Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, December 06, 1854, Image 4

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CARLI'br., r.a•
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1R54
IHE LARGEST AND CHEAPEST NEWSPAPER
.iUMBKIMAN ti COUNTY
a
Terms—Two Dollars a year, or One Dollar and
Fifty Cents, if paid punctually in Advance.
$1 75 if paid within the yeas.
A REPUBLICAN PARTY
a •
Judge Wilmot and those of his politi
cal friends who think and act with him,
have led off in a movement in Susque
hanna county, as we leain from: papers
of that county, to start a‘itepublican Par
ty. • Pursuant to a call from a pudic
meeting to take the subject Under consid
eration, a large meeting was held in
Montrose, on the. 27th ultimo, which was
attended and addressed by J udge
A committee appointed for that purpose,
of which Judge Jessup was a member,
reported a series ( of resolutions proposing
first the formation of a Republican party
—declaring, secondly, the virtual disso
intiorr-of-both -t he --old -pa rties—firoclaim—
ing thil< their opposition to slavery cx
tea!;ion in whatever guise it may be pre
sented and calling for a modification or
repeal of the Fugitive Slave Law. The
resolutions also declare for the adoption
of the Homestead bill, for universal edu
cation—for_ecanomy_irt. _the administra
tion of the State and General Govern
ments and in favor of the sale of the
sale of the Public Wo - rks.
The resolutions were discussed sepa
rately and warmly. Judge Jessup (one
of the most prominent Whigs of that see
of the State) supported the second reso
lution in, an able and eloquent speech,
wherein he expressed his conviction that
both of the old parties were practically
dead, and declared himself decidedly in
favor of the organization of the proposed
party. He was followed by, Mr: C. L.
Ward,(Douglasite,) of Towanda, who op
posed the formation of the: new party as
uncalled for, and defended the Nebraska
bill and the Administration of President
Pierce. Judge Wilmot tben spoke in fa
vor of the resolutions. All the resolutions
reported by - the committee were adopted.
SEY - The Message is a common place
document. Vie give a well prepared
synopsis of its contents which we think
will be more satisfactory and more gen
erally read than the entire paper.
Set - Prof. TIFFANY'B address before the
Union Fire,Company will be found at
length on tli& second page. It is both
elegant and eloquent, and replete with
sound political doctrine. As an exposi
tion of Americanism, its sentiments will
meet with general acquiesence.
DEPUTY , SECRETARY.—The Lancaster
Examiner says that John M. Sullivan,
Esq., of Butler comity, has been selected
by Col. CURTIN, as Deputy Secretary of
the Commonwealth under the new admin
istration. Mr. S. was clerk of the Senate
for several years, and Ni4t that capacity
proved a most accomplished officer---.
prompt, careful, and thoroughly master
of'his duties,
IMPORTANT DECISION.--A free negro
is not a citizen of the United States, ac
cording to a recent decision in the State
of Illinois, and, cannot maintain a suit.
The Chicago Times states the case thus :
JoSeph . C. Mitchell, a free ncgeo, as plain
tiff sued Charles 11. Lamar, who plead
that a free negro was not a citizen of the
United States, and hence could 'Mt main
tain .a suit before the United States Court.
The plea was sustained by Judge DrUm
mond, of the U. S. Circuit Court, and
the decision was concurred in by Judge
McLean.
__ICY - 4anupapers are advocating the Tariff
18i2, its a remedy for the
.bard times„
E
A BOLD PllOPOSITION:
The Trotiottay has at. last displayed its
trme`colors'and now openly and• boldly
prociainisitself in favor of a change in
t.ye„gohstitution to «bq ish the vote by hal
m. ! Tnis, then, is the Volunteer's de
mocracy! After years of hypocritical
democratic professions—after all its lash
ings 0f1.4d black cockade Federalism, of
John Ad. N's and-Alexandcr Hamilton—
here is its own democracy finally reveal
ed and laid bare ! What will the old
democrats of Cumberland county, the
men who have for years relied upon the
Kilt/never as a genuine exponent of what
they regarded z); true democratic princi
ples, what will S
they, what must they
think, of such an outrageous proposition?
Do away with The vote by ballot—the
poor man's greatest shield against tyran
ny ? We can fancy them rubbing their
eyes and looking again and again, fondly
hoping that it is an optical illusion, but
still to their utter amazement finding
themselves confronted by the startling
declaration in the columns of the Volun
teer-="ilholish the Bullet and adopt the
eil'a met! system."
And what does the Volunteer expect
to-accomplish by abolishing the ballot
system ? It hopes thus to put down the
Know Nothings. In Virginia, which un
der a hypocritical democratic guise is re
ally the most drisTOcratic State in the TT
nion, the viva owe system prevails, says
the Volunteer, and the Know Nothings
have in consequence been able to make
but little progress: But let not the Vol
unteer deceive itself with respect to Vir
ginia. It thought Americanism a very
insignificant thing in this Congressional
district before the election, and boldly
defied its power. After Mr. Bonham's
defeat it would be well to talk cautiously
of Virginia. The Gibralters of dentosra
cy have melted like snow before the pow
er of Americanism, and Virginia is not
impregnable. :Nous verrmts, as Father
Ritchie used to say. •
To put down the Know Nothings-ef
fectually why does not the Volunteer at
once urge the re-establishment of the in
quisition? The rack, the thumb screw
and other species of torture should be
put in force. It is so intolerable, in the
estimation of that paper, that-American
citizens should combine together to ele
vate and perpetuate their own/nationality,
to guard against insidious and dangerous
influences from abroad, and preserve their
school system and other domestic institu
tions, that the Volunteer would have them
put down at all hazards and by any means
however oppressive. It is not to be borne
that Americans shall promulgate - such
"horrid," /.'traitorous" principles as
these. Bence the necessity of a reorgan
ization of the democratic party by Mr.
Bonham. Bence the necessity of de
priving the poor man of the vote by bal
lot, and crushing out his freediun by ty
ranieal oppression ! Is this what the
emocracy of Cumberland county desire?
ues the Volunteer spent: their voice in
dvocating such odious doctrines? We
link not
ge„,,The Hartford Catholic difficulty
appears to have resulted in the Bishop
having conceded to the congregation in
question thC management of the finan
cial affairs of their church, the laity ap
pointing a committee for that purpose,
who are to take charge ofnll the revenue's,
pay the Priests, etc.
ILLINOI ELEECION.----TllO Chicago
Democrat states 'that, according to the
official return, Colonel Archer, anti-Ne
bracka Whig, is elected in the seventh
district, over Mr. Allen, Nebraska Demo
crat, by-one majority, but says the official
vote may change the result.
oov. Bior:Eit's
risburg ././Cr«b/ says a 0v.8.' has had an
other severe attack of the disease with
„which he has been oceasionly afflicted for
some months past, and is now so ill as to
be unable to leave his rQOIII.
13??6"Petitions for Dr. Beale's pardon are
recieving thousands of signatures in Phila.
kEtixtiolc
,(jr.ral6.
PROORES6 OF A muttentusm. The
'Washington correspondent of,the Jour
teal of Continer'm says, several of the
Southern members of the General Con
vention recently held by the Know
Nothings at Cincinnati, are there on
their return , They represent that the :
proceedings o;Nworlt of the Convention
was harmoniously done, and that the lead
ing feature of the policy of the Associa
tion is devotion to the peace and perimtu
ity of the Union. The Association will
set their face against sectional disputes,
and , promote a proper American senti
ment, serving to cement the Union.—,
They represent that some of the religious
organizations of the South—the Baptists,
Methodists arid Presbyterians—are all
friendly to the Order, as will be shown
at the polls of Virginia, and elsewhere,
next spring. It is claimed . that the
Know Nothings hold the balance in the
Florida Legishiture, now in session, and
will control the choice of United States
Senator.
CIIIEr JUSTICE . or PA.-=-The Hon. El- I
lis Lewis has become• Chief Justice of
of Pennsylvania, in the room of,the lion.
J. S: Black, whose term of Chief Justice
expired on the Ist of December. Judge
Lewis was formerly a journeyman printer.
He soon became a lawyer of good stan,
sling, then
_a Judge in the Lyeoming Dis
trict. He was afterwards transplanted
- to the Lancaster District, and from thence
to the Supreme Bench, and now, by vir
tue of the Constitution, to the summit of
his profession in .the Keystone State.
"PAY UP."—All the newspapers are
grumbling about hard times. Puy
says one-l'all up, .say another—Rif t
up, says all. The whole corps Editorial
were never more unanimous. For once
we are all united. We hope they will
persevere in their efforts, until every de
linquent subscriber 'has planked down
"the trady!"
Nrw York• Elertion.—The official re
turus,reccived at Albany from all parts
of the State show, that even if the imper
feet votes be counted for Seymour, Clark,
Whig, is elected by 157 majority. The
thing is therefore, beyond doubt.
Missou 11.1 . — The Benton Democrats in
the Missouri legislature are said to pro
pose a colition witlr the Whigs of that
pody, to defeat Atchison's election 'to the
U. S. Senate.
Mon the town of Tuskagee, Ala
bama, lately, a Col. Benj. W. Walk°, waasent
to jail for refusing to obey an order of Court
directing him to pay over $17,000, which he
held as trustee of an estate At the next
session of the same Court. some of his friends
broke open the jail,.took him out and carried
him into Court, -- where lme demanded a re
hearing. The Chancellor refused it, and
after several lights had taken-id:tee in Court,
Walker went back to jail. A few days after
ward, Col. Reynolds, commander of a regi
ment, mustered his men, and marched to the
jail, accompanied by a cannon, and carrying
banners, inscribed "Walker," and "Alabama
will protect her citizens." They broke open
the jail,,took Walker out;, and bore him off
in triumph on a platform, after he had made
speeeb declaring his determination to con
form to the will of hia friends. A clergyman
also made a speech ,encouraging the riot.—
Walker--was then borne to his own house,
whore a hundred men remained on guard
with him. The Sheriff, with his posse, fol
lowed thither•, but at the latest accounts had
done nothing. •
California papers publish in full a
long speech delivered by Gen. Miller, the
British consul at the Sandwich Islands, pro
testing that the annexation of the islands to
the,l.lnited States would be. a violation of the
treaty of amity and dommereo with Great
Britain, and also of the, subsequent joint
declaration of England and France, and
could not be regarded with indifference by
Great Britain. Ihe speech is most abusive
upon the character and aims of the Unittd
States.. The presence of three large English.
vessels of war was thought to have home re
ference to the above protest.
ccvcs, Bon: & Co.—The Philadelphia
Evening Argus of Monday, says :—"We un
derstand that the creditors of Messrs. Reeves,
Buck & Cros representing claims to the
amount of about $700,000, held a-meeting
last evening, and agreed unanimously to give
the firm any extension of time they marneed
to meet their liabilities. Their assets nre
ample to far more than -cover every dollar
for - which they are liable.
.The works are
Still continued—the workmen expressing
eolifidenee in the solverny of the firm.
•
Loma nub Tanuto 3llafters.
SECOND 11.,EcTuttE.—The_ second. Ice-
Lure of thy-Union Fire Company's Coursctrwill
be delivrod to-morrow evening, by 'Rev. J.
W. NEVIN. Subject, " Self Education." Dr.
Nevin's high character affords a 8 tiffieient
guarantee that his lecture will be both able
and interesting, and we trust there•will be a
large audience present.
CARLISi.E 'DEPOSIT LANE.-At 016
recent election the following gentlemen'were
elected Directors of this institution, viz :
Richard Parker; Henry Saxton, Jun. S. Ster
rett, John Zug, Henry Logan, Robert Moore,
Samuel Wherry, John Sanderson, Hugh Stu
art. The Board was then organized by the
election of Rtemtan P.AmEn, Esq., as Presi
dent.
NEW COUNTY OFTICTRS,—On : Friday
last, the County Offichrs elected in October,
Mr. D. K. NORM., Prothonotary, Mr. Jon::
M. GREGG, Clerk of Courts, and Mr. Wit. LY
TLE, Register, , were sworn in and entered up
on their duties. Although elected under
strong suspicion of being Know Nothings,
they are vitarmly endorsed as gentlemen of
good qualifications who will discharge their
duties satislactorily. It is due to the old offi
cers, MessrS. ZINN, MARTIN and SPONSLER to
,say that they retire with the well eariied'rep
utation of attentive, faithful, andlrust worthy
public officers.
MORE 13uni - 11.AM ES !--41ousekeepers
cannot be too attentive tit the proper closing
'and fastening of their - tvindows-and-doors-.----
We have heard of several houses being bro
ken into recentiY and articles of value stolen.
Last week a residence on Main street, the
occupant of which was temporarily absent
from town, was found to have been entered
itt n bask window. There was evidence that
the house bad been pretty thoroughly ran
sacked, rilthtnit;ll in the owner's absence it
(-mild not be determined, what amount had
been stolen.
SNOW Scour.—A fall of snow to .the
depth of several inches took place on Sun
day. morning, followed yesterday by a high
wind which drilled the snow ini all directicins.
The rail road was blockaded by snow banks,
and the cars were in consequence thrown
several hours behind time yesterday. The
air is now- bitterly cold and much suffering
probably exists among those who were not
fully prepared for this sudden and sevet.e
" cold snap."
BurcuEßlN(L—During the pak weak 1 ,
our farmers have been busy butchering, add
many porkers have been made 'bite the Oust: .
The price of pork has not been commensu
rate with the price of corn, and consequent
ly there fs a disposition to desp:itch the hogs
with less extra fattening than heretofore—
Mit. EDITOR -A 9 Winter approaches,
the practice of putting coal ashes in the
streets, has already commenced. What
right has any citizen to put his pile of dirt in
the middle of the street, to the danger of the
traveller,, the great annoyance of his neigh
bor, and the palpable violation of a Borough
Ordinance? These piles become so high as
to endanger the passage of carriages ; they
are certainly to a great extent blown into
neighboring houses by the wind, and there
fore the law very properly forbids it, and an
nexes a penalty to it. We desire to call the
attention of the Street Commissioners to this
subject and say to them, that unless they put
a stop to it, they arc responsible and indicta•
ble for it. • *
(For tht• Herald.]
SAVANNAII DEBATING SOCIETI
TUESDAY EYENING, Nov. 2Rth, 1854.—50.
eiety met and was called
,to order by the
President. The audience, quite a number of
whom were ladies, was quite large and evine
eil much interest in the proceedings of the
evening.
The President appointed &Intl M. Ken
yon, Esq., John Morrison and John Moul, to
net as judges upon the merits of the argu
ments produced it Obate this evening.
The sulijeet_adopted,at the last meeting of
the Society viz: "That war has caused more
misery than intemperance,%was.now brouglik
before the Society and discussed by Geo. W.
Leidigh and James Lee, on the affirmative,
and John Lee and Dr. Win. G. Myers, on the
negative. The decision of the judges was
given in fitvor of, the negative.
On motion ocr)r. wit, (I. Myers, the fol
lowing was adopted est he subject tbr discus
sion at the next meeting of the Society : Re
solved, That the prineiples involVed in the
Nebraska bill, with regard to slavery are
just.
On motion of, Stung M. Kenyon, Esq.,
that judges fur the next evening be ap-
pointed, 'Messrs.' Thos. Leo, jr., John W.
Huston and Walter Stuart were appointed Lyy
the President. On motitm, the Society ad
journed to meet en Monday evening, Decem
ber, 4th. • .
SAMUEL MYERS, President.
W. Lmmun, Sec.
REPORT OF VISITERS
To the 1 lonorable, the Judges of the Court
of Cumberland County:—'The undersigned
tWO of the Committee appointed hyth%Court.
to.visit,,examine into and report upon the
mule of management and present condition
of the Poor House of the County, beg knee
to Mate, t 1 at iti- f discharge of the duties
,as
signed them, they have visited the Instuu•
tion at different times dining the year. These
visits, generally, wefe :made without giving
any .not ice to the Steward, thus afordicg, him
no oppnrtuuity - to.atrrariiematters and things
to suit the occasion, at d'-we axe much grati
fied in being able to say, that in all instal MB
they found everythietg in good older.
the apartments looked into presented a neat
and tidy aptiestiinters- The inmates of the
House looked eheerful and contented, and
whet) questioned as to their wants and wish
es invariably replied that they had every
comfort they could ask for. Their , )Tithing
is abundant, their diet nutritious and health.
fal. Any who are sick receive the' advice
and attention of the regular Physician of the
establishment, careful nurses being employ
ed to wait upon them. Labor is provided
for such as are able to perform it, in eonduet
ing the business of the house mid firm, and
:ill who have sufficient strength, participate
in this-healthful. exercise.—Children Rho are
born in the housi 7 t, or are taken there in their
infancy, havei4oper'eare and attention hes
towed upon them, and when they have attain
ed suftivieg strength and years are pit out
to service with suitable persons oho engage
t o o teach them some usefl trade or employ
me —The of panpoN registered
on the books of the Institution on the Ist day
of November, 1853, was 12f. hero have
been admitted since then NH, together with
Iti out-door paupers, malting the while num
ber provided for during the ‘ear of
these 22 have died, 1 have liven ~u t ,
and 1113 discharged, leaving the, monbt r in
the honse, on the Ist day of Novemk r.
including It; out-door paupers, lo s. le ml
ditirm-lo the-alAvei-- 407 -transient o -4
have been adinitted, and their wants st.i.ph e d.
Upon the whole, your Committee Is hilli-ti4 . 11
that the Institution has been ‘%e li ina!,iiged
for the year just expired. flespe4 etc.
C. sTINMAN, ,
J ( )S. 'l' I? EC,
is.;ow, to wit, 13111 November, 1854. !Tad
and ordered to be filed, and publii.lied it. the
papers of Carlide.
By Order qf 1 1 ,' C'orit't
In testimony whereof I ilaVe hereunto set
my hand and the seal of said Culla at Car
lisle the 2d day of December 185 1.
JOHN M. oil Enc;,
(?erk nl Cuurt Qtfor.
December 6, His.l.
ADV EItTISE ADV EIITISE I I .—The Merehant,
'Manufacturer, Master Mechanic, Profcsst”bal jar
deed, every class Uf the oommunit:, has or ought I e.
more or less to do with the advertisingeolumus ..f nee
papers. Now Is the time for the trader particularly, to
show his'eolors. Everybody is en the look-out for win
ter goods. Therefina4, take advantage of the engine rea
dy to spead you on to fortune, and advertise.
Have you a House or Farm to Lei or Sell? Advertise!
Do you want a !louse or Farm? Advertise? Doy - ou
want Board or Boarders? Advertise! Have you Lost
anything? Advertise Have you YVound anything 1
Advertise! Has anything gone Astray? Advel tise !
Do you want lielp ? Advertise! Do you want a Clerk ?
Advm List Do you want a Situation? Advertise Dry
Goods Dealers, Tailors, Clothhts, Flow Fancy
tioeds Deniers, Hatters, Furnishing-Fiore heepe.s. and
every body eke. dr , irous of handling
peust.—do you want Customers • Advertise!
Ps if The circulation of the his d justly esteemed
the greatest ordination I/f Di{ ill/. iLknee: 1,2, that
beating engine, the heart. It del el, to all parts of the
system, giving I Igor and strength to the complicated
_machinery of man. Thin living find. n het h, r rev sleep
wale. sallies briskly through the arteries and returns
softly through the veins. How necessary that It s hould
he kept free from all impurity, and yet i o n 1102 ligeLt
many are respecting this great essential to the enjoy
ment of perfect health. 'Derangement in the Liter and
Nerves is generally the primary cattir: a,911 ofnundien.
Indigestion. and all the harms:4lm eeelings attending
Dyspepsia, which makes life a larrthon result ft nt it.—
, Suieide would rapidly follow suicide. if there was no
cure. No one would suffer long, It' he is able to obtain
1. bottle of Ilootlatl's ealobratell German pr(-
1,..tr0t by 1)r. C. M. Jaclison. Plailiklelphia,,they, rarely
fell In affecting a permariOlt cure.
l'alpitation of the heart, Nervous Disens , s, Live'
C,•teplailit, Neuralgia. Il)spopsitt., Cestiveness and
ore tdl relieved and out, d hi au ivy:lalo , ly sloe t stetee• r
thee, I•y Carter's Fpattish I.lll', the great t•n it ana
pe• Hier of the Mood. It tont:tins net a pat title of Mu
tely, Opium or any sea lons dreg, It is perfo .tly harp •
less. turd has cured inure than five hundred eases of dis.
c..n only refer the reader to the rot at v., 41 few
of may he find in another column, and all of
bleb a.O detailed in full arnund the in It i s the
I.et of all Spring; and Fall Medhlnes. and pesseEt.t
an Influence over the blood truly reloarkahle.
See Advertisement.
Ih PEPSI A .—lt has been the Qtail v of Ph V.
Rivians, to discover some remedy for this
complaint. IVhether they have been sur,:e:.iul. mm:om
for the suffers to say. There are. In this country, hun
dreds of thousdnds 'who are suffering from Indig e sti o n,
probably, in most e.ixes. caused by their ow u in(l,rudenee
in living. To tin 60 we would say try Sly ere' E‘traet of
noels lies'. It has cured, and w ill cure. the worst and
must obstinate eases of Dyspepsia, and ail . its concomi
tants—Costiveness, Siclyheadache, IleArthurn, Flatulen
ey, Acidity, &c. See the following certificate,:
Bev. A. 1,. MYERS—Dear Sir—ln the winter of 15A7 0 4,
I suffered beyond description with Dyspepsia. and a train
of other evils dependent on It. I had applied to various.
DoctmS, and a number (Win stroms had been ecommen
ded to no purpose. I procured and used two bottles of
your Extract of Ittvk Dose, and found almost immediate
relief, so much SO. that 1 have used no othe in,,dhk e
since, and in fact., Fran find no other, which In my deli
bendy opinion, ran bear comparison to pmts.
And In all case,, when I have the ()ppm tunity, I re
commend your Extract. as standinglirst over all others.
Let all who are thus afflicted try It, and find what I
have found.
Truly Yours, .CI:0. B. CONKLIN
West Morldon, Conn. '
MARRIED.
On the 30th ultimo, by•fWe liCr. J. Evans, Mr. DAVID
MENTZER. to Miss .ANN PRY, both of
Frank cord tc4viiship, Cumberland vaulty.
On theUlf day. by the same, Slr. \l'l 11.1 AM KLINK,
to Miss I,I7CETTA JONES, to or this co.
On the '27th WI., by the Ker. .1. Evans, Mr. EVEKET
1101V)1111), to Miss EVE CATIIM:INE MINICII, both r.t
Cumberland county.
DIED.
On •Nlontlay owl:log last. Us'. J. V: 11.108. N, of
this tswough, aged about CO years:
f?,,The Puncral of Mr: Thorn will tab.. , plaeo froz big
roslitouro, tom:011'01r, [Thursday] nt ball past 2 o'clock.
In Lsiwasrelr, Pre dh the 24th of Novends•r, Mut:
VOGIAIS, eldest duughtor of Col: ~Ineeb Bing
slt, dec'd: