?ADSWAND BANNER. '• t. •tA), I,;' Etr -• , .;; CEITTSBURC. ,-.-Friday Evening, June 13, 1856. , Y0U111214 T 12,; AMEaiCAN 21.AtIORAL CON ses POE PRESIDENT, MILD D MIL/MORE. FOR 'ME PRESIDENT, OMIDOVVJACKSON DONELSON, nlop Stale Ticket. . . '• . Sitstr.tt. COXMISSIONEM - :;11145mAli ii-cbcmiiix, or York, ('Whig.) • lunt r e ss opcnits.). PIMPS, of Armstrong, (Amer.) IFILYKYOR OENERAL: •t,,,13,144' 4 41,TE, of Bradford; per The, leaders of the Loedoco party baying, by' a bold enti-American policy, absorbed nearly the entire Foreign vote of the country, must tooner or later reap ; the legitimate fruits of incorporating so large W 101130041 of restless; arbittary and on. American material , in their pithy orgaul. The ittoiniam i a or the anon ' wan 1 zation. Having bid, high for that later est, they will have bid yet higher to re .r.ty.-,,, '; . - 1,',- . Ce.oveutioll. . tain it. Indeed the "firm fruits" are be „VirjeTher naniinatinif of JaMEs 80-1/fihriktr 1/fihriktr as the Presidential ' candidate ing already realized in the insolent and al..' e ,itifi e ~sa t la tali part y, is , -a Pa iPa hi a regent tone of the papers repr e se nti ng th e • ‘i 1, • • • •, . , acknowledgment etttion,of the weakness of the issues rail- by the Cincinnati Con- Foreign vote, the conductors of which feel consoimis of their power and seem dispo- , ..v Attl.by the National Adniihistration. With sod to lay down terms as the condition of ' 4 141 the boaZted'strength 'of the. p rinci p le their continued adhesion to the "Denic 441441tieb' the Kansas-Nehrtska Bill is ta° Y , Wit'hsve hereto r gi tublisbcd 1 ff#oll,.)::ased, the,. Convention were eeveral,strong articles fromthe orgarr,of . t erA Bishop` Hughes ? io, New 'York. and rho' '0 abet . id go before the people with a Pres- New York laalsPitung,”. the organ', irdeittiol 'etindidate in nny' wise connected 4 l i virtir t this 'legislation which repealed 'the of the German' Democracy, taking excep tineliOricired ' Missouri Compromise and tion to the 'n to of certain DeMooratio politicians and warning the party, oethe ' lAm legitituate consequences flowing there-; 'from,ia pat*of which has already been re- danger of alienating dread whose inpport !tilted in the fearful sectional agitation now' is °s'elitt°l to triumph. We this week 'alv i itiPiiig over the Republic. Pichoz and present anotheriiimeinion of the same sort , .4411791 1 40,the originators and un fli n chi n g . hailiee, cram, PloM:te D'Ancr 3PGrte, . the noted Irish Citholit agitator. and edi almlecteettlauf the Kensas-Nobraska outrage, We Irish. Cell, published in' New have been sot aside, along with CA9u, for-of York. It :was presented , to the Cincinnati ifttereEtt• and Hunt, . and all the other • pititninent men who voted for that 'mess-) C°°v?Pti°°J and '4OO fhtilabtit without "li4 i liiiiie Mr: Ituchamin is 't in b comment: ' ... : ' ' ~_e, 4- 4 aaa ..p , be;- 7'.vrio.A. , Nl suPPosed voters might be , 101 NASSAU &me; New Year-, 1 . pads 10 ketlieve that'. he was . Italia any mo w A r eat i„,; ' or lilkv iL7 , l, B „,t 6 L,:., hr „, z - talpreaponsible, by reason of hie absence Cpnrention ! ' .:- -----,--- ----114- :fr t. :}b e i ` ebunttr When'the outrage was' said siviteueur-4-A ward spoken - ia time is .o lie r _t_r o at . ld. ; ; D!) ... h . ave . .thn , s ., ji_resentel!, in i . s ta st atf t e ° l ; b z ° au worth` such mor e aw r d tl r b i ° 7 t g a t d r _i re a f i t t t e ' l c b j e a g. ofSe f L eq9 4 ?,." We Loncinoatt tionvention, tinned *rib W . e at yoardoor, 1 PrCis. ' You I still hope not en' your onehes, a delegate A miudrest , yielding to the storm of popularh fintliguatiob evoked by .thofrom eahfornin, (Mr. HerberOn whose hands policy of 'the from smokes the bleed 'of 'a poor eonntryman ~: i . P ii., ..,,.4 .i and Docir, ..s. s ' dynasty* . • hotel at Washington , laddres ti you tcsimple Li 1 reThßt. ,4Y- Dutirth.e.ukt watt not select ed.; straight-forward,' ques ti o n-do Llayt.:reason of . any, peculiar • personal i mit this matt to tstti yourVrat il io tc :4 'd. vatierigth; aside'. from his non-participatio n l ii. Pei Igin ceralY't yea:do . not. ; He. is "in 11 by vbiab , th , ,, , tree Tei..! now under hehvy. boa ~ to stag his • trial for ..,,,.i .i 4 ~,,,, '.; M g r ,Pft!l9 Pefea have lien tliroiyr!!;.l not decency enough to stay Avg, you Tutoring i stances of o n t !t h e e eney e andfutifit i t t b a l v e err- ;pen Yt : the aggressions of Slarcry propa-., -garlisinimo one fnmiliar with his past pa , enough to keep him'out: ought' - e ' e 1 ."Ildtialliisteiryi hie repeated failures hither-Ilam knowt. Lo se several of your number, and i though timer periiilly engaged in any Pres -I.Vlll4eirimrind the con fi dence'd Lis party,., idential carivass,• of the . three I: have winnedsed ~till,lnrutopment believe. The Washing. in the United the ,Statez.there are.thoire with you ~; -. I who can certif II AflP VOton—the matt onal organ of the - a ,111 Y-. Preferences have , p ar- thitherto been democratic, and my, action ae. lye;e-Itt urging the claims of Pierce to a re- 1 cordirigly. In 18511 was among'theo 'la rat, t o 40titinliti,iiii, Over and over gave its friends! most earnest, and I believe not the leak, ea i i. - iii,ielitand ' that the. t . • ..., I dent in resisting the artful attempt to `Make' Mr it4werable 'for the Catholic' test ' lire . .„Amention must be , a MUD . whose Demo ; the New Hainpshire Constitution. The"einti. mittigiorthodozy was unquestioned _and ' f h tti e ,; c :i i ; ic iLub o li f Fat l iets of that Any issued from wirointiluist - political history would stand, and Washingto e n Un t io li n' P lra t' ve 4 re ibi e l l 4 t t i r i g tot l 'iliii tisi of l rigid scrutiny. Whether the ready' for the MailltenatMe of a great e Prin. •144 - tt i Ll 4. 1 • ' .' • eiple in common with tlm class of citizen 'to ~ ,yrinswill be disposed to press, that aeru- whith 1 belong,, rwas then ' rand' to %bli s ter .. 11 0. y. 4 0. 1 b as :h o man aga i ns t , wha m its ate the memory of individual wrongs.' • '' ' tirisitielltiomt were directed has become the 'Precisely in the same spirit, / woo aik fol-' Afr. Herberts extbraion. Since 1852 a fierce lietiblinie - Of the party, remains to be teen- social war has been , made on the adopted citi, At,yez:,that may be; there will not be zoos. So ( I{l 9 . i as, it wiis confined to, sectarian Atenstng opportunity to furnish the voting fo r ,TNt a „?til u alitn l i g lt t ib m :ir b :: e lTr i un r eti' L I ) utassitun of tho Republic with a record of Democratic member of Congresd'and Delegate litit gigabit: , evasive policy of Mr. Be. to your Convention; shoots before breakfast; a working man, because ho 'resented being Ithitifitlinring a inn public career. Ori- called a.'•damned Irish see of a b---11," lit , Is 4404,e, )atjt4r,Federalist, denouncing the full time for us to ask you do yen mean ' togq" WA e lBl2, and the Democratic Admin. t i l l r o a t t o e r. t o li ti a s t f m ac a ts it fr o o l n tz vo v t i i r r l , d nft s : t ics, i r to overlook q alit7. of vitiation'. of James Madison—elected to I all classes of citizens, high ' an ° tl t hi e wnt l :tive and - 99Agfeks, 'frequently as an 'avowed Feder- 1 foreign-born, in practice. as iti theorY. Leak ing anxiously for your decision' . to your' pro. Oil' on 4 ''flio' regular 'nominees of the ceedings, I remain, gentlemen, very.respect . Attkecre. to purty.--afterwards a recognized fully, .Your obedient servtuat, ... • . ' ilitader of mbdern political Demucracy--at ' • TH° B ' D'AxtcY•le9EE .. time' . .4i am'ardent advocate of the Ordi iiiiititt cif 11'87, and opposed to the admis iiioWdßlaCe States into , the ITUion and a fain.,,a, pliant sopperter,of the aggressions ,of.theStave Power—at times a professed] Viiind"of the .'great' American system of i,-'-V ote; , ti i o to •om e Industry, and again' ie i l 9,4 l lp , peciky AS U. S. Senator boldly ad-' , ..reiciating Free Trude and the policy of re- boil* *re. may find some meaae in future „off o ddelding• ourselves from Foreign influence, trAolitica, commercial, or in whatever form it bar Ve attempted: ' I wish there were an ocean office between' this and the old world.— dascinq. , Ake wages of labor to a specie I totati'dltrilas illustrated in the "ten cents" May , wages of European laborers--these anti tither notable inconsistencies .in 11Ir. Suishanan's public career, must surely *tint open to severe attack, and in so far render him a "weak" candidate. In Nim7,94,11 this, hoivever, tbe Cincinnati .eseivention found itself forced to adupt s their candidate, in order, if possible, to niiiit s the lodgment which a" betrayed swd,indigritint North was, prepared to 0- ,4:mains& the recognized policy of the Partr , ' • . n.-xii#as; we think, the loaders of the tv o o tig p party hive ihowu they, bo able to neenroplish their purpobe, and in 1866 succeed in, blinding sad deluding a' majority_ of 'the I,),,l),ClA4far*iiablie, theydid in 18ta Mrimsio.l.i, ditliongh Mr flu= elnuran bad no active agency in the pas. Paige . §f .the Kitnesas.Neb:asks bill. be is tiriliatindar4 bearer of The party that has ` And ores endorsed that )neasure'an d *5l ow 'outran," now irantOring 'in 44411 d, at Wasbington, and aside from ititloato staartiod approval of tb•t legiai sgoiriti• utalkiity." he is too triaging a prirtilifar(yr weatnre dissent from the poli. elF;nlbis dirty. UO mop hi. Amain- Oa* alitijoo4 to the plotronn .down at capreatly Antis tit 001 tM L.1 ** *. MEM!MMZMI=MMMMEMMM repeal of the Missouri Compromise, and the finality of the Kansas-!Siebraska bill as the creed of the party. He therefore becomes therepresentative of his paity . and it policy, and will be hela responsi ble'therefore at the polls; No sin c e re , op. ponces of tin, disastrous policy of No braska•Locofecolsat can in any event give him even a reluctant support. Whtngie effect of this nomination may be will depend much on the action of the New York American Convention which meets to-day and the Philadelphia; Con vention nortluesday. Sho,uld both' thew bodies unite upon a strong conservative candidate*say Judge MoLEArt, of Ohio, -- it will contribute greatly , to concentrate the entire anti-Nebrashavote of the coun try, and yreueb Ile event the nominee dr • the Cincinnati Convention must be defeat 'ed., A Week Or ten da ys will clear up Preient diffipultiee. , The •!Flrst Fr 0118.9, . THE CANDIDATE, FORIBIE VICE PRESIDENCY..-,The New York Timai says did'Hot - John BreCkenridgei' of , KentuCky, , who , has ,'received th'e,noininn.; ion foi-ViatiPresicient, at' the 9inci t nazi Cotkvention, was of very (anions -person two years -since.; His affait.•with Hon. 'Francis . ' B.' Cutting; of that' Oity; whoni chellenited, 'will, 'Of couaie, berfreill in the memory .of the public.. , Att.. Bracken! ridge is.comparatively a 3.outigman, andfhis public services are confined,totWo terms in Congress. He wss offered. the laissiekto Madrid; on ahe resignation which I;elleclined, and was 'talked of as Gdreinor'of Minneseti. Ho Iti• of the Celebrated .P.-atibyta.ri4 .clergyman,; Rev. Robert J. Breeketiridge,.Who has. ac- quired quite al . reputatiOn kby his .uncom. promising opposition and for his adVocieY of slaveky sa a divine, in ' etitution. WORTH PRESERYING.--Thi fol lowing exhibits the electoral votes of the several States, distinguisbing. between the free and Slavestates: • .• • , , lEEE ii`ATSB. I 11aine, New - litextitshim 5 Ohio, ' — 23' iVermont, ' 5 Indiana, 18 lissasehusetts, , 'l3 Illinois, ' ' . 11 ( Rtiodelsland, 4 Michigan, fi Conneett'ent, 7 Wissoimir -., • 5 ' New Jersey . - 7 lowa, 1 Pennsylyaum, • 27 : _.,... California, 4 Total, . 176 SLATE in..t.cns , Virginia, 16 ~ Texan, ,- 4 North Carolina, , 1/0" ACkstuntl4 — , ..i . luth 9anakiii, - 8 - Florida,' ' ' 3 Csmit, , 10 Maryland,' ' - • 8 Audione,' ',..•• ; ' A/ Kentucky, • •, 12 )finsisetypi ; ' • 7 Tennessee; .7.• • - 12 ;,euisisuff ' 6 .144.6:06, •, , -9 I)alisnire, ' • -, .3 I Total, Outrages In Kaunas. The Now York Tribune counties a number of reCout letters and despacbes from Kansis, all going to show fink' the most dreadful exeetises continue to be per petrated by, . the puallavery party, who, strange to say, are backed up in their law lees proceedings' by all thk power and 'authority of the Pierce administration. Not content with sacking the free town 'of Lawrence, destroying hotels and printing offices and private dwellings, and commit ting numberless thefts and robberies, as they have done during the pest fortnight, they nave determined to visit in succes sion every town in the:Territory;.lll2 . d or drive away all the leading Free State Wen, to that kitties' majcbegivell'over to' slavery.beyood alLhopes,of reelattsatiop.r. iThe Free State party are tot yet, however, quite Subdued; and - manifest a disposition to make a stand in defence of their right''. Li a few,days tuorewe. may expect in hear news of a bloody conflict. . Kansas is in aI State of tiege, sad her people, instead 'of ' receiving, as they'have a right to expect, aid and Comfort from the"government. Gad the arms of the United states soldiers turned against them. • It is surprising; with the evils'whieb have already resulted froin thepitatiage, of th'n Kinstus.Nebriska bill staring them in the fat% elation con siderable portion of the North should be found to endorse that monstrous switullo— bat', so It is. party.' spirit lute grown I stronger than , patriotism, end' while the calm of Freedom liee bleeding _in Kaneas, Locofocoism at Cincinnati exults, approves and endorses the very measures which have led to inch 'disgraceful and disastrous results. MR2BUC HA NA N AN 11 MR. CLAY.— The friends of the groat' Kentucky suites: man welllnew that had it not , been for the accusation. made against him by' Mr. Buchanan, he -would have been elected President of the'United States. Of this no man actinalond with the political histo ry of this, country for the last thirty yearvi •can entertain a - doubt. .Aeoording to Gen: Jaeltson's 'own statement, Mr. Buchanan was tho man ,who put in motion the .4bargain am! sale" story which was promulgated and asseventsixl, and believed as truth, the Union over, but which was afterward shewn to . be' false, , and branded as snoil by all lteuerable' Men, The Her rtsburg Telegraph says that. the friend of Henry Clay, who -could voto• for James Buchanan for President, under these cit.- cunnitunemi, would deserve . more universal I contempt than Buchanan himself. We are of the same opinion. No friend of Hen ry Clay can so dishonor him, as by 'as sisting to place in the Presidency the po litical aspirant who never had the mann newt° ackuewledge the, foul wrong of the hbriberY and salo n charge whilst the great (ifity - 14 r er d , vilto lam nave vett done so since ho has One his hist resting 11r7illte following is a summary of the balletinga at the , Cineintiati 'Convention. the half ballot, were counted by dividing ,the3s ballota.Srool New York : let'ballot--Pierce 1221; Buchanan 135 Douglas 35/ ; ,Cites 5, 2d, Buchanan 139, Pierce 1191, Douglas 31j, Cass4i. 3d. Buchanan, 1391, Pierce 119, Douglas 32, Cass 51. • •' 4th. BnChaliart 1411, Pierce 119, Dong,las 30, Case 5/. • -sth. liuchahan, T4O; Piorco 110, Dough's 31, Casa • • • . • • 6th,• Buchanan 155, Pierce, 167 i, Douglas 28, Cass 7th. Buchanan 1431, Pierce 89, Douglas 58, Cass si. atit• ,Buchanan 1471, Pierce, 87, Douglas 56, Cues 5/., 9th. I:lUchanan,l46/, Pierce 87, Douglas 56, Ciao 71: 10th. Bachanan - 150i, Pierce 801, Douglas 11th. I".lctchanan 147 Pierce 801, Douglas 63, Cass 61. . „12th. Buchanan, 148, Pierce 79i, Douglas q;, •• 18th. B6chaaatilso, Pierce 77fr, Doughu 63, Can Si. , 14th. Buchaisri'l62l,'llieraa 79, Douglas 63,•Cass 53. • 15th...Bochanan . 168li' Pierce 8,), :Douglas 1181r.Oss*:41.• . . 16th. Buchanan 168, Douglas 121, Cass 6. 17th. Dophstorta , ~..; • Thu first ballot in the -Convention for Vico.President resulted follows : • • , . Breckenridge, of KentuCky,' '55; Quitman 39, Boyd 83, P'itipatrick 11, Brown 29, , Her. ehel Johnson 31, Husk 2, Bayard , 3l, Polk 67, pobbin ; l3. • • The second ballot nnanimone .fot Hon'.` , ...T. C.' Brenikenridge,"of Ky 6 , INDIGNATION. MEETING IN, PHIL. ADELPFIIA.--Da Friday evening last, the citizens of Philadelphia held an, indig riatinri meeting• at'theConnty 9Ourt'Hiinse denouncing die !Dunne upon Senator Sumner. , , ?.'he meeting was organized at the same tame, with chairmen and •speak: era, and amongst'-the latter we find the nimbi of Mains. Ez- Governor Johnston,• B. 11., Brewster, B. Joy iFlorris, Rev. IL -.Furness,' and others wh; delivered speeches, which were vehemently appletided. Strong resolutions were adopted denoun cing the outrage upon Senator Sumneras an attack upon the freedoni of speech. o:7lhe Philadelphia Eveningßulletin, an independent paper, says, "as Pennsyl vanians we cannot, it , is , true, raise a shout of jubilation over the choice of Mr. Bu: antrum ; for although he is , a Pennsylva nian, we can discover, in the long course of his public life, no single sot that he has done for the'elevation of tho Slate's char actor or for the promotion of her poi- 1/1/Senator Trnmbpll, .o.with avow to „. • 'reettde peace in Kansas ha, introduced bill, proposing the annexation of Kansas to Nelniska, the terms of all offices in' Kan- Isis; and laws,' and supposed. laws to nek.,Es•Governor Reeder arrived al •his home in Batton, on 'Wednesday IaBL - A coat Suggestion. 10 4 fir. Crianden on Tueeday last, in. -the Senate, asbritted a resolution request. iiig thatliesiOest, in visor of the difficul. ties erieting In Kansas, and the employ., merit of a nsiita'ry force for the restoration of law ; ,and ices° and harmony, there, to send Geo. Sc i tt to take cornrow:id of those , . . foices. Mr. Critte den said it seemed , to him that the Senile had but very seldom under their er;isid ration a subject:of more im portancli. di the affair* -of. Kansas. 'lt wait enough 0 'tiaske them feel ashamed for the ape ile now presented in that 1 erritm.Y.: : . err had been its *gen sit , months and of ono step had been taken by thearto ' iriedy this - didgracefal evil, grow jug di/ iidayr and °PrPOing wider and wider, md,inflaming , passions already too much espied: , Not only`s the 'peateand quiet of Kan ass disturbed, but the peace•of the 'entire country is :Orions'' , threatened. Of; de : bate there.het been enough, but not' of a kind , to conttibute to an impartial jadg tlin meat, but th lead to ciiminatioti 'arid re elimination, g 0 wanted to coo broad, eral, and fra al peace, andthat must be the ambitionof all, '. , • ' 1 , In the collie ,of hit re marks he - raid I Gen: Scott its the man who darries the sword in Lie 104 hatid and in his right band peace gentle peace.; and ,by .his voice will'do ore than a thousand bayo nets. ' His Pet, was to put au end to P:Prlir in 4 11 !' 1411 ' n Mr. critti adorer proposition came up next day a was debated until the hour of adjotirnm nt. The Administration Son. atore—Yule , Brown. t t o `.coucey, Mallory, Aditms, Ma il, Ana , Reid—opposed it as implying eturture of the President. Messrs. Crittenden, Clayton, Ball and Seward ur ged its adoption as a means of staying the anarchy and Moodshad prevailicg in itan sae. TheSenato adjourned without a voi-u BORDERRUP -- FIANATCHISON. This man, once the President of the Uni ted -States,.Hanate, has become a very do graded Creature. Just before tiro bogus SheeiffJeirrEs and'his ruffiln poise entered tbolowri of Lawrence to'burn and sack it, ATCHISON etude a speech to them, while standing on 4 brass howitzer, which he af tcrwards , fired off himself, but was too drunk to aintrit correctly. A correspon dent of the Tribthie gives it in full, and says that while those who aro riot acquain ted with the Honorable Oinerars style may object to fts profanity, still it is char acteristie, and two men •who heard hitu, vouch for the dorrectuese of the speech us thus reported "Boys, thi.4 day I am a Rickapoo Ranger, by G— I This , day we have entered Law rence, I - Sotithern Rights" inscribed on our banners; and riot one Abolitionist has dared to fire a gun. So, by,o-;--d, not' one l Thla, tm."l. 111 .4hempieggo,t br wholo - iik We have entered the 41-41 any,. and tomight the Abolitionists will learn a Southern lesson that they will remember till the , day of , their death. And now, boys, we will go in with our highly honorable' Jones and test the strength i of that d—d Free' State Hotel; and learn the Emigrant Aid Society that Kansas'shall be' ours. Boys, ladies should be, and trust will be, respected by,all gentlemen.; but, by G—„, when a woman takes upon herself the garb of a soldier, by parrying the garb , of a Sharp's rifle, . their she no urger ,a, woman, and; by G—, treat her for what you tud'her, and trample hee under fOot - its yea , would ti snake. By come on boys t - Now:to yourdthies to yourself and =your> Southern friends I Your duty I know you will do, and if a manor woman darn stand before.you,blow them to with .a chunk igcold ieadr ' COL. BENTON A.T•CINOINNATI. . . —l'he. Cincinnati Commerical says:— Col. Benton has been 'celled on by many gentlemen, tit•lils' parlor in the Broadway Hotel. He'ia electioneering Lard and lint for Buchanem . and is dealt: and woe on li‘ieree and Dangles. ,fieeaye ' , The Administration it moat week and corrupt, sir--,vorrupt and weak, sir. The President don't know his own, mind one hour, eir,—not for one hour. Look a tour foreign relitions. There is more danger, of the peace, of the _world being ' disturbed than you are tiWitre, air 'More titan you are aware of;sir..- " • ' . - o The passions of the people are fearfully arouseksir—fearfully aroused. _ .Mention the name of Douglas and every bad, pas-, sion is aroused—every sir. 'Heil a ptilitiell 'fitllibuster,' air.' 'He . dodid not carry-a liee Otte: 'The Mirth Is incensed, very 'justly ineettSed at' 'entidnet,, 'air. This of Slavery _agitation ‘yks settled, sir,. un til he broke' lt The angry pelted' of Old verylist, ' 'Daiiii , BP Seal timuittittisi.—On ' Wid nes( ay night s Mrs ar, • (roper, svi ri /, - I ' i M M ''Y•V' ' \ 7 of Edwirdd opera of 111Orilt Dove r, .31ass. , came, tri'llE4 ,lerith , 'Under the following singular ciroupisiances: Mrs. dosiper r,a tired to be reiit at an 'early.' hour ,svftli ; young child. i Her ' husband. went to' bed ( t at ninceo'clop , when his wife partiallY a• woke and r narked that she illil been dreaming of washing hard. Nothing more' sian'said, anthill weitt,to sleep: At, about. half-past 11 o'clock the ,child crieJ, arid .Mr. Cooper milled his Wife pn' receiv ing no reply he arose, and found she was gone. An alitrth was inuMediateleY giv en, search mode, and her body was found at 'about midnight in the millpond of Fl dges' factory, lice dow'onrds. lt ap pears that Mot. Cooper got up very care fully, soil withenta alight, passed ilown 'to the cellar, shutting the doom after her, and took a tub, ,washboard and a, pail to the water. ' ' The lionatorts are experiencing hard times at salt Late. Food Is do scarce that beggary from'door to door ie as common as in our Atlantic Cities. Brigham Young denounces the practice as likely to he an imposture, thou . gif he elys where , any of the saints have gone Jive dews without tood the); ought to make their wants ktiown. Rather a task for a mango . sup port ninety wives in a country Where food is so Irmo., • O:7AI] affray took place on Saturday evening last bet Ween two U. S. soldiers, stationed attarlisle barracks, named Thos. MoGray alias John Runty and, Richard goGreedy, in'which the former received a wound from which he bas since died. ' TUE SACK OF LAWRENCE. OlDclal Bulletin of lbe Border liuMansi. The - Leedmptoh UnfOn•-:the Pro7ola very organ at the Petit of GovernMent chosen' for Kansas last . summer by' the Border; faifian faegislature at Shawnee hliesioit—giver the frlloWinii,,dittailoi at. countiit •'the lack "of Lawrence by bon *Wean and Jones! monster posse, of which the Editor (A. W. Jones) made a pro.— We publish the narrative exactly as we find it, and entreat that every opponent of the Free-State cause be urged to read it. [Prom the Lecompton Union, May 24.] ..! Lawre fr aco ailLikn ! aiotidus 4ilitiApt of Al taeit , Aid Order Pat ' ty over Fanaticirni in /Camas. ;trhshermed• and, determined risisionce of ,the oitiaena i of Lsurrence, to Our,lawa, and'the many offenOes against the officers who attempted, to execute filen:6.ond. the more recent developmonis in the Commit tee-room of that place, forood.the U. a. Marshal. on lie Illh day of Mays, l B s Br to Wade the following , 'PROOLAMATION TO THt PROPER OP EANSAIVTIHNITORT; Whereas, bertain judical Writs of ariest have been directed to me by the'Fir'st Div Wet Ifourt of the United States, &n., to he eiectited within the County of Dough'. ; , and, whereas, an itteinVto execute Mena, bY the 'United States DePitty Mdrßbal wad violently resisted by a large number of the citizens of Lawrence, and as there: is reason to believe that any attempt to' execute those writs will 'be resisted by a larie Humber of armed Men; how,;thcre fore,' thelaw.abiding citliens'of the' Ter:. ritury' are commatitted to be and appear at Lecompton, as soon as practicable, and in , numbere sufficient for the prOper exeen. lion of the Law. • ' Given under my hand. this I.lth-day or May, 1856. 1. 11. 'Oonsr.osoN. • U. 8: Marshal of Kansas Teiritory. 'Phis •call'was ativered frnm all sections of , the Territory. • On 'etiesilay the 20th a large force of Law.tind.Order men .hav'- ing gathered in •atid around Leenmpton, the Marshal ordered different 'native to concentrate about two miles of Lawrence, an ae in he' ready for the execution of his immediate ,demands upon the people of Lawrence. At this order we :..ledrour sanctum and proceeded to 'the encamp ment. equipped (or tue occasion, and here begins our notice-: TuanraY. May 2 .0, 1 o'clock.„, Here we are, in camp; every: thing looks very warlike. The cavalry, nom befing•some. one hundred and eighty coma mantled by Col. H. '. ' Tinos, of Ode coun ty, originally of Florida. are dashing over the hills, at the clear tones.ol their. cum minder's voice—the infantry companies are being drilled by their, different captains: and everybody is in the line, preparing Inr, an engagerovitt. Rut few have an idea of the Meting that possesses oue at -the mar tial notes of a drum; anti fife, or the clear, shrill 'tunes of the bugle, sounding the charge of two hundred troopers. It is e nough to make the veriest coward a brave man, - and tits expiring soldier grasp again his sword. This encampment consists of about 50 tent! and up_werds nf...400 men. „All have iiiatte - ulfluetr minds - to - 'figit disparate in eaaeot resistance. Men never were more deterininedly resolved and eager to, meat Me issue. file privon-tent has eight occupants— 'they all seem eon tente?. and satisfied, and . , say they we're never belief. tieated . in their 'their rs are coinfOrtatile, and the :t;' have i'plotity to eat aitil drink.' 'AM irdock.---Orders were' received td Milani t th'ree-•—tenti strtiSk. wagons "Oa- . (led and all tipon the move at the appoint. oil time, Three pieces Of rennin,. whit' 160 additional men, were in the ruid a 51fOrt distance 00 to join 08. We eriCamp'. ed about 0 &chick near that place, where the tinted Spatter Convention wail held in '64. Here we heard various rumors about fightitig-one Mal 300 tuounted r inen triim Topeka Were ill nurretir and linen? it deattarkingne lhal , night—one that the variouspropusitinns made by:the Lawren- eeitei to the Marabal was only to gull oa t and.. thit iliere Would eeFillinly be 'a fight; this last rumor was considered creditable, and' pleased the &lip very Much. We Wei° not diitturhed by' the Topekarts that night, but early next inutiting the cavalry wore 'called to escort the'_carinoalci Law:. renee. At I 'o'clock the cannon wore planted withnut any resistance upon the heights beyonfl Robinson's house, and within four hundred yards of the big stone' hotdl. When we first reached there, not g hunter' being could be seen."' abouf an hour, thdre gathered in 'the streets, in' front of the hotel,'schrielso' then , some-one was' Iteranguing theM.* 0:1 the• Cast pf torin eleven then cairns Out froma 'Smell stone rormed in - frtint, and Itial .. alled . In' town:' Several man.; attetitPted 'to leave town;but'ivere cut` off ' by our pickets: ;=., rieriithe only , At o'clock' the infantry joined its ; at 11 MajOYlltiford's cOmpany, Irani Prank . = liti; arrived, , ind hy 12 our forces. arnmini.' eV to 860 strong, cavalry add :Infentry, an d fni.lialt.pnuritl pieces of &rape' Cannon.' About this time tries 1 excitement' Was ere! vied by Mi;Jas. Kelser'accidentelly 'shoot; tug 10111061 i , but the tinned wee tacirtal: ' At l'ii'Clock ihe D. S. Deputy Marshal selected small poiole end entered to makeirroSts. He selected his' plisse from die ranks' of the .teconipton conimanded' by CaPt. Jon Donnelsori; %OM was:also honored with the comMand Of the poise, Donaldson's ' , Red Shirts,;' 'is they ate more 'commonly 'known, by a-• doptingthe red shirt as their uniform, and reflected credit upon themselves and their. co:nmandtir. l'hey.were well drill. ed,, always ready for any emergency. and prompt and obedient in action. Most of them were young men from Virginia. who have left home and friends to offer , up their lives to the pieservetron and estab lishment of Southern institutions in Kan sas., The following are the names of die posse under Donaldson'', command : Capt. J. Donaldson, J. W. Ransom; ' R. M. Nace ; B. Jones, J. N. Casey, John Shelton, C. H. Grover. Only three arrests were , made, viz ; Smith, Jenkin andDeitzler. The town seemed almost forsaken. When the Mar- shal returned. having done all he could do, he released the posse from , his jurisdic tion, and they were immediately summon ed by Sheriff Joni's. Mr.. Jones, not. withstanding his feeble condition, appear ed upon herseback, and as lie rode along the line, summoning each company to as sist in the executtou of the laws, he Was I received with loud and deafening amity. His pale countenance and emaciated form—the products of an almost fatal blow from an assassin's arm—made every, mgt irtssistablf Cline!' his pistOls; impatient to. revenge this foul deed. The Ivry op. penranee of Jones, who had so often ; pie seined himintlf at the very ranuth,of 'din. ger, 'ionsecrating his life to the mainfe. fleece of : the laws, sent a thrill Ahraugh evelyleart that choked all .utterance of their willingness to foliow him in the lane of any danger. He selected a small posse of mounted men, mostly from the Atchi• son Guards, commanded •by Capt. De Treville, of South Carolina. , Got. H. T. Titus commanded the posse. • Jones had a•great :many writs ! in hie hands but could find no one against whom lie held them. He had also an order horn the Court to demand the surrender of Anic,erma . ,,fteld and side, and .A. dernoli,.l Lion of the two presume and the Free State hotel: wevutisencer. !.The arms utiere tint: mediately disfiountedirintl:iffirrendered, but very, fair could be foaud--foue , piecei3Of eannon,ione , l2 lb howiteer, and foueiraall pieces'; and t• few •of Sttsrpe's , tides..—, When they' agreed to surrender. cur , men were inarehed down in front Of the •totvw, and-. one cannon :planted upon their . own. battlements,.: Over the largest piece, cent-. mantling the Emigrant Aid hotel, was one furled the'stara and stripy/with' this mot-1 . ' .: •- • • ' • "You Yankees -/ ; -• • • -- •'• And Abolitienistsfall;. , . . • . :.Our.ritOtto is . - ' - , •.7 . .' i. ;. Southern rights to all." . , • , .The.cermon.tbere 'then brought 'out end thrown down in front of our lines.- 'Due• ing this time,Appeals were made to , Slier- Al Jones Please the Aid Society's hotel. . This news reached .the Company's ears, and was received with one universal cry of oNo I No ! blowit up ! blow it up ! We will not injure private proparty.'but our 'motto is destruction, to every 'thing belonging to the Aid Society, .The Court' hall ileolsrod it a nuisanceand we tvill.dett.' troy.il." . • • .. About this time a banner was seen aut.: teringin the breeze, over the office of the Herald of Freedom.. Its color was a blood red', with a, done • star in the, centre, and, South Carolina above. This banner was placed there by the Carolintans- 7 geasrs. Wright and a Mr. Cross.' The effect was tretnendoits: Ode tre'mentlous and lcing continued shOut blust from the ranks., Thus 'floated in triumph the banner of South Carolina—that single white star, so emblematic Of heecourse In the early his : i tory of our section - al dieturbanees. When. every Southern State stood almost upon the verge of ceiling their dearest rights to 1 the North, Carolina stood boldly Out, the 1 firm and unwavering advocate of. South ern institutions. Thus garated the firat banner of Souih. ern rights liver the Abolition town of Llvv renee, unltirled by. the noble sons of Car olini and every whip - of its folds seemed a death stroke to Breeher koptigatidism. and the fanatics of the gast. Oh ! that its, rod fobs could hare been :seen by eye. ry antihero eye. ' Mr. Janes likened to the many entreaties, and finally replied' that it was beyond his power to do anything, and gave the occu pants so long to remove nil private proper ty from it. lie ordered two comanies into each printing of fi ce to destr oy tlte, press. 'Buth presses were broken tip . end Into thro ta=zt tut ty peittooy n iu the river, and all the Material belong , • lug , to each office destroyed. A fter: 'his was accemplisheil, and the priyate pro. perry 'reinnved from Mist linter by the different Companieit, the cannon_ were, brought in knot of. the houee und directed their destructive blows upon the wallp. the building caught on fire,'and soon its walls earns with a crash to' the groutid —tAus Jell the Jibolitioh forlress, and we hope this will teach the aid'Sticiely a good les. son for I4e fulivs. Itefore entering, lnwn. our corn:modem hiatructed each member of his company of tbe•ponsequences befalling the of any private property. As far as we can learn, they attended, strictly to these ineiruct ions. Olin uct We regret to Men tion—the firing of RUbirisoit's house.— Although there is . but little doubt as to the real owners of this property, yet, it was a private reit:deuce, am! elfould have ye mair.ed untouched. During the excite inent, the 'Cointnissary, .Col. Abel, of At chison City,' liatned thwt it was out fire; and imtuedidtely detailed a company to suppress the flames. which was &intl.-- Once alterivarite, we undeistand, Sheriff Jones hint the flam es suppreased, and the, boys guilty of , tho act sent int mediatory to camp; but "with 'regret We saw the build: fire That night about 10 o'cluCk.— • This we saw from camp, and cannot .tell woo set it on fire* the third 'time; "Miring the iiiing'4(iii'the ono of our men' waskilled by the falling of it'stone freni, the , wall. Before, another .week mitaaround, no, doubt the PePei's, he filled wi th vitally.' magnified, repoits.end the ed with , leuttshrieks ferthe cnitsp,of,Free, dein by . Abolition organs. This cry one anncipates and 1411. net be aisaPpototed 'Want bloody picture their,Jeatly ? ,writers will paisth for their own purpesee; be; they are, onlY faCtion in the country,ao hate produced this paste of things. kt re, mains to, be teen whether" that pprtfop the Dl,erth end ,caffinO, themselves ni1i9 1° ); . °9.,%1 111 . led • into excitement and,. estravtigancies ,bY:their , 4 loudefiiiiks. ' ! We think the eon7enfik, tieit,.rsien of the North and "East , )cave furnished them long sinctiouflipient 4,lift to (erre correct opittjene of the motives'goy„ erningihese, men. If every Ipso Of them hid Leen killed, every house burned, slid a total entire externtinatioti had been the motto oldie "Imr . .and Order" Party, who •would be to blame ? fin partial de cision alifliir6".,l us men have 'brought the Upmn their own heeds- We expect to be ealled by The:Tribune and Atlas,' and 'all organs 'Of that paity that such men as Vtreeley and his noble broth= ers may have command over, fillibusters, ruffians, guerrilas, barbarian's, thieve's, in cendiaries, cut-throats, and all other such stiginstizing anathemas as will set us be yond the bound of society in the category ' of villains such Outlaws ; but this matters bet little with the people of Kansas ; it is another class whose good opinions 'and sympathy we claim, that Stand as far above' these political demagogues and ultra fire eaters as the heavens are above the earth: 'Plutse are the men we Irish to act as umpires for the people of Kansas, this ' is the "popular opinion" that the "Law and Order" party court, and none other. I These are trying tunes. With truth' we can say • this, is a crisis deplorable in the political history af our country, but it is only the head of "festered Abolitionism," long since deducible from their acts sod doings. That' unpreeedented appeal in the '"Menibere' of Congress :to stay -the Kansaa-Nebraak# bill" was only the an nouncement that Kansas should be made ,the hattle_field.„Alere,they could plant theinseliei.under the semblance of territo rial privileges, Could with impunity prac• lice their nefarious purposes. They began by appealing to the Northern men for "maieria/ aid.? Tiiis untatirial aid" war furnished them t they sent .their agents, Robinson & Co. into the Territory, who raised the crusading flag against all men opposed to them in sentiment. In their wake follow ed sub-employees, selected for the °mai , - lion ; men impelled, by the dollar. ipilo ence, who had no Pretensions to a prsoci ple, moral or political. , bnt the "Aid Sock ety," hirelings of discharged convicts and abandonetl, vo dislike to place min in such a category, but these are the, characters-we bad to ileal•willte--q Finally the election came off and the Pro -Slavery party defeated'. them ; then the great cry of... Border Ruffian" went forth to the Eau.. appealing for, protection against the Missourians; it had the 4losired effect ; men at the North, and Haat suffer: ed themselves to be duped end, swindled into the support of this uppeal. rendered' again their .gleteriul aid'," and give oogni zunce to their movement,. Then it sea that Reeder, whose pecuniary speculations overreaohed and hie good wishes fur the grefrth of Kansas, and Adding him, self scouted by the conservative party and thrown Upon the tido of political destreetion,, determined it was , better to,etrilie,for the opposite shore than be overwhelmed by the , abed. ':He did so, threw himself:at their , f ee t and oriel, for the sake of personal in terest; "help, help I hail Mut with yeti." lie was admitted and soon became one of their chieftaius, and the unblushing abuser of all Citizens both 'in and out of Kansas ' opposed tb his movements. nd Mg' [ adopted party. flis Eteellmicy was dis gracefully discharged front his exeoutive position and cryink, for revenge upon his supplanters, put, up a pitiful mouth' to an Abolition Congress for a scat as Delegate from Kansas. Every one knows what' his memorial alleges ;.and with the ostensible. purpose of testing the truth, of Abe allege. times, a Committo came among pa with al- most unlimited powers. Then began the crusade in earnest ; the first day of this session witnessed the assassination of au officer of the law—they approved the past and prevent acts of these men—Reeder was suffered to. thunder forth his inflamma tory speeches end they did the "buzzaing. A United States officer's life was threaten , ed and those "guardian angels" throw their wings of proteotiou arouurl the body of Reeder. An already outraged and in consed people could no longer bear it--the laws were spit upon and scoutod,as the •thlack enaCtanouts of Border Ra ffi ans."— Human life was of trifling value when it came in contact with their measures. The people beliame aroused i-take from them the protection of the law, and you have laid baroevory interest to the outlaw's hand: They dettirmined Aolltifend, at all hazards, their rights and privileges, and they have manfully done it. They havo dealt the death blow to those Abolition organs that. have so long poisened tho peo ple's minds, by heaping base slanders upon the citizens of Kennet and their friends.— They have brought to the ground the ren dezvous of Blaok Republican propagandists, and justly, taught the d.Aid Society" better nn of their means, than building forts and arming and equipping men to shed the blood of their fellow, beings, arid involve tho country in civil 'war. We have done what We have dime, and would not have anything undone that was done, and shall dn more if let alone—sh let , our doings git forth for t he, anspeution and criticism of the nation. In this report we have "not tixtenuatcd , nor ought not down i n 'malice," but furnished a alinple'ind un varnisliad 'Ruin total of facts As to the '"Law and Order" party of Kansas, they have but 'ono, opinion, but one 'Mind, to stand is defeneo of ' their haws and their rights al all hazard . 'e filrgot to Mention in our ' account, that the long conjectur e of ,the Free State llctel:beiug (introit, was: found to be true.' Priam ilia surface of the roof the tvatl extended to the height of Sifeet, with four ; port holes in each making in all sixteen, large enongh ,to admit the mouth Of an ! eighteen pound gnu. The in tad' of the : holes were cootie:ll9d Ilion view by thin coat of Hine that ,could be easily knocked out ,when desirid: The above statement ,can be established' by ieveral hundred witnessee. Th 4 "Red Shirts" raised the first , flag upon the Free'State fetal. They have in pcissossion the twelve poem! howitzer tactic from ,the „enemy., nud whichever necessary c - muse it effectually. 'Captain Donaldson may, proud of his "Red Shirts." „ GEN. JACKSON ON 'MR. BUCHANAN; WO find in the WaahingtoUorresimndenue.of , , ibp Oveping Pot, an . aturcdous, which. prove! that . Gen. , Jankson. who was a pretty, good judge of human nature, ftillyi'finderstood and atMrecilited Buchanan!e character as a political frim nom writer says, the , truth at the following,can be proved .by Unquestion; ablb'evidenie. • • ' • • the nigh; beforeleavinti Naithville 18 tieCi!ty 4iiite White fleinie; Afe. Pislk; in company"%with Gen. Robert Atmatrong, culled , at the Ilerolitage 'to 'Oroenre some adifielrotn'tlie old hero •as m the'seleCtien of his Jackson arranglylinged this Preeidene'eleci to give.' no Pl a cein , it to liuoliiil an, as he could not' be relied'upon. It so ho opened' that Polk' liatl already de. terminetlM - make thin very' apilointment, having probablk atTi 611 the situatititi to • the etitesamn, of Pennaylvania. This fain' in; duced General Ainistrong etibeegitently to tell'Jackson that he'hati xis% 'Polk'a rather hard ruti; as Buchanan find ithrintdy been selected for Secratiti of, State. - "I can't help it,"said the old man; felt' my duty to warn him against Mr. , Becii., anon, whether it was agreeable , ar, r . not.. Mr. Polk will find Buchanan an unreliable man. I know him well, and .Mr. Polk Will, yet admit the correctness of my' prodio , tion." It was the last visit ever made by Mr. Polk. In the old hero When this unavailing, remonstrance was delivered, but the new Post.lent long before the end Of hisitf• ministration, had reason to acknowledgh its propriety and jostle(); and in the4liry kept by him duringthat period, may dill be read a most emphatio ,deelaratiop.prtd,t; distrust of Mr. Bueltanad.',' . . . pzpTho revenue derived . by from tavern lionnees iu Igineitater prittlq the current year will be ab0ut , 107,00(6. being double the 'moue/ re 44 Ted •niides %cold law.: The'oicy, par! $2,800 of Ibis BUM. TUN BINH Ili' crelitteuitc. Evening, June 13, 1851 DUCAL ITEMS.,- serwitex • for the next fisstotssith. Preihyteriasi Chitrels.-:—Servicee morning and evening, Rev. Mr. Van Wick, of Chester, Pa. Christ Church (Lutheran.)--Services in the morning, R.ev. Prof.. Jacobs, and evening, Rev. Dr. Krauth.' SI. lames' Church, '(Lutheran:)—Sere een in the morning, (German,) Rev. Dr. Schaeffer; evening,. Rov. , Mr. Rill. • Arethocild Epiecopal Church.—Services the morning, Rev. Mr, Anderson ; evening, Rev. Mr, Thayer• German Reformed Church.--No Services. Anomie Reformed aturch.—No service cm til the fifth sabbath in the month.. Cryhotic Church.—No Services. The .Proyer•Meeting of the. Presbyterian, Osman • Reformed, and the .two Lutheran churches 'is held every Wednesday evening ; Methodist. Thursday evening. $19.-"We learn" from the Sentinel that, , s Whig meeting washeld in MoConaughy's Hall on' the-ad instant, the attendance on which, ac cording to the Sentinel, "was not very large." The resolutions, as published, pay a passing 'tribute to the " , old , Whig party, denounce in severe terms 'the outrages at Wasliington and in.. Kansas, recommend Judge lleLsas 'as a Presidential candidate, and provide for the appointment of a County Committee. - The precise' otject ofthe movement is not set forth, the future action of those concetned in it, as we are infdrmed by the Sentinel, depending up on "circumstances which may develop them. selves." Although advised that it was not in tended the proceedings should appear in the "STAN" we have .adverted to the-movement as a local item.., 1119.-The walk to Jver.Green Cemetery is progressing rapidly, and promises to be a very decided improvement. The following rule was recently adopted by the Board of Managers of the Cemetery, in refer enee to interments': • Raotrefl, That tho resident keepershall dig all graves for, and make all removals of the re mains of the dead from other places of burial —his duty to extend to every thing pertaining to interments in the Cemetery under and sub• joct to the supervision and control of the Board of Man - tigers. - This'-rule to go into effect on flit. 20th day of Juno instant. AifirThe Rev. J. C. INLtiton has relinquish• ed the pastoral charge of the Presbyterian Congregation at Hunterstown, in this county. There are new throe Presbyterian Congrega tions in this section of country without a Pas tor—Lower Marsh• Creek, Gettysburg, and Conowago. 2' A great Kansas meeting was held in New York at the Tabernacle, on Tues day evening, which .was addressed by Ron. E. D. Culver and Hon. Samuel Gal- loway, and others. The meeting was one of the largest ever held in that city. Political Counlateacy. LOCOFOCOISM IN '44.: "POLK, DALLAB, AND THE TARIFF OF,18421" wow ron 1856: "BUCHANAN, BRECKENRIDGE, AND • • .F11.1•:E-TRADEP , , 'WHO? WHAT? AND WHEREFORE? OR, 'A* 72N PMTS TOR TIM INVALID. Have our readers ever heard of Professor Holloway? Undoubtedly they have, just as they have heard of Humbolt, Arago, Oersted, Silliman, Agussiz, and other notable men of lemming. But have they ever asked 'them selves who and what be ia? If they have no definite information on • that matter, we will I proceed to enlighten them. , The Professor is an English physician, a native of that country which producidHarvey, Hunter, Abernethy, and other inuntinatiof mediCal science. So mach for the WHO r and now for the WHAT.- He into other physiiians what Clay, Webster and Calhoun were to statesmen, what Wash ington—reverend name I—was•to patriots and generals—what Shakspeare was to dramatists, and Irving and, Chalmers to preachers,—viz : the greatest of his age and profession. His reputation has penetrated the incrustations of ' prejudice, surmounted the 'barriers of malice, and ho avowedly stands alone, the MEDICAL COLOSSUS of the world. So much for the wit AT. WitimErone do we'epeek of him here ? If, when our fellow countrymen were dying by - thousands, of, yellow 'layer, at Norfolk and .Porternoitli, -we . had ieard a 'rem* which would arsest the progress of this disease, and stay the footsteps of the : spoiler, suol.we bed neglected to communicate it, what would have 'been 'tier desert? Truly, a very summary 'punishnient by Dyne!' lnw. For if there .be 4 -any dutptiore imperative thau:another t it is .thls,: ,l "towisit the sick in their affliction,o!and to use every means' for 'their..nutoration to 1 41fk. This is why we speak of Profeuor This our' answer to the mason ears ago, when the Professor was a much younger man than he is at present; his •dttan gen was directed to the great disproportion 14. tiveen the cures ierfornied by Uie ` Physicians, and these Which they Undertookto pintorte.:—:. • ijooboesv o d that not once in uscoto of cases woreAey s uccessful, , seemed to him either that mediene was not worthy the name.of a science,—that it was merely a' thing of chance, and . therefore a positive injury to mankind, or that thii i - PhAtelins were ignorant of the ' true hee:ling rt. H aving embarked on the study a „,, tuntin , , physiology , , and understanding:. the patiolOEy, or disease s, he. alighted upon the true reason of want of success, and Made that discovery which will immortalize his name.— TilierelF" it ''oejosedOotors 'treated it loyally , topmally. ',Was itthe kidneys that were de. ranged? Or the liver? Or the shimachl— Or the lungs?',Straightway they proceeded to prescribe for kidneys, liver, lungs or , stom ach, not heeling that the evil was contained in the blood, which fed those organs with its life-giving stream, 'and that to arrest the dis. ,ease at its Very seat and centre, they should• purity that vital fluid, and leave the rest to na- Oaths. This is the secret of Dr. HoLtowsv's antsinishing suceuss in all parts of the world. Ue purifies the blood and health follows. Let any stek person, who has "suffered many things of many physicians," and obtained no betniat, give heed to these words of ours, and try 11.i3lloway's Pills—if he is internally afflict. etli or Holloway's Ointment, if he is suffering /rem "mends or sores. He will thank us for _ . otir advieo, atid rejoice that the Professor has arrived in his country, and opened an exten eive establishment in New York, which prom iiei•to rival hie mammoth one in . Londou,—c: S. Journal. • Prentice tint !rage. We clip the foliciwlug irons 14 rine Journal. 'li geturto sholi ihai the .venerable grey-haired Senator, from:South Carolina la sometimes tees equal to the oc6sion.; It:seents that Brooks attacked .ialumner because the latter ' had in debate ibtised South Caroline moi l "Mr, Proolie, rather aged relative. Senates Outlet. The idea of using a bludgeon .upontA Senatoflor Making a speech against- a State is monstrous. A ;core ,of 'South Carolina tomtit:me of Oonitesti within 'the last few years have used theit;wiholet pok er of abuse and vituperation against Mis r eachusetts ' end, as many:. Massitchusito: members h ive exercised themselves op: on. Southkearelina: A pitched battle has long been' ragintr between the champion's of those two . Staten, end, generally • the harshest and roost offenaive language 'has come from Sooth,Qtrolioians, who den't like in be out-done in ,anything. Wliat Sumner may have said abbot Senator But ler we , know not. but,we do_ think that the old Senator, who is quite as firey headed as he is white headed. would :scorn the thought. of letting-any younger man take a quarrel with en . Abolitionist CI his hauls. We' happened to . be in the Semite Chamber pear,the close, of the last attention of Congress during one of the night die milieus of all. manner of slavery qua& lions. Judge Buller, who is really a gen t demon ()fleetly fine and' persenai qualitiett had become exceedingly elated front fre quent vielts to the Senatorial Restanrint. Sumner was making a very severe speech that evidently had reference ,to the forci ble expulvion, of ,Mr,. 'Hoar, a venerable citizen of Maseaelm'setti. Iron the limits of South Carolina, but he did not men. lion South Carolina's ; name. Mr Butler interrupted him by asking in a fierce tone, 'does ho mean South Car- olina r. Sumner prOCeeded without noticing the interruption. - 1 demand,' exclaimed Butler starting again to his feet, 'whether he means South Carolina. for, if he does, let him .say an, and I will give him something to, make him remember me and Saul h• Carolina as long as he "lives.' Stingier still proeeeded imperturbable, bestowing no,at,tention upon his excited opponent just in front of him. 'Dose he mean South Ciaolino 1' ejacu• lased Bullet, for the third .Yea. /do mean South Carolina,' t6un dered Sumner, with more spirit than we had.thought an abolitionist could possum. He finished his speech without any hither inkrruption, and Butler rose, to re ply,•but 'be fine old'South Carolina gentle. man was, top far gone to be half equal to the tremendima occasion. , We repeat the expression of the, hope, that, however obnoxious Sumner may justly be to the patriotic portion of the pep• ple of the United States, thellouse of Rep risentati wee Will promptly expel Brooks if the account of his assault upon the Massachusetts Senator shall pro re correct. Indeed the Rouse of Representatives, it seems to us, would he guilty of the gross eat and most shameful clirelietion of duty to the Senate if it were to refuse to pun ish one of its own members fin knocking tiown ; a4stuitorupon.thp poor the. Seo- Ate for word's said in Sentuarial`debiti. A :Souriumx Sttuan.--The Richmond Whig, in commenting upon the' outrage on Senator Sumner, says :, • "The Bostonians are quite, as .furious as their ..lbrelathers where 'when they -threw the tea overboard. and. something quite as desperate may be anticipated from their present wrath. We hope, howeier, they will tio themielves no personal in jury." . What next 1 This sneer at the Boston. cans as being the deseendants of the he. roes who lormed the "Tea Party." takes us by surprise, we must confess. We shall probably next hear our Southern brethren making fun of Bunker Bill of deriding the battle of Lexington. A PROPMR M►N ' .—The New York Courier nominates 'rom Hyer for Cong ress, for it is ambitions that the Fourth District ni New York should be represent ed more respectably 'then the Fourth Dis trict of South Carolina. The Courier says : • . Mr. Byer is a citizen who gives no pledgee; but hie life speaks for him. - New York may , rely , upon it that lie would not prove unfaithful to her pugilist. is tmor. would viiidiei a tlio' fair repute of the ring;and '..punish" Brooks. True, we could not expect that' with his sentiments towards :the Men, 11r. Byer would cohdeseend to deal' hinitt regular: scickilulager: The relenee lie hires 'would hardly alfow of that, Ben Count and die best authorites , agree'thui the ' nn. ty utusv be employed in suet' ease's. But that is sufficient. Ex pede flerailem ; and Mr. flyer" can even think shciw arms el his *tress; as well art hip s min ? isidipt for ono WhonV his education learifieti him to look upciii as acatiff.' Mr. flyer must' go to Washington. • • _ looThe editor chile Utica Herald says that he Mice knew a Wild widow whq out' mit .her own daughter in the good graces - of her lover and 'married' him her self! *To obtain revenge for tbis Mean, un motherly•trick, the daughter .set her cap for the , young man's rich fattier, (of whom he Was the only, lmir.) and, actually mar ried him , sed,had,ctlltiren, to the infinite annoyance oijof the-other parties:. 'Thia occurred in Oimudagua county, New Yerk, Irr Professor Morse, the inventor of the Magnetic Telegraph, kft for' Europe on Satunday, id nrder to links at, some experituentawhich are. being made across the water in submarine telegraphing. He is to , be four or five months .atment.— Professor Morse made his first frip'to En- 1 rope some fifteen years ago, when be , laid his schemes before the Governments of Europe. Ho will now find great changes —the whOle continent bound in a net work of wire. r}►Tbo citizens of Worcester,. Mau., have subscribed $7OO to procure :a testi mortisf to ha presented to Senator Butunei.. Jiop,Fahratd , RoNtrett.. and Jared gparks. aro - phi to be =oaf the contributiv.• t.no,;, , tuArbesing-preanitloid. • THE KANSAS RECORD Availing thernsaNes of the fact that the remote of the alleged death of Pr. Root, Gen. Pomeroy. and Mr. Mitchell, the shooting of. Jones; and the k Cling of "eight pro`i slavery men," , nbw prove to have bean. Unfounded, the doughlices bolt* Characterise all statements of outrages in 'Kansas as “Rebtiblican lies." What there has, falsehood t,e; well as truth sent over the' Telegraphic lines by the Missouriani*lto fistre chief' over them. is unquestionable. , rsßuLUiese. false statement's do not invalidethi or diminish the re;il catalogue of c4trie. To ..enable our readers in keep the latter in memory, we initijoin beloW alist;ofit . few occurren ces, which ere, authenticated by legal , eat- deice, and which are trot even attempted to be' denied. Ther e, Ilia' times' e • Many simihir ones repocteth and tolcrab y well authenticated. - int we wait until they shall be officially, ; and legully coo r firmed before ,adding them to the list. t November 29, 'lBs44—Missourians to the number of over one thousand 'invade territory,' armed, drive judges' and legal voters from polls, and by fraudulent bal. late pretended to elect Whilifield dole , March 89, Isss.—Nearly four thous and Missouri atilt, invade territory, and re peat the outrages edminittedin NOvember preceding.. October .1, • 1855.—Third invavion' of Missourians,' accompanied by (dialler out rages, Deeember 5, 1355.—F'ourili by which an endeavour is made to vote down the Free State. Constiiution, but proves-a failure. • May "21;' 1855.—Jones; ..a Missoitri Pestutaster,• heads en armed mob of Ala bama, Carolina, and Missouri Men, Which marches against Lawrence,'pillages , and plunders 'it, with violence to the inhabit ants, and burning of several buildings. , E=l October 2, 1055.—Thontas Newman, a Free State man, stabbed in the street of Levenworth by a gang 11 Alissourians. October 2, 1855.—Child killed while at play. by a shut fired by a Missourian at James Furitatn.a Free State man, which missed him and entered a whitlow. November 311855.—Charles W. Dow a free State tnan, shot by F. N. Coleman a PrmSlavery ,settler. Murderer, takes refuge with Coy. Shaonon, and'is protec ted by him.. December—, December 1855.—James Barber, a Free State man. assaulted ,and murdered bV shOt in the back from the gun of one of pregident Pieree'S Indian Agents. November, 1855.—ca;line i'Free State Man, called out from his mill. where he was at work. and shot by . Laughlin, a Pro Shivery settler. n January 17, 1850.—E. P. Brown, al Free State man, taken by a gang of Alp. sourians, backed to pieces with knives and hatchets, and hie bleeding corpse flung into his owittloor-, 7 frion the effects of which his wife is :lowan maniac. . May 20. illso..44sliitSleviiiit;formitrly of Boaliterd, Allegheny n County,. New Yink. a young'inal of 20. shot itt his sad dle tvhile attempting to escape from"a,Pat-, ty of posse ' ? May .19,1850 .=JOnett. lithe only Rol) of his mother, and, site a widow," aged 19, shot 'through the back: by one :of plow's poste," because he refused to give up hie ; horse, with Which Ite,supported himself and his widowed mother. • PRINTING opplcils:GesTßOTEP December 22, 1855.—Territorial Reg. Otter, an• Administration paper at Leven worth, conducted , by tol. Delobsy, mob:. bed for advocating a fret. State, prevsei broken, type iliroivit into the river, ' • aild , editor threatened with murder. • April 14,„1855.—Porkvitle Luminary,' at Yorkville, on the frontier, mobbed by . Missourians: for cause, and the cdikno,' Messrs. Park and Patterson, bilged to quite the State. ' ' May 11, 1850 —"Herald of Freedorit fire, Lawrence, K. T., fired upon by , a field piece by June!, posse and reduced to Tribune offire,'Lawrence, K. T.,rmob• ed, ransacked and set - nn Ore 'and burned to dte ground, presses,Ac.., deattnyed,,,,. Lvrioutivos—l 855 'A N '56 Six teen Free ,State -men, -,et din:etch'. dame, !Mae' been' timed 'er. leathered,' Or beitten„'oi bigh t angeontritof Ahem : serri r . ed into Missouri, or sent, siirift into • the river. Among them were 'lVilliain Phil lips, a 'Lawyer of LeveWirdrilt, and a member elecro I the .Territorial LegishirAce the Rev. Pardee Butler, a Baptist preach. er ; the Rev. Mr. Clark, a' Methodist 411 s; sionary and other ministers of .thif,4os 7 , Coos pal, of various Oeitoininatinnit. ' and batteries have been, toe .numerous ;to recapitulate, ;hardly.; a 'day r passing:Aviih- : out sortie attack on tho • Free State wen .the streets ors on the high' roads . ;> it 4 inong those assailed have Wien Governor Reeder, General Pomeroy, dtts, UNLAWFUL ARRNIITN: Of One. Robittspn ~wttlstit:a warrant. ; . Of Mr. Brown v cditor Air the Herald ot Freedom, without a: Of Messrs. Crimean. Hutchinson; Dietzler, ' Schuyler. - Bake`Nl'intl fourteen others, by Missourians, under 4 11 1 11 0 61. Y 9r a Ke,terld .con (Or .shigh tr'easou,""iie.reftising' to obey laWs Irf the "Legislature," pretended to have bee elected,br the. Missonri indridcrt. • Oitcricrrnso`t.ktvii.• September, 1855.--Imposing penalty of death for assisting slates to escape. Imposing penalty of. death far ;oirculat. ing or printing publications .citculated incite sheet, to insurrection. • • ' Imposing penalty of death for signaling' slaves to escape from any Stele and lake refuge' in the Territory. „ Imposing penally of fire yenta', impria-• oilmen( at hard labor for harboring .fogi-. live slaves. Imposing a !moody of iwo years' im prisonment for aiding, a fugitive alave,to es cape from custody of an officer. Imposing penalty of fivo years' halide-. onmont at hard labor for writing,'priuting or circulating anything against slavery. Imposing penalty of two:years' itnpris onment at hard labor for iloying that per sons hale not a rigbt to hold slaves in the territory. Disqualifying all from sittiog s Jurors who do not admit the right to hold Waves iu the territory. . • Disqualifying all. voters ,'-wlick:do. not swear to lor r iport the Fogitivo -Slave . ~ , Admittiag ilinY lotie to vole on, p'aymeot of ono dollar. no matter where resident, I f who, will awaar-.to_.. bold the', Fugitive slave: Law and`'N'ilh' ka bill: ' AfilkoiniiiiiMkto 1 , 144 ;to the to wn dud coontAltotßeetfcir;iiikreata to come. ' X#llilkotiititloi alliPd,law of Itlfsaouri, en,iwitaii;44dingilia(wherever the Word . 1 941j0 `4loiii . jw.thttan, it shall be co n. slttliti;JO mitih: 1 I Tetiitory." ; '"' • ‘ 4 41 b., • . , A FIELD FIGHT•IN KANSAS; Pro-Slavery .y . en Defeated. '' ARiIitULE ON, VIE %WE OR REANKLER. LAWRERce, Tinrday, Jane 5, An'oien field battlotook.place'et Palmy ra nn the afternoon otltiontlay, the 241 ipst. It lasted pearly 'threes hour,. The par tiesti— wereihearly equ t : The . Pro,Slave; ry men were a torn) band under 'PIT!: H. C. Pritte Verresti stdent .'el 'The Ms sintri Repuldiean. ire Proalareit Y pen surrendered• With tWesty fiint „home and mulett,,ortne,apytuqition r ,iwg drumi o , a large quantityofarticlas stolen at the seek= ing of Lawrence. ! '....! ,' ''. 1 •The United ,States, 4 lroolla ,lukitur 4 the battle, hitt did tie,t,h)ildielf#F,..; • ,..', The "Prei r o,l; , ate aOtlers ,eliatered to Palmyra, 'and `one, hittlared got' there af ter the, battle 'raj over r The [' f lop, went:ditieh trett dey wow perse the PreeState men and release the prisoners., ; , ::Another attack. leas.inatle on Fritikliti; where the •Al iaaburiane 'aelienitiled in force, wkly . !' earihhn ,iittlAuttmottition Only one at their “romptiniee , tot 'there,' and.thev , were• stunt abaut After twenty injitutesAnAnniiit trio No, partictilara. , Civil war esx(sto &era': 'Thelroiiiie , are here in force, hol nothing9tit'btit' help Gov. Shah Pon' intBltarriVtigeir: Judge Lecotrtpte haa Tailed to eothinon to wreath : lei - . the, 'inlioriere On' their plea for bail. ' • • ' More. Aid fOr ItonczaTen,. Masi.; piano- B.—One of•lhe weaithy citizens, of tbu county has offered to subscribe $1 O,OR towsids. ,any , well 'matured plan for driving out the -106004 aiikt secur ing peade to the bona-fide settlers of the terri tory. ilsxann• '6 - 4 -Efforts tire on foot here for the raising of then and looney to OA the. Flee State 'cause dn'Katitias.• ‘. • ' • Later fru* . littayialiT-Cualllictlag. ' ' ALetifants. - . • CHICAGO, June 9.—,The latest abeounta front Karina confiruithe report Of &MI6 out break of hostilities:' 'Cite Inindred . Otten * ed . at'Westport on the , 2d, and startill egii of the Frce:Bt r atd whco fought. with and captured Capt. Pattie's company, suppoir, ed to be forty miles, fiem Westport, on, the Sumner Bante Fe Toad. . 'Col. Suer started off eight companies of dragcions i , immcdiatelrto the scene of ilisturbance.. . • ' • ThO Chicago Tribune has a letter from: Law rence dated on the :ilst,ult.,•whieh states. that the Free State men were. in imminent. ner4.— The Missourians 'were i ttairshaliing fpfues gain and the , farmers-here obliged triorgapi,S4 companies for themdell* aguimultlieffiartin dark ' ' Lulea' from r :0 I'l 27, uatcAoh; 'd°p° arrptue , uOl7l Kansas con tirtii the 'repcirui of tlie'existiPe civil war in the,Terri tory. ' 'Teenty-Otie 311itiourintat; Carolinians and Alabamians have bet , tritilled in different engttgeroentin - Severitl free •Stato may hare : becp„ ) :stroo°4o,shJit' ~toil4l killed The United,States troopt generally clispersethe forces of the patties aft9r l the ba4.les.sct.,oyer. Governor Shitithinfi Proclanistien wodFTI no effect in arreedtig i the distliibtinc6- Govenioi-Robitison hasbeen . eittovel`Tiom Lecemptitin to Lertvenwortb.. , The reported death a - Marshal Donsaldson Proved 43 boipeo,rtect. - I • Itodiesitf ; men are movies' from Independ ence, Westport apd , otliee:',-Alifiisenri towns to worn the, Territory: `A psyty,left Lexington on • Saturday for ificicory Point or ',emetic° and a general battle was expected. The II 8111110111911411, DetnocracY. "Behold, helm 04, and how,Aasant it is, for &xylem to dwell kiritfief igsissttiy /"-133 .•• • The Adminiatiatioa - oflir.Pietee is a Dem ocratic Adminiatratioa, and every await up on it is an attack upon the ;Democratic party. —.Richmond Enquirer: Reaoloed, that we thank, G o od, tAat the 44 mini3tratfon of Frankli,, Pierce is etratoin# tit a ease Det?ocuilia Pad , It will bereMaraliered that in the °their dis-: trict convention, (in Baltimara) . tyhroh it ynlyt . required some few-days noticcp coaveaaithat• the UffiCe-hoiders - Of our exacting Presiden were strongly packed forth, nnadvtied Detnoc racy outside of the clisthine-house. The re sult was the, appointment ttsok.,Pitta‘Vdele gatflr—, Tra.Ykinahlo.sen(i*,, , • , . The Dereoentcy of the-South 'here. tike • their geed rot , the Zakneits Enquirer., , z Neither Slevetror !lAtt"lfiyery e eucb, form any. Prlitt;(lfithe 4 1ePiLowst4e creed.— lrashirkelon-Liti um. _ r. Dong,ress..doesi not .po s sess the; commence and carry on a' general• system cif Internal Jnamteineuts.4--RaitintiiiiiPiotfricit.' Resolved/ ilint theltiiesident's veto . of the bill for the improvoment of the St.': Clamillots, and qf other bills in eltatactecond,pcivi ciplis, is not in. accordance with the, , aentimeut nnd:,estublialied,policy of the Democratic. ast-..1 ty, end,that, as the.mpresentatives of tho De mocracy of. Michigan, we disappriiim of ;gni position assumed by the National.,execittiveid• I regard to imprOitimunts.—Democratia` State (tonvention of 4fieltigary Our jinrty North of us is disorganise (IV ikeit*litionam within its Non rankal.:7-Penn; . If the 'lards and Sorts, under the influence of personal rivalries and disappointments, eon tante to refuse a cordial arrangement hmonget ,themselves, and place themselves in an attitude before the country, that no other organization can arrange the difaulty, they must both bear the consequences of their obstinacy, gad sub nut to an exclusion from the Convention.— . Richmond Engutrer. I ale opposed to any course that will - open the door for the freesoilers to comeback 40' us.•--Afr. Odraing, delegate from Va. to Cin cianatii. hHB INFAMOOSAAADBES 111,THEKAPI OAS . 01.tinAot.—Aniong •the men • who men who have .inade dienivelveis Ootor foils(); infanioua in Ale Oppressign of. she, cilizemr,ol itansas; is AiChison. lie was present at , the sacking of Lawrence..aud, made a •speeili to Oa Siihr t e§utinox he said to diraveller Willie) lie ARE 111118 E Titharre Annum FORMA OF LAW, ELI' THERE IS 1:0.....4) LITTLE LAW ABOUT TT. " . - . li7.Becen Shark! ' Were 'last'. week' 'caught With honk and line off Charleston, a.party of gentlanton.;who went fishiog for tho purpose. 1 ..Onesbark.l wa t 9 feet .8 ,ioeltila , BooTif.tsabLYrrit fritcAtiogs tt le.—So much stress has been laid on the relation ship' existing•betweetfBenator Butlet and Mr. Brooks; as justifying.the late outrage in. tho U. S., Senate (Amber, • thst'wft clip the following from the Boston (Mak) 11//as : "A. letter received from Mr . Brooks by a gentleman of :this city, last February, ,says grandfa the r mar. run! Senater.Butler's 'father's aunt.' " DRATH FROM 1116 BIT& oF A RATTLE Stiarat.:•-•TPetPiteannah Geergien, of the 4th reportsihat Mr Henry Davit,. Jr., a gitillemon residing in Dialects coun ty, watt bitten' bs , a large rattle snake the previous da3l; and died tireffeets:-- tlty.iras bitten In the. forenotm and. Was not foondjqr„enme i tinte After, when he was •Q near death 4 as to render all remedies orivailahle. , After he was bitten' lie cord' ed his legit with'his 'suspenders,' iud then killed reptile. , lEN4it • JPIPIV." -- WhPre dime Jae. filichanun hail from now (.; . When the taz cOiNte!.,it few yearestnce inquired pf hitA inygefri ;I) the !natter, he ,denied this he wee citi;ep.of .kennly.kystnia.— Come... Jimmy, kg no ..knnllKprfia.k. State ha . , the honor now"' of claiming The peoicit Prettily kerisnly und :hes re fused 14 , ,te;the U 143 , 'Organs - in its chtirches • Otr Timmins' H. '-Benton. accepts the nomination for Ooyernor of illititOuri, titid li'iii.iiiii4'irratigeinents to atutuli the • • te - - , .; l,l It {.^ ; ': a A • • I, • 'i riteWAcrt rit4 AGE.—Dr. TO. nuts's' Venithin Erdilieat lit irithariled to cure Cholera, Croll!;-Eetl ChrdniC 'Rhea. matism, Vtimithigi% Cuts; 'Rurnwr'Old • Sorei, Swellines; Toothache; •Headitche, and Pain's:at , all kinds or nb, pay. .'-• •• • • ' GREAT CURh; Olr 'ItHEUMATISIIII.- Capt.. COnYskielb 40 - e itteaPle,rf BOW° . ((, C0 1 ; line' ine) wtid cared isf afseverelattlicletifuniii nic Itheumatiormiiralet . ditye by,Dr,,Tubias's celebrated Vonitum Liniment. CASEOF,DIDGVERA..-16. Wtig4 of the NO. ' irry t 'Char t* street, Nei) , 'Corleans;` was• itnMedilitely cured of an 'attuck. Of Choler a ' by 'TObittiOrEitii '' • • :.VOMITING. AND COLIC-4tra. ' sex shvet, Npr ProritiWar , cured`dran ittbick of Colic 'Vomiting by Dr. Tobias's. Veneden pepet,, .60, Cortbt94 Peg, t voict Soli by ail the Drifkgiets. Pike 26 Zi- al WrFot stile by S. 'E: Ittrktrixit jaid t; 413 RAINEY, Gettysburg,/ Storekeiperis nal, all in this county. • . • • Oct. ,6.."1 856.-7-tp HoUowailLeOiis(Rna 04 :Pal4l a certain Remedy for Diego:Ala ' Sorer ...74irimitth lien. derson, of WU mintitri4,lThiwcsk line, suffered for seven years ith six ulcer. one sorepla.ihie teir„pld qi.lo . tin . hill arms. which acted Crory Icin4of trtyttment ; although he used some of thii irmst noted remedies for thketwo of-the sainiybotit , intermit Ada idrAt nal, it ; was without,avail..,tAt he,lmee course 4rintßuu4... - aR4:' P,Wi; caused : the f idouili, to have an itrifittwed'apliotittihnee;'o4 "colittitcylg'ivitb' forted ivoelefiliViCita 15t'euied; and' him evat'ainCe enjoy . ixi tire 'tidal. ,of health. .. . :a ,s: i ea in . vario,hl; .14tami, •rivill it 'is eopkto4 numeroild Voniilsr TOatitlition4l. , OgeliiiP'Slar plaacia 'with whicliji.la*sacillted ra'rmik,r4i ..prace, cgK• nef *Mei; *140.111 Chess 4, 'great popular Clothing Estahliiihinan'tof hlqi4, l ike stplyit w basi And mOieCialiionable in` the_ country. BiViristii*t{june 12, 1B5C: FLOUR .AND‘MEAL-411C" Flair mark er tiaday'Amtaquitit..''lßttles of 800" bbl's" Ord 40 . 4 'tit $0 12k , co 506 I;l4l''Of4 $f 12 'offetia4O cell at s6liarkonloio6e4ll,tiladP:7olll° held at S 6 d 2i, no sales reported.-`Family and Ex tra ortoferßaltimnre 'Family at4,r 25@)43,50,,, Fg,fra',l64:. rtit; 115Z01: 'firoitird strbeeind °tin:Pimp:l , 4ol3, 5):4!Xtre , ( 1 0., at VtAgt7 251 i Ibbl. t4r41 117 0 Tito* nominally at $35016bb1. °CorotNeal`i.-We quote city p~g npfact~nre~ of E~ 7b, try at ‘2 4 4 V 1 4. 140 e A t i r- ', 4414,6110)1181104 of !CM . toliv, Ana gpleß.9rapfa to,into. .phßa 'PO 0 5 (4 1 t 54,, efillieet do.. id 1. of good to prime ~•red at.); waif 45;151 baahel. .o°in:644li:hit 6,ooojbarlels offered, rwalmales , of Whita sit 06556 _cents, and .Tel• low at 47(R . ,60 cents 71 bushCl:' ' 1144 . -Aliout fioro. cents 'ft hrtattel. Ofilia-ortboltr , 1660 herstilelk offered t 0.4 woad, lites.til 213®33 cents 1/ . PtiovittlOn4lll - nirtiltpk. We quote 1164 B . Ohf #l7o"Piiineht 15 60@t ift15,95, and sideA oc4oiihip noss,llq. 141 $l4 50 0, " lAo, 4 ,:pork--hq Aofdetil 444,P1194"..; 4111raYd , ,40 9 te Ness new, hglnt 111,8.8141, Primp at 16V€11$16, bO, and :Reln9 nt 14 3741.140.:03acont.tSitlus t6-dayi `of 100 hhds shoulders at 8/ cents. and SO /aids ;24deiist 91 cents :' ttfitn6lo®l4 l ,iptiti : ; sus io '461111: ''•Nlle . 0414T 0f 1131114 i BC:eelitS, 'genera* ;held at it;4 sid 4 B 481Ae t ppli.,0. sales of : bble et 11' Cents;..and 'kegs nialf, peat,' The Market: firm,:. Butter-.—.We , quote. West- ere ieJiegisst 112014 •olon'"tallobtlieb''. , ll4ll at 16 al fl cents and common 10. at 1214,cp? 186'0 C' * ii'oll;' l 494* 4 ,1 0 t 2 4 cents lb. n -.1 i • iiiNovEß IttAns,e4.;. " • t 114.Novsn, •Juits , l2; - 18564' FLOURVIbbIir from.vragous,-', , = $5"80 WHEAT, bushel, , I; 20'16 1.40 . .ltcr 60 OATS: BUCICWITEAT, per bushel ‘POTATOFA; Pei bushel TIMOTHY-SEED, -t,OO , CLOVER-sEpp fi 0 0 Y 25 PLASTER OF PARIS : 41' e I s 000 PORK,•per 100,Ibs• ' 1. • ,YORK 91141RAIMET.', Ybud,l'ueichty, JmusilD, l855:11 FLOUR,.:i bbl.,,from,w,sytopsi .s(t WHEAT, 11 bushel, , , 55, t0,1,„50 RYE,. • , ~, CORN, "' ; _ 411 " • ;•: 1.! 128: TIMOTHY-SEED, t$ , • .2 Oft!' CLOVER•SEET.), .f , k w ! , FLAXSEED, `f 1.60 PLASTER OF FARM, ton. - MAIRIED. ,Owytt, . , . - On the 2.lth ult., by Rev, was. n," Mr. JACOB SPANGLES, Or TyrOno township, and Miss SA,RAH., A. BENDER, of Banders4i On tbefith inst.i by Phineas Rokers; Esq.! ' Mr. ISAAC BOWERS, of Broderick county, 7AN assortment-of tut Ataryintul,anCUistrCECEl4lkEClC,'OJNEA-4 ;J:IAIP3I'km"mOI44,!E:I"."- erty.tioinshlNAdniniCeun7. \ ,„ t :`-"A:14 I ~.. ,:p..,., ,c ~.. ,Itt ABdilie sd inst 4, in, ottntpiTpapt xpismsmp, GTJRTIN LAWRENCE; son of Joseph L. and Ann J., Smith, : nett 2 loars, /I :. own* and 27' days.' • ', In Monrovia, 'AfrlclO, on the sth of Aprillaitt, MARY ELIZA RE'lll,dittighter of Re r. paild Wilson ) Principal of I the Alciandet' flier School at Monrovia, aged 23 months. , , Public= Aleetlng, fir EfE CitizeriS of •Motintjoy tOnship will hold a.moaling at floruar's School'honse on Saturday M 14th of June, at 2 o'clock P. 14..,•All'oppoied to the nimise' policy . 'of the present iiational Administration, and in favor of Freed4cn ace invited to attend. . Jano iii. 186'6.—td '•• • • ' IM?ORTANT:' Tthe citizens of Get tyshurg and Strangers Who desire to know where to And a large and handsoine "ariet'. of Summer RATS and SHO FIS,---are invitalo chit ht W, W. PAX. TON'S STORL'i. where they will find the most elegant White Beavers, and Whito Hats, Panama,- Cameo and- Smidt also, 'Soft French Bats, and a largeeteck of . Gentlemen and Ladies' and Children's.SommerShoos and Gaiters Of e'rery stile and Kice, .Cqll tvldie t y the goods. • W*W. Juno 13, , 1856. ' • • • • ' ~; NO'CIC.~~ rr 111 i/ tridersigtied, EXbduleis ottlie ,gad testament of the ROV:' JOHN'AIr BERT, deceased, late of Latimore township,: 'Adam's ernnty, hereby 'notify. all persons that i knowdbemselves to be indebted n any way to said deceased, to make' payment immedititely and,those who bold. claims against said de ceardq,ure required to present their.6laites properly tfullenticated for settlement to either of the subscribers, both of whom reside. in the 'above namedlowikhip. ' ' JOSIAH ALBERT, 1 ' JOHN — IVOLFORDI '' vjs " Jane 13; 1856,61*- ' ' ' ~° ' . • ; - § .-- ,tr; AGAIR CIIAMPIONI 1 2118 Only: Figre ichic:h in spiry instanixiiraterw ed their. entire contents in the lute ' ate*: sive Fires. the Fronting of the Artizan 'Buildings; April 10th; and in the GREAT FIRE in ilarketi Street,. Nay let, 1856, the genuine HERRING SAFE preserved the Jewellery or Oeo. W. 5412615 & Bro, ; Books, Papers &e, of Fiaher.t, Bre. and Edward Semmes & Co., aft tertsumainibg exposed to the burning ruins for nearly FURI'Y 11.0IIItS, and•proving•conelty. Sively what we Imre always claimed for them' their great superiority over all securities now •In theie. fires, the HERRING'S . SAFE, liinding side by side with those advertised as !`warranted to stand 10 per cent „more-fire than ,"citnie. forth the acknowledged victor; riot only preserving their cot etits excellent Order,' 130 being,thetnselves in a condition to ko through another ordeal, while the, boasted ,Salamanders" of other makers were badly used w ym,,eyer,y, instance, and in, some ease!-, flutiz . ien,tut coitents:completeiy ciesttriyed.., ‘ o ire. we, would simply pis, that, during ;the -li'y'dtirs ? }bat Rerriug'te. Safe has been before thetit more than two hundred I ?iave.a,:lrC4 o 4so., q,ccidentO. fires without the.ovenirence era single lcuis. • ?.; ' We mould, therefore, caution purchasers againstg the misrefirerentation of intere , ted part ties. The Herring's Patent is the' only 'F ira pproof Sife Made .1n thiS eity , whieli is protected by a.. Patent Right, and we will guarantee it to. reniet Wore than.xloublo the antouut of , heat of any other Satbitoiv ? keitivii: • 'p.A11.11E3,8 dr 11E11 RING, lifttnuracturers in tills .tato of H6111t12.Q B,r.iTtst ca/tmrloi s FEs 4 . . . „ 34.)Vohnit „St Phi/acre/phis, N.13.-04:Torane Wuteon'e Improved Sala. innnders nyiee's,'.; "ScOtt's'Abetitoi," .Iron (4,lli'gn . MA6tfifebi been telsen in - part, pg. mViiefne'ufferting'i,g) will be 8(d ht low p 47 'cos. ' June 13, 1#14'..L.-'l'y' • VALItABLZ2 , tcwir PRopnlvrl'' •••• ; • , , ; Or HAT Valinible Propeity formerly own,eri Ity.JOII:s.IGAItVIN, Esq".,,in,the Borough Ur Pettysburg, will be offered at Public . Bale, at the Court-house in said Borough, , I On Saturday 00 g 8 ,1h fie 01 June, .inst., AT ONE o.Cl.oeg, There me the Tract SIXTEEN ACRES, more or less; 'of Ladd. ofgoodiquality, with a GOOD BRICK • : r 4, 41 j D GHOUS E • trell of pcollent watrr nod a krea:tyoriety'or • choice FItDIT TREES 'there-, otl, r " '• • • . • , , istt ieiv i desirable one cam; hdi'anttlp,9 of both 'town and try. ',-Pertions, wishing to ~ seenrO a pleasant roldaneo will de well to attend this ode. • t• : Aoy desired information reixtive, te the propptty, i c!93, h otitaitted crtito the undo:sign• ed, bintions also htteeclance will lie given, and terms made knolint ujon the day bf / 3 0 16 ;$ 0 o', / • •.: VdR/iARY I , ; 1" : All wneyin face for Conrad Baker. Jane . • ' • IY..NOTT *FANT HATS,BAPS, GOTS& SFIGES,, lit lasses 20 .per emit. cheaper , than year ever'. bought. before, remember m• CO BEAN elr, PAXTON'S, where they are to be had is great - variety, consisting of Gent's and Boy's fluo Silk, Fur and Sloileh Hate, of the' latest; aZyle , Mt colors and size.? ' White, Black Tan, Blue,lDrab, Fawn, &c. • Also, a large a afiSortthent cif lien's and Bbv's Film' Calf, KIP and Grain Boo* and PatenoLeather driitors.'; • t • ' careful,' Lidice', ,• it you Want IValking emir Phie biess Shoes, shell as Jetiny Lijid, kind and Ties,' Nid and , 3forocco Slipperti-L al so beautiful lasscirtaieut of Ladies l Dress (ignore, with a large stock of Misses' and Guitere and Shoes - that you find VOBEAN'At PAXTON'S. at 'the South east Cooler Of Centre Square, before purchas ing elsewhere as they have by far the largest stock of Seasonable deal; irk town, and are doterpainedto sell very cheap. l'Oo, caro and lel' • ' - SHARP •. 2 ,''+ 40 1004.5a.t yott 110' not thistfike . • the. placer Itfitnetobet .COBAN tt PAXTON'S New Stoic, at the OM-Shaul of Relict-Kurt*: •- ••Gettyehtn*, March 4, 1886. , -:-tf ' NOTICE. ETTERS of Administrntimron the Estate .14 of MAGDALENA JACOBS, iate of Let: Maore township, Adams county, Penna., de. ceased, htvipg . .been grnnted to the, subscri ber, residing in Reicling iow'uship; he here by gives ,nottce to persons indebtud to said Esibte, to,„ call' and uttle the same ;, and Shake kusysug claims are reryuested to present the 'alma; ProPer l 7 authenticated, for settle • ' SOLOMON. JACOBS, Arlsn'r. June • 856-60' • • - ARRIAOI; TRIIIMTNGS eta always be L'O'bougbi:losrar, and Iv larger insprmoset han elsewhere ? is slisaya tole bild:ltt.i : • • - '• • ' .•.. ._ :.IFAIINESTOCKB'. 1 tolrw a 4 „ :• 4 9,,oli;;),, I. ~ , v ,, . ', ' .- 1 '.: . ,: u..-'4, ?_.O•-•:'• ~...", ..1- ite Vt:-.. irt .': ‘ , 4l. " a f:•l-i'l , :, ~,,- •;. • lehn ,.—' ,t aim " i ig-'• irta , ,-, 191 .40117x' tkivAla '.. i iii,i,W oit bsi.iipto th, l4v , lt - , iI L.P. 4.330, g iiiirefi , 4oC, 1 16, 6 4 11 6414' Trirana , ' mil, ~:, ~ . itoba LawriNiDernaltel• f - , ' ~ Jf _ ,„._ii# , ~,,k;Pr'er,' ' : L cieleitna,„ 4 ". liana In' ariniarkilii;: Black," Bina, &mini Miro, picriKWaffs - Plaid, ClOnded, and tFigaroWalolifta Brown, and Fancy Cnatimeta, Figured, PI and Plain of m . 011'2'4010 of • otdorittrib !MN tato, Cashinerotte,,Bonabastintr Bilk Wasp, /WI paces, &e., &c. . , ~,,)„ * -,.., , 4 4,-, Also, Ready : made Clothing Ingram 4 rtiiiely, with a large stook of GioCeniajigiesninrare, &c., &c., all of which will be gold as; clkeitp,,, a/ they'can be': had 'it any. it4 ' ll 'eitib. , lighttieut in the Council , / ' ' , "'j , ''' '1 , The LADIES nig Please ail; is Wel' stsi) kr • allrtimes pleased tti nee thorn. ) .41 The GENTLEMEN'S attention is irrstte&s to our taros assortment in. their line,,,ja env neetion with the Store, is our izizt.leteapoce xiimaKowartnret_o at the Sand,Slone Front % Where everything is done up . im the: heated tted beat manner. We can tt'etars' fto4 Item/ to foot. in the lieu shortest notice, ~C,age and see and judge for yourselves, ,, :•April 4, 1856, THE LADIES* STORE. ANEW StIPPL I Y OP P I ANCY 00.0±58,1 • • 11111 CAL it ILL A At • • • • • f .r vidß just, returned from, ,the.eity vary large StaCk of,. ' . Aar,Lor,gity *FAN& to which she would invite the attentioti of hoe) friends and the pabliei bilievinit thtit ex. , ' dinintition will satisfy , tbem t hitt het.Uoodtism r tbe best 'selected and 'toner. fabhienable ai Waal ti the cheapest ever effered'io this phice.:Tins assortment comprises, CashinereN e Bilk Da Lahee , -, (#lagbanas,Calicoe4De -t: Bagei !Joburtrlelothe, -.I Tin; Linneii,latlvElanhelvltoto 11 , 4 • t nets .andllonner , Tritnitingsißitial4- kradiere Dress Triinrisinga i VeNete, Atiifit dale,. Black Veils, Blue , do g Gloves' Hblietyi - ) Handkerchiefs. French Worked iCallar , 47 ' t - "Cambritjackonetknd &visa Hdltinkei t ansertinos. ?befits, Bleeresilkfai st ' ,•% hair and Bilk' Black' 1r - 1 ! • • •Lace land. Embroider. • ed HandkerchieN ' Brilds, - Fans, • . : ad, Call and' examine tbr ythirotioes,' 't Gottisburg,' Apia 18, 18511 i ' READV-1102.ADZI , ormetturii . , - ' CHEAP CLOTHING EMPOHIII JF` you wont a suit or IttADY c IiADS CLOTHING, OTHING, comPleta 'in ereiy respect;" of the latest, style, and cheaper thin they can be purchased"it any eitiblisbnitint. in die"' County—call at 11ARCUS SAMSON'S, posite the Bank, in 'York street. hare- just received firom. the, Enetern -Cities %the' 'largest !. anti hest assortment of Goods ettei'offered in Gettysburg. In offering to sell beller Goods /ewer prices than other dealers; I simply quest purchasers to call and eatiff tbemselvoit" of the truth of my offer, by a . petsonal"ezandwi nation of my Goods ancipmes. .Buyin&excltu l • sirely for cash, I , can buy denier 'and sello cheaper than any other penoh in thelCetinty. My Goods are made op In the heat by ex- • perienced•workmen, and 'can't be exeelltod'hy.' any euktonter Tailor. MY Stotilt mutate,' Or' part, of . Collis 'bit ' •,, RrICOP I ecilors, and kieds, made' up hi a sups. rior tiannei: Also PANTS AND.VEBTS, Pf the latest and most faehionableitylevand every kind of good.; suitable for Sp tog and • Suthmar waan also • - 0 ^ • i" . 3 Dcf)(DvoikasiD C3lnVal ' ' and'a,large; lisiortinent,„ Boys' ntrnisking Goods, consisting , 'of er tra linen ba'som Shirts, Buspinlierik Gloves, halt•lldsti. Whirs, .b.bclPand pock -et %/fauilkerchlefs, , ,and ;an extrno*inotry, , ap',l sortment, of Black, Satin ,a,tl„foncy BO( ud justing STOCKS, and varions other fang sr tides together with Umbrellas, Trunks, Car pet liags. Hats,'Caps t .ttoots and•filmest . tela iro also prepared to sell 'wholesale to country merchants desiring tosellagnin, Bundy Made Clothing at CHEAPEN HATES THAN CAN NU DQUOUT_IN TIIC Cline. If you :dOnbt:iti-caU, and examine for yourselves. • • - • . ItAuCts:sauisbll.,,„ rt. 13, All Goods bought of ,tae wilt 11 ; (4:N, changed ifthey do not prove satisfactory. gettysburg, April 141856., • , „ • rillacesTocitiiitOMEUTAL, DAVI, received and are now operitug a Teo ry largo and handsome, stock. of NEW GOODS, and are. PrePared u, sell, to,all want of any article .in their line cheaper than Biey can,be bought elsewhere. tiaving.'m' chased our stock in New. York; Philadelphia rind Baltimore, thus haying the advantage of all three markets, we . can; olfer.iaducenavntk, which cannot, be had elsewhere hi,the Polrucyi Our stock embraces of every variety, Summer SILKS, , Chali'Bre.`"- Berages, Brilliantineti.„&6 4 - liind 'every', thing 'fashionable f L. es''''Fos'' Gentlemen; we have beautiful AIM& ofoo4i for 'Coats,' Peas and' Yfiats,' &e.''',Give us a call, we deem it tiCedleis enraneratelbe'vw,' riety of styles and qiialities of our large tito'ck • as we are prepared to furnish eve . ritking , ' in oar' line', nt Idaest prite,'' ently at , PATINESTOOKSV!' ! , • - •• The itirtaith fi r ed 'Ara ' 1 April 18, 866;'' " • NEW ESTABLISIIMEN'L GRA :r(AR U. rrHE•mideisigned , respectfully' inform din. citizens of Gettysburg and the p_ablie generally thattbey have opened' a- GRA NITt STONE ;YARDinii South Baltimore ' , Streei,- opposite the residence Reorge pnyock, where they ere lingered ta' furniat ITE STONE, dressed in 'every style', fora , . slioutemsents, I) aor ,• and every kind of 'building, and ornamental: , usu. .4 180,1 CEUETtRY . BLOCKS. :.alsvaya on band and a general variety , of , dreseroP gidrThe undersigned having .hacr. consider.'. able naperieneein their busmen& respectful- , lv invite, persons wishing anything in their line to give us a call—as: we are greparal'ta: finial& • the same article CHE.APhUt 'than!-it has ever: been 'heretoforesoffered Gettyir j k • - burg,• . HENRY S. BENNER,: , • PETER BEITLEE. . ' Agri1,18,1856.-3m c 044 1%1:01744, , iv various plttafti'a . 'aii.d 'sizes, constantly ,on haudand for sale - 3 . H: '-.I.:.,IYAHR•4IIWftOI:7I44Vet.II I al'Ur B O XES .BEST CONI ' • TOBACCO. in 4 14. OK& sale . bY WM. DUERLEit.,_ Nq AO r 4 l llll4 I "QNNEnONNETS:RibbOnA , nir l434 . 9 reS! TS, variety, er.ttisi;ll.l fOicigOleak 1., •4 , •1 1 • % I t EXOlVAti ri a :PrAll4 • ain be' iilin"rea SO* t • ka • Twin.... c • (r. , "; " J rr: prime otitis j ust web , ' att I at 6Ablegli'L '~,...