& SLOAN, PUB TNIE 2.5. IEBB DIRECTORY A. A. CRAIG. are. °thee remove.] to No I Hopes Block, id !kw, state meet. Erie. Pa E (7IIAPIN violin and Guitar. reenteoea o o sl o th at. John P. Vincent. Muhl(' arranged for !''on Sande. - NV S - 11 - ER - M.kN, FRREAN ern Blimp's Hotel and the Reed House The been steamed bits fur the best rimmed.' Ibr Priee .100 and upwards. L. W OLDS m.oun etuters of Wen and Cistern nor quality. the best and c Deepest now in use. • t'. r y Bloc I. rear of I.,ddera Furnsee. +tate Arl! .17v Clilll., .07 cOnir•y lOt urillef fun purv.Ne. Wade wurder VdR, 4 nii•t. fo• door • wnt td 413ber WWI DR EMERY. D,_ leo, door. we'4vl Ampt &cam (; \%'. TODD, t h Gareth. Terry. & D.w. ~,;(..sie Jobber• in Keteltroh.fneflllllll Ind Do howls, Waiter*, lax 1114 Martin „ sod SW, rhilaJelpbla & SINCLAIR, • X, T • ' ITII4 , I , rur-.l4e , !:cin.• P+ Lots, Oils. Bru.lses. rertunarty, r..kr Soaps. Ree] M0w.... L EnIOTT, J.rll tug 111 . 4 owt , - WROWNEI.I., of "le Ptlnilc Squirt , , briween et, Hit I' )P, iiiCf%ESY S Frili I E 11 AI3F,LL, R over th• Erie liana. &mu' *,& of .• rr .45„Joe ni tht an Mid warranted not T [) F,IIIVARDS, Loa at Law Warren Pa Professional ~ r c,,atta wiii rrrrltr,,rumyt attention A.LKER S. CO., COMIUII.I , IOII 114Pre Mini* fourth Ware • rnb. r Striate, Erse Pa A, Plaster. Stucco. Fiala, I.llsse amid err . with motor • • r 011.0111 g either by .teambOalt, Propellers. •1 Ra,lll/3tl kARSON GRA IIA)1, ••iII4PR al LAN ..fier Ff ‘nr• Park. ETte. Pt I' \V INI( )0 RE, Pt IP. I'rlll/11,01111. 1.141.101.1, Amu •,rret I lie TENT, III3III0I) & , HUH°. 1V3 ,,. . Enttlii , ' • St tir RI Pr.r. Pa \1 AUSTIN, 1 ., /AV Of & 1,1 b 1 •, iatir), -.l , rr Ppoun-, a1....ral Lnpaa Ina ,i,d Fr.s 1,00,44, I r,l I! .I.IItFA'KI V%si ./I "‘l •I net I I' ie. t .1 B I it • NNISON ir I. N 11.41111) 1/1/..j.,01 . 0. I hefty 1,41 , Nunn • ....paper-. 1.4.14 I" 4-1,1 of Iry I rt. !MOTH STENV.III'I', ,;;;, • in F.n , ) and Staple D760011' Pet, the Kerd House and Brown' s tow DI)F.LL. KEPLER & CO . Iron r rare. killing. Stearn Buller+. Vault 4 tultera, and all artid. of Mar hiaery and , dour to order. METCALF, Relad Dealc , ' in Dry Coody, Carpet, and Dry 1 gird flouNe 'I'I.:IIRETT S GRAY, ',sr. ant Retati Ikrialer+ iu Wet tttl Uri unoce .,Yrk,..urr.r,r,an Prvio. 'done Ware. riour. r,-h, Gk.-, %ails %.ret. Huu, air . . rrro,h op 114/0, i.nr, r , W)1 S LANE, '.k• nit ,z Lane —.PAW.. our, I ,rkauai I e,rner ui We Public Square M S..NI , ()RD & ct) .1. ri,ter. Sink Note, Itr.t.te,i nun , t gni canto. ~1 rl, I.a r. 1,11.1.11. 11 SO O. Reef itttee P 1.0,e ,qa,ro, k tie T HERON ' 4l- i •-1 , /MOO •on 1.'0.M. imp Jour p "Y RUFUS REED It.nersellt t to \ 11, Or '1 1r... 11011 n.id +me! u k DWELL & fIENNErr • it•l • eta.; li•eakt• in 140 CO J.k.1411, (• w ere, ('a, ,ni H 'lre !run, H•pei 141:61111, i.ati.re vlferl, four 417)01, hell,. Pa Bel . 'r A rtt“..ll.ring- 1 a Irene r , ncidlp• a 1.1 .r'' tee l•r1.0.1.,”0 ;EORGE II CUTLER, . 1 zip ( Duna Pa Colleciwyte a nd • aci4ti.;,l la pfo;upthrr.,“o. l JO:•_qA11. KELLOGG, 114 f 11er:ha tit, On Luc MO, DO, k, Iri rr n „ 11, Pl oter 11. I *chit...Fish ton '.llll Eli BROTHEL{ R .n i Dea e. .11 P.olltel JAN .rn•„r rto., ,r squr,•• , •14. , I r r 1)1 . R1..1.N SI,()AN, riol vi ,ce.l...rotts Books. Bien Yrlbirr • r nr,!• - Nil V. ORA% r N.w l()11 114 f,./11 n Hlo,h JOHN . IiEIRN A ‘1,( .. 1,111•. Ira wf • Int 4/11. eiOUt ",, .1 I 1 ,, 011.1611,• Pub. Nolrms J P e 1111..er I. II Z N Ii; )4 ,- And thAnevise • ILA? • 1.• rpor, No I I , 1,1•,1,1)ne II \IF:., .1 ‘CKSON A: SON 11111=1II • . 1 , 'orlit...up, I roe. Pn uT,AftY ressizo 4.‹ art, Art , .r. 11 - r,tit'• Plork - 811 \i•l ill LIH P.l nwr , ght. Huntington band !lord. • ~" v 4 ...o.ll.is,estic Dr) 411 . 1 . '.l • J 7 i Nn.\\.~ift..ork. nett to & 11 tit ILL, I I . N. , tif lOW /I r hip! 111/I. N ' , I I P UI I‘ Lint A Til 1 1 kit •, Del I I/I rver, • I 4 • r, , 1411,f . lit/61e 11.11 :1111'. Pa 11=1 1;1.1 Ni 11,08 ' •• , n I. I rot Sr ii • IV lc • , Mirror•, I, , µ t or k, Ivuv .r pert . \ IJR.ITII ', l jiN OMNI dot ko ••• rwp , re kfw it, .it offer...lp NIA Ir. Pro. " r %.vriinied per ef, s more r,arrel 4./f gssikm. by 141 k b., .141 LAIR. ' 4 ' , • Je4,„, -6"° *r1 45 1 ;. V 1 . 4 • ART'S „• : .. : . w , , •, . . . . • ~ 1,, - • - 4 • - - •i4l • • .L 4 - .' • • • . . • , • I f 1 4,. ~,,, :• ,r• c ' 1;' ‘4 i ! ~.. • .. . , , . • • •,,, . ,• 4,.,...,;,,,, . _ _ . SI 50 A '. 12 11” ADVANCE. ~., ..... . , . . . . .........,.... a ............„....,.......„.„.„..„,_________ - INVININIMMIIIEMMIL..,•-1!_"2"_.........101.—".......... INCEI=I3 fIIZIZZEOI I=ll ). 11,Jurftre v , . rt. • • 14i ap,,,r 11,1 er,itar,lo- vl 1 4.y0.n eta • 0411 all ;WI, Pttl ,- OCk. COMP, I=l ••• ./1.1.40-4 le lln ow. 1.01111 .01 paie b% ' A 4iNg.i.‘ii • 1.1 it , , KAC I. 111 •I~ltr 1 $ k 0, 1 aSi Mt`l.A =I 61, . feN•ed, ,a iOt (frit bserber, - IS PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAI BY DUBLIN at &LOAN, TO WHOM ALL LETTERS RELATING To IsUs IN lass SHOULD BE ADPEESEEL onicz-No. 9, 1110Wr9 BLOCK, BEll, PA. Priatiag Odee;sornar of State and sth Sit, B F SLOAN, EDITOR Air TERMS: If paid in &drama, or indite t tnoo:.ho, $1 be; if not paid as &bole $2 will be charged_ . • sway subenriber failing to pay withen the year, the paper will be diecontinued and the arcount\ett with a pr(.. per attest for collection. TEJLIMS OF ADVERTISINq JNI" Si it* en lineb or lees makes square...l (Me Square, one week, $ 75 i One aqua:o unit :00 Oar " 2 100 I One " P. !. 00 One. " g" ISS ' nee to 675 JO" One square a year, changeable at plealure, •„, 'Cards inserted in the business Directory at $l3 per annum. Si: lines allowed for n Card, rver 41: and ander eight. $5 Two wwares—S mouths, p m. , nth• Otte, $ll SO, 1 year $l4 Uae eolumn, or 1U equare $3O, 3 mouths, $lB. r, I)bitnary and Marriage not ,e e Exibitioas, roacerta, or, 50 ber cent the shove rates Special and Editertal oent. , R iI:A. Relivuus, Public, Fir- CompanN end char r 1.• •. tall the above rates p/ - Merehanti and others repntrit.l4 tra(oeut •t•.nce. in their advertisements will be aP, , re , l rnr, ' , quart , . pa per, and card, for AIS. atiditymal spar,• the ,har gee will be in prnporuon• and the adr.rtitem•nt, mn•t be strictly • confined to the leptimate bu•inei.• of the ad vertiser Pa sent for transient n.h . ertt."nient- required in *Arline*. Hills for yearly advert..irc will he r.re•rntod hall-yearly. A redm•uor, .•f In per 'rnt wt,i be mad.• ir all except temporary adrert+.emrnt•, a - h,Ln paid rn ed• PAPER7HANGINGS , JI•ST reer.veu 1 , , 0 , 111 to tno lasge.t, r hespeq tt i be c,l • • 46 leo Wall and Window Paper. • • broustli to 1,1, tr.., I Ih.. Itut tketilit to match' We ,143 now prelend paper was ii=ased from our of the iiker.• afactaring Ilstablishmenta ,r 1 thetuuntry. and at a bargall., rot ~r .1011.00 e who pretend Sowell :tiro t "Ind a r, ,rh r that For newt . . aatl an.l w. 101 - B LIN h. Erie A pril 15, 19 1 / 4 4--te 1 / 1 7110 says so: },:a% lA tI) oho bar. tog .114 • it, •I Ire wt.e Cll,lllo , to t • f-r, to, F.. . . Lentil!. 4ualttl •ti., quani tit r truth tan deny U. (hat or Il it, u. , ,t1. h 5,1 - hi r Gold and Silver ‘Vatehr- ul • r.•rt r,pt,. Ware. Tn Sam rarnor. an t Basket.- to , tt:f Pitch rt., that Call ist , lOU r I lion. Is tPqUeoted Gaud. repannell and M.., i unit?, 111 11.)t 'W.( .t wet - hot 110lIt• :rock rt rt. 1.1 Lk May 6. luM4—.ld. l'a-it Rum. I ro Watchman. Whatet he Clock QT111A610614., welt trouble your friend.. tr.r Ow t su. eau go to etorktott sod Fulltrr , and Isr". iiir ,itsot about nothing' They ate now receiving Thirty-five r ase•, tat Of them beatittAll all of them good May 6, 11454 51 10U1) Sisarrileos BAGS. hot .1, And .1 • by March - - Die rograyin , Dl ES altered. F.rivelopes stamped in till r iniespathle Envelope. self-erste... . • •• I . • • •' fur Grocers, and putting up Gard,. ;sod Prilt•ed directions, at Colbert's I.nvelope Hitt.. rlt., toe, printing Eotablishment.ss South f',urth store, , PI, '.• N. B Orsters teal he &h0e...4 4.prt/ui er as per dry few. ar March 11.1.54 di. 1 t Notre — PrtLa - §iesinsta p city of (ilaigow Great Battle fought on the Danube:: Tussauidt Reige.o& AtUr d dad Wooodeel B ‘ yesterdays arrival or The I hues' .1. intelligence was brought ti. 1•c, a• •t. , best ocieeted and cbeepr.t 'gore u 1 I(d1.1,1g a 11 , 1 ' n.shi rood• a er i , rouptit iu t roe t„., apnea to keep up hi reputa...... ..• t..• • the shortest tailed Cant! , .14.1 taii.ishuient s the r..‘ yr, • •••11 %t • • 4 House. of those splendid good.• c , • , part of lush Twireas I assupere. I Cravats, Mandker. hlr.- It—, , I partment, invite. the .iiteiition d , • Fovea and Vasa/ !nitric , hung in the LI1411 • 1-10111 I' 6 . • give you lito It nun! • • , . everything to /age. ,d,„ , et en thing neerle.t 5 . cheaper than in rt..,r,0, , .• , Oreet LO tali al tre.ed ~• t.rir, May 13. 1.51 North Western Irnr2r,..ce (lira Ns 76 Wolomi .treer • • •ad ‘l4l, Sire.) ' h Mr, Pt/p.n.' , " Ait Ivor g : 111%.,1t Nr WRI' 0A1)%1"1:1.,. 1 Fire, Maria.. kEIERI. VCR . Huntington k Floyd No !Sr e , M. L. Haliovbeli A t'°, No 14; Uartet t I David S Bros & Co, von . 'IF,nQ for _ (' N & Geo kbbou. 140 lIA woo° k inner, s, o ,JI Mark 4 Menton & Dpnc 1 rc I caleb Cop. ♦ Co.. Ina Market .t 'has hiepttgee & , 52 , 'Ornmerce PI preset &Lo .11/inkers, rr P "i tit r.l lion Will. U Keay. Scott, Bate - k , lab Ni „an, Hurls, (la tr ed. to .15.9, .Idariet a. Deal, Mglisnin & a .cor : , ort u.n J /us eloverator. Henry Caciweil. Pardon Rennera vVon A Gaibml , A. !fennel,. JleoPeSkinfif 1 I. Bs,. NEW GOODS. out...rater h. „ow frzeirtue 4 very arse •t Ts t -..t 1 and Rummer anar et lat of Dry Hardware, arc., whlch were purchased at these roods veers ro.l add for • few weeks eat. e. , bee feria confident tit..t those Rho may faro, 1, the, COMM% will and ill- , itbelf interest to coati nu: • it, t ti% ll.t it former engin:men, a Aid! Intending to porch:l.r trt.o e• .n it litre 10 tell 11441 hts stock before puree 4 el..n !were Er te, /UM 17, I%S -4. JAM,., , 111'C:111 , -HEm- - AZIEIIIIO.Is7 i;(.7.1t1 IVr Jtl rect., :Win I Inc It j of - Pure ikupertean N .11,••• it., 1,1 , 1,e lAOSIgWOrth", Spark; Ing 1 . 41.1 , ...set,rl..i • Owen calms N. These tt 1111... if • VI , P jr,. liK :ran unkvinented. tree fr , ta2 %lc ar. !tat I I • r. Inter, pressed to tie fiatllrel .1411 r 3 hr.... Jun. in. 1-54 -4 tit ft fit\ w CEIRARER THAN WATER at. Mae. Tripo li. I cleasunglit4 poli.lsthe el kt,l 6 . ; $ • tug I,ls .ais C Witler, 1 lib I:ri a I 3 ;44r al June 10. 11 ' 5 4 -1 . RI Rl4o\ & • If You are Building )N1 'vomit:pudic tor )oor ~,„ 11 Bell &stares and everythong that rtr • - tt it fun,-hk bowie. a. I can and will loco sot Inc crt ale.t tiated ut. in tor laser June la. J o rr.7,1 If Yon want a Glass of Pare Soda Water I \HAWN tlenewsb Block 1 , .• Pyres t..tuct, .re leer fro m i.e pussonoth. edeete of Lead f.tpre, cet , .i H.. .1 Wu, Er J.., sago, (I 4-1 Bl'itl' & Oldlia =all, No. 6. llonr.el tic. 8 • :.tc A Large and well "wive d elntridnn:ll v. ' - i n t.rnr !l tnentrA ett,n4. Wti.te 1.4.1111 e. /Intr. rf unJ MON Wirt, presarri, bloc n and eut ginesn.,re ~ • ilia euaturtied wire, Falb* C ullro and rOlteltr lir ie. AI at. Iftif, Oh band. Good' , odauvbn with plowdu re 441 i..nrked n ub tart Prier, at for /neva 'Ned ch Mu) 13, iNS4- J `.O Hata Caps. StrAw Gods ~c T HII: •1 flat lisel:/L.I tot h.., Old VOlReto• a n.l she pu:iloe oils. thai h.... r ua open, L a .104 k of the .a,ke (..t..• 1 . 11, ILe -I.re ‘,ecilpte, Memel. Rom. & ,r 1 SC.. , • •. Hrou I. • /Iv he Rol/ Srr lAA pp IL NA I. C... flVe hill. 2 call. two.. Ma) 1 .. .1 - 411-1 r. Hl A9r k New !print and annurser Goods, r 11 1 11017r" ..... d Tr% 1 14, Nu - new ,rt era Uw s e e., •uaru,, ni La p ,. I•li 1 . 42,1 41.011iP in the eltl R •elott pettehaaert shwa : A trellOirr; 4,7r••11/ eager, he refit of Onsper/ a / a wss, let lea,' lit wer cent, lower Utah early sprit's ; rartv ~1"! IA .ril thrill at pr,- tee/urger than r,..f Wore eTttr,r stock of Urea.. Goods condoms IS part of It•oe., Ir eh.. pt,,,f and Atriped Huts, Block kldoo. , ttrat w, h I IV-11. Kr/ITel, blue lie De Late. Berme and Cha/le; ,nits 111,,r plaided. Iller colored all wool De I..ph• ago) fitura4l. 1 1 1C0eft hinted ble'lltia and Linn.. . miler, and en Ott.. ?morn. Knelenb and Ann. , n - , .;.•1211.1m. nud Pr nil• ke.. lot . Kw. Ma) VB. Ite.l4—i 3CASOlaili 'Ards of Ned cow... warranted fa.; for nosey refaades. et S CeLl.. tlen WO alto, V en.,-. alma yard. or print.. desirable palleree. / at rent. :ler 'fwd. a, May 10-1. TIBBAL43II.HAA G INt.UAMi+ YlLoal A Caw: lif l 4lyairal &SOWS 'bee a, and Svo.r4ble d altersh, n .h-b co.t Merril, to import. no 124 cent. icr yard Mny 10,-1. TIBPAI t 14 -- - - Fnnio! AlicTiom )u-1. it ‘A,• printed Lavinia, tl narvis per yard. color. pet/hell, I ist.ml Ma v 110-1. 'lll4dlloo. I.—A'l'LOTSprisg Kyle Bail net , hoe L.s 4,11 P Mee sad Boy-St/3W And Lettlao•a het.., en. v,,lyetyag Aft), 11-4. YRS C -.- 01.'N1 ; kit) A "IrTrit. Tank. !darter. Na t ;if , f ov a , — rho, Latta Taunter aad Late Bordered 1 urn n,a, at wooder- Val bargaltle, _at _Ma 11 . TlLtli AL* 4r. HAILe. 5!500 I . ABD, of 74 1 1-4 red 4-4 Breached Shorting.. and Sbartiort. toren lla) t 04.04 per ard Maple—t. tllllial-4& If lapir% 111)*Zin01 4[lo Midi a. Mom. Bloomer ti m. vitt 2;1 . 5 'truly bosses. wants. is /a or BOOTH it ST E W ARTS. 11, (frit ttkip Obstrber. I SATURDAY MORNING, AUG. 26, 1854 DZIOCRATIO 'LUZ IMILIATIONS. Carreepracktesse tej as Brie Oieerger. New Tons. Ali. 12, 1964. C hole a .o Brookire—Demerarson of Ckureise—st "coos" Sir. miler—Lack of Ludes—Ferry Mature—Erie Bgivalos ! romp— Know Notimessit-- Prophers—Perfeessous Oesett•—ssad like interernitlig helm. For ter., or three days put there has been a coolness al most uncomfortable in the air. The general health of the , city has not been improved by it, as this half and half wee. 'akar is the hareem time of Cholera. Wednesday, a very cool day, there was • barge ineresse of clues reported. La \ew York, however, the peetileuew ,some to be eebddiag. Your correspondent Is Informed b 7 a physician In large practice. In Brooklyn, that but • !mall proportion of the Cholera ernieS In that city were reported—that the awls gate, truly stated, world be - almost equal to that of New , lurk. with its immense population. Brooklyn wetter is by no mean• /0 healthy as the Croton. The wells of that eity furnish a liquid too plentifully imbued with time. Large numbers of the physician! would rather pay the lam thee make the report, as they could be ocumpied half the time o ruining to and fro from head-quarters. SIMI, all ear case, of Cholera mine from individual haprodensee. Let • mar, watch his system narrowly, •ad ear, for It, and he is , There is no lbattoposs about the disease. S:4l n rn .nth, Another of the old landmarks of the city was yesterday inept alley by the conflagration of Wednesday last. The Brown etroet Presbyterian church, Dear the Centre Market, we. leveled with the gronnd This was founded lepton& 1 , 20 that •r the congregation wee gathered at that:time; the • ,, rner•+tone of the old square building was Mid in 1421 Herz the eloquent diaeoiuses of Drs. Patton and tt , Adams were listened to for many years, Bee. Mr. le the present pastor 'of the Church. ad cur old ehurelies are going. I was paaaing down Mina street the other day, on the corner of Grand, there is a large old brick church which I had often boiled - This- time, a change had come over it, in one feature. A large entrance-way had been opened. a horse and carriage were passing under the portal, and a crowd of ! •lfen sat by the quondam sanc tuary, cry 'clung horse-flesh. Inside the family pews had grown int., horse-mane. A small church In Nassau strut, one of the oldest in the city, between Fulton and John, has been converted into s 'Temple of Hulth," by S. P. Town4end, the Sarsaparilla nun An old rhumb in Brook vil nry serves as en auetton room Down town, the pun down end build up fever has re.oommencell furiously. On the west * side, especiallv, near the Park. Standing on Chambers street, you eau look through Murray street, into the hack windows of Columbia College, three blocks, through a great up made by unroofed «Wu The aut. cut palsco- of "New Amsterdam' are giving way to tie ficcot warehouses of Young Alowies. Pregnow hr. , „ =II IRE I IR , . in. , heard tram k gentleman traveling in tini u•l, at d We.,, • Ft.m7 of a very elever Northern Naiad -1., a lio he. heen playing & skillful and seeeriestel genie en whorn and wc.tere people far the past five year& The •• end u a very pleasing &chigoe". He pretends thecd...gie&l Atudeot. H. hangs around t i,, Vale etiei Harvard, idl be eau pack ,11 di f tt ••I .1 ,- .1 11.,orniallon ahem uto eualthirk• lEMINI rh ien:t, Irern• rt!. , l their parent,. are and where t h .1.• then trey, ling through the South, be atop. r,,nienee "tale hospitable plantar, preteada that • !..c C.Jr•c•••C ~ . ids 1 . 2 , 111 his course, ulna urgent request 4 • . r.t! , fuan'e s..u, hle intimate college friend. ro de. -ueic t ,n•nmstaacer, twitting eon be too good for him He lives 'n the fat of the land, and always enstrives to* I.), hie pocket book, with severed hundreds in bills and drafts lie don't tell of It, but, feigning, with Jesuit!. . cal •ratt:ner. and out art, a concealed sorrow, he excites I the •vmputhttiug toquiries of his host. non, bursting tutu tears, he confesses his loss. Of course, the planter's pock.f book is wide spread. The theological otadont helps himself, and walks off. Bat no don't ever Opine book to dice ricaltty again. He goes into new oonquests. ID one how 'vet, on the Ohio River, he eietimised throe 'geiith.vcer. within a few miles of each other. Perhaps he may favor •ome of your readers with a call. He sells hiniseif Mayhem, alias, Yahoo, sham a half doses other name, Judge McGee, Rev. Yr. Station, N. 0. and oth er-, bare .uffereel by him I,s 3 1 „ .it hi, I IMIIM - .^trter‘ n.o• n New Fork v full of people, yet the cry continues, "no. boll; at home." New York people are not at home. That w. t%t• I,vely, eouversable, visitable part of the world le not her.- Tiler, Are plenty •1" lousiness men who "can't get sexy,' an.i wouldn't tt they ooukl, men who feel morally they are not turning a its pens* every day In the we , ..1 But the greet deleteeey seems to be the sheens* of toe fair. Limits' are to wares as hooesty--sesreer. If my x tew would •oneent to stay for the comfort of the im more,,i," , trhelnr.:•, F.usines•, they coald have the sway of the whole field matrimonial. J thr, NI fl., , err ‘1 'r rr •.•1 J II A Dorm. D i•o! hunes 4.). Mot. • 'the new arrangement of the Brooklyn Ferry Company, atkltitg lOU per cent to their previous charger, naturally crcate , tli.eatisfaction. The poor among oar citiatina contetted that they hate been thus taxed to support a e l nipped Ferry for Wall it., at the same priile a- .I.ll..dher Verne , Instead of rising, loaomotion is get ting •Itrapar su all other direetion.s. Too eau rid* !tenor sa miles by stage, in Sew Vork, tor three cents; by car, in cr.ur eats. W 4, New Yorkers get a tafy few things very cheap but we have to pa) the difference n the exceeding lientlfeen -of others. ••:t.t.ne foolish peple residing in the tipper part of the Eleventh Avenue, have taken it into their beads to make a patri.dv• demonstration against the Hudson River Rail s tad, somewhat similar to that by which the inhabitants of Erie have gained •o tench notoriety. The railroad own ,ar , tnrough the thickly populated portions of the in I nea• Fiftieth it, We on the engine. 800111 chil dren nal, been run over by the oars in the Elwrisaith Av enue and, instead o! moving their children out of the way, the people ore determined to move the engine out of the ttreel by tearing up the Mil,. A meeting was held last stetting by residents in that vicinity and very latatasato r) vpeelies were made. A secret Vigilance emnatitme was appointed, and perhaps you may hear soon of the up tearit.g ttf rails. But the rioters will not and it quits en e ,, tnt , rtalde work 4• it was at Erie. The • act Archbishop Hughes, ,tie sowed in ear nest , ontri , versy. T y e Thou.. easerteel that the American and iri4 Catholics had lately split--foresim two passim; And, t hat. in fact, there were "Know Nothings,' meat ithotics. This the Archbishop strenuously denim. Sat he .creme to have tie worst of the alisamot, time far. A iv•Thet boa arrived in Philadelphia- peploses Load fortune to Seward, in the time to Olaf! MIA Slum* the 7%. , .• is osoioni. Probably be he a Ketevr Mollies. Ills ramorecharound here, that the Preside**, of Alaboald eel lege. Mau. left ranot by tie rangsation of Promideat. Hitchcock. will be 0i:et...1 to Rev. Dr. Stereos of arcestayn Dr. btorriea IA ail/ • very prom we. He has only tamed his D. ii.. and that was shaken to bare beep be •towed upon blot full early. He Is, however. ewe of the most eloquent and popular et the etty preacibere, Red rte largo end intueatial congragalicm would mitiorbledly be unwilling to part with their pallor. Tisis smelt there tiled in Brooklyn, aMr Halbert. He was the man who irell introduced the measure of prewmodog ships from Weer* from the poet of New York, as the lishliatie he was Wyo. ly isermucausl, also, to the %swam* idiom oa mar cantle remmic The 111Horites me reelvtag is this Mated ty. The loss freak in Wail skeet are olamoi gap se beseg the Ay of Jarman. If is was mono sad so tray think, I suppose. They hold a snag amp mooing war Jeivey .bore, mast emit. Trate weft maser yellow sad Arta circles about the Baa, on Thumbs'', which *ere par. ERIZ. PA !OIL llorsasoik, WILLIAM BIGLER, Of Clearfield County JUDGE OP SUPREME COURT JEREMIAH S. BLACK, Of Somerset County FOR CANAL CONIALMONER HENRY S. MOIT, Of Pike Camay . gam irni Pill& ERIE, SATURDAY WOK AUGUST 26,11854. tea*. eseesik aselts, , loM. lasilsime.,_ They peelashey fersiell a tenible stalls *Wag sor *wed semis wine. Te-del, there's so sal at alt—dlimei sad glamor The Palk... rade* If dillinseiref sees* oesseira. ties et Wear sad burden, WU ply drab *sok b U 4 aad imam They lave boa 40Imdlid i, peas de boss ea Melo Mera's prapergt ie tPml sroott7. 3111'7 &oh eat fbr serious mesdames as of tine days. -411.-- ay Yogi, Aug. 15, Übe. The Liirrary 'stepwise of What N n OW— "Julie: end "lbare.ist theDettittriee Preach -ay agetia—Chiplai Mate ilkitifehiese-4,4 o f 4,, 4/ . 4,_ teal osilligger ► Olhow. Wo to as sushi, demising et edits! Per if Minis go ea at this rase, Mare will not be a spot of • ..iitry left whams we may lad rest foe the tole of owe feet. This weal rallostica Ica provoked by the debt of the "Chicle Arrow," Vel. 1, Idle. 1 , paktished ailemishm elty, Nebraska. This city mad* of sin houses, mad about three times that samba of inhabitants! We mart Myatt a new appals dye for New York, cad other villages oat this way; it met he that eis' g la emasißswed a aims it meads de any loam. The "Arrow" states *alb square has boon left rut for the motion of ea Oddiellow's and Itammic Hall Sorely, this would be wield Kirke White breathed so poetisklly and fervently after, "A lodge in some vast wilderness, some boundless tiontirdkr of Made." But for an editor whose sancta's is a piss stump, and a pricier whom press -rood is "sill oat dealer" this "Arrest" is a wonderful production. It is well printed, well edited, and has a decided Young America keit about it. Listen to the way Nebraska stook emapanise do up their adverti sing. "Osseo au Bludgeon% this is the great central Per ry' Hersh for Nebraska! (Styled) fan Compony.'! 1 with a few of oar overgrown, permy r anapte New York stock companies (mold be transported to Nebraska, dii they got a little stare& taken oat of them. Bet what a singalar Aware our Wall street humbles. men would cut, transported to the leaf embowered streets of this city in Nebraska! How fearhdly would real Buffalos' and Pan thers oat-shins the "Bulls?' and "Bears" of Wall erase— What a panic meld be created in the stork-market, by the suedes advent of as irate Batiste. diving toward" the list and helpless board of Broken, with his bind legs and Mil in mid-air' What glerious opportunities the Board weak' hare to lay out moolastbine Railroads, construct uni versal phibiathrepie swiedllug establishments, and imay• nary "Parker veins," in the untried homes 9! mother earth bohemia their feet. We have some pretty good specimens of humanity, however, even in Wall street. They are blessed muses in that desert of Nolligh. geheming souk — There are many that keep to view the end of money-ma. king—mseralarse. They an shrewd in their daily lari. as.., and most liberal in their daily benefit...Akio. Such men esteem it a privilege to give to every worthy objeet of charity. Moreover, there are some who appear hard and crusty, bat do many a good deed in silence By the way, an eminent banker in Wall street, look it into his head to come down early ,•ne morning, and one for If whether hie elate were it the !embitter owning up to titer. He came down In him carriage at 6 A. Y. and found no one but the porter, building the. fire, mid eating a doughnut - "What are you always eating toe" exclaimed the banker. "Yoe do nothing bat munch In the counting-bouse all day. all of yes." "I is.. doom to start the Ere, sir, end I have got to go Ica to iay breakfast yet." "Well," said the banker, "go doe s to Delmonieo's and get your break fast, then," handtog him T. That was . 1 trifle, out ,t showed a kind heart Bat we hate wardered from the oonsiderstioa of our subject the Nob's** literary enriost ty. At Bellevue*, Nebraska, war Omaha, another paper, ales demo , retie, is to he started, ealledthe • Scorupka Pal Indium.' Look out for the day whet Nebraska gets fairly golage Nay we be theft to Lest Seraday the street preaching eindeinent revived a The CM, Illaiteteps tu New 'reek. held over a half doses amain= onetore. deemminatieer toe...else, both Catholic. and Protestant. and anxiita r prntrutle their valuable opinions and experieneer upo it"vital lard-. Von will not hear the last of etre..• pre,.PO , there are loafer, enough r.und tb.. oily to keep ooe of demist stamp orators is eounteaucte. The Catholics and Protestants made amicable arrangements by which each one sass to be permitted t has e his say. at the rate if Et% teen minute.' spiel... At a Park In Brooklyn, near the Navy Yard, More were several thoesand persons assem bled to hear a sailor, named Staler, and a dieuerbence atom.. Stones were thrown, and there was far a titne fair chance of a riot. but it was linall) put down. The Crystal Palos show. signs twaklnr from a drowse, eon's/sent upon its , superhuman efforts to awa ken the interest of as nalatairestod population. It has been pretty fairly rue into the ground, but may attain a degree of success in its lair etfor. The Fall Exhibition meets on Thursday, Sept. I, when medals will be-awarded. It is to hoped, for the rake of the credit and 'mill of the Institution, that it will sot make mesh a broadcast and heterogeneous distribution aa was I:l k eda last year, whets everybody and his relations bad Crystal Palace premium. Tll4 American Inst.tute makes no display this year.- Last year it rank some thousands In trying to compete with the Palms, and wow Iles el. Wonder what is to W imps of our beautifel babble of glass, when the Exhibition la ended. Perhaps some of tbe insiptent Barnum. will take it on a toot through the united States, stopping at all the principal town., and performing the "Yankee Double Quadrille," ala Bann= It ought to be preserved, how ever, to adorn great Gotham. People are beginning to look up the antiquities of our city, the headquarter) of, "Young America!" We have some antiquities Yester day I passed a house in Cherry street, which Is reported to be over IMO years old, (No. 404 In that day, Man hattan Island was smaller by the width of three or four stmt. than it is now. In the lower part of the city, the spasm occupied by Pearl, Waterrioutli Sta., was firmed) under widen Dutchmen ferried the natives to Brooklyn, in a roe-boat, for one penny a heed! The space oretiptesi by the fine old Park on the Battery, ea.. a heap ol stones, wader water at high tide, I believe. These detailt are gathered partly from old tinint Ihcsrbiro, well known sr Laurie Todd, the beta of a popular Imerlean romance.— He is a queer, abort little old boy, about Su yr 9p, has re candy married a young and beautiful wife came? of sofas in kis pocket when 1.14 w to tea, and puts it in his sup. Be DOW has a birth In the Custom House. Tbe "Tweire-abeete-ot-writing-psper-nod-twenty-ti self - sealing-eneelepea , tor-font-orets" men, in Nimrod St., or (me of his enmdatees, hoe got into Amble and into the tombs. je bought de reams of piper Sot hlty cents per ream, of a boy with a Mrstd emu This paper it scene Wlif stolen, and the melndious-worded vender is Jugged in nOnne4inninen. A letter to a merchant in this city, from a correspondent in Labrador, states that the Hudson Bay ecinspeny is known to have instigated the Indians, at dif ferent timea, to murder sailers tram the States, offering them arms and liquor. This, he says, Is the belief of all the reridenta. The Hippodrome of Fraeconi, a person by the way, of fahtdoeis existence, is getting op some funny 'pentads for the santansest of the million. Puha: roe tire is gives, inviting feat and bone eel - sowers for noes trots and walks, with tams Klatte; and Minn/ work the amateurs make of IL A Donkey rue comes off rem, genkohly in imitation of those common in Roman carni val/a when the nee that gets last to the goal is the Assn- Pion of the day. The liillartles as having eathusiattie times at their easp-seetiag in Jassy. Gress orewde of the idle sad maims satirally are led to attend. This...se dan of the globe is not burned up yet, the GPeratiq is pr•h•hlT dehrred vat tool menthes. It best teem *sage that so many yeas cit neesiliive expo.- Istien and hare, has not diesualted the iallstamsed seal of this net, which inched*, many !cream of real worth and chastiser. Bat it is not more strange than the spirit. nipping excitement. And at Tfeboken the jolly German bass had • !Shoring. They Saw how to enjoy them sans hotter thus any other clam of people in the city, sad cheaper. They transport themselves, their children and Maids is a tried moms to Ho b bles, 54 the rate of three eons a head. Than in the green dyne& hide they sit sad listen to the glorious old songs of "Fa derisall,' and rep out the sonorous eloarness, for every mother's se of thou ass sing moos melodiously. There is ae oitayes, spear sasursi, healthy, satiallectoa 00 0 1• meat than this seine murk& itter-4esi et the Wags. The Gilead Jai, have br Grams for the mauler of Cul Levity fdtystal Panto Mork is dews to 6. it IMIN. "I ma very much premed for time;' ' as the man said when his wife hugged and kiswl him to coax a gold watch out of him. % . Wear% ADD 111 OW rift STATE' • COIMITTIIt To ran Plena or PgrOiIIYLVARLt: • Fellow Cititens : The Stabs Central Commit tee i*tited the Democratic eterseiatin which in ' in Marsh hat, have t it their duty to address yon on the pow ens impact of political Whirs. is Z el o stle pponente of the Democratic party and of policy (we scarcely know at this mo ment by what name to call them) heee,= Peace connected with the approaching made another of those sudden changes of attitude which have so often heretofore tarnished the po litical character of their leaders, and dissa6- , the people. They have run through their !bole list Of public memuree. One after the agar, their principles have been oendemned by * public voice, and abandoned thumaelvee. i A National Beak, about whisk they twee thesaits ed revolution, is an "obsolete Idea." The inde pendent Treasury, which they' denounced se Scree'' , is Ito longer denied to he the sabot lied best mo de: df keeptog and disbursing she pe4lic revenues. Their Bankrupt Law is delied over, with their full oonaent, to the infamy it de serves. We hear no more from them about ex punging the veto power from the comelitetion.— The thunders of alarm spinet the annexation of Wats are silent. Their execrations of the Mex ican war and the barren state of California, are no longer heard. "The Tariff of 1842" is eras ed] from their banners and omitted is their spewbee. Th ey seem to be ashamed (as cer tainly they ought to be) of their predictipas that the country would be ruined and the Trmisury made bankrupt by the tarinf 1846. Even the Gulphins of the last administration have retired td the quiet shades of obscurity, content to gorge their plunder in ailenoe, without defending the means by which it was acquired. It might naturally be supposed, from such un toward circumstances, that these politicians Would cease their war upon the party of the peo ple, when their formerly avowed principles and easures were thus abandoned. After keeping the country in a commotion for su many years, by contending for measures and views which they now tacitly admit to be either false or hopeless, it would strut that diseolution was the , uly thing left tor them But the natural ems. mies of republicanism and equality can never be idle The Jut rested and ambitious demagogue 'will never quit his trade. They can at least 1 ,;!.e: local offices by stirring up strife among the people, and this they seem ready to do, as pane mg events abundantly verify. We do not deny that the masses of the party opposod t us are honest, sound aud trite hearted citizen., who desire nothing but that the honor and Interests ,f their country way be promoted. It their sincere prejudiees against the Democ racy. or Limir long tialeta of obedience to party discipliut which keeps them where they are; but we eoutideutly trust that the time has turn come when they all will b:.ak the trammels which have heretofore bound them, and join the Dem-1 ocratie party in a cord,sl support of the Laws and the Constitution Previous to the be..• Presidential election, the organs, orator- and leaders of the party, then milting itself Whig, had exhausted their list of party diwtrines Every issue had been seteed agalust them But they are seldom ~io l mss for some temporary subterfuge, and en , lt: -ion they betook themselves to a nio•st disreputa ble expedient They exeit d all their power aud influipce to excite the anger, hatred and jealousy of the Catholic and naturalized voter, against the Democratic party and its candidates im mediately upon General Pierre's nomiust,oo, they denounced him as a bigoted Protestant, who, if elected, would use his power to prevent Catholics from having their just rights A re striction in the Constitution of New Hampshire against this sect of people, was charged uu him as a high political offence. Certificates from Catholics in his own neighborhood, declaring that he was hostile to them flooded the coun try—and the sanctity of the Post OtTioe was vio lated for the purpose of circulating thetitAluett. meets along with the religious papers read by persons of that faith. Oa the other band, Gen eral Scott was held np as a man for whom Cath olics, above all others, ought to vote If he was not a member of that Church himself, it Ras or. ged that his family were, and his daughter had, with his eousent, gone into a convent. Never before was so bold and shameless an effort made to rouse religious prejudices for political purpo ses Sensible men of all parties, sects and clea ns, were deeply offended at this unblushing sys tem of endeavoring to carry an election by secta rian appeals. Still more humiliating than this, if possible, was the flattery bestowed upon their adopted fel low citizens. From the aged and distinguished soldier who was their candidate for President, down to the most obsolete and inefficient of their speakers and venters, all professed a becoming zeal for the rights of foreigners. According to their statements made then, all persons of for eign birth had been or were about to be greatly misused by the Demoting—end they were ur ged, exhorted and warned to trust nobool4r but their true friends, the Whip. Even the dialect spoken by foreigners was referred to as being su perior to the vernacular language which the =- tire born citizens used. The "rich Irish brogue" wis music to their ears, and the "sweet German accent" was the subject of extravagant eulogy. These facts, fellow citizens, are fresh in your recollection. But would you believe it, that the same politicians who were preaching this secta rian crusade against ttie Democracy, leis than two years ago, and who did all that in theta lay to excite the jealousy of adopted chimps against native born Americans, have recently espoused the doctrine of proscription against all citizens not native born of whatever religious faith, and are said to be in close alliance with a secret and oath bound assotiiiation which proposes to punish men fur conscience sake. In Philadelphia the newly elected Mayor has boldly declared his doe . - Ow of proscription. That this is a mere posit- sea! mamenvre on the part of the Whig leaders may be confidently awned. That it is a hasart less attempt to make • political use of religious prejudices, in which they do themselves not par litipate no one can doubt . Ascertained facts, -past and present, make it perfectly apparent, that these same politicians, if they could awe votes by it, would again Amster the Catholics aid be the champions bf the nate of our adopted *lkea citizens. EEO It may be asked, how shill the Democracy Meet the issues thus presented ? We mower, just as they have met all the other false and an ti-republican doctrines of the enemies of rights, by the power of truth, by the area moon and argument appealing to the eorocieisce of the people. This mangling of -,sligioes sad political elements cannot be approved or seders ed by s free Lod liberakpeople in this age and in this country The'y *lto think so; Mai be ere& nlon; sad short sighted indeed. In 1852, the Democracy asked no more than equaljaetiee for Protestants, and neW when the Whip heft -*hanged their ground, me will diamond Li eiss. sue aid eonstitatiosel sight fotailaillion skim of thaiever helpf they may ha to be. This has ever been the creed of the Dow erotic party, as it has ever been the policy of thin garcvmment — They reeognise so pecans veglita in any sees*4slass, but have only wig* to maintain the past rights of all, and to bestow' Imre NUKIISIR Olt • 1• V ,31 „ The and eoustaudion booot the 46 reward a! ladividual grist primildee of «woes Mash, tlm pork et thin 40 • 16 7, _native well m gale of , foreign birth, foug ht sad bled Sw.—Ateedlesii of Cossaieses, which swahmseienseisietissmesid take frost bit fellow man—juatim, to sit, tad igesial Armors to sont----this is the platform of SEe bemorraey. Prom this high elevation, let us look down calm ly upon the impotent struggle . of those who cope eimiNet with them pnwmpies Ours is the oases of over commay, at liberty mid true re ligion, which, ma only flourish im its purity all are permitted to worship they think right We are fully persuaded that the pee of this Bate are tens and will remain erne to princi ples of civil and religion' liberty, which were es tablished by she 'militia. Their whole histo ry from the Arse settlement of this provisos down to the vote fit the last Presidential election, is ttti the toll** limey emmirsed ralirptift mut with lekgoed petrisdam. How meek sad why the *maples of univenel Wheelies are sad ought to be valued, seed not be enforced by argument on this point. -The his tory of the world for two centuries is replete with incidents demonstrating the wisdom of this doc trine. Redigiona *Mention may be looked upon m the fruitful pont of the infant isolonies—the rights of ettnactence and of worshiping God according to its dictates, may be considered the corner stone of our republican institutions. The Polities and Catholia of England sad the Helpmate of France .fled front the persecutions of rsbgiosn. intoleranee at hone, to the wilds of this Western world, in order that they might enjoy that liberty here whieh was denied them in the land of their birth. This land has been the land above all others of religions and political toleration—a toleration of all sects endorsed. so numb in harmony with our republican institutions. It is true that here and there at the early settlement of the colonies, a 4 contrary spiri was sometimes manifested, but it gradsally sn 'tied end the heaven born princi ples prom by Lord Baltimore in Mary land, Boger limo in Rhode Island, and Wil liam Penn in Pennsylvania, have had their beathful sway in the policy of this country, be ing engrafted in the constitution of the several States The Quakers and Baptists were once persecuted in New England, and the Puritan preachers and Dieseeters from the Established English Church, in Virginia—but who would dare now to avow, publicly, sympathy with such intolerance'—Who would have the hardihood now to propose an amendment to the constitu tion of the Union or of any of the States, that a person born in a foreign land, or professing any particular religious faith, shall be excluded from the rights, priveleges end 'lmmunities of an American citizen ! Thanks to the spirit of the age and an over-ruling and ever wise Providence, the idea of rights of t conscience has eventually prevailed and been permanently established, and peace has been introduced among men under the sanction .wf our governinent and laws, un subjects which Lad lung led to cruel and bloody wars. We are not defending tio t •nents of any par ticular ..ect, hut rbe right, of all to enjoy their own peculiar view, without molestation, whitest I proscription and persecution. In this lies the safety of all, for the powerful of to-day may he the weak of to-morrow. The same oppnissions and cruelties, rieitod by a dominant religions sect upon their weaker brethren of (*polite re liflous views, may he returned upon themselves with • tenfold fury in the ebbs and doses of par ty and political feeling, if such questions are to be tolerated at all in political diiieussions The poktmed chalice may be returned to the tips of :hole who would force others to drink the hem look. We feel right cure, that the adversities of , the past in the history of mankind, will not be lost upon the good Benet of the American people, and that all religious persuasion. may be permit ted to carry out tie , pure and holy mission of propagating the geepel and diffusing s sound mo rality among uses. Let nut Win, fellow citizens, the sealed foun tains of religions contriveray be opened to deluge with hitter waters tilt• happy country jaet not don the unmitigated evils of religion, fends be scattered brie). east over the land, to be more loathsome than the lice and frogs of Egypt.— Let us iwt be divided in political matters, by reason * diversity of sentiment on religious , uLject.,, uhcrc no differences can exist iu the eye of the law on such subjects, and where all seem and creeds are alike protected. Let us live together in amity and love, with no eeeterian, bigoted or intolerant views upoir subjeota about which men never could and never will think alike; each conoeding to the other the right to consult his ewnennecienee in man:creed religion, because sech ooneeseion secures his own right to do likewise. Let us ale. ;4vvid the otaitracted view of hu man rights, which denies the privileges of cult tens to these who 1... v. been born on foreign soil ) . flow few of hut can trace aneestore, not re mote, who brat saw the light of day beyond the blue waters of the Atlantic. And how it grates upon the American ear to hear it ehnouueed f ie has recently been done by the new Mayor ef Philadelphia, tti it a distinction marked and man ifiest is to be made among the people of that city, not by reason inequality in intelligence or true worth, but by reason of the accident of birth. The adopted citizen is no lunger.to be considered an equal, but au inferior. IL can pay his taxes; enrich by his labor his adept , -,1 country, and if need be defend her flag, her bon er, her interests, on the field of battle, but he must not enjoy the emoluments of office, must Dot occupy positions of public trios, or even ex ercise the right of suffrage except through pro tracted yearn and much tribulation He has cast his lot among us, made hie home in our midst, is identified with us in feeling and interest, end by all the ties which love of countay can tuitwiue around the human heart, but yet, according to this modern doctrine, he belongs to a pnecribed, degraded easbe. Webraire fit long, long yore invited the tip pressedofnay s li ms to our shores. extended to them the hind of fellowship, offered them the protection of the brad shield of our constitution, to seenre them in the rights and immunities of American °Wiese but all this is now to be erect ed outside et and beyond the *institution, end sumps and higher than the funtleateand law of the land. Pie rest charter is to be treated u a deed letter, so far 4 it:wren the equality before the law of sffripted native born chi sels, and i ',ewer alkoili the constitution end bon of the begin ta be hereafter the rule of so- IX& 4 It wet ass ! pod se among the reams of &- I c a tusar nidepadeaos, and breaking all our to the - British crown that Qatar 111. bid eadeleeured to prowess the popehisam of theta &stray that imp 4tad ablOsatall the lass for the wan Liao at faatiippo, sad tlhat be had re- fused to pew lamst to swung. *sir maigratiori id r sack taw outuideted among the remits Tisk * doubtful sad Woody war, of smash greater magnitude are those ataa prat mud for die sonsideratiou cif all liberal Waded assms. The Awe ofClam* fit ss was all .064; us bird mama to paritave eatsaas i e k 4184004 am itleak lbst the aeir leaved*. ad thartawresthy the ehealohat 4.11 , 0 WOOkow le It lel we eeelia#4llo9B . . Aer aralisatios laws, we WM ea übe NUM lime HEE GED t t„-a ' J..' us 19usa B.--0:1 0 : OAP; EXPO/V.' '414 Eitto be mai anti tedii of Ntwookuor 1 oi ll"1 :td leave their bdelibit; tMtbh . 414 awe to their native hted,ol4 'Reit,' VI our own government,'wiles - we meow t lik_siest duomitents thus held out mimes* 148 cos intended to deceive. MW it is 110 e eUildill NI by those who: adhere to the venue : 1 1111.4 -01 4 unaided by the new Miler oft-Plfgharew Mt change the settled policy of this natio*, - al es log the condition on which the P9OOl 0 Otlitir t " 1 countries are to be received and adopted el 111Prauti zees, but a much more dangerme4 inti - onejoy ins, • gloried is assumed. Its peacticisi werilObss till - sow to be retrospective. It proposeh teiskotrob"P"i* citizens the civil rights which th+ itivialresdi sai acquired under the i,onstitutib*, by erveadetti -- s power to subvert that instrutsent. Ithriutat-i A tempt to settle a policy not reeogniimd law of this country, that-berretta-to .d out of the country shall hold s dell :ciffiokiltoliee• /- the government—no matter that' het haiirsoddite! A her. !Igloos the !kith of the lasts tifairsetiatoll mast* how OA his character; ei betiirel 114 ' 0 abilities; low thorough his ethmitiobt." or . hi* ' numerous his virtueor-no nastier hewso . his attachments to the coustituti ,, n; atir=- 1 . thodox his religion—so matter though. ite-kbet•L , suffered and bled for his adopted eoantryt Wide 41 such we are to have no polities) eottbsunitak-oP"-I we must nut listen to their advice n=1 . 4031 mob them in the public service .., The 41 AS honesty and capacity Is to be t t s verteeked, eediehit,ll,,, Icircumstance of birth and b' It alone mentir4e- .. cide who.shall fill the offices of the governettot. '..- . Here is a disfranchisement of the most obster.w .1 ivas character The alien and 'Addition hos -,•••• were passed under the administrirtion et' theoll: 1 ", der Adams in the height e etp• ingsilrheo ark" LJ ' oral domination Elio they w. I !3srs,. 10141115 0 44 , -' : here it a similar polioy wi , hotrt th-. saitetilintill I law, secret in its operations, sri.l trmittueliolit . ' ; Just abd cruel in its roennl ft is in effootoshay , :: administration of the alien late of bbtek tantimirr.v.f federalism, without. the ttrag.- to plat-st how be .4 , • 1 statute book Its spirit, c5 ,,, , nt .-., . n .O, deptgis#, I - the same .. ' " • The Constitution of the United S Nit eq asteb444.. lee Conran to page uniform nateridlessAu tion. It also provides that Cougn-i sktilinaito no law respecting an establislnenterreligionits prohibiting the' freeezercise there d• 'mod that no ' religions test shall ever 1.0. requir,• - 1 'll a qualifi cation for any office or public trent uvular the • United States. , The constitution nf Pennsylvania is even mere. emphatic. It declares that all me-• hams 'Nit eroi and indefeasible right to worship Abnighey God according to thn dictates of tnnir own eons. - seienoe—that no man can, of right, - he compelled 44- to attend, erect, or suppnr t any Otter of worebtp r x: or to maintain any ministry, aertitpit big envies', • —that no human authority cati,in any cult vast ever, control or interfere with the rights pf•ocno- • • aeienoe—that no preference shall ev.•r be gieeti.. , by law, to any religious establishurtnts ormities 1 , of worship—and that no person who octavo- , • ledges the being of a God and a future ease et .44 • rewards and punishments, shall, nu account ao.' • his religious sentiments, be dim i uskled is hold any °Sloe or place of ins: nr pr, , flt under this ,- • Commonwealth. •. • S Such was the fabric of goverenientereeted the patriots of the revolution, -who wad erneW u what liberty, true liberty want sad who peekielko • "their lives, their fortunes, and their snored be - , +t+ or," in ita maintetinnee w• to 4o away 3 with this noble feature of our government by in; 3. direction, and establish a test n a trecran to (wt' oostitation and lawi, bra autizqn..tio.il to both, ' and which can only leaf r.) roll: ice, andtleiigiotot - . intolerance? • ..a. N a..e. But treating the question ss one inertly of peib , •- ' . bey, without regard to consrutional right, beast% • , this liberal feature bf our pc.crument thus mat •., commenced and noel( lac? by time, Nen views ed with the happiest r: cults to the development of th e resources an str-ngthcnie4 the arm et the nation? Why should this I.bers'• policy be•.• now rudely and Mashly broken op and alatuonts4.4oe. I ed?—or why 1...h.-Jald we be te., , zeuerena woleora when liberal and - progre.sive ) 1 0.e. in ail otbregazi) reapeeteTri• warm! , rh.-rivhe l peonliarirma. American" We ar, •%.are •,,. •y.t. JI rbe peiwc el to the vice, and eices.e ,, of iguoraitatii destitute population, who come into oar coulak, • L.l ; unprepared in some mapectr for the proper -am. • joyment of its inaturiuns We are free to ad Astra. that individuals abuse tbc b!csaingt• ntirAtittreto erament, but tiw• i!i—nativese ue-grellit.•4o, I as foreign—E , d surely i. no reason tot o h ni o ne ,,,,a• the policy of the governmen , , for i.ropoeioglaerr--...1 nenditions upon adopted citizen., I.r for puma. I ing the just equall:. with The neje t. Indeed it !s dtsi. tilt %via, n 'intuiting she id . • jest t , ) sus who at) to 04T beti , , Cadd bye's*. Gut of foreign j$ ni .ti Our in fu hievoy would show tilat uiw• i fs..ur pr. , ;+eritywod 1111114 id advance to riati.”,. ;41 aut.., la+ heew aweed... ttr mated by the ta1e1.1... urrgy . . - ..inc•tiv••••ifa• • • - dustry tlao.‘a f hitt n. 'the delta 4 gratitude is at 1 , • •Ittt at) ..s stiotr mid*. H e m •,„i wt forgotten th •,- of adapted rat. . teens and fir i_ ; 11 r, to rtroititt-wav) crag , • gi,.%Htc~c • rg, t • ti the chi‘3ol\)4lll war. fL, ‘..tt. t ..70t0,17, DoKoilt, Ke:43iniana. 411 ., 0,, I, ilk 'l,lll hut .4 v• - nown, wire penis 1 lir. and propyrty.m our beitill, and to ha- • half , he of librtt) an.' sottesi repabl,tras Pleas? Did th, y not rink their livos sal Ads • their tolvoid I .1 tila• • and f9r ti. Hare not ti,. r - at) , I oi tb,. . (iu. ha%.• mai th:s n. r, r:- a nt.,•!. - . , 1 ,u,;1.. ) 11-tun , , tr• am, P.l 4# de wu -, t oar pc t vtru.ly uocalw .itol layds bloom ~ u , l blota..in as ) , the rose!' HMV- they not fe7le,l the forest . Art. tined the rude and uubrukeu R.iil, constructed - hitt " - T railroads and canals, and 'attgely ~ .xtlltatettirr° * internal commerce anti ties bouudA of culture son :11 !‘ civilization . : . Are there tot t:, be tonmd nmobeel then, as well as among native t,,,t n eitisens,'Wei"W of exalted worth, brilliant tal,nt... toweri 2l 84 nius, who have given w, their valuable e in all the useful and ennobling Fur-nisi iiiikd &lesions of lift, and front among woriut the , ''' • of our artists, statesmen awl nratoth ht. s. adorned. la it wise, that nil th*"att •-•, :th l iiiii* 4. ; these; shall be disfranclitbed, - pr* 1 , . :; ' '' 44 count of their foreign birth, 41 , : - . if' . '' . `9"i their religious opinion? 'lieve wc'tio 4. . _ ,I. v r•A , . . lam t by such a policy? • gat , tk-sitz. But how is this polio to be - editilitath* 'l d ' ~ '*"" how is this new tart to be sitplictl, end litirb .-) Sserotly sad wild:cut warning, by I g :e& •till- `*•' eight political associations,soluseiogtithio b+"" extra judicial oaths, to do that wttleit exit ' a nothing elite ,in elect, morally, tinth t , tllll , II" treason te the goventtnens, ,vnte! thus 'attP s ' to do, snider 4,htt clouds of the nrq I, kild !1' I_ . _ . . . oat politioal i eantbivationa what ika apidei 1J ashamed to ropma in the' liglo o f day aild'11110 1 "' ashamed , . . fon ever emu to g ' n f a e t i'l t;:e, o '.. n tt t i : t° 41411 :41 3 ,on degenerate into onein il ctof tyranti Iftiont rep. liiedlis en .of the . 111 lion,'opidid b Daunt, Meret mudlllitplAcs._mona made the nation usable *e its eskteldieudtdie Itio brunet tideint &Men viittrtarkilftimiOgOt sm. entintdin - and murder. Whilvisi IMO .Dei die iiiisei of tincosble titilMlodlorow 4080 gar their mil* wave& aced iiiiliffond AMA QOl 11•41 i tL. quads mid secret.etrieTtes dwukihiw ass. oriel 41/tobite_w. w yokiiii, or the raided ' • of 1111101111, lasides-, are is odbmrtsi sr dr . ea easeidruldrAkideetihe -prints AVM Whew t .. titian in trilatiit in the eye of the lift Alltimimuy • amok hi politleit 'Mlle other pesilMiiiiilliminost, i Corldwded in' Piimitilliphilkiiiitv liOu E !I t ittvt-4,111 ; oft - - id? !MN ' I tUftsbassiii NUM= "db s• ft 1.•