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UtXSS & CCrifcunt FRIDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1360. KE\V yOKIL Th. pro-Slavcry men of that State have, Bir.co t’ o P. um-ylvania and Indiana elections, avowed that New York waaihebattle ground. Tne Republican:, have accepted tbe challenge hidden under this avows’, and pledged them- Mlvee to make the C;h of Novembers Wahr looday for tick opponents. That's the spirit. New York is safe. ’ A. MAIf Ithl) CONTRAST. To. contrast afforded by two of the candi date! for the Presidency—hiycobr and Dcug- U-—at Springfield yesterday, cannot have to impiasa the crowd there assembled, ilr. Inserts at his usual place, calm, dignifi ed and confident; Douglas on the stump hol lowing l.ke one ol the hulls ot Bashan, beg ging lor votes, traducing his opponents, and, though slivering with fear, bragging like a Mexican on hlmsrlf 1 We point to the posi tion of the two men ss no small evidence of the justice and necessity of a Republican vie tory. all COTIING IN. Tne chivdri- F. F. Va by whom the De partments at ■Washington are filled, and who, ata-.'y lime during the past six years, have been ready to mob a Republican at a moment’s warning, are coming down. They fee the omens of a Lincoln victory; and they feel that their valor which, cot thirty day. ago, would Stop at nothing less than a dissolution of the Union a > the eonscquecce of Ou> Anc’S elec tion, 1s oozing ouv. Trey want to hold on to what they have got. A place for each, in an oaayihsir, at s comfortable detk, with good wages and a sure paymaster, is, after all, thourh liscout maybe President, batter than tha doubtntl chances cf office in a Southern Confederacy, or the mote doubtful prospect of bread and bacon in an? of the rural districts whence they com . Within ten drys, seven hundred of these bare made npplicarion to join the Republican C.ub in the federal city. Uzcrect sons of the South. One almost pities their combe tcisfar.'uacs. is fiotChts J.,V00 “ OI " C 1 ‘ 1,OIU! We have repeatedly recited the presumptive evidences of the CalholicL-m cf Judge Doug las-,o frequently that wo reed not relate them here. Our articles on the subject have unquestionable met his eye; indeed we are as sured that one of his Iriecds in this city sent to hire, wfcils on his Eastern stumping tour, & ! recapitulation of the points which we put j but no rep’v was given to the letter. He has Bines teen in tbie city; and if our allegations that bn pockeu 'nave teen drawn upon to swell the fund sent from‘this country to the Pope, to put Italian Liberalism down; that he is the owner of a pew, and a tolerably regular worthipotr, in a C-.ih.uio church in ■Washing ton; that his children by the late Mrs. Doug las,’a f 0.-cuih Protestant, have, since her death, teen baptised into the Catholic com muni an, ana are receiving a Catholic education; that his chad, who died not long since, was buried according to the forma ana ceremonies presented by Catho’.ics,-we eay ho has late ly been in this city, and if these allcgaUons TOC unirue, wholly or in part, he would un n.ienionarlv have corrected them and put the VLs ft Tinas* nui i. ft without taking notice of either of these fac.B, though lie i« everywhere answering quevticr.e, retelling chargee, and endeavoring to make capital. Shall we tall? his silence to mean that be confesecs that the report, circu lated when he was abroad, that he had teen r.ooivei into the Ccurch by the Pope at Home, is true; that ho is permitting' hi« frienda to deny for him the faith that he professes; and that hs is secretly using a powerful, unecru luua and dangerous religious element to help him into power? What other construction ail'll! we put on his refusal to speak on this matter, by no means' unimportant, when on all other questions the eonnd of hie voice has been heard on every slump from Portland to Norfolk, from Norfolk to Dubuque? Lot our aeaUrra if .l>*r ""I "“t Ann.IIAM USBOLS was making els ctioncering harangues all over the country, end that the evidences ot Cathoi c.sm— secret, unavowed, Jesuitical Cath olicism—were brought home to him as they have teen t j Mr. Dtuglas—wouldnot he have opened hia mouth nnd repelled tne charge, if ho ctuid have cone eo with truth? Would not Judge Douglas now do BO if he could? But we leave conjecture for what seems to ba piwof tlirccl: The (Kuos Co. IB.) ItrjnMiam aays'thnt Eev. John llicteee, Pastor of the Catholic Church rt lowa City, wrote a letter to Arch- Vmhoa HiChca, for* Information to govern aj ewa actions in «fie Presidential canvass. The Arcbb ib- p ia rfpW, la substance, said: “Siephek A. Douglas DID JOIN THE CATUOUO CHURCH at Roue, akd is a GOOD AND FAITHFUL MEMBER; akd YOU MUST DO ALL IN TOUR POWER TO SECURE IIIS ELECTION. He took 7X13 OBLIGATION' TO DO ALL IK HIS POW ER to promote the INTERESTS OP THE CHURCH’ 11 VTt give tl.o above as it comes to us in the I public papers. In times of high political cx* I ciiomtDt, reports, simple and harmless enough I io tbem^c've 0 , grow, as they pass from mouth 1 to mouth, or paper to papsr, until they assume shapes as little like tbe originals aa Douglas is I like a statesman. This may be one of them; I it may be true to t e letter. *Wecan conceive I that ArcbbUbop Hughes, whoso interest in I l£r. Douglas’ success, is proved by his al tenda-ca of a Douglas meeting in Hew York, —i thing which no Archbishop or Bishop ever did in this country before—should write euch I wor'a U> a priest who sought Lis rdvice; but we cinnot sea how a prieit would dare to make the contents of such a letter the proper ty of the public. The probabilities of tho genuineness of the extract are largely in creased by what everybody knows of tbe ar dsnt and effective manner in which the Arch bishop is supporting Mr. Douglas; but it will not do to depend upon probabilities alone. Is Douglas & Catholic ? That’s the questio A TEST OF MKCBUIXir* A. Christian once went before a Turkish magistrate, and made complaint that an Arab bad stolen hie horse. “Art then a follower of •‘tbs'Prepbe'.r asked the official. “lam wo*,*'answered the Christian. “Tbengotby way, pork-eating deg; the law was made to “protect only the property of true believers.” it is jual the asms with tbs slavish Demoe* racy. All laws, no matter how cmd or un just, made to protect, favor or establish slavery, must bo enforced in letter and in spirit. laws guarding freedom may be adulated with impu nity. It is reverencs for law, they tell ua, that im pels item to avsums the unpleasant task of enforcing Hie Fugitive Act; reverence for low that makes them promise in advance to up hold Bred Scott deosions; reverence for law that excites their anger against Abolitionists ■Waivin'- all scrutiny of the justice of such an tipathies, judgments, and law.-, we may indeed qoesticn'tic sincerity if this reverence. Dxs not a mean and untruthful spirit underlie. the •whole matter? Reverence for law I What ’ ’ law? Does tlio Fugitive Act include our whole system oflegielatioa and jurisprudence? Our Omstitution guarantees freedom of speech and liber>-y of the press, those twin guardians of Bepublican equity. A law of Congress im poses the penalty pffino and imprisonment on aav postmaster who shall destroy letters or newspapers passing through the mails. The ' ninth article of the Federal Compact carefully provides agaicst any evasion of such epoch ■; ■ jnenla. The Constitution and the lows of Con gross are deelared to te “the supreme law of ■' .the land;” “anything in ths Constitution or '■wv'“l»w»of any .State to the contrary nolwith ", ..sstanding.”- ’ ~V ,u ut Southern States have enacted laws obliging postmasters, in dcllance of “the tu teems law of the land,” to not only rot de •; ' liver tosubecribers “incendiary" public, done, but to seize and destroy them. And to in any . : ' way oppose the established mode of siavehcld r lag, is held to he incendiary. Those encctments may be construed to make it a crime to pub lish the preamble to the Constitution Itself; a , • crime to publish the Declaration of Indepen dence; a crime to publiah certain portions cf the Bible. They would make of Washington, Franklin, Jcflersnn, Liiajotte, rank incandi prias. And the Uw-revcreccmg Democracy—how do they treat thie substitution of Auitrianlsm for Constitutional freedom 7 Even thus—they uphold the hands of those who defy the law and the Constitution. Strange reverence, this, for the aim erity of law 1 There was never yet a man so much a misanthrope that ha did not like something; nor a law*hrcaker so far gone in sin that he would not obey some of the reg ulations of society. No thanks to him who officiously goes out of his way to help an o • fleer fasten handcuffs on one whom he hatei or despises. The rascal of his own clan ho would screen from justice. This is not rev erence for law. There should certainly be os much alacrity to maintain tbe just rights of freemen, as to fasten anew the shackles of ti.e runaway slave. Anything less than this is mean.epiriled, at enmity with good govern ment. and prompted by an obsequious hypoc- nsy. . Some months ago, two citicena of Ottawa m this State, aided a slave to escape. They were arrested, indicted, tried, condemned, lined, im prisoned. All the requirements of the law were complied with. And what an uproarthe Democracy made because some people sympa thised with the prisoners. It has been written about and harangued abcul from Maine to Cal ifornia A pro-slavery orator whoahould make no mention of it, would bo strorgly suspected ol ucaoundn-. sa. Last spring a slave ship was captured and taken into a Southern port. A grand jury was summoned to indict the man stealers for this fligrant violation of the Con stitution and of a Congressional statute nuk ing the slave trade piracy. The proof was over whelming. Mot