The Susquehanna register. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1854, June 22, 1854, Image 2

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    ENE
gitmintbaluta
1:,14 - Zig.R : AND TUE.
• •
0444 'zito*ning4*4o,-.4 2 ; isti*
1
This
*BIG STATE TICKET; •,- •
(-ve;•nqr,
PaV)Cii 9f,4.Northumberland.z.
Canal Corrimissioner,
ORGE DAR S IE, of Alleghenj.
Judgit of Sufireme •Court. . •
SMYSER, Ot Montgomery.:
:it B. P.A.LiEER., ;the Atiaeri6ut NewepaPer I
'vale the only aidhorized Agent for this paper in'
toga o flieston,,New ',fork and ruladelphia. •
Siri larP,henomencon,
a,
is. titan 4:4' our aoquaintoxice who
t i'to be - a Democrat and a Christian. -7
Iftnan's creed is made lap- of strange
' dictions.. He
. 14elicves t as his. Bible
, -' .
rai ', thou shalt t steal ;" yet he,
. , •no .
es, hccausC:his party leaders „tell him,
i i
we should steal Cuba, if Wne; cannot buy
Religiousi,; he believes in the precept
teachis'ua to , do as we, would - be done
politically, he advocates slavery exten-
Religiousty he believes, ",thou.shalt
ill f',politicidly he is in fii,v6r of an. un
ar--Which \ is wholesale murder- 7 -for
ii.uisition of Cuba. Religiously he be
, " thou: , shalt ~ ..tot covet ;" politically, be
to annex all . that joins us: Ikihort, re
sly he believes his Bible, = while politi
he belieVes in shot Democracy ; and .
!ore be is Continually called upon to rem
. , •
1 right ' and . wrong, to believe. that
is sinful in an individual and on a
scale, when corhmitted. by .ti, whole
natl . , is , perfectly, right and . prop r.—=
o e
His ligious telicheibobil y annormees, from
the, pulpit, that the passage, of the Nebraska
bill asmi act of iniquity, while his neWspa
per tells him that it was a glorious triumph
of Democracy.,'• :I,7fileSs he can keep one set ,
of prjuciples for, the §abbath, and another fOr'
weei, days,e will probably .soon distard ..ei-_,l
ti.
their] his po itiLs- Or Lis religiOn. ' .-" . , .
elairnl
This I I
con
tells
beli "
that:
it.
it. 1
stow
not.
I
just I
the• a
wan
ligio
cally
then
ono' '
4 what i
sma
. . . .
~.... Olieningwfthe Northlranch Canal:
QhFriday morning the 3d inst.,- the Canal
Bo Gen: Gen: .Clover, owned by- Col. C. F.
'. W I s, Jr.,of this borough, started ;from
the ead o the Canal upon its first trip •to
'.. ~ Toncla, Tunkhannock and Harrisburg. It
has he honorrof bing the firselmat. ,•„ -,
. ii
' ' It was under thecommand oeour esteemed
: *.L.towitsman, Capt. Pars.ons. Quite a number
,of our Citizens witrissed its departure. We
i•
. i hope now,
,and expect, that this, long looked
for improvement will soon: be in active oper
atio . Velearn -that in a short, time a boat
fitte
i -up for passengers will be in readiness
, ti.
to eonvey passengers from this place to To
tl,wanra.—..4th-enian.: . - -
''.l is to be hoped, that the adventurous navy
igatlOrs; on board the., Gen. Clover ; laid in a
• libi , stilt.ply 1 a ix-tar fb funs; tbr they have
"evi ently a log voyage in prospect—long
in ' i
41
nt of time—before reaching their desti
- nation. When last heard from they had ad;
Tinged is far its ' the aqueduct,' a ;short dis.-
,
tatted' . above Towanda, wherfas we learn from
the ißeporter, fkleit ' ili: was discovered 'at Hem-,
l
' • loc Run, threatening a serious hreak, and:
I w
,thewater we* drawn 'off fOr the purpose of
' . rep
i irs. - 'Breakers ahead' are also reported
"below Towanda l t , ' At one place 'the water:
suns 'through the'herni bank, and under the
Into* river; end in other places et
'extrfaordina ry sympathy. appears ito,,-"-clist
betWeen the ;watera in the natUralTand the
artificial channel, causing them to':: rise - and
1 = fall in U
nison •so that the navigators of the
I- 1.
4 raging canawr can go ahead.swimmingly,
_
t. cproVi l ded there, is a ' rafting fresh'-in the river..
Itii thoUght that this kind of inter-communi
cation. is no irnpreinent.in canal building
- iri . i, lining of the canal seems to have been
much neglected, the Supervisors of the work
haying► been 7 ,' according to some of our Lc :
izoio'w ecitemporaiies, who 'ought to be poSt
'ed np—more intent on lining their own pock,
ets; than anything,l else. - . ' -- '
,
' The 'Canal' CoMmissioners" passed
r through
. Turldiannocir, on their way along the line- of
the canal; tol;Athetis, a4few days ago. I.7rhe
, jkrorth Brapth Democrat says, they reply le
the inquiry When the cluial will lieeompleted,
`IN re don't:10)0w," The same paper speaks
of priiient condition of the work as f* :
lows : I '' ' ..
A /That portion which was Completedmany
yearsago, and which was supposed to have be
conie pe7ninent by lapse Of time, b,as. so far;
proved:,the worst if' it is possible for a,ny
'work . tobe'ivorse than much of the .new.
Inl some parts of the old work they find logs
andsstunips - by the quantity ; and in others,
.113 and loose stone indiscriminately rolled
togethet„and hidden from the rigid scruting
of the engineers; by a few inches of leachy
tiseles'idirt.J. , ,In Other. Portions tife.ieVel has
been so
,de r Ptirted, from as to subject Those at
present engaged in letting-in the water ,to
the profitless labor. of persuading it so far
to forget its natural instincts as to resist the
laws of gravitation, and travel a few feet up
wards for, very considerable distances.'_
The l7
The prospect now is, that the - work will
not be completed during the present year,
eVettlhough . l it should be prosecuted with
•
proper
. energy, i nstead of being made to
serve, as ! now, merely as a means of, feeding
from- the public Crib a company of hangers
on of tocefocoism.' The : General Clover,
therefore, if too ! 'proud_ to turn back; -will
"infer somewhereamong the- hills of Brad
ora o r
_ Wy6rning, and if ever seen, in Athens
ilw
'ain, willlhe received with something -like
thfin_ linge that would now greet the sudden
ax_ppearance ! ofir John Franklin in England.
Atibther fire
tw4:
(;rning loot,
Azonlz,
on Fridaym
j.. 1
- ed,hl;, 741 D belonging to
1000.1.1rr
ba7.,.._.rses- owned by 'Fkal
open give great
- - .. Bull, and •
•wanda,excellent
;.114tie,
and their of
toill3re44lllP: j Oietti the - saving to
e, and ~attributftvai ••erviti. proximity g
veral
yea. • de stro
r
ler.,the:
i., 1 , '
e.
-The '' "Popidiriav
. '
i.', 7rAlhlosoe r g
- 14 1 .4 ed at the Noithfi4
,ptpe., liiiiiisturi CoMpron
into Nebratka ana Ka
'th e ' peopleOT these Terri '
ilienifiethef -- the
there or no. This it,is
las . .and his &Mara:ts/is
__... .. _
and thififleusible oxe n
caul coMpremise hereto
.. ~. , --„.
411 parties, North, tuad,Sf
century, is the Main Str
"thtgli I ,_ - kiji.relf:at the
to'ihstain tne measure
P - Can't"the: people of I
selves legisiate tor•the n
todiAsel",he.lnquires
• New to,expoSe this
and ,show ; What,an infitt
it net be well: to keep
that-this very propositii
the ern ones ect edu
'l' ••i'' • a' 'd
Legislature,. was repeats
the Nebraska Pa/it* ,
the published ptoceedin
_
Saturday night previeni
of
,the act, 'and you hind
"'Mr. Mace of4tuli: ,
Ifielit'. diat ,the TJ:rritor
hzte. PiiWer to 'admit o
anyt e jme liy law. :
-Tlns, after some dike
---.0 . 4 to '7'6; -
. ' "Mr Parkeriiilndi 3
meat of bounties ,;ith
large - Free-Soil immig
chide Slive`ry." . 1 . .
. This .wasalSo rOcet
. '""Mr, Fuller o( Ma
ing :. r - The LegiWattt
establish - or, exelnde
see proper."
This too was rejec c 2-91 to '7l. So it
will be; seen that{) net.° content with breaking
down, the barrieili whici't Congress had placeU
k • I;
against the extencion if slavery in the Mis
sonri comprornis i un erpretence' that it wits
more demerci l tic to le'. velt to the people-of.
the Territories, they a er all.undertake,-in the
face and eyesot,this shi mpretence,todeny tho
Territorial Legislatur the power to exclue
it, even if the malorit j. wish to dO•so !„, '
Now let• this be P m • I t*d; or• cut out, and
kepi .on hand to thro l in the face: of any ,ole
Who preaches up the ;humbug of : "•Popular
Sovereig(ity," (or rat er "Splatter:Soverie
ignty, as Col. - Benton calls it,) to sustain the
Nebraska Bill. The : would . be just 119 Intlkil
real Derilarracy, or opular -Selreigiity. tin
allowing every man
.;rho' chooses to keep a
-olir hf . - 'th tut. license,.tii - have ,as
t,ippling .iouse wi.
many wiveS as, he cat
itli, Or even, to make
and deny both
,e(mgr
tures the power to p
Majority of the pe
there is iu this Nebras
MESSRS.: EDITORS :1
to . xnake. A. few
,ittg
from my own feelin I
Inyto Way held resp
cord With your oWn- .
; 'feelinl,7 - nt .tlas-time
regard to that most niquitous and T-T..,,...._
daring act of the pre ent c.ongress, known as
the , Nebraska Bill.- The papers - frein differ
`ent parts of tie con i try, ;are filled .with the 1
proinptings of nob e - and patriotic _hearts, I
and With the proce dings of Meetings assem
bled,for the puiposl of•expressing the indig
nation of honest me at - the outrage that has
been perPetrated, liy the aid of northern
traitors- and scoundrels, (nancies less '• harsh
would be given 'Co then if appiopriate) . a;
„vinst the known wOies and strong renion
Strances of theiLconstituents. There is hope'
i
*lien me see the frel•aten of, the 'free States,
aroused as they no are. "They have suf
fered all things," fu the sake . of peace and
i
the Union.. For th 1 sake of the' Union they.
have seen the Utz' n, disgraced and their
tonatry hunaillated, so as . to almost make
them. blush for-ther country's shame When
, •
they read the glorio s declaration of Indepen
dence. They feel that they \ rave been
and that in yof their Representa
be-
-6,, t)
trayed,
tives - have been b ghi over with a price,
much. as , Arno/d, th
..traitor, was... Who :
doubt it,l - How ea it be otherwise? 1
. tbey,against their o% ii consiliences.and agait
the heartfelt remo i
strances of their mist
uentaiarld unas k ed:l y any petition on Ea
h io
lend theirnvert territory twel
times the size Ofth State of Ohio, from fr.
~dom. to which it been consecrated and
which it - belonged, rito Slave Territory, in
a soil-in which •t e Bohun .Upas ryas,
beplanted to overEpread this fair ceunti
with its blasting. and nauseous branches.
InTesaible! - Popgilt, they were, as surely.
,
ever cattle were: bo fight :in the . stalls. • T
T
sotrie paltry prom' • 0 . for themselves or . l
some or their frie . ils . ,, they have barter
themselves away a 4 transferre4i :so far
they . eould dOit,:the._freemetr of ihe INo
1
into the embrace of the slave power. I, ' The
have let loose the:flood gates'of contend° s
and Wive thrown i• to the public an apple,;:;:
discord worse than that thrown among tIO
ancients. The cur. sof an outraged peopl,
will follow them through their lives, .an
when they shall 1 • ve the land that:the, hay
dishonored, for tha bonnie whence no- tray
eller retards, their emories, will be crown
,
with infamy_ and a a tempt No man eer yet: ;
sold .himself or his country, 'who in time did ,
not receive his ap iropriate reward, . though
for a little time he might revel in the ill got- i
ten wages of his own infamy and his country's
wrong. There is no justification of their eourse
— T it admit S -of no argument—tthey ever nev i
er el44eted for the oul deed, they were, never'
asked ty their 'costituents: to do it. They
were plead with d .besought not to do this' ,
s
great. wrong, rind et they:did it, and mocke,d,
at theireoustituen , and,like fiends, exulted
in their own perfi y. This may`,"- be !strong
language, but *lt ° can-think of . their firing
100 guns on Capi I Hill, wheilhe deed was
i al
done, and say ,., t ikis : too 7ngl But
sWI their-treason be. Outfitted to triumphal
If !o,ilien is our glory departed
• i nothing
can be too hula* ' g for us to submit to.— , ,
, _ 1
: •i 1 1 • 1 HiMlL** : ..,
k? - ...i. ,__, ,_ y I f
' t preWueu up: 134)
Of t .. 13e- NOW.
risetti* Slavery
l•.* tluit .it *milk
1 , itOfii4idO'cide for'
, --- 'irlit 2 taie ilevery
i retan
. 40 AT- I Doug- I
- !‘.nutre derApciaticl!!..
fe for violating a sol:
Cori aNniased in by
fqr-440 1 . 6 f.et
lfig,liarPe44.-upon by
teg,.q n g dr mmed
;II New Yoi-
e TeiTitories them
iggers ns. well as any
, . . sparent humbng,
'taus ea it is, - would
it begwo - the peop le • . . •
i on to let tile people_of
matter through theiy
lytvoted down :by
Congress 'I Look at
gs in the ITonse on
to the final passage
'the following. ~,
. a
c affere.l an . amend
al Legislature shall
exclude Slavery at
Oki& was voted down.
na .uffered an amend
s .view =to encourage
ition to Kansas to ex-
-85 to 66.
..offered the . follow,
p shall have . pi4er. to
laver'y, as. they :shall
, -
get, to establish broth
o
' gets money it holik§s,
sa and the local Legis-'
event it even tbouglffa
' le want. spell laws, 'as.
;•a bill. Why not' C.
! Roguster. ' -
Will you _permit me
esti(l t as in' your:paper,
and for which you are
vnsible, utdegs they ac-
views:. There r is a deep
.ervading the North, in
.. .
.. . . .
•
~11; we .snibmittst.'wiat
.1 ,.., has been done. in W i hl - ..,
.::„._
~ 900413 .. ipaiiiitendent,. -.. •:..-
~
ingtakia.r..ffias Isist`few months, and the " 1 (*it diVersitOf Opirdok appears to haVe
tier Wwblibit ltia been 'done; - I
batlike, as 'existed int - he:different coi*tie.s Of. the State,
helEasilti ini . pieriOirig pinier,thai'theda i iiii*:the , iitn - i‘iOf salary to be pild,tc(*a
of - our f rede* . iptioaila gone by, ai49that t.he' .
. .,riewly, `.. elected. Co.unty f : ' . Snpd,ruateticlents. of
_sun of Freedom tibia rose So .glarionaly i in - *loofa. .Lais6aste,i'paylithe higheisl;siiij '
ird, will :set iii . glOom, .But What'is ttilb : and Sullivan thelinilesit,4so,tse ; faiiia'heard .
denel - .Let-lhe - -People act-Let the - issue) from:. : Chester, .11ticks, - Allegheny , ' Seliyl--
fisirly:lnade.between Liberty-and Slaver} . kill, and . , - Washington,:each . fixed thosalary .
I,.tet.everylotherAnesiionbcmerged_ia thiliafel,ooo,;_seventeertother cOuntiesiiiy4o 7 ,l
Let the peoplesOnik out in thunder . to n or over ;. and agood . many Of . the remainder .
against this great andk4nitatis outrage, `;ply ••• ',Pll:: 4.ii)110,140; same * ,'BC4I - 1 1 40 1 iii *350:
,ttna,se,:yrini,)„4l4,..i.t. l .4or_eyep,.lip.illicd;,.,at4l-. . ,_#.l l R n, P01npr.V,Pg,_,..P..F.4 . 9
..,,P.TerITVP.I,,
TheY....haira made Si_ .- idesperiite.:Saily,. upon; ; pays 'only - $ . 369.,. ppriteighbers,'Bradferd
'.they „are'detertainedte drive- ma to the Vcia„ . iiia Wayne 'eonn. — ,,CieS,,PaY $60 .. each.:.' ; ' .
-
TheY‘haie added insult to injury-- , Theyi mien . ..- The. Honesdale Democrat informs ilathat
to' BOstoriloarreat Burns,-at the very-ii the election.ioU John I...Stoddard' to the of."
.Mint w he n- the pople werebleeding With th flee in' Wayne,eennty, has . caused' considera
.,r.
Wounds they had', eceived, and-were Pelt 'Ma disaiitisfiletiOn,'lllnOtig Other reasons, for
... fr --7- -
with-the wrongs ey had endured, - `1 n 1 the .folla t, ..
wing : , : :. i.. . ,
.. • . ; •
States treeps,wer L. sent . to' make ...them pas , ' That tht appointment 'pf.k.r. Stoddard , - as
*sly stibmit.-• -• Oh it was a terrible 'day! for County :Superintendent; . While . he l '.r.einains
-Principal. of the Academy at Bethany would
!those liVing• in the.shadow of the namininent.
• • ,- . '.be unjuSt .towards kindred: institutions and
'.that, covers -the remains of their , fatherS.Wh - 'calculated too- produce dietrust and heart-burn
died inlSe callsO‘Pf freedom- TO it !,',lsit i ing4 - tiniqvg theactive promoters of education
'Gatti., ; Publish it not in the . streets Of IA throUgheut . .the-eounty.i 1 . 1
'kelon.L , Three Weeioii ago they • Might . hay .. •By ~thei termatef Ilia, my, no person,
, r 'male
et.. females, can -teach nu- any common school
taken Burns away unmolested, bin they! r -
the. county unless he.or-she first receiye-a
d the job, till the bill was passed, 'the certificate -- of' competency - from. the Siiperin
, .
'ithey might see how .. low.thcy could male th tendent.. This- is a most . responsible .!trnst,
,'Boatonians get into the idust. The minscif; and it is of the Utmost importaneethat the
man who exe rcises it should be impartial,
the soldiersprevailed, and I .l3ostoor leaS htit.
1•• i • 1 , and that his position s.houlkbe such as not to
bled,. and.; fr..‘edOm . for; the t . time hung, h
raise the snspiCion of partiality against. Mtn.
One evil anticipated 'from;Mr.. Stoildard'S
head and slunk away !rem the bayou' if
United : States . troops: This is the. ,cou . e., election. was that he woulKilnot intentional
k that has..been 'and : : is " pursued. Insults; - :au . ly t at least inadvertently, deal . more favorably
. 'pupils than he'Would with )u
-with his own .. . , I .
Wrongs. that wolild have set
,the whole' n 7,
. 1 • .Os from other Academies when theyl.came
Lion in a blaze a e‘‘ years ago, have Irene -
dared with almOst m a rty r before. lihri al candidate's for the vocation of
.. martyrmeekness / .
.13 t
teacher ; and that he Would tie
.liAblo tOa,lika
-
they lia3. - e. gone 'one ..step too . far.. 1.1ii3 d infirmity . with candidates ;whose edneation
ambition often overleaps -its .nark. I' i etiTe had, not'been obtained! in either of-the'''ACW- .
ed cites of en-so.thftht w hi le
e ceunty. : 1-Another evitaliticipiit
net for party. . Allthe poli i tieal predileetiOils
in.the discharge Of the du.
ties of - Superintendent he would canvass ac-
I ever had; givoway to this all . absorbing
for pupils for PS. oWn A.cadeiny, , and
question. -- I will' for - •anyman . : who,, is - ii, ye l y.
unmistakably right upon this.subject:-1 ca.7e. :thus give occasion for Offence to MO friend. of
other institutions:. 4 was feared that - in
riot to whavparty ' or: where he' belonga.! The'
these particulars Ili. Stoddard's election
man. Who is ; not right at heart, or, if iris it
• i ' would, result in sowing the seed of . discord
''• ' i
there does not declareblinself so, oi , Jen.l,(l, ite-
and strife.
eididlyi . Tonistakably, and uncomproniisin • --
:,Iy, shall never, receive. my Vote.: .I . Care . t ing promoters of the; ethany Aqideni)'r have
to what party 'he belongs.' 'Whatis' pal y
1-.)
said if one of the Principala of the Honesdale .
, . Academy -had under precisely the saute cir
te the dearest interests of oiir,Coiintry,lwh a cin
uslaiiCel, been elfict`4.`'p' Up'eriniendent''!— .
we SeothoseintrestS unshe d into the •di st 'We kno w very.well what they would have
by - corrupt and ambitious . politicians' .1.-3 -said. .They would have said that no Matter
what.the gentleman's qualifications might-be
long as God shall spare ray bib- I Willnever,
the fact : of-Ina' relations here 'was a
, s - uftielent .
giVe s'yote, if rknow - it, that''Shall either di- ,
reason for his exclusion. ' ;In that N ieu ..tif the
reedy, or indirectly, sappOrtaaid, or . clomtl)rt.. ease . they would have found us - beartily coin
.. .
the. conspirators': against freedom, Wla 'tiding with
_them. " • '' ' . •
thaybe,.orwhereVer they belong. We We think. lie ought not to have bee nen
.•. • .
been Tylerized,lFillmoreied.lind-Piero pointed, and that he will have to.usel-Consi:l-
•erable prudence and. caution in exereiSiug tikt
Let us no , more t Let al} .traitors - p .
Inactions of the offic e
,if he . Would proinote
With according t o their • treaso n ,. and. k,
i . ' the ' , general welfare. , That ha may succeed
safe. We have good men and true. .)' in .tivoiding.A
,occasion of .complaint and ' i'
Wilmot - has ellinf7 b to his. ' integrity. 1 _ silencing., ell opposition, he _ certainly has, al.'
- . I . • -
li • '
have : neither been able to buy hint hi.lfrioi, best wishes.
. .
en him., : Air.. Grow 1:.1.-3 been trne -. to li 11.
self,and - hi4 coi4tituents. .The-taitelllous ,
could-not buy- trim, altlaiugh he. has plwiy
been a ;Forty - i ruin. - It .Was - hard' With
c ti.
doubt for - him to bre:ik.'witli . the ..kdraiiii fa
i l
tion at Washington, as lie Was a...frien .10
it. But be did it manfully,-acid spekn, :
in defence .of freedom. Let him be riu E
i t
ently sustained,; as he will be by all erect lei
,ofirii district!' V We need such men 6 s
• 1 • I 1
by its In the day. ofevil. - - : 1 . , '-' •
os
.I am riinipp,4 in c pi. *h.' , t 1 .... 4 1719 M at
takes right ground- Upon this subject. I:. j op
it isilleontinue . that coarse. Onr.PaPe ar
productive f,V - as't good, Or , vast evil.. ILe
—o i , l.
them he of good, and letthem. work ti geOei
in the. great IWork beforelthem. . I care- no'
for - Old party ! orgiinizations. I wish ~hiv )
.6r
bound together :with tow and :that, wa
onfir?.. . Idi like to hear the native of err
E t
lor Whig gat this t wish ime. • 1 every pal
tf link emitdl J:te severed. ,1 wish theoif
of the :piop.ki4ulpie heard all over the P l an;
in every dald l and r on .every Mountain t p.
• It would ..,inalse the powers that bel, 'a .
Washing t on t remble ' worse than . Ishassar
did When
.liel saw the hand 'writing loft thf .
wall-, Wholi4 to be led by ambitions •.Polit
. cians inlthiShimir of Peril andel' danger t? '1
whom, orNvi i iii i t party, do we mi-e any alley
- an,ce saVe to our etiuntry 1 (. I want Ito sot
for such men , as Wilmot and . Grew, the
are right. '. If i Pelleck is right and . Bigler .
wrong, I Will tote for Pollock. If largl6i. is -
h
r right and Pell,Pek . Wrong, .' upon'this I subject.
i I will vote ferl Bigler. - . Let them sp e ak of
I .Let uiknowl 'ili.ere they are, it is:net a th
t for dodging, Inpon the one side of:the' tin
r.. - upon this momentous . question. Penns iv
nia pas,sedthe bill in Congress, or .her. r ps
isentatives d d... She mutt correct it,' an sl
will d0 1 ..50,' .
,a sure /IS .-next Oeieher sl .
1 .
,1 come round.
1 The disgrace of Ithe .
, must be wiled out, and her traitors .eb
..G.4s.
' . WITCLICRAFT ' IN_ Pi.NNSTLVANIA.—theI fit
1
trial for withcraft in Pennsylvania, - was th
case of Margaret Matson, indicted, at, Phila.
:delPhia, Dec.. 27, 183. ,the wittiesSes test
fled to haVin 'i been told that sevtlfal col
Were bewitehed by -het, also oxen land - that they (died. The prisoner deni
.4 lvd
i)
eii
things whereof she * was accused, and - mt d ti
witnesses ' 4oke only
_by . •he,arsay.Aft
`which, Govertior 1 fenn gave the jilt. thi
,charge, and 1 They brought her in, ui ti
the comfit:Airtime of a witch, but no gu Ity i,
'manner and fOrfn!'as she stands indite , :mil
'there 'upon
. ishe Was bound to her *44:1 be
t avior for saXlmonths, and discharged,. 1
•
!! ! enton, Campbell 's,if Phi
t 1 ,..
ana — Mace Ofh Indiana, have been; t hin gli
investigating the Nebraska swindle, lan t he
dikover that ;the bill was-not, as Itileha .SC
alleged, the! 'Senate bill without the . 0 yt(
tmendment, hut, it contained a elauee til
person, other ! than a citizen of.. the nite
States should hold office until they bad or
to support the extension of Slavery, h tali
,
ing oath in support of the bill. , The et, al
so provides; nll laws of Congresi 16ca , y :ap
plicable shal l continue in - force. • 1 i
The act of}June 30, . 1834, fOrcibly, ex hides
from said Territories.all foreigners who have
notpasipOrtelfrom tbelVarDepartment under
penalty of $l,OOO, and the passport iinilts the
time foreignOs are permitted to remairi[there
in. If this 'view be correct, the popular sov
ereignty of the act, after all, excludes 411 for
eignexs with Out passports. Great eadtement
- has :been produced by, these diseoverils, and
- Mr: Mace has introduced a bill o!, the sub
ject—, - : I [ ''-
Government . Plotting for Slavery.
ThelVashington correspondent 'of the Phil!
a4,elphia North American, in speakinir of the
prospect of settling Kansas says
• ' '
Mr. Benton said 'a year ago, thal if fhe Ne
braska-bill then proposed, which did not dis
turb the Missouri compaet, bad been passed,
1- Kansas . would be a State, betbre the end of
this 6mgress. The - general impressionlias
d ben that but a small part of this region -was
susceptible of settlement . ; but later intelli
genee indicates this"to be a mistake: i Kan
t' • .t.s. the lower territory, has probably tillable
le lands sufficient to afford a comrortatne sun
re sistenee to one hundred thousand inhabitants.
et
The title of the Indians is - nearly extiturnish
ed, except, to certain very limited reservations,
within 'which they will beneeforth be, confined:
The ..atten - ipt will probably fail, andtht.e. poor
re victims of civilization will rapidly disappear
as from the face of the earth: • 1 -
a- :The AdministrationhaS taken care to
pro
hibit; virtually, -by 'practical measures, the in
flux of emigrants from the free States. They
icd stancti•eady now,. to pour in,•hut the Commis
d, sioner of Indian .A:ffairs has poitpcnied the
opening. of the country' for settlement for six-,
months. •The inhabitants of Missouri 'cannot,
1. be restrained frona; crossing the border and
making their. locations. -But organized balids
t e of emigrants-from the - North, withtheir fain- I
dr Hies and`stock;---and they cannot move in any
E t c other Ivey, than in largebodies...—. -can and will
be presented, under the instruetions lately is 7
sued from Washington; from going I ,into the_
to territory. Whether .these' restrictions apply
to Nebraska I have notbeen informed.' Theca!,
culation here is that lituasas will by these
measures be made a Slave territory before
any. considerable amotin of Northern emigre
, i . tion can reach it. • • , •
ut? I ' •
. .
Nebraska , biL H' - ,
r, ~ The Nebraska bill and the Cuban Auestion" .
a . have teen .the *subject! of. an .artiele in . a
‘,... London journal which, in' discussing. - has en
te=red somewhat Minutely into the position of
c the . two great
. parties ihvA.merica,•the North
.and - .South. _ Speaking iof 1 -the two questions
above mentioned it says.: . "The citizens of.
the. Northern States. cannot be 50.,,,,b1ind• to.
their interests or so deaf, to their duties as-to
regard .with apathy either of these inn pending
t events: • It is - not ttohd.Suposed that such an ,
. -1
tirtarit to its , instituti:ons,.as the 'Nebraska
bill,, or such a blow at-its now ;KO,tled pre
dominance as the absmition;of .01barwill .
find the-public opinionief the .Nof.h; insensi
vs _
ble or immovable: , VII * ortnnal hoWev
r, er,•-• the extreme urgency ofdange'r 4arequir.,•
'r s ' ' ed to unite Northerner* against their vigorous
ill rivals.: The planS 'of the South are' general If
he accomplished -before i feelin :.O iY of the
.6 - 1' North is roused-to b-or reSistnnee.'
it The truth is,- that great factions of
-. ,
~ America are really :parties, :the
c ''' Southerners const" uttited;:interest,
• , -
1 .1 which alternately with th eo,
,
Demo
crats and Whigs.. :edify ttetingon,
the - difficulty whit ties eiperienc'e
- in'eoming to an - uric y, that the slave!,
il. • holders have repeateg i ly, . Managed 1 Since.-the
• beginning of the centurV tolwin 'aloSinggame.7
.After . endeavoring to ow.hoW—through the
t i
;counsels • of Johri..C. -. hOurv—this has been
achieved, it winds uj by predicting that if
the Nehraska"billis- carried, lind.the rape of
Cuba .aceomplished,,..l! the . conseiitienee - of
those events will be itilfallibly. foll Owed 'lv a.
re-action against' the 4outh.which.Will shake
tholederation to the centre." • - !.i • - .!
AMERICAN DirstoCaacr.—The New Yprk
True Democrat: a staunch organ of the Hun r
ke.r - Dem:krity in do Empire City, has a
leading article on the Piesent conclud:.
ing thus • i , • 2
." We revectfullyl ;submit that we prefer
our own countrymen ibr the public dikes of
the city ; State and 4ation, and shall coma&
tently refusakp suppoit, for any pUblie posit
gentlegym of f4teign birth,' as long as
'We can fi nd,'S tuitive;born capable
of filling the place, find willing
it». - -
~ TEE COP WHY.
'•-•:. The Ofilli4elptiii toesPatetil'hparier 41110
very bitterly; bp . 0 : 4! thog oc tib n i o. j u, t
COnrad;igildthe, • 1 Ticket, e 3 4VV3 l / 4 1 in- ~, i'a
long 'isxplanWon 0 - t'. , eittiteawkiehildne-
Od :Ae ir:esu#t• !.- " 4 itlict tiii i Salo w: 4 *
paragrapus, - setting; i 1 . 1 ra i oost A h - t e edu
but • foreshadowing.e iiitilort4ipc i ii- tiseil d e i t .,
cesol this defeat : ' - 1 1 •:. f ,.
..• Fromthe Fhiladel :
ea Deeptch,VirM:iiih: .- -
-There is no disguiSing the -fact.- 7 i 7 t he - ;,6 0 1 ) ...
nents a Mr. Conrad have been. , iStenti&iir
whipped. • We admit the. trounenif,r'xisflir asA
: wIl sire. Cone Med, Ori ihp- part of, the Anti
`P.rohiiiitionittsp ~. Althorigh not authorized to
-B Peak.fo thel-Dkt ,' 41PY, V .4440,1wsitatt-•
rwi
Lion in declarhvg_tha they haveecime off bad:
ly in th is fight. 'Th only thing'‘'We Cati 'do
is to:gather onrielves;vp,, - rind - setrining's, : the
battle-field Candidly ;inquire whatitt was. that
hiirtns. ' . I ' ! ' i'' - ' ' --:
, . - - , • ,
Every voter knoW4 bf to cases in - which
-those who,had vote 4 'the whig, &A:Merle:an
tickets ;previously; being dissatiSfiedivith the
nominee for Mayor voted" itgainsit s. him ' last
Tuesday ; and yet; 'notwithstanding this de
feetien, he made up handsomely ifor. the sub
straction,by the Unlooked for Sidliesion Of ,.
perso4 who' never voted a'Whig, Natilre, of
AI-eine:Law ticketlefore. ' ': -,. . ,
It is i nOwievident . ,where 'this - !exra force
came from and - wiat - brought ' it. 'Many
of Mr., 'Conrad's stew friends!' voted
.for
him, nbt asla token! of his persoiiriliiojailtri-'
- ty with them, but bCtiIIISC he hail banns) him
self-probably much more-solemilly . than thci.
public imagine; twsupport a certain principle,.
That irinciple. is Krow-NothingiSin,. ebncern
ingl which there
,is ctinly surrnise' t that °ppd.
sitiou to the appointment of foreigiers tei of
and resistance Ito' the' catholic religion,
are the principal " articles of ifs creed: - - The
Vote- in the City waids proves
_that among the
Simon Pure Whig S, M. Conradlloatlarg,ely,
whilst in portions.of the town Where, Dem-
O'er/icy has hitherto ruled , he rani immensely
ahead'; In the ;1 lth and 12th Wards--;-the old_
Northern LibertieHwhich haVe given es
ti& ris one thousand`majority Or the Dem-,
rieratie ticket, there is a coniplefe 'change.
'Mr. Conrad lots' a majority of 357, wh i ch. up= -
on asifull a poll as there is as in; - thrit,section
last' -week, may be set down - as a ehange
'of from eight 'hundred to eleven hundred,
•
votes!, In South '- a sk and priOyaniensing,
last year the,Denioeratie majority was 870.
Last Week the' same districts griVii-a inajority
of 670 for Conrad,-L a change pfl fifteen hini
.died. So it IA t.lirbugliotit the !county ;;nod l
in the election !of 'Mr. Conrad,; Democratic
. . , .
voter trump] ed. i ! •
- It heeds but little investigation to deter--
it: i t
mine' the 'real, of this result. 1 The Pauses
which led to t to defeat of James , '. Campbell
as 'a icandidarri , for Ithe StipreMe, Court' in
'5l,- have beeri at Werk in thiS eleetion. Govl'
cruet- Bigler undertook to !set thot•te who
Would not support Judge 0. at defiance byi
appointing thri man just defeated at; the, polls
to the first la* office .in the stai,e , and subse
quently by snsoothing his way to- take an
equal - station .witli the nobodies of General
Pierce's•cabinet., I', .1 '. j
. . _ .
~
i
t 'honest 'opi ion - that Judge. Carlipbelt
`as un 't for the station to-which he aspired,
ted o t e opposition which -was, first maul:
fest d r.q 'nst hii; but that feeling is now
takilhg a ectaVari turn, in consequence of the
indiScret ons of the administratlon;andof the
Go - Vern sent I offibers in this `eity'who'act un--.
der !lir tion 'I, froni.,head-quarters: The tip=
point m nts of Cha's Btu wnlarid_Jblinaliller
have. 1 ver b§en Popular, and those . .bffiecrS,
by the striet,eliqneism which governed their
subordinate appointments, have disgusted the
rank and file.!'of the party. A . bitter feeling
against foreigners H has taken itposs.ession of
many who byont , to the 'American wing Of
the 'democratic 'pFrty, and the' ;result of laSt
Tuesday shoW - s, without doubt, 'that several
.thonsandi of: thern have become 'either con
nected with:the Knolit-Nothing o r are di
rected by secret influences which are not ap
narent to thepublie, '- ! ' - ' i
There - isanother matter which has had
mueh to do With the result.( It is' 'the . pa. •-•
•
sage . of the Xeberka bill,' antithe - identifie -
' .tioti of the .40zin;stratioir with, that,shamef l
art fof infirnzx„ This law was Passed , throne - Ai
a venal Coup-6s in, the most iindecent„inilii
ner, and its effects-win . fully demonstrate 'the
maxim, "Whom the Gods 'wish'. to . destro',y'
they first, make - mad." .r ,. io 'sephistry Caii
make that unneeesary measure`'palatable to
.
the
. North, arid' " I
the
,NOrth, in the election Of last Tuesday
may be detedted evidence- of the gericral fe
-
ing. The AllYierumn party are cipposed o
iithe', law, wiilibrt - the ClaytOn aniendme . t,
for the territory will be throwii• open to-fOt
eicrners who Will have access to the ballot-bdic
without previoup residence 'or naturalization:
, Nat nralized cit izeris are dissatisfied w ith the lief;
beCause the design of the:law iis to' degrade
free labor by Ilinging. it in1.4.:1` coMpetiti l ii
i)
With- slavery; ' - ' ! ''''', -,'
The esl u o-;s1( to
of toruiits limy/ ll tehich trill' be mortifyitig
it,t
to 'the j.Vittiotia and State iiiiministratiorig.
The hand-w d is . upon the Wall :---•"_Wil-
Imm Bigler o art weighed in. the balance
found iv ta171 1,7 !" and Messrs. Thomas B:
-Florence. Jahn I ! r 7liohhins and' William . 11.
,Witte, who ttt t e command of the admirriS
tration were N Milli* to 'it'e se e the
, ,
, t .,-rpt r pre a • Jr
constituentspin . vote for a measure!' which
the,y\ must lias - 4,, ' known was' unpoptifirjai,
honie'rnay qtire to - the shades of \ priv te
life.- \ h , _
~,,„, -,, .
i In regardto .tar course on: this subject we
have no aplttaie. to make nOr, regrets to of
fer. - Mr.' Co s rad identified himself Uri,
.11
principles tidj w Or we '."tire: Opposed,. and it,
was prlly trj. s ppose that he' could do so
without eliltin. oppc isition. i' hi theerinv s
our -course ma or may not'• have had at if
flience. W . ,e hi ye denionstrated, very sir
ly we thitilt o tl at not Nutlistanding his e .le
ci_.,
tion, Mr. Otlnri d must haVO lost from v
to, six tlrouS4nd 'of the Whig !votes, of th is
upon whosis iii port he most refied. Th
,nust have tee strong disiiatisfaction, NN'..
hurt to haVO Ca sed.such.a nianifest tioil. 1,
despite of.', th is disapprOVal, ilkir..oan • ad, has"
triurnphed.v,l . ;` '
, - ..
_
- .
POSTMAtiVER:
what the ; flPh
Vtn--7 . 11
The irrepl
p4rtlnent also •
hand at 144 h
three days' it.l
bnrg, the
all together., 'I
to
: go frOm '
-papers and- . ..1e
read. •
fcr Cleveland,
on the. Wedne.i .
-ed here gon
the. folloviiag
Vont Philadel
diva Fit - takes
..Ifow long- aft
get. the Depa
'der.?
t , _
I .ft.NOW ,NOT
Tribune t
iy t9-beconle
nor any thing;
its new phase
gross abuses
rent polities;
Many fe.itnen
bentipletel.,sue
decay and
•
GENERAL CAMPBELL.—Ite
ladelphia negister says I
• .
rities in the Post Office
s nueoinnion! wealinesS.in
lin.l List Avek we werefi
lout mail4rom.befond pit
1 they carne-pouring in oi r
t takes a man thirty-=six hours
i'hiladelphia , ti.) CleVeland i but
.tern 'are sevCral days on tb
illed nletter last Friday 'we&
m t a
five to to .and it reached its destinatio,
lay following)
re Another mail
, y had not ireached the on
Friday. A' 'passenger can gr
tc.
hia to Si. Loins in about t r 4.
i a letter from --'-
e does Mr.lCamPbell as to
moat* into something like or
,i. 1
1 , 3 Na Spsont4rtmqs.--Th: N,
rinks 44 the ectuntry,is - not 'ke
' .Native,' or .'t Know Noth ng,'
of the sort ;'but. Nativism in
ill help.to orrect; some Very
which have crept into our cur
tbeit willipass away, as so
•
tions: have,,done before
• ••_• might ten or deltky its
;saolution,, *
coug, not • vert
'toter question.
TOTinieyerdiiiibts, the Lfuiitiiiteigxiu*
er sti* tplat thy ; 4 vernor didl3lo,4te fa !
', o l u ti o ti." a t ith 9 : it. : the sense ot 44014
te
be Sk ,-., - 4 e acne Law, eetisforently
'theptitOplAi, m ill hive to vote 'on the ipeston I
Ini thdlUeotion inOetober malt. ` :„.,---,, ...,,:s1".
dMet Governorifs° signetrthe bill !feria
ing the sale of intoxicating liquors to minors,
intoxicated or insane,. persons,-or to habilual
, drunkards; aft,4 the 'samels. now in full.fo*e.
t' ite "Governor did not sign the bill requir-,
ttii beer-honse keepers, and store keepers ho
1 4 in liquors, to obtain 104515 e totn tie.
untitt the same Manner na ,- inn-keis .` ,=•—•
A O4l l-141• beiiarpeovt-,inliti- Ith. -
, e,...
Roc!c,(?, ylir.e„ it will doubtless remain un
it t' 'next Inc 4 ting of,tl4.ljegfslaitire;i
;Mil titi) : FT the: lielogrAection. 0.„ tu4r,rnte. r
Whild the do4r.af'liati dedipfed,to 'sign
the general .bill
,whiell ,ptw4the twOlitlW4B
equititg;tke sto j ies ana:l?**.hOps tkin 'ply
1101* Courts:rei it licelise,:te dt , ifin=t}-Isll,l\
ieqifiring the, store and'beir: shops in o*.
i'ler aridA6ehre
~ coyntiep ..to go to the
Tie. has.,thus shown, -hew much uf 'sin rtty
(..;
there ism profession of hostility, to bad 1 47 8 ,'
and friendship for general laws. Thenrts
(t
iti.C:ti.f!ster. and Delniare counties time efus,--
'ed to-grant license wider this, 14w - , whit uo
ireSirictiou r exists, ih any otliir county, ih the j
'state, because of., the refusal of Go
, 1 ittor,
Illgler to 'sign the bill. The, credit of l!the
beer. houses and`; liquei j stores,.. many and
perhaps inoStof ithieli are an absoldte nui
sance to the community,'' is due to_ Gov
13i.ler. • j . ,
;Mlibtistering. at the &nth.
.. .
We : have: lOoked . With a good deal. ciflinter'. •
est; for .the last few days, li, - .1 - 4Our.NeW Orleans,
e:echanges r for 'the purpose 'Ofgathering'Some
satisfactory :information respecting the great
fillibusterinLi e).tpeclition, said to be in : process
of organization in that eity.,
,These jedrnals,
however; ha Ve little - or c nothing . to z 1 3 . - (iti the
subject, : -(Silence, however, in these cases is
sometimes. politic.)
.- ~" ' ' • . 1 -'• ,• - ' • 1 '
. ...
The New Orleans correspondent of the Al-.
eiandria ,- (ta.) Democrat
,furnishes the '61.10.w
-ing particulars :i - . I: .- -' -.. • ! •, -
. 1 . •
The . fate of 'Cuba is ~ Theri, is an
1-
expedition„ on Toot, haying for its: object her
overthrow;: of a character altogether t' o• for,
tnidable to . . admit a lop thipn, which :t hang
a doubt.' ' 1 , 144 -I._p O sitivelV true,' 0 What
is a' little •Xiinirkable, there is no . . dtsbnise
.. . ,
whatever - i l bOut. it.
...Men talk of it) h , '..e l ' lc cts atil
event :beyond the aurveillAnce of •chancei--
'`There is: no such 'Word its fait!' • 13likttkera
kite. Meetings -are. not hold,inor are . riisibles
excited by .. svmholic givings out and MySte.:.
rious hints. nut 'what amounts to sOniethilie .
more and better,. a hundred s Übseription books
are. - open, - ' . .and - I state* fact within lily oWn
knowledge; that nearly, half a -Million'ofdOl
lars has bea n . subscribed in NeW Orle s'lnd:
paid in. : An,.
w one can see these, boo -S, wit
,ll
ness the paymg don of (...iish !by , wl*,',l May .
call a countless throng crowdintarounthem,,and fork over whatevernMountheina -jdeeM
1
proper 'Aftinjtioris ~.of' war' . Inigo''. annon,
Muskets, ,poWder, etc.,. leave 4roaltnestdai-,
ly for :New . 'York, and largeibodieal - Of emi=
grants are, pressing.forwa rd (6 thellio. : ran . d - e.
'Up to
.this time these Public movemet ta have
encountered nO.Obstacles; i nor )vill., th ... ) , im.ta;
ture. . Men have -Chargo of the expedition.noW
'who arc. not hair-braii.iedTools,-but: en - 6'1.011c
practidal i bttsinesaoperaters: They st rt w ait.
r.
the sinews of War—'—xnoney, *itli pick (.1 Men,
not the . rag-tag . •and i ' bobtail of , Urge itieS—
and ". with, -appointments 1 f..n- any , y ;ie:rgcn
•
. Newspaper qtirrelicy.
.
- The Rtichester Union offers to all persons
who Will iSendit' "fire Weekly Subs Tibet's"
an A elea . ant 'and cost - AV. B..fel,ErigraN inc4ep
.
resenting President 'Pierce dress,
on lorseback. •
Thereupon -a writer in that '1 d' sheet,F
the Binkhamton , Democrat, editedi y. Tisni.)
D. S. Dicki men's brother, 4iscO4rses,.inl
this. Arise •'
President Pierce's prohle. and 5 .
c4l ,
_he Rochester Union - for $7 1-21
dicta ! This, is too 'much pork for a
That thing wont work. The wind can't be(
raised in that :w ay: The "Steell.'ngraving"l
—the Rochester' Union—President Pierce,[
sad, his Cabinet, 'and - the Whole Adrninistra-I
tibn; are not ivorth s'7l-2. - If the Rochester
Unioi wantS' to 'eltend eircultition 11Y .
means of" Steel .Engraving,s,' , it had better
leave. Pierce's head out. That- is ldo improvc-i
ment- - to °"engravings," just:pow. bel
sides, every man's het4 is most at homeou
his own' shoulders. - •
" Elegant, and - costly steel - engravings," of
Franldin Pierce's head, Tnounted on General=
Taylor's shoulders, , don't :take as cy
about March, 1.4358. - I- -
~ .
INDIGNATION' -.GIZETING IN BD:GII. ox.-:-.4,
A 'meeting of which lion. D. S. I I/ ' lekm-i
'
son Was Chairman,' and ni
W. - Stuart Secreta-i
,
ry . ; was held:in Binghamton .._ . on the - 13th
inst., by which after several on speech Js the
,
maladministration of the P.' O. Department,l
the following resoltitions Were unatliMouslyi
adopted: , " ,
Resolved„ That the present -iarrangfr,
merits for the transportation of the fails up
on the New York and Erie Rail Road, are
highly. injurious to the business interests a
the towns upon itsline, and when ,compared
with the Mali facilities afrorded upon the Cent.
tral Rail .Road j are unequal_ and unjust. . I ,
(Resolved, fThat the attention Of the Post
,
;1 Office. Department be respectfully requested
.
to the greatinconveniem - te arising from •the
,suspension of the Express MailA and that
,_ their immediate renewal is most earnestly
...e urged uPonih at Department, / _ - = 1
ie ' Resolved, That the importance ud niai.,
.e nitude of the mails that ought' to b , carried
upon the Cxpress Trains iMpera ively re
quire that they be placed in the clutrge.Of
. /
Agents' of the Department, and that this - meet(
ing respectfully request: that , su.4 \Agents
Inay bwappointed,without delay. 1: • '
Resolved, That the - proceedings of this
meeting be forwarded to the Representativ'e
`in CA'xigre.ss• from thiki District, and that he
be„requested t.ti present the same t' .the Poet
e Otfic Department. - . , - 1 'l.
FRANCISCANS CQMING FRO/II Rem To N..
is 7-4 The fdllowing is from the cor - pendent
of the Dublin Telegraph. The gentleman re.
fcrred, to is Nicholas Devereite t q., of IT4-_
1e en, N. Y., who is one of the mos extensiVe
land owners in that. State: . 1 .
.f t
e G 0 A. benevolent Irish gentleman named
Deveremc, who - has become a col nizer, and
has' considerable landed property i the St,
of New York, has been making arrangements
' e in Rome for bringlng with hini to[that court.
a certain number. of Vrancisctupc as, ma..
ny as can be spared from aty, clef/In:vanity
here, to occupy a .dinvie.nt ready - f9r theni On
his estate near Utica,. assist In the cultivation
of the neighboring grounds, and *collie the
nucleus to a new Mission much iesired Or.
the Catholics cot , those 'parts. Mr. I:level:aux,
promises t'o endow this . convent With '5,0410
t.i
dollarkh . and a further benefit - maybe eneet... -
ed _ in:possible results to the co 1:1101"Ce of
Rome, froM the interesthe has ken . in lie
.
pinurieturee here prepared, _sus'rimers:of
which, in, the silk kind, also of the Byes which
appeaied tO lila' surtgio;„ to a' others, ne
has sobsatera_to o:air7 Aottsiii`the tiatie: •
- ,
.. . ,
-WM Camp —''' - . i
__ Jas., . bellitesigal -
"Thisle-44uestiion which we hear , tweiit l'
Y :
thmTi ideffronvgentlemen 1'438164 in diff..-,
ere 4 Part ell the state. It is " a seriousinqUi. -I
17„ &lint one ch ve ,cannot answer: a . Nis -
restnationwoulk undoubtedly, proinote the
mtqests of the:Democratic party.; but owe '
'.impression is' that he Would not
.resign ev en
if satisfied thatlioNng els&uadVsecure the
..
eleetion of thedimecratic Statetteket. -, W e
, thinlithe better way is to call upon the Pree.'
•ide4t to remove : him. He:is ii , valkly ' ovr t :
rated:man aid is an injury to imp ,party or
ildrilinistratie4 3Flatti. which if eugiect4.-
kili *olii-eiliheitto ordnipalthit, at this day: ' :
no MaircOarkeeted‘with bin:Apolitically canbe
elto anieffiee in :Pennsylvania. ' 4tl is
the efor*.iitvve Are correctible duty itoresign,
7ed
If e does not, it is the duty of the isr*deet
- to remove. ham, . Nothing: wpialo.tell- more
firrorabli Oiv the 'coming
,ilection ; *indeed ) ,
Isf.r. CampbeltirittlittheiffiC,i no combine.
tioh of i4mB-•could beat- the democratic par-
ty.l Such' an cient as his fis*liatiijh or; re. '
moval i'ould Create _a zeal and confidende
in he democratic ranks - dud : would tell we n ;
ie fully at thenext October itectiein.Aet us
h 1 .r . from Washington on -thiiitoportivat.,sub, t..
leet --- Zkentocratic- Union. "-- :,- '_. i' '
- Adilt" e. -
The St Louis. Intelligenwr, irr an article
on the recent. Belton )4iots„givee' the peo
ple of tlic:.North %Vb. - wing -piece of ad
,lusteid of killing United caates "_officers"
who are discharging a shorn duty in trying
e: , tecute -the laws that you. bate, you *WU
more, SesMe e and ustix r, 6fi g i nxe f ew
of these douglifaccd 'knaves do fou
ally 'sebd to Congress tort:lake such la*s.;,-
Who is .responsible tbr the so-ealledt-Netr in .
k perfidy? Who . bit men of the Noith:
Sent'-to Concyr,ess by the vote of the Nort,l 4 6 n
people ei.ey have the . numerical majority, yThey`could easily have defeated ~thei Ne
b asks perfidy. but they did not do it. They
Vartored "your votes and their souls, according
t your account, to Frank - Pierce, 'Stephen
' and. the devil.'
The suggestion, coining tr, it aoes from a
Southern paper, may be*orthy of attention.
One thing is pertain) : that'thes- traitors to
neir country should lie politioally gibbeted
and We' hope: to see 'it done very effectuall y
next
At the lato;„sesSion Of. thee, egislattii.the'
genate added to the. appropilation bill a set
.praibitjng the paring out of the iWa..
sury of the 'Relief Issues'. so That they, may be
peedily cancelled:, . 'The 'Lanbaster. 'Exa m '.
ner•whose.-editor'was a member ;Of the gen
iite, says; " this section was negatived in the
Ir9use," through the Aireetintertereitee l of the
State \ Administiatidn." says z 1 r
The respotrOility, of keeping 'thew notes
iin circulation rests upon thept* nt State
lAdministration.".„ In hislast two.tinnual no 4.
sages,. Goi Bigler Professed - great ankiety for
their Speedy cancellation, but s wheti a iiraett
jell meNure is proposed. whick WOUld, effect
accomplish the result_. he pretends Lod
his anxiefy to defeat it io‘ just'as great,
The. facts lu this case, as in most others, must
1 convince any. Candid inquiret l that the Goi
ernor's :objectiens,t6 ii small paper cUrreney
are the sheerest humbug iruagiitabk.'l
'
:`Sale of tile !lain Line. •1
Th Lan'easter - EXaminersay • arn
9., _
o eetu
f the stockholders of the Pennsylvania II
read, - on MondaY, the committee appoiettA a,
a former meetingto consider the expedient!,
of, purchasing the Main. Lhle Of the'public
works made a report unanimettlly*oppeA
Alen
. t 9 the purchase. The:meeting acipne,e,
in.the report, and no further aciionwillbe,t4en
on the sub, eetby that ,Compariy. It is now a.
_parent (as indeed it has been all along) tha
no 'bids will be made under the - bill of , thv
- la4 session: ' The terms - Of' that.bill are t.
strit*ent. The 'opponents of a. sale,' al the
they could not' directly defeat the bill, wer. -
able to engraft . Upon, it a sufficient quanti,
otObjectionable provisions. to prevent an
;company offering-to purchase! -
N. The whole influence` - of the State -Adminis
tration• was exerted to de tthe ortir-
ing *that, to renderit inoperative, 411 which
latter respect it
,WELS but too succeasfUl.
the IpeopleNof the . teinmon*ealth want NI
public woria sold ; they, must elect a Gofer'.
nor friendly iO , the sale.' If . Gov. Bigler is
re-eleeted; the same result may, be expect d•
at, the next session as was experienced at Ili!?
lastl If lifr. Polbx4c is Chosen the intluenco
of the administration will, beihroWn in favor
Of the sale, and that result,may,be confider.
ly anticipated. .
pies o
, _ i, s.I 's
- , , : 13tateitighta-
_,- ~.! j-, x
The PuiitlveSlavo Ackhas beck}, • n
ed, 'utteDnstitutronal - , by..one ofthe.tu4e; t
the'Supreme Court of Wiseonsin;, 04 riceo i
c e its i . violation - of -the ri g ht, of triall by j y
and for other muse's. : The Fetieralaudie'
1 7 holds the: celltra l 7- The. Conttilif Pe
1
syltania ha4e i decided that-State tribun i
'hal,•e, aright tp try wen' for 'crimesiebnam 't
tedl. 'Within' their jurisdiction, whether under
dolOr of servi!v_Federal civil prcesi or not. ..
The l'ederal judiciary has decided tixerontra
ry, and Goveritor. Bigler l o ts submitted widi
out ia. word. In • the - reeelit* strugglo in .Mass-
aehnietts, the writ of thel - State Couits forte
pleying, Burns was trampled under riot.— '
In every rain, State rights have'bren over
hprne. Where there blis been a shoW of op
pbsition, . foreign hireling,s have been armed
With' revolvers and `bayPnets to crush 'ea
State . sovereignty. But as the fraenialk, of -
the, North are not, aecuteniad to hiive 06(0.
la* ,thrust, down their throats with the butt',
ends of muskets,_theso things will Sosbn have
an end.--.l)aily .4 1 egister. ‘, . ~.:.
. ,
JUDGE DOUGLAS' BACIMD 0UT. 4 7--WO:1*
derstand that roPms. had been taken for
Judge Douglas, at- one,of our' Priniipal lity•
tell, and that ho was expected -to A rrive:ea
Sunday morning: , Buk-But- . ptiblie' indo3-•i ,
became. tiori bee so uproarious . on Sunday,in fl•
.peemtion of. his visit; thakthe postinitsteit6
egraphed him not to come, that the 1 ;
! rather too warrh a plziee for him at pre4er;t:'
Whelk: this - fact:, beeaine known, the ituNie 3
were satisfied the traitor did - not intindl4 t' l
venture on a visit here, and the - ,eseiteino , t'l;
somewhat subsided: :1 .. .., ' 1
Whether our Senator Will viSit Chieip qi .
i
'this season - or \not, we- are . Unit forma: - V
Should he venture upon suds an mieilition-
we, prmise him an audience::te Mimes -3 , f
i
las,garas any that he ever stood b fore in Ch •-',
_Ar.4.--Ch.iiago Tribune; • • ' ' 4
,1 :
-,
BITE ox A BATTLESNAIXEL-DRU:KENYE SSI
I DEL _ ~,
_::
it '" IRDY.— 11 U /4IPPet! AO knOW somethig `•
abtint this, and - can suggest an, effOtual T 'i .
W e
edy - , i mean alanilieliquor,.
_The p>'.l-. f, osophy ;alit is simpV this The morn 4 3
Serpent is, a - powerful se4atiie, Which it,i's
nil' ail t: 1 ts tocounteract. —
ores r _wer.,.. s initi an .
.•,..
we once - saved the life of al yaluOle done,r..,
tie by giving hini. (in The, absence of any i'gli- %
-,er. li'quor.a whole bottle of ideboliel, in do -
' lO -- cior half a tutnbler aka dine, It was 0 : 0 1 Y
when he , drank the last ppitiontliat intot •
Gni ',showed itssii, Fh:powertul . was thS Sr
tive tietion of the poison. Once make AT P •
who b
has - been itten by : a venemou 14 16
-drunk,
.0d the . , victory is achieved.. Ye'
that niomott he iiisafe, and the. Bora nisYl l l
t;eate'l as ita - Oidinary ad Blight flesh visa. ll°4 '
—ig; 'A cirtocisk - • , -
Raef Notes.