertainty of life. It says that a gentleman residing in Cumberland, Md., wrote to his friends in Bedford that the Cholera wag rapidly a bating in Cutnberland—that no danger was to bo apprehended—and that he never enjoyed better health in his life. Before that letter reached ite destination the tele graph announced that the writer was W corpse 1 LOOK OUT I , —for &11 manner tof this representations and falsehoods on' the part of the Opposition, betireen, this and, the e lection. There will plenty of them. IrrMrs. Stows, &labor of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," bu r returned from Europe. fr:rTbe Conoeotiout Town Bleed.. come off on to-morrow. 'The friends of Prohibition ire actirs tlunni t tiout the State.. The State Neonate. • AWFUL Tamsenv.—One of the :levet Ifir"By a eambinatiow of 'favorable eir-! awful trartlies that ever happened in this ettentitancee, the Whigs , of •Pcian*ylvanis country, occurred at ttPlaindealiati," tl.l have had control of the State Senate for reaidence of T. R. Lockerman, neat Roy al Onk, l'lntraday eight, Omni IS n'. clock, which resulted in the death of John Lockermon, aged about 17 yeses, As 'tear as we can ascertain, the following are the last six or eight years. Last session the Whigs had but one majority—hut that ono was sufficient to hold locofoonistn in' ; cheek, and prevent a good•deal of tual-ad-! ministration. Should the Whip maintain their integrity in the districts in which Senators are to be elected this fall, the Senate will continue to bo Whig; but if a single district be last the Sonata is gone, and Loenfoooista will have undisputed sway in every department of the State Government. The leaders of the opposi tion understand this, and hence their.anz iety to defeat Dr. Niturasont, and carry this district for Mr. Douglass. Our friends must look out for desperate efforts on the ' part of Locofecoism to secure, this end. Upon this one point their entire energies will be concentrated. Shull they sue elect? the circumatences It appears that for some time pun. the' inhabitants of "Plaindealing" have been troubled by the discharge of bricks and other utiesiles, at the house and thminliab-. hunts. On the night stated, bricks were' I thrown. and Robert Hughey, overseer, and Wm. H. Keecheval, gardener, were mil the watch. with guna, aecompanied. by T. ; R. !Ackerman. A brick was thrown, : 'when Hughey tired but Without °frees— Kercheval then said, he saw a man a short i distance from them, when tockerinati told him to fire at him. lie did so, and: ;upon arriving at the spot, John Locker.; man, a brother of T. R. L., who, it is said. had come mil of the house. was Brand j dead, a rifle ball having pierced his head just above the temple. Kercheval Mutely started for Easton, and upon his' arrival gave himself up, and was rum init. ted for examinetion. Jauckermatt was ar. rested yesterthiy smutting by &mill!' Clark, long, and have never found him to ho Re d euitimitted its jail in default of bail, aught but a truthful, honest man, anxious for diseatening the life of Kereheval. to serve hie constituents faithfully...and Kmadieval is an old man, a native of Engla honorably. Both the llerriebui Whig mane,nd, nud le very fond of the Lock m. greatly distressed at the oe. papers speak in warm commendation—of— mir r ent r e . It was very dark when the his legislative position in the House, and affair occurred. Ile is ens we believe, . surely the editors of those journal ought ; smeared by the euemoitillity. Young to be competent judges of his capacity and J " wk " m "" was verb' 1 """ b l i k ed b y his aequnintanees, and wee a quiet, peaceable fidelity. Besides, hie experience in the youth, and pleasant companion. House will give him influencoand position in the Senate, that must be of service to THE INGRAHAM DaIIIONATRATIGAL-i- Al the uteemig held in New York Tlmre. his twunktituents. Why hesitate, them, to slay evening, to do honors to Capt. logra. give !din a cordial, hearty support? His 1,„,,, letters w. re rend from several lnum• opponent is a bitter, thorough-going par- inent geetlemen who lied been invited, but ej eale —an open, avowed opp o nent o f Re. did nisi Humid. Gen. Garibaldi, excused ing on the score of to. form—and nothing ran be gained, while limn ;mew dla "seem, :eel air. Meagher trusted Mat much must be lost, by Mr. DaIenLASS" he H et be considered as acting success. with any impropriety toward the comma - But wo shall expect better things of the ere, il beams in intiol that" lie to nut as Whigs of the district. We know that the )" ' 1 "44" " I Mu nUed 81. ‘te a t " f a r r e• Irueed lrun; "is km opposition leaders—relying upon the ef- art i" a feet of cowardly insinuations, and bolder I ,,e nitii, 'le I „ r , ign walei by au udi misrepresentations, as to Dr. MEusiseen'ts err id' the Feint le. " Hon: • Roll. .1. oifieiadeareer, and calculating largely upcn Walker cqnstilertal the seizure et !Coate a defection in the Whig ranks, by reason of clear ‘ 1 " 1 " 1111 slid justice. and no the nomination of an exclusive „ mainc outrage of our rights iz view of Isis deels• norm to berme. citizen of the United Law " cendidate—hope to secure the eke- St,, lbse. Edward I.:uerett ispelatide tics of Mr. Douctass. Whige of : Frank. Caps. legralmi's course, and declares lin and Adams—shall they nut be disap. that leak the Wrong and outrage were en the part of Atietilii, Krrstit was Veer , pointed? _ _ LETTER PROM RIO, C. ELLIS, ERM, iirmertan ol but he does not Nsir . °von , , risia. is, 1853 • nentleinen :-Todentir aftern, , on. I woo hamlet your Bale of ibe Public AVoritv. extr u4s "Y "Pi"i"" t " Itis el" HI" t o ti•itee•nea Liver of the 10th, nod la crunpli , mee wlw }nor Anicrwan protection, try virtue o f h its r.l7:,;ta"),.."TiVold.l7"dri'a There is evidently a ereing feeling over dlaratitrit In become an A oterwati citizen. sey ,, rgie tc e o t t i tz te ol, t , r ,„ not. tot so t too ofno„ the State in favor of the Sale of the Pule LO menage of a Nei lb l4provialtmtt to the lie WOrICA ) as the only means of putting a POLITICAL NoMENCLATUE.—TiIe 1 7K .-.- lytmtre she Low. prolilhitint the ninnothetare and Mix tide Ln 013 t iif l'isto v [lends." which is •rt tams sesr shsvpryve.. with the nyorlenth it Stop to the fraud and corruption so charac- eel net shell be submitted to the people for their idoptton to the twineuelaiive at New -or rejection terirtie of their administration. Not only n ' Yerk. leis apeed dinar' 13.trwhiirtiers Co He you ntleven, I hare thoitrht errionetr on the is the Whig prees unanimous upon the who bad el v1:71 orilieir arlitesion to the to which in"ccw"th" cciWcw. of moment , worthy the orison , nor every man. and leo,. SUbiCet, but in Berke, Westmoreland, and Fugitive ::41;i,e I , 441. 1 ;ineti the Bah llndre tle sr rrsosso -twos proiss;asst and mesas, one or two other Locofoco counties, resole- P1"I1"rm, and spitting thatl.l of founitil on nriiion ex peeler:oil as Como mew and ptlelt the z t4lt n i, i 7t , t ,, n . t. t.o ttV i t . o w tte ite tt . ni t t o tn n; I T . h i a t t o t LlF . h . tr eprlre mou lions favorable to their stile have been a. I Ili Ilea kern (rein their struele• Cejs. therefore. Not in arce , lanoe with 1 .. t; ' true polle ' vrt . .n it e h ll (hilted by Locofoco Conventions. Still ihx and Jeloi Van Remit are s elfin. II "f the ‘"'' a the proposition is far from being settled, bricks of the new sei e ed, but ilie Eve,fin,z thtt 0 0 detet"ealttlou nrrlerbilon.houl4 - p r eer "r :ii ,r 47l:Z: -' : as the entire patronage of th e Canal Board, feat, the 0:d Barn-burner meals, .tel V. : :t n :it n i r . ' l : Y e ' re 7l ; - : ,n r= " • i t n i n ue rur ee i rt i L t t's 7 l ,7 o ll,l turs; rl7 l ;iii weightier mutters of the I ter" WHI the "Di'itlOClßliii UtHon." Itt . leA lit the Bit (to' Mtn wit tn. w s it:tol3 c er. An I P .nun 4N. r rout serpeefull• tn ,'lode,, mHei r. vanian," "Bedford Gazette," and other As me Piety II rad taw vett a ore cert . nu. I r t" , e , t ., e:tel , tonote for aril loge ,rue ~ffrt -. , r ~T L . eon 'Cr nn ehteetiong to en olio, log leading LoCofireo papers, are virulently op. weious, we quote with pleasure, "Putty ror ono:, ni!ti reznol to Oust inenoure. tn forth, HAI enh of the oite.tion to the re , .l le or Penretyletnin, poring the movement. and may succeed in Is r.z." heheolno tint Trthe, the question belongs-thatt ~TX the, ito erenv ,, lierotition reccomplishing their ends the people do A. 111 AN WITH TWi.N V W With much reweet. lAm Gentle...a, Your uhelient .en Ant, not see to the matter and return a clear I. if I) ‘,V matt ra ing MIISC r. Miter, h uh JNO. C. ELI.Pt. " To Ntett-s, E W %hie, W. W. Paxton, Jno. sat majority .o favor of the , whose real