slioAN N 10011 1 ,,, PUBLISHERS. VOLUME .27, THE EKIF, olisEßvi,,R. 1, /I'll 1,1.4 LAI A 47171.1)A1 Nl • • I. 11 1 * . t % I/ 11 . \lll 11 rI it I rrr ITV %•:!, tl IFTI I 7- 11. r. .4 I.IIA NI, 11.4111ur 11 1,11 in XI/ 0 111 . f dll II 1«11,1(.. 1 o• I i.P 1., It olon Ile , lho r to It, le. , tt. It It nth 11 'rover 440, , 1. , 111 I 1.101- 110 FRTI , I \ • . r 1.14. In NI.II, I nu.• +qua, 01.1 •. ' • ,ku.. • • ,11 4 7 1 11 41. t..., ...it • is . , •' ti.) • ol.tn no. ,1441, III..til•. a • 4.1 tl.. I: 110 " I . r • 41/111 • • t 'I 03,1, to • r sad under whi ctl w,iiev, lU.vun• L ti.. • . 7 - .• '• , t.t • %.1"111,-• r , 011.1i ' M pi. nt rhaite.— ~ A rho.. , I I. 1 Itt., 111.1earil L , r 11, • tirt I -I.ttn.. the char. , . it ‘ll 1.. In iontit.,l.l•nt .11.1 Ito 1,1n , t , •t 10..trt , t1t enttintly It.. th. letntlnt.l.• rton.r 41011 t trlnFt.tnt rtit , llrn n-intrt I Ittllll r.. y.n.tly 14••.1141114 .4 1.1 t... 1,11 t• tut tt•tt. ,(111 it., •• n• : 1 ` 1..1tt• • , t • • ill "1 6.1‘,,.• BUSINESS DIRECTORY HAILNCEA 1.14:41/101T.'' k Hp I ~(1.. l , arpikt Phew. Igeolt A il• Attt At ttooelo, 113 %tort 4 4 trot t, J. tIeCREALOV, AltrICT A. Bill ND%416. 1.1 %tat X /AUK, I VINO/ of l'noot strrti, .Ncr I aril I tgplr• H.• ‘ll/11,1 (.111/1011. w , Mi 11 • .\:. , .1101 1, •, MatsulAtt,.., I).a. , I/ tI. h. 11.0. •I •i . 111. i ori. It 1.,.• I tuarlA-1 tort I tit' olio., I.r, I Alt It llo• I 'l.l 0,1.11. •••1 %I =I lilt 11TH J IJ% ENIVILT, , .❑L .. I, t. U. u.o t ttrl ..portf al!. .11. 14. Li 1.1 ti.lo AU+ 10. r.,.•• 41.4 11: , h •I. V•• 14 "LeL.trt , • r. 13114)Tliglit, 1 . 14 , i ° l,l, %YUMA, t . TII/10 , YOTil. *l4ll. , 411. t•tt, n,..... , N I.—, MIK 1 4 ;1141 1,n.•.. t. 4 N ttrt. ;Arts.. theP. .1 1 r .14 tr. .• t , t• vat nth el , l I I.•h I'l I \ "1 , 11.,10 , ` 1 ,, ”nl,r, 111t.1 td••• Ist-ep• c.a., In 111 I% r r •11., • y. , it liar. 4, • 111,V1• lip , II 11... IL I I lorlut ii.l. •^4, Heirll,t-,... ' .. WI ...i iIAUTON nut "•1:, ,• r .., „..•. • II 0, t .1t r, =I n VI t l.“..nt. 1:. 11.11..1 ‘i , .lt. • .oryratel mn•l c,r6 •Ir, T , Ol. • 11 , i‘bt • HI., 6 - 61.1• • • TIMM t. 1111 l 11LIILAID, trt AN, ,tot ~• -,• a11...LA , !Wets 11...rt:agt et, hued and ,it•tniup,“ • , t ''"r7..l I ~,.okh a.• hh - r. ' r h I ^hh.' t • tr.. •••• I.llal Ilk: r- I I'. awl Dm0....•,e I , r) si . If, 1.1 n. •i r rt' I • • rseLiofii 'latfia, th *lit ••TALLAS IL PA 1' Al tR141 , 4,: In, enlorMtrearers•• Illmewma.erthpainn. in 4 ~ RI, L 4,,yr. 11.ter sa.l r t, ea.( of , tr't .rrt, Knr, ••111t14 .1 t, I. 1 11 I' I. It It A. 11 I.Tt L h 1. h 1,,t• a • —I , 4 illSo aht 1 1 1 nIL, 11.1. I a , `I" 31..1 !Arid Wynn ~ :•,.. print 111. • In I ite I nat. ••• I. DK. J. 1.. NT }•:%% .t ItT. ,•,, 4•1) Who« S Lover& t r 311.1 • ; •me•t I.t t %V. K. itt JO ah Chattre**//, Heakit • . 11 ‘44...retzu tsl.4 1 , 4 1., I ttrt•aritLy '1 .11 1 I lit H 101.11../ . •i • 1 111•11.0% H. R. Ht*EMATICh .• rr w i • Itrnrr • M 141. •al.• and H.t sit ,1.,a.•• u. I. I and all kit{tta .dl:run..a•t .(.1.• ,4 1t... 1,114., 11.4txr }irk*, l'a TI BSA 4 0., 1 , • AU. RETAIL I),ALL/Ln rn fr WIC% it Nattitio, ()al loth , 4c. 5 , ..r I Nh.rL - ('O., INLATI • I : 4 4 , r”utallue tto•lr F. er — uurth .4.1 r .4 liir .•11- prri...rt 4 l• , nyrt. wall;,II ..th-r.•l..rnt.r• 1" :444 + - .L. , ••••• ',al t..1 , 1,111 g It k." . . 111.1 .t. .0,1•• %Vll/11,11Y{:. .441. I b 1 , 11 I t. ..11.. , 111.rdi Lite 1 , 1.A.5.,0•1, k.tiu, I'4 •till El. T. ..Tt:iiitt..TT Co.. 1., I '4.1,14.4r, .el.l • Ir, r, uf fl'b•L 111 , 1 IY Ip-tree'. • i 4,, 1 , Lvery attiele u. tLu- •lual _ tu• r Atli W rtt , Pn ase...alus.bt N. 4 litol - All loud. 4 Roofing gil.l..,utiu.: 0 1, .I• 41141 44 4 11441bfrh F.11z 4 .,111a.i. t• rl4, :44 LENIENS S. 1%l , that. r- ,I 4 1...14.•11t v, : :4:0•41• l It.u, + . %ISO FrUlt. Fwh.o4, *VW Ag.-n l. , t le - bkolAlarli L.IL• II Fr( ka.nr, 111•111 IL,LLAJI t. %VA 11161/E.N. •, • nut V t ,rftlt/Ige, It. PI , . lir, all the Ynnetp&l tits I tilted •_sr..l . • ...qr.. 1..14 • - • t . t .01.1 1ut..r...t paid stun • t Jr , , • e nd iocioami 33 .1. ( IL tit:, r nn I • • r• 1.••••.,1 to Nu I Huklat* /awl , r s I • lIIMMEIMI L. 11. %NELL. 'a..•r.v 1.. 14 tlhass if -.kerma*, Il.• .1 1;0.4 • 11. 1, ri tor. lh 1 y r 'l.• •t art fti.”l arrotl4 t I. t‘ I. tCL 1.. 'ii. 111. D..% 10., -- r. 4 r 1,1,1 .1”./ /..11 la 1. .. .141 ' 11/ 1% rli awi • 411.101 ..1 1,/ ~us ' .1•11 1. I/.. •01ao • All 11. 't 11. ,La I , -trt,t I,,sr P. a. t 1,,r, /1 art, 1, ai/II 11.1 4111., Gtri,J .or (.111. 1.111.11.. al I ...II Hllll%lll/ ti. 111-.1111.11,41, •so.•I, Marian //.rt...., • P I , n4r, l'alut-. at , , . ~ to r.ffriatue.. liar ..u•I N., go iterat 1-14.8asn, 6n.. l'a zi D. D. WALKER eIV ••: , 1.1% and Uommtca••n N.mh►nt• fourth • •" i•uoirrOtlre, Errr. hr 11••••1.4.• is. l'••ftl, '• 11.11 A•.. Al2/4 it, NAM-, • .1.. &e., i r4 tth gorrarparo•rt torilo o•r for .I.a ' , Wog •• roaomo s Yolpirtirro, Pktorourov, or to Hooloorol ..r '4l I. IH.Wuf Tiio.ll-tA .111. .14 POTI I air .y tAt fir. Ldklooti ar • aletuv, J. weir), • 1.11,104% LASIAII, and is SW, (rood% hole vie HOG KM% d k KNNEtiV, MI r.r• is .riardal Ls/ iirose#l • • • TA u. Hat.torari, f;Larmri In ' .•- II and I 111.,. It, ~.n.. t .4 Illth 414 XS- • 4 • E TT, A.. 1 Pealvr iu 11 rt u.l I ,r‘ • • - t , ..resirn anal ftrrerr-otte Fr. N% , I ` L. •rr Flow% t F•ovrol. .hot, • , ro•rrei, opimeite lbw Fiend LIDDILL. KEPLER, .11 , ./ , tviu.4 &nl• r x l suit 1. ,,, m04 r ' • lam all La*.,dlla hu rt l nil takur, t a•t• Fro • prAnwr--•..b,.... (I the Amer. , •La Tier of rtreet sad for ilzbitc p -t and ad .r.rnante•l WILLIAM $. LANE, ‘ ll, •••••, ...r , ` , KLL,.III A T over Alickftou • s Start •1.1,....•• • ti., 11, PUNIC .414t1111".. a (1)., • -61.. r. lianY \..t.. I ....tat..-/tl. , .4'1 , 1. to /Le 111. pnewspid etthra eomtfaalt.l, rut rai. •• Put•hr 4, 4luan-, F.rir .$ T. It Itit.III.ONPrTIART, - IA • /dior, Ftith ettwt, a f. w d. ars , Eit..t (if •aectc, tourttt .tavlet. }...t of the ~t4l Nl FI'S SIDED, Multi Sall Aniorrit`an alp! 1 . 1 \ , - if. .1 .Ie In.. I's J. K. till". 4 ,11144111,11. -k...tatwrwm, •q..prr., P... Let utien, "1 the K..-I ErP- tIOOIH S ..oricvt (HT. yr.l Ii ta,l I h-e:•.r. t.•. u tL. 1,.."1 ‘ll4 HP.% LA liE01111:1-: 11.1 I 71.1•31.. ' ' • • w l.tmr4, F n.. t ~44t 1, oar... Comm ha..l •",, Atioivto4 and .Its;dttrti .1411 MA 11 la ILLIOPLit.. • !. 4 w'• li•0 114. I, • -I „ ; • ticTElt A itlarril&:llc. e. LL..1.-rp ur Dry. 44 Mk, 0111% ' 4 • 4 •• • & 44 0 • • (.4 a .14/11\ .V 1 } .. .1:%1 • r.. I. "th• I..tutt' ~,,,, • .11. II NMIN fiL.-1, "4""54 J 41114 IiEANN CO., aryl " 4 4 "4,1,1,4•.1.m 6 , 11101. In "al Flour, a t -at I.r • .1461, ”I I r Lao. P11641'4 IL Form., l't Ult O. i.ts I.r•rt44 - 4, 11 , c, thrw *..ek a auu 33 J. 14 1101 11: I AMPS As, I • • • VII, . stn / 1, 1,0v/in Ifinint,R"... Ittobirter as - J ANNA MARIPHALL. .* .•• MI, .tatr. Taarray Ha& 111111 116116 , tat. 113 ill% Ps- ERIE_ .. .WEEKLY :OBSERVER •ithm 1 month . MEM =MI /=I =EOM I= tV -❑.4ui:r IA 13!IZII=!11 Daily Lines from Elie to 111 Lean, Edinboro, Klecknerville, Ilaagerstown ik ImidaMe. CI ONNECTIN44 at Erie with the Anteriesa Eastern, 1, j Western and Soethern Expellee, will attired to the eol lection of Delete, notes sad arummenta. Zang Wive has a Safe nail is aceompanied by a Unteeeger. 0. D. SPATFORD. Supt. it U. LZELAIIP, AO., Brio, A. M. Doinur, Memiviie. Erie, Jasoary, 211, 1866. 37 W I L L I dirk A I D — ri - 0 - 10 — Vti i d itZt OLD BLACK STAR s idiat LINX OP P•CILINT.I. 411111eP AMSAG k fro any part or Urged Shale sad • 'related attired at tine lowest possible rates by old utalliehied Womanise front Liverpool Ow New York every Ave dap, comprising the foi wi inagm eat 'Alps: as hise. Tonnage. Pulps Tearoom. Australia, MN North America, Ms limbo. thee Owep„ 1104 Cow/weer, 1605 Ohm. tese Desalt (lister, IMO Uteri Lelia, 1600 Itateswirm. 1110 Ilaselewa. 1400 tiny Mannering, Me goatliaaptea. 100 George Washisquoti, 1 611 8 Yieeedloorla. 1400 Jacob A. Weems's/sit, MI Usliwormh Eno Irene, 14.41 Yaw/wad. 1600 Jobe !!right, MS William A Ilarbec It, 1800 Ler retina, 1404 nrorauto. 1000 blatibbos. IWO New &tip, 1000 The Slope of thoo !Abe are the tamest sad esriltest is the trade Their accurnwodatioa fer peseeeewe are Ilseittralied, and the frequency sad peseta& ity of their illeparteve Wer ad vantuees to the sailvasit bet to be 44 by arty otber Lase et Packets. Puck paseenners to Moline easing int. lb' inottey paid for skew will to prelndrill refuwinil waken Abworat. Nu t eillaCal4) of passe. will be lawasid for childless seem II years of ant eaters seeoweeealet 11 es adult whe maw Ye wild for ue the same tenth:eke. Peewits desirous of bawls; their ' Meads lirmeght met from Orem Whims mad lielnall, br the With liar Ulliv of Plleillita. can pare ham IMAMS at ray 011lert (epee) awl Uwe @seen to thew that deepest. It sad good treauweirt Or wheel' the shove Ship. an isewid. 144 of CI sad epwarda, as areal Britain. Ineliest ewe 0 z.• limey may he procured at tele Ohm the setresead cer which .gilif 3 awed wll/10r1dientrei la We aeseew limb stake psi ties is either so the rheas mused seenhriele SIMARD 011111111, =• 0,. Owner et' rem* sad thuds Writ. fleet IL NM Iylll ____ _ I ! What lave yea Antad ! ilr ilkil ionst ostbselkol wadowiewb emeniseeet ef Good. Joba l Plat figlireivell Illisek, atfis Ur Woe laieiy osoceeiwi_ J. I . t. &web" essaaelog CLAIM, cAsautzass. N iIITTIMI, 1.., of the wowt toobteeelio 8t to sea Patterso, wed Glowswete Ready Nab of gouty dasisivasii ft oat tho toot* of the snot foottotion sail the paw of tko toot owebeeekei, U y o gi dosM it, Mil. wee owl be eetoltefted et taw iletueeer of law Gouda, eat Low rotes. TY Plebe will r w r ik ib m : =Set willing to oosolootodolroroay out I T Ms litoo s tviii. a sok Dan No. 111,1lreirsh rut. Ceiba Week ad sumbowle Is the imam, madame sp. litylis. 1411111 saligibsoit pa& . Omilr *we Wi lt, t u a l 3r eir ts aadi be ceevebeed.ei= W a tt = A =lllllllllasegia ft Aftemik,`" ---- ' ---- . inia'a it him ail= in Idiwesilli. 7 ,,, r 17 lb. ii 6 i AHRI CLUEi THOMPSON, Led C.Fonallosime !(arehanla, and Ikeilers Is C.& I -.lt, F lour, Watorrl.h.se and Plaster urblie Pock, Yast •Irrvt, Erie. H. 1111.011.1 a It .1. ROY TUN, 17i and Cosoos4akoe lievebast, Public Uswk, Er.., stealer , •It. Fl.ll, Flour and Plaster 33 C. M. WItIGUT .116. k t. tot, Collet tor. and Dealers in Gold nod Sal er Com, apt-ur nof MOM, . Land Wamn* sad Certificate. of Deposit Mao, loran,. on tl.n pi - 1acy...1 nu . +lu tbr I_ mom and all wt. of t • Coulter t for sale 4 Office, William. corner a l kat, • tn.•t tint Public : 4 140.r. Ii %% P R•itict, C is Grit:sit*. T. V.. BLAKE. R. 3.1 r %cry It CU and Wholesale. acid Retail I lealer kirclaru wd t. Artificial Flocren, ittbi...u.s, Silk., Lanes, and 1 s•tilonabl” Itllhnon, Vu ti RPed ., l 131.Ch, ,, tat. rtreut, ra Particular attention pawl 11. G. W. UB CAMP, i r..ni it Lt. Ott, over J I;upu, • Li..ol•torr, Part A . Krar, Pg. T. , 1.4)111a KING. 114 Kt' R s AND rlct:ibrior BRoxi:Rs Ir - 7 - E.4.4. to I , Y JRjp. k en. New loft. YY storford, W. EMI 0. B. IIIeCILICAR V, 1 *VD ',llltLIAlg AT i.•,r state. and .... 4 tre.44..,ver Stewart k Stoelau'y Drug Store 2 W. C. BILkLICii, :I\ ll _ •1, 1./ 1111 au.l F arrier, rery 44ealtr, Traturr •1141 ,4 .14.Rman, ,44.., 4 set, leem to the nahlhe H. well It•ttt. t at W.. Mb •, reel l anal Inionue, warn. ne nkll be glad to I. 1.-t %.•1 11 t RRtI KY, ~4 44 T. %% 314 , 01C11.:, , r . l'rortute, sAh Salt, lirstu, H... t . Ytar. ‘%rrrrrivit, rus.l ' , trap, Warr. kr. •• , r \4. 7. ' , Wt. stroll,fribpuwite Brown's Hotel., 17.rtr, .1. ( . ?Will Pry sus , .4.IKTIAr 44.41 dealer to Ihiguirrre.type, Atubrutyp• aut 1't,..t..4rp4i, tter) .lellCriptluu. State grert, opposan Hotal. £ t., IY • I. W. HIBBARD & CO., ■4llilaLi 11 air VIACTLRIIII.O OF Pierce's Superir Percussion Matches, yr) i iI4 , III)HRiMp rßryr, A 11111114011., • V M 41114 , 1\ V M 1.00 • 1 111164+ 100 PIANO FORTES, 'V k. • U 4 WHICH £ THIS DA 1 MCC ICI E CArTer iiezt Week. amid as eta, ate Mann's Piano Forte Agency and Depot, sign of Lir? 11 E B 1 (3 1? - 1 D E . A MO I: are BOIRDIIIY., GRtY k Co'm celetrate.l .41111.41.9 PIANOS, with Ike new PAITITT CORROGcI- I I Ise n, )t SDI NG BOARD, crLicb toot the 'IRS PLEMIL" V • . n I,,..kering• Pllll , lll only received the THIRD premium vest and increasing demand for Orr.. ipstrausentsr•ii i .L inti.o•-•ibie for th. rosmitacturer• to fill their order,, n••teith.tin.thrirc the Immense doubtable+ they furnish, Wok rid fc esr• bare to rrderr throe "rotes (euei lb to per ucar.toitAct • tare , t raw.. 311...• • lorh .or the • .n.l bluer tt Mann's r,. 111.. he found a I.Aktoil.:llT.H . l( of N AHlul V MAKES, froet • uccsrrciwkroi goo, and aelecte.l by the brat )iticea to the net rr Baylor fu.t concluded • contract for 100 1.14N0-EOI(tES • at+ sorttimiry rate., 1 am peeparesi to furnish them on terms tot • ett any at. I'sll (chi rr - March 29 PARKER, GRAY A-DAVIS, REAL ESTATE BROILIER,8; AID, MUIR- A NCR AND GEINERAL Ali ENV . ). l'amecil INaQ. and !aim' CUT. lawn - 1° %it b•kll.t A 111011. E. I PAIIILJLEU & MILAV r hy, I ai..l tg. at, 11.11 , 1 it• a 1 E-rlt I\l. I kVi. %.11VNT.. i It H. ..A FH •- ( Holum, it/Wil• 1....1 mg../ eat. r .-^sat 1111... w. and Noah Wledliottlf • Clainum, anal ti.-•captio6. In NebrPankS Ter, dent/ all.l nron-neeid.otA. her Tale., Per -. T. 111 El %. 4rrw.t r a Low and Votary P.M'', Waltz (111 Cr Ii• I: t,4ll,raibli, sod M H F. I. I 1.14 , i II I K, ,mood, kayl lleadralle.: Hon M 1,01 I. ;wow I Itndawrton. Ps.: Ur UPI 1/ili/441% Ro•k lolatka, MERCHLIIITS' I.3IBI3ILANCE COMPANY. .11. r. 1450: , , , • E,. Aware, Phi/acid/Am Authorized Capital, $400,000. Amount Se curely Invested, $200,000. 1., •, .1' 1• 1,, 11,- 1,0,1111,14ar. f ta I.r 1,9/.4 hart. r 1.... 'Li Ai , ILA 11/I.li, 1 1 rtngireltial.‘„ II HI-1. !Cell 10 current P. it,t,livni 04.,13V.it I ,1.1, r I. I V. J.,hn Ihraltsll J• on 11,j'hrlu, ~ Jnlull M. lisle I, en NI . likokoletors I. I licOisn 11, Fitt-sin Mill.. r, 16a. 13 Wright .4 nhn .1 Ihlttrrs.m. Wm. H klleu, karma K. Nir I 1 1.0:11:1 , FIVE, , rrt tary a. A. BEN \ k.rt, %Erna Krm, I'. • CE AGENT 1i I - II Id, J. J. LINTS, R. I. 11t... 4 1:Nrrl tt, follow mg' .111:1'.'%A I IRI' IV , I R.I ‘CE4II)IIYA.SI, ..t two,taro 4, , %1111)NO FAI Tfil'/R1 4 ND m4kive Lokst - RA l(, - CI) la, • .I.apltal sour P 1 11.1 111/ 1.4111 %1) WAR! w - INSURAI.CCI Lt Ottt•twirg, . f 12,1 I \ - I }{..0. , t. t'"lll'i\l', II olf , f I "AU,llini Y. iI.. Ln 1111/ •••• 111 - Ils 4. Liar Inland w ruin I.! t,„ 141A141.1. Fn., 11.,,i IM. Pelf. _ 49 T. R. BLAKE, TIROL ESA L E .1 1? EPA IL MILLINER, •n h ROM S , Wc..TATIF wTtaT, IBM, MA •tibewrib..r Inv lust muanord Irmo boptou an 4 \•w -York th,• Otr,oot mud L.l •tock of 11kIlinor. t n,ol. that h • by .1, hroucht to tho. ray, rok.lottlie to part a. BONNETtI. Cobuni. Ne.P01 ,14 ". Cbi), PI r• I/. F n neh, mat a = ffit==l ( NW.ItEN , H STS AXE) JoCKEY 4 rioneh,Nast, salt Eancy Blenenery.— row I:ll.6pes A few French Pattern Bonnets jUSt 4/1 th. y won , isopnrted. silk Lisle, Crape., Mood, Tisssur and Lawn liolsoetP kb giant nariet r Ika4osa. Irlftorni, MAL I,arus, (Farm LiAtimile Drew I=lo ha". Head /hews Sloodle, Loma, Wier Um" **Am M.A./kr itrisdika, Se ed/as, Pt., end we alker kends 0 . 1 !wads, hoe imperaus is weatura To NE Soli) WU( ILES ALE Old RETAIL von CASH ONLY t•..n,t torsos thiztrons de. 5 tu tbr eastern cities, and at the 55.1 omoufsetorise, ?sr...lring the first selections of their goufts, fool he. %Rut pecurr4 tie Pen tors of 50file of the beat Boston nallinen, I tiAtt. r that Et ery (Jr(' .rt made to please my numerous Patrons .01 lie gym. n.d with the. I.tm..st 01116NPOR. The 14Vprte tor, thautau! for iota rayon, hopes that ta Rh the um ,. g.rest hi. b.., •rol I,y ittlict littoatiou to Wahiawa. to merit a coati a tLOCI .Late of patrumie. T. R. BLAKE, Proprietor fmni all quart, will be Ml:plied with every kiad of Itilluierr 0..44 eatterisa, and Pattern Hata, at wholesale. prides rh.• awl l•ro,nor tlepartmeat will be andet the super iateroieure of Mr Albert A frbae, frost ono of the lore's* lffm•nahe• taring bons.. Ilasomehusetta His work Deeds bat a trial to la publie patron Pelee. of fllles a gios aoll Preemies.. 3 Sldliishio. A liberal dr.a.unt t.. ligllin.-r• grk,,, March Y 6. No 6 Reed'• Block, SUMP ottrioct figigg Erie leadville EX PRESS & TRANSPORTATION Co tadee the management of fhe Prank Road Co.) IZIMEM Diaitu»•, Mum. April 12, lUe. =I T R 8, Proprietor, SPEECH HON. WM. BIGLER, At Indepen.,:eter Square, July 4, 1 556, ON Pol;tiral Odevtiows and lanes ,!/' the Present ('uneass It waa the remark of au emient American Scholar, that it is one of the Gal like attributes of man's mind that enablea him to mingle the results of the past, the realities of the present, and the imaginations of the fntare covering centuries of the world's career, and contemplate the whole scene together; and again, that measur ing time ht the ideas conceived and the events witnessed the men of modern tiro, s enjoy a longevity equal to that of the Patriarchs of old And it has occurred to my mind, at this moment, fellow citizens, that the scenes about to day, the recollections of the past suggested by the occasion, and the ade's of the future which these seem to present. not then the historic voice of the oration, furnish a striking illostretion of the truth and beauty of the wonderful sayinizs I have quoted The hallowed spot on which we stand reminds us of the Nation's birth-day, of the dawn of liberty and of the mighty crow: quences that have followed The presence of Independence Hall suggests to the mind the scenes of '75, the period when our fathers, native and foreign born, Protestant and Catholic, seek ing redress for the oppressed colonies, gathered within its now venerable walls to council together for the liberty and rights of all, no matter where born or of what religious belief. Then it was that John Hancock and Samuel Adams, of Massa sarbusetts, Edward Rutledge and Thomas Hey ward ..1 South Carolina, Benjamin Franklin, Charles Carroll, Thos Jefferson, Roger Sbermau, ant their glorious compeers, matured awl enun ciated thee. grist truths which are still found at the hinds of our Republican system, and which reteniece all governmeut and taxation, in the ab sent e di' representation, anal proclaimed indepen dence and gulf government for the colonies It was that act mud (feed that ushered America into the family of nattonit, at the same time that it astonished the world by a new revelation of liberty, and of man's natural and inherent rights, fixing new relations between the governing and governed and giving effective vitality to the spirit of civil and religious freedom. From that time to the present, thee.. just and safe axioms have stood itt bold relief, like beacon lights for the guid ow • th..,e entrusted with the helm of State We ore also reminded of a scene, at a later dote, when, within the sound of my voice, George Washington, James Madison, Charles Pinckney, Thomas llitljin , Benjamin Franklin, and t it associates, devised a scheme for a union of the States They agreed that the States should compose "ne family, on terms of perfect equality; each remaining free to have its own domestic in stitution., and tbat new States might come in, thereafter, ..n terms of perfect equality—that the gevei tiruent of the State., el united, should exercise only -uch powers aq were expressly eon ferret!, and that all other powers should be reserved to the people and in the States Considered in all their bearings upon the ceedit,,,e iitankiu,l, these events bare scare been iqualfal tinee the dawn of Christianity. Aside fr , ni the world wide influenee which they have exerciaell upon the mime of civil and religi• our liberty, Ind see. I'3l precreaa in all the arts of pert-.-, thz y suddeuly elevated a young and dependent reentry to iufiueuce and power among the family Natiens, and the American people to the diguite. of ..elf erutufsnt mud the hlee- , lugs of atiluie-e From thirteeli oppressed Coloro. o,tO s than anise williote. et in hettitat,ts, we have now thirt ) ere- etvereign States, all teeming a ith wealth and the elements of Nirtieled greatness, inhabited by urarlythirty million , of intelltgebt and happy citizens; with a comae Ice extending to every pert on the globe —a ea ve.-- to every sea—end our repreM utatiri s duly eel, i.lcrcJ at every' Court, as well where loved .kod chi , has been accon.pli.heJ through the of liberty and its benign institutions It has been the work of our National Union, and the well eonsitlercti eouspaot by which it is held togeth. r Perpetuate these relations, and en the past beek the close of the present century will find the United States with a population of one hundred millions, and all the moral and political elements of national greatness, viForons and pure. The reugth of our Republic, it is manifest, con sists largly its the substantial interests which each itidnidual has in the permanency of those wise institutions which confer equal portiotia of sovereignty anti dignity on the richest and poorest, the hi hest Niel humblest; which were baptized in the Ido sl of our revolutionary struggle and transmitted to us as a sacred legacy by our fathers The Union is the guarantee for the future enjoy ments of all these blessings as it for the con tinued progress sad prosperity of the Nation. (Applause ) The perpetuity of these institutions, with their warred and ample blessings for the use of others, is our highest duty to the .itrurld Our govern ment is a peculiar one, differing to a greater or less extent from any to be found in ancient or modern times It is a representative system, in which the will of the governed is felt, at short intervals, in every department The mass of the people is recognized as the proper sourced govern mental power, and the ballot box is the Wiliam through which the popular will is reflected. This is called self-government. Each citizen, high or low, rich or poor, has his part in the government, endowed with hifh privileges and charged with great responsibilities. It is not oulv his right to vote, but his duty to do so (Applause.) Under this system all measures of government emanate front the popular will—by it one may is accepted and soother rejected; one measure of policy sustained and anotherreputtlated - In the great work of giving effect to the vital priuciples of our republic, the Democratic party has been prominent and efficient. With occasional brief intervals it has held unbroken sway in the Govt rnmeot, and the highest vindication of its policy is furnished in the unexampled prosperity of the country: Here is the ready answer to ail the allegations of the opposition The tree should be judged by its fruits. Besides, its policy sad measures hive been uniformly vindicated by time sad experience, and those of the opposition cowiemned. 804 was the case as to the acquisition of the territory of Louisiana and Florida; the war of 1812; the annexatioa of Texas; the war with Mexico. ' the sequieition of California,ao with regard to Sauk, a mammoth a Sub- Treasury and the Tariff. Whilst the opposition were as uniformly wrong, as in the ease of the alien and Sedition laws, the bankrupt act and the Tariff of 1842. No other ,party has been so sbaiternbly wrong. Had it been the it purpose to be on the wrong side of all questions they could not have intemeded so well. It is *Luella incredible that.there is not a vestige of their policy to be foetid is the Government. And still oar sneorse is as important as ever. Perhaps awe never was a time when theirianiph of the Dosineratie party ea more important than, new, or a time when its miseion was re well re, fleeted as is its present motet* for the rights of the Stapiwageiot Abolitiosiesa, and for civil sad religiose fowl opium Kaow•Notbiegiaa. • We are rapidlyapprec President ial eleetkaa, involving the intey of oar party wed Pi lo6 4 l rlL - WMp.lh. dal 41 °•es, "Cy silatto stlistikemmor ashen sod mg lammihipid6 AMID yew far asubsaaa oral (11010 Si 50 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 19, 1856. plause ) • Buchanan is a distinguished son of oar own great• State. Bhe has Ass heworisd Woo, and he in turn has added to her horde, sad his election will be *ties to both. (Applause.) For masy years Peaasyfranis has sought the distioetion of pressman hiss to the mass a. Pres eleut - her jewel and their hope, for her pride and their heuefit. (Applause.) She was werraated in 11,1. Her political sad moral in this Live in he family of Bailee juetilled bar. She ha- !writ A line member of the Cesdaderasy. whit flbe agreed to do. She has hese faithful to the eumpect---to every festese of it. 56.. ha. I.een loyal in peace and liberal in war. She liar dune justiee and promotes! peat .seseeg her sisters - She was among the eat to rarefy the Conetitutiou, and she will be the last to violate it Slie possesses the barthspot of lads peutirso., the Coastitutiosi sad the Usioa, sad neither shall ever die with her easseste (Grit applause .; The State House Bell that bat sired ed the news that Liberty was boreetat the Con veution had done the deed-nosed in the mid' of her nietrorlis. The fanaral tolls she has sworn never to bear. (Applause.) la the Revolution she did her pert. la the wit of 1812, her men and money were fully tendered. 80 also mu the war with inezien. Central is Cleo graphical position, she has always been so is the conAlenee and affeetioss of the feebly. (Ap plause t—Utsequalled in the exams sad variety of her industrial pursuits, se is her amoral Mo ment:, of greatness, wealth sad power. Sesand only to nue of bet eaten in the lumber of her populatiou, and to moue is moral sad politieal greatness, in her love of coustry sad OHM of justice. She has always bees treats the COl mtitutiou In future she will go for those who go for the Union; sbe will despise time who trample upon the rights of say maim. (Ape And yet she has smear, up to this eightieth year of the nation's age, bees hawed with the Presidency, in the perm* of Gas of her own 'citizens The Southern likstim have had nine; those 1)u the East of her duos; sad no the West four—she noise. What Peansylesaisa eau hob upon this picture, and thee raise his voice againA the proffered hosed But the in:Aination to honor the State was sot the oul) considratien that =eid epee the oc , .ovention. Mr. present ed attractiou. I believe be would have beau u,,wioltrd irrespective of his local residents,. The exigencies seemed to call for him. His long expetieuce, his clear Sad calm judgment, sad steady firmness, so often evinced is trying times, designated him. He had bees ashoolea in the most difficult ordeals of the past; bad draws his lesions fr.otu Madsou and — Jankson, enjoyed the coupe n toast% p and example of Clay and Webster, Calleiun and King, Wright sad Polk. Binge 1814 he has, with brief internals, served the public and excelled in every position. Is Co.. grees, in the Cabinet, and at foreign Courts. Wbeu Jackson's name was presented to the people, Bnchanau took the lead. (Applause.) When the attempt was made to cheat the old aro •.fter he had the most votes, Mr. Bueluisan resisted the scheme When Jackson put his heel on the Bank, Buchanan helped him to keep it there k Applause ) When the old hero said the French tenet pay or tight, Heolutnan stood by him When, in 1841, the opposition passed the Bankrupt act, Mr Buchanan resisted hand fur. 1.4,1 t 0.., frightful eeeelefuenees. Wises al the -time evasion, they attempted to abolish the dun Tic•e•tsry and f.iiligtitifle a Fiscal Agency, Mr Bueheoan resist i d them. When about the saw , ti m e th. taught hermies on the subject of the tire 1.0) and the revenue laws,. his powerful argliteeet• sanetinnedby experience a. feared t put p...es When it was proposed to re ann. c Teat., Buchanan judged rightly and went for st Wh. it our diffleuities With Mexico preseitt.,(l t Old Buck was for tight. 11. eeiiii..ll.l wi-ely throughout the struggle. W h.... i t W 4 pr..p,..ed to, restrict the occupancy oft lie lee. r i t..rj,.., to keep the people of one of the ....tiotry ..ut, Mr Buchanan oppos ed the mot.. mene When at the Court of St. .I,4fit Bull wanted to dictate his toilet, Old Buck went to the Court with his own coat and breeches on When Lined Palmerston wasted to cheat us under the Clayton and Bulwer Treaty, Mr Buchanan soaked his false logic, and then wiped it out I tell you More that he did. Whoa die compromise meseurs.pf 1850 were adopted, he took the stump sad nitained them. I stood by him many a hot day,!whilet ha demonstrated the constitutionality of the Fugitive Slave law, and eudeavored to convince the people that those measures should be a finality on every pout& to which they referred. Amongst the resit, that the people of the Territories should settle the slavery question to suit. themselves. That was my doctrine in that terrible campaign, and I know that we agreed When bogus Americanism &id stated tits sagacious mind at once defected and exposed its fallacies I tea tell you what he did Beside When he was defeated for the Pres sidential nomination in 1848, he supported his miere.osful . . enpetitor, General Case; whoa, , i n 18;e:, his claims were agais deferred, he took the stump for General Pierce. You will all remember that when Thaoleualitepbeas mid Joseph Ritmer re chartered the Bank, Mr. Buchanan said it was rotten, and when the same party attempted to reclaim with cartridge boa -what they had het at the ballot box, aid usurp the Government, Mr. Buchanan met them on the threshold Ile has done many good thin, sled when he is President he will dlo more. Him companion, Mr Breckbaridge, if all that we could desire. He is a diatingnishal sad fovorite son of Kentucky Though spite young, be ban made bis market both as a soldier sad as a statesman In the field aid if Congress he was alike _admired. Hie .short saner in the Hone of Representatives has serval tO distbefiniat Wm se a man of great powers of &ad, sad as a statesman of enlarged slaws, as a high toned ne sd gentleman and fine scholar. lie will • e over the Senate wi th dignity, and be the of the nation should the first Milos be by death or otherwise. So much for the Democratic, now for the other side. A - nd here•l am st fault, for I ass tilt Milli* that I can call to mind the frightful itersi n t ms candidates and the is they re resent. i then, is Col. Fremont and Mr. Derma, reprises& iegsectional or Black Republicanism; scat steads Millard Fillmore, administrator dektmos *ow at the deceased Whig party, with Agars* haste Doselson for Vice President ( ansa l tip Natiunul K now - nista; then cas es ton and Kenneth Rayner the embodiment et refractory Americanism Lul last, bat sot leant, stands Garrett Smith Ltd Mr. Mafferiaas, dis ciples. of intensified Abolitionists. Then *we is Maio. lawitot, Spiritualism, Woataas Ve t. , and other isms to be egos*, apportioned. icig as to many things, thaw parties mod elmosts unite in one. common boot of luatility to the ihmocracy. Dissimilar is faith sod ben they readily fraternise on the platena of plies :sad / power. You mistake say "mime, boweeeir , gfri much fellow citieeoe, I JJmvs 111,0440, that I intead to dissitst this fried:id army stosadhlatsa sad their apparteassees. I ilia look Aare& Preemie bnelly, aid be oily; "so far Kr. nu more. it is evident that he has i or eilaihilhis piety is Nis sestina of the thaw! Will atm ail to this Repablieta candidate oily le osa sad oil moms, has be gives to the wadi? Whom sad where did he study the Mame of Gomm salt? Where is his mooed? Where eau we lied the widows that he is it to be a suseseser to Gimp Washingtoo? What has he demo fir the Names to pm his this to We wend-wide ibetinstiom? What set of his lit smithies his to so large a shared patio eosidisee? Whet beitles be. he fough t sa d Softies woe? "Os what de& this our feed, that he hes gluts so great?" Qua Meade maws? They Ray ham bidden reams, but it is time they devehiped. Perhaps they sought a hero soars sod a Statesmen without a reword. they sought am empty vessel is whisk to deposit all the isms. Perhaps the Berblhoo party, just omit* out ea geograpkisal pruidpies, not entail' what mute to take, see when to go, have earwig ded that they would seed an sevisiser---that as they do not p by principles they bail better go Lit compass. dud haviag heard that 001. t had trued the filoositme of the sides mad sealed the heights of the Bosky Motataiss, mad hood a bmsiihi bee a wiled gap rea p, . ha is just the sea for the eaergemy. It se true that Col. F. did elms those somansins ender die cgs , proteetkin sad pay of the Gov wisest, but it is equally true that other sea did the sass thing on their owe restomiiiility; and they do sot ask to be Prosiest. Kit Chemou was inseam is this way sod yet he is mot evea mined for Vim President. It is also tree that Col. F. performed eertaia briniest feats in Celifor aii about the time of its assisitios, fir whisk he was mart leartialled sad lasi gat, is every mot; it also appears that he ritted that State is the Ceded States Slew for a brief period, sad was relieved fro. further serviee, at she sem desks, by almost mums easiest. bathos thlop famish Dooms= feemakiag hi. Preside's. Bat be the meson what they say, I shall Mae soy gases if his fries& be lot is the peskiest of the Waters traveler, hi the choke of bud reeds, with* they had takes moodier, be. fore they get to the wed of the see, sod I shall ads it still farther if the Colossi does sot lad it son dillies& to diaeova l :c os o the White House, this me over the Misattiss. I se no sakiaduess to Col. t. Re is doubtless a very good sea is his way, and quite sedum in his seism, bat miasmatic' is amt the only qualifration for the Presidemey. The wheats of Government is a differeat sad far more diflienity mod,. It - would be ao more than to employ a blacksmith to make a good watch or a Iseazto expound the gospel, Aim to 'sleet an or to act as Chief Magistrate. Bat seriously patlemen, is there ovie'sesa its this yam anstably who ma look mother hi the lase, mad say that Col Fremont is the mat who should have the direction of our National affairs at this eritied *Mare, ia these dime of foreign and dosestie trouble—do not believe any moan will say this. The idea is absurd. Bet I abject to Mr. Fremont on other gr u. He has been presented and is m pperted as a motional easdidate. He was Dominated !by the Northern and Eastern States, sad not one paper or public man, so far as my Irecreledge goes, has some oat for him is the South. La him and in spirit, therefore, his nomisatios was sectional. I am no alarmist, for I have great eonMesce in the sober judgment of the people, bet I cannot class my eyes to the dangerousC eerie, of geographies) parties. From the very nature st they mast beget disoontent and sepa ration. It is the first time that a candidate of respectable strength has been presented on sec tional ideas Should he be elected, he will be the President of a notion sod the benefactor of a faetlon. He cannot represent truly the whole nation. He will be under obliptwas to ode ',don only. The slaveholdin; States can have no part or lot in his administrative. His advisers will be from one section. The boson and emolu ments of the government would be conferred upon that section, and the South be eseleded. It has been the usage of parties to claim the patros4 age for their friends, and it will not be pretended that Col. F. is the man to rise above the rule. But the whole idea is wrong, it is in conflict with the genius of our institutions, which intends equality for all the States. It is at varesnee wadi the dean to be performed and the obi lions to be assumed. The wink being to alienate the feelings of the people dose, motion from those of the other, and to embitter the shassiels of national intersoures--to weaken the tide which bind the Stein together. Nor will it do to point to the Present platform and say that it declares for the Union. . The party trisimpluint epos sectional grounds, Mortise= or Southern, might prate about the Union ' bet disaffection would come from the defeated section, the people of which, feeling that they were no longer equal, under the Constitution, maid slain' their right to demand a release from all its obligation. Washington (meow the, and and his admonition should not be lightly Much as I admire Mr. Buchanan, I could not vote for him as a sectional candidate. But sow for the Kassa. question, sad the nee of the Republican or Fremont party. Kra • ce the eommetieement of the prompt session of Cosgres the whole crowatry has bees agitated, • • lag the Mato of moiety in &Mu. The most amomplished artists of the Republica* party re painted the Martial• from time to time. That the Mettle of the truth would have made a posture dark enough, so owe • doubt; but that them gentlemen, for . their own, have gave. it the despot= ij s am as evident. We had bees by the Republican mason ia Cowper, as rostrum tad is the pulpit, that the people of Itimewari had invaded the Territory, .a the the Meadows for mearbseauf she Legislature • is Mann, 1855, that the itrespiltake see bees drives from the polls; that the poem- I had hues mar* by mere bowie or.. that Isere of Kama* were net valid ham that the • would sad Mask' resist them; that assreiy • ia Karam that meows lasi maim were to germ the ends of slavery; that 'sally liberty lay Yowling at the het of • bartbr i rdiaas, aid that the whole eswatry ea the verge et elvil war. Nem is a *tang what remedy did the Rquiblima Repro. • is Otagrees propose. MI they ask a sad )wt messum Of mind lly lo erns, ' .chess, but with leamwdadow *met the e t tie l ftraf ali th k a al Akt malice mad the Stan Mouthed.% healed that body, a omens admittedly without er, sad is sonroveatioa d Ism aml in maidee the Government. With all Star anemias for tie law stkey maid abeam a • • step tahmila &kw of tallevierw • We won bald that the &dainties et Yam Ma as a IRON waa me* hir bar imam the eels made plashairte the *ffie stied sad nridell war is the Tomitery. llientlemea, is bed bosun mimes se U, time some Arnim and lag mama Si pawl*, was deutamlol by the heat Wanes, en Wyse Hann% bet cir the whole Wily that mildiet she laws d the Ronal wee ' u miak heel, a. rigid of V I EIMPI 1161111111114111111111111111111$ the mrnabam, WM" wen mpymmmha mim4 llll 2 id* die Qamstitadsk nadhbnAlhal liAmika -. to mom slim dillisaliista k lfK IhmeMe..-a .11eashera .house, alms sea minla 4 1 14 111 muted to the Senate oa lioaday last, by Mr. Douglas, and Wednesday fixed for a fiaal vote. bill provides that the precast-inhabitants may sleet delaying; Jo a Omeventies to meet is lioremhor omit, to farm a amatitution, preparato ry to atheism' is as a State ; that a board of five euusignionms should be appointed by the Pres ides," to repair to the Territory, to saperintesd the .electiost of delegetes • to Asko an emtuaers tioa of the legal voters; ;ad put ute a list of ro ten at every District ; and that all those who may have left on business or because of the sad elate of the society,'shall vote. The law throws ample guards about , tiliUllob- box, by heavy pataltimi against illegal voting or violent,eforts to iaterfere with :the right of suffrage; it also salads all the Territorial statues Intrusive of the liberty of speechand the freedom of the pram, % aid thou requiring an of fidelity to the Fugitive Slave Law as a q leation for a voter sad other absurd provisions. imam teetotal W hig isoonsistent with the Constitadon and the organic law, are clearly tritbin the scope of the Cosgreasioull eorreenok without interfereing with the doctrine of non-intervention, for the Kamm law provides that the action of tbe terri torial legislature shall be confined "to rightful subjects of legislation." Here, then, was a mea sure of peace and law, the prompt admission of Kansas as a State, irrespective of her decision on the Slavery question. Its vital objects being to terminate at once all motive on the part of out siders to force temporary population into the tittnicory, with the view to control its policy on the Slavery question. What followed? Did the Republican Senators support this measure? Did they accept this pro politica to bang Kansas in as a State ? By no many to my aneaseuient it met their violent re initialises. The first demonstration came from the Senator from Massachusetts, Mr. Wilson, who proposed to strike out the satire bill and insert as tispa a nation, simply repeali all the laws of. Kan sas; Territory ass State. for from New substituting anareli or the admission of the York, Mr. Seward, the 1 e r and the intellect of that rirty, still insisted epee the Topeka Constitution.. In Abe fate of all his anathemas against the lawless authorities in Kansas, he vot ed to sanction a measure wanting in the slight est coloring of authority, and which had been brought forth in defiance of the law and its *lb. ewe ; and what is surprising, in addition, his merge seems to be sanetioaed by the entire Re press, beaded by that common fountain llii• s, falsehoods and vagaries, the New York 7$ -thole ( The Senator from New Hamp shire, Mr. Hale, proposed to strike out the fourth of July, 1856, as the time that the law should take ant, and insert July, 1857, so that the strife in Kansas might last a year longer ; that bleeding K.anses, for whose people so many eroe idile tears has been shed, might bleed on. They first objected that the local laws- forbid sad pun ished free discussion, and thus the slavery m had the advantage ; then the bill was amended, as bad been agreed upon by the committee, so as to annul all such laws. The next objection was, that the Free State men had been driven from the Territory, and the friends of slavery would have things all their own way ; then the bill was so amended as to give all former citizens the opportunity to return and participate in the election. The next plea the intention and allot was to bring in as a Slave State. The answer was- no; it provides that the unre strained will of the Bona fide citizens shall settle , that question, and that the; objection could not properly come from the Rough/iota side, because they had uniformly claimed that 'a very large majority,of the real settlers are against slavery, and that all they sought was a fair expression of, popular will But reason was powerless. They resisted to the end, and finally the bill was pass- at the end, of a session of twenty-one hours, by , a rota of lit to 12. Within a few boars after, the Rouse passed a bill admitting Kansas under the Topeka Consti tution, and thus the issue is fairly made up.— The Democrats are for bringing in Kansas by the straight way under the auspices of the law ; . the Republicans insist upon her admission by the Crooked way ; a way tarnished by violence and revolution. The Democrats emceed for a Constitution to be made by the whale people, through a pure ballet, bee; the Republicans, for. ea* made by s party without the agency of law or of the ballot bolt. Judge ye between us. But is said that the Bosse troubles have pro seeded from the legislation of 1864 that the doctrine of non-intervention bast failed, sad the Democracy are responsible. This is the best our enemies can do; but it is bad logic It is a sufficient answer to say, in reply, that we have , bad peace and quiet in Nebraska, as we have , had also in Utah and New Mexico—all organized on the doctrine of non-intervention. T h e dif ficulties inKansas werethe inevitable ooneequenees Of the undue oftciocumess of out-eiders Fined-. • cal Abolitionists on the one hand, sad fire-eating Bouthersen on the other. The ' press aid the Fleapit, have pointed to Memos as a kind of battle field for the Slavery and anti• Slavery feeling (if the whole country; and invited people to go there sad fight it out, Men unsettled in theirpurpoees, and without fixed principles have been sent into. the, Territory, stimulated with prejudices and armed with deadly wevona to determine a question of local policy. Whit could we expect short of lawless violence. The agency the pul pit bee hadin thiawork meets my unqualifiedoon demsatioo. I cannot me why the temples that were cleared of the Moneyeimagers, should be *Wed with a question, of bitter partissaship and of populating the Territories. To expound the Gospel is a work Which should be equal to any man s ambition; and the dissemination of its truths is just the best way possible tti constrain staissman as well as the people to do what is right in the Territories as. well as in the States. But these esdiets am not contrary to the theory of the law—to the doctrine of self-gov orameat. It is a principle indicated by our ex misses. It is sailed to all territories and ail ages ; as broad as the universe and as imperish able as the mountain& It is applicable to the quistion of Slavery in the Territories, and was is tended as a finality. Whatever the powers of Congress may be, it was politic and wise to forego Its use sad trust the question with the peop l e. 4i. Far oise I regard the principle as settled and that hereafter the people of the territories their local legislature are to antral the of Slavery in their own way ; • and why they sot be permitted to do *b? Way , at to former neighbors are now lathe Is sad would seam aureesonable that u =l skis the right to legislate for then. Certainly las sot se otespesast to judge as they. There is set scaly beauty is the theory, but shore is paistisal *dee is it. A noi r loomo Mee of his Noma isharited rigida by sheng iss_g his real: use ham a Sines to a lii*ery. - The saver *PAY ass to the Gomel eillinalerat asessapasiss hiss, ia full tons and vistas I as sess wri b;pe warm of powetto Logidose fru she • bold tat aw l sad the people the orker sill I bolt tat who Compat ex postr wthis yrs two pm* all Ito loam as la, ilia olio oe tie Stows- a dW *lse sokiss, pow is asspisis- r olosilo opy= olf last logidstios. Ta be to *AM, *a ads , I bow SIMI Imo akiAalkosawalo rw-7 ,-.4oo.enionerviL • 41hopopen rho ! Newt flosillogft the limitiosi _= _ B. F. BU3OIOIIIDMIt. ME permaaentlyssabad -in inelpinat step. Beth is not a tame* uew. - ilipapirt will at all dines bi within' ibe 'eon people . Should Ramose aims int4 4 4, n =the as a /roe State, the pimp* °odd. lab Slavery, end nee versa. ' On the general subject of MatO7 I= given lay views. Ide not lam* ll'' . in his wisdom permitted the AlkohNO'lAlWis way to this Continent, not why inoed to fasten the instititioa et Itkrtigeggyses the Colonies. I cannot tell wha t 111117-1110. tend to bring oat of the nilatitms now between the reties in oar counfty ~ htel l #111111,!VI know that when the eonstitudat'*..lMPOS upon between the States, each I lea tei=t and independent, Slavery was 2ki 'section of the Brat artistes* to niteWido tiff Representation in emigre's, sad in th* r eme, lion of the fourth article, se to tINC" of fugitives from labor. That alter tlut liberation, the eonxenti o l4_ widl , - . at its head, agreed to tolerate and - ' the insti tution I know . too, that when swum. is made betweep.equal and indepeadankpagea, it is good morals and good faith tocsin iteessree And still the institution so establishedis now slant theme of agitation. The most fleminisni abolitionists dare not deny that it is the albeit a state to have it or not, and that no Mali& power eau rightfully interfere; still • we. elf =intimation and recrimination has beet kept up The motives of the Southern people= it, have been subject to the meat a . criticisms, whilst in turn, assaults of eriatr ille levee have been made upon Nordista usid'ili their motives, all tending to an elienallbe lips people from each- other; and to prepay* OW *it violent separation From my boyhood,' Eutd - b my very heart, I have depricated thaaikillig dissentious because they can do no to either w hite or colored races; are la evil and to evil only. Tfiey maylisiii, as I fear they do hazard, the peace and fails terests of twenty-five millions of White CON* without the possibility of improving the Lion of of the three millions of the colored mai. It is astonishing that even fanatigant--inyetange fanaticism—should sanction practioceim want i and efforts so directly in controtrel4kma rd the Constitution, and so wasteful of Wilms which it vouchsafes to all. The aborting' muse teem with the most vile execrations of as evil which they cannot avert, and their outer. saw elate sentiments full of treason, Wendell nil lipa, for instance, deciared in a cxsteestio . a at New York—" The only remedy for the slam is the destructaon (. : t the Govereasen , ..., e 0 / lea. lenge any HOW to tell me what the * :fineknolline dye for us " Lloyd Garrison, at the samelaw sestina proposed to resolve "That, theonielmeill vital isson,to be made with the slow, per*, it the dissoteikesefshr een'etamy lassukuri-iaidS." Henry C. Wright said—" I like the reselinisa r \ eery much." "I don't care the snap et my %ger for the Constitution, when the. 'Of slavery is to be concerned. The on tottr i A l of impbrtance is that the mass of the= Telerate the Constitution.. We should 'to do away with this. / diawk God that ram a traitor to that Constitution." Burma *bey on the same occasion, said that, “the Clinititi. don displayed the inginnity of the ear diteß, and that the Union ought to be dissolved.")KN. i Wade, now a Republican SenatoVfithipllio, If a speech to the people of Maine, In Auct i re l l denounced the slanholders as a " of aristocrats," and the system as one et "'outrage; e i aggression and wrong ; ' that its v life, ing, is an outrage, and that the ' mama .t -tits. Save Law Should be repeal ..." Dlr. ard, in a speech made at Buffalo, in' Outobwilest, speaking of society in the SlaveStates,aym that " the non slave bolder in the Slave, Skidesin allowed no independence, no nentailstap lig* pistols mid knives enforce not merely theitiMallie but their actual partnership for gayety." Mr. Seward, in the pSinaate, on last Widow day, declared with great earnestness of imaNi, that " thasiay for compromises badges* *Ann Mr. Sumner, of Itlseeachusetts, in Nevesellme.bnlt pt Boston, said " It is an oligharley aliens b► pond precedent; heartless, grasping, tyninnisok careless of humanity, righ t or the Conatitstion ; stuck together only by a conlederay tiaras." The Boston Liberator, of the trait, says: " The United States Commitstism is 4 covenant with the devil, cad see agrastimma mid hell;" and again, that "the only ism is the dissolaticin of the Union." The Nei Yak Standard is but little less violent, and tie-!1f tonne is vigilant in its work of Amain the !emir No man can notice these things cish !Whig that we have fallen upon evil time,. - • ' But let us turn from these disgusting thsen diarisms and read our duty on the sub tif Federal relations, Fis presented by W in his last address. •He says : qltis of to moment that you should ?rope* edishats the value of your National Union, to your indliidual and collective happiness; that you should Cher ish a cordial, habitual and immoveable idea ment to it--accustoming yourselved M AM and speak of it as a palladium of your.po4lo4 safety and prosperity; watching for its ' ' don with zealous anxiety; !lino whatever may suggest even a ate can in any event be abandoned, d • y frowning upo n , the first dawning of net etiss9l to alienate any portion of our omustry Am *V: rest, or to enfeeble the sacred tier ni together the various pule." . , I , ;And yet, these fanatics have •no pidgeer Sampson -like, they an rom bent on tearing dehestihe temple though they perish beneath the Aim, The have never offered either a pruning nit. *lig remedy for the evils of whisk theyesseelta...- So far, their efforts have hauled the sinee; se striated his opportunities and dill its an" shamus. If they think the Ald be happier in his own country why do thief 41 the Coloeisatieu Society! When. tbs Des Silk, with Clay in the lead, attempted NM- thisthee, the Abolitionist s turned their hubs mil itird , I - obsiZ me Bet suppose no constitutional di in tervene, or that the Southern pee* , to emancipate their slaves, at *VOW p r ovided they were taken sway tut Intl* maintained—what then meld be dclue r 'Odd a scheme be devised -to better their einifilitidil? Who would employ, feed and elothitr i a lees bein_gfe Where could a home be thena I WOuld they be permitted td Kalb ? I Alla Illi. - , _ Ali* change imp they live eui elevated is the-wear their ideas of son osposided sawn to these the free blacks without politiom whites, for which "Ms ot the bops." If. • aro those rows SoMto soi d 4 ologralisag sew she 'maims Ilia sot) pre I st tie • r- _.tigassibriasvilesea aiselbsiks. Assiky ingialistihmo vistas If Wit egiesdes, sad+ piiisuilir al".l =j isieroors kora* 111•Mss, shade isikm, 1014d1,./404 tirJ cJi-la HIIT .- tv.z.ii J. 4 1.1 C,d c - .41 . tai 14.0 artimiir ^strrae ':--,D..'241 .11,107111'W, 11111111 le• _ _.A11,. • -2L
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers