. , • 3 . . . ~ •1 . . . . 1. i • . . . • . . --...... . . • , ............-.--."-•-". "•-•••.-•----..--•-...-----..----....,-........-..........--- -.-..--..............-.....------...-..--..--.-..—.—........ . .-•.. .7, ', :;- .'..... ..: If ..._;., :,— . 'f ... 7: , , _ . ~ .. - Iti 0 \ :-. --.' •-•- .._ .. . . . ...... ...,., ... ..._. .. el I ! . .. J. • ~, , .,.., _-,...4. ;; ~..Cq.'., ; „ • . . - lilk - : •,„ . • . • =0" ,• , . . . . .., .- ~ ~ .: ~, , ...r -I'll', •,- 1 % t: , ..: ,. ..- ':. ,I; . ' .:. '' . ... .. • '' .:. -.'• ... '-- ~,;* ''' . - . 1 -' -- .... . ' .. • ..•! .r.. ' ..,-',;,:. ~,-.-, ;'i.04..:-..t . .. z....1f..-, '12,....1.11.s . ....'1 . : : '. - ,:i: . ,:.. 2. 1 , ,_‘,......, e., ,' . . ' - ••' ' ' ... - , . ..- ~ .. , ';.,. -..,.-,_ .: - ...t.:':' 11::, .-.:.:". :-.:,-..a .. :-...1,'%?..:-..i./..t:::`;+, - :7,! 41 , .. ... '-.---- -- - I, :' ''..-•,'_ -- .* .1 ''' ---- -'' .. .'' 1 -.:: ' I—' ' • - .) • i - - ~. -. . . , . . . - . -.......-... _ _ _ SINGLE• COPIES, .} VOLU Tamils of Adveit,*ing. 1 Awe pp lines] 1 insertion, .. . _ 50 1 " 14 3 14 ... . . si 5.0 V,aeh subsequent insertion less then 13; 25 1 Square three arenthsy 7 . _ 2 5 ,.„ I " six " ••-- - • - 400 1 14 nine " 550 I $ eat year, 600 h o le and figure work, per sq., 3' ins. 3CO tvery subsequent insertion, - .. u So I Column six months, u 18 00 1 .. - n lO 00 II II ll ' . 7 00 t " per year. 30 00 . i 41. e 41 re 16 00 bisplayed SiAlle.column, each inser tilh less than four, , , 300 Vigil-additional insertion, ' , 2 00 bAble-column, displayed, per annum 65 00 1/ " six months, 35 00 0 " three " 16 00 0 " one month, 600 st ‘‘ per square . 'cif 10 lines, each insertion under 4, 100 parts of columns will be inserted at the same rates. Administrator's or txecutor's Notice, 200 Auditor's Notices. each, - - 1 50 Sheriff's Sales, per tract, 1 50 s slarria, , ,Te Notices, each, 1 00 birorce Notices, each, 1 50 Administrator's Sales, per square for 4 insertions, businc,=s or Professional Cards, each, not exceding . 8 linca, per yea 500 Special and Editorial Notices, pe. line, 10 ill transient advertisements must be raid in advance, and no notice will be taken of advertisements fran — a distance, unless they are accompanied by the money or satisfactor tcfcrence. egitsinr,ss earts. ttOliN S. MANN, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Coaderiport, Pa., trill attend the seretul Courts in Potter and ACKman Counties. All busineqs entrusted in his care will receive prompt attention. Office corner of West sod Third streets. 10:1 F. W. KNOX, .ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa.; will regularly attend the. Courts in Potter; and the adjoining Counties. 10:1 ---- ARTHUR G. OLMSTED, ATTORNEY 4 COUNSELLOR AT LAW, 4 Coudersport, Pa., will attend to all business .entrusted to his care, with promptnes arol tfdt ity. (Mice on Soth-west corner of Main and Fourth streets. 12:1 ISAAC BENSON ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend to all business entrusted to him, with. care and promptness. Office on Second .st . . near the Allegheny Bridge. CABINET MAKER, having erected a new and convenient Shop, on the South-east corner of Third and West streets, will be happy to receive and fill all orders in his calling. Repairing and re-fitting carefully and neatly done on short notice. Coq•lersport, Nov. 8, 1859.-11-Iy. 0. T. ELLISON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa., respectfully informs.the citizens of the vil lage and vicinity that he will pro:imply re spond to all calls for professional services. Office on Hain st., in building formerly oc cupied by C. W. F 4 l . lis, Esq. 0:32 COLLINS SMITII SMITH & JONES, DEALERS IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, Oila, Fancy Articles, Stationery, Dry Goods, Groceries, &c., Main st., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 D. E. OLMSTED, 0. S. COLWELL, A: C. TAGGillf. D. R OLMSTED & CO., DEALERS IN DRY GOODS, READY-MADE nothing, Crockery, Groceries, kc., Main st., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 M. W. 31 INN, DEALBR IN BOOKS & STATIONERY, MAG AZINES and Music, N. W.. corner of Main and Third sts., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 X. J. OLMSTED S. D. KELLY. OLMSTED & KELLY. IEALER IN, STOVES, ,TIN .& SHEET IRON WARE, M.ain st., nearly opposite the Court House, Coudersport, Pa. Tin and Sheet lion Ware Sande to order. in good style,, on short notice. 10:1 COUDERSPORT HOTEL, D. F. GLASSM[RE, Proprietor, ' Corner of 'Main and Second Streets, Coudersport, Pot ter Co., Pa. 9:44 ALLEGA.NY HOUSE, . ihmum M. MILLS, Proprietor,. Colesbnrg Puller Co., Pa., seven miles north of Cou 4""r +'t on the Road 9:44 LYMAN HOUSE, C. LYMAN. Proprietor, Ulysses, Potter Co., Ps. This. House is situated on the East corner of Main street, opposite A. Corey ) 1 4 Eon's store, and is well adapted to meet the wants of patrons and friends. 12:11-1y. EZRA STARKWEATFIER, LACKSIIITII,,wonId inform his former cus tomers and the public generally that he has Tee , tablished a shop in the building form :erly.ocenpied by Benj. Rennels in Couders port, where' he will he pleased to do all 'kinds of Blactsmithing on the most reason ' able terms. Lumber, Shingles, and all kinds of Produce taken in exchange tot work. 12:34. Z. J. THOMPSON, CArRIAGE & WAGON .kAKEB and RE PAIRER. Coudersport, Potter Co., Pa., takes this method of informing the pub lic in general that he is prepared to do all work in his line with promptness, in a workman-like manner, and 'upon the most accommodating terms. Payment- for 'Repairing invariably respired on delivery of the work. - Va 411 kinds of. PRODUCE feu on - account of wnrk: e;35. NIMOIR 3. I sit and watch the Hot aria shAott blend- As day ' s retttiln'tgglbry leaves the west, Tilt n%ht' %Irk curtain, silently descending, Mitts back my winged day-dreams to their hest,. And the dusk landscape's vast unbroken plain rails on my sense with dull and heavy pain. Oh, night and silence! solemnly enshrouding The objects that my heart has learned to love, Roused by our spell weird messergers come crowding. Which only hours like these have power to move, Reckoning my spirit inward to behold The curtain of their mystic wcrld unrolled. Then thou art with me thou my sours ideal, A presence felt—a prophecy fulfilled-- A life within my own : intensely real— . Whose pulses Pith my holiest hopes have thrilled— Thou, whose great soul, with loftier aim than mine, !Attest my struggling, nature up to thine. It may be that the earthly name thou bcarest Will ne'er be spoken to my mortal ear; Yet tho' unrecognieed the fortn thou wearest, t 'eel no less thy lying presence near, Which, entering in my soul's most deep recess, Reveals thy being to my consciousness. Perhaps we side by side have stood together. Anil hand with hand in transient clasp have met l Trod the. same path in bright and stormy weather, Seen childhood's sweet illusions rise and set; Perhaps exchanged -life's outward courtesies, While soul from soul was veiled in close dis guise. 1 50 Or it maybe froth heights we call unreal, ' Beeausr , our sight is dulled by mists of earth, Thy forvid thought shapes many a bright ideal, O'er which I muse uncousciotis whence its birth. _ It may be that this homesickness of heart Is but a yearning to be where thou art. - And it may be a pang of isolation Mingles with thy delight its sad silky; That life lacks fullness, even in bear relation To the eternal source of life and joy. Panting, though living waters round thee burst, To quench the fever of thy human thirst. Perhaps, though entered on thy rest before me, Thou watchest, waiting, wanting something still ; And by that speechless yearning weavest o'er tne A my-tic chain that hinds me to 013 will. Else what the secret of this vague unrest. This longing unfulfilled within my breast? I know hut this: how opposite soveer . Our paths in time's short passage may di verge, Though change or accident way seem to sever, And seas between us roll their sleepless . surge, There is a goal where I shall meet with thee, And join my life to thine eternally. Ahd then I wake or sleep, in joy or sorrow, Though care may weave fur we its heaviest chain, Nothing can quench the light of that to-mor row Whcie promise brightens every hour of • pain. When the celestial gates for me unclose, My soul shall find in thee its lost repose. E. A. JONES- -. "Down again I" I beard remarked, in a half pitying, half compiaining way. " Martin ?" " Yes; he's tripped again " "So I beard this morning." "'Tripped, and gone down with a hea vy fall; so heavy that I doubt if he ever recover himself again." "I'm sorry forblartin," said the other. " He has alivays impressed we as a well meaning man." '' Yes, well-meaning enough ; but some thing more than we:l-Meaning is required for success in this world "- " A spice of cunning and shrewdness, not to speak of roguery." "Shrewdness- is required, and fore thought, and a number of other qualities not posses• d, I think, in a high degree by 3lartin. As to the cunning and ro guery,-they way succeed fur a time, but they always outwit thetusehies in the end." " Poor fellow ! Be the cause what it way, I pity him. He's tried hard enough to keep up.• No n•an could have - been more faithful to 'business, so far as the devotion of his time and his active atten tion were .concerned Be deserved a _better fate." " How will his affairs settle ?" "Not particularly well, I hear." "-Does he show a fair hand ?" " Oh, yes." The answer was without hesitation I might have known that from what I know of the man " • " I don't believe Martin would hold any thing back. He hasalways impressed• me as a man who would, pay to the utter most farthing. Poor fellow , I Fitt sorry the fortunes of -war are-against him, ann that he has gone down in the lieat of bat tle, unvietorious," was responded, •in a tone of pity. - • • It was the first intimation I. had of -Martin's failure in business, and t was pained to bear cf hie misfortune. I knew Vzbelea fa tiiz Tthicifks If tie 'DiiitktOetN : qqa Vttna. POETRY. PittgoGNtrio,.*3 MISCELLANY. From Harper's Magazine ILTP HIGHER. - 001IDERSPOItt, _POTT ER COUNTY, PAW 7 1111,1313DAt. 00T011R it, 1860 _ _ _ . and , . held higi,•as a friend: in .high perhonal,tegetd,--,: - The testimony ihich had been boynO it; iiiiror of his in• tesriity 'was in' igreeineni 'with my . owu estisnote•of his obanlcter. • - Intelligence of this failure soon spread through all .the business circles in which Martin wasknown, and for two or three days alMest every other .person you met had eouncLhing to say about it. The or dinary way of referring to the subject was in -thi , words, "Your. Martin, I hear has gone down again." And not a few .respencled...“lle'essached the bottom of the bill thiitiMe." 7 Bonin' pitied; some blamed; and some spoke harshly and ad grily—the latter were of those who lost by the failure.. I felt grieved - fez', Mar tin. It was a sail ordeal for a man of right feelings to pass through. I did not meet him, except casually in the street, fur some time after his failure. But, passing his store one day. and .see ing tt chtied, as a sign that he had given up hu.iness. I felt that. as one who had known him with sonic personal intimacy, I should , not hold ru‘self aloof in this his day of trouble. called at his'honse on evening. l'hen 1 grasped his hand and looked into his face! saw that he had not come through this trial without great suffering._ He had the arpearance of a man who had come recently from a bed of sickness. " tiow are you, my friend?" I asked, as we sat down together. "As well as could .be hoped for," he replied, a feeble smile touching his lips wit h. a ray of light. "Cast down, but not forsaken." - " Not forsaken, I trust," he answered in a tirmei voice. " This is one of the troubles that is hard' to bear," said I. " Yes; .but, as in all other troubles, our strength is as our day." '•I cm pleased. to hear you - say that," I remarked. "1 should be sorry, indeed, if I could not say it," he answered, still gaining steadiness of manner. "We look forward to great trials-with a shuddering sense of fear, because we arc emiscious only of the feeble power .of endurance that may be called, our own. But when the trial comes, and we go down amidst the rush ing waters in fear and shuddering lest they overwhelm us, we find an arm to lean upon that is unseen but full of strength." "And !.4o vo it strength Las been as your day ?" said I "Yes, or I should have perished among the floods. That I sit here, and talk with yoti as a wan to his friend, clothed and in my right wind, makes the tact ev ident " . "Could you - not have prevented this disaster'?" I asked, duiint; cur euuversa• tiun. " be replied, with such confi dencea his voice that I said with some earnestness, " Then why did you nut use the meansP, " beean-e I could nut satisfy myself that they were the right means. Yin shall hear and judge for yourself. "Two months ago, ont. of my custom. ers, to whom I had sold rather more free ly than my judgement aft' rward approv ed, failed. It was only a few days be fore the note's which I MI6 received it payment carte ,due. These notes had been discounted. aid I had, of course, to take care of them. In doing this the means held in reserve fOr maturing pay meta were eshausied fur the time, and I I was thrown upon the street as a burrow er, on most disadvantageous terms. An other loss, following quickly on this une.l alarmed and bewildered ine. Twice be-1 fore had I. failed to business, and now this dreaded ordeal, more pain:ul Omni death in my totagmation, looked inc 'in; the face again, and I grew taint with heart-sickness. I lock ed eagerly this way and that. Caught at one expedient and another . dropping each in turu as! of little promise, or as indetensible on the. score of honest dealing. • .‘Winie sitting st my desk one day, searching about in my thquglit fur a way of escape from the difficulties that eu• vironed me like a steadily approaching wail of fire, a real estate agent with Whew was well acquainted, came in and said to me, in a confidential way. 1 know . where some money is to be gained. Mr. Martin.' " Money is a very desirable thing,' I answered. "•And not always to be picked up in t'..e street,' said he. ‘. %Not au far as any experience is con- , :erucd•' .or. mine . either . Well, : as I was saying,' he went on, know where some money is to be wade. Would you like to jUin me in waking it ?' I answered yes, without hekration ; for, of all things pulley was what . I then most wanted; and asked fora statement of the ways and means required. • "•In the first place,' said he, 'can you .raise three or. four thousand dollars with in a week ?' "I said yes, if the athount. was only theedilleidpimarllg ; Tif for' Wad i vesiiiint no. • • :“4Vwiltonly be needed-.temp he atisieied, 'as - bait for, taking a I And fie smiled that ro strike ine as pleasant. j' • ynuscif fully,' • I in and he went on. . I •4There is a piece of Wild lava interior of this State, which owned for year:B'llllNa eld-rrly sistere, - who long ago. were sick hog - taiga on property that yield comer The tract inewdes fled thmiSand acres!, and was bought 4 at one duller and a halt an acre.l be . had to-day for three dollarsad know' the; partiei - Who own- it. in are now, as they hard been. anxious to turn this property into money. which can be invested andinsul;e an an nual interest.: -They aro adv4eing in life, and prefer a present eertsinty to large hopes in the future. I have known of the existence,ef this:property tior• sonic and have had itching lingers toward it because I felt 'iatis6cd • from its loca tion that it mast confab) valuable miner al deposiis—coalor iron PertiSps both. Last week I ran Op into the redarn Where it was situated, end getting a skilled- man in the neighberhood, spent two days in a careful examination of the entire tract. The result Mere than confirmed my ex relation. Coal crops out in madv places, spectrilene of which I brodght ay. - -ay. It proves, on testing, to be:of superior qual, ity. Moreover, a railroad is now' , in -the course-of construction, which will pass within three miles of the land. . Why, I.Mr. Martin, this whole :duct could .be "sold-for a hundred thonsarid tl.,hiars in . an hour, if its value was known in ;the mar ket as I know Now, what I - ;reqiiire to gain possession is the- money., But unfortunately lam poor. I knoW twenty men. who would clutch at the opportunity f joining - nie in the .. purchase, and., put down the cash at a word ; but Bm afraid Ito trust them:with myseeret. iAnd this' is why I come to you If you can fur -1 • ni.,h the means required one half of the hind is yours.: I have already , seen the old ladies, and they are ready toi sell the, property for six thosand dullard; one half' cash. and the balance in six and twelve months' pavments. The thing roust be. done quickly, or they may get an inkling' of the truth. • What do you any ! Mr. Mar tin ? You can sell out your ino'erest in a week for fifty thousand dollars I.l' "New this man was not a scheming visionary, who got rich on paper twenty time= a year. but a cool shrewd person, who understood entirely what! he was; about. If he had spent two days on ti property referred to, in company with ar expert, the report he tuarle as to coal de- . posits 'night be fully relied upon.. •Here. then, was a way of escape made plain to me.. I had but to - 3 uise the s'UIA of three, thousand dollars, which thy credit would enable one to do, and hold my portion of' this land until we could make its value' known.. I was ou the . point- of thanking, Itim_for the oiler of a share in so promis- ' ing au enterprise. and Saying.that I would go in with him of course. When this 1 question came into my mind . •Is it right' ! to take advantage of the ignorance of these old ladies, and get possession of their:property at a inete tithe Li: its real' worth ?' The. question . distiUbed one cansiderably, and I endeavored to put it out of my mind. '. But it kept repeating itself, and growing more and more intru sive ever nwthent. ' , , • , —What do yoc say?' -asked the man, breaking in upon my long, hesitating si lence. " In one hem- I will give you an - ans wer,' said I. " This would afford me time to look at the subject on all siti2s. Thoetuptation, under the dreadful pressure ufl uty cit.- cenistanc:s, was very great. In either of the - previous ordeals through' which I passed I. would have yielded with scarce ly astruggle. Bur-I wild nut see, now, that a way,oreseape like ibis was - defen; : Able in any.' clear aspect of Oirisdatt morality. It.;was taking advantage of my better information to, • obtain valuable property for a most trilliveonsidi ration. Would this be in limmony with" the Gol den Rule? Would there be justice and judgment in the act ? Was it a deed that any good conscience could bear on ward to the closing of life, ..antft not feel t its pressure as a. burden growing ; heavier? ' As, I dwelt on the subject my Mind grew excited and eahr.- On the one hand was inevitable .ruin—my affairs' were.:so near, a crisis that hope had given 'way ; on the other, a for une as large its I had ever asked for lay within my reach, ,and I had un!yr to put f my hail awl take it—only to put forth niy nand - Viand save myself - from disaster and my icreditors from loss. Then came the addiiorial ;r. guwent that iny refusal to aceept the adrautage would not prevent the old la dies from . lusing this - property: Some other:persow person - would be fotind to 'take. my place infurnishing the:cash yequired, Ind so the-land would pass tonew own-. era. But this did not eati4yl we.. It was the.old lithe _argument in favor of; appropriating anntlites geode bevanae ! , th y were doomed to be stolen by some.: , body. • . neaten , ittrarily.' pig fish.' 'did not "In an hour my tempter rotttruett. "`What's the word, Mr. Martin 1". 'be asked, limiting at me so confidently that I Ml* he Was to to. doubt about my ac cettance of his proposal. I bad settled the question, after a severe struggle, and was , prepared to answer without hesita tion. ow said, id in the l as been maiden of pap -0.410 'in ...The-thing seems promising enough,' said I ; ~but I nave concluded against becoming a party In the, transaction. hy not ?' he asked, locking disap• rig two riginali% It can Here. I pd they r years, pointed. "'Plainly, was my answer, , becatise it 'hasn't a fair !Oak. Advantage will be taken of another's ignorance.' "The man's face betrayed an instant angry movement of his-feelings, and he muttered something in au undertone, in which my ear: , seemed to detect the words, 6'tupid fo•=1 • "'And are you really in earnest?' said he, scan3ely - seeltlng to hide a look of con tempt that was ib•ing, to hiVace. am,' was my firm alfswer. " aGood-morning . "He - threw the worth at me with an impatient impulse, and left me on the in -stant." "Dld he find.a less • scrupulous indi vidual. to juin him-?" I asked. "Yes; and what. is more, the purchase of the land was made, and it has since been sold to &company for some fabulous sum—iwo or three hundred thousand dol lars, I believe." "Half 'of which would Lave been . yours ?" said t "Yes," he answered, without change o? tone or -manner. "And instead of - being away down in this low,' dim valley, you would now be on the sunny heights of prosperity ? ' lie looked at me fur a little while with out answering: "Have you at any time, regretted that decision ?" I asked. • "Not for a•single instant," he replied. "'After the temptation was over, and my , mind was able' to rise into a clearer re ion, I saw the trairectio» in such an bidet* aspect - that I almost shuddered in thinking of my escape. Ah ! Sir, there'are greater evils than po"erty, and higher good than riches. With that sin upon n,y consCience r I would have gone IdoWn,iuto regions of doubt and darkness, and mayhap lost my way, never to find it , again. It is better, fai better, I think to walk in the right way, even if it be with: naked feet, than to . {read on soft velvet io passing along the, road that leads f io destruction at last." 4,fietter ? Yes, a thousand time. - , bet ter'!" said I with ardor. "This fall, then -this 'going down' again, as the com-, nion saying is--can nut, 'n one sense, bel called a misfortiine, but a 'trial in which: there . , Might come te'death of something etiii.and selfish in your soul, and thencel a nenr.,birth of .higher and more heavenly I principles. Yon were brought into al sewing - temptation; in which good gained a-,Victniy over evil ; and you are a truer Man fUr the fierce struggle and . cuirinest." "I .know not how that may be," he an- . swered. ' "I only know that I have elenf , conscience; that in the Eire through which I have been, required, to pass I liavOnu let truth or „justice_ go to the tunes." I'. flow think you, reader? had that Man gone down lower or up • higher ? What would you have done udder cir- Cutastances of like 'trial I Would you have:clutched eagerly at the golden op portunity which came with such tempt. ing 6.9ailes ; or, like Martin, risk the fire ? If. son are a man looking heavenwards-- and doubtless this is se- I .a the question come hltme ; it May give you a new con sciousness of your own state •In the mir ror of hik scrupulous action you may see a reflection of yourself. . - . Vhat gust:atm the Liquor Traffic. The .folbwing extract is from a dis- Course .delivered by Rev. G. L. Foster, D.stor of the Presbyterian church in' Yps ilanti, Michigan, !occasioned by the mur der of Wivife by her husband, while en• der , the maddening influence of strong drink. Aber a ivid_pret-entution of the 4'6mm:li:but:dens entaikd upon society by this fruitful cause of immorality, pov erty'.and ericue,,he very properly inquires. Who is responsible fur. the existence of the tratbein,any community ? have reached', the inevitable convic tion tl•at:what ‘ sukaine the liquor traffic here; and Arhat'-hindeis theaticeerafal en , forcemeut of latv.lor its suppression, 11110.1 e thou anything eISO, ia the general under standing that the..trojic hos the support, the' countenance-oat least the learc to be, of a wmparatiCeig Jew . (f Our Aral re. spectable-Lowlinfluential•citizens among whom are- included,. •to• their 'shame, or glory, too many of ;the - Mer4ers of the le gal. profession. allude are not distinguislmetiOnerally for their intelleotuality, tor for, 't4eii .wor4l. FOttt - CENTE,I: ' I 'ERPIII 7 -$1.25 PRIV Affainat:ti else they Would botAas:trilling.to t stand so near the tide of tion-coinnittal• ism in aspect to a moral evil neVerthe - less they have grert infinence: theta have considerable social- end- tub: mentary iniittelite. • Some of them came here for the sole purPoseef mallow-Mon: ey, and they have caredinteriSel, ibr nothi• log else, not seeing hew intimately clot!. nectrd moral worth is to all Other worthil. =Some of them have a commendable spiv. it of enterprise in some directions;- They are generally, of a quiet, mind-theivotto business staum—so much so that the, seem to be perpetually sajting: "'Am t my brother's iteeper?'- Some "tit thont havo become so related to this hi securing official positions,' that' they ban in no manner oppose what hits ilea• One of their chief supporters. - Now, such as these, are the cause of the existence of this traffic here,. acid hence the cause of its evils. Thar Course di c,,urages those engaged in the traffibiand discourages those desitang and seeking its. overthrow. This audience kno*s very well that if it were proper, I could liannO about a score of tram WhO, taming Cordial ly and decidedly to the help of others ) could quickly drive Oat - enemy of alt good from tooting us. Whether they shall none aim° to croupy their present positteli mains to be seen., But If they do; I*lll most deliberately and publibly charge upon them the chief, reripatirbitity of sus• tainitig among us a busit'ais that brings forth poverty, pauperism, Vorrow,'adalte. ry, and murder, as its' legitimate fetal, If any shall be offended at this plahautoti l they shall be responsible for that. Ant t become their enemy because' I tell theth the truth ? Nay iudeed i—and If any of you are in doubt whether you stolid among these condemned ones-you dray be sure that you are included,- , -for to !stand where you are in doubt is to ettool where you are condemnable. Olt; If the day will ever come when soda 'of theie quiet, mind-their-own busirienS sort- Of men shall wake up to the fatt thin tittle own sans have been ruined by that alien which they have sought to bey ea 111:1Plz committal, they will greatly wonder lin* they could have been so indifferent? how they could have dreamed along so careless of influences that have blasted their brightest hopes and diaappointed their most confident expectation's. If the day shall come when some of these shall learn that their daughters are affianced to young men whose habits have 'been formed un der the influence of-nabobs end billiard rooms ; and if they shall be 'ocirrftlled td go on to learn that life-long alliances havo been firmed with such as are, passing through the progressive stages of inebri , otion, how can they 'ever forgive /NOM selves that they were so careless ds th'ey Loykere, of the moral influences surioutd , inn their homes? Oh, they Will mourn at ihe kast, l3 Iwhen n.ournine: will be a poor atcinetnentt I' for past indiirdrence, and a poor liledg§ that it shall not be increased to a dreadful Iratiguish. Say, what 'father would: mei , iconic, the place or that &Mo.; 4'6 *a§ I recently summoned from liis . efttiet flout% to look upon the murdered' form of his daughter? What mother . ,*ould be in her place. who thus, lo6kcd lipott hild ,she had borne? • Old Timex Derncietiiit: " Your late purchase of ha estate,vA' tit view of emancipating the slaved at; lie a generous and noble . proof - qt.yutit , !humanity. Weald to God a like into alight diffuse ,itself generally into the minds of the people of this 'Contitty. l 'zt-; ;Washington's letter to;Laftiyelle, "I never would have drawn my s*orit in the cause of America; if I - Could' haVd I.conceived that thereby I *as_ helping ,td /:found a nation of slaves."-:=LaMitte. "One hoar of American' Slavery . 1§ ifr4ugllt, with more misery than trge: Aft' i ; that which our fathers. rose - in TOAD:hi to oppose." "Itremble for •say coliktry iShgt . Intenzber . that God 'ix just. and that_ justice cannot sleep forever: - Tilt Al; mighty has no attribute aineh would Add ;with us in such 'a atruggle.";=reonttbi tliffersors.' "Itis a debt re owe 'tilt' nytil:nt Our religion to show that - it is at :w;th that law whit* Give me Liberty, of give tut • Death 1".747, I Potrick Henry, of Vi,7lihib . • ".Sir, I envy neither the heart Wet the, head of that wan from the North.. WWl': I rises 'here to defend slavery on prindipin: I give to my rinses their freedom 1,1 Which my conscience UM' ran bitty are ' justly entitled. 'lt has Iting iitil4.beett ' l a matter of the tleOpest . regret to dig ; that 'the eittpamkatleel ander Which t . ed theM, and the obstacles thrown tri the' way by the land of the latitt;'linve ented' my emancipating them . iu nor hfo One, whiff • ull. intent' tu.dtt im case I can- acce plish . , Randolph. "Slavery is contrary to the laa , 'of.tta4 tare and natines."-- . _ , "Shivery stifles industrY_amiii:presel enterprire; .it is fatal. to eeent , :i.y .auJ =;=M NM 1111