Star and banner. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1847-1864, June 06, 1856, Image 2

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CIETTV'SBIBIRC.
Friday Evening, June 6, 1856,
voutrtuf THIE AMERICAN NATIONAL CON
13333113
TOIL PRESIDENT.
MALLARD FILLMORE.
POR VICE PRESIDENT, .
JAIMEW JACKSON DONELSON
Union State Ticket.
0. Cknt CONIIIISMOYER
TEOII/0 B. COCHRAN ? of York, (Whig.)
-' , t ATIDTTOR OCICERAL.
,DARWIN PHELPS, of Armstrong, (Amer.)
' • - sarivEroa. GENERAL.
B. LAPORTI3, of Brad (Republican.)
I hope we may find some means in future
of shielding ourselves from Foreign influence,
=—political, commercial or in whatever form it
I
easy be attempted , wish there were an
iceen of fire between this and the old world.-
14,fersost.
THE SUMNER OUTRAGE.
tel. The assault upon Senator SUMNER
has attracted general attention, and prove.
ked general indignation throughout the
Free States. Never si n ce the formation
of the Government, have Northern men
been so united in sentiment as in their de-.
nunciation of the sudden, brutal, cowardly
and murderous assault, made by a South
'Carolina Locofbco upon a Northern Sen.
-ator--made, too, by the connivance of fel- 1
low Loosfoco Congressmen, and with a
view to hack forever the expression of' ,
anti-Ellavery sentiment by Northern Rep
reactances in Congress. The subject has
been investigated iu the Senate and House.
"The 'report of the committee of the latter
will be found in another column. Its re.
'commendation for the expulsion of Brooks
will doubtless lead to debate and probably
other scenes of violence, should Southern
dictation be farther attempted ; but it is
vet probable that the requisite two-thirds
*ill vote to sustain the committee. Brooks
id a Locofoco and a Southern man, and
Will be defended by the Locofoco party of
Congress, which, in morals. has become a
*ma Of ruffians without principle or heart
twee conclave which has sunk below
the respect of reputable then who recog
vise amoral sentiment. and are not prepa
red to defend and eulogize wrong. BO
tweet' shielding Herbert the murderer of
cm Irish vraiterat his hotel, Rust the street
bully . who attacked (beefy, and Books
who , invaded the Senate Chamber and
-soaked its oaryet with the hie/A of I mem:
her of that body, it has sunk to a mean
position, scarcely worthy of contempt.
• Many monster meetingsjuive hetm held
.on this subject. One at Brooklyn was
presided over by Mayor Hall of that City,
and, was addressed by several ablo men.—
from the reports of the speeches we ex
4ractihe following. The one voted against
fdr.'Sumner. for the Senate, and the other
has :always been a Democrat, but finds
that, atty no longer fit to be supported by
decent moral citizens
."Mr. Allen, of Massachusetts, said that
when Itlr.Sutoner was elected to .his place
Ito voted against bite, but when Mr. Sum
ectrwas elected a •Salter he became a Sen.
for of the country, and every men in the
eoontry ems bawd to support him in Free ,
Speak. Atone of Mr. Sumter 's politi
cal kremlin, that was. ho could say that
moans* bid been or could be brought e
piglottis *Leacher, Ninety-nine out of
every bwedred of the citizens of 31tusachn.
•sette would vote any amount of her treat
ers ur any quota of her men to maintain
the liberties of her Representatives at
Washington, if necusat, . [Enthusiastic
tebeenr.)
Ex-Mayor Lambert was ready to define
bin position. Ever einco the outrage on
Sumner. his blood had been filled with in
dignation. The stoic calmness of Douglas
was worse than the brutality of Brooks ;
it was a disgrace to that party for which
he had labored all his life—God forgive
Lim [Enthusiastic cheers.)
The meeting in New York City was
very large and attended by many of the
most conservative men of the city. John
A. Stevens, President of the Bank of Com
tura, called the meeting to order; and
-amoarthe Vice Presidents were Ex-May
or Havemeyer, Ex-Lieutenant Gov, Bra
dLlt,Ex-fdayor Kin gel aud, Erastus Brooks,
' of, the Express, John A. King. Joseph
Maxie. Ex-Mayor Brady, and malty others
of equal respectabifity aud influence. The
leading speech of the evening was made
by. Datentr, Lona, Esq., one of the leading
lawyers of the city, always a "conserve
. tire" man, and a supporter of the Corn pro
mise of 1 , 850. His sense of right, and re
spect for the Constitution' have driven him
to, exprees. his opinions boldly and elo.
•• trendy. We annex the report and com
mend it to general perusal :
Futow CITIZENS: We are'not here
to-night for any political purpose ;.wo are
not bent to further the interests of any ,
party ; but we arc here as chitties, went
ben of all parties, to express our aenti
amnia with reference to the late. outrage
upon Senator Sumner. Why is it that
Neir•ltork, speaking through you, canoe°.
tad with& commerce reaching front China
through all the borders of this country to
the porta of,the Paciao—why is it that you,
tonuatisi with the internal improvements
°fah' country in a manner which redounds
ao taw* to its honor and glory—why is it
that you are all collected here to-night up
on au occasion like the present I It is
not that you want, information ; it is' not
tkat ,you ;toed excitement; it is not that
,
you noun any one to stimulate you to
ari aitrwlon of sentiment, but it is that a
?nautical', abiding and steady judgment
ohoold by pronounced byyou to-night, not
*I It City of New York, not as the peo
‘44,llutto oolketoi, hat &apart° of one great
eitipire aro !Mott the WO mayor seta, as
to the principle upon which civil govern.?
went, upon which free government. if it can
exist upon this earth, must ultimately rest
[Applause]. My fellowmitmen, the ques
tion we are here to consider is not a ques
tion about Premed 8. Brooks. Lot the
name be sunk, and lot it over be held in
detestation. A name is of no consequence
in the question before us. The name of
Senator kiuniner [applause], our revered
friend, an educated man, an honor to the
literature, jurisprudence, and the politics
of the country [applause] ; a man with
whose political son timeuts 1 confess I have
no serious connection. Let that name it
self be sunk ; let its honors, it, classical
chaplets be buried in the dust itself. It is
not Senator Sumner, it is not a bleeding
Senator, it is not a sufferieg man that we
have before us ; but it is a prostrate Sena
tor, it is a Senator of the United States of
America [applause] cut down in the Sen
ate House for words spoken in debate, call
ing upon you, gentlemen and fellow-eiti.
:ens, to say what you think of freedom of
debate; what you thick of the sanctity of
the Senate, what you think of the very
foundation of this Rbpublio and of govern
ment in the whole world. It is a question
of government, a question ofall order pros
trated, of law despised and set at naught,
upon which we are now called to deliberate
[applause]. My fellow-citizens, the facts
in this case are most graphically described
by the actors in the scene, and I shall read
to you in a very brief summary the details
of what occurred, so that you may know
precisely, and in the very words of the
party assailed, the facts os they really are,
so Mut you may ant upon them in your po
litical conduct. I read the following ac
count of the proceedings : Mr. Slidell of
La. alluded to a telegraphic, dispatch' pur
porting to he the evidence given by Mr.
Sumner before the Committee appointed to
investigate the circumstances of the assault
made upon Mr. Sumner, in which Mr.
Sumner says : "After some formal busi
ness, a message was received from the
House of Representatives announcing • the
death of a member of that body from Mis
soori," Hero you have announced to the
Senate the ntessage of the death of one of
the members of the House of Representa
tives, to which the gentleman belonged,
who perpetrated this outrage upon Senator
Sumner. A member of that Howse of
Representatives was stricken down by the
band of death, calling upon that body to
adjourn out of respect to his memory. • A
message is brought to the Senate announ
cing this death, and out of respeot to the
House of Representatives. thus visited by
the death of ono of their members, the Sen
ate suspended their .busineas, after enlogi
ums upon the deceased. Then, gentlemen,
what took place? Senator Sumner re.
mains in his seat, and a member of the
House of Representative, thought dint a
fitting occasion, without regard to that iol
°inn admonition which God Himself • bad
given, to prepare himself for au aseault
upon Senator Sumner, the results of which
he did nut or probably could not be sup
posed to know or care for ; and for that
purpose he comes to that place—the most
elevated, venerated and important of all
places in this Republic, the Senate cham
ber of the United States—that place where
the affairs of the Government are serious
ly delibereted upon by Senators, compris-
ing the' best wisdom and the most solid
virtue of all this• Country, wliere, the treaties
with foreign Governments are to be deba
ted upon and considered, where debates are
to be conducted not by young and impas
sioned men, but by the sober acid delibera
tive wisdom of the country—a place to be
filled not with vigorous men,. not with
fighting men, but with elderly and studi
ous mon, with men to be distinguished not
by force and power of body, but by form
of mind and venerableness of age, by ele-
Native of private and public virtue. What
occurred there. Let us for a moment read
what Senator Sumner tells us of the co
curreuee :
[Here follows the statement of Mr. Sumner,
published last week ]
Here, then, wo have a man coming into
the Senate Chamber and makidg this as
sault, not pretending to be animated by
any public motive, nor carrying out any
measure of principle or policy, bat giving
as his reason that he had read tho speech
of Scooter Sumner, owl it was • libel on
South Carolina . and Mr. Butler, who was
a relative of his. Although "my relative"
is the party alluded to by Senator Sumner,
I Preston Brooks am the judge, and more
over, I tun the exeontioner. I am here
with my cane to attack and cripple you una
wares, with your [min hand, and 1 deal you
a blow, the first effect of which is to Atm
you. Now, gentlemen, lot usace what were
the circumstances attending thescene asde
scribed by the actors in it, because it is not
my Faros° to stimulate an excitement, but
I desire that the impression made hero
shall be exact, durable and abiding, and
that whatever may suit your own judgement
of right or propriety shall he toreafter ac
ted upon [applause], so that public men
shall know, when they come for any pur
pose before this great people. not this peo
ple of New-York, half a million as we are,
but before the great people that inhabit
this vast republic, that the) shall be dealt
with according to the judgements of their
fellow-citizens [applause]. Let me now
read to you, gentlemen, the explanation of
Mr. SLIDELL, with . whom I certainly have
no public or private animosity, no political
conflict or strife. I have met him io pri
vate life, and I believe him to bo a peacea
ble man I recollect him us once a citizen
of this very State. hat us hear his state:
went in • regard to this matter: "He had
not speken to Mr. Sumner for upwards of
two. years, and did not consider himself
upon such tams of intimacy as . to justify
any expreision of sympathy upon his
part." My fellow-citizeos, here is a 43n
utor from—hal I -beg you to drop his
name:. I- beg you to hear in silence, and
not to prejudge him as he seems to have
prejudged , others;
bat le t me picture to
you that bleeding Senator, atuinted by the
blows of a Mau of superior power in brutal
force, struck down in the Sonata House.—
He was a ge ntleman whom he must hare
"met in social circlee." I did not speak to
him
.for two years, and I could not express
any sympathy with him [hisses.] My
fellow-citizens, is this the character of a
• public man ? • (Cries of "No I No I"] Is
this the character of a Senator ? [Shouts
of "No I No :"]. • is this the character of
a roan of common feeling and humanity ?
[hisses.] No sympathy ! Why, if my
worst enemy were bleeding at my feet, and
it wet but to give him a, look of eynapathy
of returning consciousness from. being stun
ned by the blow, I confess I cannot conceive
it my dat7 to have passed him by [Cheers].
I.' wish to -call your attention to the few
remarks that I have to make of the dan
ger that is now existing in this Republic
, from the materials which now compose
!the Senate of the United States peen"
In the first place, a man who had not spo
ken to Mr. Sumner for two years, could
not, when he was bleeding and stunned.
express his sympath [Cheers]. I will read
now to you the debate of the Senate of the
United States, froth an authorized reporter,
giving you the language of the men them
solves. “Mr. Douglas corroborated the
smtembet of the latter, so far as the evi- 1
dence alluded to himself (Mr. Douglas.)
He found the incurrence brought to his
notice, and said his first impression on
hearing of the matter was, to go to the
Senate Chamber and endeavor to restore
quiet." [A voice ; I do not believe it,
Cheers and Laughter.] Here, gentlemen,
yon have the impulse of a Senator of the
United States [applause]—a conservative
impulse. Mr. Sumner was stunned by
the blow, and it was the impulse of Sena
tor Douglas to settle the question [laugh
ter].• But, gentlemen, Senator Douglas is
a man unlike some of the warm Southern
blood of the country, and whose nature is
not to act upon impulse, but upou consid
eration.
Let us see what he did : ..But
upon reflection, if ho did so. under the per.
sonal relations in which he stood to Mr.
Sumner, his motives might have been Mis
construed." Here, gentlemen, is the con
servative impulse of a Senator of the Uni
ted States to go into the Senate Chamber
to whibh he belonged to restore quiet, alto
gether quenched and suppressed by the
thought that his motives may be misunder
stood, and therefore he did not go in until
it was all over [Cheers]. Should you not,
Mr. Douglas, have interfered and prevent
ed such a dastardly and unmanly attack by
a brutal ruffian upon a brother Senator ?
But, my fellow-citizens, this is a Senator
of the United States [Shouts, cries uf "Ju
das Douglas," Arnold Douglasi. This,
fellow-citizen, is a Senator of the United
States. He is a Senator of the. United
States who would not go Ago the Senate
House to protect a prostrate Senator for'
fear that his motives should be misunder-
stood [Laughter and hisses]. Now, gen
tlemen, let, me introduce to you another
Senator, for whom .privately I entertain
the , highest respect—l mean Senator
Toombs, who would not interfere at all but
approved of it. I regret this the more as
I have always respected him as an individ
ual. How could he see a fellow-Senator,
bleeding, bruised and crushed by the bled
geon of's villain without rushing to his as
sistance ? My friends, I anr unwilling to
believe that the Slave States endorse this
matter. ,I kuow many . Southern people,
chivalrous, manly and gencroue, and I am
certain that they would be the last to toler
ate mob.= act u 3 114. Brooke has comtuit,-
i ted. I cannot further believe that the
{ Southern press, notwithstanding the ex
citement of the present time, will express
themselves in favor of this brutal outrage.
lam sure they will not. The great body
of the intelligent Southern men *ill not
favor this. I love and respect many of
our Southern brethren—l am well acquain-
ted with some of them, and so far as my
ktuncleage .of them goes ..I feel perfectly
convinced that they will set their mark of
disapprobation upon the outrage Which we
have assembled to denunciate. We will,
and must denuncithe it, and show our Rep
resentatives and , Senators by our conduct
and firmness, that we will not tamely sub
mit to it. Chivalry ! It is the meeting of a
i man by his equal. abstaining even the'
'advennige of Ana iti wind. To a peek - of
I chivalry, or of gallintry,in such a ammo!
Lion as this I Why, my fellow citizens, it is
'like that whieh Q the Romans in their enmity .
affixed to the term faith when they meant ,
bad faith, they called it "Punic faith."—
'lf you wish to honor the word chivalry, do
not call the conduct , of the man from South
Carolina chivalry [applause]. I appeal for
I the honor of your historic knowledge, of
I your ancient associations, and of our com
mon language, that this word may not be
thus perverted.' My fellow chivies, I will
now mill your attention to some other Mr
eumstanees—and to very few, for you do
not need instruction in this matter. We
have now an outrage which, as betweenl
two individuals, might excite our eympat hy 1
and indignation ; bat it is a national
question, and aitind ividual
, considerations
are sunk. The question whether a man 1
from South Carolina may not have been I
unduly excited and have committed an ,
indiscretion, is in itself comparatively a 1
Itrifle—atrocious as it may be. The danger,
the importance, the gravity of the occasion
l ie in the manner in which it was received ' 1
and treated by others. You have peen 1
how those who stood by treated it. Let ,
UP look at the act of the Senate as a body.
What has that Senate done ?—and I beg
you will hear me with a slight degree of
patience, because it is of the greatest conse
quence that this country should see to the
protection of the privileges or the Senate.
The privileges of the Senate ? Whose
privileges are they ? Are they the privi
leges of the men who ore elected to the
Senate? Is it that Mr. Slidell, or Mr.
Douglas, or Mr. Sumner should be waited
upon first ? Is it for the elevation of their
personal dignity ? Far from IL It is
that the Senate House, and the persons of
the Senators who meet there, should be
sacred because they debate and decide the
interests of some three millions of men.--
! It is not their privilege, it is my' privilege,
it is your privilege, it is our privilege.—
It is the privilege of 'the common sailor
who has a law to be passed in regard to
commerce. It is the privilege of the mer
chant who has a law to be passed in
regard to trade. It is the privilege '
of the
manufacturer who has a law to be passed
regarding his interest. It is the privilege
of every man in this country who lives
under the Government, who is to be
benefited by the Government, or who is to
be ruined if the Government is prostrated.
If the deliberatebodies of the Unieti.cannot
debate and cannot protect their debates,
what is Government? Can there 'be a
law? Can there bo a discussion, can the
public interests be looked at and carried
out ? No, my fellow citizens, it is our
privilege hat makes sabred the Senate
[loan. Tho privilege of the Senate is,
that the members shall .deternine their
own order. They shall deterthine what is
decent among themselves, an d; \ they shall
determine it exclusively. When, therefore,
a debate occurs in the Senate, if the Senate
do not judge it improper, his a concluded
thing. They, by the Constitution of the
country and the necessity of the Govern
ment, are the exelnsivejudgee.
When, therefore, Mr. Sumner made
his speech—l do not dare how much it
may be criticised—l do not care how
much it may seem to others or to myself to
have been severe or caustie or personal—
it is the only way in which the Govern
ment can be made to go on to regard that
speech as belonging to the Senate ; and if
the Senate doss not interfere or think it
improper, no man out of the Senate has a
right to interpose judgment upon that sub
ject in the way of executing its *entente.
Let me put this to you in soother way.--.
Suppose that the President oethe United'
States heti gone with a ile of marines in
the Senate—his conduct having been crit
icized in the Senate with what he and his
friend, supposed to have hem undue asper
ity—and lie had undertaken to inflict that
judgment which Ito conceived himself
entitled to pass, in the manner in which
the gentleman from South Carolina—
[Many voices—No gentleman]—inflicted
it upon Mr. Sumner, how would such ac
tion have been regarded? Would it not
have been a revolution ? But if the Pres
ident may not do it—if the men elected
by the suffrages of thirty million of mon
may not invade that Senate Chamber,
not even by his presence, can it be that a
man with no privilege in that place may
go there, undertaking to execute his judg
ment, not upon matter of public policy.
but upon the impulse of private vengeance
[No. no, no I from all parts of the house.]
Will the Cothmittee of the liuited States
Senate investigate dile matter of the. at
tack upon Senator Sumner, and come to a
judgment I You will observe that the
Constitution of the United States gives no
judicial authority to the Senate for the
protection of its own deliberations ; but it
has been judged by the highest tribunal.
of the country, and it is the law of every
organized Government that the high de
liberative
bodies of the country' have the
privilege to protect themselves, and secur
ing the freedom of debate and the imunity
of their persons. New the Senate of the
United States had this privilege. If I
should go into the Senete without the per
mission
of the Sergetint-at.arms, I should
be interferring with the privileges of the
Senete. andli wouldjie the right of that
body to commit me .to prison ; not be.
cause it was granted by the Constitution,
but because it was a power that existed in
the nature, and structure of the Govern
ment itself, without which it is plain that
the Senate could, not deliberate. So
could the Senate, in every instance, pro
tent its own privilege, by trying the offen
der, by sentencing the offender. and by de
claring their sense of !tie violation of their
rights. and by an adequate sentence and
punishment, .But, , my fellow citizens,
the Senate of the ~hied States appoint a
committee ttrinvestigate the case, and to
report upon , this violation of their privil
eges. They way, however, that they can
not try ate adjudicate: it They turn it
over to the Hatlett'or Representatives.—
They , therefore so fur as their judgment
goes, declare that they cannot investigate
this,offenee against their own privileges.
Why not I Doett the Senate atean to say
that if I had'enneltito the Senate-bruise,
and had .struck Senator Sumner, or any
other Senator, %Sidle he was in the pos.
session et the protection of this privilege,
that I should nut have been punished ?
Do they inean : io 'say that the Senate
house shall be an Open arena for the ex-
Whitton of erivate vengeance I Theo, gen
tlemen, there is an end of deliberation
on end to she soundness of the highest de
liberative body in the country. What is
their apology 1 , Why, that the members
of the House ofliepratentatives are priv.
ileged, except irt matters of treason, fel
ony, or breach of the peace ; and so, they
say, we cannotery him on a mere breach
of• privilege. tan they not try a man
who has conunined the grossest breach of
the law of lite land 1 tan they not try a
m a nr - fee perinea* act ar 'vicilanee4 Zan
not the Senate'nf the United, States judge
and punish any breach of privilege when
it is, . commityld,. by
. a member -of the
House of ,Repretieutatiyes 1 Could they
not punish except for a breach of Ilea
peace. Such. an act of violence in the,
chamber of the Senate was the highest
possible breach of the peace whin could
be committed in the country. I ask
attention to this..becamse it will be a mat
ter of great consequence in this country to
judge the conduct of those who thus act
in the Senate; because—aud 1 now pre
dict it, with all the assurance of profession
al vison--it will follow that it le no priv
ilege of the House of Representatives
which has been violated by this gentle
man from South Carolina. [The speaker
was here interrupted by cries of "No gen-
Ileman—nothing but a blackguard r 3—
How can the House of Representatives
punish a man who has , not broken their
privilege. f They have no general guard.
ianship of their members. They cannot
punish one who shoots down. trailer in
a hotel! It is a breach of the privileges
of the House. I predict to you that this
attack upon the Senate will find no ade
quate punishment at the seat of Govern
ment [Great applause.] Look at the
criminal proceedings in that part of the
Union 1 This atrocious cue, as between
man and man, results in a civil case ; but
how do yin' think that the magistrate to
whom it was referred measured the
_ex
tent of the outrage upon the person, upon
the dignity, upon the honor of a Senator
of the United States? How does he es
timate it ? Gentlemen, he demands pay
from the mail from South Carolina in the
incredible sum of $5OO [Leughter.] Now,
my fellow-citizens. I bring you to the
point of this address. How is this coon.
try to be saved 1 How is it that the Sen
ate is to be preserved ? When I look at
this subject I have n) pinta t aottghts.—
It is not a thing that a man can look at in
any private view. If the Senate be de•
etroved, the Union is destroyed ; because
the 'Union of the States exists in the Sen
ate. In the Senate the States are equal.
There Rhode .Island • measures Chin;
there Texas and Florida out double New
.York. It is therefore in the Senate' that
we look for the . Union of the States, and
twilling is more astonishing or more a
larming than the apparent madness of
that great Section of our eountry, whose
whole protectiou depends upon the Senate
being upheld, in seeking to prostrate and
eventually destroy the diguity of the `Sen
ate [Applause.] Prostrate the Senate,
end what would Texas be i Prostrate
the Senate, and what would South Caro.
lina be 1 Prostrate the Senate. and what
would even the great and flourishing Com.
monwealth of Georgia be ? What would
those small, and even those great com
munities be except as connected with this
glorious and powerful union of the States
represented in the Senate ? If, therefore,
a blow be aimed at the Senate of the Unit,
ed States, it is a blow aimed moat effect
ually at the very heart of the Union. A e l
a Union loving man, believing it fraught
with inumerable blessings of wealth, of ,
gretness, of power, and of civil liberty, I
stand alarmed at the. madness of thosel
men most interested in its preservation„
1
calmly looking on and seeing the degrada
tion of the Senate. Is the Senate of. the
United States to be attacked and hails no
power to vindicate itself f to be open to
the assault amen who choose to come
in with bludgeons and knock down hs
members ? Look at it for a moment.—
Here is a treaty to be ratified. Somemen
have so Interest in it, perhaps against it.-r
Disable a Senator or two and the business is i Such ate thelacieuch are the owns. I
done: So in regard to any law, or apportion -1 ger—a aeries of them, which ought to ring
ment. For Hound States Senators speak free- through every city and field, through ev
ly, and sometimes personally; they
must
oft-
ery palace and cottage of the Free States
en discuss character; they must often deeply
wound person! sensibility ; themust provoke —which ought to fly, like the fiery cross
the nephew of manyan uncle [Greatioughter.] on the highlands of Scotland, over the
But are the nephews to govern the country.-- 1 mountains and through the valleys of the
[Laughter?) Are they to come in and ob- Free States starting the sleeping, rousing
struct the Senate—the old men, the wise men ) the thoughtless uniting the free clans. and
the deliberative men of the country ? Far be it.
Let the voice of an indignated country from ev enkindling wh atever glimmering spark
cry city, town, hamlet and village arise with ye t .
remains of the feeling and spirit which
one united acclamation against this profanity. in termer times entitled the inhabitants of
[Applause.] But how is it to be done ? The the Free States to the character of patriots
South is as emasculated thing; the House of and fearless, far-seeing statesmen. But '
Representatives has no power to reach the alas! Sir, I see no principle of vitality in
outrage; the criminal justice of the country what is called Freedom in these times.
has nothing to say. How then lathe evil tobe see diviaiims enough, and parties enough ;
met. My fellow-eitiseus there is a remedy,
and one remedy only. It lathe remedy that be- seeevery whims setting up for itself and
longs to poputargovernmeut—that every man calling and expecting all the rest of a nd
loos
matte his detertainatien now, hereafter, world to follow in its train. But of a
for all time and forever, to mark the 'parties thoughtful, oonaentrated, determined prin.
to this outrage, to this inefficiency', to this de- ciple of united action, suited to the oeca
reliction of duty, whenever -any of these men lion, which, spurning the desire of place
come before you, , no matter for whet office, or and the hope of emolument, and the hart;
upon What pretense, let them be marked [An -
Otiose.] Say to them,.
,you had todo witli taring for office, and ululated solely • for
the prosirttion of your country; you had to do the advance of publics good and general
With an sOt which polled down to its founds- welfare, I see, nothing. The paqty of death
lion not only the Goverment of your country, 'reason the aWrit. of Freedom in the so.
but the only model . ever existing of a free called "Free States."
Government, of a great nation embodying in In my opinion, it Is , time to speak en
itself thezinciples of Freedom and of social the house-top what every man who is wow
order. xon have not only struck a blow at thy of the name of freeman utters in his
your ceuntry, but at the existence of all Gov
ernment among mer." 8, „Ark them , wad , chamber and f ools in his hears. By a se
whatever party comes, whatever party propos- ries of corruption, intrigue and cunning,
es, whatever way opposes. Be among that bribing the high by appointment* of State.
10.000 men who are said to exist in New York the low-by the hope of emoluments ;
play
whom the politicians of our country cannot in g between the parties of the Free States,
reckon upon, but who always come out on, great counteracting one by the other ;by
occasions. Come out, whoever be the condi- ..
mattering the vain, in 14e the mean, and
date, whatever be 'the principles. RemeMber
that nothing isif greeter or higher importance rewarding the subservient, the slave.hold-'
to the- country than to preserve freedom of ern have, in the course of 50 years, usurp
speech and of debate in our Legislative bod- ed the whole Constitutional powers 'Of the
iesagainst every attempt to subvert it [Loud Union, have possessed themselves of the
and long applause.] Executive chair, of the hells of Congress.
In Boston, and the leading °idea of of the national courts of justice, and of the
New England, New York, and the West, military arm, leaving nothing of hope to
the people have met to express their din- the spirit of Freedom in the Free States,
but public speech in the Legislature and
approval of 'this murderous outrage.—
Philadelphia alone has given no signs of the ballot box. The one a stavehblder's
mob is crushing in Kansas, the other a
disapprobation—poor, contemptible Phila- deputation from the slaveholdera of the
delphia, with its small-settled. merchants, House of Representatives have attempted
its stony hearts, its despicable sentiments. to crush by n slaveholder's bludgeon.
Though in the North, It has always been We might add many more evidences of
we may expect will an aroused and outraged public sentiment.
truer to the South, and
remain false to its friends and to liberty, But we forbear. Surely WO have given
while there is a peony to make by South-
enough to show that popular indignation
ern trade. is universal, and will gladly seek the
ballot-box to correct tbe Manifold evils
Mr. Everett did not attend the indigna
lion meeting held in; Boston and was pre- which threaten the , country.
sumed to be unfriendly to its purpose.--
Thii is a mistake.. 1-16 declined to attend
that meeting, as he declined to attend di
meetings of a political character; but in
his introductory remarks to the delivery
of his oration on Washington, delivered in
Taunton, Mass., a few days since r ho made
an eloquent allusion to the condition of
Senator Sumner. He spoke of the pleas
ure with which' he always dwelt upon the
theme of Washington, and continued as
foliates :
"But, with the satisfaction which I feel
in addressing you this evening, are min
gled the most profounifauxiety and grief
—a sadness which I strive in vain to sup-
press, overwhelming me at theoccurreuces
of the, past week, and a serious approhen-
Oren forces itself upon in 7 mita that events
are even now in train, with an impulse too
mighty to be resisted, which will cause
our beloved country to shed tears of blood
through all her borders for generations to
come. Civil war, with all its horrid trains
of pillage, and slaughter carried on with
out the slightest provocation against the
infant settlements of our brethren on the
frontiers of the Union, the worse than
civil war raging for mouths unrebuked at
the Capitol, has at length, with lawlese vi
olent*, of which there, is no parallel in
the annals of our constitutional govern
ment, stained the floor of the Senate
Chamber with the blood of a defenceless
man, the Senator from Masischuicita.
01 turgood friends, these are events
which, for the good name, the pekoe and
safety of our country, it were worth all
the gold'of California to blot from the re
cord. They sicken the heart of the pa
triot, of the good china, sal of the Chris
tian. They awaken the tomy doubt,
whether the toils, the sacrifices and the
sufferings of our fathers for the sake of
founding a higher, purer, and freer civili
sation on the Western Continent than the
world had- yet seen, have not been in vain.
For myself. they fill me with sorrow too
deep tot tears. I sorrow not for myself.
My few remaining years are running too
rapidly to a close, to allow me' to !Hach
much importance to anything this aide
of the grave, which concerns mo individ
ually. But I. sorrow far beyond words
to entire's, for the objects of my affection
which I leave behind. --- •
For my children and - .my country I .
grieve; and God is my wiinesa, that if,
by laying down My life this hour, I could
undo what has been done within tho last
two years, beginning with the disastrous
repeal of the • Missouri Compreinise, I
would willingly, oboe, fully make the sac
rifice. Did I not:think- there is a healing
charm in the name of Washington, and
that attachment and veneration for his
character, which is ahnost•the only remain
ing kindly 'sentiment that pervades the
whole country, and that in the contempla
tion of that character there is a spirit of
wisdom to guide, and love to soothe and
unite, I would even now throw myself up
on your indulgenoe, to excuse the from
the duty of the evening."
Nothing in the eeries of effort. which
this subjeCt has produced, is more full of
indignant eloquence than , tbe letter of Jo•
BIAS QUINCY, wen., now in his eighty-fifth
year. •lio could not attend a meeting, but
wrote a letter in which, after enumerating
the aggressions of the Slave Power, he
speaks thus o&this last :
The hostile irruption of two members of
Congress into the Senate Chamber of the
United States, openly armed with deadly
bludgeons, and probably secretly, accor
ding to the habits of their breed, with
bowie knives and revolvers, and there
prostrating on the floor with their blud
geons a Senator of the United States, sit
sing peaceably in hie seat, unconscious of
danger, and from his position incapable of
defence, iuflicting upon him blows, until
he sunk, senseless, under them, and which,
if they do not prove mortal, it was not for
want of malig9aut intent in the cowardly
assassins—and all this for words puticly
spoken in the Senate, in the course
. of de
bate, allowed by its 'presiding officer to be
spoken, and exceeding not one hair's
breadth any line of truth or duty. This
is the fifth and the climax of this aeries of
outrages, unparalleled, nefarious and bru
tal.
Report of the Committee In the
Sumner affair.
rOn Monday, in the House, Mr.
Campbell, of Ohio, from the select commit
tee on the assault upon Senator Sumner,
made a report, as follows :
.Whereas, the Senate of the United.
States have transmitted to this House a
message complaining that Preston S.
Brooks, a Representative from the State
of South Carolina, committed upon (he
person of Charles. Sumner, a Senator from
the State of Massachusetts, while seated
at his desk in the Senate chamber; after
the adjournment of that body on the 22d of
May last, a violent assault, which disabled
him from attendipg to his duties in the
Senate, and declaring that said assault
was a breach of the privileges of that body.
And, whereas, from respect to the priv
ileges or ',this House, 'the Senate have fur
ther declared that, inasmuch, as the said
Preston S. Brooks is a member of this
House they cannot arrest him, and, a fac
liori, cannot try or punish hint f ora breach
of their privileges ; that they cannot pro
cited further in the case than to make their
complaint to this House ; and that power
to arrest, try and punish devolves solely
on this body ; and whereas, upon full in
vestigation, it appears to this House that
the said Preston S. Brooks has been guil
ty of the assault complained of by the
Senate, with most aggravated circumstan
ces of vinkince ; that the sane was a
breach of the privilege. not only of the U.
sited States Senate, but of the Senator's,-
sailed and of this Howie, air 0-ordinate
breach of the legislative department of the
Government in direct violation of the Con
stitution of the United States, which de
clares that Senators and Haprescintatives
for any speech or debate in either house
shall not be qamittOned in any other place.
Whereas this House is of the opinion that
it has the power, and ought to punish the
said Preston S. Brooks for the said assault
not only as a breach of the privileges of
the Senate, assailed. and of the Senate
and House us declared by the Constitu
tion. but as an act of disorderly behaviour;
and '
Whereas, it further eppoaft from such
investigation that Henry A. Edmondson.
s representative from the State of Virginia.
and Lawrence M. Kent, a representative
from South Carolina, sometime preCiour
to said assaulti were informed that it was
the purpose of said Mr. Brooks to commit
violence upon the person of said Charles
Semner, for words used by him in debate
as a &noir in the Senate, and took no
measures to diecourage- Or prevent the
same, baton the contrary, 'anticipating time
commission of such violation, were pres
ent on one or more occasions to wituels
the same, as friends of the assailant--
Therelore-:-
liesoked, That Preston S. Brooke be
and be, is forthwith expelled 'from this
House as a Representative from the Slate
of South Carolina. •
Ressioid. That Ws House hereby de
duel' its diiapprobation of the Old act of
Henry A. Edmundenn sad 'Lawrence M.
Keit{ in regard' to said assault.
Signed by Mr. CA:npbell, of Ohio, •Mr.
Spinner and Mr. Pennington.
Hon. Howell Cobb; from the minority
of said committee, submitted a minorill
report. arguing that no broach of privil
edge under the constitution had been com
mitted, and the House had no powor to
go beyond the constitution in deciding
that the breach of priviledge had beencom
mitted.
Both of the reports were s _svere laid on
the table and ordered to be printed.
110'Cien. Ayres, a well known citizen
of Harrisburg, and President Of the South
Mountain Railroad Company, died last
week.
liCrit is said there is still a: snow
bank near Isllagara Falls forty feet deep.—
Early in the spring it was one hundred and
twenty, feet deep.
rThoy have passed a liquor law in
one of the Alabama towns, whiob fixes the
price for a license at 810,000. ,
The Republican National Convention
will meet in Philadelphia on the 17th in.
sten I.
A Slave Purchased In Plylaouth
Church, Brooklyn.
At the conclusion of the sermon yester- ,
day morning, the Rev. Henry Ward Bee- •
cher announced to his congregation that
he was about to perform an action of a
moat extraordinary nature, which he
would preface by reading a portion of the
12th chapter of Matthew. He according.
ly read the 10th. lath end 12th verses of
that chapter,
after which he proceeded to
gives sketch of the latter history of a slave
girl, Sarah by name, an appeal in whose
behalf he had lately received. She wait;
he aaid, the daughter of a Southern plant
er, acknowledged by himaell ss hie owl*
offspring, and reared In . his own funds ,
until his, other daughters growing up had
treated her so eruelly.that she attempted
to escape. She was captured and taken
back to her paternal muter, who made
immediate preparations to sell her to the
Extreme f3ooth. tefusing to dispose of her
to any one who would permit her to re
main
,in the neighborhood.- Many per
sons in the vicinity, knowing her to be a
most faithful; efficient, and therefore rid
able piece of, property, were anxious to
purchase her. bnt her owner utterly reins- j
ed to sell to them, his object being to have
her removed to so 'great distance that her
near relation to the others of his children
could occasion them no further morti&m.
lion. She • was, accordingly. sold to a
Southern man who held her et' $1,500
but who finally consented to part with her
for 111,200. A slave bolder in Washing
ton, pitying the girl. bought her for the
latter sum. immediately, hoWever, setting
on foot subscription to enable her to pur
chase her freedom, he himeelfeontributing
$lOO. another man, algae aliveholiter.
gavesloo, and ;TOO went finally obtained.
"At this platter.," said Mr. Searcher, "I
received a letter asking if we could do any,
thing "toward making up the rut of the
money,,' to which I replied. that I would
promise nothing unless wacould see her
here.
'The reverend gentleman here stepped
from his desk, and with an encouraging
"Vome up Sarah." he led upon the plat
form a young. intelligent mulatto girl.
whom he presented to the crowded audi
ence as the slave girl in question.
She is, .pparently ,about 'twenty-three
years old. probably three.quartere white,
of very pleasing and modest
Mr. Beecher seated her in a chair by' his
side. while he continued his remarks.—
She was here, he said, on her parole of
honor. She bad promised to go back.
and she must return. either with or with
oat the five hundred dollars which were
yet necessary to make her a free • woman.
A collection wonld be taken up, and the
result wenld show their verdict.
By this time there was hardly a dry
eye in the whole immense congregation
of nearly" 3,000 people. Men wept. and
women sobbed—not shamefacedly but
openly and without atty. : attempt at con
cealment. ill seemed to be touched to
the very heart. The like scene has nev
er been witnessed in the world. In. a
Christian land, on the Christiau Sabbath,
in the pulpit of a Christian church, by
the lips of a Christian . minister. a tremb
ling, shrinking woman begged from a
Christian people money to save herself
from a l;fe of slavery and compulsory
prostitution.
One. gentleman here rose and announced
that the money should; be forthcoming
to make her free, and that if necessary he
would. be personally" responsible for the
entire amount. This announcement was
received with hearty and long continued
applause, the audience being no longer a
ble to restrain their feedings, and Mr.
Beecher expressing his approval of the
jubilant demonstration. Sarah, the slave
girl, had, up to this time, preserved a tol
erable composure. but when the certainty
was declared that she could not go back to a
Woof Slavery. she buried her fax in her
hinderchieland wept aloud. As the col
lectors paned among the audience, the
plates wee, actually heaped up with the
tokens of substantial sympathy. one lady
even took the jewelry from her permit
■nd east it into the fund. The amount
collected on the spot was $784, which be
sides completing the sem necessary for
the purchase of Sarah, will also secure
her child, a boy of tour years. who is now
in bondage.
The scene was meet the most remark
able and exciting ever enacted in this
country before a religions engtegation
and the instantaneous awl owl satutao•
tory pecuniary rapes.* to the pies' for
liberty, shows that the Anti• Slavery Sen
timent is ready. when occasion requires.
to indicate its sincerity by memento
more tangible and aubstantial than mere
words.
Another Account of the Sum-
nee Ammanlt.
BOSTON. May 29.—Dr. Bunting, of
Montreal, Canada. stales in a letter ip.the
Evening Journal that he was in the gal.
lery of the Senate chamber at the time of
the It on Mr. Sumner. He.isays he
saw Brooks approach Mr. Sumner. not
in front but at the side of his desk. and ad
dress him some words in a low tone, and
then at the moment Mr. Sumner raised
his head, turning it op one side to Oaten,
he poured down on 'him blow after , blow
with the greatest rapidity. •
Mr. Sumner struggled sewed times to
rise from his east, but was evidently so
much hemmed in as to be utterly Weal
psble of rising until! he had, by great ef
fort, torn the desk from its fastenings and
then pitched forward insensible on she
floor. While this win progressing. -Mr.
Keitt stood with one hand flourishing 'a
large cane and holding a pistol behind him
partly under his coat, but which Dr. bun
ling saw very distinctly projecting from
between the flaps of his coat.
Dr. Bunting says he was. from his po
sition in the gallery, directly above the
actors in ,the scene, enabled to see this
very clearly during the assault. Mr.
Douglas, he asserts, stood within five feet
of Mr. Sumner with his hands in• his
pockets. Dr. D. assisted to dress Mr.
Bumper's wounds.
Faitomous Briarr or SLiviirr.--In
a speech made before the Hamilton eoun
ty. Ohio, Republican Convention recently
held, Judge Hoadlv. lately a pionsibent
Democrat, said; "If Gen. Washington
were alive to-day. and were to otter the
sentences contained in his will. with ref
erence to his slaves, and resided io the
territory of Kansas, he would be consign
ml to the penitentiary for two years under
the Pierce administration." The is a
most humiliating tact ! And yet this is the
administration and policy which the peo
ple are expected to uphold in the next
Presidential election under Buchanan;
Dotuglass, Pierce or some other tool of
Slavery that the Cineinnatti convention
may put up. •
iiii:(....:.,5,,,.,11.,..i;..iiiit...-e.,..10,,:11.,,..!,:,...jj.,.iii.: ii,..
eatErrYSBUIRC.
Friday Even lig,J tine 6, 1856.
!Religious Serice+. for the next
Sabbath.
Xresbylerian Church.-Services morning and
evening, Rev. Mr. Van Wick, of Chester,. Pa.
(Aral Chaireh (Lutheran.) --Services m the
morning, Rev. Dr. Schaeffer, and evening, Rev.
Dr. Baugher.
St. Jame' Church, (Lutheran.)
in
in the morning and evening, Rev. Mr. Hill.
Methodist Ilpiseopal Chureh.—ServiCes
in
the morningand evening; also, toutorroir (Sat
urday) monnng anderentng—Rev. Mr. Monroe.
German Reformed Chure4.--Servicel
morn
ing and evening, Rev. J. Ziegler.
ARSOCIate Ref crated ChurcA.--No services.
Catholic Church.---Bervicem •
The PrayerMetting of the Presbyterian,
German Reformed, and the two Lutheran
churches is held every Wednesday evening;
Methodist. ThursdaY evening.
HOT.—The mercury on Tuesday lit.' rose
to 94° in the shade, and on ~Wednesday
to 95°.
.
tia.,Mr. A. K. birsne bee sent to our office
a common lien's Egg, weighing 6} ounces,
and measuring 9 by 7f inches. That, we
think, is bard to beat.
/(The Union County Committee met at
the dice °fa. Wuxi), Esq., inthis place, on
Tuesday last, and organised by oPPointing
Mr. Josses Wrnarsa Chairman. The Com
mittee determined to order a County Conven
tion, to meet on Mondsy, the 4th of August,
to nominate candidates to be supported by the
opponents of the prelieut National A.datinis
tration. Due notice will be , given thereof.--
The members of the Committee being from
the different sections' of the County, gave the
most encouraging representations as to the
favor with Which the proceedings of the Union
County meeting on the 27th ult. have been re
°dyed by all sincerely desirous of rebuking
Nebraska Locofecoism. ,
cir The Republican Milociation at New
Oxford yesterday afternoon appointed Nesus.
Jona R. limn, Joan C. Elms and Wit.usw
Walsorr delegates to the Philadelphia Conven
tion, with power to-appoint substitatee.
Ords we go to press the parched ground is
being refreshed by a fine rain, with every indi
cation of turning out an old fashioned "north
easter." '
lerOur exchanges from different parte of
the country complain of .the defective appear
ance of the Ccirn. A great deal has not ger
minated at all, many farmers being co mpelled
to
to re-plant. It is thought a good deal of expo
sed coin was injured by the severe weather of
last winter freezing the germ of the grain and
destroying itexitality. The frost of last week
has also seriously injured gie growing corn.
1i 'The turner-stone of the new Church be
ing built by the "United Brethren in Christ,"
near' Miller's Store, in Bionntpleasant town
ship, will be laid on the 14th inst. at 2 o'clock.
FATAL ACCIDENT.--On Tuesday after
noon last, as some heavily loaded lumber wa.
gout, were passing the residence of Mr. Max,
about a mile frpni ilunterstown, on the Nano
c
ver oad, his eon, aged 4 yeurs and 6 months,
was run over and • itititautlf lulled, auk wbeel
pant glirectly over his head and crushing it
'E Goinss ttiitrii was horribly. Dr. C. . o u called
in and found both jaw-bones and the skull ter
ribly fractured. A younger child was with him
at the time but could give no account of the
accident, merely saying that he had been play.
ing with the 'wheel and fell. No blame is at
tached to the driver, who was on the wagon
‘ when-the accident occurred.
Cincinnati Convention.
116.,This body met. at Cincinnati on Mon
daylaat, and still in session, having, at last,
accounts, made but little progress. towards *
nomination. Gen. John B Georgia,
is Chairman. The main difficulty connected
with the organization of the Convention arises
from the contested seats of rivet delegatiOns
from Missouri and NeW York. On Monday
afternoon the floor of the Convention was the
scene of intense , excitement, in consoquence
of the Benton• delegation from Missouri forcing
an entrance into the Hall by knocking down
the doorkeeper. Afters good deal of oonfu
sion the Benton delegates agreed to withdraw
and await the 'decision of the Convention on
their claims. That decision has since' been
anade against them; Tbe rival claims of the
"Hardie and "Botts" from New York present
ed more difficultyyraid had not been disposed
of tip to Tuesday •evening., •
Cincinnati wsstcrowded with strangers, the
friends of the several" -prominent candidates
working night and•ilay, and very hard.' Bu
ehanan, Pierce and Douglas are still the prom
insist candidates, with chances for Buchanan,
who has afl' immense Outside influence at
.work in his favor. The debates of the Cowen.
tioo have been, at times, stormy and excl.
ting.
All day Wednesday's** occupied in discus
eing the phitfornr. A vast of it,endoraing the
Kaneas Nebraska am and denouncing Amer
icanism, was adopted unanimously. The - part
relating to the foreign ;policy of the Govern
ment, endorsing. the falibuster movements in
Ventral America, , was sill under discussion.—
:The resolutions are Profoundly Akira on the out.
:reges in Kansas and at Wash!ngton. The
New York difficulty was still unadjusted.
• -COL. BISSELL.--This gentleman has
:Vett' nominatod for Governor of Illinois, by
the United Anrican Republican party of that
State: Hie election, therefore, is highly prob
.-able. He belonged to the Democratic party
until the , repeal of the Missouri Compromise.
He mined with distinction at Buena Vista, as
of the third Illinois regiment. Short
liafter his return, he was -elected to Congress.
Haring the Compromise session of 1850,
whilst debate ran high upon the Slavery (pies•
tion, as it is now doing, he made a speech in
-reply, it, Ex-Onvernor Brown, .of Mississippi,
.then gt member of the Lower Rouse, and now
United States Senator from that State. In
`that speech he took occasion to ridicule the
Bottibantes Fusions° assertions of tho Ex.:Gov.
-enter inthe most scathing terms. Ho pane
-tared most sharply the inflated pretensions of
Southern 'chivalry. The speech was eaten.
..aively read and admired throughout the whole
exeintry far its boldness and bitter sarcasm.—
Baths chief excellence consisted in the per
hatpins: dal fearlessness exhibited in it.
Oat of tbis speech proceeded the difficulty
vrkielt led Col. Jefferson Davis; now Secretary
of War,to sand a challenge , to the Colonel.—
It was promptly accepted, end it is understood
he declared the terms of meeting to be—rifles
- . .
s . it ten paces. By the interpos . iiien of friends,
it web stopped; and a meeting did not take
place. Whilst he remained in the House, no
more was heard of. Challenges from Southern
mon to him.
He is very modest and retiring in his de
meanor, and no one in the House ever Sus
pected him of beirig possessed of such fervid
eloquence. This speech at once made him a
lion in public estimation, and his willingness'
to face any consequence arising out of its de,
livery, confirmed thelpopular judgment.
The WalitabEtOn Election,
kir The.' Demeerstic papers are shouting
over the success of• Dir. MAGRUDER, a Whig,
elected Mayor of Washington city, by thirty-twci
majority over the American candidate, while
the American party has secured. majorities
in both branches of the City Councils 1 The
Organ explains how Mr. Mammas was elec
ted. Since the last electien, the extension of
the Treasury, and the extension of the Poet
Office buildings have been' commenced—on
which are employed setae 1100 men, nearly all
of whom are forekenets and Democrats. The
aggregate rote of the city last year was 6219.
This. ar it le 5841. Increase 622, or nearly
the exact number of laborers 'employed upon
the Treasury and Net Office extensions. So
far, therefore, from the election of a fusion
Mayor, supported by the combined vote of For
eigners, Catholics, anti-American Whigs, old
line Democrat., Governmentofficeholders, end
imported laborers,, being s wan of unwise,
the wonder is that the Americans were not
entirely over-wheltned and routed. They fought
single•handed against a powerfkd 'coalition, the
latter backed by the satire sympathy anti in
terference of the Fetimil Gotennent, sail yet
they carry the Councils and only lose the May
or by 82 votes I If the Foreign party can find
cause for gratulation in this result, they must
indeed be "thankful for 612241hr/ore
The Death of Needing.
Irene 4merican Cdt, an Irishpaper,
devotes mock space to the killing of Kea
ting by Mr. Herbert. 'Referring to the
vote by which Mr. Herbert was shielded
from an investigation, the Cdr says i
Now, in relation to that division on
Herbert's case, we have °duty to perform,
and we shall not shrink from discharging
it. That duty is to announce in untwists.
liable terms, to the adopted citizens. of
Irish birth throughout the country, that
the Democratic party in Congress have
shamefully deserted their duty, deserted'
their own professions of impartiality be-,
mean difierent clause of citizens, and
that they have, as plainly as deeds can
speak, declared the murder of a man of
Irish birth by one of their colleagues to
be a trifle wholly unworthy even of inqui
ry. Is the Democratic party mad, or is,
it only rotten, that it should so belie itself ?
With half a dozen exceptions, every man
of the majoritsP for Keating's murderer is;
a professed °Democrat!! What, then,
does it moan f Or can it mean anything
but one idling—that an Irishman born.
however peaceable, or loyal, is only fit to,
be used the Democratic party, sad 1
when used set up for a 'target, and shot
with impunity. This is what it means,
and to this meaning we shall hold the en
tire party.
We hold Mr. Pierce, Mr. Douglas, and
Mr. Buchanan responsible for this con
4uot of.th couddiout oriditmisszters. , z-y
They were all in 94shiogion; " it weefor'
Jays the topic of the town ; if their friends
have taken sides against'the victim and a.
gainst common justice; they are wholly
above suspicion. A tew days ago the
blood of Thomas Keating was on the
hands of but'one Democrat ; it has spread
since then, and is now upon the souls of
the 79, who, refused all inquiry. It is on
the Democratic party, as a paw, and ac
cursed be , he who helps such a party into
power, until that blood is lanfully purged
away..
This is pretty strong language, but the
Celt conelodes with the following unmista
kable hint : , •
Let them not suppose this
matter is go. ,
ing to drop here. One who seldom drops,
anything has it now in hand. and he die.;
tinnily warns the Democratic Represents.;
rive' et Washington, thatifjustice is not;
done on the murderer. Herbert. they will
be held accountable, as the party who in.
terposed to screen and protect him from 1
the penalty of his guilt.
Who is this stone I" The. Cult is a
Catholic paper. Its editor is a mouth
piece for Bishop Hughes, and the above
may, be regarded as a threat of the Argil.
bishop against the. Democratic party. He
will hold them accountable for the Kest- 1
ing murder. and in order to ahow his pow
er, sell out the distindsve Inds vett to
Republicanism, or some other party."—
The latoptege is incapable of • any, other
•
construction. Tito, Democratic Repre
sentatives are to be judged by the Irish
citizens and ,voters of die United States,
for the charge of guilt irolte matter of the
slaying Of Keating. The , old • ally turns
upon its own party.
THa NICARAGUAN. Loynan.—Ferther
;VW a Real Misson. 7 -El. Panameun of
.
the 2tl of,May, has, under the above•head, ,
the,lallowing curious statement:
"We know that Walker, in order to
secure the services of the Licentiate, Padre
I). Augustin. parochial curate of the
city of Graniva, and to dispose freely of
whatever concerns the ecclisiastical juris
diction, has promised him, as. soon as his
government is consolidated, to establish a
Protestant church, of which the said cu.
mita, Si. Vijii, ie to be the head, and Genet.-
al Walker the protector. He does this to
recompense him foe the signal services he
had rendered him in forming and support
ing his government. Led away by these
promises, the Curate Vijil has again em
barked in a revolutionary career." The
Panameno then goes on to denounce, in
severe terms, the conduct of Padre Vigil.
DECEASED.—The lion. John M.
Niles, formerly Senator in Congress from
Connecticut, and Postmaster General un
der President Van Buren, died at New
Haven, on Saturday, in the sixty-ninth
year of his age.
A CIOMAION MISTAKE Or FARBIKEIL". - 41.
(armor in Ohio last Fall put up his wheat
crop for a high price. In February he
was offered $lO,OOO. In April be offered
to take .47000. During this month he
will probably sell for $5OOO. There is a
lesson in this (Or other farmers.
On Monday 800 U. 8. troops from
Carlisle barracks, en route (or Kansas,
passed through Pittsburg. •
Senator Wilms sail Mr. StewlLL
Krln a report of s ifiscuseio . n in the
11. 8. Senate in referent*, to the Selmer
affair, published in our bat, is will be re
membered Mr. Wrtsos etrmseterired the
assault upon Mr. Sumner, by Stooks. el
"brim]. mutat:Owe and cowardly." For
these offensive words, Mr. Braohn chal
lenged Senator Wilson. We ee.ex dm
correspondence between them :
U. BROOKS TO SIZICATOOL WILSON;
Flints lirotd r lft V., IESI.
Ste :--In the Senate to-day, i reSsnrieg
to the collision with Mr. Sumner, Via=l
of my conduct as "cowurdly," thus ,
yourself an arbiter of true mune.
In debate in the Senate heretofore, pea_ de.'
clued youself respoauldi fir what yes meek
say there and elsewhere.
I, therefore, hold =pellet Shady, by this
note, to request that you ingl Wane me, with
out delay, mitre and whew, costae of tik &s
-trict, a further note will Sad you.
' IlesPeetfaYs kee p
. 8. Baum
Hon. Hew Waist's.
lIIMATOS WILSON ID O. BOOMS.
Waticrtaglois, Say 71/, IN deka.
Sin :—lfour note of the TM it was per
ced in my hands by.your fin:* ad Gemini Lear,
at twenty minutes pad ten this mania' s. •
I characterised on the &or of the Smote
the assault upon ay Cotaegilta, now
deroua and enwareW' I so deew—l •
think im now. I have no what-
ever to make* regard to words.
I have never entertained or en/owned ,in
the Senate or elsewhere, the idea of pawed
fesponsibiliti in the sense of the dnellist. I
have always regarded duelling as the linger
ing relic of a barbarous e'inTizatiow, Aide the
law of the counrry has brandiedas a crime,—
While, then fire. I religiose/3r Iberians in the
right of selfdefenee, in its brooding gene, dee
law of my country and
vat
of my whole life shire %WI me to meet yaw
for the purpose indicated in year letier-
Yoar obedient servant.
Hits= Irmo&
Hon. P. S. Iliapas.
The lefeselmin ef
107'Fitattezei Pfinteihao lbws Bred
of the United States sot quite sh i rtyoise
months. He was humerstal in the
midst of professed peen. la with Pool
ses that he would quiet nihilists; be
assumed . the oar!! of din wises we mina
united people, basing *own our patristic
Ausolimeutto the Union. sad our deter
mination to suppress all seethd login.
tion. What is now the position of our
country ? It is agitated sod rest by Aso- 1
lion ; all its internal peen has hen jeop
arded by the se-opening cf agitatin, and'
dectionalien is mad. the poressoemt issue
of the tinning contest; at hone and Area
all is ''confusion; we have dad war is
Hanna, and s besitathingporsey is refer
ence to the British enfistmeut else which
has made as appear eoutemptible ; we have
outrages committed apse our einiaree at
Panama; we lure vacillated es Coital
American Policy till it has made aft Chris
tendom laugh at ;we aredis' ided 'stop.
°graphical party lion. North sad South;
ruffianism is rampant at the federal capi
tol. and it is apposed and stimalatad by
tho Democratic organs alai the .11hisoent
hi party ; Senators and aeon ire assailed,
American chismes.hunted. Atoll ..Amerhosa
citizens assassinaled, so spread the eerie of,
slavery over our country. MilSard Fill
-
Moreton the 4th of Blank 1854, left the
Union•prosperoost sad happy. What is it
nowt Think, leaders, of the blenings of
Democracy lo—PAikt-
Istsmuusartos AT AuxConts.--Bos•
ton, Jnne 2.—The 15rareler plashes a
letter from Aux rajas. dated May 10.
stating that a formidable ineanertion
had broken oat is that port of Hayti
against Emperor Sollogne. From we m
three almond dents wale ommbing
on Aux Ca3teo, mod every sob is town
had been called met token/the troop for
repelling the enemy. "nisi troops had
marshal to meet the ionogents and de•
feed the entrance to the teem; and se the
letter closed, as alarm was beating and a
report circulating that the neap bad been
repulsed. The were greatly ex
cited and had e their stems. As.
trialbeisionte Efts
Lest Starrlay. Mr. Fredesiek Loodkv,
snags! and respectable chiron of Wisd
om township. in this meaty. pot a periled
to his elisions:v . l"y etatrimg his *mat.
Mr. Lasalle wan a .ember of a family
which 'has - been crowd:able sefaismase
for that species of mania Sikh ends in
suicide. Nearly half a mammy mro his
father contsised suicide by poiSsa. &nee
that time his brother awl that brodser's
son have hung themselves; and a few years ,
Igo his own son drowned himself. - The
'Jacob Lauds who shot Mr.'llenr• Nen
frits,•of this place, a maple of yeah ego.
and is now in die State Lunatic Asyhtam.
was a nephew of the Mr. Lucks whose
melancholy death we sow record- He
was- - -whit fevi men haw been—the sae,
grandson, brother, sephcor. and cousin of
suicides. All these stolonnaass mew—
father. sons, and Cir" 4 "" l- ' rue ' we be
lieve, sober. hottest. sod industrials. sad
respected in their several neighborhoods.
-- York Atooc ete.
Indira , 'llea Neelling at Gea.
Gi!t=:ll
Coscoao, N, Jane 2.—, large
gathering of the citizens of Coscisrd and
its vicinity was herd on Swaplay eve
tang, to express the indignation aroused
by the Kansas and Scatter outrages
Addresses were made by Thomas P.
Treadwell, IL A. Bellows, Sylvester
Dana, Rev. John A. Moore. sued others-
Resolutions were adopted denoslocing
the attack on Stunner as brutal arid cow
ardly, and urging the expeISFANCI of his
assailant from Congress; also condemning
the recent outrages is Kansas, and amen
sing both outrages to the insatiate grasping
power of slavery. and calling upon ali
parties to combine is resisting its nevai
ces, and effecting its exec:li= Iron the
Territories.
Bovrox, June .2.—Many of de pal
est opponents, as well as the hiken/s of
Senator Wilson, met him in oar wrote to
day, and beastly empressed their warm ap
proval of his manly axone at Washington.
To Tara SLIMS orr or SILKS-36i
Ov.ther is a phial, two maces Of cam=
of lemoo. one on of oil of tamentise-
Grease sad other spots at atlir. are to be
rubbed goody silk a Beau zeg dipped in
the above empathize.
Cr/o. business =adage( time risiepaleat
Blues" will be held at the Amoy dis mem&
B e Conn ofdesl wM sit at the our fins.
•
40 ,....__ ,
k. i t
sno Co urvo l. Iht a nwo t
die n ikood bas arri wa r y ed .
a i oi n u C e. inci l n n na th ti e ,
- . e . f,..k •-ir" -v i cars a friend ancosted him with--." Well,
4.....4.4... " ....,... 4
i Colonel. bound to the Cincinnati Conven
t ;4-T.- - ;-..;." ~..-; • . tenor "Yes sir. yes, like the wild hog,
'-, - : sir; be can be tolled op to eat corn, sir; but
• • be can't be coaxed into the pen, sir, can't
' be coax
Important from listastas. f ed in. sir:"
Ifiel-landeri Proceedings of the Pro-Slareryt ' BATON force, Jane 3.—The Eastern wing
Mem—Lcruiess Arrests—Ciril war incite- oftbe Louisiana Penitentiary has been destroy
/le—Horrible Murders, dr- 'ed br Ore, invoicing a loss of $200,000. Nine '
. -
- An exciting extra of the Westport News. ' p - 0, -ers e , c 3 P 4 -
ieadeaWar.War,t reached Leav en wort h '
ll 9 Fr nlhn ' na ' ehasbeeninuta i iz
city on the 28th ul- andtrrewthe Pro-Slare
mraadaylanditiaconneetrrnth
r 5 cons there into the greatest excitement.— " numerous Popular Institutions. Among the
Thal - held .a . privnte meeting and appointed a ; moot
Committee of Vigilaneeto attack Leavenworth, . Is meg. rut Plan; pb"isadhlrhielaphiho,isonosthsouciactoedr
endless() Free State men pass, anddetermii• :Led' cur of which. No.'lll Chesnut Street, is the
to make lawless arrests of obnoxious parties. '
A toanparty of men', armed with muskets and ', m g' r rertekthis, the larges t , cheapest , ,.......EststAiilm"torßoliectst:
I=4 United States arms,) been p a " .1 most fashionable in n'a grcountr
all the afternoon ma king arrests.--1
They took prisoner a clerk of the Committee I.
of Chomgress, named Conway, and two vitneses t SAILTI3IIOIIIE 11114118.E1'.
that IA been subpoemed, Messrs. Pari
BAL
um and Mlles Moore. Warren Wilkes of
gas. June 5, 1856.
South Carolina. beaded the party. A. Moore,l FLOUR AND MEAL.—Sales Howard
me of the murderers of Brown, helped to make
, streetp6 124, City Mills at $6 121. Rye Flour
the arrests . Messrs. Parrott and Moon: were l
We quoteat $3 50 '0 bbl. and doll. Corn
arrested while conversing with Mr. Sherman.i
Mr. Sherman asked if it was bv legal process i Meal—tees little selling. We quote city man
they had taken one Of the Clerks of the Com- I ufactured sa. $2 75, and country at $2 25 113
missies. Mr. Wilkes said it was not—that he. bsyrol.
ihad no legal authority, but that be would ca- i
restthe men down on his list. Many others •GRAIN AND SEEDS.— Wheat —We tote
lbs e e b een taken . The town is excited, and • &decline of 3to 5 cents "0 bushel. hood to
4 the Commission fear that they mast leave--; prime white at 148(4,51 55, and choice do. at
1 5.54241 60. Sales cif good to prime red at
:AlarrnMe extras am sent out from Westport
il to the border towns. A fight is expected near , , acsel 35,
and
ordinary
to fair
qualities
of
•• Pottarrommie Creek. Some Pro-Slavery men "
fried to drive a Free State man from his claim, whits and red at I@sl 18'0 bushel. Corn--
.
bet Ito refusing to go, they took him and were Sales of white at 4sgsi cents, and yellow at
abranto bang him, when his neigi .rc tboa i came c a w mere per bushel, as to quality sod
to the team and shot some of the
" T Y coodition. Rye—Noneolfered, no sales. We
patty. A ciNe is is inevitable. , -
A letter to the St. Louis Democrat, dated quote at 68070 cents a it bushel, nominally. —
Topeka, 25th, says : The 'United States Die- Oats—About 700 bushels offered to-day, and
like Cm"' was adjourned to t h e Beemel Moo- sales of 1200bashels at 27(430 cents "ft bushel.
day inSeptember. Judge Lecompton refused
'to admit Messrs. Robinson, Smith, Deiukr. PROVLSIONS.—Baeon a steady demand.
Brown and Je n kins t o hml, and they will be Sales today in lots ofBo hhds. sides at 91 cents
held pthonets by the Martha, • and 401dst it. shooldere at 71 cents. We quote
Gem PosoetoYbris holloo. ,__ o ° plain tams st.10(g101 cents , and canvassed
Is Is tilditgobe to the y .
-° "" tsuuu ' an 11(4124 cents /fib. W 6 quote shoulders
'Mei is toassemble hi*.
Lt is estimated that the loss sustained* the at 74 cents, sides at 81 meta, and hams at 9
eitiMem of Lawrence by the recent Stark mil cents VI lb. Lard—We quote bbls. at 101®
ammo& to a hundred thousand dollars. 11 cents, and k%rs at 121 cents "ii lb. Butter
Mr " = a P rcimil = e7 He liKilmills 'i n f orme —A Lairds:sera Prime roll at 15 (gm cents
bogie*, ' from Lea
so that on Wednesday last he', was arrested coma= do- os , 12c5 14 cents
by a party of twenty men beariciernked States "
vandbets, ender the mina:Mid if ed. WSkes,
of Sou& (Isizia, and taken before the Vigil-
awe Committee.
faimenworth was mannmcked by picket
gouda and no. one suffered to enter or leave
the town. Col. Wilkes had alist ofthe prinei
ppaall cierzas whom he intended'bi arrest. He
had dready made three &credit.: It was stated
*et the whole Territory *mad be placed un-
dersaitary surveillance: - ..
• The Repablican imbfithei ati Extra of the
Kansas Herald, of the 213th nit, which - Confirms
the walker. previously telegraphed ofthe murder
of eight Pm-Slavery men, on Pottawotamie
Creek, by a party of Free State men.' The
sweremosthciribly matalated. •Irt some
instances, • after their throats had , been cat,
their legs and aims - bad . been . thappedoff and
I their eyes gouged out. the - Pro-Slavery
fasußes Mckory Point were driven o 3
at
1
the point of the bayonet ; and their...horses and
• stolen by the Free State men.-
The New Orleans Median-
New Outclass, June 3.—The election ree•
ferday, readied in the Sucre's of the wir4e
AmamiMin.- . ticket, with . the:exeeption ot two
ocruselmee. The Mayor has 1,500 majority.
Mr. Trepaseier, the Clerk of the First District
Comfit, was shot and severely crippled by one
ors rty of Sicilians. A. serious not °teary.
4Jc - the Moveeth Precint, dariot shirk. three
Ntrniess.eine lolled, and several. others wean
! sea.. =WM IllginiaPP ~1111 r.
*goe:aired throughout the day, but without
say fadher deaths. • • • •
Mode Islsuad Amerksua Convent-
Pnovroszlrg, R, L, June 3. -The Ameri
can State Convention met to-day, there being
about 100 delegates present. The manias
sloe of Mr. Fllhnore for President was repudi
ated lby a. vote of 61 to 20.
amulep*l Elecllein.
_ Wasanitaroz, June 1.--Mairrader, the lrn
ins cancrtdate, is elected Mayor. The vote
mined: ...11er. 2,936; Hill, American, 2.-
9111. The M•Uielilltt have elected fonr alder
men and•she - Union men three. The City
Council stands 12 Americans and 9 Union.—
Ofthedesessors 4sze American and 3 Union.
Aid to Kaosaa.
Owosso, June 2, 1856.—The adrned
meetin . s of Saturday night, for the fmt , coo
sideratron of Kansas affairs, and the ratifica
tion of the Republican ticket, was the largest
ever Zeldin Elmois. It was resolved to send
five hundred settlers from Illinois to Kansas,
and $1.6,080 was subscribed for that purpose-
A committee was appointed to procure further
solimiptims, and take charge of the anrange
meets,
MI for the Free Slate sea.
Barrow, June 4.—Fanenli Hall was dense
ly crowded bat evening in obedience to the call
&c a meeting to consider measures to aid the
Free State men of llamas. Hon. Thomas G.
Cary called the meeting to order, and Mayor
Woe presided, assisted by forty-three vice-pres
idents, embracing some of the most wealthy
I mm of Boston and the vicinity.
A. committee was appointed to solicit sub
seriptions and several subscriptions were hand
ed in before the adjournment. One gentleman
tering $5OO.
Later from Kansas--♦tolence
and Bloodshed.
Coteau°, June 3.—Dates from Lawrence to
the 25th ultimo have been received. The cop.!
dent sends a list of the property destroyed I
at Lawrence, amounting to $130,000.
The crdfieulty mentiong as occurring at Pot
tawattamie Creek took place at Osawatomie.i
The quarrel arose from depredation by the pro
slavery men on the cattle of the free State
men. On the 26th ultimo the pro-slaverp
men seized a free State man and hang !tics ' t
when Lis wife fled and aroused the neighbors
to the rescue. A fight ensued, in which five
pro-slavery men and two free State men were
A force ofsixty men has been organized at
Wmt t .y 110., to proceed to Osawatomte.
Them. are in the Tract SIXTEEN ACRES,
mole or l e ss, of Land, of good quality, with a
GOOD BRICK
un gij DWELLING ROUSE,
- •
s well of excellent water and a
great carnet: of choice FRUIT TREES there
. on.
-- - The slnation is It very desirable one, corn.
Senatorial Election.
; Lining L.e advantages of both town and cone-
New Havr.s, June 4.—The Legislature to- j try- Persons wishing to secure a pleasant
dayelected James Dixon, an-American Repub. r.7..!ence will do well to attend thisati sale.
the
lican,to the United States Senate. The vote Any desired information relative to
stood—Dixon, 114; Toucey, 101 ; scatterir_g pro y, can be obtained from the undersign
?. ed. by whom also attendance will be given,
and terms made known upon the day of
Methodist General Conference. i sale.
Ismassrous, Ind.. June 4.—The Meth,- t R. G. II'CREARY,
dist Episcopal General Conference adjourned ; Atbraryisfactfor Conrad Baker.
lasteverfing, sine die, and the members are - JCEIC 5, 11.156?—ta
to their respective homes.
-- --
Mr. Stunner Iraprowing. 1-
im .•m= of Administration on the Estate
Wsautrwros, June 4.—Vr. Sumner 'a ; u
of MAGDALENA JACOBS, late of Lat.
Trin cli g in health, and will proliably visit i
imare township, Adams county, Perina., de
-3 chnsetts before resuming hie seat is the ;
laving . been granted to the subseri
'SeiTnta Ibe resrarmq In Reading township, he here.
aßsim!ziffig
• .
CMCAGO, June 3.—A letter from Mr. i "be gives notice to persons indebted to said
reline has been received, stating that Dr. Root ~ Mame, to -call and settle the same; and
and Mr. Mitchell, who had been reported Tour- !.. those having claims are reqirested to present
dered by the border ruffians, are allve- They the slower ProPerlY *Mimoriostedi for settle
were fired at and afterward arrested, but. sale, wrest-
sapiently diechargem SOLOMON JACOBS, :Adm'r.
Jam 6, IPsS—fits
StErCoL Richardson, at present a member
of Congress, hay accepted the Demoastie noes- ; jp),BRUGE TRIMMINGS can always be
1 hiltiall for Governor of Urinals. l ,-w Impel lower, and * larger assortment
_,....A kur elsewhere, is always to be had at
iiirThe National American Come% at its FAHNESTOCES I .
session in New York on Tuesday, decreed the
romosal of tbe injutiction of secrecy from the rtiIIaWCILS, Um Fansi
:
bra's; —stricks of
vreakings of the *dm' _ 1 ff. tbasa--sS - ' SCHICK'S.
HANOVER ELAIRSET.
Hatroven, June 3, t 856. i
FLOUR V 1 bbl., from wagons, 16 60
WHEAT, bushel, 120 to 1 .40
RYE,• 60
CORN',
28
OATS.
BUCKWHEAT, per bnsitel 40
POTATOES, per bushel
TI3IOTHY-SEED, ' 00
CLOVER-SEED, 6 00
FLAXSEED. 1- , 60
PLASTER OF PARTS, , 00
PORE, per 1001bs 7.00
TOR& 1111 ARK ET.
Tome, Tuesday, Juno-3, 1856,
FLOUR.p, UM., from wagons, , $ 5'62
WHEAT, bushel, - 135t0 1 60
RYE,• , 62
CORN, 40
OATS.
TIMOTHY SEED, 112 Lobel, 2 00
CLOVER-SEED, " 4.110
FLAX-SEED, a 1 80
PLASTER OF PARIS, tem. 676
MARRIED.
On the 1511 i nit— by Rev. D. Hartman, Rev.
OSCAR B. THAYER, of this place, and Miss
MARY GBH% of Smithsburg,
_ theVoh Lv the Rev. L. Gerhart,
'Mr. CHARLES I. CLIPPiNGER,..4 R.o'
Island, Illinois, and Miss M. LOUISA, daugh
ter of Mr. George Hersh, of New Oxford, Ad
ams county, Pa.
• On the 29th nit-, by the Rev. G. Both, Mr.
BRAEL SHANK, of Butler township, and
W as CARAIT A. KUHN, of Franklin town
ship.
On the 29th tilt_ by the Rev. L. H. Keafau
rex, Mr. GEO. E. PLANK, and Miss TIB Z A
JANE, only daughter of Mr. Joseph Eittinger,
near Fairfield, Adams county, Pa.
DIED.
On the night of the 28th of May, at his res
idence, in Latium:re township; Her. JOHN
ALBERT. :retired clergyman of the German
Reformed Church, intim 70th year of his age.
Mr. Albert sass man of strong mind, a good
preacher, and useful citizen.
On the morning of the 28th of May, Mr. B.
F. GARDNER,* merchant of Petersburg, Y.
S., in the 47th year of his age, after a protrac
ted and painful illness. Mr. Gardner Was a
kind and good citizen and was universally es
teemed by his friends and neighbors;and his
death will long be deplored and held in remern
brance by the community in which he resided.
On Sunday last, ltinz . MAGDALENA JA
COBS, widow of Samuel Jacobs, deceased, of
Latimore township, aged 78 years, 8 months
and Bdays.
Public Meeting.
Citizens of Monntjoy township will
hold ~meeting at Horuer's School 'house
mt Salim;lag Gfie 14th of ittae, at 2 o'clock P.
AL, all opposed to the unwiso policy of the
present. 'Sstional Administration, and in favor
of Freedom are invited to attend.
Jnr-e 6, 16.56.—td
VALUABLZI
TOWIT PROPERTY
For Sate.
IFINHAT Valuable Property formerly_ owned
JL by JOHN GARVIN, Esq., in the Borough
of Getrysbuzgoeill be offered at Public Sale,
at the Coart-lrase in said Borough,
Oa Saturday the 28th day of June, inst.,
ONE eCLOCT., P. M.
NOTICE.
READT-ATADZI CLOTS:ENO
AT SAMSON ' S
CHEAP CLOTHING EMPORIUM.
IF you want n; suit ' of READY-MADE
CLOTHING, complete in every respect,
of the latest style, and cheaper than they can
be purchased at any establishment in the
County—call at MARCUS SAMSON'S, op
posite the Bank, in York street. I have just
received from the Eastern Cities the largest
and best assortment of Goods ever offered in
Ge,gasburg. In offering to sell better Goods at
/oil* prices than other dealers, I simply re
quest purchasers to call and ratify themselves
of the truth of my offer, by . a personal exami
nation of my Goods andpnces. Buying exclu
sively for cash, I can buy cheaper and sell
cheaper than any other person in the County.
My Goods are 'made up In the best style by ex
perienced workmen, and can't he excelled by
any customer Tailor. My stock consists, in
part, of
Coale of all Sizes,
prices, colors, and kinds, made up in a supe
rior manner. Also PANTS AND VESTS, of
the latest and most fashionable styles and
every kind of goods suitable for Spring and
Summer wear; also
11Dq.)11;.i avvilD.ol3:lo3oo
and a large assortment of Gentlemen's and
Boys' Furnishing Goods, consisting of ex
tra quality linen bosom Shirts, Suspenders,
Gloves, half Hose, Collars, neck and pock
et Handkerchiefs, and an extraordinary as
sortment of Black Satin and fancy Self ad
justing STOCKS, and various other fancylir
ticks together with Umbrellas, Trunks, Car
pet Bags, Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes.
)3Ee..1 em also prepared to sell wholesale to
country merchants desiring tosell again, Ready
Made Clothing at cliesPErt HATES THAN OAR SR
DOIIOHT IN THE CITIES. If you doubt It, call
and examine for yours MAß elves.
CUS SAMSON.
N. B. All Goods bought of me will be ex
changed if they do not prove satisfaetbry.
Gettysburg, Ap;il 11, 1850. •
THE LADIES' STORE.
A NEW SUFFIX OF FANCY GOODS t
MISS lIICLELLAN
itAS just returned from the city with a
'Very large stack of
MILLINERY & FANCY GOODS,
to which she would invite the attention of her
friends and the public, believing that an ex
aminatiotrAvill satisfy them that her Goods are
the best selected and most fashionable as well
as the cheapest ever offered in this place. The
assortment comprises
Cashmeres,
•bilks, De Lanes,
G inghams, Oalime s,
• Base, Coburg Clothe, 51us.
lin, Dineen, Sack Flannels, Bon.
nets and Bonnet Trimmings, Satins,.
Ladies' Dress Trimmings, Velvets, Artvti
cials, Black Veils, 'Blue do. Gloves, Hosiery.
Handkerchiefs,• French Worked Collars,
• ; Cambric, Jackonet and Swiss Edgings,
Insertmgs, Muslims, Sleeves, Mo.
hair and 'Silk Mita, Black
Lace and Embroiderr
ed Handkerchiefs,
• Braids, Fans,
'• • . • &e,
tL.CalLand examine for 'yourselves. '
Gettysburg, April 18, 1856.
XYE IN G 00,111%
GEORGE ARNOLD
IFjust returned from the city with as
large and beautiful a stock of Goods as
hare been offered to the public at any time
among which aro Hosiery, Gloves, Under
Sleeves,
Collars, Trimmings, Opera Lawns
Robe Lawns, Do Baize's &c., &c.
Gentlmmix Goads in Great rarieta.
Black, Blue, Brown, Olive, Claret, and Drab,
Plaid s Clowied, and Eig,ured Cloths,Black,
Brown, and Fancy Casiimers, - Figure, • Plaid
and Plain of every shade of color, Drab De
tate, Cashmerette, Bombazine, Silk Warp, Al
paces, Se., Ate.
Also, Ready•mrule Clothing in great varieiy,
with a large stock of Groceries, Queensware,
Jr,c., dm., all of which will be sold as cheap
as they can be had at any retail estab
lishmeLt in the country.
The LADIES will please call, as we are at
all times pleased to see them.. •
The GENTLEMEN'S attention is invited
to our large assortment in their line. In con
nection with the Store, is our
IS at CD . 1.? Sa 31 - 0 awn)watoutt,
at the SantbStone Avid, .
Where everything is done up . in the neatest
and beet manner. We can rig a man from
head to foot, in the very shortest notice. Call
and see and judge for yourselves.
April 4, 1856.
FIATINEBTOCIE 21R0T31111111
HAVE received and are now opening a ve
ry largo and handsome stock of NEW
GOODS, and are prepared to sell to all in
want of any article in their line cheaper than
they can be bought elsewhere. Having par•'
chased our stock in New York, Philadelphia
and Baltimore, thus having the advantage of
all titres markets, we can offer inducements
which can not ho had elsewhere in the County.
Our stock embraces
DRESS C DODS
of every variety, Summer SILKS, Chali De
tains, Bemges, Brilliantinos. &c., and every
thing fashionable f es' wear. For
Gentlemen, we have beautiful styles of Goods
for Coats, Pants and .Yests, &c. Give us a
call, we deem it needless to enumerate the va•
riety of styles and qualities of our large stock
as we are prepared to furnish everything in
our line, at the lowest price. Call early at
FA HNESTOCKS',
The sign of the Red Front.
April 18, 1856.
NEW ESTABLISHMENT.
GRANITE STONE-YARD.
THE undersigned respectfully inform the
citizens of Gettysburg and the public
generally thatthey have opened,a GRANIVy
STONE YARD, on South Baltimore Street,
Opposite the residence of George Shryock,
where they are prepared to furnish GRAN•
ITE STONE, dressed in every style, for
alontnnents, illoor Sills and
Steps, • .
and every kind of building and ornamental
use. Also, CEMETERY BLOCKS alera'ys
on hand and a general variety of dressed
Granite.
-The undersigned having had consider
,able experience in their business, respectful
ly invite persons . wishing anything iu their
line to givens a call—as we are prepared to
furnish the same article CHEAPER than it
has ever been heretofore offered in Gettys
burg.
HENRY S. BENNER,
PETER BEITLER.
April 18,1856.—am
coax, STONES,
OF variouspatterns and sizes, constantly
on hand e nd for sale, a
WARRENS' FOUNDRY
gabgegtodt Drotbers
H AVE received and are now openings vets
JILA large and handsome stock of NEW
GOODS, of every variety. Give them an ear
ly call if yo want bargams.
April 1 I, u
1856.
A -
N extensive assortment of AEON and
NAILS just received at
FAHNESTOKCS%
TOBACCO.—A prime article just reeeired
at
• —`
. , .
"CAST rota DREAD ETON TEL EATERS, POE
TER MANY DAYS YR BEALL LOD IT."
A CERTAIN CURE FOR ALL 11111111131 C PAINL
Don't Condemn it but try it, U cannot fail.
F. C. ALLEN'S
C 0 NL'ENTBATED ELECTRIC PASTE
AND ARABIAN PAIN BITRAOTQII
lbr Marsala Horse.
LCopy right 'secured accord' lug bt.:l '
SMALL JAR, • • ggty c on s
' ,
LARGE JAR, • Ono Dollar.
THE ELECTRIC PASTE acts' upon the
Muscles, Tendons t and upon the whale' •
nervous system, removing torpidity and_ptto
during a healthy action of the blood .. Thank
being no volatile mutter in its composition,
remains in action until it accomplishes be
work. It cannot lose its strength, and is 4.
ogether harmless, its constituent parts being
entirely vegetable. •
What will it cure ? We answer--Rhea• ,
matic Pains, when everything else fails,
Cramps, Cholic, Chilblains, Burns, Scalds,
Sprains, Head-Ache, Tooth. Ache, Swellings,
Bruises, Sores, Ring• Worm, Totter, Stiff Joints,
Contracted Cords, Fresh Cats, Ulcerated Sores,
and all Scrofulous Diseases where external .
remedies can be used, Sore Throats,. Stiff ,
Necks, &c.
What it will curs for Horses and
Sweeny, Spavin, Fissulas, Poll Evil, Wind.
gallr, Ulcers, Cholic, Sprains, Collar and Sad
dle Galls, Stone Braises, Stiff Joints, Verdigo,
Splints, and Running Sores.
lial..For sale at the Patent Medicine Store
of H. A. Rockafield & Co., General Agents,
Lancaster, Pa., and by A. D. BUEHLER, Get*
tyaburg, Pa.
biirNone genuine butthoso bottles having
the words "E. C. Allen's Concentrated Eleo.
trio Paste, or Arabian Pain Extracta,
caster, Pa.," blown on the bottles. •
VW—Look out for. Counterfeits. 'Don t for
to ask for ALLEN'S.
April 25, 1856.—1 y • , ,
A HUMAN LIFE SAVED!
DowAnlAc MOO., March 11 . 0888.
. A. RHODES Esq.: Dear S i re—As I
J• took your medicine to sell on consign.:
meta, "no cure no pay," I take pleasure 'in att.:.
ting its effects as reported to me by three
brothers who live in this place, and their testi.
mossy is a fair specimen of all I have re
ceivcd:
W. S. Conklin told me---"I had taken nine
bottles of Christie's Ague Balsam. and cootin.
tinily run down while using it until my lungs
and liver were congested to that degree that
i blood discharged from my mouth and bowels,
so that all thought it impossible for me to live
through another chill. The doctors too did all
they could for me, but thought I must die.— .
Nothing did me any good until I, got Rhodes'
Fever and Agpe Cure,
which at once relieved
me of the distress and nausea at my stomach
and pain in my head and bowels, and produced '
a permanent cure in a short time." '
11. M. Conklin says—"l had been taking
medicine of as good a doctor as we have in
our county, and taking any quantity of quinine
and specifics without :sty good result, from
the 25th of Aurigae the 17th of September.—
But seeing how nicely it operated on my broth
er, I got a. beetle of Rhodes' . Fever and. Ague
Cure, which effected a permaneutcure by using
two-thirds of a bottle. . •
S. M. Conklin was not here, , but both the
other brothers say his case was the same as. .
H. M's. I sold the medicine to both the ramie
day, and the cure was as speedy from the same
small quantity, andl :night so specify. Yours
with respect, A. HUNTINGTON.
The above sneaks for itself. Good proof as'
it is, it is of no Latter tenor than the vast num
ber of like certificates I have already published,
and the still greater amount that is continual
lypouring in upon me.
One thing more. Ltat.year I had occasion
to caution the public in these words:
"'notice onefirm who hare taken ens ray
L
general circulars, substituted the name o their
nestrunsformy medicine, and then with .
impudence end their pamphlet with the ezda.
matron, 'Let theproprietor of any other wadi,
tine say as much if he dares," &c.
Now I take pleasure in saying that tha cau
tion referred to the same "Dr. Christie's Ague
Balsam" that is mentioned in the above cer.
tifi cate.
There are several other industrious people
who are applying to their poisonous trash all
that I have published about my Fever and
Ague Cure, or Antidote to Malaria, except the
certificates of cures, and the certificate of the
celebrated chemist ? Dr. James R. Chilton, of
N. Y., in favor of its perfectly hartnless char.
acter, which is attached to every bottle. This
will always serve to distinguish my medicine
from imitations.
For sale by Druggists generally.
JAB. A. RHODES, Proprietor.
PROYIDENC; R. L '
April 25,1856.-3 m
NEW STORL
BONNETS & FANCY GOODS.
MISS IRCREARY him just returned Do*
the cities, and is now opening thei best
selected and most fashionable assortment of
MILLINERY AND FANCY GOODS ever
brought to Gettysburg, consisting in part of
Neapolitan, Straw and Fancy
BONNETS.
CAPS and. Cap Trimmings of every descrip7
tion, Veils, Laces, Netii and Illusions of all
colors, Embroideries Handkerchiefs , Gloves,
Hosiery, Summer Dress Goods, Shawls and
51antillas, Mourning Goods, together with an
assortment of Fancy articles for the toilet too
numerous to mention, which she invites the
Ladies to call and examine.
Miss MOCREAKY will also carryon the MIL
LINER business in all its branches, and hopes
from the experience she has had. and a desire
to folease, that she will be able to give general
satisfaction. East York Street, directl,y
opposite the Bank.
April 18, 1856.-3 m
IF YOU
WANT HATS, CAPS, BOOTS& SHOEI4,
V V at least 20 per cent. cheaper than , ritz
over bought before, remember it is at' CO
BEAN 44 PAXTOWS, where they aro 'to be
had in great variety, consisting of Gent's an 4
Boy'li fine Silk, Fur and Slouch Hats, of the
latest style;all colors and sizes, White, Black
Tan, Blue, Drab, Fawn, ke.' Also; a hula
assortment of Men's and Boy's Fine ;Calf, IKL3igg
and Grain Boots and Shoes, Gent's ruvi
and Patent Leather Gaiters.
careful, Ladies, if you want Walking and
Fine Dress Shoes, such as Jenny • Lind, Bes
ides and Ties, Xid and Morocco Slippers-,-stl
so a beautiful assortment of Llubes' Dress
Gaiters, with a largo stock of Misses' and
Childrens' fancy Gaiters and Shoos—that lon
find COBEAN & PAXTON'S, at the !South
east Corner of Centre Square, before purchas
ing elsewhere, as they bare by fits the largest
stook of Seasonable Goods in town, and an
determined to sell eery cheap. Take ease
and keep a
SHARP •
look-out that you do oat mistake tie plats....
Remember 00BEAN & PAXTON'S Near
Store, at the Old Stand of Realer Kart&
Gettysburg, March 4, 1858.—tt
Ina BOXES REST CONSIEWS
%ivy' TOBACCO. in moo siotilo
sale by WM. BUEHLER,
N 0.157 FrinkUa Om/
VtONNETS, Ribbons, and r* ow irtily
d
/LP satiety, and to snit Ma
found cheap at
ITOLLOWAY'S PILLVW 4)1
JUL . COM behad
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