13 rt tort 3nqmrcr anti tflmnwlc. BY DAVID OVER. IMIHI t CIUMCLE. • BEDFORD, Pa. Prldit) Morning, May :iO. I•.*><;. ••Fearless and Free." UAVID OVER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. i FOR PRESIDENT; IHLIiIRD FIIiIJOKE, OF NEW YORK. FOR VICE PRESIDENT. ANDREW JACKSON DONELSON OF TENNESSEE. IMOX TICKET. Canal Commissioner: THOMAS K. COCHRAN, Of hork County. .lud it or dene rat. DARWIN. PHELPS, • Of .hm strong County. Surveyor General ■ BAIITIIOLt >MK\Y LA PORTE, Of Bradford County. APOLOGY. —Ou aocouut of the sickness of one of our workmen, we are unable to 1 got out more than a half sheet this week. ] We will try to make it up however during , the yeai*,iu the amount of our reading mat. j ter. A GROSS OCT 11 AGE IN CONGRESS.} As our readers are aware UTLARLES SUM- j NEK is one of the United States Senator* trom the State of Massachusetts. Ou the j *_2J inst.. ju*t after the Seuate had adjourn- j fd, whilst he was selling at his desk wilting, j Messrs. BaooJts and KEITT, two Locofoe© members of the House from South Carolina, J came into ti.e S. ;iate, each armed with u cane. Brouts walked up to Sumner and made some remark to him about the great speech he had recently delivered in the Se nate, and without waiting for any reply, immediately struck Mr. Sumner a violent blow over the head with a cane, cutting a gash four inches long. The <>ano was of gutta percha, cue inch in diameter; and Brooks followed up the blow fast with oth er*, striking from twelve to twenty strokes Ln the following day Mr. Seward offered a resolution of inquiry into the facts which was adopted with apparent reluctance, and in violation of all courtesy, the mover ot the resolution was excluded from the Oom- Mr. Campbell of Ohio, offered a a similar resolution in the House which was adopted} Lut strange to say, nearly every I/Ocofoeo voted against iu Me hope for the honor of tho country that both Brooks and Keitt—certainly the former—will be unhesitatingly expelled from the scats they have disgraced. We entertain this hope however, because the Locofocos are in a minority in the Iloue; for if they could \.->te in almost solid column against a com mutes of inquiry, how can it be they will vote for the expulsion. Is there no law or justice upon the earth? Doc.* might make riirltt.* Whither arc we tending? The most solemn contracts of our fathers bare been shamelessly broken; Kansas is having a leg islature and laws forced upon her by tho citi zens of Missouri, and at the point of the national bayonets, by fire and by sword: her unoffending citizens arc shot down in cold Wood, and their survivors are plunder ed with impunity, and that too by uicn as suming to act under national authouty', preachers of the gospel arc tarred and eatherd for 110 offence except that of ex pressing a desire that Kansas should be a free state; and now a Senator of the Uni ted States without apology or excuse, is basely and cowardly assaulted in bis seat by ruffian members of Congress, and beaten almost to death, and the party which per petrates ail these wrongs, does it all in the abused name of democracy ! How true it is that "Where the wicked reign, the land mourns." A Weekly Paper, Devoted to Literature, Politics, the Arts, Sciences, Agriculture, &c., &c —Terms: Two Dollars per annum. We have no space for further comments J to-day, and we ate sorry for it. In conclu- ; siou we will merely remark that the people ! everywhere, and the honest portion oF the j public press, are speaking out against these i giant wrongs in such thunder tones, as gives assurance that the day of retribution is at hand. Disastrous Fire. Our town was visited by a disastrous fire on Sunday night last. About 8|" o'ejock, whilst most of our citizcus were in Church, the aLrnt of tire was given. It was soon found out to be in a back building, attach ed, to the brick house, owned by Dr. 0. \V. Anderson, and occupied by Mr. J. C. lira shear, who vvasabseut from town. The fire extended so quickly that Mrs. Bras bear, who was in bed, with her child had hardly time to escape. Very soou the building was in a sheet of flame, and speedily communicated to the brick offices occupied by Dr. 0. X. Hickok, who was also abseut from town, and the oil" recently occupied by John A. Blodgct, Esq. It then spread to another large brick building owned bv Dr. Ander son. The first house and the offices were entirely consumed, aud nothing remains of them but a portion of the bare walls. The upper story of the other large house was only enusurncd, but the whole inside is great ly injured—aud the whole house was only prevented from burning by the uiost extra ordinary exertions. A very high wind prevailed at the time and the fire originated in the business and most populous portion of the town. The buildings of John Cessna, Esq., E. L. An derson, Esq., the Bedford Hall, the frame buildings on the opposite side of the street, the residence of W. P. Schell, Esq., and the large frame building owned by Watson's heirs, were in great danger. The flames were at one time so terrific,Taud the wind so high, that nearly every one expected that that whole part of the town, and probably the Western portion would be consumed.— Some five or six houses were on fire at one time. The buildings destroyed, all belong to Dt. Geo. W. Anderson, aud are not insured. It is supposed his loss will not fall short of S3OOO or $3500. The furniture of Mr. ' Btasliear was nearly all saved, but a trunk containing some valuable goods, along with | some other articles were burned. His loss .is probably §>lt>o. Nearly all the valua i ble tools ct Dr.Hickok were saved. Part i of the law books of J. A. Blodget, Esq., ! were destroyed. Messrs. A. B. Cramer & i Co., sustained a lo*s in the removing of their goods to probably about SSOO. The | whole loss will not fall short of SIOOO. j Too much praise eaunot bo bestowed on j the citizens, men, women and children, for the maDner in which they conducted thetu- I selves. The fire company was ou the ground j all the time, and owing to their exertions ' aided by the citizens, the fire was confined | to the buildings burned. One young niau, by the uatne of Thomas 1 Martin, was severely injured by the engine { running against bint, but is now doing well, i Several, other slight accidents'occurred. It is supposed the fire originated from pla : cing hot ashes in the back building which first cought fire. ' Outrage in the Lntleii States Senate—Sen ator Sumner, of .Massachusetts, Knocked Down and Heat en till insensible by .Mr. Brooks, of South Catolina. I WASHINGTON, May 22. —Immediately 1 after the adjournment of Congress to-day ; while Senator Sumner, of Massachusetts, was still in the Senate Chamber, Mr. Brooks a member of the House from South Caroli i na, entered, and approaching Senator Sum ner, accused hiin of libelling South Caroli j na and Lis gray headed relative, Senator 1 Butler. Immediately after saying this, he struck Mr. Sumner with * cane. Mr. S . fell to the floor, and Mr. Brooks repeated the caning until Mr. Sumner became de prived of the power of speech. Previously he called for help, but no one interfered until his assuilaut had completed his design. Mr. Sumner was then carried to his room. It is not yet ascertained whether his inju ries arc serious or not. [SECOND DESPATCH.[ I Some eye witnesses say Mr. Brooks struck Sumner fifteen or twenty times over his head. Senator Sumner was sitting in an arm chair, when the assault was made upon him. lie had uo opportunity to defend himself. There are various opinions on the subject and quite coutradiotorr. Many i were applauding the act, while others were denouncing it as a cowardly attempt to beat down freedom of speech. The affair will j undoubtedly cause great debate iu the Sen ! ate to-morrow. Mr. Brooks was arrested 1 shortly after tbo affair, a complaint having bc1 don't like the looks of that man, (point -1 ing to the one he meaut:) 1 believe he is no : friend to tne.' j 'G-r-r-r-r-ar' said doggie, facing the sup posed enemy, and showing all his little j sharp white teeth. The gentleman laughed, I and extended his hand to touch the cloak iof the dog's master. Dogete wou'.dn't al low it. Ho snarled and tried fo bite, Lut j his master held on to hiui. He wouldn't j even allow the sirauger to look that way in i peace. Presently the master said: "I've changed nty mind, Priucc, I think that lie is a pretty good kind of a man after all." After this the stranger was permitted to touch the coat and shake the master's hand. It was evident however, that little Prince was a good deal puzzled by such a sudden change of opinion.' As I watched hitu looking so sharply and inquiringly first at one and then at the other of the two gentlemen, I thought it would not take many such ex periments to shake seriously doggie's faith in the sincerity of his master. *** I presume uiany of you have heard of ; the murder which was planned over tho ken j nel of a dog, and which was by that dog j prevented, so I will not repeat the story. A lady told uie of an adventure which befell her husband, ten or fifteen years ago. I shall tell it to you, children, before I close this letter. Tito lady's husband was passing on foot through 11 forest where lived j a Spaniard, who .was the owner of a won- j strous and ferocious dog. He ban several j hundred dollars with him, aud as the night was very dark, he could not help thinking occasionally of the robbers who might be in the woods near him. As he was hurry ing by the wall of the Spaniard's garden, down beside him jumped that awful dog, the Bear, as every one in tlwt regiou called hitu. The heart of the poor gentleman stood still in Lis breast, au l his hair rose j on end, for he expected to be torn limb 1 from limb. The Bear was never suffered 1 to be out of the house unchained, for he j was so savage his owner dared not allow j him to go near a stranger. All this our | poor traveler knew very well. But Bear did not harm him; he only j walked along by his side, and every now j and then made a circle rouud him, utteriug a low hearse gmwl. That performance at first renewed the man's terror, but, as he found it meant hint 110 harm, he took cour age and hastened on. At length, to his great joy, Mr. reached his father's house.— ' When Bear had seeu him safely inside of 1 the garden, he gave a low growl of satis- } faction, and, wheeling about, started back \ to his home tu the forest. The next day it was found a murder had been committed in those dark wood*, and it had iu all probability been planned in the i hearing of Bear. The good fellow had saved one life, but as he could not be iu two places at one time, the other unfortu- I nate traveler had beeu robbed and inur- ' deled. Children. I must tell you no more se:i- j commonly un derstood by instinct, and to induce you til- , way. to treat with kindness the faithful ! frieud of man.— .Maine Evangelist. Live within your Means. We tiou't like stinginess. "We don't j like ''economy,'' when i' ooincs down to ' rags and starvation. We have no sympa thy wite the notion that the poor mau should hitch himself to a post and stand still while 1 the rest of the world tnoves forward. It 1 is no man's duty to deny liimsolf of every ; luxury, every recreation, every comfort; ! that he may get rich. It Is no man's duty to i make au iceberg of himself— to shut his eyes and ears to the sufferings of bis fellows— •and to deny himself the enjoyment that re i suit* frotn generous actions—merely that he may hoard wealth for his heirs to qll ar tel about But thero is yet an economy which it. | every man's duty, and which is especially cowuteudahlc in the: man who struggles with poverty —an economy which is consist ant | with hsppine.-s, and which must be prue | ticed, tf the poor man would secure inde pendence. It is every man's privilege, and it be ! comes his-duty to live within his means; not up to. but within them. Wealth does not make the man, we admit, and should nevet be taken into the account m our judgment of men. But "competence should be secur ed when it can be; aul it almost alwayscau be. by the practice, of economy and self-de nial to only a tolerable extent, it shrub! be secured, not so much for others to look upon, or to raise us in the estimation of oth crs, us to secure the consciousness of inde ; pendenej. and the constant satisfaction | that is derived from its acquirement and ; possession. We would like to impress this single fact upon the tt-iud of every laboring ntan who : may peruse this short article —thet it. is possible for him to rise above poverty, and that the path to independence, though beset with toils and self-sicrifioo, is tuuch pleas anter to the traveller than any one he cau enter upon. 'lite man who feels that he is earning ! something more than ha is spending, will I walk the strcels with a much lighter heart and enter his home with a tuuch more ebcer i fu! countenence than ho who spends as he ' goes or falls gradually behind his neoessi : ties in acquiring tho means of meeting ! them. Next to the slavery of intemperance | there is no slavery ou earth more galling , than that of poverty and indebtedness.— I The man who is every body's debtor is every l body 's slave, and iu a much worse condition ? than he who serves a siugle master. For the sake of the present, then, as well } as for the sake of the future, we would most i earnestly urge upon every working man to : live within LU means. Let him lav by some ! thing every day—if tut a penny, be it a i penny—it is bettor than nothing; infiuately : better than running in debt, a penny a day, ior a penny a week. If he can, earn. a dol- VOL. 29, MO 22. iar let him try, fairly and faithfully, the expcrhucut of living on ninety cants. Ila will like it. "People will laugh." theui laugh. "They will call tnc stingy." Better call you stingy than say you do not pay your debts.— They will wonder why b,do not hire bet ter furniture, live iu a finer house, and at tend concerts and the play house." JAU th ni wonder, for a while, it wou't hurt them and it certainly won't you. By and by you can have a fine house, and fine furniture of your own, and tbeywill wonder again, and come billing ml cooiug around you, like so many pleased fools. Try the experiment.' Live within your means. - [Mune Far n rr, Our Creed. We lore religion, not the priest— We lore our countr, and our God ; We love the man who governs lest ; .Not one who rules with iron rod Each family rhuuld hi a State, Where all domestic virtues grow ; The heart a.i empire—then lot fate Atteihpt iu Vain its overthrow. We love tli? fanner and his toil, The talisto ms of life aru there : treasure God 's great gilt 01 soil. Ami his creation fair. We love bright gold, that it may strew Contentment in the paths of cant; We hate the men who never knew 1 hat he could have- too large a siiar j. We love lioth wit and merit fine, Though poverty their grace unfold ; The diamoud* in the dirty mine Shi tie just as blight as set ia gold. We love the beautiful, the good— The finished work of nature's plan, I'or when they're fully understood, They constitute the perfect man. We love in woman, virtue, truth. And know sucli gems woul 1 bo less rare If pity for bee tender voutii Exposed the tempter's ready snare. Her life is often" overcast, And uar';Dv-s clouds the future way ; But heed the lesson jf the past, 'Tis darkness tells us what i* day. i Take off thy sandal, wcuty Time, And ley; it at the gates—go in; Seircfi, for some new ami rsdient clime. Untainted by the blight of sin ; We wish thy realm as free and wide As makes God's universe our home, Tb.it what we loved might there abide, And what is hateful never c uu.i. For the Inquirer and Chronicle. MU. EIUTOB: SIR —I have always thought ' our County was more Christianized than it is, and I was astonished to hear tbc false hoods circulated throughout it, charging the bereaved parents of the Lost Children, ; for whom their hearts have nearly boon broken, with their murder. After tbev were found 1 thought the falsehoods would then surely stop, but it appears that these people arc so addicted to slander that they cannot cease. I have heard that they have ; circulated nearly all through the county,- | that 1 had east up to Mr. Cox, that he did ; murder them. This is a falsehood of the ! deepest dye, as I aui not quite so nar r ow minded, and 1 believe that uo man with an i honest heart will judge another *> soon, without having more reason than tiicy had iu tli is case. WM. A. MOCK. Union Tp, May 10., 186(1. DIED. Ou theSlaidf Mnv, itist., in St. ('iai-ville- Miss MAOUIK UASOXTI, aged 23 years, 7 ' months and 20 days. She was a worthy ; member of the Lutheran Church. She died ; as she lived, full of faith and hope. DISSOLUTION. THE partnership heretofore e seating between the subscriber , under the name of At' is EL & Co., in the carriage making & Si icksroithing business, was this day dissolved by mutual con sent. .All businessof the, late Firm will be at tended to by Mii'tt.tKMtnd JOHN G. AT KISKL wbo will collect the outstanding notes and accuuts aud pav Iho doUs. WM. WF.ISEI,. MICHAEL AVEIstEL. JOHN G. AVEI3K.L. May 27th ISoG. "\T7"E the undorsigned, have this r. AT at son, where he has on hand, and will con stantly keep, a general assortment of 01-'it,lire tor Men and Boys, which he will sell on the reasonable terms, uadt t which he respea'.fui iy invites tho attention of purchasers. ISAAC UFFEL. Bedford. May 8". 185®t