El Ka ~,; t franidin ftportitorg. Wednesday, Jane 20,1864. UNION NATIONAL MK FIT. FOR PRESiDENT. MIRAIIAIII LINCOLN, OF ILLINOIS: • FOR VICE PRESIDENT. 'ANDREW JOHNSON, OF TENNESSEE ,GEN. CAMERON .has called the Union State Committee' to meet at Harrisburg on Wednesday, 'the 6th of July. The campaign about to open is, one of vital importance to the Union party and to the Nation ; and we cannot too strongly urge the earnest, cordial and prompt co-opera tion of every member of the. committee in the Work' of organization for the strug gle.. Let the attendance be general. Tnn army of Gen. Grant before Peters 7 burg, and of General Sherman before At lanta, have made no decisive operations, during the last week. Both are gradu ally but we trust surely reaching the de struction of the military power of the re , billion. Its whole life is in those two armies, and when they are defeated re bellion practically ends. Most important news may - be'expected from both Grant and. Sherman at any time. '. Gen. Hunter reached Lynchburg last • week and destroyed the railroad for some • distance, but, did not attempt to capture - the town. He is represented as having „gone into Western Virginia, in aecord 7 -:ance with his original orders. What his ,movement is, we cannot conjecture,' PENNSYLVANIA CONGICESSIIEN. • Thelong session of Congress isdraw ing to a close, and the Pennsylvania Rep resentatives are about to appeal to.their Constituencies. They havebeen entrust ed with a high measure of responsibility in this fearfnl peril to our common cowl !. try„ and they will be judged by an earn •est and loyal people with a jealous scru „tiny that no cunning sophistry or polit mai' discipline can withstand. Those who have been faithful to the . National cause will, in most instances, be returned by increased majorities, while those repre tenting debatable districts, like Messrs. Miller, Coffroth, M'Allister, Dawson and Lazear, and have voted generally as Jeff. Davis would have dictated, Will have a .Tearful-rendering when they confront the. ~ p eople they 'have persistently betrayed. The following is 'a list of the present del 43gation—Democrats'in itaZics, and Union :members in. Roman :, 1. •Samuel J. Randall. 13. H. M. Tracey. 2. Charles O'Neil. 19. Wm. H. Miller. li eo nl nazdiS c i, 4 }- I?y rs. Bail ey. 4. . 16. A. H. r.th. Russell Thayer. 17. Arch. JU'Allister. ,1 6. John D. Stiles. 18. James T. Hale. 17.:J.0hn M. Broomall. 19. G. W. Scofield. 8. S. E. Ancona. 20. Amos Myers. .9. Thaddeus Stevens. 21. John L. Dawson, 10. Myer &rouse. 22. J. K. Moorhead. - 11. P: Johnson. 23. Thomas Williams. - Charles Denni Son. 24: Jesse Lazear. Of the old members Hon. J. K. Moor , head has already been unanimously re nominated for a fourth term, and Hon. Thos. Williams has been practically re ' ;nominated by two of the three counties Allis district declaring for him. - Of the other Union members, all ate pretty cer tnin to be re-nominated without a contest :and ;triumphantly re-elected, but Messrs. •-lEfide and Tracy, who were elected two pars ago irregularly, receiving the votes of , the Democrats and a fraction of r Alie tnionists, although both have made ,-.blioneless records. Judge Hale,,we learn, *ill not be a-candidate, and the regular Union nominee Will succeed him.' Tracy will probably run nolens voleas against the Union nominee,and the issue will de ' - pend upon the force of the nomination made against him, but we look for the election of the candidate for whom the .copperheada do not vote. A feeble ef fort has been made to defeat the re-nom ination of Judge , Kelly in the 4th district, built Will not sue& ed. So true, earnest and able a Representative cannot well be spared just now from our National conn . - On the Democratic side, Messrs. Ran :4ll, .Stiles, Strome and Dennison will certainly bo re-nominated, and we look for their re-election. A contest will be 4 1 1 . .Anadel'agai — nst Dennison in Susquehanna ! 7 4),;id,tuzerne, and against Strouse in Leh le4son and Schuylkill, but the chances are . 4 141 y with them. We have not seen any inflitions as yet of our Irish " friends" ...41-gle:taining regions of Schuylkill And tuzqrne voting leas earnestly, less ire , .quenily..or 'taking less interestininaking their ne.ii,hl,lors *otoii# dinst the war and ,everything ; that' savors of loyalty and 'Freedom; and .as they make their own erlarinalamLeleetion laws, they will give just as umeh : ragjority as they deem ne eessary.-,.. We learn ghat Grow will not inn again' Campbellhas gone abroad as , Minister .to Swedes a ; Ancona and Joilmston Svill q out lig' 'party limitation and will be sueteeded•byintense Copper heads like themselves. a:3l)2.ey Will be ,rejected by his party -for ..sastaining our armies in the field Aitd tbes.sluse of the 04;: e nrnnient generally,..and Natil : probably nupported by the pnion ,inn of the -41,Adot Against .Mr. Giaasbrenner tie :Ifie,Allister,. being ateitOr hot t oor .overboard b 7 omen/Lc/1i ~ " : ff-, - -.1 , 1p--i;:-..4> :=----.--,,,-...",: ,;:;-, ,- 1 : 1 •-•!-- :4 , ..- ,_ r - ___,_, _____...,,,,,,,,,,,.._, :At ' e _3ratutritt'iatpositottv;: ityantbersbatg '1 7 .110.• , ~__._ sent. • He cast just enough of loyal votes to alienate his own party, and not enough. to gain the 'confidence of the Union Men. Messrs. Miller, Coffroth, Dawson and La zear will likely be re-nominated---certain ly they all can be- without a contest if they deidre it, and, unless the signs of the times prove singularly delusive they will all be defeated by decisive majorities. Their districts' and McAllisters' voted as follows for Governor last fall: 14th District (Miller's.) Curtin. Woodward. Dauphin - 5065 3b15 Juniata 1456 1737 Upion 2024 1250 Snyder 1758 1331 Northumberland. - 2649 3356 Curtin'a majority, 1,403. 16th District (Coffrotles.) Adams '2689 2917 Bedford 2430 .2704 Franklin 3876 3710 Fulton : 7611022 Somerset • 3064 - 1738 curtin's majority, 729. 17th District (111'Allister's.) Blair 3283 2386 Cambria . .. =2164 3000 Huntingdon '3260 2167 1709 • 1626 Curtin's majority, 1,237. 21st District (Dawson's.) Fayette 3091 3791 Indiana 3961 ..1955 Westinoreland 4494 5581 11546 113T1 ~ . Curtin , s majority, 219: . 4th District (Lazear's.) lleacer 3037 2056 Greene ~.. .. . .... .... 1484 ' 2960 Lawrence 3063. 1251 Washington .. .."2._.... 4627 4371 Curtin's majority, 1,573. It will be seen that Gov; Cnrtin's ma jorities in the five districts ranged from 219 to 1,573, and the soldiers' vote was of course rejected. Had it been counted it would have chosen Wallace overLazear and Stewart over Dawson. Next fall the Union strength at home cannot be-short of the vote given for Gov. Curtin, unless we should have decisive disasters in the field, and the vote of our heroic volun teem will be cast almost unanimously in favor of the great cause for which they are periling theirlives. probably be succeeded by Hoti. Louis W. Hall, of Blair; Wm. 11. Miller will most: likely be opposed successfully by Geo. Miller, of Union ; Dawson will be succeed: edby Stewart of Indiana; Lazear by Law rence, of Washington, or Cunningham of Beaver, and. Coffroth will be run out by Col. Jordan of Bedford, or Gen. Koontz of Somerset. - Judging the result in these districts by the present indications, the Union men cannot : l'aq to gain at least 'five Congressmen in this State, and if New well, , York, Ohio and Indiana do as the proposed amendment of the constitu tion abolishing slavery, will not be defeatt ed in the next Congress for want of a two thirds vote. Let the Union men look well to the interests of the cause in the debat-; able districts, and there will be few cop perheads chosen to burl their impotent treason against the measures declined ne cessary to give us a United and Free Re public. COFFROTy SPEAKS A PIECE It was in balmy June time ! Gay Flora wore her richest .robes, with variegated hues, and flinging wide-spread her sweet est 'fragrance. Ambrosial dews refreshed the green fields, and hung in crystal tears _upon the flowers as:they welcomed each returning morn. The winged choristers of Heaven sang their loveliest songs as new days were born and died; and the modest hollyhock was struggling to rear its swelling buds to,- burst forth in splashing splendor. Coffroth was in Congress. Ho had en tered the Hall with a fixedneis of purpose on one point that •he hoped no conjunc ture of events could unsettle. He had "de termined not to participate in Any gene ral debate." The world should grow no wiser or greater at his expense. He had resolved to go through his term of service displaying only the—. "Playful blushes, that seem'd nought, But luminous escapes of thought." But events have thickened upon Coffroth. In vain did he struggle to be "a listener andnot a talker" when the most "extra ordinary legislation" was being pressed upon the country. Ile Could have tolera ted any degree of treason—any amount of relentless murder by the ernel authors of this wanton war, so that it-did not too deeply crimson the foot-prinis of , crime. So long as it bfotight rich fruits only to traitors, and disasters to loyal men, he could be content to' listen. Butwhen the twin demons of treason and despotism were about to feel the avenging stroke,of faithful men, and a justice loving God, he must raise his voice in thunder-tones to protest against it. AS Freedom dawn ed above the bloody, din of civil strife, and pointed to a continent about to be regenerated, he flings resolution to the winds, and breaks the expressive silence he had fixed for a Congressional term, Four millions of "ignorant and debased Aegroes" were about to be turned loose upon the country . ( with pestilential of. feet"— , 4 s Their softest•toneh asifilnart aslizard's king Their music frightful asthe serpent's hiss'!" could bet - therefore he Aka; for he felt that it might :be the terrible-ealm of death to the country; and Coffroth spoke! 'The - "mere abolition of 'SlaverYn Ras not his complaint:: For such a trifle, ab stractly considered, he would not have violated-pre-determined reticence; "but when the abolition of Slavery endangered the harmony and success of treason, in his judgment it ceaSed'to be an - abstrac tion, and ho bent , his :whole colossal en ergies to st,kr, the tide of. sorrow. to the amiable and virtuous murderers of our brave fathers, sons and brotheri. From his own land of heroism and bereave ment; of Freedom. and Freedom's sacri fices, he turned his eyes to a land blotted with gigantic crime and holding high car nival in desolation and death: It has as sumed rulers, clouded with perjury and treason, who have made wicked, cause less-War and hecatombs of dead to make mean ambition and matchless perfidy ap proved in history ; they— " Whose games were Empires, and whose stakes - were thrones, Whose tables, earth—whose dice were human bones." And to these he turns with mingled sym pathy and adoration, and declares that to abridge the rights of traitors or take their slaves would be "stealing!"—and be it known that Coffroth won't steal, es pecially from traitors ! _ In Support of his position Coffroth in yokes the power of logic-not, mere made jargon learnt by heart;'.: - but origi nal, profound, commanding logic. He stood before the giants of the Nation— " With loads of learned lumber in,his head"- -aud startled them with an exposition of constitutional law before which the fame of Webster incontinently pales. Vainly have statesmen believed that the consti tution could - be amended in conformity_ with its own provisions; but then Cof froth-had not yet lived, or had not yet spoken. - To him alone belongs the re finement of logic that declares it.nncon stitutional to - amend the constitution ac cording to the terms of the constitution; and henceforth jle constitution must stand before the Nation as a monument of unconstitutionality. Sad fate for the great declaration - of rights; but profound ly sorrowful as it seems, Coffroth is inex orable, and the constitution must be ac cepted as unconstitutional! —So much we pardon, since fools and follies must over go : together; and per haps. weshould pardon more. It is not the fault of Coffroth that Coffroth cannot reason; for his reason is not of his own creation, and it would be unfilial to blame his parents—blasphemous to 'blame his God. Hence the mantle of charity falls over such mingled nonsense and half-- fledged treason as CoffrOth utters. He has listened to able men talk treason; saw learned"colleagnes act the traitor's part, and they wield over him— ',12952 11549 12620 12091 10416 9179 12211 10638 "That odd impulse, which in ware or creeds, Makes men, like cattle, follow him who leads." And he haS foll Owed—bravely, pompous ly followed, and - Congress and Coffroth shared a common disgrace. Congress has again resolved to perform an impossibility, and the world will not be astonished that it has failed; There ' would be just as much reason in enacting that water shall not run down hill, as to pass laws designed to regulate the price of gold arbitrarily ;' but Congress tries and fails, and keeps trying from time to time although the evidence of failure has risen mountain high. The first enact ment forbid the hypothecation of gold purchased for More than - par, and gold went up and down thereafterjust as usual. Next Secretary Chase was authorized to sell tht gold in his vaults, and a collapse . was predicted ; but the 'gambler made a pool"--that is combined together—and coolly invited Mr. Chase to sell and they would take the lot. As they would then have been able to control the market ab solutely, and run gold up' to any figure they,wanted it to reaeh, Mr. Chase wisely kept his precious metal so thathe might have it when his interest must be paid. But Congress was still incredulous, and another bill was resolved 'open to cramp the genius of the _gamblers. A bill was passed practically :declaring that gold was not a merchantable commodity, and that it should-not be 'sold on