4.,,0t:,..0-ti,.qlool,ltit:..::"*gisttt....;. a .11.. T# VRA*IER. ,LVD, , MONI,IOSE, PA. lniesd4.ll[Ornivim_Jun 15 1 113541. WNW suit TICKET. ' • CMvernor, 1 JAMES ; POLLOCK, at.Northu,mberlon4, domniissiongi, . 1 - - • GEOIIGE DA , llSlE, , ,of'Allegheoy. Judgt. of Supreme ,Court.; DANIEL n §IItIY'SE . R, of Aignigornery. • -, - WOOD . Wanted` on subscription \ cif this office, hrimedistel - V. B. PAT 14TR I 'R, ..the American' Newspaper Agent is the' only authorized .elgent for this paper in the cities of Boston, New York, and Philadelphia... . . Nebraska* Pennsylvania: . ' The opponents of the bill, in oth. -er States, express a good deal of doubt as to the course ;hat the Free-Soil men of Penn. iylvania j Will piirsne. It is feared.that ull the loud talk and lOng-winded artiele.s against -this •new triumph of oppression, are mere vaporings, the otlipring of a / momentary ex oiteMent; which Will have, passed i away..long before m'e shall • - te_eilled upon to prove our' -sincerity by . our actions. Undoubtedly a very large majority of Pennsyl‘lmians are . ..now opposed to * , t,he measure which has open ,ud a lfltstregiou, once free territOry; to , the encroachments 'ot .i , Slaveryi but before . the Cittober election's many, may lac taught to see diffe.reutly._• fThere are plain indications that ~ :an, attempt will be made to hav e th is, pet measure of thetadministration reeels-e an en dorsement; or ;that rimy be' assumed to . .be an e' l ndorsernent4 at the hands of the Derrloo racy of= 'thi.4 St . i te,!:next fall. , The ifict. th.,t,, while the peoli e., :Democrats and all; indig ll nanfly denoithe : the, iniquitous act, altriost all the 'Locofoco n' vspapers in the• State boldly advocate it, is most; significant. Why do . - th ese sapient itors see things so differently - - fiomtheir nein. ibe•rs ?as to believe that right , .. P is Wrong and iivrorigt , is right ?' , Evidently they I cue froth those i n \ a uthori y ' and.thereforehave setto work irsinstr . ously - .tomanufaeturelPuhlie opinion. Ilbi• are they - without. some prospect of success, judging from the:prey - 19s history of the Penn.sylva rfia,berdocru,-, Blind adherence to the par .ty lenders, be hey pure or cOrrupt, right or wrong, hai long-,disting.uished• them. But of late there have begun , to appeari some indica ' ' tionsthat theiwill not consent icrvemain the -sfave.sof party foreVer, but will dare to 'eon demn flagranf, acts of injustice e'en thount I committed In-the name of Democracy: - ' ,And b '... , , y...great ou*age against kumamty, recently perpetrated 4,l',W A lpiton, seems to present a favorable de4sioti: for them to isslie a new declaration of independence. ` Perhaps_lhey . ' .1 1 , 'Lave deternTed to'do so; the Philadelphia_ .' . election wo d" seem to indicate as much.--- - Theresult of that election cannot be ciainied as a mere * Whig triumph. Both Whigs and Demoduts-lOok upon it as a Merited rebuke . of -a corrupt and recreant administration, and an eXpression of Northern , feeling on the Is Iraska question. ' '' , - . In this -county there is at ,present great unanimity of 'sentiment... Leading men , of `cill parties seem ' aareed that Slavery is the one all-important question of / t h e day, and all with 'very rare exceptions- 7 agree that the aggressions : of *our arrogant *ould-be plasters at the Sonth, mt,ist henceforth be re -listed "to the bitter" end." "1 The .Bradford ,Reporter andi the, 200 trose Democrat join with the Whig papes in they respective counties, the Argus . and our 'Own paper, in, open oppositiOn to the Nebraska Bill. ' The „Reporter. has heretofore been a regular Dem ocratic sheet, with a tinge of T'ree-Soil, while tie Democrat has; always, under its present . editorship, claimed to belong; to the "radical \ Democritey.7 If, as we are -told and expect; t Governor Bigler comes out soon as a Nebras ks man; we shall be apt to hear the Editor ; of the last' Mentioned paper anxiously asking q • like another!great statml "Wher e shall I .. VT! have said hthat-iprobably Governor . ' Bigik will' come out in •fisvor of the 'l4- braski - 3411;I but if h does not, his election as thelilm, competit or of an avowed foe of that measure, would be claitned•as a Ne,brasl. l e ka triumph; But t we \do riot - believe a ean: didate who !is afraid to,6preds his sentiments ' ,on the question, l can be eleetCA: • The people are `too mit& melted on.the subject ' to be • - trifled with. _ .If the Governor rtmecins thank. • lie must be treated, throughout : the eamirdip, • as for Nebraska. Oul theiState must be car t , sled for Freedom.' t 1 , - ',... Perhaps it will be said that, a Whigs, we ' ' -of course eonsidei it important that. Bigler 'should beidefeatel and Pollock elected. In 'answer we are prepared' to 'say that - we • • limo:the trAttnpl•of the foes Of slavery ex tension, past and future, of far more import, ince, at this time than that of any political party whatever: : Let Governor Bigler au • his friends. come out boldly I and earnest] against the - Nebiaska bill • and its kindre iniquitibsi if they; are i really the friends o, . freedom, and th4e_theY may Ihave sinne ho - f• of carrying the State; but .i.heilvise hemil . • be beaten, ,as sure as there li4 faith and h esty in t4n, in spite of liii the influent* t . • . President Pierce's, cOri mp administration call h i ' , bring to bear in4iis favor. I 1 ' ' • ' . Itatortrria J'Avalt.-: , :News has been r - - ' ' 061 '0 trPnl.4"l. Japan s'itialrcsl/4comprisi , :the gratifying intelligence Ault a treaty been co n cluded between! t l4 Americans and Japanese, by which, reev intercourse is opeu r- - e(1 between - the iwo oouUtri,‘,twe) 4 ~ ports a • secured to the Americans , ! with kind t - - • • Inetti'an# abuudauca-of water ;And provisions. the Japanese utterly '_denied, having made any ixeay with, or m20)446)16 to,-Ihe gus . New' Pahlietitons; . .. Puittans'a._•Ofonthly.--r-Tite Jae !Amber completes tlte7third volume Of this 1.014 - putine; The ,great:success . . of this p;ublicatien — is A cause'- for cengratelatibn, of only itch the - publishers . ut Witlithe rtublic. It is iob tained a position in both i'mtspttert*durint the brief Peljod since 1 ' Om i t. appearance, such as few works of, th: kind ever, reach; Ind this spcce, so compl te4md imtraidiate, mustbe attributed to tb - intrinsic 'merits of the Si-ork, - aid not to 'any trinconsAnfluene -1 rei.• -Painam proposes to continne ;those pe culiar Clittrtictriiitics whie, - bavtis , nfrl , buted in a great degreo- - to its ,polarity w ith. the . American public. Its co tent&will_bct whol -1 ly original, as heretofore, i dits cop . 'butots I will comprise many of , 'most disti guisb. led writers of the ! . .Jni , 4 'Braes, 134 their I.- • % 1 names will _be withheld , .4m thelpu I l i e, so that each . articlp.will be 'judged by its own. merits. It is proposed o give 4 series of i,. portraits m of rcontributo :, comencht With the author of the Potiph r Papers. All ,ar ticles that are accepted a . liberally p id for. lia ttgu . Like Graham's and odey's, iP triath's Monthly hai come to us wi l / 2 h great Idt:i -v- The My number, .wever, Exiled to reach us. will the p tblishers be kind as to 'supply it. Published by Geo. Pu) Place, NeW York, at $3 cents a number. : Gkaoon's Pictorial.— trated journal, foaming 'weekly,"cOmmeitees a n being, the seventh volut OHMS to us regularly ft eign and home illnstrati celkut original reading by Maturin• AL 13allOu, 1 nected with/the Boston by F. Glenson, Bo4on, or. $1',50 for six •month. scribers taken at the:ral The whole Slave case, Amounting.. and &Bats; is to be paii goVernment;by order It is -prsposed that sine the several Free:States • • as .each'ease .may be e...A bonds of union - betee l l • I andloallak affitatien a These, 'slave hunt source of ' agreeable recreation and healthful sporting gentlemen, excitement for Southern sporting gentlemen, who, judging , from . the numbers that; docked to Boston during the, pendency of Burifs case, are adding slave catching #o: their already ex tensive. and "unique list ,of amusements.— Think Ufa company oiyOung "blookis," arm-I ed with bowie-knife, and.•ostol, - discussini over tfieir cups:thequestiOn whether the neat day's sport consist in shooting-asehoot:' [ 1 Master at hotrie, or. himt.ing a nigger at the. North! The latter sportas more exciting' .1 and furnishing so broad afield for Coursing the fugitive, will prdably become very \port ular: Often the:miserable, setvile Yankees, like the serfs'of England in feudal times, Shall be startled lty- tit; err of,"tally-ho," an the rush of their =led lords through the' trampled fields, in pursuit of the , panting ;game.: It must add greatly ,to: the poptilarl i .ty as well as freitieuey of these hunts, that •they ( are to be carried ow,. at the public (~sl l reuse. The 'sports.Meti.ha re, only to. OD ic , .• .., - round , by, Washington, ~on their • way home, :and Uncle Sam s ~ footi - the bill = phyall ..th l e expenses or the Itunt,'''hy order of the Pres ident." How kind in Uncle Sam to do it !-- And then ,a 'nigger' co be 17 turned loose at any time that a .chase. iniihtf be thought de inisirable. The more estrays;;the .tnore sport d the more bills to he paid .by government . manifeat that a war with ,Spain is not bsolutely necessity_ to dePlete the treasury: [ . _ . i i... . ~ . . We hear from 411 qu , arters.romplaihts - Of th - irregularity Of, the mails, and the inof -7 leien administnitiOn;,of ' the Postoflice de- I . D , ent. -. Papers miscarry, letters,` - are de, layed, arrivals are . let *rens, hours. for basi nessyiten, every thing . irregular and, indieat . . ing incorapetency:Or..inatteption In , the•head of - . the departMent. Postmaster General Campbell- ought to Supply the *ants of Penn sylvilnid in this particular, as - - welt at least as 1 he dO'es thoge of other, Btates, and, if be dOes : so, then - we can '.only . .Sa p y the others can be but . .poorly, supplied. , j Oar mail_ privileges have recently Made...lithe an advance baelt.. wards, in this vicinity. I We, used to get Our NeN4.Yorkmerning R4eis at about 0 i,' it. of the..day of publiCatren ; new they•mieh.us near 5 t.. - 7d. of tbelfolldwingdaY.• ;We Sup- . 1 pose our mails milat.belbretwht by the Ex= , - ,=- , • , -presss,train on the New York & Erie la:.1, road, as they .wereforraerly,[if lir:Campbell thought .7 the interests :Of 'Us - ovuntry:.:folks worth attention.. Butt is probable that all the!ettergy of the fidininistration nee4s tO•be hisbanded, to enable 'them 'to meet thellge braska . .,tiuestkim,laild he . mails, as well 'as other every-dtyLaffairS,lmust be left to look after themselvei..; ':. -I, 1.. - ' ••• ' : ‘' 1 -- ff' A yonthftil friend of ours, of some 1, .1 I wit. Free-Soil tendenciesoind withal ambl. • ,1 , gags of leadership among the•deinocracy of the county, iii unilerstocid to lie preparing a speech foi the next Fop'' . of July, in which 1* will take the ground that the DemOcratie pa / rty :is th - e - enti-slavey f! , • rty of the , country;, that the 'only, hope of .g., PoOf \ black is in the t , \.. , 1 ~... p i ts .. , , party Inat tiuds an f.X i' i ent 01 i principles in l , President Pierce • d Stephen Arnold D i atiglas. He declares i. :t such is his liori. .I 1 , - ell opinion; and, hat i .is for tat reason 'he has recently joined t4ql% i • ty. If he thought otherwise; he wouldu't , :;. . une with ibeni; being very strict" ? awl." . ' :. to principle. vir,Senajor I DOUg . ; Piie.W.York, exp styloof democratic Ei npire Chub and Custo •ed hiw and he would :hear ailifrereist, the_p*de: • '.rh idelphia hare since ';-• • . tones he waS warned_ to the stonnzieatined and all 'otheNtortlie teemble at the doom' nanl &CO., 1 Ter annum, I . O Park or 25 This .. faTort illus- . ixteen*tajo pages w ,volume my .Ist, an' i'of the work. It cighted wit its for ,n,!and a fund of. ex: . latter. It - is edited 4entleman Tong enn- Vress, and published a $3,40 per annum, Clubs . of ten sub e 'o ft r •annuni.. • i • ease ofN the Boston I o some, Thirty thous by the United States !f President 1 3 ieree.— •lar . ieases i be got up in n l s often as convenient, 1, • , Ypectcd to cement tae.en North and South, imonk Northern fanat mill 'also furnish a on his recent vis his pleasure at the `'rider with which t l tte lind/ I ,9* ( amers greo ; been - warned that he of thunder frOna rrtisses `en in those thun4er ,; hut, that is nothing , to overate] in lain traitors. Let thrn awaits theta. • • • - • t, "I'M following emlar document •cos pick pp near a — la offioc lin tins village,. one ilasVweek, an handed to us uith_kie. q. est to . roublish:; - ' AO it looks like in-sder ti. ment s we _ Aid obariii th e greitenm- D ' ' • c . tie party' fii p blistdng it, though scithoUt . y 1 ••1 . Seery santfin/ t expectation o be i ng paid: Dissolution of Partnership. . , . The 'eapartnership heretofore existing un- ' d - the-name anil style of the Democratic arty, has been dissolved by muttial octants. .'Franklin: Pierce iiirill close up the business of the concern, and from. present indieations will speedily S•Ceomplish - thkaesibtbleend:' All persons (tnostly oonthertiers) who arc indebt ;n to said firm, Will please . to "fork firer,". d all having dams against it (chidlYNOrti- Congrssmea Will firesent them .to the id Franklin, or Caleb Cushing, his attorney; r liquidation. ' (Signed,). ‘;, . , . • -; , THE DYAIOCRACIt'. . . . 1 N. B. The undersigned, having formed i business connection Withlhe Slavery interest, are prepared to let as el:minis:4(m merchants ti br the purchase nd sale a slaves) of all mi nts-and - for any lawful 'market; particularly - for NebraSka an Kansas. Runaways pnr 4ued with the u ost piorn ptn ess ; and 'as-we keep a mitriber , f trained , blood' hounds, and have the Treasnry of the United States at Our corninand, We fear. no yivalry in this de artment. ThelSouthern public aro respeti • ully solicited t giyenS their patronage. - , • PIERCE, DOCOLAS é CO. An Imposter. - - is . A few wenks ince the Bingh mton papers , pave SOll3O acc6 nt .of the exp oits in . that village, of a wor hless,character, named Nich olas B. Hultzla, der, Who balk from New Milford in this County, and . did business on the capital ofa 14.•kenleg, and a pair of crutch, es. Ile was dePribed as indulging in drink- ing_and other v i ces, as remarka ly impudent,, boasting-of thei'amonnt• of in o . ey he made • - 1 &e. - The following; • Comnitt cation shOws thatlie 'has-been extending hi operations to, 1-. = more diStant places, And more serious _offen-. .... , . . i. . • . : - :. -: - NEW MILFORDAIy . lth 1854 . : -' -MESSRS.•;DECORS::. reeling'. sense of dnty due tb the - public, 1 ihOught'l . 4vonld '‘irite a. few lines, to belpubliShed respecting the int-. poster recently-I -Spoken! of by. khe ,Bir)gliant.. ton paPers. • •.I-le is, I- shouldthink;.between fifYy'and iixty year a age, has 'a, broken leg-ar.d n: pair of crutches, and 11:1 - s benedin this_ and the "adjoining til.wnshiPs, tintil people haeleartied that het spends ,his money "fon Spirituous:liir`rs. The mostfliportinit part of his rascali y is 1 nbt . generally know.-4 The ! most . pat t or last summer lie !wa.4 begging money. as. he ;said to - amputate' hi' 'broken - limb.l 'After lie' had obtained . the, money, he - went so far as to bargain with Doctor's Griflinganch -Vail( : of Great Bend- Township to ninkutiO'his, broken limb: The Doctor's caine at the appointed.daii,: hut n Hultilander as tojbe found.'. . lie' soon le the place for en" Yerk, telling his wife an family that It was going to have his leg to-; ; t ken off. Ile, vent as far DitteheSs County;r: . in the TOwns ip . oflllfulteaweers, and , aft< r, insulting a; nu her 'pf females v he fell in (Xi . Rl . 4 pang with # widoNr-W.ornan by the / name .- wen Warren, who had en - children. lire told her .that hid Wife had ibeen &ad . fiSur. years, also that . he- had forty tteresj. of land - in NeW Milford; as rich as I',l gai:den, with many -oth , er fine storie.- She married him on the Sib day. -of Octolk e r lasti. .. II& lad _been living . Frith her -near Y fonr ineuths when my broth et and I.wen t&that place on a'visit'. Ills wife - and -fa . ily, hearing, where-he -wa.s, fe ti 't . ti. ,- • - id :f ... .... quested us t 4 go and . see hit, had his leg ttikelf ciff i - and= ho , We did so, and taking with 1 Knott,., the I , ,r4a4valti , r; who rile e. started. for hi dwelling. ;, WI he.was Perf , tly nstonished., what to say or de ::! - seeing; .pletely -caught, he lebuld no Mrs. Warret said! he-told h relieve . her c re hY cutting h did saw. wdod . part of a Oa ) tiine-be . had hardly been, once a week and isholtad t as she would al little child next- day but one 'After w started' for Ii CW: lii:il to rd., . 1) Preacher had given him, a s his .tniscondutt. On return, be did not,rret with a - very IloWever,:trsison: told him his father, be -- would not, ti doors if he 'would behave hi ' .. I could have told more .am - in baStel. ThPenrlsylvan l Le i lature pas;ed I' which woul shot up in a measure the I g beer shops. ,Gov. Bigler Poeketed thO i He wants all the; beer. shOps .epen, lon !1 next election—Cartga Chief - I The Locof4ico Nopers of the State reso __,, ,_ various enrolls to shiel i d their mid da from the censurti,sitch conduct deserves : of which, bY•the r by, has been lan earnest ;o Pi er,of a prohibitory law, S ays he ought I 1 to the bill • I ' another, a professed frier:, of prohibitory law, also thinks he should *I hold his sanction';, While others, More to gravely assire their readers of the Well- no' fact that , the GovernOr has, signed e 1 submittingi the questfon.of prohibition to . I people snexk, October; leasing thgm t I in thtit any statement of his leaving' put att te 1 perance bill in his - pocket", is false--n, bar room parlance," a W hig_lie." Yet, truth is, that a I bill, intended to restrain th liquor S' traffic, , (1-wh e ect ,to ich:would have the C . ;fire& ofl the low find tilt y- beer houses in': ... s . cities, - where democrats voters are tnanufactured out of .ignorant foreigners, -', wag .passed by the Legislature near the close of the session, and the Governor has-4ot i ed it. LATEStrIIOI4 Furtorz:—The lICNCS brO ) by the steamer Pacific, which arrived atNew- York on Sunday last with three : dais: la ter news than that brought by the Arc lit, is , e l 4 ; not Mitchlinaportanm.,•The terfort o ..,:e ... ing ofGuetasvarn by . Sir Cheri ' Napier; was,prem l ature; the place w..s - lx.nril rde , l' thoW.d. of May ;by the allied flftts, ut out effectj and the atfack would / be ' can T on the 24.13. Considerable alarm i feli -St. Petersburg, and great . preparat ons . making, for the defence of the city Ft the Blael Sea the abandonment b 4u ' of her, forts on the 'Circassian et lest, w ith, eseeptionl - of Itedout Kofeh,• is Ern -but ito 4 .W.n,g of.tAnY interest from SevastA and Ode , sa. i ar, , that . rgrit is-saidA the Mormons con the titstirn - War a:perfect God;senn to sect, and wiff et on,Legin'td_send on sties:to