one palliating circumstance could be offered. But the robbers were openly acquitted. Their offence wasnoteven deemed worthy of trial before a court. Public senti ment in the South would not tolerate a con viction. And the leaders of the Democracy uttered no word of condemnation. -To pity men for aiding a miserable slave to escape,— this was a heinous offence. To violate the law and the Constitution, to steal a thousand people and cram them into a filthy hold where two hundred perished for want of air and nourishment, to outrage reason, justice, hu manity,—this was no offence at all. Law rev erencing Democrats—mere whited sepulchres on the outside smooth and plausible, but full of all rottenness and corruption within. From what a thraldom is our country escaping 1 ' At the Charleston Convention there was a delegate from Georgia, a Douglas man, one Gauldcn, who advocated the opening of the slave trade, boasted that he owned negroes stolen from Aftica, and inviten the incredulous to visit his plantation. He went to the Balti more Convention, and repeated his words. There is a law of Congress which provides that, if any man in this country hold aa a slave a negro brought from Africa, he shail be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary for a period not lesa thanthree years nor more than seven. "Was Mr. Gaulden arrested? Ao, nor rebuked; but on both occasions lie was loudly applauded. And the Douglas faction, at both those conventions, had the effrontery to pace a resolution declaring any resistance to the Fugitive Act revolutionary and subver sive of the Constitution. Is this reverence for law? We havethe authority of Mr. Douglas himself for saying that fifteen thousand native Africans are annually imported into this coun try and held as slaves. Mot a man has over been oven threatened by the authorities with prosecution for purchasing any of those un fortunate people; but the scoundrels go abroad, hosst of their iniquity, ecoff at the law, and invito others tn join with them. What a commentary is this on the morality and truthfulness <f men calling themselves law*ftbidiDg citizens. jnOV£ni!NIS OF iUE PHOPhE. lowa.—A union meeting for the purpose of fating the Anti-Republican factions in lowa, baa been called to meet at Davenport to day, Let them fu : e. The Republicans of lowa can thresh them, lake any nhsps they please. —The following “good thing" was on one of the banners carried in a Republican procession at Providence, R 1., a few days eince; - W« c*»e Uoujr’M our c am". •• We will s»ve Lin teln outvotes." Tn* Progress of Bepcbucakum is Tole- do, Ohio.—'The Toledo BUkU publishes the Re publican vole} ivenin that city and Lucas coun- ty, since 1856, which shows the handsome pro gress which correct principles have made, as follows i Y par. C'.tr. Co. Year. 1«5.. L7M «.0W ISM., SB::: i.s«j w« Comxo.—Sttflbrd Pike, o~ Wales, Erie Co., y t w York, a Sil?er Grey Whig and Fusiocist up to this time, has floaliy declared :or Lincoln and Hioilin. Fear jean ago there was but one voter for the whole of Bath, including what ic now Crenel/* Village, ‘ fer Fremont. Now, at the mKlire id { ° m m Linol>la Club . ia L “ coln Hall, eixtj-two voter*: “ e \“f it ia cow estimated that tbeHT 11 0E t c dred votes for' Lincoln and 1 French*! Village alone. So tayathe Albany Journal. “Democracy’s glare is Doug.” is one of the most concise, as is is oce of the truest, mot* toes that we bare noticed during the present campaign. - - • - —ln October, 1554, Abraham Lincoln closed one of bis tb'cat >peccbea on the then recent repeal ot tbe Missouri Compromise; and the man who perpetrated tbe deed, by saying that if Douglas would not admit t .e facts ot histo ry t and wccld continually fly from bis own premises, no argument aosld pul an end to bis I sophistries. “In that ca-.e,” said Mr, L., “lean I only commend him to tbe teventy thousand answers from Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indi* I ana.” Baowxnow ox a Socinsur CosranwucT.— P&r/cn Brownlow, in a late number of bis pa- p*r t ujß: “Same of our laboring clmmi think rety hardo! Me tnterir.g and 'vnirmpvovt manner In which Yancey Epoke ot white women tt »be Nonb* who stand over Ihe wathiub, and cook aroocd firesides. Chbws thought atili harder of the teornjul manner m winch be spoke of white men at the North, blacking bools, *cd dririog carriage*, characterizing bo*h tbe oe> capaUcaof waite meu asd women acooosi), as degrading menial service. True, it was very s'-rerein its bearing upon cur own citizens, nint-Unih* of whom are degraded, according to Yhacey's views of the dignity ol labor. But this is really nothing to w hat awaits u% if a ‘ Southern Confederacy” shall be established. The wealth and aristocracy of the “eight Cot* ton States" will be represented in that concede recy. a d will control tt, and the right of voting wi limited to those who own slaves, Tb* «o»t* >ment will be that cf a “slave oligarchy," and none but the owners of slave prep* rly will he allowed to vote. Io ’-bis way they will get rid of the Irish and German vote, and the na- Uve poor cf cur own country! —lf the Douglasitea lost Indiana, it wasn't far wantof work or trickery on their park. The Seymour Tinus aays that in Jackeon county, the County Clerk employed a deputy to go around secretly and naturalize all foreigner! who would pledge themselves to support the right ticket. Every possible means was adopted to keep the outrage from the knowledge of the Republican!. * ~ , lie friend! of Mr. S. A. Donglss must feel ome alarm »t the revelation cf the fact, that one of the Sew Vo* Delegation atlhe Haiti morn KaUoncl Convention, in attempting to prevail upon Mr. Wm. L. Yancey to incept a nomination for the Vice Presidency, with Mr. Dongtu ct the head of the ticket, stated i Tbet Ur. Douglas was already eo enfeebled hr diaease that he could scarcely live eir moults alter the Pi widen 11.l election, and thus Mr. Vanoev’e ctndid scy would be very sure to mute him not only Vice President, but, very soon, President e-f the United States.” Hr iTood. in his .peach .Ssturdsy, made a propoaiUon to the .Democracy, which they will undoubtedly accept The object is to oeteal bin no In. Vbe courre to bo taken !* not a new one to to the Democratic party, but has In come bv usage one of the main planke in their plat form. Ue sayo “'Coocealrate the whole Dem ocratic force of the country on Illinois, loalana Connecticut and Sew Jersey, and this glnncni object is attained. [Loudcheers.] Lockout for emigration to the above named Slates.— Mb. JJemocrai. Alfred E. Lewis, cf Philadelphia, bsvisg bees asked to state explicitly what Mr. Douglas said to the Hod. Mr. UcTherson, replied in the following letur, which is published la ihe North Carolina Standard : . ** PfllLAZiXLriiXiy July 53,1M0. “Dub Eib: —>"onr fercr hu gait been nlacul in my hicds.' The-words of Judge bonalu, os neatly a* ton at this moment; e call them, u npettcd to me by the honorable neat mu I bore named, were aa follow; ’By it a Sir the election shall nerer no into the House—before :t enall go into the Hoa ; e, I will SSSw it oter to Lincoln.’ The wordo tbaensod wore accompanied br a tiolent gesture, and perhaps an additional oslh. Truly yours, p • “ Altbio e. Lswis.” During Mr. Yanctj’e epetch in Faaeuil EalUeeya riii TrateUr,) the qotaticn hem* „ge’j— “How aboct TtpoUr SoTereigniJ ?" Mr Yancey rali.it «u the gnd till Docglifl Vtodd la nobody*! wayi Jl Toice immediately called for three cheer, for Douglea, and a majority of the andieaee gare them with stirring effect. Three cheer* for Lincoln were called for, and lbs response show ed that tlisr* was a good force of Republicans In the Hall. Mr. Yancey, no wise disconcert ed, at once proposed three cheers lor the Con stitution and the Union, which of course almost everybody present, Douglas men, Bell men, Republicans and Breckinridge men, united in giving, following it up with prolonged ap plause. Cjairoasia von Lmcomc.—The Stats Repub • lican Committee of California, have sent word by the Bony Express, that n thorough canvass of every conn y in California, gives Lincoln 88,000 votes in that Stale, which the Committee i think .vyill give him.-tte State- A New Inncrussinut. CoKrmcr. —A writer in the Charleston Mereary of a recent date, re veals anew phase of tbe 44 irrepressible conflict” not down in the, bills. Hs say*; men, who hsve never done a day’s work, may talk of tbe dignity of Ivor, and deem their listeners fools; hut has any white vuchanic ever felt this dignity of labor when unsuccessful in estimating lor a Job, he finds that it haa been awarded to one of our eery rftp tctable free pinont of color,item whom, also, an estimate baa been obtained; thus add ing to bis disappointment, the mortification of feeling that Inis dignity of labor placttM'* alone on the same level with ibis highly valued and privileged does of negroes.” ' Veemoxt. —Tbe following is the official vote for Governtr at the late Vermont election t Whole oCDiber of votei Era>lu* Fz'.ibitfc* has J.S.&ize (Duug'u Uem.) iU-tun *i aiTtjr Dem.). Sea lenn< ‘Tairoiinki orcr Saxe, 112,059— over all 20,244. It ought to be knows, perhaps, that of tha scattering eleven were for John Wheeler, and are supposed to indicate correctly the strength ol the Bell-Ererelt parly of this State. —Hon. F. A. Conkling ia the Republican can- for Congress in the Vlih District cf Kew York. Ur. Conkling u a brother of Hoo. Uoscoe Conkling of Utica, now a member of Congress and a candidate for re-election, and both are sons ofllon. Allied Conkling, former* ly of Auburn, Kew York, and cow of Kebraska. F. A. C. is a distinguished merchant of Kew York. —Ur, Myron H. Coloney, formerly reporter acd writer of rhymes of Syracuse, K. Y., more recently a wool merchant of this city, bat at present a resident of Lake Ids, Minnesota, was appointed a delegate to the late Republican SUie Convention at SL Paul, and was obi ged to walk the entire distance, 15C miles, to fulfill his appointment. Us returned in the s&me manner. Ue was appointed a Secretary cf the Convention. Dow Douglas cot tub same of “ Little Gust.”—A correspondent at Abingdon, in this Slate, tends ns the following scrap of history: The delight 'with which Judge Douglass friends call him the **Litt : e Gi-nt," is truly amusing. Perhaps there ate bat lew of them that are aware how this title was obtained, or •hey woo d not be so proud of repeating it. I speak from my own recollection and under* standing: Manyy«nrs ago, when the Mormons w?re in the heigth of toeir glory at the city of Nauroo, in this State, Stephen A. Douglas vis ited the city of the Saints und i-ptst considera ble time in coquetting among the populace,elo quently congratulating them on the beauties of tneir' peculiar institution. This so endeared him to the prophets, elders, deciles and saints, that Joe Smith said, “Trulvtbis Doug.as is a UttU giant,” Soon the lilicois Democracy caught tee sound and passed it around and away it flew with lightning speed to the utter most bounds of the Democracy, and still they are ringing in our ears the words of the Mor mon P.opbet, *■ Great is tse Little Giant.' From Lowra Egypt.—A friend at Ullin, Pu iaiki County, writes us that the news of the great Republican victories in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, made the hearts of the Re publicans In that vicinity leap for joy, with a corresponding sorrow among the Sqaalterilea. The latter, as a petty piece of spite at their de feat, cot the halyards on the Linccln pole, but they were soon restored, and a Lincoln flog thrown to the breeze. About three weeks since, B. W. Melz, the Py t Master at Ullin was turned oat by the Administration, because he had de clared for Lincoln and Uamlio. He was a most excellent Post Master, and the people are high ly indigt-acL D. H. Waters, a noisy Douglas tie, was eppointed in bis place, and on Thurs day last Waters was taken in custody by the United States Marshal, and carried to Spring held, for counterfeiticg. Sad Triflixo. —That unfeeling and heartless men tbould put it into the heads of weak minded men, like Daniel Pratt, Gecrge Wash ington 0-i* MelUn sad Stephen Arnold Donga las, that they are running for the Presidency. PERSONAL, The New Yoik papers chronicle the names of the ladies who were u honor td with the hand" of Prince Albert in the' dance. We cannot think that Mrs. Governor Morgan, or any of the other ladies enumerated, were honoud by this distinction. The honor— r n cur American judgment—was on the otker tide. Five youcg ladies from the Union Straw Works, in Foxboro*, walked oa Friday evening last to Walpole Centre, a distance of six miles, to hear the lecture of Hon. Charles Sumner. They returned oo foot the same evening, feel ing themselves amply repaid for the.r long walk. City. Co. .2.6TU 4,612 Got. Seward was unable to speak at Buffa lo on Saturday, although he engaged to do bo. He wrote an apologetic note in which the fol lowing passage occurs: ** My friends will ulti mately excuse the delirqnency, I am sure, when they reflect that iincsthe«stfa of Novem her, 1558,1 hare had cnly eighty-five days, all told,'for the occupations and duties of honu * while 1 not only ecjcy no exception, but, on tho ** hate more than aa ordinary burthen contrary, - ~ ~ of domestic cares end reS?* 2 **® 1 *lIC 1ICS * Alexander Dumas bes been a*” 21 ® * honorary director of the National Museum (for merly the Muuo JSorhonico) cf Naples, and of the scientific works going cn In this perl of Italy. In this capacity the celebrated novelist will present to, the Dictator a project in regard to the excavations of Pompeii and the plan of a great archpsological work, historical and pic torial, about Naples and its environs. Dumas lives at the palace of Chnitemone, formerly crown property and the place which Francis II used to offer to his dis inguished guests as a temporary residence. The r chest mas in St. Louis .is James H. Lucas, banker, worth it is said, $5,000,000. Pe U r Lindtll’s estate is put down at $4,000,000, and that of Beuoist, banker, at $1,500,000. - llohert Chambers, the distinguished Klin is burgh publisher, whose visit to this couatrj has afforded so much gratification to hosts of friends acd admires, was entertained a few evenings since at the residence of J. B. Lippincot*, in Philadelphia. About one hundred distin guished guests were invited to meet him, among whom * ere the Marquis of Chandes," II nrj C. Carej, S. Austin AUibone acd Ilobat Dale Owen. Mr. Chambers is now visiting Cunsda, hot revisits the States before returning to his home. The Marquis of Chances lift Philadelphia in a special train on Saturday afternoon last, to ▼isit the coal and iron mines of Pecniylrania. I He is thoroughly at home in ell that rtlates to i these great interests, as he his need to be, since he is President of dee of the largest rail* way companies in England. By a strange vicissitude, General Canar, who was shot for Invading Costa Rica, suffered his execution at the foot of the very menumeat erected to Wa honor, in the Plaza at Paata Are tas for his many tetrices to the country. Miss Hattie Taylor, of Newport, Ky., who danced with Prince Albert at Cincinnati, re ceircd as a present from the Prince, a magnifi cent diamond brooch, scrmoncted by his crest. The present is a token of the Prince’s remembrance of the Cincinnati ball, and more particularly, of course, of the pleasure he expe rianted in the society of Miss Taj lor, who was selected as one of his partners by the Floor Managers, and with whom he danced and waltzed. This Is tiered to be the first and o ~]r present be has bestowed upon m this country. A rjiiiio IN SOUTH CAKOUNA. Hew Yorkers Arreatcd— neported Dlo- cot cry of arm*. Tte community of Marlborough, South Caro lina, is in a state of profound agitation in con sequence of' a horrible discovery, w. ich the Columbia South Carolinian reports as follows: “ We team that startling developments bore heed made in Ifarlboroagh, and the whole et m mnnity thrown into a state of greet excitement. Two mtiseni of Western New fork bets been arrested, who had under the ir cure a large stud of arms. They were searched, and invoices found celling lor snother lot, amounting in all, si we are Informed, to about twelve hundred. The arms' were consigned to parties in Wil mington, to which place a gentleman had been sent to make invesugalions, audio s cm. oih ers who maybe implicaud. Their eomphei-y soddirect agency were so thoroughly ecteh- I : Bhed that they were commuted to jaa. lbs fetliDK vu bo intense that it was with great difficulty that their violent setiure andlmme diate execution could be prevented. Judge -Wbitaer.who was holding court there, inter* poa d, asd finally succeeded la staring the feeling and re>er?log them os victims for more legal procedure. The public mind of the North has been so wrought op by the declamation of Republican enters, that these missionaries of social subversion may doubtWs be found in every southern community. Whenever arrest* td they should not be lett to the slow process The vigDant societies tboola seise vhei giTS tn£= i*it trial, and,3l the ctrcnm stances convict them cf of such atrocity, ahould met? out to them pun ishment, prompt, summary and extreme. Ton conwiN at deoatdu, 10«000 People In Connell. [Cjrrtipoadence of the Pmi red TrltauM Dzcam, Oct. 15. ISO. Last Saturday was a great day for Republi cans in Macon county. Hiring but seven days notice that Tom Corwin would nddressthe peo ple of this vicinity, smell posters were cent through the country, and the remit was that 10,000 people camein wsgonsond on horseback. The number of voters in attendance was larger that at any other meeting ever held in Decatur The Democratic meeting held soma time sinco, after two months adreriiiing for CO miles around, did hoi turn out tbs cumber cf voters as at this meeting. Ncverwasa epeechlistened to with more attention by all parties as the one de* livered by Mr. Corwin. It would b - impossible for me to give you an outline of ;bis masterly effort of two hoars. It would require nn artist to giro Tom** singular expressions of counte nance to make tbe thing completes The speech has done much good. In tbe evening, a grand torch light procession, and speeches irom Gov. Bebb and Messrs. Danto and Weldon, with iha returns from tbe Iste elections, made tbe enthu elasm beyond description. Since the Pennsyl vania and Indiana elections, I know of twenty changes to Lincoln, and so they will keep on until the 6lh day of November. Macon coucty will give CO majority for Lincoln. Dick Ogles by’s election to the Stale Senate is sure, and Illinois certain for Liccom ty 12,C00 majority. Milton. oli:b .54165 ,1I,T« . S 115 . to A Traitor Exposed—lmporting irlsls Voter*—MaCleaoa’a Track*. tCorre?pondf nco of the l*rts»aidTilbim?.l HiMimt, UcDcs.rcn Co., Oct. 17, ISM. Tear recent exposure of the base treachery of the Chicago Democrat hat relieved our Re publican friends in McDonough County frem an incubus that was beginning to be painful and dangerous. Had you let it go on for a fortnight longer with its incendiary articles, this Legisla tive District would have been lost. Our Re* publicans are not uliraists or abolitionists. We stand by the Chicago Platform, but not by the reckless and lawless course of John Brown. We are eppesed to interfering in the affairs of sovereign Siates. We deny the right of any party that may be in power, to meddle with slavery in the Slates. When the Jhmecrai de clared that " Lincoln would make all the Slates free,” it placed Lincoln in an unconstitutional attitude before tho people. The Douglaaites se z»d upon these ultra assertions in the Dtm> cerat, and quoted them as JkpubUcan deeirina. The basaand unprincipled part that that paper tyas playing was not then comprehended. We did not know, as we now do, that it was saying those thinga on purpose to be use i against the party it professed to support. Aadwhilo this was the c. ; se we were math damaged, and came near losing several hundred conservative voters, who supported Fillmore in 1338, but since then have been attaching themselves to the Republi can organization. They said that if these ultra, fire-eating declarations were Rjpubljcan doc trines, they would cot act with the party any longer, ss they were neither abolitionists nor disuniouiats. But eiccs the Pncss and Teicc.ne has shown the Demo.rat to be a "wolf in sheep’s clothing,” they will all be reclaimed, and support Old Abe. Bat what punishment does the political swindler deserve who con cocted this infamous scheme to beat Judge Trumbull and give the State to the enemy ? How nicely be had arranged to steal the livery of heaven to nerve the devil in. We are ear prised that yon held your peace eo long, while Ibis Dxnierai was Bowing tarts, and that you did not expose and denounce it much sooner. You Chicago Republicans cannot imagine what mischief it was working in our ranks in the central counties, where a majority of the people are natives of the slave Stales. This county will send a representative to the Legislature favorable to the re-election of Ju ge Trumbull, if wa are not overborne by frauds and colonization. The Dooglasites have com menced importing, and np to yesterday onr spies reported th > nsmes and hiding-places of thirty-four Irishmen that have been brought into McDonough. There is one gang of seven from Schuyler county, who are harbored in some shanties at a saw mill about tea miles east of this place. Four Irishmen came here a few evenings since from Galesburg, and in quired of a Republican for our deputy sheriff. They were introduced to the t oreng person, when the " cat was let out of the bag.” • These Celts were hurried into the country; but a Wide-Awake tracked them to their hiding place in the house of a rawllog Doughsite. The others were simll iiy introduced and placed. Most of them bars so far ecme from Galesburg and vicinity. Who furnishes the nonej to pay the cost cf this colonization? must tske consider.-bis to carry out the fraud :nt plans of the Squstleri'es. One day last v e k a draft for (400, endorsed by Joel A. Mat teaon, was cashed in uuaiuu'-h for the holder, a Dooglasitc ol Macomb. It can be guessed what use this money was put tr, and it Is cot h&rd to dime why Matteson endorsed the draft. Tours, Ac., Wins Awake. P, S.—Since writing the foregoing I have learned that a gang of eight Irish went down the rotd last night on a freight train to Ma comb, where they landed. By daylight they bad disappeared, but we shall soon nod out their lurk ng-plaee, and spot them. W. A. Ueracliot V. Jolmaon Prefer* n Nesro to Llocolu for PreMdeut. [Oormpoßdeccc of the Pres* end Tribtre*.l Oamvizir, 111, Oct. I*. ISM. Enclosed I send you a slip fr;m the Wabash Daily Kzyrm of yesterday, published in Terre Haute, lad. Judge Gonard Uan old and well known citizen of Terre Iliute. He was for £-*tT yetrs editor of the Wabash C urier. Bia etatcment will be reeeired with implicit confi dence wherever he ia known. Besides, the cer tificate* of hundredt, of erery political party, can be obtained, that this statement la true ia rrery particular. This declaration, not merely of negro equal ity, but of ntgro tvperioriiy, cornea from a lead er of the party whl.h b&a been charging negro equality upon the Republicans from every etmnp in tb s Northwest. Men of Illinois 1 Will yon vote for this man, who says, in a aet speech, that he would bath er ore or ms NEGROES WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT or the United States than Abraham Lincoln? Can yon rote for him and Tote your asniimente ? Will yon rote for the man who thus insults you by preferring a negro to rule over you, rather than year own honored Lincoln? Can you do it and preserve your own self-respect? Will ywdoitt We will see. D. W. Stormont. Tl e following is the t rticle alluded to in the above ccmmunlcation: OCT. JODNSOW’S SPECCn AT TZBBB ILiCTB. The telegraph reports to the country that Governor Johnson said in his speech at Terre Haute, at tbs great Democratic demonstration in that city on Monday last, that he preferred a negro to Lincoln for tbe Presidency. No such remark was made by him. Commenting upon the qualification of Lin coln for tbe Presidency, Qor. Johnson said that his rail-splitting ability teemed to be bis most prominent recommendation. If this qualified a man for the Presidency, the Governor play fully remarked that be bad divers negro men who could beat Lincoln stthat; and should one of them b« made President on that account, he was confident of one th-ng—that be would be found on the slavery question.—Terre Haute Journal, The above I clip from the Terre Haute Jour r.al of Thursday last. Now, Ur. Eiitor. permit me to tell yon what tbs rtutinguiiaei'DeTo eratie candidate 1 r the Vice Presidency cid aar. Iwca tt -'Hz,: in front,within twenty fife fe<t ot t'.? ‘ -j. i At r, locking him in the face at ih» iis f wt-.xd ttis words dirtinctly. JoU>os b>u, lost Mr. LiseMa was bragged of an a gre.tr rail aplitt.r, and his friends claim ed mem on that account. He (Johnson) then continued, and said f a’, he htd twenty negroes on hi* plantation *ho could beat Lincoln rail splitting, and give him great odds. He then named fire or six, giring, as I snppo-ed, the* real names of the negroes, any oie of whom, he emobatieally declared, HR WOULD RAVBER SEE hLECTED PRESIDENT t»P THE UNIT ED STATES TUAN AUK LINCOLN. Tfccse wete bis words, and the lentimeat was ap plauded by several persona on the stand aronnd the speaker, as well as some who stood on the benches n**? me. *. As I passed away through (he cr .wd, immediately afterwards, I heard severs! upon this outrage upon all decency; and inquiring whether ibat was Douglas Democracy, Johnson did add something aocut such negro being sound on the slavery question, but that was thrown in only as another reason for giv ing preference to his negro for the Presidency. Juss Combo. X,, Preparations to AW Spoiled. A San Francises corresponded, wntirgna der date of Sept. S7tb, saya: The rumored capture of Geo. Walker has created a eensatieu here. His personal friends and sympathisers ruaniftat the deepest co. cera for the fate of the great h.ttl-s filibuster, though I have not learned whether it is intended to get up a pnb.ic expression of sj mpathy in bis be half. 1 learn priv.tcfy that lb a general's agents in California were prepared to send him fifteen huedred men, together with arms and provis os, at short notice. Two luge ocean steam ers, one of which is cow lying at anchor In the’ bay, were to have been employed—so sgys the story—iu transporting the troops and stores. Of course, a confirmation of the news of Walk er’s disaster will have as effect to uciett'e whatever negotiations may have been made for carrying out the enterprise on this side. The present foggy wca’her would faeilitite the departure of a filibuster expedition from (bis port. Fob Cash ob Lass.—We undustanu that a paper iain circulation among the worklugmen of JJwton andiu vicinitr, iovitiog Ur. Yancey (6 addrw them upon the influence < f alavAj*; bor upon whiio‘lab3>r where the two systems are brought In competition with each other, —BotUm Trantcrift* A KANSAS LETTER. Condition ot AH.lr* In Hie Tnrltory. A CALL Ul’ON THE CHARITABLE, [Correspondence of the Press and Tribune.) iloc» Cut. K- T., Oct. ifl, 1860. Haring seen some exaggerated articles la va rious papers of theEist, iu regard to the condl lion of this pari of the country, I feel U my duty to give you a carnet statement of affairs as I find them in t’is immediate neighborhood. J inn Co. is generally, conceded to be one of the beat: if not the beat in Kansas for good pralne land, abundance of good Umber, stone and coal, as well as Us industrious, enterprising pyoyle. The drought of one and a half,jesra is not yet ended, filbongh we had the best ram since Its duration on the 30th of Sept, which has made good pasture, (bat no haj), has helped the fall wheat, which now looks fiae; but I am sorry to say we hare but little iowed for want of eeed. or the money with which to get it. There ia a fine prospect that we will T«t raue enough potatoes for seed next year. The buck* wh at will get ripe, I think. Too weather has been very warm iince the-.in of the 80thin.t, lintil to-'ight. Should the wind cta.it blowing, 1 fear we will hare frost. The sogur cme has dime well, is mostly ripe and manntaclured up. Toe juice is unusually sweet this year, and makes excellent molasses, ihe corn is most aU cut np. and we can now teU about how much com has wen raised. Three fieloa in the ral ley near me will yield about twenty bushels to the cere. The corn was not touched after wanting. Another crop, worked twice, will yield about ten bushels to the acre, (the wormr, however, bare done great damage to it, de stroying fully one-third.) The general average will col be more than three bushels to the acre. We must hare seed wheat, and poss bly seed com. from abroad, to get a start again. Had we had a good season, the people of Kansas won*d ba"e been independent ana comfortable, notwithstanding all the bloodshed, anarchy and oimmsion oi James the First and the Demon ccrLcj But we are now in a v.orsefix than erer. We hope to lire through end come out right side np with care next fall. As to the em'gration into the Territory, there has been but little compared with preTiois years; still there has been some, and of a good das*. The omigruiion oni of the Territory has been Urge. A great many hare gone to Illinois and Muaou riu> woik lor a living; a good portion hare gone back to the State* to Tisit amongst their friends this winter. Three fourth* cf all the outward jvnigration will return next spring; toe other lourth we hope will stay out; we don’t •* need them.” There is always a chu of men who think they can lire in a new c .untry without money or labor, and as a natura* con sequence thee are not overscrupuloua as to how they obtain a subsistence. Therefore good has came of it; we get good citizens in kr.e p'aca of hil Lsxzircni, . Taut there is suffering in Kansas now lam certain, and there will be a great deal of it be fore spring, unless the prosperous, benevobut people of the East, open their hearts and panes to help us. The people here have done all that Ktrong arms and hearts could do. When it was ascertained that the wheat was killed bey ond a d,;uh:, it was plowed up and put in corn; Unn gurtun grass was sown, but was an almost uni versal tail ore; buckwheat was eown at the prop per time, and in great abundance, but wo fail ing, I fear it may yet be bitwith ihe frost, how ever, some is now sa f e. Turnip*, seeds, (enough lo feed all creation had they done any good) were repeatedly pat in the ground; but they bare entirely failed, so our prospects are sad indeed. No wheat, no cats, no hay, no vegs t hies, about three bushels of torn and worm dust to the acre. A’o money, no credit I Let everv person East who has friends in Kansas, do all they can, let them send esais'snee to their ctcu relations, and solicit aid from their neigh bors, to be seat to their friends here for dir.ri buiioa among those who are in distress. In that wuy a great deal of hunger may be prevented, and some lives saved possibly. The donors will feel that they have done a good deed, one that will be of good service to them ia the great day of reckoning. Politically we hare nothing to sar, but onr hearts are with yon in the cause of justice snd freedom. We would like to have given “Old Abe ” a lift, but Democracy did not leel willing to risk us. We hare hare been punUbcd with lire aud blood. We have teen too “E.ephant Democracy,” and on the 31 of December next we will leel his wrath. 1 presume you harelong since learned why, so much ecull-duggery was exhibited at Washington in regard to the New 't erk Indian reservation of Kansas. After try ing in every conceivable way to pass a law giv log this valuable tract of lands into the bands ct greedy, unprincipled Democratic politicians ana speculators, but tbrou-h the watchfulness sod honesty of the Republicans they were thwarted in all such deigns; bat unfortunately for us, thus bas the th.ng passed into the hands cf that old peijured villain, Jim Buchan an, who bas proclaimed the laucs for B*le, at the land office at Fort Scott on Monday, the 3d and 17th of December next. Now the afore said J. 8., of Washington, D. <3., did pro claim certain lands in the Lecomplon Dis trict, some time’ curing the patt summer, of which 820 acres were sold. He aUo pro claimed a part of the Fort Scott Kids for sale on 13lh ol August, cf which 80 acres were sold. The same will be the result of the December sale;, but the point sought to be gained by the alaveccracy and their miserable old tool, J. 8., is to open said land* for private snfry, for which purpose, I am credibly ialormeJ,litre areover UO.oOti acres of land warrants owned by iaauib ern men, now in tbs bands of the border ruffi • aas of Fort Scott; but a Free Stale settler can not get sight at one on any terms. The agents of the land office are coaxing pro slavery men to j‘»tnp-cla ms, enter improvemeotsfrom under the settler, encouraging double “fiblogs" and contests. No man of good eecs%orot >he least morality whatever, can witness such skulldug gery as is every day and o i every occasion ex hibited by the bloated scoundrels who hold efihe by virtue of bis “Holiness, James the Fjffct and Last.” Whether the settlers will al low the sales .o go off remains to be seen; bat :o the bumble op uion of your correspondent, is “ mixed,” aod cot a great deal elthtr. Htpisg the pipers oi the East w iii not do us xnoie Uutm than good in oor mis ortones, but that ttoy will give tbo true facts in the case, viz: that Kansas can stand more drought than any country in the world, acd yet produce semethiog, and that the benevolent people of the Eist should help those suffering to Kansas, 1 remain, ycurs, Mabjox. Progm> ol i&tpubitcaaum In Vlr* KiuU* From th« Wheeling, (Va.) Intelllpe-.cer. OCDDt rtZCOCT. Wool icUb.r. £ih, I3«a { I'esses Editobs:—Within the three weeks we bate h«ld seme seven Lincoln meet jrg fl j n ihis refr.cn cf Wood county, and could th* whole county be canvassed,tbete would be a Republican rote polled that would ustociah the “b*U weathers” of old parties. As it i*, we will iu this upper end of the county, give “Honest Abe” such a lift as will cause tome considerable shaking among lb* dry bones of these same individuals. In 18S6 but 8 rotes were polled for Fremont In Wcoa county: now, we hare the names of 40 voters on our lists in one precinct dene, who are pledged for Lincoln and Hamlin. At our last meeting, held tcree rights ago at Bar roosrills, 23 voter# entered the r nanus on the Republican roll, among them a number of our oldest citizens. There is a studied effort among many of the leaders of other parties to crush out our grow ing organization. To auch an extent is th;s the ewe that in some parts our Republican friends hare thought it prudent not as yet to organize. We doubt the propriety cf such a course, for now, if there ever was a time in the history of our country, is the very time that every Re publican should run the hs;ird of doing his whole duty—for what momentous issues lung upen tbs result of the coming coolest I There are honorable exceptions to these ef forts. There »re many who refuse to stoop to such contemptible meanness as to prevent any citizen of our country frem tbo free exercise of bis own privileges. In our own immediate neighborhood, all attempts to stifle the freedom of speech hare been abandoned as utterly hope less, and it is gravely suggested that this in feeted spot should be cut out and stitched on the “Panhandle." One week ago the dtizensof Williamstown, in this county, called a meeting, to which they invited the speakers of the different parties, but before the time of the meeting itwai dis covered that a discussion of principles might spoil the caculatioua of those who bod things all “fixed up." Silence was the best policy, thought they, and so indeed it wm; but this time the fact was discovered too late, for al though an effort was made to give out the im pression that the meeting was abandoned, the Republicans, although having from eight to thirteen mils# to travel, were to the dismay of their opponents, on tbe ground promptly at the cppolnted hour. CoL Peterson, J*. U. Colson, wfE Sltv-ms on,*and others were ready to enter tbe lists for Lincoln, but a tersemeercss-firing, B*n Brick, and Dag. unconditionally surren dered, sod the Rspnclcims having thus cap tared the enemy without firing a shot, proceed ed to have a rail meet ng on their own account, and a rousing one they had. The Republican platform was read, and Mr. Stevenson, at the request of the citizens present, explained the co ry set forth therein, staled the une position of the Republican party on the living ques tions to b« acted upon in the present political struggle exnosed the infamous course cf the party calling* itself democratic, explained that • the Dell organization, if persevered in, could remit le no good but might be the mem. of greet itiary by it» unnelure end inconrsteot combinations *ith the dirjoiuted end dying democracy. FortheErprto. Donslea and Broderick. The SanFrantisoo i »««. ■“ spsskmg of the curare of 1553 in Californis.sajs: Darioe tha*. canraM Broderick well noder «lood Bounins. He txoicted neither ad nor comfort from him. Though he did not denounce him for hia irpachery to tun in l-nhlio. jet in Tirirate he denounced him in terme enca as cn- could n°m He called him .reachernne, "oscillating and weak. He told them how Hear th, week kneed bobu-1 was to goiog orerto the support of the English bill, abnnnonmg his friends and all they had been cont uduig for. Manr men in hi. State bar, heard him te.l how be made the qnirenng demegegue joatl before that lemons Anti Lecomplon caucus, w“n he Sd h“ that If he be.rajed them he »hhld do- on-ce him In hut eear, and put ahnra lle ' hi hare made him crawl under hia chair.’’ Thfeprentpt action of Broderick intimidated ime proinh from disgrace. He ro- »K Eoglah e.indl.rrd by thst mesne eared him.eli at home. The Albany Atlat and Argut s?yt: “Th.inWlU.MWof disaffection and defeat I. nth.Vs-Tlti instead of diiconraging the Ure’brokerthVDe’mMretir fcrem * Herethe ‘‘'voltlm M Th« Democralio party has for sererilfears been marching.Wight to Usi end with utoniahinK resolution:. and tbsi n.wstrom T»Frinsvlvani4; 1 Ohio- and Indiana has ? nr ®^7 : impetus to it. progress m this direettoft. Fnun WASHINGTON, [fp#:'a Di piUUloih- CluM nv 10ax*tte.1 Wa.'luji«tvn, Oct. la. THE TROCBLXO WATIS3 Of DOUCLAa DKMOCHACT. The Democracy are greatly troubled at the 'aspect of thinga generally, especially that brunch of tbe pany who navo stuck to Mr. Douglas with io much tecaaity. Got. Letcher bca been here, and is cursing lerociously at tbe condition of affairs, and lamenting bis stupidity in lit*king bis fortunes to those ol Stephen A. Douglas. Toe Little Giant is now universally regard* ed as played out entirely, a r d bis pretensions are absolutely derided by tboe* who once were wont to pay him resoect. Thousands who swore by him in the heyday of his prosperity, since tbe recent Northern elections bare given him the cold shoulder, and gone over, body and breeches, to Breckinridge. THE CONTEST LX S3 BRTWEBX UXCOLX BEECX- IXHIDGB. The fight now will be entirely between the latter and Lfrcoln—in which contest Lincoln mast, if the signs of the times are to be re garded, come ciT Victorians. 1 am unable myself to see any other result, and think the odds at betting should be put to 60 on such an event. tax moaner XX GEOEGIA. The Augusta DUfateh , a neutral paper, says of prospects there: *• Alt ouradvices agree that Southwestern Georgia will roll up a tremendous majority for Breck and Lane. Tncre is scarce ly a corporal’s guard of Douglas men in the first and second districts, outside of two or three cities; and it is confidently believed that the vote will not much exceed five hundred in each district. The same-stale of things exists In reference to the Bell party. Satisfied that Mr. Bell is not the manou whom the South can moat thoroughly ana satisfactorily unite, they are coming over to the support of Breckinridge and Lane, who are dearly committed to the doc trine of equality, the only fair and satisfactory basis on wnich the sectional troub.es which distract the country can be adjusted in Upper Georgia. Tlc skies are still more cheering for Breck inridge, woo will cross the Cattaboocbee with alirgfr majority than any liekat haa ever re ceived ; and if the Seventh and £ gbih Dintricts do as well, Georgia is secure for Breckinridge bf several thousand majority orer all compel- Ms rtoenu election. Frcm Florida, the returns received from eighteen counties, make Milton's majority 1529, and Hilton's 2125. Nineteen counties remain to be beard from, acd*ill probably increase the Democratic majority in the State to about 25'K). This is one of the States the Bellevcretts swere they wonld carry. rucsPEcrs or the admixistuatiox pantr. It now appears that Delaware, North Caroli na, Florida, Mississippi, Arkansas, South Caro lina and Texas, have in their St-te elections de clared for Ureckimidg ; that Kentucky by a Bell and Douglas fusion in au inaittuiSeant Stale officer, has apparently gone for Bellever ett; white Missouri has gone against Bell, but basnet decided as between Breckinridge and Dougtai. Such is briefly the result la the Southern States. BELL AND DOCCLAS DBITSX OFF THE FIELD. whut face then can the Bell or Douglas men talk of success, with the Nor h ana'll monslj fjr Lincoln, and the South neulr eo for Breckinridge ? Their pretensions are aim* ply absurd; and if the. were wise, they wonld abandon the field. A KILLI.X DOLLARS TO DEFEAT LtXCOLX IX XEW TOOK. The New "Voik Hiralt indulges still in the in sane hope that New Fork may retrieve the field, ana begs the merchants of New York to raise one million of dollars to heat Lincoln. If the reports from that city are correct, the mer chants of the modern Babylon will shortly have occasion to raise more than that rum to save their elating fonunes-from total wreck. A great financial crisis is by many wise heads an cipated. They Lad better ave their loose change fer hard times. No other paper bnt the BtraA would bare the impudence to propose publicly eo immoral a proposition as the rats leg of a great sum of money to be used in bribing electors, for I cannot understand in what other way is could be used to influence the result. Senator Goodwin, lately a prominent Ameri can ot New \ ork, ia out against fusion and in favor of Lincoln. SOCTH CABOUXA ELECTIOX. lam reliably informed that tha election®in South Carolina have mainly resulted in Ihe choice of extreme men. The Itehng in that State is intense. The Southern banks are not advancing on cotton, and, ax a coastqience. Northern dealers ate telling very sparingly to Southern buyer , for nnleea the planters are able to draw on tbeir factors, they do not pay the merchants, and the latter are unable to meet their liaoiliiies. Xl»e Pre»ldeucy—Tbe Forlorn Hope of ilie utuiocrei'j, tFr.iu ILe New Ycik Timet.] The orpins o. the Democratic parly are doing their beat to keep their courage up. Toey try to persuade themselves that all i s eot lost. They acknowledge the stunning character of the blow they hare received, but console them selves with the thought there is a month left in which they may The Washington Conttiiuiicn talks about reconquering Pennsyl vania—bnt mod of the other organs confess that New York is their ferl ra hope. Much of this,however,ittmrfepreunse. The sensible men o: the ptr.y knew ana fee! that they are beaten. The Pennsylvania election ia not the only proof of coming defeat—it is only one nr. re added to the m»ny sfuiptuma that have preceded it. All th<* el etioca of ■Le sum mer hare Indicated ike kaxe tend ncy to the f» :blic mind. The Maine election showed clear yenouah Low things wire going down East. Tee Western States ail show a similar increase of R?t*ub:ic.in atreogth; ajd now Pennsylvania, usually the strongoold of the Democracy, the Siate which has more than o:cc saved the party when all ee* ned lost, has given the death-blow to their dy ing hopes. Ii is ntv<r tolly to expect that a tide, which has thus been rolling m aa-J ri.uag higher and higher during lh« last year or two, ia to stop in mtdoceau end flow b.ck btiore is strikes the shore. Why should not the same influences which have affected otuer States, tell upon New York? TtiscUv,it iatreo, is mainly commer cial, but so is Pnilaoelphia. Oar people are conservative, but so are those of Pennsylvania. The same canes must produce the same ellecta here as they have prooneed elsewhere. N'ew Yoik feels the same impu.ae which baa roused every other Slate to an indignant and effective protest against the current character of our Federal rule. She will vole the same wav, nod we shall be very much surprised if Lincoln’s plundiry m this State does not very cooetdera bly exceed 5 ~ 0 Tbo tu ion movement, on which reliacce is placed in certain quarters, never very w*ll informed on political subjects, will do not the slightest good. Indeed, we be lieve it has done, and ia doirg, the Opposition party very great Lu:t. If me*' Duugiaa Demo crats bad gpne vigorously to work immeciately after their Syracuse Convention, pushea the r ticket, fought their enemies, and ecs’.ained their friends on principle, and male no efforts for coalition or fnuon with other parties, they would have ccet a larger vote than they will now. They have disgusted thousands ol their friends, and have demoralised the whole Oppo billon movement a oral VUi.« lo Plill«d'-lpbla~A. Rem I'4I»C«UCP. The visit of the Pnn eot W*!»i to Phikdel phis, says the Philadelphia BulUtin, calk to mind a story we hare heard cancer icg the visit of another royal or imperial penonegs to the city. When Jerome Bonaparte came to Pni!adelphis,in ISO 3, • a tie brother of the First ’ Consul of F ance, h* attracted much attention, and extraordinary honors were eboirn him by the political party which tympainizjd wuh Hs illnatr;ous relative. The Indian Qieen Hr el, on the east side of Fonrtb street, above Chest nut, was then the fashionable home of the city, and at this establishment the future King of Westphalia made his home daring bis *’*7 in this city. Mr. ilensparte, or Prince Jerome, as he was c lied, was at the susceptible age of nineteen at the time of his visit here, and was particularly subject to te der impressions. The young gentleman had not enjoyed the advan tages of as good training as the Pi inee of Wale? has had, nor was he accompanied here by as discreet a suite. Tiis consequence was that the young Frenchman ogled all the pretty girls he met with, and where they annex hit fancy particularly, he eod.avored to visit them. In Fourth street, below Chestnut, there lived at the time a lady who shall be nameless, who was in very straightened circumstances, who bad a very beautiiul niece, an orphan girl, who w.s an inma eof her house. Young Bo naparte got his eye upon the young lady while in the str et, and fell, or pretended to fall, desperately in love with her. Finally he called at her aunt’s house, and declaring that his intentions were honorable, he insisted up on visiting the young lady. The aunt gave the anient youth a very prompt and decided denial, and 'cent him oIT with a huge flea in bis ear. Jerome afterwards went to Balti more, where he tell in love with his usual fa cility, and that city, instead of Philadelphia, enjoyed the doubtful honor of famishing the susceptive Frenchman a wife, who was never recognized by bis haughtv brother, and who was afterwards discarded by himself. Gen. Walker’s Boat Design. The Havana Diario has tbe following story, which may be taken with grains of allowance; ** Walker was notworktngon bis own account in Honduras, but was the agent of as American auociation, whose motto is the * Kcightsof the Southern States,* and with which be was In con stant communication through a Mr. Fayasonx. His projtci was 10 form, with the help of a few inhabitants cf Ruatan, known already to the government of Truxillo, an iodepenceat State of part of the Republic of Honduras, and to an nex it to the American Union. The new Stats would have contained the Gay Islands and the whole part of the coast of Honduras from Pun ts Casiula to Omoa. Walks would have been, of course, placed at the heud of the new govern menu And if, by the intervention of the Brit ishers, the plan was to fail. Walker did not thick that all expenses incurred should be lost on that account; for be hoped that in a ew hours he could capture on the Bay Islands, and on the northern coast of Honduras, from SiX) to 400 negroes, and send them to New Orleans and ether Southern Stales, to be sold there as slaves, and indemnify the persons who bad ad vanced money for the expedition.