mane is Paid io he Nathaniel, A O. Karts, conindttel. I measure. J. Bird, is in jail in Camden, N. J.. on it charge of bigamy, and varimes other eller. ; The Public Works are yearly adding to gee. On Sunday Elizabeth II errungion, the debt of the State, instead of helphig a lady of Plolerlelisliia, visited him in pris m pay it off, and if things go on long at en and aeeertained he WAS the matt to the present rate the State will be swamped. w Inen bite was married on ore Oth of fa. The North Branch Canal is yearly eating 1 Y 1"81. On 111 e same 114 Y lie was visited he nnuthler up from half a million to a million of del- glary f i rom o h Kete om r i ugton, mura was mar rie d lars, and the Portage road, which costs in may I t is „ Afro ; hmtieini ; more than it earns to run it, is absorbing a wife in Reading, atwitter in Wilmington. hundreds of thousands more. Political Del., ;mil another yet in Philadelphia.— oormorants are growing fat on the pick- , The prisoner is only Omni 23 years of I it is stated declares at I. I age, an d, , tns ings afforded by these works, but the pea keenly wives, a statement which may be pie are fleeced to give theta the opportu- tre e , art more than nite•fourill of that time nity. The first letting of the contracts her bag been found within a few dare.— on the new Portage road were awarded to It is alleged that he abandoned each wife political favorites at a coot of 5u60,000 a• soon afire marriage, anti that they never heard of him after until his recent arrest. hove what they could have been contract- , The affair creates the greatest excitement ed for, an d t his is but the beginning. So , i r , Caindetn, and line induced an immense Ilong as the- State is the paymaster the l number or people to seek admission for State will be plucked. Oar only safety the purpose of seeing him. and hope of escape is in getting rid of the public works altogether. They will not sell for coat, nor relieve usof more than a realty of our .indebtedness ; but their sale will save us from further indebted nese, and from all the corruption and die, grace now attached to their management. Plow, let it be borne in mind that not only is the Whig State ticket composed of caudhlatestavorable to the sale of the Pub lic Works, but our candidates for Senator and Assembly—Dr. kinurauss and Mr.. Ferrets—are earnest - advocate*. of the mea sure. See to it that they are elected.— One vote in each House may deoide the mat ter. Dr., 1 3.1zrziNap. is, every way worthy the confidence and support of the, Whigs of the district; We hare known him TEMPERANCE. IN NEW YORK.— The names of sill persons-1,143mnd to sell liquor in each rad iliTtetv York, is to he made out and given to the Captain dile ward in which they reside, whose duty it is to obtain the names of all unlicensed dealera, and report them for prosecution. as-The grand jury in. Philadelphia have found, a true bill against Thomas J. P. Stokes, and Matthew Vanduseu, Jr.. the former Laurette physician, abd the latter Quarantine Master of the port, charging them with misdemeanor in office in permit ting the _bark Mandarin, with yellow fo• ver on bond, to pus quarantine. !?The American Mothodiitshave built churches at the rate of three per week, and printed books at the rate of one per minute; during the past sixty years. 0:7 - The - Millerites have fixed upon. May 1?,1.8fol, as the date of the destruction of the world. They say there will be no mistake about it this time. 110' Hon. Neal Dow, author of tha "Maims la►w," addressed several larePro hibitiou meetings at Harrisburg last week: EPIDEMIC AT THE BoUTII.--ZIADEPS is sweeping o'er our laud, says the Biloxi tiffs Shure of the 17th inst., in the interior as well as on the coast. In the high pine woods, heretofore thought to be aw almost impregnable fortress of health. typhoid fe ver and kindred diseases . prevail to en a. larmieg extent. The like lina never be fore heen known here, by the oldest in habitants. Several deaths have occurred in the rount:y, from diseases supposed to have been contracted either in Mobile or on our own enact. 'rile ill health of our inhlbitants generally, in the country and els w here, has caused a general stagnatioa ut business, CORIOOII FREAK OF a DJADKAN....-4 man by the name of Win: Blevist; got intutti• rated-in Nieholaaville,,,lessamine roomy, Ky., nit Sunday last, and tinder its influ ence imbibed the kit* that God ftad sent him to chastise all unruly 'teeny's, and said that he intended to wytip them all to death. 'Phil pretended•mission he car ried nut, between Harrodsburg and Nielo olasville, by visiting, all the farms and fac tories and belaboring every negro so un fortunate as to encounter him. One he heat and bruised to death, while others lie maimed for life. MrProf. Henry B. Patterson, of Penn srlirsnis Medical College, has withdrawn from the Department of Materia Modica in that Institution, on account of enfeebled health, and Dr. John B. Biddle has. been chosen in his room. ICTMr. Bowie and Mr. Ligon, the Whig and Democratic Candidates for Gov: ernor of Maryland. have agreed to Cati.e.. the Slate in company with each other— malting alternate speeches. akirArt elderly lady died almost instant ly a few days since, at Palmyra, Missouri, from a sting of a hornet, inflicted on the wrist. IcrThe Whigs, of Massachusetts have nominated Enter' Washburn, for Governor, and Thos. O. Plunkett, for Lieutenant Gov. 'ernor. • CoMMUNirATIM. Um* Itleelhogor *ls Friend* of a Prohlbllory Ltqaur Law. At a meeting:of the people of Marti* Count , eonvenvitat the Court Ilittlesi. in this h il (igh of Oeuyebnrg . on .Saturdav, Poll of Seplemher inst.. for the put.. posit of constiltiotr upon onertsores the best calculated to secure a Ptolohitory Liquor Law in Pennsylvania, Win. -8. .11ranu don, Esq., of York Sprhres. Wee called to t he chair, and E. W. Staltie ehl A. W. Marinley, Esq., appointer) Seerctarien. The meeting was ad•lreiteeti+Av 114 v. Mr. Weever, of Moine. Ull she re t biert of the marline. After which the Executive Committee reported that they had addressed copies , o f the following letter' to the eandid.itest each political party for State Senator snit Assembly, and had received replies from, Dr. Atellingeri the lirltig anutibite foe- State Senator. and Messrs. Were end El lis. candidates for Assembly. and that they had made use of till the mews in their power to reach, the nominee of the Remo - ramie party (J. Wythe Douglees) htilltail failed, so that they had no itotronuoieation with hint, but were satiqied, from all they could learn, that he was opposed to a Pro hibitory Liquor Law. Srpt. 1.0, 1853 8341:—The undersigned, a committee appointed for the permute, tahe the liberty, in view of your inwition oi the public es a candidate fora seat in the Legislature of Pennsylvania, of propounding to 1 ou the following , interroiatory. stud respectfully ask ■ prompt rfply: If elected , wlll you, vote for, end rote your best effort to procure the passage 0/ a lave /MINI' in its pro/Wong to the Maine Liquor Law. tirdids. king the manufacture and Woof intoxlratinik li quors RP a beverage, wuu the proviio that said art shall be submitted to, the people lOr their a• doption ur r ,i.beij. , o Tr. , friend,. of Prohibition o ill meet in meow meeting at the Court Pone in Gettysburg. on sisturday, the 24th inst., to hear report from this committee, mot center in n•feranee to fit ther Cu.! lion; you will therefore. it is presumed see the importance of having your prior to that date. Y.ry resprcqu,lly yours. W. STA 111. E. W. W. PAX FUN. .INO. 1. HILL lallt I Z. COMMltire, LETTER rprm JACOB A. 31TE110, ESQ. (floe latcaT FAVT..) ,, T. Sept. 2.1, 15627 Deer Sire :—Tnn w of the 10th But. but holm receive!: ant io repiv to you , interrogatory, reepectitig the entire' (- would take in the leaislatum, Of glacial) In reference to the , •)laluo Liquor Law" queetlon. wouli soy to the 11-et Owe: I would be oppmei to, and elw aye douldel the propriety of furring upon thepenple a law vliuller to Ile prOVifif.ll% to the "Akio* Liquor Law," without first solimittlevt it to the people for their approbotion. lint atamll I ho electel a Itepretentative to the Lenittitu-e of this Mite. 1 will favor (and If the question I. brooch? on) will vote for • "Pr. - dill:limn Liquor Lew" with a proviso ttvit e,i I Low ohnuld he referred to the vote of the people for their niprovel nr divaproval. • With due reenact, I remain roue &lent JACOB A. MTER.I. To E. W. Stehle, Wm, li. Patton, John L. lIIU and A. B. hurts, committee. LETTER FROSI OR. D. SMUT:S . OIM. Eeee Rants. Pelt. 22, Ish3. %sem E. W. Stable, Jon. L. till, S. R. Kerb and . W Pinson. coalmines. Ar. Gentlemen:-1 hove the honor to acknowledge the re. eelpt of your noto errinl ring whether— "lf elect. I to the Senate, will you vote for owl nee neer beat effort to prfwore the poems of • law el miler In Its • provision. to the Moine Liquor Law, prohibiting the sale ant manufacture of intotlentlng bloom se a bevermo, with the prone° that RAW art Moult M eubmitted to th. people for their lidopt lon or rejection'" le slew of the reeponandllty of the donee devolved upon a legislator, ganef to the dlecherge of hie official duties, unto^ the sanctity of en oath—a reeiwualbillty that can no t, be folly met hr an bowel and faithful seting up to the conviction., of • deliberate Judgment—l enelfret feel free to myoelf, In abeam of ouch deliberation, to the support of any Rental leglelation. The ernhamuuments to which such* pledge way eulglect lenislotor In the honest and onemleutlona Meehan". of dote to the Commonwealth. and to his ernititnentm, strike, me an being en apparent on to rem ler it unnecreo. nary for me to enlarge thereupon. A bill may cone up nu any particular toplc—he that topic what It may—ant while the principle Involved In It might he unoltJecnousble In itself, yet the, bill may be encumbered by provlolona and • &Mai highy oiliest ant olajmnonsble. WO., a Legislator. mini m° to the support of a bill time drawn, In advance of Its poiolbleproelsions being known. would be fermi Into the el eeeeeeeee of either apparently ebbing's hie magma pledge, or what may be worse, be forced Muth:Me the oath under which he tioltes Mee. While, therefore, I eounot pledge myself IS the SUMO" of the "MMus Lew," or any other taw.* am foie to Minn the right of the people to control the action of their Repro. tentative; and bailey* It to be the duty of • Rogirments. ties. In his itispreeentativ• eapadty, fialthfally to carry out the wishes of his constituents, eimegially when ash ertobite are fully expresso: and undendond I can have no Monte. l ' elf "fes, Oen In saying that if elected to the State &mate, could , have no &hlection to voiles ter • bill to tat the erase of the movie of Pennoylvania upon the propriety of ahaotios a Prohibitory Law. I halo the horror to be veryrenioothillr ram. • DAVID. DDYLIDODD. .• The following.preamble and' resolution were then unsulmously adopted : Whereas The views- and purposes of the two candidates for the State Senate. from this Senatorial District ; so fares we have been able to loin, them. in referenee to a Prohibitory I:iquor Low, to be sub mitted to the people for their adoption or 'rejection. are to to entirely unsatisfactory; .„ therefore, Resoled, 'Mit with. our itionektions or duty, and, the pledgee we have given to each other o, this great question nt, moral reform and State pulley, vb. cennnt eoneistehtly give oar mufflers to Dr. Mellinger enti,J, Wythe Douglass for the ,:ter,ate, at the ensuing flaw election. On motion; the Convention proceeded to nominate a candidate for State &Mai. Hon. Gnonoz CHAMBRIIS was than no-' minated, which was ikccepted‘ by miaow lion. • , • r And then, on motion, it, was Resolved, That e committee of flee be appoint. , ed to wait upon Hon. dodge Chamber., and ten. der him the nomination of this 1111111111 meeting said committee to hays power to SU sap victory that may occur. Whereupon the chair , appointed Bev. D. D. 'Clark, Solomon Powers, George Warren, J. B'. McPherson Ind. DC. J. L.. Hill said committee. On motion. Resolved, That Mesa "roesedinare. including Ow . . letters of candidates for dsnaurcand lispowents— , tire, be publiahed.' Op motion, adjourned. • (Signed by the °freers.) ' POLITICAL VOA:. Sept. 27.—The excitement among tile, politicians of the Democratic party in.thie city has reached its highest point. It a almost certain that Charles O'Conner, U. S. District Attorney. and Greene C. Bronson, Collector of the port, will be re. moved on account of the letters the, wrote to the wit alkali meeting. There w adore talk of their resigning, and (hue tweepittfi i , he disgrace of a removal „ We rail attention in an advertisement, in anothor t edition, of i tven remedies y one Ow "Fere' did — 4/VW: and the other heir -Ito Ra Votpiliaint." prepared under the direction of the Ilniversity of tree Medi cine. aml popttlar Klowledge, curl issued by order 411 the nowt! of Trustees, twin i ts 1, a i nettory. in Philadelphia. As everething originating front th is in stltntion