iiet4tonverts and wives for e = among t h e terbpeatt widows, ilut"PrObirbAtory Llititur Attir X6ll" 1 The a,i .lulicter of, • tile body which m et. a t Ilarrisbutg, on Wedn e ;sday; woUldiiirka - con. vineed the Most ..4iik tioil observer of the stronghold the cause of Prohibition has upon ;bhead s of ithi peoOle of Penyrylvania. Ariong the delegateii, Who Ariirv. equal in num imr_to ,the members' of the Legislaturellbere were ;no young trieri. The seriousness and earnesitness of age, and.e.xperienee were ev i. dent ithe debates, and we 'observed a large ' mulnli i of. venerable Atureii and noble &inn tezian f i, which ~,would havelgraced u,Siint& We ' ave seen both 7lfenses of the Legislri fore i i session. and ninstatai that the Conyen tiun i ould not lose idwmparisen•witli eith er! - oit of the 40Mb - et's' appeared'Aii be` substantial citizens and likely to exereisegmat influence in their respective : counties.. Not a few of them were effective speakers.: l'ite . proceedings Ncere characterized by a spirit of harmony and itiodemtkm Unusual on such ions. , On all important Ooints,,.opi ias nion naed to be . nearly, if .not altogether Unanimous. - The reselutioni to vote in Octo ber on the question of Pixibibition was adopt ed, vved believe, witlfout a .diisenting voice, the general opinion being quit, on tho, abstract question, there will be a large majority. - _ The i resollitiolito use theirabest endeavors tosend to" the next Legi:slattire men trustworthy oil this eat question, Was -passed with a hearty :aile. Some debate was (dieted by.the letters r iof t h e .different candidates fir the - , office of 'governor. On a first, reading; Goieraor Big . lees lanswer to the iinterrogfories was not clearly understood. "4 We subjoin them both, that our readers may read for themselves. INTERROGATORIES EY Tilt PROISIDITORY LIQUOR' _ • , - . LAW COMMITTEE.." .. .c e 1 . Do you belieTe a law, prObibiting the ' manufacture A:lets:lle of intoxicating liquors, except for sacramental, medicinal, mechanical, br'artistical purposqs, to be constitutionall and - would its'constitutionality, in your opin ion, be affected by ii submission of, its repeal to a vote of the peotile; previded - a majority Voted •in favor of the law ? 9.' In the : event of; your election - should the Legislature, enact sneli a law, will it receive . Your ,executive sanction 1 1 /- oovEnson inouns'S unroa:. . . , 1 • k rbatuisnurto i J u n e 0, 1854. ,• GENTLEMEN i--1 have beenbonerell bv.the l reedipt of 'yeur eon nutinication of the - `lBth• ultimo, propounding to me certain questhins touching - the subject' , of a ProhibitOry Liquor . . To your • first. inquiry I reply that the Su Court of. the . Statelhave repeatedly , held. and 1. concur iin 'the doctrine, that,thc• Legislature can exereise all, law-Making pow, er - not expressly .' . eprbiddeii bye.the State or , eder:il - e oustitutidn. ~.Under this, construc on I - believe 'the .teaislatiire have Authority' t l* to control the manufacture;-and' sale of spirit moiti liquors; bet. In the use of Itluit.power, it must .be obvious 'that a la* might be pass-- ed,.-xvhich, in -its details, would bet a manifest violation Of the Conatitntion, and hence the' impossibility of anSwering your question-dis tinctlvo Without seeing the exact forma of the .. . proposed la*. . -I . . -, i - . ..1 -•-. ..: . As.. to the -second . point in the inquiry, it must-bevery clear 'that ii.la*, , constitutional initself, would not l'.le.rentlered otherwise by allowing - the _people to .decide by, 'vote wheth er the Legislature 'Should repeal it or not, no matter ,m-hat that lote ingbt be.... , .. : - , ' To-your Second inquir I answer that I sin, , cerely deplore the l .vils of inteniperance,,Und inn- now -willing, a.s.: always.laive been,tO, I .sanction any prop Measure to 'Mitigate,. and, if ;poks3ible, i . entirely- Ter:lo%* the vice .i- • but, I ' , cannot pledge myself to sanetihn adaW;the. 'details' of which •I have not seen; . The terns Of the . Constitution, -and oath of office would .seC.rn teL forbid this course on the part of an ~Exceutive. lIe:' should -be 'free to jinlge.:Of the. constitutionality 'and 'wiSdeiri ofnpropoa-, ed law after having: fully extuninod and con sidered its Provitins.- , - . ~ -.- . - .''..,. • " . I Very respctfully,.your ob't„l :.• ~ -.-- ;--- - --.; -: - ~.- - : ...- Wu 13iiu.s.u., .. To i l' osteplien - Millar,! Jas.:. Blaek, jas,:„Piper; ..john Jones, Gej,. W.- Stanton,'Esqrs..-Con ~. • • nuttce. - It - 'will'.-be seeni that gOvernor Bigler de, clines to;arisWer. Very: cOurteonsly, it is trite, but verg decidedly. His letter is as non ' ,eoininittal as:any ever" written by the Sage 'Of Kinderhook, ,:. If the . Governor had refuied : to pledge . himself l . in advance; to the.Deino.,. ei • erati on the questiona of BankAiSmall:Netes, &c.; if he laid - told them that he wished them .. 1 to leave him ‘`free.to judge of the constitu , tionali . ty and .wisdom" . of any law they Might 1. 1 propose, they vrotild probably hive left.hirn -' in.-Clearfield - County with full leisitre to make' of . u 4 ' his. mind..- l'io, _party is ' , ,now-a-days. so blindly. confident Mpoliticians as to take them I altogether on -trust. •A 'candidate is selecte4,: not,to - do him . a Eivor-,or-inke him a despot,' bht to carry out Alitaley agreed upon between, l i . him and those he'Tepresents: I ; • ~ . -, - The answers otl i the candidates of die Whig; 1 • Natiye.Ain c ricani and . Free Democratic par: , ties were expliciC, - . We were able to obtain . . , a copy- of Only - One, • . which, %'e 'insert. The others wer-licipe to lay before our readers to, to .morroW . --. ' {.-i -- ' : . • •-- ; 11, and see i. le v he .pro - speted. s the Rev. Mr. rrted '.lb . oiii, arc ien we'got there He knew not he was so- coin ' say a Wordr—! r that he'eoftld • r wood, Ort..'ne and since that i t tit of the ho se .viiiit ppoti - im . However, - he *ere , there -la rnot until t..h! . vere :lecture 9 i ll cr ing, .to : his ho ( .warmreeept ox that:as: he ' rn hiin ou 4 i self: I . - -.:. - . "rticular4, b t 1 .. A., D. . N Junin pottocit's f LETTER. Mttrox, May 306084. j , Gii.-ximiss :—fYour communication in ref 'crone() to a, prohibitory law has - been receiv .. - ..-„,_ id, and . in. reply, I-say that, l the constitution .l - ality of .a prohibitory lavr, , siMilar'in its es tn- sential features t(I, the one referred to in your Ito, interrogatories, having received atindicial de wn termination by the highest Courts - of 'several ''ill of Zur sister States, and the; principle having been recognized; by the Supreme Court of t'fie , the,Unite&State's, I am relieved from the re fer aponsibility of a first dmiskm. These Courts tm- having affirmed the constitutionality.of a pro- 1 hibitory law, anti' being of the highest author- 1 ity, I believe, Upon principle and authority,; such a law to bu constitutional.; and its eqn stitUtionality, iti my opinon, would not - be affected by a stabthission f its repeal to.a , vote of the peoOle. 1, ,__ '' '' - Every measure of moral or pdlitical re form, sanctioned by. the representatives ofthe people, within tbe.limits of the Ciin.stitution, ' should receive my official sanction. 'The'ex pedieney and propriety of ! such lairs are - for 1 the people, through their representatives 4— • ! and their will,constitutionallyleelared,shou ight be - respected ,by the. Exe'cutive. If 'the poo plc demand ; and their r6Presentatiljes enact Mich a law, their will should tkot be' resisted by the exercise of the 'vetci power—a power of purely conservative, and only. to be exercised tak- in cases clearly constitutional, or exhibiting', indubitable eiridence, of hasty, injurious. and 1 .I imperfect legislation. Such being my . views , , of official duty! in the premises, should the ith- Legislature, the constitutional exponents of red popular. will, ' ()beet such' a law,,it would, in b at the event pf trii election, receile the execti are two sanction. !I !om , 1 • ~. Ypttra very respectfully .. i . ' , . - - . Jas. 1' very eel'sTo Stephen Miller Esq., Chairman, . the and others,Ccimmittee. - , .. led, The resolution . not to proceed to ano ,pol nation, to publish the fetters of the'diffe d ti rl j candidates, leaving die matter open for in vidltal action,waseminently judicious. 'Three of the: candidates anering favorably, It would have ibecnitrvidious to select either 41 them. *The general impressiqi seemed to-be that a union ticket would, be agreed upon: by the . Whig,.Native and Free Democratic par ties, and Temperance men thus,Saved the ne ,. --, l',. own ly . Of malt, i ing a di.ect choice. - *llrohtbi- Wm being their atm, it must be compar#tattn ly tildiffertait Ill) the : , What party-grants it. Had Grevernor glet an4ered faivorably, we' have , no doubt, liii.vrould luxe hien pat w i n an equal footintWith his COMpetitom T And now, we trust ?Judie f r i e s s at em ., , pertu . tee will gird the selviii l qi roll the eon; Td test in October. The great.qnoitiod, o tp ix i. hibition is to, be deeid by hallof,Ysbp, frej3 voters of Pennsylva is are to say: 'ether they' will' longer sitbmit to , the desolatmgin„._ fluencea of the rum tfile..- The weal or woe a the State depends tpon the decision. Viol tory in such it con is worth all the-time, expense, labor and el pence that can belte -7 stow. to achieve .i .-. Should 'this,ttitper. 'Aube ho s ts move together, shoulder io should er,..thero can bdnb ddubt of the retatlt--pai= ly Register. r ' .. _ . ; , . So ea - ` "the Organ 4" .;; . ~ : ';While Gen. Pierce is issuing his proclatim-, tiOns. against .the Filli asters, now understood; to 'be: getting up • an, ther - exlvditron for the; in.valion . of . Cuba, hiS . organ, the Irbtashingtant -Union, on the .other rand, we see, is doing all in its - power to stimulate the very Spirit. whill it's master affects an anxiety to diseonntenance.i In an article on Cuba, the very . .ne'xi'clay ritl4 er the proclaination • as published; the - offici-i al editor . :speaks . of Cuba -as ,staqing - in the same: relation to the United Statesias Turkel • d,)es to Russia,. an ..substantially avows it self in favor of, this oVernment - adopting the •Saine policy toward the'" geiii* : the Antil les"' as that observid by the - Czar. towards the. Sultan. A - rep ,esentation ttiOreglaring-. ly false; on .which, o found p.rentises - so . ab surd, ;and. coilelusions so tkoroUgly . recklessi unprincipled and prliligate„ the or . gan of such an administration a 9 that of Gen. ll'ie,ree alone Would have the 'ha diliood to milked,'Even ;Were it true that ou 'country holds the sarrie relation toWards - Spain 'aS RUsSia, , fowards I t 'urkey,—a • parallel •preriosteroti eiiough in. itself—it is a beantiful'speCtaeleciertainly,to Witness a Democratlic Journal , adOpting a sort ; .cif logic. that prac4eallt approves . and ap-, Plands ; the . robberiiim of what,i4, commonly uriderStood - to, be i ic greatest 'despotism in Europe. . The edit r says : •. 1 • r 2- .:•-:- , • • ~ 1 .‘Self-preseryation (it mantis preingtitpde and .cour _ . , . age.;. and it we would .511 V;.?; ourselves 11 , 6 . long and, l.ngering troutdes in tit ;e to come, weldtotild atonce kettle our difficulties in-regirdto Cuba- s i. ''. -•.. . i • WhAt . partieular kind.of, - "promptituile," and eourage" . are,here indicate!), we are at. iv loss tie-szty,--uniess it, .10 wail. -.. -,W4r,in ' deed:, is* is dealing 'it h• i s we are to treat Cnba 2 ,,as iln . ssia h Turkey:'' 'The Union hesitates to -ail Van e this pplaion openly;- for 1 , frankness is never •x_ petted . to be it: character. Of our "official- ot an,"—but- - the inference . is 'obvious 'enough: The tactics' Ito be obs..erv- H ed then„nre. just ,liese,i.L-The President, ii- . ;. ~ . . ~ ~-, I.sues antir'illibust r • .rroclamationS, to. (inlet , the appiehensions f thegreat Masses of our people, who hones y.d6sire a vaintenance; of ,Ipeace, At every, sacrifice save that pf honoy . ; 1 whi I e the- role asign ed 40-the - Union is to pro-1 pitiate. , the . Fillihusters. find k!i,tep. alive the! hopes and a Tirations.of a certalyclass of see.,-! I tional politians, who are desiroUS ofe;btainingi f.po. t session of Cuba—by fair Moans .or foul, it matters, not-Which—for purposes we sincere ly believe - incoinpatible, and ;de.Sigijeir,to - be ' incompatible, witti . the union of ,the-StateS. . 1 . - dri the face of 'sneh facts•as these; We -hav - new and hurniliatin4mairifestiptinua . of the - plicity and trafficking character. of the Men' to whose hands' the reins of GoVernment . .ar comniitted, intrigue and sehemitig abroad and intrigue and ;scheming at, lioine„ arel th tiarrdw :liquirdaries beyolid. Which it has Ti(. seeming ability 'to . pass.... The The tiff 'Of .. . great nation in very . deed have lallen into , th care of very....sn - Lll. men.--Neto York Zr. press.' ,::, ',, - . . . . . •. . . ... . , . . , . • Enfo r cin g .the.Law. . ~ • . ' .1 The Bigler papers are loud in their praise otthe Message of his E.xcelleney, vetoing the bill. for commuting 'the penalty.. incurred- by tha - Railioad Companies for. violating thelor ,a,..nainst .small uctes, the.penalty; denOuneCd liy..the law, amounting, to a fine of from fiff , to -seventy-five thousand dollars: . The', b* had' never befor ) , beeri enforced; arid in fact,, ev citizen' in t tat part of the state, was i the daily. practi.e of violating the law..—b' , the law - of necess ty ' : ..P • - The argument of the vote ~L 4 - that it you"( be Wrong , to int reept the'floW of justice, o stay the .. penalt of the law.l The rule. is : the Main corree ; but; like! all Others - , liab, to an :exception. - . . -.But while in 'feting an odiOus and .onero#s penalty. in one c. so, with - inflexible rigor, how ha- .is excellent acted - in. others,? .„ For the trig' sf Kid n a iligi he.bas pardoned an Al- - `or . ...the crime Of viola iiiig the. I; ecr4e; i . - he has. pardone the : PheeniXville .rioters: . For the crime f stealing away. Rachel a, d ~.Nliv4etlePOrke ~arid selling them Ito slave '.,. he: this. pertnitte a ,MeCrearY to go, free, a, d thesovereignty 4f our StatetObe trampled un- , der foot.: These are the morniments of Gov.: emir Bigler's i*partiality inl the adininis "a : . tion 'of the UM St 'What deed in: the cal 4- . - dar of crime—f Tony, counterfeiting, arson r .murder--has n t been released of its penalty "by this iinmacu ate"Govern9l7; who nowlifts his - handS in hol - horror at a bill for relieving 1 - 1 a Cotperatien ", rom penVties -. for doingqbat, *whreh. most members of t e Cominnuity . ,' ha l ve been ,doing with . inipuni •! 'I Could inpiStre \, : i be .`nag,te glaring . 1.. . A hat, 1. heneSt : motive could . actuate the Goye or' in .a lavish ex r• else of thepardoning poiweil in fayor 0141 State 'criminal4, and, notortous v, felons an refusal even to abate the penally; where .11 the Opinion of all impartial men, .no t intenti I al wrong- wil , .llperpetratcd.il 7 W4,ge • el ord. . . • ACh y oly D A l : w id r 7t , , . This afterno n as several persons, (I t laborers at th , ... Beaver Meadotv whari,)el engaged in. unl 'tiding a dirt scow just ab v the dam was held as broken by the force o - at thi place, the line by:which. thi boat (N. .:, - th current, the bat went over the darn, . an melancholy t refat?;, four persons , tper drowned. The boat - came to the surfiK b ottom side np, and two personi sueecede in. makiliglt4r osear,e, one by climbing-xi' obi the -boat, the other being forced by' th current on to r'near ihe'beach. Butonelm dy has thus ea been recovered. This sad ca ail;ity will fill many heartmiii grief, and sbrOud many a douse tie tircle I gloom. They were all activ . and indostriot men, and they all, we o've, had ' ram' ies: • I , c '' ,- P. S. Since the above' was in type : :i learnithat but three . peisons was 'drownt vit. Charles BoYle, Michael 'Sheridan, . 1.1 Nicltolas----: a Geinan. o'bOdy Of i Fenner hasn recovered. Tivo were re cued - alive by bde *tiling a hole - with an fate, through the',bottom' of he ,'A boat. Mauch, Chunk Gracile Extra; • ' ', 2_ ._ .l . . vrA Washington letter vriter statea that the P,residentWas very much exiitod upoll tb' Ikr,ton SlayS Case, and declared thatie nt essary, ho would-order out Ore 3 1 4!Pir the United States Army to yi o 1 - `,..‘ he [law. He order4l Pol. Cooper A *iii i ant Ge heral of the Arwy,tto repair to'lloette,. empOwer: ed to order thither the two *litanies r troops stationed lit .Ness•York,,fOri ' • , ! \-- Ifike.reittillreeiligai9; The\old story of the &got.of sti4tkunited, l itronkandlnigli.! - woWiless, is every. year Pbed t f i , ao and oyer again at thetNort4.+, Pe iiitt`the north a great---tiaiinglgant-.: fi l o le' Partt'.:fois.l\ )\. etiilotn. • It eon:lo%mi 6.tnr s at laisit, of all the/voters this eide.d n and- Dix n'si Line. It has,. any Any, i '' jority of helf's million, iti the Union. 10 im rnltere have only 'to unite, to beinVineible i it its ext . linsiel•L. ' o p n r\e i Y s 9' th t e ' 45111 Y. - c i lit ' at l is i. ;an t ou l in verw ilyts h w e_ e l ax i n u tte in nst : i ' they neve.r dnunt e. Thosewho Went St very .abolished, will- work Withithusc s e. . 'Nose who ao - luieqee in pelt Compre-, Wrefnikttitutip these Wh6 - do riotAthongh ... 1 et question ia 4tregard to future ones. Th. )se. Nlr b h n ° din p g r9 , n ea m i lli m m ot nul enlPo '"gi ra t te lve w La ith * t l4 hcr who 3i . nit it unjust and notbitAing,al . though both: i e agreed upon the only point *issue—l-it.% peal. • The personal friends of tia t h a t 6viii ri t i join with' the personal friends of that than; though bot# are right. on the pending wes t ons. So we gO on splitting imd dividing on. hstractions i and in the meanwhile Reali ies, I ke the ,Nebraska 'Bill are passed through , egress over our he s. .The irresistible party of Freedom is 'Oa red away between "Free-Soil Whigs" and ' Free Soil Pemocrats," - "independent ern rats" and '"Silver Silver Grays," and twenty oth ::. („r- sUbdivisions, each bent, not only upon w ing its; own way, but having its own wa of . Itaving . it. .Yet each has-proved, by yea- of s experience, that this is playing direefiy into the hands of the slavehOlders... We tark about ' Southern .:'propagandists and " Northern ought ces,"as if they Were at the botto of he mischieC Propagandists and ;lough aces 'ether would be but a featherlin the. e, gainst _us, if we were hut true to ourse yes; Even now, when the popular attention of I le, Free States is Absorbed'will ! by this out : headers of various c l ot -e rat's - `guards are - li ing 'out to -their men, " lian't train e"1" th r,, " Don't fuse here !" " DOn't ee-ePerate any where !" " All the old parties are rotten !" Ste., I &c., Slavery has -just put a. nail tio the ternnies of. Freedom. If their! object!' is to clinch it, when it comes 041 on the Other side, they' have hit on preeisely..the,way tq 'do it. . , - ' ' It is not so at the South. • The Virginian Strict-Qmstructionist- doe,s not hesitate tjein the Arkansas Railroad stilarter, nor the Lary lAnd c'''