** A curious libel suit is on trial in Andros eoggin county. Me, Darin? Forbes, editor of tie Maint limveranc* Jtvrnal, is accused of libelling E<sex Fuller. Pre*Uent o' - the Slate, and Mr. Clark, Sheriff of the county; having charged them with a conspiracy to overthrow the Maine Liw, and representing Mr. Fuller as “arum blcated'sot, and seller of intoxicating liquors.” The same editor baa been notified by the Postmaster of Raleigh, N. C., ibat hia pa per is V notit to circulate in a southern commu nity ’*; and the Ralelgn Sumdvd says he ii “ a miserable hypocrite.” ■ Ur. Forbtshas a hard time of it. Tax Cavnou'c Paxss AQitsar raa Tkuforal Powaa or the Popb—Articles in £rcvason,'s Atrittt and t .e- yrtanan’t Journal join in the cry for the unity of Italy and the succetsof the revolution, asking the Pope, for the good of hit native conntry, to the ranks of temporal rulers.' The Roman Catholic Press has caught itbetinsplrauon of liberty, and in disregard or BishcpSfha.' pU ad forTiomajuty''against desi* - potUm and the Pope. Political Jea DVipriii Thecns’om (prera’ent in some parts of our country) of subjecting candidates or any office to every variety oficqulry with regard t> their conrse upon all possible and imposriblo ques* lions, is thus satirized by a correspondent of a South Carolina jjnrnai, the Spartanaborg freu. To the candidates for the Legislature of South Carolina: If will too vote for a sufficient appro priation, by tbo Legislature, to b*ve the Arte* tiisa wel. in Cbarlestoa bored through to the Celestial Empire, so that Boulh Carolina may drap through in the avast of Ur. Lincoln’s elec tion? In the event that the African slave trade is not re-opened, will yon favor an appropriation, by the Legislature, for the importation of mon keys to pick onr cotton ? Will yea vote for a law to prevent the Aurora Bore alia from making its appearance south of Mas in and Dixon’s line? Will yon vote for an appropriation to aid in defraying (be expenses of the visit of the Prince of WkiltM to the United States? In the event of your election, will you, in ac cordance with the strict rules of political econ omy, vote for appropriating tbo superfluous gas so freely generated by that body, m aid of Professor Lowe’s intended balloon excursion to Europe ? . „ If elected, which hotel will yon stop at in Co lombia? , , , Which of the candidates for the Legislature do you think will be elected? In view of the great importance of the fore going solemn questions, and the necessity of speeide and categorical answers to the same, *• What are yon going to doebout it? Are you in favor of making such simple tons cf yenrseives as to answer all questions which may be propounded to yon through the papers? . . . , If the last question is answered in the af firmative, we repeat with emphasis the omi nous question, “What are you going to do about it?'’ . Tli© Wreck of D«apotlaiu.«—Snfferlnga of ike neapulitans* In the fjllowiag extract from the correa pendent of the London Tima, we hire & pic* tare of the wreck of the fallen Neapolitan des potism: Almost any man we meet, or any of the hosts who bestow so treeb attention upon ns, bus a tale of some deed of oppression of which him* self or some of bis friends hare been the vie* lim. The wonder !s, not that such a power should break like a frail re.d. but that the country in which almost every man was a suf ferer, not a voice should be raised for revenge. From Reggio to Naples we never c"ma to a lonely spot on the road where we Lad nit ihe company of some of the poor disbanded Roval soldiers. It is the first in--tance, 1 believe, in history, in which a conquering and army were seen marching side by ad% and almost promiscuously, without any hostile feel ing. Che sufferings o; the depressed Neapolitans are dreadful. We must have passed no less than twenty five thousand of them. As they laid down their muskets they every man Legan tramping. Footsore, and rnaiy of then shoe* less, almost naked some of them—lor they sell all ava table garments they creep along, parched, burnt, starved. Few ever pass ns without begging lamentations, or without that peculiar gesture of the thumb and forefinger >efcre the mouth, indicative of hunger in the dumb Lazzsroni language. Garibaldi has his own army to feed; and the very dispersion of these miserable fugitives over so long a line of march would render the distribution of relief an impossibility. The amiable, long-suffering features oi their Italian nature come forth in all tins agonv; 'or the thought tbs: violence ni*ht wrest from their tellow beiugs that cnarity which their solicita tion cannot elicit, never seems to strike ary of this long train of desolate vag&boa s. Thus far 1 have beard of no exceer.or even miner offense, Uld to the charge of taece poor fuffer ■era, nor of any instance of harshness evinced toward them bv the inhabitants of the country they go through. gPECIAL AUCTION NOTICE. W«wDI exhibit onTHCRSDAT. Uth Ink. fremthe (Ktlvg Out Auction Saiea OtthecLtlreStrckxofMes n. U-NKA'tD t RCTTON, L. Jt B. LEXTZ A CO., ana CHAs. lilEai C J., Over IjOOO Piccfs irress Silks, C.mpri:lns Exerf Variety of Plain. Blade Silks. Blade Figured. Silks. 3?lam <. 'olored Silks, Ard AH tbc Cbclccst Novs!‘l*v In [LLnaVUED SILKS, POMPADuCU SILK?, Boablo Faced Bilkt, XSept. Silks, fire, Seven ted SUe kkusccd Silk and Velvet Hobes, SCFEXS LTIOSS SILKS, Brocaded wlla Velv t, la Cains far atwe'. aal Exeninj Dituee. Alto, Ore? On* Thensaad T’cceat Rich Paris aid Lj ons Dress Goods, FRENCH MERINOS. OTTOMAN'S VELOURS, VALOURS ESPINGLE, REPP. OTTOMANS, ILLDMIN'ATED DRONGELS, Ac. Th*»e Coeds were alt Manufacture,! and Stlc*tsd ft F!nt-e;iu JV4W 'k'orb City Hetatl Trmdt, But ©wise lo th; htßf«j of the tewon, amt the noWem! kntl uiMii'tctol (*cT>r**il'D ti th# soutira tn^ t were fotcetl opoQ U»« nurktl »i.d eo'd *1 Au Immense Sacrifice- —w> w n| teU P!»’d FJ’ti 'or Thr*» ‘h'Ulnrs; HetTy PlvdSlkif.r Fft'&nf*; Rijeib Qailiy «ea*r Lri*s MV, ft»rjj:x -hurti—« -U *!»•- ►»» ‘>n »lT>n ?hHlpe»; Rch o'tck Kl.mpd'-ilMf.r «» * Sill.-ns • Ext aQ-»*;tr» •i w-v-'actU M k« Jor fihil lr<i- I< iula' prut Fouiuea tierin’ >l* ticbts iCr Liglteta Lfotare; Scpc.it> S.vea aad Jfite Klooneid Lyons Silk Uobcs for $25,00. troith r.«/ rcr«r». Elegant Seven aai Nine F.mactd Velvet lloben for 8 10.00, Coct to Import Sixty Dollars. TVs I* the LAR3HST acd CP»AP*6T SAT.* ef RICH GOJI-'S eve- m-fl* In this courtly. iar!, as we largely, we caa cffcr oar i*u.toars ihe^ Greatest Bargains Ever Known. We will exhibit a! '« svreUme PARIS >XVELTIKSIa Kick Velvet Cloaks, And all bert Stylet of Clia>* la evert vaHe»v of tb»p» ted m* , *r‘-ftl.ofcurcw&impc'r a l»a and la.luf4.tule, aa- at EXThEUeJA LOW PEUfcS. We are now receiving d*»lv from AaeU'-s. tai Imror truths Newe»t end Choicest«; »&d*o' E»rHi Xi f s ?ri htiu3» t and exh-b-t »a a:maetQQllxliea stock of General Dry Goods. Wh’chwe offef at ahclera’e or re' 11, for ml t:* s S at pUes mat cannot be compel .u with la Ihli dty, WJI. M. U«ss * CO. 167 and ICO Lab* Street* locUldM? ml FALL GOODS, GLOVES HOSIERY AND UNDER GARMENTS, for Gentlemen, Lade*andCb.idr;tt^ rh.UrenN Farcy II * left la ete it witty. Tr.n.i.K'mt Wor.ted G:c<U. tta cannot be rnrpaa;«. p:;Ei3 AND CLOAK TRIMMINGS, the bust choice ryes. Button. Tape's. Girdle'—a fullAaortattt. GUI Bel?*, tu Wes, sUea, Ac, Embroideries, f>t!a Setts, Kdclrg*. lanes and Vela. InimV Kobe* ata Waist*. , . . Frtncii aol German Comte, from the test naaafie- NIT?, Of the latest Itrles __ A fuU aaV-unent cf ZjPHYB WORSTEDS, AT WHOLES ALE AND K>TaiL. ADOIaON GRAVE?, octis 78 Lake Street, f bkago. Jones, Perdue & Small, 132 - * LIKE STREET, • - 122 MANUFACTURERS op BLANK BOOKS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS Z5 Writing Papers, Envelope** memorandum andFais Hooka, WHITING INKS AND FLUIDS, CARDS AXD CARD BOARD, BOOK BINDERS’ STOCK OFFICE STATIONERY. JONES. PERDUE A SMALL. •jJ7 - RANDOLPH-ST. - yj'j Thud Store Eutof Brigg, Home. HEW GOODS AT SEDUCED BATES Ihava new on hand aai to arrive, a Urn and varied •tocK oi crockerv. Ualaa and Olacsaut, Parian, M*rhJ« . a&d Xena Cotta Yaws. BILTKA-FLATKD WARS, TAILS CUT LIST, wUa a general aMOrtoent of HOUSEKEEPING GOODS* Alao, Oil Palnltega. Tackee Notions, Clock*, Watekw aaO Jewelry, wbiea 1 will aell at ireativ reduced nnen asdtowhidil would IsrtU the attention of Merchant* Housekeepers,a»4 otben. JOHN RANKIN, Wholesale and Retail Dealer, raytAly 177 Randolph meet. JP L. VINCENT & CO., HOMEOPATHIC^PHALMi’ F, 102 Washlnsfim Street* 102 ALLCSOIS, 'Wbolenle asd Retail Dealer* ta CHICAGO,. Homeopathic Medicines, And every vadety of Physician*’ OFFICE CHESTS AND POCKET CASES, sajar of Milk, Globules, Corks ssd Vlsls of every stic. TABTTA ATX! DOL. HCMSOPATIUO BOOKS. £TC*ITO f-r Af-nt. fnrtha Americsa Vise Company, ocM leMta —■ OATARKH 1 CATARRH I I \j doctor aiKLtra Idlanld Catarrh Kemedy. Sm“ o Sß^ ,^BSSSs^te Jg L E CANT Fall and Winter Opening of •UIJLhIJVJEK 1* GOODS. mas A. E. WILLIAMS Hirloir ittnm.-d from Jfew Tf tk, n*Vr na nbsesee of sere* r>l»e«k«—i*uia s Lxlln* ttemoit choice nr es of tne iwon- I would her trends every any at the Millinery Uocten cf IV. W. WETUEREII, •Ko. 54 Ho. 84. .Lake street. Where ibebprep*red to »h-«w th» richest Bonnet* to be f.Uid lattie city. Onr stock U tow f d and coaip’ttc ta every He*. embr*> tßf e'ey-nr *yle*Slower*.Kuihotu,and Silk aoi Vel vet Ma-’er*aia for Bonteta to ererv vanity cf color tod style u Wh>ea»ia and KetaiL ihe attention of the trace la Invit'd be'o*e pnrtbaeli c No. 8-4 Lake »tr- el. a few door* east of &ute *tie«t OCISOSS7-2W tl. W. WETHFRELL, DAGUERREOTYPES. Hit B«>C and Cheapest In the City, At HESLEB’S, 113 Lake Street. Photographs. THE BEST AND CHEAPEST 1H THE CITY. At KESLEB’d, 113 Lake (tract IYORYTTPES. Th* Bttt mmd Ctuaput t» th* City, AT HEB L £ R’3, 113 LACS STREET OTEIaAIi\OT\'PES, The Best and Chespest In the CUr» At HSSLER'9. 113 Lake Street. /X 1%/T BH.OTYPES, Tbe Beat and Ckrapcjl la the city. AT HUStSH'S, No. U8 I. ASS ST. :«ea''OIHTI JP>ALL AND WXNTAK GOODS EECEIYISQ DAILY BY T. B. OAHTBK. A very Attract** Slock of Winter Dress Goods Now la 2; tore. LACES ASD E3IBKOIDERIES At Half Price, U cut eat Lit itock. SECojyo-HJJvn jjesss fob sjle. T. B. CARTE t. 13a Lake ttmt. cpHE LIFE OP WILLIAM 11. SEWARD, With Seleetiom fro a kb Works. Zens ax .GEORGE E. BAKES. LIN’ OLN A.VD HAMLIN MEDALS. KEPUBLIUaN CAMPAIGN SONGSTERS. PORTRAITS 07 LINCOLN. Bartlett’* Ufa of Lincoln* Booad In <’!mu.... M Fret SO Cta. •• Paper ** 15 Uia Lincoln and Booclu* Debate*, BcnaJla < loth ....Free SO Pti •• •• 35 o*. The Political Text Book for IB6o* C'osprvnz a brief View rf presidential Noai ailO't and Kleclsi9, lnfb.ln< ai t.e Nvmai flatfomu ere* yetadopted. by ilotaox O.silxt, Prce£l. for*a.eoy \V. . KU&.V BooiueHe*. lia Un rtree*. CROCKERY AND GLASS. BURLEY & TYRRELL, 4>*.. Lake Si., Chicago • . • 49 IMPORTERS AND DEALERS El CEOCKESY, CHIHA, GLASS, BRITANNIA AND SILTSR>PLATSD WARE, FLUID AND KEROSENE LANIPk. Table-Cutlery and Looking-Olaues, Aiktis AUsatioa of Dealers to their LARuS ASD COMPLETE STOCK OP GOODS. Which they offrr low for Caah or good Notes, aag <**6-4:0 MUI>&33’S American Sherry, IBS NOBTHWB3 C PRODUCING ITS OWN WINE. A i.rfat Want Supplied. A Pure Wine of delicate fl»»or that conretent Jnd*e» prvno inre iope:l rtore:o«tof r.r bLb p»l« td *» n-»-«oid lo thliro'intip. .» au« bria* optbe uu .n tinned tromtne Strawberry Variety of Rhubarb. Brror>dt v e crdltar totlc «ff«t cf & rare (rape wire, this *etn ax an ai|»t.tive, an<l i.-rnJnU t^ifrring /»««*» ir*lf ffnt,'mnHdfn**tip>iiirm <•» Ar bxfW*, osJ *l»o, n»n*njuntily t cannot *•* oO>tr in'..-*, are n»ic( .t wita the happkit tffecL HoU at maau'aclufer’. pile** bp J. 11 KKltO dk CO., Chicane, It!. LE.MCDQK BeleUeie.llL,bept. 1. IftjO. *elM*4-4ia G. H. & L. LAFLIN, 42 & 44—State Street.—42 & 44 WHOLESALE DEALERS 15 Hews, ledger, Writing ▲lf D FLAT PAPERS Of Every Description, Straw and Tar Boards, PKIHTIJfG OK. •Inti Envelopes AT LOW PRICES. HMIMa WORSTEDS, WCOIEH YABH3, WOOIEH HOSIERY, BOYS’ BAWD-KNIT SOCKS, IS FANIS’ WOOI* HOSE, New Worsted Goods. Tax CORTXZA 6LXSTE. RUSSIAN HOOD. ESQUIMAUX miS, CHOICE UA&iresAl, Hoods, Kittens, Gaitei*, Socks, 4c, HAK REITS, Ci SILT. CHENILLE, AND WORSTED. Commenced Slippers, l«d £abreUl«7 of all Uadi. SUTTON & BUKKIXT, . 41 - IA9ALLB ST., - 41 Mldld-tm. Oppo.lt* Hoffman’. Bank. QASH ADVANCES. Wakefield, Nash & Co., Liverpool and London. Liheil Cuh ndenncraenU will be made An Cmioin* mesUtot-ie.toee boa*e, of BICON, LARD, BRUVI- SlJ2>S.nrdPttOUUO£*ea«r*Jy, by oeta to ly THOWAi WASH, C MALL COAL, SilAlL COAL, SMALL COAL, SMAL COAL, SMALL COAL, T3UALL COAL, Mai: be TTied wllh Moat be rsed with Moat be Used with LITTLEFIELD’-* COAL 8U115K89, LITTLEFIELD’S COAL BURNERS. FoU by bold by la lake «tmt Tan Scliaack. 47 State St* Tan Sctaaack, 47 State Si., CHICAGO. I IVOeßerel Peeler la Uatuehecpia* Article*. Bjll jyjTERCHANT TAILORING Gentlemen’s Furnhliing Goods. B. X.. HUll*' #i .Dsa*so*s (Cad.. u. Bro.) M .» vuivH nnJ nperior otoek of lie Cassimeres. Cloths. jjd icasisnno goods, ac. Frealciff ayerletee un Cutter, be iwutm JTe et4 et Good FUU»r a Qmaeat u eea be ebUlaod, - . B. Z* HULL, Herebttt TeCer, ecttdlttla • dA Beubora Stmt. g AII TII & PUINDIS TTould sell the aUsttlon of the public toUnlr Urge stock of FALL ASD »INTER GOODS, ESQUIMAUX. MOSCOW A-SD CASTOR BKAVSRS, H'ld-tAaC.'*'.*. freach. Eaelisb. Scotch and Amrr <-* a t.'asMuieics, for FaaU aa4 bulta. Velvets,alks .ouCaabmero VESTI.VCS, Of the latest end mc»t d-slmb'e atv e . BroVcletbe and or all all rfwtikh will (>» «r-U Ofthi yard < rmvJe am cti men's ot ihe U - e«t style* nnU warrant* eUloiiresat.stiCl.ua. Thelr»tuc<of Fxirnishinc; Goods Te e’*o prmpl****, ror»*:(>Ur* of LtnlM* Woo' atd f*hikar Flame! L'O'ier'i Drawer*, wool wb'te aad ruiorvU Lln* i suirt«uo.t Collar?. T *-*, ?r»r(*. Muffl-rt, soepercWra, lloaiarvaMl Olo.enoi ah k.nd*. is» walrti k!) are invited to to k at before purchasing eiae* where. Don't the pUwe aMUIL A PHINDLB. eeS9dlfl(Ma T3APwNUM t S GREAT VAItIKTY JJ STOKE. IV j. 138 l«ake Street* WORHTti ■*— lOOOpoaiideitf every »a*t« ‘adtolttsf Spl.t, Mnglr ... 1 D< uft.e Zetih»'. Sov »<!. T qnl and Ike aaw .-client.i I'alor. at Waul* *»l* act JCet .. . QUAKER YAHJI.—fi(O poarda or id * tnprrior Tara, blj-jo»iitd. -M .lte, ec.iUi.ci' ad»., b ue. ur.Ui, ic, BAi*Kr'ts —A larveit'wk of Oertnati aid Ft*-phTr*» **l.Di{. Keikute. Wwi, Liv.ca a d Ta/ iU.k«t«, Ciw,r« ULc.Chur*. Workitandi, •> c. Blß*> CAUSH ■—Auudnien of a superior tcasafactu:*, Alai<. P.rot and S‘ittir»»i i •, TOYH A*l» FlS' Y of oar dlr**t Imp'rtv tloa inat France. E rfhu a»l fJerum M .n-;f i«.iure. Al<o. case* of Tcyt 'if V n rte I r<* ; a» r«,*;d t»ea? •Bvedo'larotc***. Un ra Ursa tan. y, k~. YANKEE NOiIONa.— \*?r«ril ***.rtae,l 0/ irtrf. Una* la this Use. %&“ Merchant* ard WhoOade Dealrr» tie Wctwll sad our *tock com irir, »•»<• p* c » i* I w t r lower than Ui-lnwejt. 'j.y. »a,j P -, c , ~ o j, vr» !*• p.itrd by u direct. creeqacbtly c-u c-:nf-« ».IL any solmiH lue country Lwi.vm.c U.j.r c fro -■ t;« maait ac.urar raj La la to oner a p>. n».r .n»Jc;ai«oU, CaL aiid uy aa at I3H LAKE STREET. aniyth-ly J^IN'INGEK’S OIiD LONDON DOCK G- I ]ST - Thu Delicious Tonic Stimulant, Eipcdallr drained fsr'tke aie o' the MEDICAL riIOEISSIOIf AND THE PAMILf. H'Tinz supe—«ded »h« •r-caTed “Gtr» H “ Ar-mv'c** ••(J rd “M*'K-.lert." , *.' A c , i->rp«,"**c ,f» sow i- do vi by al - of ppntalttnt p;v. c vh-«nt**‘, t'J «eurv at.«r ’'t" l i*»t» ii ■<lc a t fj’i 51* Uet.Lf ni; »nd «i.ar-t:c> wh c* -• r.; t» otr» ».n n;«t Uia. Pn» ’ip la quart iu:l.n a-d »>.-{ ty a.l grocers, Ac. A. 71. m.NINCFK ± CO.. (£ttahU*bed la 17T3.) Scr rt'Piinw. No. i*> it-. 70-»a> whcleaaV, *tj C?'cm*o isojt R-ed A Co., fctu J E.Ful:w» »<*o. •net SO GREAT CARPET HALL Hollister & Wilkins, 135 A IST LAKE STREET 137 A 157 The Best Goods at Low Prices. CMPITIMS. Date oa hard -tdorTWor*a>. of t*.«* r o-r-i ! 'vpv%«#a so«! of the !-«•» iCucst c raw art .re t ;w 1 'Tsp-' ur*i n.u u. the >or , ’.w- & efMtd.« J! r., U.-n. V» **t, Bruu-la. Tto »t*y. Thee su;ert . r fin- • fvton ■ c<l Wool lt;f r.v Wo D'’r>i. bc.tcb H-—:i«. F-lt, V«R-»*!aa. T* »- »•, t c an, U mrt * : i»r <* r;>.t'a.*i, ail fit. t. •.t *.f'» v, prl e-and rVt- n«; couir*’!’ •*'■* : ' >♦* ni'-n d»»lr* le-•tonm-ti e*-r ri - - • 1 •. wbxh t. ey at U.u .hwm' • . *1 • OIL CLOTHS. Of tto.'o wo n 'tr a ’ar** :»iil nn- v e’lbor ■< r»/u jn >| tail:y. tve it ir< Atu«r;ci3 our.‘itai mto. i • »i,ih* <>f • t•• .... JuJrv*r\j*»ua«w •>».<!; wjj», a-, p-1 t r >• t.i . ti*»i *b:!lri*:« *e* >i >1 • o. H" .»v *'• -• M i « t *e-'v« ’tot. o cht"' n f-*t ar>l twc r r ur r* I •• >• BT' rifn. fror l<> t n !»Ll I n_» j**r ,vi. A lal>. Cloihs In ra (o.bsaotl by ttt >a;U itud >ur uli i givat var o y. MATTES IE BIS. M*v*n • f> r I'fflCM. Ci nrc -s ,V • t >,■ J In »!• irom crc»-all totw i uni-w. r blrkW .•» «!»!•• . r<s e.c .<t *n’ » : alf >anU w Hnwel* »nd *u(i tl C«*co» J-.- Hk-Mim. A.l'V I ’e J|. »»rl ty In * *•» and ea tf rr. CBRTAIIU MS. Fr-uch Bioc«lcll3, Si .! Lftsthga. hep- «“> • ••K'. ~v--. • *«■» • •• « • *.!•». b'DM’.MI Lx.* i urtii: ■», ,n p iif urJ >\ tvd, Km!ir:t.enr; 3lu . n U. rt l’u, • • •%' •« v,. r • C n.rn 111 ••Oil. bn«*» rr *,* l:, •. J-t far .i;i • - an.* pitta. C*t.tn» Ixnel". Lior», ropery • ■ • < . • li.tici Cuii-ln Gimp.-. sot. H.-nl .nc. Lti »■„ ,». »>! kia-U of (V raun » n*c-**«\rr '•>* ■.«• «•a u-ov Soade< n mid f-«.>d» % • rv >ad « I. **i l e; >r. d*» BuO, O-thn :.Mt Blip* >£.;,(!- Hi at fa; .«.! wi-t*ne- U»f wilb hrn-t F itur. • I. 1 i.r* J* Hi t •, Putfim. t'hi»uib**.;a •*•d B* c-**) *f i c >t<.n-. hea hqlutii Ftx*u*>*. Itra?« »t0 ».:■) m Ki.-.-, |:it|. Pulley** d i>*aclk»t«.Mix.v C tis »uu .a FURNISHING GOODS. TV le Un»n- J-. p «»t- ititj bjrth» r,r.l. I In •••rh «■, iml D .vi vi» It'. Lne an nto -• inj.3 of all wi>lt:;4, i »••{ ~w »• T w Crajli. }‘lu <•*.".« l ’I /.•!■• Cnv<r«, etut.ri. «v. ». .t .Ld *nj*v>*K«J: P’afDitßrrC* s t/.'<». ccwi'i il.i.e swat or Fr.nte I’kt UPH LSTERY GOODS. S^ri -.£ H*t f , lUir. CV.tt. ti, Se*a» i. V . • , n a M * M*lli* .a s-ath r , .1 , ;'v“. Biukm Q'l 1, tow t ,„l fto.i ». ll j —r>l 11 tu*. I’ltt fc« ,rn s- ~ Co- . • nt'rd B.lto! mraiji. , o-. .»a crbrt - ..a.- •l rt -. >yr n.b •;.< t>«| Am. Tali. at Twit*, fw t Ci bobieiex Prime Lire Geese Feathers. Hollister & Wilkins’ GREAT CARPET HALL. 139 A 137....Lab* Cui>»{alrv». ...133 * IST 'J'O TIIK LOTEKs OF GOOD TEAS AND COFFEES. TA« Btst miui Clunput at ST ANTO M’S No. 4=3 Olarlc Street. SO PER CESP CHEAP*: 1 : THAN can Bi FOCSJ> WiiK ike, ▲ C Wholesale asd f etall. The Best and Cheapest IUTAJA S E G- A E S . Try My Sfgars lO For 23 fts. Try My Segars -- 8 Far 23 Cts. Try My Segara 7 For 23 (’is. Try My Si’gars C For 23 t’ts. Try My Segars -- 5 For 23 (is. Try My scjars -- 4 For 25 rs. Tiy My Segars 3 For 23 (:s. AH Imported direct, end belts? f. r tfc • Moae/ than cm be found ANYWriE ;E. oetMnivdpr . 500 ricc«‘» mmm fmits 9 Cent* per jfaid at Wlioie»*l*. P. PALMER, IIS, 11 4 AWD 11» LAKE JTK^T. 220 Pieces Keal iujibb BRUSSELS CARPETS. 90 Cent* per Yard at ItotaLl. P. PALMER, , 19 ltd ASD lie LAIS STREET. »* gaVerw 400 PIECES Hamilton and .Paeifis SELABIES. 17 1-3 Cent* per Yard at Wboleutle. P. PALMER, its. ltd and Lake street eaXAel** 1 . 'yy. w - kdiball, PIANO FORTES** MELODEONS. Vestings. 99 » • Clark Street* • . 99 HALLHTT, DAVIS X CO.’S PmmlnmFUao FojUo, which tavre been twarded thirty* two Flnt Premloao lb i«ol<h end bu«*r Modeln. GEO. A. PRINCE’S MELOLEONB, PIANOS TO BENT. Anlyikttute.Store, N Beßth.CfeliiU«*U Co’osJjilcfof No. U| u»< stiert .UlsoU. •*<., >. T • j. a; CM V-2-.-D [Op^talM.l r. t, «'c - J.a ' l * • o<r, '*• •>»', M »V ;i, br *b, • '.lb tiniU-.l IM-i fek \i'.i v [•tIMISI* mi