the stock boards ; and Congressional financiers waited for gold to topple down and bury with it the whole swarm of speculators. But probably to the surprise of,Congress, it gave the gamblers the entire ',control of the sales of gold, and it went up twen ty per cent. in a single day, touching two hundred and thirty and since vibrating between that and two . hundred and eight. The result of the last enactment of Con gress:was to enhance everything, and the people -pay the piper. Bad a carefully prepared tax, bill _been applied to gold gambling, so stringent in its provisions that it could not be evaded, and so exact, ing upon such operations as to give thE' government the lion's share of the profits when successful, and to swell disaster fearfully when they stake and lose, we should have, been guiltlei,s of the folly of restricthig,ttadu - nod had a large source of revenue for the treasury. Gold must be bought end bartered. It is daily needed in the legitimate channels of business, anti those who do notpesse§s it must trade with,those who'd° said• • - A . ,•; as 'long as it is subject to-Inflations Had tde,.. GOLD-OIIR FINANCES. pressioni in price, -just. 'so long will men gamble in it as they 'do in every other marketable commodity. They will com bine to enhance or depreciate it. as they do the price of flour, dry goods, groceries and fancy articles; but; if allowed to pur sue their own wad, it Will just as 'surely find its just value as, water will find its level. To attemp4.therefore to reduce its value in the market by arbitrafy enact menti, is simply to attempt What legisla tion cannot perform. There is one remedy for the alarming advance in gold, and but one. Operators can manipulate gold to fabulous figures solely because the government is without adequate resonrceS for its vast liabilities. If: Congress would pais a revenue bill suf ficient to pay the interest on our debt, and make certain provision for retiring our circulation and bonds as the interests of trade may demand, gold would, not command a premium of forty per rent. to-day; and when it is considered that the enormous indirect taxes now snffered, by the people are justly attributable to the cowardice or faithlessness of Congress on thiS vital question, there must be a fearful reckoning for many members when they. come before their, outraged: people for re-election. The people : are nowpay-I lug an average of thirty per cent..more for the necessaries of life than they would be asked to pay, did Congress so perfect the tax bill as to give ample revenue. If an individual issues his notes and bonds to an extent beyond his visible means to pay, they inevitably depreciate,and he is discredited. The same simple rule ap plies to the government ;.• and until:Con gress learns these accepted 'rules of trade, we shall have unsettled finances and grievous burdens imposed upon the pet), ple. One-tenth the money now paid by the people indirectly in -the shape of en hanced prices for everything they eon-' some, would, if paid directly to the gov ernment to sustain its credit, give ample means to float our debt and keep g9ld.at a very moderate premium.: To ref Use to tax, therefore, is` to refuse relief to the people, and cowardly and treacherous members of 'Congress will learn that the people understand their own interests much better than they have imagined. Let Congress give the governnient,judi cious tax laws. 'The people 'will cheer fully bear their share: of the burdens ne cessary to maintain the government, and we shall then have reduced prices for all the necessaries of life, and the credit of the government and, our currency fixed upon a basis that cannot be shaken by gamblers or, traitorL THE FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW. TUE Senate on Thursday passed the act repealing the Fugitive Slave laws, of 1793 and 1850, by a vote•of 22 to 12. • We give here the Yeas - and Nays : YEAS—Messrs. Anthony, Brown, Chandler, Clark, Conness, Dixon,..i;'oot, Grimes, Hale, Harlan, Harris, Hicks, Howard, Howe, Lane (Ind.), Lane (Kansas), Morgan; Morrill, Pom eroy, Ramsey, Sherman, Sprague, Sumner, Ten Eyck, Trumbull, Wade and Wilson.: ' NAYS—.Messrs. Bucltalew, Cubic, Cowan, Davis,' Hon d ri Clig,J oh n so n , Povv ell, Riddle, Saulsbury, Van Winkle and Willey. It sounds oddly in the year 1864 to read the names of two Pennsylvania Senators in the list of twelve nays on de question of repealing the Fugitive Slave law; but such is' the humiliation of our greateeiiii monwealth to-day, and such has almost ever been her fate. -Pennsylvania. ~has furnished nearly two hundred thousand men to defend our sacred Nationality against the assaults of : Treason and Sla-, very, and full . twenty -five thousand of thatnumber fill untimely and often name less graves,:—heroic sacrifices to . the crowning crime of human bondage and its endless train of evils; :and when an enlightened progress, dictated • alike by laimanity and. National necessity, seeks to blot frinn our statue books the blister lug evidence of our Nationalabaseinent to Slavery, Pennsylvania records_ a solid vote -against it in the-firstlegi.slative -tri-, banal of the, larid;- Fortunately the bill has passed and is now a law, despite the shame of our State. —With Senator BuCkalew we ha,ve noth-, ing to do. He has disappointed no one— has sacrificed no convictions; violated no pledges; falsified no record. He was cho sen by a legislature in sympathy with his views, and he has simply been consistent in error. But Senator Cowan has been faithless to the sentiment that called him to responsible trust, and shamefully vie., hated his own volturtary record: In 1866, when the writer hereof was Chairman- of the State Committee, lie was compelledto recall several appointments made for this same Edgar Cowan because of the radical abolition principles • he advocated. Ibis only theme seethed to be the destruction of Slavery, and the blotting:out of the last vestage • of its power. In short he was radically in advance of the 'times—then holding and advocating views so violent that, in the absence of rebellion; they could notk be justified either in law or, comity. 'Before his election the formal secession of _several States was a matter of history, and Slavery was abOut to re sort canselessly and wickedly to the ter,- 'Able arbitrament of the sword. -In such a crisis, the supposed fidelitycif Mr. Cow an to the government and his known hos tility to the fruitful parent of our Nation id made him acceptable to the Wald - 'nexk of the - legislat , ute, -he teas clothed With - the' ;highest legislative trust. Others might falter before the se duction's of power, or thedisOpointriletits of small minds, but no one doubted that there would ever be 'one faithful man in the Senate—EdgaK Cowan4 of 'Pennsyl vania. -:--Such were his antecedents—isuch his pledges—such the circunistancl3-8 of his election. How faithless 1j has been, let his' record tell. With Sarilisbury and Powell and Davis, and every open, in solent ,sympathisat with treason, he votes habitually from day to day; and shames his loyal friends and degrades his great State by his perfidy. When will Penn sylvania learn to value and cherish States men, rather than political adventurers I TIM Spirit is needlessly exercised be cause the RErosrrouy- has advocated a re-cast of Mr. Lincoln's cabinet. = - The Spirit don't do such things for the very good reason that it don't do much think ing for itself, and never speaks until its course is clear of all obstructions. In Short,. it is a mere partizan journal, and don't trouble itself with independence of expression, but meeklyfoliows asits lead ers dictate. If its party is necessitated to put on a tolerably plain stripe of loyal ty,-very well—if it is enabled to display its faVorite coppery hue,the:Spirit follows and loves it all the better. Believing as'we do that the cabinet is impaired in popular respect and useful ness by the palpable antagonism of Con • yiction that obtains, therein, we do not hesitate to urge a change. We have done so personally months ago, and,do so pub licly, now that no 'reasonable excuse can be given for keeping discordant constitu tionaladvisers, when the supreme coun cil Of the Union party has emphatically demanded reconstruction. It may not be done even noW but assured as we are that if it is not done evil may result . therefrom, we prefer stating the truth and leaving .consequences to others. -The intimation of the Spirit that blun ders and needless sacrifices in the man agement of the war have resulted from Cabinet diss - entions, is unlike untrue and abstird., The ministerial antagonism of which we complain is that which openly confronts the' proclaimed policy of the adminiStration, in vindicating loyalty by the j iist punishment of treason. We hold that treason is a crime for which there can be no tolerance, save at the cost - of virtue and fidelity ; and we object to any ele ment in a National cabinet at this day that no that treason and secession for feit no rights under the Constitution. THE Spirit denounces Graiit---Lbis of fence being that lie 'persistently fights the rebels instead 'of retreating after the fash ion of Don't be hasty, neigh bor: the Chicago Convention is postponed; ." Little Mac" is overboard, and where you l will fall in the- - new deal, no one can conjecture. It-may be Grant, the "Wool ley Horse," Vallandigham, or " any other man." , uot safe for the Spirit to speak evil of any one just now. We -give this adinonition gratis! THE Copperheads of Bedft.rd county have nominated B. F. Myers, Esq., of the Gazette, for Assembly, and'Michael Wertz - for Commit. .sioner. Congressional conferees were chosen friehdly to the re-nomination of - Gen. Coffrotht and'Afessrs. 0. E. Shannon, J. a Hartley and J. H. Schell were appointed. Judicial conferees with instructions to support the nomination of Judge Kiininell, of this place. Mr. Shannon is thezentleman 'who withdrew his subscription to pay bounty to volunteers, lest it should dam age him in his party, and Mr. Myera is the pres ent member. He was the only Man we have heard of in this State who openly justified the riots of Seymour's "friends'' in New York. He will be handsomely-defeated. and will be a sad der and we trust a wiser- man' after the people pass upon his case next fall. The resolutions adopted denounce the war, - the draft, and in deed pretty much everything but Jeff Davis and Slavery. Considering that Judge Kimmell is ti• War Democrat we commend to his careful consideration the resolutions with which his name is mingled,•and especially the following, which was adopted • Resolved, That we are in favor of an armis tice and cessation of hostilities, in order to make • way for peace and a restoration of our unhappy land to its old Deinociatic glory and prosperity, and in, favor of all: proper compromises and guarantees which may secure to, the people of the States their constitutional rights. WE beg the attention of the Spirit to one or two recent incidents, which have doubtless es caped its notice. Gen, Sturgis, a copperhead General of the most approved sort, led a com mand out from Memphis recently, and by pal pable incompetency or treachery sacrificed all. his matbrial of war, and many of, his men --the rebel Forrest capturing more Union sol 'diers than the number of the entire rebel - force. Will the Spirit please let ns have its usual lec ture, mostly copied from the World, oripelitica' I and incompetent Generals? ' Again—an association of copperheads in Ta maqua, Schuylkill county, resolved that a loyal paper'published there should be demolished be cause it denounced the draft rioters, and the office was promptly gutted and the contents de stroyed, solely because it was gnilty,of instiiin ing the government Will the Spirit note the occurrence, and give its stereotyped overfiow of indignation at this attempt to suppress the f re edeetof the press? Tut Efonse of Representatives refused; by a vote of 100 against 50. to repeal the s,3oo„eom mutation clause in the enrolment bill, . Such a result, by so large . 'a majority; took every pup by surprise. -1 Jil4 2§ 1 184. , , Tug Ifniorr_men 'of gallant_ K t * e i. l 4 t hay .„ unanimoußly presented Gm. Wm.s,Koontzfor Congress, and nominated Moses A, Komi 'for Assembly. Of den." Koontz, the gomeri e jg er . all says : "In presenting Gen. Koontz to the other' counties of the district, its a suitablep er _ son to oe the standard bearer of its loyal citi zens in -the approaching election, we emphati caliy present a gent/emu who has been ac , tive, devoted, most efficient and unswerving in his devotion to the Union—one who has never missed an opportunity to sustain by his perecsaal exertions the friends of the Union, or adniinis= ter merited and withering rebuke to its open or covert enemies, and one who in the 'halls of Congiess will do full honor to Ibis eon s tit t i ents in promoting their interests; sustaining the government and manfully, but honorably, op posing the enemieS of the government. Let him be -nominated and Somerset county will evince her appreciation of his merits by givi ng him a majority never equalled since the days of yore." • : THE Methodist Sunday School Convention fdt the Carlisle District was held at Petersburg. Perry county, recently, and was well attended. Rev. F. Dyson made a gratifying report of the operations in this section of the district * 01. the . thirty-nine schools reporting, the one in Chambersburg is the oldest—dating since 1821; and - the sixty-forir in the district, Chambers burg is the largest,'numbering 275 scholars. The, number of teachers and officers in the district is 1,050, and the number of scholars 40.0. The following resolution was adopted: - Resolved That the judgment and observation of this Convention is, that collections taken by the classes weekly and reported at the close of the school each session, is the most suceeSsful plan to secure funds for Sunday School and Mis, sionary purposes. WE notice in the Easton papers that the State Agricultural Society`, acting thrOugh its sub-committee, have selected that town [tithe proper place for holding itS'next annual exhibit tion in this current year. We hear that thaen closure is the most extensive of its character in the State, containing Over thirty acres of ground —park-like and romantic as the most polished taste would require, and its interior fitted up far more elegant than we have ever seen in any of the States or counties in - which 'such struc tures are erected. Easton is accessible from hit points by railroad—in the heart of a `very fine agricultural and manufacturing region, and its citizens alive to the importance of a grand display of the products of the rich region which surrounds their enterprising little toti-u.., WE published ii last week's issue au estraet from a Washington letter to the Bostontifilrer ri;er, giving an account of an encounter said to have taken place_between Gen. Coffroth and Mr. Bailey on the floor of Congress. Glee. • Coffroth writes us that the statement is incor rect; that he did not use unkind language to Mr. Bailey, and that the latter did not strike him at all. lie says that he did rnakerivemark to Mr. Bailey in jest about his vote in-favor of the constitutional-abolition of slavery, at which Mr. Bailey was offended, but nothing else hap pened: and it -was soon forgotten on both Rides. We make the correction on the authority of Gen. Coffroth, and feel gratified that such a discredit to our immediate Representative and to Congress has not occurred. THE citizens of GettysbUrg. at a public meet: itig held with reference to the celebration of the 4th of July, adopted the following resolution Resolved, That invitations be extended through 'the papers of the country tothe charitable, be nevolent and industrial associations; alidpthe public generally, to join the celebration of the I r Anniversary of the b thy of Gettystirg, on the 4th of July, and th special invitation be extended to his Exce nu - , Andrew G. Cur tin, Governor of. Pennsylvania, to be present and preside. . , . the Gettysburg Sudan/ says GOv. Citrtitt has 'accepted the invitation,' aud will bo•preaent at the celebration. - MARYLAND has wheeled into line, and another updimmed star shines out in the constellation of Free State. Her Con stitutibnal Convention, in session at Annapolis, on Friday last, passed, by a vote of 53 to 27, the following article of her bill of Rights a - " Hereafter in this State there shalt be neither slavery nor involuntary- servitude, ex. Wpt in punishment of crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, and allpersoas held to service or labor as slaves are hereby de. Oared free." • • - TIIE June number '6l, the:Gulled States Ser vice Magazine is on our table, with a splendid steel engraving of •Lieut. Gen. U. S. Grant and a variety of able` and most interesting ceatribu tons on subjects pertaining to war. The Edi tor's,Special Department. 'conducted by - Prof. Coppce give a complete epitome of military and naval intelligence. It should have a wide cir culation. Price $5 per annemn; C. Rich ardson: New York. WE learn from a gentleman who has recent. ly returned from the western shore of Mary land, that • the wheht - crop in the .counties 01 Washington and Frederick (the most produc tive in the State),never looked fingr, and that the -" tillers of the soil" are gratified at the pros. 'pects before them. The corn crop has it Very . healthy appearance, and a good yield is eipec ted. CONGRESS on Friday lest settled the pre tentious of the copperheads who tried to climb into the House on technical grounds afterhaving been defeated by the people:_ Charley. Carri gan and John Cline, both of Philadelphia,- who Contested the seats of Thayer and Myers were 4 declared sent home by • a decisive vote: " , THE. Continental Monthly for: July is rich and instructive. It has several very able articles buelaing the war—one by Hon. R. J. Walker. It has gained a high rank , in the list of' our litera ture, and is eminentily independent 'is its scope. John F. Trow, New York, THE rush of immigrants to the port of • New York is unparalleled. Within the twenty-four hours ending Wednesday noon #vAressela came in, bringing three thousand two hundred and thirty-four paaenkers, all frern LiverpooL THE patriotic citizens of Somerset are ma king arrangementa for a Grand. Sanitary Fair, in that place, to commence on the Fourth of July.. The better the day the , better the deed. Sou twenty cases , of emallpox 111'6,11:Tort- . ed in Jaekeon and Toboylie Jowiishipso . - Perry cetinty: