Irisdniuns, Pulp Ito Volitind lift. . staiet—Ausssna iffpAt ! so law I , Intolerance in Religipn. . tia . -4 .S•lat—ffeserrees •in Sprats, i , is-ha veil dlfoe w. its west ~. . ~ . 10--- ~ , .. to draw s wet 4 isT%. behatf. Froek dm. Wureequer ( Mar) Falladium — " MO New York, July 19. ! ill. ... too, of Madridois not to be depend! ; - During the post we e k th,ree Catholic meeting HALIFAX, duly IS.--The rap] mail steam- donut la st anetther riticiiial dicer has made hoomoo'bra bees wholly or partially destroyed. 14 4 Pliallar% CoPuill . laitchl lkwa July Si ar• 1 Weir presumed aifildreetbs6 a reason fin' * dealt); The first filet at Manchester, N. H , and its des- rived here at 5 o'clock this afternoon. , ing to take any setive steps in support of the traction rotated from the spirit of intolerance FROM IRK BALTIC . —Sir Charles Napier was , Queen's II thorit in religions matters that so much abounds in theu v. lying in line of battle before Croastadt, but rep I Th e re p or t whf o i k we have received goes eves oommunity. An Irishman had lacn murdered by t„ June 29 no attack had been made. The En - further than this, and speaking of a "Yrateraisa a stable-keeper; and after an examination the glish frigate Desperate had fired some shot which tion" between a portion of the ' and the murder was held for trial for the offence; and the the batteries returned attseit on the church followed close upon the ghemernund was ewetom a t a me t mea b e ird w a as i ihvised i a s urra to to- thi l oteda t sell*,:thet"Port of a o rmu ciefierst "l & Id : conclusion of the examination. The next was the 26th and 27th of June, and the fortifications ' D nansa, • • h er to m i x . h er crown. A a: DorcheSter, wit( ro the Catholic meeting house I were destroyed. I Regency is mestinsed, with Nervous as s umem was blown up in the time with a cask of poider; FB,OIII taz BLACK SIA.—On the 24th of 1 ber, and if member, then the sole chief. In op for what reaaou, i does not yet appear. The June eight Russian steamers came out of i poeitiss to these runtora, whit& arum from ale third ca.ee'was at Bath, in Maine. The maniac topol pod attacked three allied ships, at th ß e e M d ou b t, ti me le the pew aufwoama on 1 ares Orr bad collected a crowd in the street, and in teries, wno the midst of his harangue ' the doors and win- The allied ships engaged were rho furious : the other side, that the insurgeuts have saffered , dows of Which were smashed in, and the build- Terrible and Eecartes. ' e defeat, and retired wpm Toledo. The wither ( its for this ruiner is the telegraph, which is in ing then set on fire and burned to the ground Th e affair seems to Lase been a running fight. hands o f G overnment. I t may no d ou bt ha This spirit of intolerance is foolish; it is worse, The Furious was considerably damaged. I the true, y Raldjuk. but it does not come before us in a Way ais wiektd; and is undoubtedly fanned into a I The main body of the allied fleets were at ., which anaiaice it to any me a t . dame for political purposes. Now, nuder our Sash are the additions to thus isformation we laws, all sects in religion have aright to be hem. Some English bouts, taking soutal at the ' published day. % Lai we ow l ey b e f ore oar have the right to build churches , and worship ill I mouth of the Danube, exchanged shots with Wale I . I them as to them , ball seem best; and, such being 1- C ossac k s. i r - e - ta . ciers to-day. rhere'is no doubt but that on ' armed insurrection exists in Madrid, and in the the fact,'what is tea be gained by a warfare of a: ri Tax .. , A1411..a1F. —On the 21st and 22d alt an ara • and t h at t h e Governs/meat had not b eat one sect Spun another? Religions wars have in important battle was fousht. The I:articular.) , r- - i t se p u t it d o v a. Ili itultid Waif all ages ! ern the bitterest oaf wars; and when are derived risen a dispatch rout Byrault. Omer , the • • pal seat of G overment, t h e tasuartts . thee have ono- cemmenced there are blows to bePacha fell eau the rear of 25,000 troops near Sit- , non ham been a b le to ma i nta i n i tse lf . Th ere era burns ree-ive , l a' well a , ' to be given If me PartY *lstria on the 21st The battle lasted nearly two" 1, many churchee the other my he provoked to days. The Ruesiane lost about 2,500 killed ` ofileers in and about th e y capital, of great . tome, but not one of the number has Dee for m burn churches also; and after this game ha s been They, however, made good their retreat reeklessly played : out, the parties arc whers they The plans of the campaign, and the move- ' ward to maintain the theme of Qom babble- 11. now threatened with such imminent deetnte were in the beginning; living side by side of mol e s of t h e a lli e d fleets ar e kept a profound se- l , i don. each other, with less means and worse temper cot 1 We are surprised that these *yenta have been than when they began the affray A telegraph is being bnih to Varna, Shtunla, In this city the Catholics have demeaned them- ,so long deferred. For the last two or three years Widdin and Creilipoli,-50,000 Anglo French the 8. • h nation hes b een r i pe f or t eierree d es , +rivets ill a manner that deserves commendation m ap s are still at Varna, and St Arnaud and In the finds of a portion of our pnnlati. ' and in all probability the only consideration 'n a deep Ponce Napnleen arc also there. On the 22nd I which has restrained them f rom action has b ees prejudice had becn raised against them by the the cannonade and attack on the Russian rear ' the recollection of t h e ev il s un d er w hi c h th ey circulation' of Oise most improbable stories guard was beard and Gen. Canrober sent 3 squad many w e haele r ea so n to b e li eve , honestly runs to recantesitre Naar Paella is preparing have so lately smarted. By whom has the na -1 tion not been plundered—by whom Dot dragoon thongitt-that the Cathelies would rise in a mases t o establish his head quarters at Itustchnek. l ed and oppressed? So it is in Spain, and so it is on the sth of Jnly. I.nd slay all the Proteetanto • ni, cumnitinte.“,„. with the Danube are ' as rota s throughout Europe. She has and, and they were 'Nebel - Ay v er y much anion- kept open a , fir a+ skistova by the Turkish Flo- compelled t h e wor ld to & Fla i r o f her, and the I kied that the predictien failed to be true--as- t ot, fortuned of a country which once were of naive:- tonihed to find that the Catholics were about nn Get, Vareigua Dililliers toms:tends the divis sal in hays fallen so utterly in public ea that day as tonal, torietly attending to their own , ion of the French army embarking for the Bat- ' t i o i on th e e few of the thousands who read the stfairs, and manifesting nee inchuation to moleet . _ bulletins from the Danube with the deepest sax- It. uy one. or "return evil for evil." iety will think it worth their while to give more is time that a portion of the public should i come to their een-es on this subject We have than a glance at the intelligence even of a revto no knowledge in the mutter, except in common lution in Madrid. with all men; but, so far as we do know, the Catholics have never entertained the faintest idea of doing the Protestants wrnng, by any as saults upon their persons. or it tacks on their property. They have their own notions on re ligious matters—their , vmpathies, their creed. and their toveionce for their Church—ant they have the lam.' right to them that other denomi nations. have tv theass All they ask is to he let alone: to be treateel a., other sects and other men are treated; Co better and nn worse; and this we say from no tantiee other than the public good, for we arc no candidate for office, and do not in send to be, and have eating to gain, for our selves or our party, lif y reptrentation that is not in strict eanfornity witlf truth, both in • spirit and in letter :".' There are great interests aivolved—t he penee.the welfare, th. tights, and 'the progres- of sock ty—and the press should at no time, but c , :pocially now, utter a word who , ir . ttncleney may be to put thosw• interesig in nerd - - - The African Slave Trade The Committee on Foreign Relation , t;nited State..., have made ail vlaburat.- report, which by Senators Mason, Side'''. Clay ton, Douglas,. at ii Weller, on thr subject of the abrogation of th portion of the treaty with Great Britain, aimed .tugtv.t.l` , 4'..!, which hind tur Governmeut to maintain a naval foree on the Il'estern coast of Africa Under that treaty the two powen • auputated that each w,,uld %maintain ou that coast, at least eighty guns, to enforce as far a , pos-ible the I.up prialsion of the We.,t Indian and Braudian .N , trade which to ~me extent WW. believe (,) • Ln carried en under tile cover of the United It was provided, however, that eith ,, r p rt, th , treaty might terminate thi+ arrangement. u due notietlo the other The repkt th, p"? 1,•:. .t•ons of this 'kind with any f)reigt.; , w. r it fate , that the method adopted has pro N-d inade.inat. to-the restlts contemplated the t .0, .f sign tug the treat), nd I hat en t years ha+ dt monstra: 11 the ut:cr luau, the present Sy' NU M Mt /068 of lite frtm, unbLaltby nature of the service ha i•et , urred The lit itish govern ment Liaa maintained ou the station vreuty-r•ven vessel., arr ing ;Mt guns aiklinatity.d by 3,0011 men. The total aunual expense of this squad run has reached 6:).00U,000 lu the year 1'45, alone the number of .leeths o .eurring in :t, re.tch• ed 250, and the utimber scut, how'', invalid was 7 1 . The United Stitt( M b..ve four vessels, mount ing ei z .. , thty gunk. on the coast, at iin of $1,000,000 per aunuut The sanitary thea-ure adopted by the Laver!. 1.13% e been so far suucetss ful, that the average of deaths - upon our 1-quad ran is proportionately much below that of the British. . France, which at one thas stipulated to kcep an equal force with Great Britain in those seas has procured a modification of the arrangement, and has now only twelve vesse!. tuLre Such hate been the exertions made t. suppress the ifave trade. Now for the results En 1842, when the Ashburton and Webstcr treaty was framed, the number of -;aces export. d from Africa wac 5(1,000 In 1543, it rose to 55,000; in 1`64;, it was 64,000. The best evi dence goes t.. -,Low that tile slave trade cannot be crippled r oven checked, by the means at present employed In thirteen ye ir, our squad rta has only captured 14 vessel- Brazil has putt stop to the Importation of At ricang Cuba :Intl P r Rico arc the only ports now opt n f , r, vecptiou The Coll/Nit therefore favor tlit withdrawal of our naval fusee / from Africa, and its employment in cntshing on the Went India lotion From the arguments adduced by ti. committee, it would appear that this latter vcis altogether the cheapest and most effectual policy So lon g Cuba and Port -, Rico shall belong to Spain, tiv:rf- is little hope that this traffic can be entirely suppressed. The only method by which the exertions of the naval powers can be made available, will be by surrounding those kalaado with a cordon of cruieers who shall keep bright lookout for all the suspicious =fin i3CIDE-NT.—During the march of the pro ce:i,.o for city grove, on the 4th, a few fiction ists, unknown to-the citizens, Owed a boy in the steeple of the Baptist Chareh, and set hint to striking the bell atter a most dolorous fashion. TI grow outrage and insult to those SUM ger* who had come from abroad to celebrate the day, _arrested .he attention of several pertains, smug others, that of an old veteran in the fiat, Ake of Isis country He listenod a moment aware . launeelf that the bell was indeed Willits, and inquired the cause. Hardly patient to Bain to as explanation 4 it, he prated to a deep soar, received In an engagement with the-Brit izia—"There," said he, "is what I bow forth* independence we enjoy, and do they sou the bell on this day:" Liu eyes lighted up as he mur mured a wish that s shot 'night ailarmalas °roue bell. Faction btood rebtiked.--.• Gemara. Dresocrat ne.. A Down caster Lab ►stonished now, of the people of 1; alum, as witness the following from, the N. Y. Evening Post: A.t. One of our hotels on Tuesday, a gentleman 41‘ evidently had not-"been chute" emeasliely, ienvided himself with a cigar from tie ediee, miatte s r smoking it half up, returned m saying tlist, lie "lad used it all be wanted 4, sad was ditto tale a walk; if the clerk beard an" one a cigar, he could sell it in him if pomade •--if not, he woulLlike to have it saved till his return!" Literal Let The Engi..,lt iin v , Jf-battle ships—SA. Vincent, Roy a l William, Algiers, Ffannibal and Terrible, Steamer Lynx ,in3.4l;ers, are embarking a force at Cherbourg .., A.s.t.k —From A.mia tRe news is bad. On Jane 19th the Turks met with a severe chook, in attempting to storm two n‘tioubts be twt., n Luirbent arid Kutais Th, llik,slauN attacked them on the flank dur ;ii,c, filo :18‘1131: and defeated them with a loss of 1,50 n men.' 13 cannon, 35 standards and the nt;rt camp equipag were captured. Th. ^rew of the English frigate Sanspariel or Shukumkab, and the crew of the English frigate Sampson are fortifying klatrin ebtd An erroneous dispatch was published, revers ing the account and stating that the Turks un der Selira Paciia had defeated the Russian 4 with the alio% e lo.y, but reliable accounts show that the Turk, were disastrously defeated. 1. I k Eli POOL j 1 ARK LT- BICEADWITI /TYS. —Busi nt•ss it, wheat and flour has been rather limited, w , th. ut unacrial change from our last quotations, 1 , •ipit.1.1..y of prices is downward. Indian eoru rather active-1s decline. Some circulars quote wheat 3d, and flour 6d lower. Me'.-r- Richard...in and other leading houses . Into weAtern mum! flour at 36s 6d. Philadel phia. Haltimore and Canadian 37a. White wheat 10s a 1 ls. White and yellow corn 355. A military insurrection headed 'by O'Donnell, had broken out in Spain; 4000 of the Madrid pniaon hail marcifd toward Toledo - LaTEsr —Madrid is covered with barricades, the garrison fraternizing with the insurgents, ii ,k ek and t Y Donnell r..atoit, : : t.. attack the palace lntelligenee u. .... 30th ult., state* that the ~ .ern was 'much agitated The insurgents, to the number r.f 4,004), wer- at the Campo Deltno .. about a gun Ahot from the Palace. I /I . .iEnpuz2:, ,!'iroctor of the artillery, had t.. attack to Ili, although -protesting kw. r,, th(.. Queen. Gen 143111 hxd al so re • fustA, on the prooxt that he could not rely on o . lfronne it it .aid has summoned the Queen t..ch.nge her Ministry, and unless she did so he w“ , i' 1 att4cl; the town the same evening. atxbeatioo of the Queen 1$ under *ion and ti e fortn4tiou of the regency of wind, Narvaez shtluld he a member On the other ;11 I ••.t Parr... 1• clan the news received from Sp ,:n to ilig,vorable t. the government, and the Insurgent 7. n t.r having been defeated marched • 1 • i Ye uf 1 n olutain3 a despatch from Bay :b.. 3,1 inst., which states that on the '29th uit., the Queen of Spain appeared on the Praou, and was well received by the troops and th.L. populace A itxplu•ii frit] :lb , Spanish Government of Cue 2d, states that on the Ist,iite 4 P. M., the Queen's troops attacked thtr insurgents, and galued a signal advantage over them; the latter were routed, and many officers and privates have asked permission to return to their duty. From the Lonellog Daiiy Times. isl 73. THE SPANISH INSHILHEMION.—AII though it were not enough that the Eastern portion of Eu rop. Aoulti be given up to fire and sword, a civil war 11.1. broken out once more in the Spanish Peninsula It would be premature as yet to of fer an:, very confident suggestions as to the scope or extent of the insurrection, or as to the designs of its chief promoters and leaders. One thing ' only is certain—that never have the depositaries of power in any European country sine* modern history began sunk lower in the estimation of a people, than Queen Isabella and her minions in the estimation of the Spanish nation. Every thing in Spain is prepared, and has long been so for an outbreak. Whether the present Insurrec tion ib of a character sufficiently important to ef- feet its professed object it is not for us as yet to say. Everything about both the Girrernment and the Court of the Spanish ()seen has long been rotten and unsound.. It would be idle, perhaps, with regard to the bulk of the Spanish people to speak of an abuse of the forms of liber ty, save in so fair as it served as a war fry and as an inscription upon a banner, the idea of a Constitution never had a serious held upon the Spanish name. De Lomis never wrote for South ern nations sock as we see they ill our day.— When the Coastution is presented to'the fancy or the imagination of the Spaniard in the form of a beseitiful.young warms whom he reeds I with devotion or of a stern warrior before whom 1 hie spirit quails, the Spaniard is a Coastitution: alist. lie is slow to oomprehend .thie aloe dia. tinctions , upon which we set much Mora. The people, if they are in insurrection, have not riesn ' for an enthralled Press,, for corruption at elec tions, or for the mere exercise of despoild er. They require something tar more to dm r honor and chivalrous nentimeni every ismiivid coliow nal of the natiou than matters of State porta'', ere they would consent tt tate up arms spinet the Throne. Such a motive has been, f in the disgusting immorality and earrupdon the 21 Court. A- recent licenee has 'bees by crowned heads at various epochs of the 'hiatory of Europe, but wpm/motion much if at any per iod of modern history—even in the Courts of Central Germany at the conclusion of the Seven teenth Centur,y—thers was a more thorough and pervading foulness ef life then has pran ged in the middle of the Nineteenth Century at the Court of this young *WA Qneen, who was raised to the throne by the devotion eT a loyal people. There may bb other reasons thrust fee ward as the more pesisdneot canoes Ow this in atopeotion' boulthe one which has Added forms and vigor to thew all has beet; the iopeless de- Pli6ity Of. the Spanish' tkwirt. gram 140_ taloggaphie ditlipatdhaa we_r.bfidi . tchatiy.gi OM* seen tbat,the wrio in shady headmid the siruffbrisidable The Direceor of the Artillery, Gen. of the Paris, July 4 a -,4 , Tax MORALS OF MFAICAII General Avails' disgrace by being reduced to the ranks, for the crime of bigamy, has been confined. Ilia second wife, whom he marri‘ I xi by proxy, in the early part of 1752, was the . daughter of the late General Sanchez, and is a lady universally esteemed for her and virtue. It is now said that the un , happy lady, in despair, committed suicide. This man, Ayala., commanded in Mammon's during the exciting filibuster troubles in October 1851, ' and for his defence of that place, he was promo. tad to the rank of full Brigadier General, reedit.- ; ing thanks of Congress, and a cross of honor from the then "sovereign State of Tamaulipas." Such is life; and such appears to- have been the end of a "fast man." It is strange that the present ruler of Mexico should, in 1854, punish in such an exemplary manner a crime in one of his subordinates that he has been, in substance, , guilty of himself. In February, 1836, Don An tonio Lopez de Santa Anna, as President of Mexico and Commander-in-chief of operations against Texas, entered San Antonio de Berar.--at There lived at that time, in L 3 Villita, dose by the memorable Alamo , on thc banks of San An tonia, a young, frail, un u•ootting daughter of Eve, whose only fortune ws4 h.r fair name and fine appearance. :'he Irt• plea...int to look upon. In my youthful (!,tys 1 '.tle‘r her well. The chief of the minion }mot saw h.r.. n't unable to corrupt her, had one of UM own olue-rs dressed in the garb of a priest, wit - performed the marriage ceremony. Yearo eihrmr..l, sod when Santa An na returned to -owned with the laurels be had itaf'.cr•• , t tit • fivlii of San Jacinto, he marrie ,if ‘l, t.ni :•• a Colonel is the Mexican Tee 141: ESTION ANSWIMUD.—We clip the fol lowing interrogation from the New York Mirror: "To cut the matter short, we will simply say to our amiable and patriotic Irish Roman Catho lic friend of the Knickerbocker, that we don't believe in conferring power upon men whose al legiance to the priest is stronger than their alle giance to the magistrate. Does he ?" No, sir, and, what is more, we doubt that Ful ler is acquainted with one single "Irish Catho lic" who does. We have seen the attempt made often; but it invariably fails. If the Catholic clergy possessed that immense political power which thle Mirror would have the public believe, Bishop Hughes, during the agitation of the eom mon-echOol question, would have placed the Catholic vote on the aide of the whigs. That he was not able to do this shows that in all ques tions purely political, the Irish do as other citi zens do—vote as seemeth to them well. Dar inrthe war of 1846, a large number of our vol unteers were Catholics, and, what is More, they did their share of the fighting; and yet every gun they fired was aimed at the breast of a Cath olic. Anion; the chaplains in the army was. Father O'Reilly, of this State. Inds gentlemen prayed deny for the triumph of the American army, although that triumph amid only be ef fected by overcoming one of the strongest Cath olic countries in the world.—Albany Knicker bocker ----4. "Free . Cabs." The editor of the Lexandria Democrat (Red Riverl. ' La. ) has been spending some time moose his brother filibusters in New Or leans, sod writes joyously home to his paper as follows: - The fate of Cliba is sealed. Nothing short of the hand of Ontnisotenoe can save her now, and the Queen of the Antilles may set about prepar ing a wedding dress for her marriage to Uncle Sam. It does not matters straw whether we kick up a war with her about the )3lsak Warrior case, or let that take its place among the thousand and one other ittiFtiplibes we have impatiently endured. There man expedition on foot, hav ing for its object her overthrow, of a character altogether too formidable to ad mit a loop upon whidi to hang a doubt. This is positively true, and what is a little remarkable, there is ne dis guise whatever shad it. Nen talk of it here as an event beyond the surveillance of chance. "There is no such word as fail." Blatherskite meetings are not held, nor are our risible. exci ted by syrnbolie giving' oat and mysterious hints. But what, alsonnts to scusetbing more and bet ter, a hundred *Ascription books are open, and I states faet.within toy own lnsowledgo, that near ly belts salon of do bask been subseribed in New Origins, sad paid in. Any one can see these barks, *two the paying down of cub by what t iniz w eaLl countless throng crowding arennittheso, and bidt over whatever amount ha petty dap proper. *uniting .01 war, Ughcannon, moon, Innaketa, powder eta, leave here al most daily for New York, and large bodies of einigraattineNpraing forward to the Rio anode. i4ibis WO thew parse movements hare enonioared no toberaclet, nor lin they in future. ideurbavo charge of the expediiion now who are not o bnir-brained Ws, bat who are energetic, praettoat Odium operators. They will start with the Janette of war—oroner—with pinked not the ragtag and bob MO of large cities —sindwith appantenenta for any ciourgency - . thineas..A seas lir* war tlnteisksati sessititaed anise& by Uoenes his breams oils with gas. The reason for the act was, time, Who es a rano "eye b i bowed ar alsonsider shims& of amooyorhisio he hod so hook . mellow* know so oimoshlo oho dosebo of who holed &ow titut helot Was esi ei4 se hie oodooshoo. :lp is as• 0,46 . Ihe atts, . SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 22, 1854 DINOOZATIC sun NOXINATIONS WOR GOVSINOIL: WILLIAM BIGLER, , of Q County. Jaws Ql WHAM COURT : SEMIATI S. BLACK, or somerast County. POI CANAL comusszoNn: HENRY S. MOTT, Of Plk. County. my, The Directors and barmen of the Erie and North Bast read, evidently judge other pee pie by themselves. Became they are venal— because they lime their price, in some instances a very, mall one at that, they have an idea that everyman, DO matter bow exalted his position, is vulnerable to railroad gold and stocks! It is only npoo thisltypothesis that we can account for the slanders they are now circulating against t h e h onesty an d integrity of the Judges of the Supreme Court of our State! These gentlemen have never amore been accused of corruption, and yet the hanipuirou—the licki e s-,,f t h e E r i e and North East rued have been, and are, boast ing that the snit to be tried next , week in the Supreme Court of-our State will be decided in their item; They even go so far as to say that they have dame of the Judges secure, and to name them! I, :e av t .t , villainy is bold, and corruption stalks a in open day, still we have every confidence thiethis boast of the power of the "almighty dollar" is a lie—a base, and wicked lid That Mirruptiou is their only hope we be lieve, for we well know they have not an iota of law, and less than that of justice, to bang a hope upon' But the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania is above, we hope and trust—nay, we firmly be lieve—their leperous approaches! We say to our friends, therefore—and especially those who des pond when they hear such boasts from railroad men—to be of good cheer, "and'wait u little lon ger " The day of retribution is at hand: There is one spot, thank God, railroad goki l hannot reach despite the boasting we have alluded to. and that is the Supreme Court of the State' FANATICTEIM ClUsE.—Withiu the past week we hive been called upon to record several instances of outrageous sacrilege, growing out, it is to be feared, of the spirit of fanaticism which has of late become so fearfully rife in various sections of the country The first was the rob. ! bery and desecration of the Scotch Presbyterian Church edifice in Detroit; the second, a too suc cessful attempt to blow up the new Roman Ca- 1 tholic Chapel in Dorchester, Massachusetts; the third, the robbery and attempt to burn the Broome street, New York, Baptist Church; the fourth, the robbery of theseommunionlierviee of an Episcopal Church in Philadelphia; the fifth, , the destruction by a mob of the windows of the ! Roman Catholic Church in Manchester New Hampshire; and the sixth, and most alarming, the destruction of the Roman Catholic Church in Bath, Maine, by a mob who had been listen ing to t the ravings of the street preacher who blasphemously designates himself the "Angel Gabriel " These outrages furnish food for seri ous reffection. They indicate a state of feeling which threatens fearful results in the future.-- Albany Journal. As the Journal says, such "outrages furnish food for serious reflection." And the first sug gestion that presents itself is, how intelligent Christian*—how Editors who ought to be above the bigotry that so disgraced the dark ages— can be found to pander to the spirit of intolex anoe the mystic order of Know Nothings promul• gates. If it is right to burn a Catholic Church, it certainly is as right to burn a Protestant! If it is good policy to proscribe one religious denom ination, it certainly is not a worse policy to pro scribe another: so when you have driven one system of religion to the wall, there is no safety for any other system; for the same reason ing that leads to the formation of a secret organ isation to overthrow the Catholics now, will prompt an organisation for the overthrow of the Jews, Lutlisrians, or Episcopalians hereafter! It is understood, remarks one of our cxchan- gas, that by the tenets of the "Know Nothing" associations their members are sworn not only to proscribe all foreign born citizens, but all Catho lics, wherever they have been born. Now, there are thousands and thousands or people in this country, of the Catholic religion, who were born upon the soil, hundreds of whose forefathers fought in the revolution, and who, many of them, were themselves soldiers in the last war with Great Britain and in the Mexican war—Ameri can by birth and patriots by impulse. Thew was one Charles Carroll, of Carrollton, we recol lect,.whe was somewhat noted as one of the sign ers of the Declaration of Independence. Be was a native, and a Catholic; and yet, according to the doctrine of the present day--a doctrine our friend of the Girard Empress is using all his learning, and talent, to peemnlgate—he should have been &chided from the deliberations of that patriotic assembly. Thon g there is Chief Justice Tansy, also a native and Catholic, he too, so oordingto the same illiberal dogma, in u nfit to oc cupy his present position. Then, there is the amiable-and somewhat celebrated Jos. ft Chand ler, long the Editor of the Gated Ga✓tte, no, a very useful Whig member of Congress from one of the Philadelphia attiring he, too, is a native Ostkolie--still, awarding to Know Nw. thingism, the Girard Express, and 'its correspon dent, Mr Chardler is a very & VIM ., =e— very! now long, we ask, will such nonsense be tolerated? It were laughable, were it not dan gerous; but as it is dangerous it sheald be frown ed dews like evesi - lotheerenussut barbar ism of the post! - _ The following oonvernatiwujiteidd to haTe taken 'Awe not s thousand miles - from this: "Sir. year em is ads seigiberhood Woks tether poor, "Yes, ft does Wood; but our lop ore fire rat,'" ••So I soft; you aro not in rarer of tonspersuo• in thin seethe. I suppusr "Well—Cl, dionipli median no soli on, Anyo,,li,w-"' How hie the Gainar upon *be smunesion of the “Sunday Liquor train," is the above. "0, yes?' it is in favor of its supplunion, though it would like to sell Mayor King's Prothonotary, had ?pi:look's gubernatorial "hope first." Prank Smith was bang at New Orleans on the 7th iaet for the sutler of his wife, and the Mayo; of Aletandria, Luitialana, was shot dead daring an affray on the 4th. - -•w~ ,- - -- - 11160 Gm Quitman, Mr. Thew,har and Geu. tianndernowesatad at New Orleans, for =mina• tion on chair at being oonneeted with certain illtrboateriag operant es, him bees ratamawk on giving bail nailer promo. It will be recollected sag at iltal Awe ream* reflood to gide bail. Istsoody- brea.~bort 1011111110011 will melte teal ramaribis. erber• ' The Pittsistrgh Fbet exposes 7.! .•••,` whige have been attempt* to play" order to elect Fetlock. It says that up to February last the whige had accomplished nothing towards se curing the cio-oppeation of the Abolition ist& Without such ts)-operation they knew their case I would be hopeless, with it them was a possibilij ty of success Hence it was that great efforts were made to nominate Laritner instead of Pollock by the "Fusionists, - and they would ha% e bUC °ceded but for the power of the "silver grsy'l por tion of the party in and about Philadelphia. Af ter this, the plan,of a "Fiana" wee apparently given up as impracticable; but the passage of the Nebraska bill, and the Fugitive excitement in Bottum, brought on the "attack" again more virulent than ever. But. how the thing was to be accomplished was the wostion? And it has proved a sore question to all concerned. No one appears capable of solving if, though, if we may believe the Post, the effort has been made, if not successfully, with a good dent of pertinacity. Not one contract, says the "tt, is yet signed, sealed and delivered. Mr Darsie, being of foreign birth, is obnoxious to 'hi , Native Americans or Know Nothings; and he has consented to withdraw from the ticket. His letter to that effect is in the hands of the State Central Committee; and the publica tion isouly delayed until other bargains can be perfected. ' B Rush Bri.lfordi- the Native American can didate for Governor. Upon the withdrawal of Mr Darsie. the de.tign was to have Mr Bradford decline the racef..r Gov..rnor, and take Mr. Dar sie's place on the fusion ticket, for Canal Com missioner. That would secure the Know Nothing vote to Pollock, and th , whir vote to Bradford But alas' CIME "The beat laid sobemes of mince and men Gang ail aglay." To the astonishment and wrath of the whip, Bradford refused t' withdraw lie illgieS that Pollock must get out of the ;ray, and let him have th , Gubernatorial track And he believua that he has only to be stubborn and resolute, and it will be done But Pollock, too, re f uses t o r • out of the way It is said he has joined the !inert . Nothing:, himself: and why then should he be required to withdraw Bat Bradford is stubborn His infancy was rocked in a mahog any Lrac • Ho is a man wealth, of r( spectJ bility, of °mil - Alton. Why he be compelled to .ihar,d a n , • f , ir , nru lip of being Governor of a great Democratic commonwealth? Not h.., indeed' He po , itively refused So fusion is "up astump' there. Not I , eing able to buy the Americans and Know Nothings with the Canal Commis sioner's berth, the traders turn to the Abolition ists, and offer them the vacancy oct-asione.l by Mr Dsrsie'- withdrawal George H Riddle, of Allegheny county, in. suppo:,ed to be available The Democrat, favored him with a fat office once He rewarded them by abandoning their ranks He Can prrdrably have Mr. Darsie's place; but upon one eondition /-4.0,, the Abolition candi date fur Governor, must withArv.w, and sell, a— sign, tran4 r and convoy hip whole party to Pol. lock But Ir.: another diffiealty Potts refnw s to get unt f CI.. way Hei- rich, and can afford to spend a lit tl.• th.• campaign. Fle is am biti on ,. ,iniething might turn up that would male a great man of him yet There is nothing like being in luck's way. A nomina tion for Governor is an honor not fo be had eve ry day; and when obtained, it is not to be re, linquished for nothing But ~hove all; Potts a. reputed an honest man, and he denounces "bar gains and sales" as dishonest He does not believe a few demagogues and trading politicians have a right to buy and selr the great mass of the peo ple. He believes it wrong to buy and mII tie gioes; and equally wrong to buy and sell white men He appear'. to be one instance of an Abo litionist woo considers a white man as good as a negro; .and that nettlaer should be sold Again is the fusion scheme "up a stump.'• The plan, it will be ..een, was originally to put Bradford in Dursie' , place, Wiiinot in Snayser's place: and have Potts wiiladrax. That would have left a clear field for Pollock. with Whigs, Know No things, anti Abolitiont , 4ts to hack him And the other candidate on the sate ticket—Bradfoid and Wilmot--would have bud the same backing. But the refusal of Pott4 and Bradford to d i s c ii tic the Gubernatorial race knocks the whole thing OD the head; .in tumJit is Orown into titter eo n . fusion. L.„ There is another difficitThy. Smyser refuse: • 2 to decline in favor of Wiltaot Ho thinks a whi t e should not be requ:red toiittbdraw from the tick et to make room for fl reniigade Democrat We think - to, M r Silty 4 cr is right and shoul , l stick to his test. Bradford is right too He t a better man than Pollock; and has hosts of friends who will nevus consent that their taco: its be sacrificed Potts is right too. "A white maw is !LS good as a negro," and should not be sold. Such is a brief history of events thus far. W.- shall keep our readers informed, from time t,. time, of farther developments. A new era of political gambling has dawned upon us, rich in schemes, and tricks, and infamy. Is it not in famous? Party leaders professing to have prin cipled, and asking the confidence of the people; yet ready to abandon all their principles, and tra& for the fusion of a rabble that, they hope, may secure the spoils to those leaders once more We are satisfied that the great mass of the peo ple of this State will Morn such political gamb ling. The Democrats have nothing to fear in the present eampaign. They have only to close ranks, and charge firmly upon the disordered rabble of their frantic opponents, and our old Commonwealth is still safe under Detioeratic rule. Ser. The Gazette wants it every where known dint it is in favor of the suppression of the Sun dt. Liquor traffic! Good! Better still, how eller, we want it generally known, especially by temperance men who have been urged b:, the • (*am, to vote against Bigler upon temperaue, grounds, that. while the Gazette is thus prolific in words, it refuses to art: ft refuses to use its influence in favor of temperance in the only place where that influence can be effectnal—with Mayor of the city of Erie! If the Mayor will only do it—if he will only take the reeponsibili ty--says this immaculate Temperance paper, we'll stand by him---but, then, "we have no disposi tion to force him, against his inclinations, into a course of action calculated to effect it " Verily the Gazette is a contingent temperance paper— very! But the Gazette wants to know, in em phatic caps, if we will sustain the Mayor should be "attempt 'to enforce the law." When we mumtenance disobedience to law,.wbether State or National., it will be time enough for the Ga unt to alit no itti answer. such a questteel Ia the isesatiate, hot telepevease ma watch the Gard& How it was tots Dowel - ....--,,,,p__ _ _ Oonalusive e, 4' m:::=1 The Louisville Jewerreal is the leading organ of the whigs in the Sonthweit, and ia..the'netenl par ty conflicts between Democrats and whip exerts wore influence than any other jourtutrof its par ty It took strong and decided ground against the Nebraska bill upon the danger of renewing the slavery agitation in consequence of the repeal of the Missouri Compromise. The fact that that journal failed to make any .impression is the strongest- pawl that the people of the Southwest fully approved the measure. The Journal, how ever, eepudiates the issue of "repeal" 'proposed by thi. northern abolitionists, and in discussing that proposition makes an argument in' favor of the principle of the Nebraska bill'rwhich, for conciseness. compactness, force, and Ls:inclusive ness, has been .eldom eqtvilled. It is an argu ment addressed to northern men; and with a full oonsciousness that it. c, unanswerable, the Jour nal challenges a reply to it. We present it be low, with the single remark that it is surprising that no j porti , m of the people of the North should advocat, a pr )p.Aition which degrades them by detiyin•g• it. them rights and pnvileges which it e;,te:etif s to others located on the Southern Aid() if :to arbitrary, ;inc The argument is as folluws: "And, after all, the main principle of the Ne braska bill certainly in itself right We do nut see how any man of good, sense, who exam ines the subject, can come to any other conclu sion We;can see no reason why the general government would say that the people living on one side of the parallel latitude shalt have the privileze of deciding for themselves whether they will have a certain institution or not, but that the people on the other side of the parallel shall not have that privilege. Such a discrimination appc.trs to us to have no foundation in justice, reas,: , ll, or common serest We cannot but re gird it to; odious and wrong Give to th e p e opl e of all Terrionei the power to choose their own institutions, or give oto none We should al most suppose that the northern people would hase too much pride to be willing even t o to the discrimination which they adrf ) . cat, 11,w ~ a n northern folks reconcile it to their fe. at northern folks shouldn't have the ',an- privileges of self-government as south ern f ;tk.—that persons living north of thirty-six thin} -11;.uld Le denied power- freely exercised by ail persons south of thirty-6.x thirty" When bef ,re it wa. known Ora the people of any por te,i; , f the eounuy contended zealot/sty for a .te ,i,ri ty filo • r'.ii ,:senors of power; priutityci, ~ other sections' Will our Di-. 'n , •rti u- ;he fay bestow a ti.. ,phi or and it v,• rd or two upon this view BM che I.;(c. , ite don't likt our quotation, from that nexcellent - whiz paper—Th. Bwieth, ' nn m , , -011—Mr. Fillmore . % ho•Le orgain. And uo wond. r for th , Commer.-ift/ proves the issue the sio.z , • rAist. , —the repeal of ti! , Nt•i,t ,utprurtirahle.' There is .11 , 1ikr.4 A Intrli as to have one' : . a , •orite b ,I)kiN annihilated, and the ~,/ ha , "done that sumo - with the (; , i- , ttc%, in,tauee No won ler then our neighbor gets itiky and suubs by declaring hi 4 determi nation it. , t to "shape his c,mtiu,.t b) the Comin.,e -.1.1.0 why should lie' Certa4t ly li , Li , 4 ri,:h urgk the peiple to wage au tical,l• warfare---:o follow the vnio: 'is r. N•tL tn, "bitter end"—and neither cr uor auv one else Lave the right to }ea nay But the Gazette is mistaken in one thing, hop ever. We have no desire to place it "by the side of t he Commereiett" upon the Nebraska, or any other question! We would latherhave it occu py its present impraelieable hobby, "repeal "- 11.', ••••mnd and fury, signifying nothing," is a great deal easier exposed than the sensible oppo sition of the Cummerekl. 0, no, we dSi't want our neighbor to shape hit conduct by the "dic tum!' of any such kniapir paper! • gar Rev. Mr Balm, of Chicago, 111.. insert* :i prayer of Li+ oWn in the Ohl, B run ch o f t h a t uty. which run , thus' "0. Lord! have mercy nn our .speLial reelvalist preacher,: Mere) awl good ness, we humbly beseech thee, keep tlnku front taking ladies who become converts on their knees, amif th. in to heintirms. and kisAing them. - Th.. r. vererei gentleman evidently flow n th• pr :co "wreitiing ,u prayer." slur NI - Rib rt SAluyler, the dt.faulter. ,the aur man, the F3,btoll Traits-rip say , . •Lit few mouth- :Igo had congeientiou, *.ruples ab-ut rt.linind„ train, on the New Haven railroad un Sundly% Tiler, area "f , .w un r .f th., ame it loft. ' atol - them in Erie ft: . ,,, 'CI: ,s• Hampshire Legislature has; ad- I, .$l , ( Am.)tig the acts passed are preen , fal..e and fraudulent -I, Stork. n Bank, Railroad, and ether and town:4 liable fun by mob.. and lilt:, and to ein- 1 , w, nwritd K. tilt nto make testamentary di. ;if then .1.11 excellent enact ment. *dr Orestes A lirowtison, who is a Kom Catholic, is said to hayr joined the Know No thing- IL. -tipul.itss for ono restriction of the creed. that while w need abate nme of ita hostil ity to toreign•-rs, it will cease it.l proscription native born Catholics. sir That modest young gentleman, Ossian F. Dodge, the vocalist, was married on the 4th, at Cleveland, Xiqs Ettie 4 Lyon Ossian had (.19dged a great many varmints, but he could'nt dodge: this Lyon. so like (apt. Scott's coon, he came down! CANADA.—We u o t ieo th a t L or d Derby looks upon the separ,ton of British North America from England, -as a natural result 6f the growth of Democratic principles. I anticipate (said lie) that the time may come when the great North American colonies—will take upon themselves the entire and dependent control of their own affairs. and, if ley are trot_Wominally separated, will be practically and entirely independent alike of Parliament, of Ministers, and of the Crown. It might be that even in such a state of things that great federation might remain in per fect harmony with this country, bound by ties of I , yalty to the same sovereign, although that sovereignty might be but nominal over Canada. I had believed that the time might come when exercising a perfect control over their own inter nal affairs, Parliament having abrogated all con trol over their legistation,.these great and im portant colonies, combining together, might have foraged a monarchical fovernment, ruled over, either ass permanent S ieeruy or as independent Sovereign, by one nearly and closely allied to the present royal family of this country." Nearly three weeks ago the intention of ap pointing the Duke of Cambridge Viceroy of•Cite ads was announced in - the Daffy Times, before it was mentioned in any English journal or hint ed at in Parliament. We allude to the subject now merely to show the accuracy of our infer: Canadians will be surprised, we calculate, at Lord Derby's boast that the resat of their bogie thre, "ender the alight control of the (T'over hot has been in maw of =merle/ prosperity nsParallelad in any other colony, apd leaving Ear behind the boasted program" the Waited Slates." 4'. Timm *ant la Otani fitaCiiil-; - T -- -.10- "Vies Ss News, Aye, "what's the ainret" He t „ this etersal, moon anammesd,siot ~ ‘ T i o' • ilea, is still upon every lip' what'. not be news to Smith, and what II TA*. " ' stale, /at sad anprottable" to Jgrie - in the day we hear the inquiry, se; It "o'nlghts," its only because, ItSv skinned, "we've got used to it " queries "every body," Jut as though r smolt dearth, and "every leiviy" some new dievetopmeat to mettle and ' mh o ,' reiler.t for a moment spun what a psia tg will end the very atmosphere icrgtit t v mi ll, o a of men in anns upon th fate of freedom in tit. The war is lestined to draw IL' .L. , the runiggling and oppretied pv they may at least have one mere et,viot from the darkness of tWpot.i.in Lc!, China moot loan from ber quietly for centuries, is at sea siati t_i t ,, and is- about to take her part fa t !itch century. Lands horetofore unr to ocean g ro i n the continental world . sr, tes. o to be received into the faurly of ••at., , Wigging*, the eeieneei; th e „ 2 , fifty millions .if people to the worli. PV.ISC, bat now the eatode• nobler amain) , and are t .iu• • I them. The great republic is ..r.ttita r I its institutions thrutigh all th . power isliegioning to make itself `At Free preys is thundering all tirr, v. up from the four Cornet. of the steam the daily bittor7 of =Muni "what's the news." The geoerat:,„ will road the events of to-day, and rould have found time fir aught ate • tying course of affairs, 1111COSISCIOLI5 perchance more stirring, yet in th will be living. 3111,. Some teen liar, been enter., where that the Schuylerising 4Ceor . eubscrtber te the Sunbury road, migt; ny past receiving. But it upp , u• the project is gull even It. leg. The President of tb.• Suntory that work has been ruspended t`.i can 1.5 no reamonable doubt ~ 1 Crave, Dillon t C.., btnui; Pa. ) 'I ' 7 Ur. Crane alone, but nn a rate wealth. The inrahn,ot , 'ton .rnption will only b.• - pap in their inotaltnenia in addiuou to the a w. n, 1, taanagera, bold after Crane !Awl , propoitals be tviv u - P , el .! - • , Lack Haven R 4 . a thosli n • no lierti, up! .t the Philadelphia pna,r. , the fwll....tug 1.1411.fi .111 t 1.1.1 C .:r It the Ln - ..eh:: ra , t a poni , in , ftna 1 m he sairveyee regaire.t t„ ;Ity CnunCtla, shall ha.. Fr”ln thi. IT would WSJ II ltttl, tvu fast .3 Fru.-4,, bur) tu.l I:r,t I :• , lead--11.1 drad a.. tb., Du4.e ••. the itialta.47 butt INI!!!!Ellill Tlif../TTI -S , LO Thoatre ,, f .111e,ro P. Tt ..c.ry night_ Thug ~ t 0,1 nature the enterta. , ..uion , ; La: "•.e- be: that the r 1,091 at tb, .nsuletus.U. to hold ,Lll tlia+ de r paehee whieh the linnagert have tt 'W C1111:1101 pretty -...1,n• r. ,L 1 LA..t melt and I •pur 1F1.11 , 11 prugiamrl) , . I AI. A Etzalt litutte 't - at t Won lerf. IN .1. BBAAA, end two more wowed people; and, tf 11: - ,.nk Ar. T Ir a business people, too' Wurinca IP ir's tort Cuimr. ese.tonreot :an.u rl LeitoKt9n. K, It a' 14. x. !toys thrt were being formed al rerions part, antaer■ haring already been ral eminent and wealthy Konio oonneeted with the onterpri.,. W - ' VS.. The E litter tho G where the Know ]othtno• r people .lander oar c cav said,•' and Re helleve it. tu ut ••Koscror tamed In regara r th•• u. • • west* t•• ..ur tem t.. 4, •At MEI —E n o urvioubtefiy Vv no' n en•• of k:6.74er •r' prreautoopary m-s•urr• e.,cl Iti• 1 diztair tlist gtvr• Jolly and mske• &finny for dir or filth ' at Or a ntecaperlte r c;m:D mint tha: : , .10 411 IS to a i due care exereteed In re stmn I • • h..‘r wan the choler !nay rms. • :• Should, I, c•unnan4ly c s. The Abe Ed'Vl' • savi , we ••tare it to heart beosti: r • tv timete.l the; perhapi" we '•were our - preference awl 14ve of slaver; the offi 'we - 691 d under g hive- fr , winch ye , . have quoted. th--r kyrl.... Of we mean ram the first place, we dit'nt "take it t have been lied about at least ones e- - ' last ten years, by Whip and Abuhi • Park.;rteas u that. in the DeNto,''' • the least. In the next place w.• lave been, "in love with slavery" " We, however, entertain the t• :et"_ believe smote Derma rs -- . 1 Wis . have very little to .. • t l easion. If the peep' why let them hug it to 'n , .r of ruses, and they may - all of us.' Su, too, if h ;•'•-" with the "peculiar uastitut . .n it "bone of thail , bon.. a:, 1,7, an. auca a ronPumniato "• I ' t" 4 wnuld kre non') of our ;,'l.! '"' ' "bread and butter. - aL.: ('la right t. eat it or lot .t .‘,on rally, hire a Duck r. • • —se Ilse, ever ealtrutio-ti t, • • as capwbte , ghociti • the right of Ch",•014 4 not. 3% wV ft het ein pow,. the right of the ""‘ touch for two of the Y"-1 • • ' VOL. It would 4.4 e, Lt , ' a 'er - Washolgton Brown--' - to hare the mouopo'o ol ' • • Baeilmood is to the 71 • age rap.," road, to pr dultio. if he behave, i •• Brown.'• nria, 1/1214 he p: Fort Leavenworth "'bout ,n ••• have to hurry up the ,aL • Froecions" will be to. :el la. More • • ',"' • Edward Crane resigned ih. i'• • . 1, Central Railroad Compan; mess to his remptafion it n • 'i „ ' " r fraudaimitis issued '44,0434.0 • • cern' Tht. Crame wa. th• railroad mien- He wii• c• bury road. Adam survived ' cia^suou very much u Nether L • •• • be lost his W`1"• stronger than A. Wm. : ma, • nest reasoner' .4fir Did you ever tee SU r. sad week after week, and n %km npplias brook has dissip..a“ and looks brown—tio r 06,11 qns, 111, bolds kayo a "earl" in tbeta elite." if Briosheou'r irnvn en .e rr 01,1111ity 111 Ilbadlinqi, "twit ► .a.l tlov around by th• propolliog t r r • _ V. bon that the Chows pre Mat la Dwelt. = PIIILAS ,per / 2 13=1 ENE LEM TEI IMMO , .r. f OM