1
~*-ww*w* ^«***wsa«*****.s* OTICE8, 45. 1 & * HAR BEfcs ilADE ran of tWeelf&adretJ and £,--;* Tits, which is cl*ime<J to f.$ V. on a certafa mortgage, '&: v I ipril, IS&S, executed by fe* lua wife, of |the sova of f*U trench and (state of New L? r uf the samfc place, and £& r Clerk of St. Lftwr«nee %C it. In Book number ^ of £?: i the Tih d*y o£J.aiy, ^ r>.ch said Mortgage baa, t-Vn iloly assigned t o t h e it or proce&&ng at law or a recoTvr the amount so L therefore, notice m here- in power of fijUe c o n t a i n e d TUte in sat. h case made and ped In and corvered by said [t t or parcel of iand situate '-*f S t . Lawrence, awd the ILWU. and Sisaingur|faed as I. jf said tonrn of ( Hos»ie, •• Beginning a t a fiece uf •i «JT£ecUont>i;the Ol How l^tUage of 8ctroerv.i#te, run-** .f u.« said Ox Bow road, jtiT chains to at sta&e . ^a.f degree*, we*t thMfc*' f a staJte ms the ^rouxfil , rees, €&at thfee chains and >• the G-ouVerneu£ road , •wild road, north fifty-two aams ana seventy-nine nta.ning one acre and .Aiid, AS surveys** by Levi _-c j. ,d i i » puttsc auction, If Bossir. »' » i'-uAj of S t ty of Septeu4wr n*xt, a t 2 \ the SOth dat - J ***«, 1 •** \ M. WELL^, Assignee. or Assignee, * •*»» SALi*. , UL1L tiECCTIO>s\ ,^rt'i, Ja|UC'i jQt of the , a .-..tflDelUSoIr SiLVlfijTEK - *L i >ii<Ul r i p o & e to »aie :*•:, i.cx... 4t 'u.e St. Law r .(p'ofc^uuffst-, nf." o'clock interest J ft&«-Mud (Titter*., |ig of u«- levari.,augments ou ___j have *«a .aauni, w> t h e I PtUage L . : ". th-* v llage of ID the-plan •$ **.*£ VtUag* -o * of St. Lawrence Ooar,;j, as _ Also, all that 1 ii-*urd to l^ded, Novecaher H\ >"^, -ben T :he easterl^oide ©: uie suvu? ,r in the roaat^maiiied *a, 4, .J th 'iy , Wess 'w^re cua.-J I i.oeteen abainsM&ty ..uns jvii 4. Su , Hast twelve cba-^a , West ch's. $3 Unjt*, to • tA-nii-g twenty-five and une- I e IOWL _ i ogu^atcti e , known it, - ki. potmgen Tract, |-A aavi :-^ -ty-ttr<*fe MindreUis. ?c..iQ SLv, jf s»»d Tract, Coo- i 4fty-one ^Quur^lthi. Jffeo, - i .tLertro' ^.-m : ^ u , a o F o r d w\ !**», !*.'26, S3 f jft(}»j Begin- I n>ad ane nrf Uie^t. Lawreoce 1 .iia^e%i . 5 , - w , a n d rtmnmg i.eieea ci.a.aa ana teu^links iJ tf.e^n, N l «ihS4 0 i Mest I \ hnss t o a {Hunt i$saidroad , ' 'iirttrcQ caana aiad thirteen I'IM; .'UitrQKv, Aouth 4U >k' , I 'y-lTe*- Qka l<f t h e place of nty-hve a c r e s aji-a; t h i r t y - f o u r o, in Bioca No. 4 , of t n e ap- .u^e : Ojnicasbargn. Also, - \ ax. t ^, h, sa-4 r>..<&N.-> -i. ItKirt of me Js'o % n b.-tcfe N-. [ ^ iiJAgc. Also, Ait : h a t part uf f-. ae&' r . t e a ' ^> ws Begin- ^-^ate sir**--: *s*-er? nie Une diY- fS t*>e Sarfie tbence. South uc- i.aaU.-'iX.iuid tta feet, more r:y j jrner i ' a ^arn 8tana t ng hail tfc'-r>cc,at r ght angles f v ^ ; "*••<£ bn n, ?Q a north- fi, x* -*-.•'- at r <: ; i. ^,ea north- firsttme tOurieeo fert, tbencv Tty puriuKi w,BE. PtAtc street, "sa, t t . a paiz; a a range w*th \ trtitm" brtweer :in? office JL J. ce aUjo.Qing the *a.mf JD the t AL ruV. a.D^ es nortn-easterly . ane and a. toDtiDoatlon of trie ut tti- .udbe» t;ortberly from 11,11 n : '^c iwtj^lfDg-hoose on f eet, more-or TeSs, to the west -nee iMiatn-fiiLSteriy along said re or .e&j,-to the place of be- iLSO. I w u.e tixwn o' Oswegatchie, eii as sab-dtv»sKnr mt No. 3 , i n ILe, ma;> dttiJ s u r v e y thereof, tlie year It-av ' e'og the same - 1. d tTi'hert by dee<l from T>avid aad J.inn J. i*srd, ejtecators, retorted m u^e Clerk's Office AXiO, -AC J in *-r.e i.e.i.ngton Tract, tn ^a-d C >antj -f p t . Lawrence, |iot betw^fi, ir:r- I>epeyster road > ,i, cocta.cjni; forty-seven acres ,«. L. t-Nt i.fontaming fifty ftrir^iit*i6 Lot No o, containing zinndretbs. Lot No. 6, contain- r :y-three idres and Ehree-han- .n^ig sixty -eigh4 ifires and nine- t *o. K t containing sii^y-seven .ndretitha. Lot No Q.cootatPlng i. l ninety tiundr^dma. Aiso, m L.-t b e t w e e n H*»tory Lafee and 6, containing thirty-one acres A. Lot,No. 11, containing thirty- I e handredtiui. Lot No. 1&, con- r*s and tbirty-three hnndredtha. ^renty-seven a<i^s and seventy- No. 1\ containing forty-five acres iredths. Lot No 19, containing l ten-hand red th*. L&$ N o . 2V, On B«J$er SreeJi^Lot No. i, •r aoTes and Jorty-tive httndredtha. •six^-t-wo acres and fourteen hun- ;• j t a m i n g eighty-three acres and f in the town cf Sonverneor, in Loaiatmng <?ne h u n d r e d two acres -dthS- LotJio ^.containing flfty- Contaming oity-thxee acres and |rO*t No. t&, contatniQg Qlnety- •even hundredshs. Lot No. 14, sed one acres and twenty-one I t IO, eontaiiiing ;eighty-two acres taa. Lot No. 16,'containing siarty- y-iwo hundredths , and Lot No. IT, acres and a£netv-five hundredths a.y Id, laol.* , PA1SE COKVtaSE, Sherifi; Ipaty. .S*-ts) w tbe a ' c v e rsutu-u, f3 postponed September, instant, then to taite Jay and p»aee above mentioned.— PAIN'E CONTEKSE, Sherift Ipoty Sherifi^ [40-4wJ • t o the ahovelrioii$e is further post- Ttne lath dfjy of October, 1857, at [uce as abdve ofititjooed.—Dated . PAlNE^COHV£BJiE, SheruT [pnty ^eriff. [^-4w] I S PUOCiLA31ATie?f. t TATE OP KEW- YORK, ( COCS'TTf 0» M i Ll-WSESCE. } M IGSED, SHEKIFF^gF THE conformity t o a precept t o h i m t n od delivered, by#tfcua, h i s p r o d a m a - i -^ous bound to appear a t a Court of and Jail Deliveaw to be hold en at Canton, in a n d f o r said County, on iber next, at ten o'clock In the fore- ce or otherwise to appear thereat, i nereby reo£ures ( all Justices of the il other officers wljo have taken any fr*» appfeftraoce of a n y person at vho hare taSefc any mqolsition cr the esanlinatr>n of a n y person, •tarn sac a reco«rnizance, inqniai- m to the aai8 Coiart a t t h e opening t day* of ltSf sitting.—Signed a t t h e » 17th day df August, 1-A7. PAiSS CO^VKRSE, Sheriff. *£& OF liHE^BRIG MA Y- l cached nnder a^warrant: I A WAKE^T OF ATTACH- med by the Bon.fcmaziafaB.James, •apremts^Coqr.fc of *he State of New auon or&EQRGK S. ACLT,on the ^ r _., to theJherUf-ofjSt. Lawrence me brig. Mqgfimcer) belonging to the Vgh, S^C^State of Sew Yorit, of TSE J-UET was the last commander, ftsel, her tackle,ipjareland furniture le of ssid warrant on the Slst day of J-aons who cliilm tobsvoany demands mis or vesaeLjier.^tHCkle^ apparel, or • e ptoTfiiiona-of %tle % of chapter 8, •eTixed-Statutes, entitled " Of proceed- luon of demands against ahlps dr Tes- lameudatory ^f the same, are required "an* of their uespec^ve claims 'to t&e feuedjj^he said warrant, within three L i t ^ t h e dat^.of tb# first publication • their remedy against such brig or lited. gaid bfig-or Vessel will be sold If the claims against her, unless the I or commander thdreof, or some per- - „ j dfechsjge «ald war- t &wj widUn Jnree months from tbia the first-w^3pcaiioii of this notice-— k, P- CON\*ESSE, Shexflt. By E. J. CHSPia, U. fihexlH I HEREBY ©IVES, THAT J£& I partzterahip .eozmeeUon between the Jr m Olxil oom per*)n»l right, or M •.« of the e>t«te oS J.h, CHITSOH, <3e- lit, aSB hereater ettoh of the «nh»c|»- "-"--» solely in-their own respectWgfit- a t and beltart.—flswegatohiefSej JA&'H. OHimOH feCXIOS NOTtC£. ;is HEBferftr^^. THAI f „__Jife*ekl n mis 8t»te.oa ag^eaibEiiay al SotonS** S»«BTO» I» efcoteij, to .wtjfeS'T- Oftjf WW i" Joel T. B o u m j ; in the plan of gtejt&cfeJ&uuh- -"V. rand. Sn-»«/ r, in *e.ptow « 8U»» .aJp&ISTKD AND PCBUBHED SWSCS tXSSBOAX Bt HITCHCOCK, XUXOTSOH » STUWEtli. ? Editon and Proprfetora. Oitice tn New stone BaildinB»»*aJ>ella Street, one'door trani ford. t 3. -i'TCaCOCK.. M. W. TILLOTSOH I.Q.SWLW1LU TERMS OF THE aEPUHUOAN : To Mailaa* Office Subscribers—OneDollarpeTanoom, j.wsya in advance. To Village Subscriber*, who are I -<fJ by the Carrier—One Dollar and Twenty-five "• » TBBM8F08 ABVEaTISlH6 : l)3»sqaare,one «eek,t65« Vo6tanntwombnths,|600 D Jo. two do. 0 T5 Do. do. three do. 7 BO > , iv threedo. 100 Do. do. six do. 1500 •)' i.». one mootb,l 36 i0o. do. one year, S000 yi.* do. two do _ 1 T5 i]< caiman, one month, 5-00 ^.. • do. three do v 3 2S f Do. do. two do. &U0 do. six do,^4 00 i Do. do. three do. 1800 io. one year, S 00 , Do. do. six do. 88 00 .R.umn, one month, 2 50 * Do. do. one year, 50 00 Tor three months, or longer, at the rate per year of 110000. BnamessQards, of S lines or less, inserted nnderap. , V"» l ? »iead, with privilege of change, at$eperye&r. ^jfjruamgander oaiitracts, as above, confined to the 4 i$<?rti»er's own boaine&s. Legal advertisementsin- 14-teo at therateflestabushed by law, ^&~ ^'i Oommnnlcatiopa mustbe post-paid toinsnre j„« colamn VOLUME 27 r. , , 'h, a splendid government mpported by powet^l. mnnopol'ea ana ana , , ' * " -L-u— ii "---• - = " - = " -=-^==*^=— OGOMSRUR(|H, N. Y.. fDl*AY 4 OCfTOjER ST LAWRENOT REPCBIJCAS , For lftoT. >U RC ri r t.L 12 8 Jl'Li' 4 5' 6 T ' 9 ;l ISISU IS 16 IT H IS o 0 21 2*-28 34 J5S6J7'^39*0 81 ^ rQ 1 S S •** S 6 7 i i.ill :ii»i* <-, :«'•; 1^ 19 J>'it oo -2S 24 95 2« '2T 28 1 3 „ 4 5 6 T.SEPT , ) nil 12 1 3 1 4 •il« 17 l«l?2«91 « 3S 34 •K'SSf^T 2S >4 il' 31 12 3 4 5 6 T S- 9 V> n 12 1W1415 1&17 IS 19 20 21 24 23 "* 26-27 2* 39 8u OCT SHV 5 4 5 6 7 ^ 9 1011 13 U 14 15 lft 17 1^19 2» 21 22 2S 24 25-26 37 2f 49 29 q l « • 1 S 8 4 5 » ; s 9 lull 12 IS 14'5 16 17 1^19 20 21 32 28 24 25 26 3329 80 NOV. DEC. .. 1, * Si 4 5 6 f g! BllWll 12 is mis'iaifis 19 20i21l22^8l24i25 asiTss^'SOiaii.. «t 8i 4' 5 6' T< 3 , 9 10. U 18 181415 16 IT 18 19 20 2124 2S2425 262T28 29 8081 •• . 1 H * l 6 7 8, 91011,12 13 U15'l61T1219 20 2122128 2425126 27 2S29 80 ..'..I.. 1 8, 3 ' 4 5' 6 T 8 9'10 11 12113.14151OTT m 19 202122 23184 25 26"27 23 29 80.81 i ' r ' s '4 56 7 < MH1 1S18'14 1516 17 IS 19 20 21 23 23 24,25126,27,23 29 80' .1.- 1 21 81 * 5 ' 6 7 Si 911011112 18 14,lM6,lTh8.19 30 21 22-2SB4!»;26 9T 23'29'80l81 .. . BUSINESS CARDS^ GKORGE WTTHERHEAD, Dealer i»> Urocertes and Provisions, —also,— floor ,0orn,Meal, Pork, Fiah, Prnit, Wooden-Ware, *c. OGDENSBBURGH. Water-St., opposite A. CHIHST 4 Oo's Hardware Store, |^"0ashpaid for Country Produce. All Goods de- livered In the Village free of charge. [8-tf] BESTA1 OPERATIONS. BLOBKETT & l.E«i«iO, DENTISTS, 0peratlngftooma,tn EagleBlock/pverSeefy A Preeman*s Store, fORD-8T., O&DKNSBrRGH, N. Y. CARD. . Having associated Dr.Leggo with me in business, the office here will be constantly open. Thankful for the liberal patronage 1 have received,! would most respeot- fnlly solicit its continuance for the Arm. pj-tf] 8. S. StODGETT. SHAVIMS .titm HAIR-DKESSISIO.^ HESRY WATK1NS, Shaving and Halr-Dreaaing Saloon, is ras Basement of Royal Vilas' Building, Pord-Streot, OGDESSBURGH, NEW-tORK. ^ff~ K variety of the best Newspapersare alwayson his table. f86-tf) OLDS' Dfaguerrian and Ambroiype NO. 9 EAGLE BLOCK, Sign of the Mammoth Eagle, Ford street, OQDKSSBCRGH, S. Y. [24-if] THE GREA^ WEST! NEV1N & MLBKHIi oaLUuia ra REAL ESTATE, atin Oencral Land Agent*, OMAHA C1TV, NEBRASKA TEBSTfibfct. UAVip i. BBVW. OEOBOX J. OlLBKRT. Will Collect Debts,Invest and Loan Money, Buy and Sell Real Estate, Pay l&xes, Examine Titles, Locate Land Warrant* for NoiPKesidents, and attend tojill business entrusted to thetr care with promptness and fidelity. .Chicago, Illinois. l'OETRY. R iCliS: tiallery, HATS, CAPS. A*l> *'* K> " E. W. BEKKDICT, IfAJIUVAOTUBXa ASD DKALSB IS Ladies aod Gentlemen's I'm GloTea, Collars, Victorines Children's Fancy Caps, 4c, comprising a genera* assortment of his own and city manufacture. jST" Cash paid for all kinds of Para, Wooland Sheep Pelts, at the old stand, No. Id Mechanic's Row, Ford-st,. 0gdensbojrgh,N. Y. 4S-tf AND IMPORTERS. Bon. John Wilson Messrs. Corned, Jameson A Baas. C. N. Holden, Esq " " B. 8. Shepard, Esq " " Messrs. Wm. Warner A Co Detroit, Michigan. Hon J 0. Hopkins Madison, Wisconsin. Rev C. B. Smith Iowa City, Iowa. 0. Wilcox Minneapolis, Minnesota Territory. 0 A. Burnham, Esq OgdensbuTgh, N. Y. G. N. Seymour, Esq " " Hon. Preston King " " Prof. Calvin Pease Burlington, Vermont. G T Boardman Middiebnry, " HOD. B f. Agan Granville,N. Y. A.Watrous PS-ill Balaton Spa, " R. T. LYON, COMMISSION MSROHANT AND EOSWABDEB, No. 5U nertvin-Street, and Cuyanoga River, CLEVELAND, OHIO. Solicits consignments from the country of all kinds of Produce, Merchandise, Ac. Will attend to the purchase of Goods for COUNTRY MERCHANTS, And give them the earliest information of the state of Foreign and Domestio Markets. Strict attention glven-'to the purchase and sale of. Produce and Merchandise, for the Northern, Eastern, , Western and Southern Trade. Always on hand, Flour, Pork, Lard, Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Grain. Hops, Groceries, Salts, Water Lime,White Lime, Plaster, r^sh, Ac. PRODUCE AND MERCHANDISE , Purchased at a small commission,on orders forahlpment to at' portions of this and other countries. Charges moderate. t!9-ly} Refer to Business Men and Bankers generally. ST. LAWRENCE trjUVERSlTT. ST HBS. UJTLO WVJH. Where-fans riph sunlight ubon dome and spire Telling bright tales of man's'immortal trust- Where sunset touches with a sword of fire Thfrsilent watches of a Statesman's dust; Whore mercy tempers jus tics with calm power. And; beauty trembles upon wave and tree* Goddess of Learning,toa happy hour We rear a fitting shrine to God and thee. Oh I beantUuljupon * hundred hills Shall flash the starry doine fcttuorn and eve, Windows shall glisten on a hundred rills, When moonlight hands their silver meshes weave. Pillar and frioe and moulding rich with art Beneath-our Northern sky shall proudly grow. Warming the good and patriotic heart feWlih manhood's sweet and consecrated glow. Oh ! God, whose ministry Is hunt Upon the mountain and the sounding sea, Within the forest—playing if thon wilt To bless the work we dedicate to thee. Thou whose proud dome of learning is above, Beamed with the golden pathway of the spheres, 8mlle on thy children, in their toil of love, And keep them, rather, in the coming years. WKurcnnt, N. Y., Aug. 21,1857. H E p t ' R E VOC CALL. BV cnaaus SWAIN. ft. rosebud on her bosom, and whose voicp was like the sw«e,t sound of a silver lute. No spangled slipper was on her foot, tint ishe moved as one .that.treadetb upon,the air, and the divine beanty of holiness had j so glorified her fa ' ' * *"'— r -— A | "upon her that she God. facet that 1 felt as I gjazed BDi p , le -was almos^ an angel of ^aa "Say you so?", cries the robber chief. "Do you mean it? ' Then follow'ap exp anation, from which it turns out that ' Loi rel is no other than his cousin 'Henrf, ea plain of a merchant 1 11 .1 . .l.« ...l,r,la QtT«ir The Liverppol Ti®es g^ves tie follow- ing synopsis of the couvjetion-iat Liver- pool and sentence to death, by banging o( '"",' ,{• r r " " r ~ , , a., the master and first and second mates of —- and no robber; jthat the whole anair ,, ,,-3,, , T ro , . .! 1 TJV ~ bas'beenafarce performed by the three '^Martha and Jane, of Sdnderi-and, Eng- »nT.in;r. ',r, nrrlor tn cure _1 friends and the captain in order to cure the Honorable Belfast of his suicidal tastes. A Ohaptei on Boys. , m th sioner. in \ For all Points East and West. Through. TicKets c a n t>e Procured over the following Roads: • i S ^ D TRUNK RAILWAY, of Canada, .,RE\T WESTERN RAILWAY, of Canada, MICHIGAN CENTRAL RAILH i \D, SEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD, H«E SHORE RAILROAD, MICHIGAN SOCTHERN RAILRilAD, ? rTBDAM i W4TKRTOWN RAILROAD, , BtLDWIN-S LINE OF STAGKS. i^d ail Railroads West of Chicago—at the lowest rates ^~0ffi-e, in State strt*.*t, at the old Drover'B Bansu ls-i'Mbur«h, 'anhary, 1*J7. [7-tf] NORTHERN v .>. V t ^ ^ ilASGE OF T1MK 0 S P, THl'tlSDAY, Jl'LY w.U run daily, Mondays AXD AFTER > , Passenger Trams -?te<i) rva ffiiiows G O H G EAST. HRST TRAIN—leaves O^densburgh at U : 20, A. M ,iine at Brash's Mttls* arriving at Rouse's Point ,: i 45 P. Si., connecting with Vermont Central ^^'UtfK 7Vrnn, arrvmg at Boston eaxiy nexX.morn- -p, also with Lake Champlain steamers, for Saratoga, T-jy, Albany a o d » w Yorfe, and with Ohamplain and si LA^rence R. R.., for Montreal and Quebec. SECO^DTRAIN—Leaves Ogdensbargh at 6.00 P. 31., *,-- v!n« ayRoose'a Point at 11, P M., vto lodge,) and • r ,--,1 -ig next moruing hy Vermont Central R. R. i„3 Laie Champlain Steamers for the East and South. UOINI; WEST. FIRST TRAIN —Leaves Rnise's Point a t 6 A, M., con- -'. v i; OgtieQ-tburgh a t U , A . M., with Grand Trunk -t toray Express Train and American Express Steamers - Kingston, T ir^nt", Bel.ville, CobarK, Hamilton, s a<'*ra Falls, ButTiiO, DetroiL, Cnioago, and all poinu W~st. 'KCON'D TRALN—Leaves Rouse's Point a t 2 P . M., i~ »'fig at Ogdensburgb at T.8U, P. M., connecting with T R. R., and Auu:r;oikH i.ne of steamers for the South i-d Weit, except on Saturday's,) when it will leave % use's Point at 7.45, P.M., on arrival of last trains and ..earners. vi trams connect at P o t a d a m w i t h fcfie P o t s d a m and w4 iertowTj Rail Road for Watertowu, Rome, Ac, also ii Vlooer* Junction with Plattsburgh & Montreal R. R., ' * Montreal and Plattsburgh. (iEORGK V. HOYLE, Superintendent. DfBceSupt. N. RR. Co., ( MALOSE, July 26, 1S57. f ftVtO POTSDAM AMD WATEBTOWJi RAIL ROAD. FORWARDERS ROBERT W. BUSH, QSSBKiL AOHTr 1SD Commission !Herchanl, Floor, W^eat, Corn, Pork,Pish, W*ter and Uand Grind- stones, so., 0GDENSBURGH, KEW YORK. REPEREKCE8: D. 0. JUDSOH, Ogdenaburgh.N. Y., 8, GILBERT,Prest. Drovers Bank, JASCXS AvKaxix,Prest.Og' densburghBanlt,Joaa D. JUDSOH, Prest.Judson BauX. [*a-in HEFRFKH7IGNT SALOONS^ FIXERON^ RTEB-aOI'SE XXD DI.MNG SALOON I (Two doors from the St. Lawrence Republican office J ISABELLA STREET, OGPBNSBTJRGH, N. Y. Keeps constantly on hand a choice assortment of Li- quors, including that rare invention and most delicious beverage. Lager Bier . ALSO ROCHESTER AND ONONDAGA ALE! OYSTER Served up in the best Style. Warm and Ootd Meals at all hours. He extends a cordial inaitation to nis friends on both sides of the St. Lawrence river to give him a call. [oa-tfj TO MANTJFAOTUEERS AND DEALERS n PHE AND SPRVCG L.inn.RER. W E WILL PURCHASE SEVERAL MILr- liona of feet of Pine aod Spruce Lumber, to be delivered at this place, or along the Line of the North- ern Rail Road, during the present Winter, or in the mon tha of May, June or July, next, in quantities of One Hundred Thousand Faet, and upwards. As we are pur- chasing for Western Markets, manufacturers willfindit decidedly, for their Interest to ascertain in due season what is most desirable, and to conform strictly to itylei of Lumber best adapted to our trade, aa the large ma- jority of lumber manufactured for Eastern Markets, is quite unsaleable in Western. To parties disposed to forward for Sale, on their own account, we would Bay, that we have ample facilities for the transportation of any desired quantities, fff" N. B.—Any enquiries by letter, addressed to us I here, will receiye prompt attention, I Ogdensburgh. December 19, 1858. 1857. BARCIAAY., HALE I.L. T. BARCLAT. O. J. UALS, It was a rustic cottage-gate. And over it & maiden leant; Upon her face and youthful grace A lover's earnest eyes were bent. " Good night," she said, " once more good night, The-ervenlng star is rising Wgh^— But early with the mbru1pK > l% n S Be sure yoacall asryou pass by\ As yon pass by, Be sure yoa call as you pass by." The spring bad into summer leapt, Br*wn autumn's hand her harvest threw, When forth a merry party swept. In bridal garments, two by two. 1 saw it was the maid that blessed The evening star that rose so high; For he, aa I Buppose you've guessed. Had often called as he passed hy I As be passed by, Had often called as he passed by. MISCELLANEOUS. Better than Diamonds. A Core fbr Suicide. The scene o{ the following story is at Oravesend, England, in }852. The Hon- orable M. Belfast is giving orders to his valei-de chanibre, J.iri). Jim is to admit no one but Sir Richard Linn, the Baronet Kithsdale, and M. Clifton; and to bring downstairs his best dressing case, his tow ling piece numbeT thrte, and a certain choice picture. Jim bows to the earth before the honorable member of the Cham- ber of Commons and exits. Monsieur Belfast looks mournfully at the pendule and then, with a slow sad step, enters his bedroom. After having shut and double locked the door, he opens the window and gazes on the Thames, which flows beneath. It is low water, and a bank of yellow mud lies below the window. "No no " lie mortnurs to him- £^1 hVli a young man, he is in an anoma. self, it would be a dirty death,—nnwarthy \ om condition,forwhici there is T . . _ „ ; , . „ , <•,.,-,„, il.B win-' ugsisnied in Nature. Tieyareal' Death Sentence - - . - -.»,. ^ i [ froiBi oFa^atfloliey, of which the present nation- al adrrfirjislSiatior, jgthe'defender and promoter—j > m «i tn oi«wo*» .that alaverv^mignt* legislative chosen by.slave-. „. i:t.„ nn iV,o or.il on.! make •al aanurjBtraaonistneaeienaer auu P""" rTT. p.coantirjil^rj^jeri pi-slavery, ttiiat .slavery^ni#» | jbe sure to", jent*" » i<»»inlntiirft nhoseQ bv .slave* . L. LYON k 00 l*-tt] 1857. & CO., WM. T. M1TBKB.) Ogtlensburgh, November 81,1S66. HOTELS. BALDWIN HOUSE, CORNER OP 0ATHAR1SE A DIVIBION-STREKTS Near the Steamboat Landing, OQDENSBTJRGH, N. Y. JaasHUB BALDWTB, Proprietor. Oarrla?esvrtll be In readiness as the Rail Road Depot, ! and Steamboat Landing, to convey Passengers and Bag- gage to and from the House, Free of Charge. The best of Stabling and the largest amount of Stable-room of any HotelinOgdensburgh. 41-tf WASHINGTON HOTEL, KEPT B7 J. W. CARRIER, Washington-Street, Ogdenaburgh, N. Y. This house has been thoroughly renovMed and re- paired, and Is now open for tbe reception of travelers and cruests. The bouse is large and oonvnodious, and is pleasantly situated near the business portion of tbe Vil- lage of Ogdensburgh. 12S-U.) EVtllA\l,L HO rll., KKPT BT Robert W l o d , MAIN-STREET, PRESUOTT, C- W. a^T* The guests of this House, are transported to and from the Rail Road Depots and. Steamboat landings free o? charge, a* [8&-ds-2m»] Storage, Forwarding Sc Commission M e r c h u n t s , Blue Warehouse, below Walker's Point Bridge, MILWAUKEE, WIS0ONS1N. Dealers In all kinds of Western Produce, on Commission. Agents for Northern Tra.nsporta.tSon Company's 14 FIRST CLASS PK0PELLEB8, Connecting at Ogdensburgh wtth.Railroad for BOSTON, sod tbe Ogdensburgh Railroad to Rouse's Point, thenea by first class Canal boats, via Lake Ohamplain k Wbite- hallOanal orNEWTORK.. AGENTS, OTIS K.ttBiU. 10S 8tate Street, Boston, Mass. JAMES P. CBUBCH ..Rouse's Point, N. Y. CajtwrouD * Oo Ogdensburgh, N. Y. CKiMBsftLis, OaawaonD k Co Cleveland, Ohio. A GoDiBD Toledo,Ohio. J MYEKS 19T Broadway, New York. I J L. WutsBB No. 8 Coentts Slip, New York. RicaiBB CaiiPts Whitehall, N. Y. E. R. MATaswa Detroit, Michigan. MvrmtH * Co Chicago, Illuiola. %&~ Property forwarded with dispatch to and from Sew York and Boston,and to all polntsin New England, via Ogdensburgh. ' rs8-tf] WEDVE3DAY, July 29, G0LNG N0RCE. Acc*m. ^XlTS Wstertowo- *«o<s«~= Wswrtown Ssnford's Corners gran's Mills Philadelphia istwerp Krtne's G..Qverneur H.chville Herman Canu a Poisdam ... Potsdam Junction >l«atis OOLNQ 80CTH. Acc'tn. Lsavs Potsdam Jonotion —. Potsdam Canton dermou. RichvUle. 4-' (^.Qvemenr Eeene*s Antwerp Philadelphia Evan's Mills • • Sao ford's Corners Watertown. ' WsteOown Junction. OTTAWA ...s as . . .9 08 . - " .9 80"= ..9 45 ..10 05 .10 15 »" GEO.'B. PHBLPS, Bupt AmiTlSiEseoTT H, B il-w»T- m saramw Arrangement. OOaMEKOTSO OS MONDAY, MAT 18TH, 1S57. MAIL TBAJLN, 1 EAVES OTTAWA A"E 1: 45 A. M., ar- t riving tn Prescott at 10: 15, A M., oonnecting It Junction, with Trains going East and West, and at Prescott with the Northern Rail Road Trains for New Y'-irk and Boston—also with the La&e Steamers going West. Leaves Prescott at 13; ao, p. M., on the arrival of the Qrand. Trunk Trains from East and West, and the Northern Bail Road Trains from New York and Boston—also the Lake and River Steamers {rom the East and West, ar- rivingtoOttawa ©ty at hi 00 P. M. ACCOITDtODATIO* TRACK, Leaves Prescott at 6: SO. A. M., an arrival of the Brand Trunk trains from the West, arriving; In Otta- wa OJty at 10:10 A. M. i. Leaves Ottawa., At ll i 15 A St, arriving Irs Prescott at 9; 48 A sfc, connecting with the Grand Trunk Trains from the East I . m_. Jlm ^tk the j^jjje steamera going West. 1 HARDWARE, Set ~ CHANTSY & CO., WATEB-STBEET, 0GDEH8BCHGH. N. X Dealers In Iron, Steel, IMnila, G&: Snelf o.nA Hearr Hard-Ware Wflod and Willow Ware, and Manufacturersof Copper Brass, Sheet Iron, and Tin Ware. Agency for the sale of India Rubber Belting, Hose and Packing ; Dqryee, Porsyth A Co's Scales and Bafea, Ohllson's Furnaces, Metropolitan Cooking Ran- ges, Ac, Ac. 41-tf ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS^ E. & N. CRARY, Attorneys and. Counselors.. li^cas,! iUDRID A5B WEST POTSDAM. Will promptly attend to all Legal.buainess entrusted to them. HDWA&n CBABt, 1 St. Law. County, j saraas caaaT, Madrid. f N.Y. ) W. Potsdam. CHAS. J. KING, (Formerly of the Firm of Myers k King,) Attorney A- Cvnnsellor, OtTICE BJ AVERELL'S NEW BUILDING, FORD 8T. ^^Professional business entrusted to him will be promptly attended to. . ~~ E. H. NICKERSON, Attorney and Co unaellor Waddlegton, St. Lawrence County, N. Y. ~" W. A. C. BRIGHAM & CO., Qenora.1 Commission Olercbants, Dealers la Batter, Cheese, PoTk,and all kinds of eouutry Produce. Consignments respectfully solicited, and cash advances made when desired. NO. 8 ED8SIA WHARF, BOSTON. w. a. o. BaidBAK, L8i-tfl Bamrri. ro«. BBSSBSSH. each month.^^^ The snbSoriber is prepared to sell PASSAGE TICKETS in this Line. Also,Draftson ENGLAND, LdELAND and SCOTLAND. LAND W ARRASTB bonght at New York Prioes. GEO. N. 8BYM0TJR. Aprils!!, 1S67. 128-tf 1 GOODS. IN QUALITY AND E YEBY Stjlt POalTJM, OGDENSBURGB CAUBIAGE . fACTORTT. I HAVE ON HAND and for sale, the moat complete lot of BCrjO-lES "**» - - - and 0ARR1AQBS ever offered In this place, comprising; 16 OPEN BTJ8G0S, & BIDS SPRANG BUGGIES, 10 TOP BOGStES, At prices defying all competition. Work will be sold with a written sflpmation that it shall be strong and durable. Terms UberaL teff fivery description of work made to order. f . A. OALLAGHAH. —' " M a»»>,nn». 0. 0. Mrsas, I was standing in the broad, crowded, street of a large city. It was a cold win- ter's day. There had been rain, and al- though the sun had been shining brightlv, yet the long icicles hung from the eaves of the houses, and the wheels rumbled loudly as they passed over the ground.— There was a clear, bright look, and a cold, bracing feeling m the air, and a keen northwest wind, which quickened every step. Just then a little child came run- ning along—a pour, ill clad child, her clothes were scant and threadbare; she had no cloak and no shawl, and her little bare feet looked red and suffering. She could not have been more than eight years old. She carried a bundle in her hand. Poor little shivering child! I pitied her. As she passed me her foot slipped, and she fell with a cry of pain : but held the bundle tightly in her hand, but jumping up, although she limped sadly, endeavor ed to run as before. "Stop ! little girl, stop!" said a sweet voice ; and a beautiful woman, wrapped in a huge shawl and with furs around her, came out of a jeweler's store close by.— "Poor little child," she said, "are you hurt.' Sit down on this step and tell me." How 1 loved her, and hrjhv beautiful she looked ! 'Oh, I cannot," said ihe little girl. "1 cannot wait, I am in such a hurry. I have been to the shoemaker's, and mother - JE^j§|jgg£[ must,finish this work to night, or she will 1st, and 26th of never get any more shoes to bind." "To-night?" said the beautiful woman, "to-night, ?" "Yes," said the child—for the stranger's kind manner liad made her bold, "yes, for the great ball to-night; and these satin slippers must bespangled; and—" The beautiful woman took the bundle from the child's hand and unrolled it,— You do not know -why her face flushed and then turned pale, but I, yes I, looked into the bundle, and on the iivside of a slip per I saw a name, a lady's name written, but I shall not tell it. "And where does your mother live, lit- tle girl?" So the child told her where ; and then she told her that her father was dead, and that her little brother was sick, and that her mother botvnd shoes that they might have bread; but that sometimes they were very cold, and that her mother some- times cried because she had no money to buy milk for her little brother. And then I saw that the lady's eyes were filled with -ii.,i ,,„-,!,„ bimdle Quick- of a gentleman. Turning from the win dow, he sits down at a rosewood table, and gently raises the cloth, which covers half a dozen little bottles, "Let us put these in order," he mutters, taking up phials marked DIgitaline, Laudanum, de, Sydenham, Chlorhydrate de Morphine Curare de Java, Acide Hydricyanique." "Devil, I have only six drops; it must have evaporated," he mutters, and, replac- ing the phial, he takes u p a pistol, snaps it several times, then loads and caps it carefully places it like a sentinel before the collections of poison. Next he draws out a pair of razors, strops them crosswise beside the pistol. Three knocks at his chamber door interrupt his pleasing reflec- tions. "Thev are punctual," bejexnlaims. "It seems I am never to know disappoint- ment. The raps announce the three expected guests. They enter ; they compliment the Honorable Belfast on his personal appear- ance. The baronet, Nithsdale, declares that he looks younger, handsomer, and jollier Uian ever. The rest echo the opin- ion, praise his house, where he can see th* regattas from the windows ; every polite 1 speech seems to make Mr. Bellast more BV HENRY WARD BEKCHER. A boy is a piece of . ixistence quite separate from al) things else, and deserves separate chap- ters in the natural histor r of man. The real lives of boyB are yet to be wr tten. The lives of pious aDd good boys, which mrich the catalogues of groat publishing societies resemhle a real boy's ufe about as much as a (hicken picked and larded, upon a spit, and ready f ir delicious eating, resem- bles a free fowl in the fields. With some few honorable exceptions, tl ley are impossible boys, with incredible goodnef s. Their piety is mon- strous. A man'e exper ence stuffed into a little boy Is simply monstrous. And we are soundly skeptical of this whole school of juvenile patie de foie gras piety. Apple Hhat ripen long before their time are either dissased or worm-bitten., A So long as boys are b tbies, how much are they cherished! By-aod-by tha cradle is needed lor another. From the tmje that, a babe becomes a *-~ is in an anoma- i no special place assigned in Nature. T ley are always in the way. They are always doing something to call down re- buke. They are-inq lisitive !as monkeys, and meddlesome just wher< you don't wi*h them to be. Boys have a peri >d of mischief, just as they have measles or chicke l-pox. They invade your drawers, mix up your looth-powder with hair-oil; pull your laces and coll trs from their repositories; upset your ink upon ir valuable manuscript; tear up precious letters, sea tier your wafers; stick eve- rything up with expe -imental sealing-wax; and spoil all your pens in t le effort at spoiling all your paper. , Poor boys! What a*t they good for? It is an unfathomable myst iry that we come to our manhood (as the Israel tes reached Canaan)through the wilderness of btyhood. They are always wanting what they mi st not have, going where they ought not to be, coming where they are not wanted, and saying tte most awkward things at the most critical time i. They will tell lies, and after infinite pains to Leach them the obligations of truth, they give us the full benefit of frankness and literalness, by b urting 'out before company a whole budget of far lily secret*. Would you take a ijuiet nap ? Slam bang go a whole bevy of boy: through the house./ H the nervous baby at length, alter all manifer of singings, trouings, soothing?, and malerual bosom- opiates, )u-t fallen aileep V He sure an uiiman nerly bov will be on hand to bawl out for penms sion to do something or other which he has beeu doing all day without! dreaming of leave. Who shall describe the daily battle of the hai and the bath, the ordeal of aprons for the table, seems to make Mr. Bellast more andthe bam, tne oruea. u, o.|„„,.„ .„. _._ but he restrains himself, and asks the placing and mol-ing up, the endless task ol -i- J- ;.,„ good manneas ? If there is one saint that ought argry . um, uc i^«.. , them to accompany him to the drawing room, where "port and cigars will amuse them while he talks of serious matters."— Ji.n, in answer to the bell, brings in an immense silver salver covered with bottles | and glasses. Monsieur Belfast presents him with a purse, saying,—"Jim, in eight days you will enter the service of m y rela- r-tion Si. Weems as first valet-de-chanihre. Go and admit no one." The stage being clear and the actors all present, the Honorable Belfast proceeds to question his friends as to their courage. He ascertains that the baronet Nithsdale, tn hunting the crocodile between Syout and Keneli. had nearly been devoured four or five times; that Sir Richard Linn up y<=^v^ ..»„ ... .__ had been pierced by a poisoned arrow near societv, a boy secdres in a string I m i ,i.i c . i _ *A ,.„ the door for the exquisite pleasure (_ h a o n a g r e , that be first became maigo .. , .J_._ _t,_:„ 7T„ 0 , blue, while 1 his head swelled like a balloon; afterwards yellow as saffron, and wasted till he was nothing "but skin and bone; but the poison being of second quality, he had finally recovered. As to Mr. Clifton he had been hardened to death in all its forms, on the hulks of Plymouth. With these antesgdents Mr. Belfast feels satis- fied that his three friends have a full BtOck of calmness and moral courage, and would approve of his decision, after thev had an- swered his question. This question was, do you consider me really happy. "We do," they replied in chorus. Further cross examination, which we good manneas ? If here is one saint that ought to stand higher than another on the calendar, is a patient, sweet-tt mpered children's nurse! — Talk of saintship, sii lply because a man lived in a cave, and was at* teuuous, or becuuse he died bravely at ihe stake ! What are faggot* of fiery sticks for a few hot moments, compared to those animated faggots which consume nui^cs and gov- ernesses for months and yeais, to say nothing of the occasional vatitty of parental coals ! Are we, then, no. ou the boys 1 side v To b . sure we are. It is not their fault that they are bovs, not that older people are not patient. The restless actii hy ol boya is their uecessity. To restrain it i* to thwart Nature. We need to provide for iL Nu: to attempt to fiud amuse- ment for them ; bi t to give tbem opportunity to amuse themselves. It is astonishing to see how little it requires to satisfyflboy-nature. First in the list I put strings. What grov.ii up people find in a thousand forms of busioess and - lor tne eaquioiw H.^«««. v of uutying it again. He harnesses chairs, ties up his own fin- gers, halters his nick, coaxes a leaser urchin to become his horse, and drives stage—which, with boys, is the top o human attimrueut. Strings are wanted for sr ares, for bows and arrows, for whips, for cals'-ciidlest, for kite?, forfishing,and a hundred things more than 1 can recollect. A knife is more exciting than a string, but does not last so long, .nd is uot so various. After a Bhort time it is lo it, or broken, or has cut the fin gers. But a stri ig is the instrument of endless devices, and wirt in the management and ingenu- ity of a boy. Th > first article that parents Bhould lay in, on going uto the country, is a large ball of twine. Tbe h ays must not know it. If they See a whole ball, the charm is broken. It must come forth mysteriously, unexpectedly, and as if there were no more! For indoors, next, we should plaoe upon the list, pencils and white paper. At least one hour Further cross exanibmuiuu, ».,.— •-- i----». . wj , be 8ecured b y that. A slate need not repeat, brought out the opinion d J ^ vefy good _ Bu , chijdren a> of the three drinkers that Lady Belfast ^pWa t0 < 0 what men do they account.the was fond of'her husband, and that the, L nU9e dhalf of 3 .-»- — - »«' «t nencl to be Honorable Belfast was sound in wind and 1 worth twice as inline uoii»» ••'— . , limb, very handsome, and enormously ncn. But,' when thev were asked whether they would undertake to say that those causes of happiness would endure for ever , like sensible men, they hesitated. •' You I are right," observed Belfast I _ .'. . J . . /loir that. [21-tf.] NATIONAL POLICE .. OAS6RXXE. . T HIS &REAT JOURNAL OS CB1ME AND criminals is in Its twelfth ycarBind Is widely cfrcn- "—*«*•» mnritry. it contains all the great ' - ji »~.*«.r. nit .the T aiw that theiaay a ^ r --- ., "You we ng»i «"*" "*" tearT- and she rolled up^he bundle quick- ^ oWned to rae 0I ^ e d ay , that W n ' d gave it back to the little girl: but | , J_. „,,„;_, „„ f ftT mv rave „ hair.- iy, <»" & __.L:.<™ otoo—no not ly, ana gave it um... w. . v ^ she gave her nothing else—no not even a sixpence, and turning awsy she went back into the store from which she had rr^HIS &REAT J U U » « ^ » nd i^idei? c^rcn- " V r^ h„ store from which she tiaa X « » V - ^ S S - t S a S i g ^ Z oL " 2 she went away I saw S S S S S S S f " T l O - r of a diamond J t ^Presently not tobe found JP " ^ S T ^ n n n n n s ; *1. DENNIS ITTMOTT, Attorney and Counselor a t L aw, LABSENA VILLAGE, ST. LAWRENCE 00TJNTY, ' NEW-YORK. [29-tf] BBOWN" & Sr'ENCER, Attorneys, Counselors, dec, |V Office lately occupied by James * Brown. r. o. BBOWS .' J. o. srraora. A|>riH3,1854. Sl-tf (OB,!«-. _ Superintendent* connecting With ^ ^^^me^gotog Weat. and Westr^also with the Lake steanv g ^j^ - Presoott, May 15,1S5T. tW T. " tssT. I. Q. SHLWELLV I Attorney and Counselor a t L aw, I JTustfce o f t n e Peace <fc Town Clerk, 1 it OfJBBHaBDKPH, NEW-YORK. esT" Office, in ST. LAWEMCS RrprmuoiS fialldlng, IaSJeU* street. [44-tfj- Law, Buffalo to Ctxicagii, TOLEDO. MTLWAtTKBE, KACWtl, KENQU^, ... KEGAS, OALENA, BOOS ISLAND, WELIM TON, DCBOftOB, HAmSON, IOWA CITY. SI. Louis, ST. PADL, AND ALL PLACES LN THE WEST ANT> SOUTH-WEST. The following New Low Pressure "steamsrs form the Line from ' " '* ' Buffalo to Toledo, Connecting with tin niCHiie&!C SOEfttERW & NORTH- ERS INDIANA RAIL ROAD, P L Y 843 MIXES TO CHI0AGO. MOBE1S & VAB.Y, Attorneys and Counselors! at OGDENgBTJEGH, NEW-YOBK. Office—Marble Bow, Corner o f Ford and Water-Streets. , « , AH proftaslonsj onsmeii'entrusted to them will I 0f~ ADDITIONAL BOUNTY JLANT) obtalnedundei Ubelate" Act of Congress; passed M»rch.8rd,ia55. aspaoi KOaais- .{IS-tf] mnn H. VA»T. . rAJt«erjjey»jponnse.l,or, 4"c»» Gives his entire »ttentI4*%6 the practice of hisprofes. sioni andsolioitspatronagsv * ^ ~ QfBce—flornerof fsrd «nalsibeU«^tre«t»,Oi- she first admired me for my xaven hour.— Should I become bald like you, Cluton, should I lose my fortune, orhAvetowear a wig, 1 should no longer be perfectly happy, therefore I am determined to de- part- before trouble comes." j -—- ,i After announcing tihis determmation, WssT^arf^it'roHad bfe The little g.d fae lhree frietldSj on being a8ked their SffiTaTer g her a moment, and with her ^ . ^ approve d to^Mf* 10OKeu - ,.t._ . i — iLor-were be-1 f - .. -.i. „„ ,.r,or.imitir Tobmh strikes ?$; fbr air months, tbe glitter of a diamond pin. Presently should- write their, she came back, and stepping into a band ,.,„. :-~» inroll«d dffi. Theliti onuaeu u . . . v,. f letter and a bit of pencil to be worth twioe as touch as any slate. Upon the wh >le we think a safe st-earn of wa- ter nearby affo-dsthe greatest amount of enjoy- ment among all natural objects. There is wadmg and washing; Uere is throwing of stones, and finding of pebbes; there Is engineering of the "n to the principles) we fy^«J£&& forefathers. But i« an f ^ ' j S e * faltered, and that day was lost Let Owse contributed to this resx.lt * e ^ t t a " ^ ^ of the conseqnenceB of their^acts a cons^H almost csrtain.totie foUojed b y ^ e c * ._ 'HttlC bare feet, coldtep than •fore, ran qnickly away. 1 went with the little girl, and I saw her t,o> a Barrow damp street, and into a staalL dai|c room ; I saw her mother—her sad,-faded mother, but with a face so sweet, so patient—ihusbing and soothing a sick baby. And, the baby slept and tbe moth- er laid it on her lap, and theibundle was unrolled, ami a dim candle helped her with her work; .for tho'ogli'ft wgB'iiot jet night i ., , her room "was very dark. Then afterja !£S~ - .tP*1 while she kisse^ her littte girl, and bade -fevumM0& .•» j^her warm her poor frozen feet over the ' ••-•• , l opinion seriatim, appiuvcu wu,ou~.— •-- ujo^ wtucn (eoupy our iate« ,™ . - - - - they were be-I r . ith ^ unanimity which strikes K,]™ are found in the occasion*! hours ot Doy sent the gun number three to the baronet, crocodile-killer, the enamelled dressing case to Sir. Richard, and a painting by Ostade to the Doctor j^hhr warm ner poui u.^^^. edanty fire in>trie- grate, and', gave'.her a little piece of bread t for she had^no more; atid fben she- heard her 'say her eVening prayer, and folded her tenderly-to nerltbs- <, „ J'I.„» „T,iT.*tali her Ihat Ihe' an itadeto uie ^uoi*... . " Adieu my fri«»d," t murmurs Nithsaaie, wiping away a tear, ' "Think of us somqtimeft,. my gooa »ei- Tast," sigbs Richard Linn. * "If you choose firetarms," said Br. UUt- ton "put the barrel to the temple, but not top near. That is the best plaS, «o.««ur ofwounding without killing outright. With this bit of advice" Belfast reUWs.be- doni the^laee of Sf^r**,^* m^ er, iS *e piwff ^-^^ *<*• --«,«:pTfeto,»:#' »" a " ° f *'*•• | ;<mrt of *PS^»*te - ^ f "" <" H*™" ,-rf«»Ta*w|ff«P-- «-«8e«S***' { -•J,o_«ie*«iBie CoAt fbTfl»';»on»th' ^t2T«5«df Aiuni 0.. » * » . »»"-» I*rtr»r* ' Jle •*** #& V*****?*' Jfoaotie* St. L»rr*ce and Pranklin. PS** tLSO'jO.BP'ELBCTH) FOE ,i;ncoCIETY : t ^ro?£?|-,.m.the 8 .a P ,.ofN». % place , < . ^I&J^'J Allen ialn^iad.T&a. H;. *«£$•,, Hods'wrt.. , tiof. 6f8a- >f <*&*** **>•** **3 -• \r^y^?Wf J 4 TTEADtSYV- •jW ".fA-rseiiiT rJ-S-A^: •; ' f'--^.-,-r y£%, lJtrtti* C<-c^7- wesrmxr Hsknopolis. t-i. vwn, etnar, Leave* Bofiatoofendwii «jB4Thnrsd»Ji. • •ITT OF SJ^ilAiO, A. D.exaraa,Com'r, Leaves Baftaio Tuesdays and rV&aya.' inCTSSBN WCB1QAS, t. B; 9otD9strtB, Ootn'r,- Leaves BnfStIB Wedneadaykitna atHsaatS* Leaviog Sfiohlgan Sentuern S»a Road Dock, toot ot MAin-Skreet,Baffilo,eTeryeTcmngT(«nnday»exceptea>, at 9 o'dock,or immediately after 4he arrival of the Bx- pr«n Tram from Boston, Albany and Hew-York, through to Toledo without liading, where passeursrs, take the to t-oicoo wuaous ™-^ri£i.?lh1ea«o?»»llraiirtn«r»e»r- JUDS30N & POWELLi *ttiorneys and Counselors a t L aw, OGDENSBCRQH.ST. TxaiWBEKGX CO., N. Y. Office, No. S Eagle Block, Pord-street, up it»;lrr. > toseros » JOTBOS tST-tf] /oawPowni^jj!.. * 0. W. BALDWIN, OSDra8BTJS0a!^oAWt^l^ i |&.,tl. Y. «-ly Office In Oustom-HouseIluilding. ~GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS. ^--Wfeit."'^ 1 , . <«t^."i. ,'tt With this bit of advice" Belfast retWes.be- • ^ ^. ttato^ft ^ ^SiAf** hTudthe sc^e.into the darkness.o! W 1 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ y ^ a i W Wded ^**^T£?£J%: I chamber. f S l r ^ . h e a r a *he no.se o£ a no^togeou f ^ , * ^ r^PIZ „m Weied'ner, andrtoW. Her fjiat lie an a , $ d s a robber , feaW ope» > « d ea ^ ,,„,. But boys have hours of geat '£%&'*lX^_'r2^ ^- B ^ i8 J?{f^^^^^ ^ boy wants and tHe Mm to listen ai IIIB B.OJ»«'° T««= «- -•<- IrthtTolmand gorgeous daftiaftwA* ^ s t s , hearing the repor^beS^eHw, Sa6adelwith^tha>.^ begW to talk' 0**jto*#* trl.^1 nf which spared to to|# ^u./r adv Belfast can now marwiier pi I i, the next evoning after oeatuigatObiesKstsjuh a )uth.W«»t«»n4W*BBer»«Qla*asiienigiMi .-. . Passengers, by delivering their Checks to the Ageaton the Cars, can hsVTe.t^^^A«MM con-rejed to the &m%, tree of charge,andeiiaekt&thrasgh. . Parties destined tor Kansasiwilsand this* most desir- ihlerouWtsripeexl tndcoSortl POT the prompt dispatch et »r(i, n t, the'Lme has oh- aqoaled facilities. AH Preirlrlttoaid be marked "0»re of 0. sorbes," Agent of OpmpanyijhjjraB,. Buffalo.- ' At ToleuB.thSldne ofSAefcSeji etmseew srlth lihff TOLBOO, WABASH ASB wBaaaaT^gE9A0.' , " <6onii, P o r k , *?SV %% eW-TBEMS, 0ABH. Q l « ¥ ^ » l t ?°& m p v O h e e a e , WLi^sSfrfs Peaa.and alfWndsof OormiryProdnoe. iu>«oo^ 0QDr^Bttm6H ' O. L. HO* ill>. Totedb, Qfs Bndge, ffl* with ^^^„-Boan^^1 WSJfSra can b. parchaaed at aU Sail j THROBStt « * » f S , S f EAStl «n£rAgen«s of the' Road i n i Steamboat 9 mca Wri,f^!J.Sew, York j B. t. rWat»,'Betrol«; " " . J J v 9* , i?'-S , /. '...;• *."','- '-•'•: V. ; ."eenersj Saperintenrltnt,; E7.SA DOWNEK,.3ErAv.'4g?nt. March'ITM^ftf- ._ ".- DUCGS AND WIEDICUMES. 'E.Simsxsmm,. \.'<b»Klffl«-»m*tstr?ClVr 1 \'- -" w& : t<i»ta'ToC»,Cnrl»'»ia. Braids, ikpVori h»h.d v oi; '-•V4»Qit fr^f+^j -^..-^ __ : ^portion of which spared to ber-wdrilat ; give wannth'-airl c6rnftrrt?te: h»%iirable y If such ..-'thoughts' pame, em.aBuaiiJ;ol ftilleasaht coitage^nrl al, ^opft SKQ deftriy loted her, audi irjioiejatrijne ha^ kept winit - frdnvhe* And .... . , biiiS whoconlfJl never dbttie btck^if tihtieJ thoughts did come reptnihglyj'' th^t*' $&% came anotheri-and ,.t^«t widow's''tstt^f wtlTe clasped^ and tr-- ^ QO ''* r;finr(>rl,lo v i-.'jtl: -deep contrition,!!as. ." ItheiS conffl ence and caresses, -cverv u«y ™»»»» , I somi one < Ider-tnttri Wnjself, to sJwm.*f_mV &> tney^reis >"frolicsrOT0f ittBen6raLiis» very i&£? Sbnrceoff offering. One of * e most.ctomta form; of s tfahDM, i? * « which' "tuseito rec- Lthat Lady Belfast c a n n . o w Wm^m % ^V SfeMtnSetfM a little ohijd, but als? sin Henry; the otV,' ftat ?$m. J# k j i t t l . , o iiMren. ; . , ; . , ... ^ y *oi bear of the banktnptoy of hig,bauK!r,4 r :, A l h oi iandi.thtogs aro blamed m j ^ j a m ^ . diaRbolai ; ihiit Belfast was •.**#%•**,***> ^ W ^ ^ ^ S f f r i i S S M ^ ^ *>* ijS|rimg»ira*: probably have dietjof apoplexy. 'YoUUWr'^""- 1 *—' -•<""™ri,ns*aiBnfom-owB d'her Mx^"\.- 'p n bearing these unpleaiant truth?; th||iikings + -Mi'P. in a rag?, vows vengeance against th4 cousin .Henry,; the banker and.jh? 0)4 cousin ueury^tuo r ..-. - r » . —--• doctor, and is i e ^ r m i n e § ' ' % inoSjsvhitn,; self in life." s He gives Lowel twothP* 3 c^pSan'^hefe: m M ^ i g - l seir ,n ...e. •,, A « « .;»•--- -•-.. ^* S c ^ i o ^ a8-S£ear4to^ SiforOTe me, for thou doeat all things; ^ : mMQb ce. DecsendingJWr£ l e r i S - m * * * Wjtfieei^ j M t ^ t o to the r o b b ^ h o a V n ^ ! ;pro^ea^ 1 !:.:i." ^ * M *n*r **'*^-f •M. u..u«,•»"5J£-gt _«5..;rs»t trii. rrsraAics Oa., i - ' , « « »-"KOW-.« ITS riFXH. i \ \ffc KBfiS KOv7 OS^ BASBI COTJSTaT , W M S t o S ^ o a r t h oTiuiy qctanvttUe,, I ^«SiwlKSW 'HatiH : yowatrCti.<i«h»«j»»hw'-•---•...' . ..' ._. ~[-29-t.r) > . , . - ' ' fftr'Mto^^,..^aier., wiam blaw«w« ^t^-^'W^tta spiled aaihtwed > ^ f % £ f- l'M„ orkte had never knows hefprev ^ m * N W f ^ S S w S « % « ^ «rS drawitlg &$$*$& f f e S spoil/nothing.k^5a^Wty,fite tiw U a a V n o voice likP-,rnu3ic,; p ,»^P£ g^oftboM- Faoscu*^- that. ho. shall 3 fbAohbrable M .**a|t^U* a£h, h£^SffS!ffb& i l following eughr nights ni ditches; 6r m^'^efcyfgwcjt* WVU , -i of robber spies;. At the end of that time "sild k^mk&^t^'^n A«Q^-" naitt.1 '* **ersrs.- LVOV * tO* SIE11 *? EAaSlSTtBi ASD 4tfS»*-W * * • " * ' ^ j ***2&£2°* % i omos, J^,»ir»ci«r- J^tm-L ".-pn* ^«" w B IHE&BSCKlHEElitTIJISfiAPi ••ana-. ' ««Mdets^lnaiswisaeittf'S«r*et t f^^ mEMf t in.thee^aps^sfss.j Aw ^ en ceeoaStf< 1 SertTWi Je«tee» to- «fc »Wprlttor», of tfc* a»l4«M«4 ii^V^*r^^°*ni W a«^w;., "BniieU.ABrll'SH^lW-. .' - 1«>-«W 'i» bS,-Jnar««~. 'J j,. . '.. - ___J-i±2Sl_ . , . PlUt»l)B«Plll** . . I o r tooth H«xe»i , . Iff n'EPlttftTO APAETMtNW- ; - j: ., AtI-» ^JBLOTWIKQ BILWHI I i TTJ»rr^I»fStf-*S3> ^R S ALK AT THU fc ""*riiT%Hcock» mj*w<# * wwnui. ««|&it,H»I. \Zbi % aa* young, happy ttcw, ««»* taetit, t* 3- A"*!i^Twls»W»M».. *»!•• wnnaftdieS ^y.ritfany. »••«-*- —- T-J—--,- "•--*. • - * There h<i mitbea. him pick . tho pQalatof Lo/d Kehdal x : pan of hw parliameutar/, ico'llfiar-uea. IiO»«l . e 1 ' 1 ^ m £ H 9 sto1 ? 1 ' |'liandk°Khicf, spreads it. «« lilt, the 9fr 'ienimil Of^ %le,.wi'«»I'i»» 0 ^dtilevury.oa.* st.ates.-Tte H«jo«g» 15 rUhe* WX of tk,- ll.eatt* r . lea^ng «8 hatUd cloak behind, and €eS'to «• r0 °- Xt^Lin Bbgftntstre^. As soon as I thVbaiuli* wlurns, the II. P. eWlaims; "jLo-w*!, J" 00 a r e a 'noi'stor, » « ; * aW IWuliyw^W fT H !",*„. rmiied mat - "JUO-W^ }'«« ulc ** «««««».-.,„ tS3wll»l**f»l«.»«- !, ' ~ ' „• « ' ' * . . ' 'l e ' . ; , Tv u : " W e have hoard a n d ^ a d rrMich lately of the' way in which seamen are treated in the commercial • marin)e, boitf this case throws all others into the'shad^whether as regards the brutal torture-wh^ch accom- •panied the extinction of life orHhe delib- erate and systematic maimer ih which it was carried 'out. Rose, if, appeared, had shipped on board in the month of April, and the of torfftre commenced'before the vovage begaiv.. Tie was'used i so shame- fully that he absconded from tbe ship, was brought back, placed in ironi and from that time until death released h)m from his sufferings, the captain and firsf, mates of the y essel made his torture their'idaily spor£ It was proved on the trial that he was flog- ged e.-ery day by the three* prisoners; that a large.mastiff dog wa.s set to worry him, which tore the flesh fromjbis body in large slices, causing the i bloojl toflowin streams, and leaving, bjehiiidf the most I ghastly wounds and ulcers; r bat an iron 1 bolt was put across his mouth ajid his handf! chained to a strong bolt in the deck behind his back ; that he was put in,to an empty Cank and rolled along the defck ; that his own excrement was forced doxyn his throat- that he was sent aloft to furl sails, and se; verely beaten witli a rope before making the ascent; that a rope was fclaccd r o u n d I his neck, a*nd lie was raised frpm the deck to the elevation ol three feet, where he was suspended fur some minutes, and that wlipn lowered he felfon his back like a ddad iiiini ! Death at 'lengtli, uxjre char habit- than his -persecutors, put an end to his sufferings when his body -was found to be indented with the marks; of t h e rope and his wounds full of maggejts. Tlie evi- dence was so clear ainll indisputable that the three miscreants were found guilty, but the jury, from some extraordinary obiu»e- ness, recommended them, to mercy— mercy.towards the wretches, the recital of whose deed makes the blood of every lis- tener and reader run cold!'* But Mr. 15a- [ ron Watson, despite the warning, senten- | ced the trio of murderers to,be hanged by the neck—a merciful punishment as com pared with their brutal and cowardly treat- ment of their unhappy victim" lolders, who uHiaaUive on the, soil,,and .make ilaws which! hotreernan'couH bear; tb& legisla- jtnre and these »aw8iJB*6mpheia by the' -president* and congress i and thejfreaidentis tiowenfoKsmg' 1 nhem, because he'says htfctaaspp dispensing pow- er. But how does it happen, that this Legislature. jand these lawS exist? yi$t> are r""""" !iv " > for them? ws exist „n 0 ajg reauauDiuo dor- tseny Who called tu'em.. into being ? [The party which has-inow conbr,t,!0{ (jj e ggjj. Bral Government, the partly against Jih^ebj^tg con. tend, the party which seeks to carry %e, g^ate of ]New York at rhe coming election, aria, wfiich would be emboldened to- re-opett the slava^rig if it should succeed in bearing down the d«mo. cratic republicans. • - t. ™- «, tf^!^!?^^ -' JBifi 'JratJUH»a["«»s - - TB«AlfenadA« : N»*rSPAEBE*A01SXv _ i A-g.niW6r:ajffispen»n**' I « ldlta ?# tot * e A °?*I iraaimriB eASStfesoawnoiBat thejame rate teq.nlre<i by us. Hto6nWer*reat ' " JOSTON—ScoIIay's Building, Oonrt-Street; •illrWJTORTft^arflmBBaBjMmgt" . _ _. „ . fHTLAMiLPBJA—K, W. cor. ™rd «nd Ohesnnt^a. lAI.TMOBjgiw.Ioi.North.anagayette-S^eets. fiorf^ttfSoutffiesrxSi resoliifion, respecting the reclamation of fugitive slaves, was adopted, ffhe majority address and resolutions were then abnpted.. .. ;s.. -' f , c ' The S&te Committee then reported as tollows: Dist 1—E. D. Morgan, James W . Nye,, B . J. Msniere. ' ' , ' , ! _ ; Dist 2—John G. Floyd, A. P.Stanton, Lewis. C. Piatt Dtet 8—John L. Schoolcraft, J. W. Forsyth, POLITICAL. The Qonventi n at Republican State Syracuse. *t ADDRESS AND [RESOLUTIONS. Below we give the Address ahd Resolutions of the Republican State Convention, held at Syra- cuse on the 28-1 ultimo. , We last week spoke in t-ommendation of the meifc whot e names are on the Republican Ticket, in ahothercolumu of this pa- per. We in>ite the ca.if.-ful attention of our read- ers now to the address and resolutions which were adopted by thdxjooveutioti, reported by Mr. FiELH. THE ADDRBSS. Fellow-CItksena of the State of A'«p York: Two dangers threaten our institutions—slavery and official corruption. The 'republican demo- cratic party is hostile to both, and will never cease to combat both, so long as thei- exist. The influence of slavery hastbeen injurious to the country ever since it began. From the time when it stipulated for the continuance of the slave trade twenty years, down to She time when it of-' fered two hundred -millions for the purchase of Cuba, it has beeu the jfreat, idisturbing element iu our political system, It has ever been grasp- ing, encroaching, aTofeant and domineering. It has spread in extent ahd increased in power. It has appropriated to itself the) greater part of the offices of the government, dictated its policy, for- eign and domestic, and so debased the public sen- timent, that multitudes now. proclaim slavery a ^jod, and its extension a proper aim of Govern- ment. H I Since tbe last Convention if the republicans of New York, two'aggressions ,have been made by the slaveholders whibh ares unexampled in our history ; the decision lof the Supreme Court of the United States in the case ofj Dred Scott, and the letter of the President to ttie clergymen who ad- dressed htm on the apitirs oi Kansas. The decis- ion in Dred Scott's «ase followed naturally upon the Presidential eledjion. Hideed, it is hardly too mdeh to say, that b i t for tlie untoward result of the election, tbofdecision wbuld never have been given. If we had elected Sremont, and inaugu- rated a new administration (devoted to Freedom, - i: --~ -,.-Q,it,f-r.£i8Dr have been channel, oesiuea una. »»...b.., —.., _ . tive to that nameless attraction of beauty which especially*hovers about the sides of streams; and though they may not recognize the cause, they are persuaded if the faot that they are very hap- py when there are stones with gurgling water around them, ihady trees and succulent under- growth, mosa ind water-cress, insect, bird, and all the populat on of cool water courses. But boys ar i not always boys. All that is in us In leaf, is hi them in bud. The very yearnings, the imaginings, tbe musings, yea, the very ques- tions, which ocoupy our later years 4s serious '--"^ J : - * l --» «nnooinnnl hours o f b o y - r ^ t e r r ' i F S e effort, of'*, democratic repubh- *"—I. I -When we say aus, we u«.« o— 0 isfy every friend of freedom, and every lover of good government, that our success now issoarce- ly less important than it was at the lastJPresiden- tial election. If we can hope ever to retrieve the losses which Freedom has sustained and is con- stantly sustaining, we must stand firm now, and show the state of New York as the immovable bulwark against the slaveholders' domination. The other great evil which menaces us is offi- cial corruption. Official action is not unfrequent- ly affected by the hope of pecuniary advantage, and in some instances—very few, it is to be ho- ped—that money has been paid directly to official persons for their vote or influence.—The meutioa of such a fact is enough to excite the indignation of every friend of republican institutions, and of every honest man. Already the good name of Our country has been injui ed by the stories which »re current respecting the state of things atWash- ington, at Albany, and in the city of New York. There are jobbers in legislative grants and otbet private schemes, hanging abont the capitol of the nation, and the capitals of the states, who solicit m mbers of congress, and members of tbe state legislatures, and offer to the feeble minded and the wicked, unworthy inducements for their votes. These two things, fellow-citizens, must not be al- lowed to last, for they sap the foundations of our instil .'tions. Corruption must be destroyed or it will destroy the government, Thatthere%hould be men of such unspeakable baseness as to Bell themselves as they sell cattle, is bad enough, but that such meu should be abie [ 30 to deceive the people, as to reach> places of I 6-ust, almost surpasses belief. One would think that an honest people would be sure to have hon- est representatives; "but such is either the facility with which we are irapbsed upon, or such the vice of our plan of election, that we do find ma- ny of oar representatives corruptible, and what is more, we .find sometimes thatthose who have beeu corrupted are re-elected. Surely these thing3 need only to be known to be corrected. There are two remedies; the first I is the election of honest men—this would be cer- [ tarn and complete; the second less oeitain and complete—legislation. The legislative remedy which promises most success is, first, a different mode of legislation, and second, penalties against what is called " lobbying." The only mode of legislation which ought to be kjiown iu our republican system, is by genefal laws. Special legislation is opposed to our theo- ry, and is the source of • corruption. Our present Constitution inculcates' most strongly the duty of general legislation only, and yet in the last sess- ion the legislature passed 81# statutes, of which only lu6 are general. The rest were purely spe- cial, and very many of them ought never to have been passed. Special acta are those chiefly from which pecuniary benefit is derived, and therefore the only ones iu which there is any motive to cor- rupt a legislature. Cease to pass special acts, and the services of " lobby agents" will be no lon- ger sought, and tbe source ot corruption will fail. And in these cases in which special legislation is resorted lo, i» it'uot possible to prevent the private soliciting of members ? Why should it be anv more proper to ask privately a member of the Legislature, to rote for your bill, than to ask privately a judge to decide for your side of a con- troversy ? It should not seem difficult to regu- late to a considerable extent the soliciting of bills; to require that it should only be in public, before committees, and to punish all irregular and private applications. We commend this sub- ject, first to the electors, in the hope that they will see to the election of honest representatives, and mil imUh f/icm when elected ; and then to the Legislature, that they will adhere to general legislation, whenever it be possible, and uiake an effort to prevent the irregujp and private solicit- ing of bills. Official corruption has been most glaring in I the City of New-York, where a struggle has been carried on for several years between property owners, seeking to maintain their rights, on tbe one side, and spailers and plunderers on the oth- er. The struggle is still doubtful. The next election-will probably decide^ whether the city is to be given up to spoil, under its present munici- pal rulers, or whether it shall be saved by the election of a different class of officers. The Dem- ocrats, as they choose to call themselves, and as we are willing to call them in contradistinction to Democratic Republicans, have already raised the taxes, i'n three years, from less thaufiveto more than eight millions, and are now striving to continue tbe present city government, with the Jisyor now in office at its head, a mau of whom ,.it is difficult to Bay wh'feh most to condemn, his private or public character. The elections of \ this autumn will decide whether the Democratic | Republicans shall drive this man from the post he has dishonored, or whether the Democrats shall retain him with, his subservient aldermenl councilmen and confederates, to impoverish and despoil that devoted city. Citizens of the State ot New-York: fellow elec- tors : the choice is before you. You are to de- termine whether the State shall be governed by a party calling itself democratic, which believes in the inequality of men and the right of one to buy and sell another; and which in that part of the State now undtrr its control, presents the worst instance of mis-government which this country ever beheld—or by the Democratic Repnbl ; cans, who believe in the equality of men before the law, in the inalienable rights of every human be- ing, iu a simple but firm government, in the eco- nomical administration of affairs; and who will strive to secure the purity of the elective fran- chise, and the purity of legislation. .C..L. Beale.- m , _ \ Dist 4—Edward Dodd, Wm. A. Wheeler, Hen- ty^lhurchiu. _., Ditf.6_D.ftLiMeiohn, J. 3. Briggs, 0. Litte- field. «*v * • 'Dist 6^ B . WiUiams, B. F. Bruce, A. 8. Di- •^en,- 5r - ' C. Smith, Alfred By, Duvall Dist 7—M Ransom. Dist 8—E. .G. SpsMrW p. Dorsheimer, A. 8. TTpham. -^ '- -.. • A vote of than|S)to tnaisicirBof the Conven- tion was adopted unanimou%j a ^ /er which the Convention adjourned Une (fe. v - Bttr. Giddings npon.tfee^ejiffiejjVa letter. tiiroiaNrpiED mragioN. * uuwu.. .. - -Jive secreu^ ucm^ „.,„ r ._ lem discussed in latter life that is not questioned by children. The ere uion of the world, the origin of evil, divint foreknowledge, human liberty, the 'immortality cf the soul, abd various other ele, ments of slal Orate systems, belong to childhood. Men, trace tl e connasttAns 'bf truths, and their ethical applii ations and relations, but the simple elements s)f the most recondite truths seem to bave gained in them very little by tbe progress of years.', Irjdeed, all truths whose root and life is in'.the Infibite, are like the fixed stars, which becoma-no larger under the most powerful teles- scope than to the natural eye. Their distancelia. too Vast to niake any appreciable variation in [•magnitude possible. They are mere points of figM. ' cene do not avert *6Bfci fc iecUoa from Tl.e.nextstepw|lpr0^fly b e ^ ^ ^ - ^ ^ f e £ ^ .doptedattheRepublicnStateConventiop^ Net? Yorlrcatf hole ^ V ^ ^ . - J t present " P ' at Syracuse September 23d, 1867» Meithat conflict w «* «tf»i*g# -g£££ J> | ^ of the Btoe of New-York a d h e r ^ ^ ^ between the 6e«j and .fha slave eiem doclne ^ f e « t e £ f y j a S . " tional esectttrve-. JKr «*W*dl* *• Uuion > slavery in every W f ^ S i * ] Constitu- •tecansoitis W n i z e d % the " J * " ^ £ha- t tton^ Slavery, b j ^ f c ^ K WtencO iustmmen^to'exlstinywaiere, todi\ «™ > h?a part o h t a f T O Sf* *^rSj^H, 'i*> not Ln follow fiat * # ^ e K S d n ^^^d^XSo^^btedly which tfrey-abnoi .{J^KXair existence cf reco& the f f e f J ^ ^ ^ S fe . Professor S'liliman and fortyitWo other distin- guished men of Connecticut recently addressed a letter to President Buchanan, upon the Subject of the difficulties in Kansas. , Premising that tbe right of the peopletoenact their own-laws and elect their own officers con- stitutes a fundamental principle in our Govern- ment, they delicately and appropriately expressed their grief that the President, through Governor Walker, should now employ the army of the Uni- ted States to compel the people of Kansas to obey laws enacted by residents of Missouri, and to res- pect Territorial officers in whose election they had no voice. ^ t "• To these charges Mr. Buchanan was, from his position, under no obligation to reply; yet he ap- pears to have been irapressed*wlth a belief that he could so answer aa to render his guilt at least doubtful in the mindB of the more unthinking portion of the community ; and, after mature de- liberation, he replied, admitting, if the charges be correct, " his name should be consigned to in- /amy." To this the whole country will respond a hearty amen. ^. But our wonder and astonishment is excited when we read the whole ot Mr. Buchanan's an- swer, and find that he tacitly and tully admits ev- ery charge and averment made against him by * Professor Silliman and his friends. He does not deny a single fact or averment advanced by them. Nor could he do so, as those facts have become mattei s of official reeord, and have already passed into history. But, admitting these facts and charges, he attempts to justify his conduct by saying that whjnJbe.came into office as President he fount! the laws complained of in force, and tbe < - officers iu the exercise of their functions, and then urges that it was his duty to continue that state [- of things. In tins assertion he falsifies the whole history ^ of tne Kansas difficulty. The Free State men, comprising three-fourths of the population, had never acknowled nor obeyed those lawB. They had withstood all attempts to enforce them; and now, at this moment, Mr. Buchanan is, by his officers and by the army, endeavoring to enforce enactments of those Border Ruffians, which have ever been regarded and treated by the Free State men of Kansas as the enactments of foreign usurpers, without either moral or legal force, and insulting to the self-respect of American freemen. But suppose Mr. Pierce had, by the power of tlie army, compelled the Free State men to obey those laws, enacted by the border ruffians of Mis- souri and the meu appointedtooffice by them, wduld that fact justify Mr. Buchanan iu commit- ting the same outrage upon the fundamental doc- trine referred to by Prof. Silliman ? Had the argument of Mr. Buchanan been ad- vanced by some pettifogging attorney, or tyro in morals, or bar-room politician, we should have - regarded it as unworthy of notice. But we are mortified at reading such aa article from the pen of a President of the United States. -Does Mr. Buchanan, or do the leaders ol his party, suppose the people of the Free States so ignorant as not to hold him, who sustains an,d enforces these in- famous laws of Kansas, and carries out the des- potism and usurpation ol the Border Ruffians, guilty to tbe same extent, andjustly liable to tbe same penalty as those who enacted them ? Every intelligent citizen of Ohio would say that the man who advised, aided, encouraged, sustained or sanctioned, the invasion of Kansas, is just as guilty as were those usurpers who, with force and arms, invaded the Tenitory, and seized upon its Government l At the time of that invasion Pierce, and Cass, and Douglas, looked on in silence, saw the out- rage, aad theu, assuming all the responsibility of the invasion and usurpation, they took upon them- selves the infamy which attaches to the laws and to those who enacted them, and openly attempt- ed to justify all these wrongs by charging North- ern men with having gone into the Territory in great numbers to vote, and thereby exerted an im- proper influence in favor of liberty and justice. Thus did they, publicly and shamelessly before the country, admit the facts, and then attempt to justify this forcible usurpation, this revolting des- potism, by charging others with iiUent to do wrong. In this subterfuge, this miserable effort to waive responsibility, Mr. Buchanan united, ap- proved the outrage, and ran for the office of Pres- ldenfupon the express understanding and expec- tation that he would pursue the same coarse, and carry out the objects of the invaders and usurp- ers. All his appointments in Kansas have been made with that object. HIs*n6le influence has been exerted for its attainment, and he now stands before the world .involved in all the moral and political guilt aDd crime of that invasion, and of the enactment of those infamous laws, and stained with ail the blood that has been shed to enforce them. But the President, assuming the invasion of Kansas to have been just, the infa- mous enactments of those Border Ruffians to have been legitimate and constitutional, and the men appointed to office .by them to be duly authorized to rule the people of Kansas, proceeds to de- nounce the Free State men of that territory aB rebels, insurrectionists and traitors, in abont as good set terms aSiGeorgelH and his associates denounced Jefferson, Hancock and Adams,.and their assopialeSi for resisting the Stamp Aot and the mininna'whom he appointed to office, and —' „A on .rmvtoserve the Free ty 01 l i m c , w v. — ~- "-- . bility andfirmnessti tbe dqofflf 8 "\ ~j wvern . I T"" m ^i or J w hom he appointedtootace, ana e.s.ofthe republic, that . « ^ ^ S t l « SwC??^ « npury to serve *e Free ««P» I 9 the ^^l^ltSe exlnttowhich £ U of Kansas just asto$«diB>«'°"* 1% iaH&econiideration for their boy-nature, ™&\*aapprenticeesapis.Wwi.f*£°^/#mfetBr' irt.i_~™«J^Ao=onrl rmrBsses. EvBrv boy wants 1 T £ r j.»joay v e reclaimed; but ^f&vtdthO brings him, no laws of our own State, tot* htoi, WfinbmtL -,of OCfUgriESS.wl to'tra^-thatf--' masters into I there! held to when, free"™ Now — * 'laws State. .Soi'jOSS^toKansas tthe pare congruous ana proper, „ c u » y oMldten' ir^uesteptenupott&ej^sale otpurow, IliMngs tiddftHirafe^We attempt to. m 0 'jheniby a.ioan'tfSepaenj «na\not by a cbildSg* l ---'idorj8t,^|j-r^tfi^wrl.s«f.«iol«g ! ^' tbe one iand ; petted,Mattered,and w S g R L a i Tihe" othe'—it is Mtoniablhg how many«~ J ^* work tn Ir way up Wan bon.e^m*uWft.K^' i'ofbeiei »'«nd; friendi. ''Huthan fcjffW JP? ^ elemint of,great-toughness in ^S^-'dB*** i»o«Hni a . « ? wide:pf, our^«roW?[7In _ „,.»«, 1 fcanylo!ildreiare spoU^.bnfclrhl 11 « wany ,*re r*^?f /-.-. iii'-. -.-';• **•& Godtob* th* /. The «fuatry Is appoint^ o^°? » ^ n jOottdrBi 's nursery ; the «*w e f?>* ro .SEL,, in. 'Sormalign spirit« :.:*"$ *.$«&&£J ^™* e(i of ^»riifm^!m^ meat is the maintenance OJ'U'UM-" .. 0 —, test of a just administration is the extent to which it carries that doctrmetoto practice, ' Resolved, That fris a contradistinction tu terms to call-that manS^omoerat who believestoroe right of one«rf n to enslave another, ortodesign naxe that«4^ al0Craac; government.which swriesJ slaVjerj'jr# ^ wherever it?goes. qriBStWd. That slavery and official corruptionH •^^ ••• -' 1". oFthe ballot- ?i%a, That Slavery auu vuu.. c . •^rirpiforoachmeat upon the purity ofthe ballot- 'Tara the»great evils whichjEhreateti our -ihsti- -• .u_. . L yiomncratio Eenuhlieai threatensto*enu au artuj w ««. . v State men of Kansas just as the British King sent Lord Howetoserve the people of New-England. We have in times past awarded to Mr. Bu- chanan talents far above those possessed by Mr. Pieree; but it is certain that Pierce, nor any oth- er President of the 'United States,' aver put forth [•such shallow -sophistry as that *hlch oharaoteiuea tbeanswer of Mr.Buchanan. Tie President's wh,ole defence rests simply up- on tihe averment, which is untrue, that when be J - d "—"Jo nf ITonaaa were oom> /fifth 'doantrf.' J>p this,if for nci' other; reason; ps.fi jo-Is migMh»^o an effort eyer^ year to remow IAeirisJiren^ftr^ genaeirtpnths fotinj the citf to ^ecojotry.-.'Jpor tbe best effect it is :4*Sl»bt« I'tbAt #2 «»ouIa utterly leave ft^cily. behiild then- ItisaftsurAtogo Into the counlft to gpd all the luxttrie*qf»dty. It is.toget tla of jMm thatthSJ go. Men ajpo carsbcred and hum'. petcdbytooniachechvetuencejns, city, they growirUficW.: Thoy foso a rtellah for natural t?eau» andtbesirflpio cccMpatioh^ of tdral life. OurCkildren need A Separatef aBd special tnlriuig in eoWr* education. "Wo *e«d them to ths PolyMchnirmo for;cjglit. month*. Bat for' io«ir montli werssnd themtd God'eschoolui tha open- ncjjind stnjplicity'tjf the couatry, A dip&»*» in thi ichool will no. 61 service lo body and mi'" 1 Whilej life lasts, ' ' *'toisseetio*ualdlti», and Idoot »eM a " tree,*;'i»piied the «ertant; *'»n empty barnjrequirce no tbttek." tf a?,-?ppr^ 0ari mto Kansas,' 'baek]ii b u t g * 9 master taker hmvapil taffibla* 8 of Kansas cr -} mikimm. wn -mam t Fnugr-'b* taken by theiir y, -tTJe time may jleliapsrcorne' apprentices may be taken -by le^haife t h ' Sont&SaroHfla; the e-a^uht*beinWoduotipn of free j£r tte'Writr^lhoS*lshl»faauig;- SBier step in theiatli:#S«ggr^P.d,. is like- le the re^poidngl#ihc? :? Blave trade. We t see on what pra iplolfti «»nihe .refused, if le lite doctri*s of th 3 Preeidect and the Su- preme Coart be t^uar-d sdapljoiiB from the Oonsti-' tutioi Wehaw >r»rD ad'thecountry agaihstthia' a»i ul! and lo^fcl consequence. Already we see for snW*af*fnti'«id We ieball Beverj-foithwSB". if thdftur years of Mf Bnchanan's AdmioiiW-j .tieitty«|ii»j»jj^;W«iuld>h*ra seemed as.tf-**™"*^- brAiinptimor^toj^ljaWe tbm a«'-iej .pssopri ^wr°4*el. 'Wheal «*'«« extenaonis-o ;iiBivoiJif*«r» fcacdMs over tpo free lilioki#wWw»f* r r«*-sr'~':-' aerviepoy to Obtain it.'tiiwW*** 1 *****& * ™- fioo prsparad to admitfiatf jtf «n* thttwhatever ter- es instanllT slave soil.?-- (iretation of the Constira- flag of:this country goes, into whatever ftBW*e* chains and mansclns in _ BOB, a»iirine.scH aShotteaV toaMt eentimeusa, *>fteASonabtetoour history and tra- ditions, th«,ei« nb hobet'Of rescue, bat UnbetmU ^tl max of -aeniocratte repubUcius voters.' . Iti»ii«»y*d4rkeiHWtbetoultwu, ,Th!«i* ibi darkest hour of the night. Never before ha* a docaine bjscn procMmed, which not only no ....»„„ »,„!;„„ nationolfchrijteijdotn, acomera upon w rrv - .. ,j. -r~ -- j^gi, js untrue, tnat wnen oe ie ^rcat evils ww^hlhrfiaten^ur^sti ^ e avermemg»«" rf Kansas were oom- ipns; and that the WgLJ?*SS-' ^tfto1M * a w l X t o » enactments of the Jf whl resolutely and positively sn-u^gie „ ^ ^ g »m<i ^ p M •w^SSSass-sss feisiv- vz gptopria«Bg the public ^f teff 1'paiptil" rethrnand'fauMttl a d h g t o ^ tecting-tilW* 5 wl *.,.mr,t.ino- and-nromQ68&#«? ; t* g '~r~Ifel*AM.. I 1 " I • R m m 33" m*' ; \ *\'i ~M l - n.L ^ i 0* -^i . h"JS. - - 'I * w " V : 'V,J , W l '[^J^H '**' '•- - > ':• J ffi%& V. i'y^ •'. - * 'm^i atVVw^i 8*-' mm aoarter. mL ^ ora R^W nnnhssS^^aU' w « S h » irMedJctated'tortaem ^ - p e » v u « - 5 ^ S l v 4 T h a t ! -™"j^2SSiW^' ttriEfaSaMnM^^ » }ti __^„ i5uiaujiuiuuH r t<'j'-»'5!>s"--'». r. 1 ^r&and>^uTper»n»urJi!ussouij-5iMwuu, i ,o, „ VM . hoEuog'that,theSta,te * p a l r t f # | ^ v * P o * k t t e ^ t ^ officers wen appointed hy slavehold- -•••- .^ __t.,u -is'-arJwi^ < ?I«M Mssowito rale pyer them. H they te- 'fu?eiffieyaretSBie shoii'fBirltsfyfiiieted, Now' promptingaad ; pror#QiDg»a.a«bWtecting*Sw^ winttel^aBC&^at sueVdespe^sraf. ^inSeerL - -teresiBofproper^###* te .H?y^|S«WA- .fees^rao| : 4ihtaato.it wi^Et|tor. - , with tfiiiWelPaiionjof-the common- -«^^«'-raS.. „„ t ^fW a i -wealth from tb|*»|SJ^nnM^e^ulstoal andI. r'^S^^^^StrSfeB <&.*#' firm i ^S^^w^s w"«fr *mmr ^ T ? ° S S » p ' e £ B e , that labor raw ,*jSf^S¥W?ledge;6Ur 'stfefl i^^Tnonraition to the gohetnel- — . ^ ffi SeTobby power hvlegislafio^ whareby JSiraierent pesies have waitedtoW^« aesolved, That the ^ a t M t *"-Jvk*&\„ rjy w v w i « iu •*] .le#deiiwd morality i . . SPelioW-cWteni, ( '" I this is aelavB Re"^ 'rh^' lt *?<wN*' If:tbaVbethfc*rt» tfon, * « * * £ * * £ Its fold*. BoB,m Resolved, Tttat too IOUM«J«- *-.»™ . v- —. 1 never alfew4»| huinanj»ipg tone b^wjltte-13B(dl caped from another state,' and reclaimed under ti»eciwtitiition ^*6,1feltedpates.., ^ »,.;..., Supreme Court of the United States the ***e Of: DredSoott, encttheletterpr %e Pretfiderfttoflie memorial of theclorgymenoatha aBkirs of KtnsM, .contain doctrines to which Aa people of thj| i State * m nBT * r consent, be. the .coneeqwenoee 'thai they may. ',. T .-. '. >- ,-•-,,-, ...•'/-i-i..- Resolved, That the practice of railroad com. paniei, in giving free tickets to members of as- aembJy and other officers, cannot be. too highly coudemned, and we urge upon the neat legisla- turetopass laws which sbsll put & (top to the Resolved, That the mpnittous lr«nd» at fee,, we tr^t %5,..ow edito». sss m ArtHftfalt&l^"laiatje. m tlus-miawe'f-ofMr. finehanv- • * itenablniamg tyrguny he . i the country navfKi and reesmg mm lm^IWMQ.1I h?ha? *e»ay eomiaittg; sntl . n^rcienB'tS commit, ajpu* : 6ar Gov. mt and against mwldnft < «pr^ t lfe9 ; -wobrd i -' Mplrtijg events be. aa'dg:up truthfully.— ^history, and pws dowa to'poeterity irtv^ Mlhkt aefci^tes not, hoip*|^{»e $o assume » d , , maintaw poeitidni that wfll not tense a hlush »• :. ( - .I'M.fissfcli! ''tssw^e-spjgsgs,---^- ~ i ^., .«MM-3^j%w^/ ::: <- '•"'•"'- Thetravel from the ea»t" -• ^- *^^ **— a A -rine been ©roeliiinieo, -wuiu" "w i i u S i n ttatfon,fiuTn* nation*? f M ? ^ " ^ Besoiveo, -«Bme m»»«v».-«» « s S^nly tt^V«aioapOTdr-«««M"»*«^ tioaa which have lately been perpetrated,,p«*»- S.f tt.W**M» * , l«' 1 «P OB r n8 ?£*&• m i a tbe city oENewtwMefflan-,^ 0 " l^upuienAour^om ^ iSwditiaiprS, tbatw^mvrfeem «»5gS 1 the cou-Wof our ifiwedom-'ormg ***; f *fS!' !ro'mTatiree, F wi4«'i^ < .i.«ry--tba' 0 f loT - iog, praiaing *** •** lld i n t '> The earnest aiumuvu v.. w , .*«^-.-«•.* boaod by the higheet wmtid^rttaMj root of an evil, tad pan whatever f ^oesjiry to pat an end to It Hr. Briggs, of Onondaga, j ^—A ^lalssk mttmitirmA a.a«Ml , then by the GranaUffehtt h»B08* ; ' of conshlerahle importinon'''*» tw * t *W*t* ,tobejby the ^ b t t r a ^ - # » « ^ * J i ^ | ^ " h6«t?fl « 60^aWiSl? , *?- ,R " ft * ; ,*?§ ^ i S i l P ^ mteot-d itfcmovenwtite. tfiTof «Krtf»em a*a. .$»} wpmpHm* ;^JSftdeavt»* Tlntew, - 9 t o * <**; I S iwsm their error, wh*. ta-f no4 cce LUB- baSb trains takinc their «»••* *>» c—xtoetik* of th* TMUtk oas«M»r «fPgP?'[.W» tl-ey pceoess ibrerip* twqrhWjirt* *?» *«M>*MI^UU. -••--* -<-- w .- Ill i ,V'-' II irom*atcttr»^F»»T»!^»,»^«ry--tbatotiov .Brtogi,«fOK»dsm, W^KlT^St

•w^SSSass-sss feisiv-nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031401/1857-10... · Tty puriuKi w,BE. PtAtc street, "sa, tt. a paiz; a a range w*th \ trtitm" brtweer :in? office JL J

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Page 1: •w^SSSass-sss feisiv-nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031401/1857-10... · Tty puriuKi w,BE. PtAtc street, "sa, tt. a paiz; a a range w*th \ trtitm" brtweer :in? office JL J

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OTICE8, 45.

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l u a wi fe , of | t he s o v a of f*U t r e n c h a n d ( s t a t e of N e w L ? r uf t h e samfc p l a c e , a n d £& r C l e r k of S t . L f t w r « n e e %C it. In B o o k n u m b e r ^ of £?: i t h e T ih d * y o £ J . a i y , ^ r>.ch s a i d M o r t g a g e b a a ,

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ped In a n d corvered b y s a i d [t t o r p a r c e l of i a n d s i t u a t e

• '-*f S t . L a w r e n c e , awd t h e I L W U . a n d S i sa ingur | f aed a s I . j f s a i d tonrn o f ( H o s » i e , •• B e g i n n i n g a t a f i e c e uf •i «JT£ecUont>i ; the O l H o w l ^ t U a g e of 8ctroerv.i#te, r u n - * *

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.Aiid, AS su rveys** by Levi _-c j . ,d i i » p u t t s c a u c t i o n ,

I f B o s s i r . »' » i ' - u A j of S t ty of S e p t e u 4 w r n * x t , a t 2 \ t h e SOth d a t - J ***«, 1 •**

\ M. W E L L ^ , A s s i g n e e . or Assignee, *

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, ^ r t ' i , Ja|UC'i j Q t of t h e

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| i g of u«- l e v a r i . , a u g m e n t s ou ___j h a v e * « a . aaun i , w> t h e I P t U a g e L . : ". th-* v l l a g e of I D t h e - p l a n •$ **.*£ VtUag* -o

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i . e i e e a c i . a . aa a n a t e u ^ l i n k s i J t f . e ^ n , N l « i h S 4 0

i M e s t I \ • h n s s to a {Hunt i $ s a i d r o a d , '

'iirttrcQ c a a n a aiad t h i r t e e n I ' I M ; .'UitrQKv, Aouth 4U >k' ,

I ' y - l T e * - Qka l<f the p l a c e of n t y - h v e a c r e s aji-a; t h i r t y - f o u r

o, in B i o c a N o . 4 , of t n e a p -. u ^ e : O j n i c a s b a r g n . Also , - \ ax. t ^, h, s a - 4 r>..<&N.-> -i.

I t K i r t of me Js'o % n b.-tcfe N - . [ ^ iiJAgc. A l s o , Ait : h a t p a r t uf f-. ae&' r . t e a 4» ' ^> ws B e g i n -^-^ate sir**--: *s*-er? n i e Une diY-

fS t*>e Sarfie t b e n c e . S o u t h uc- i .aaU.- ' iX.iuid t t a feet , m o r e

r:y j j r n e r i ' a ^ a r n 8 t a n a t n g ha i l tfc '-r>cc,at r g h t a n g l e s

f v ^ ; "*••<£ bn n , ? Q a n o r t h -f i , x* -*-.•'- a t r <: ; i . ^ ,ea n o r t h -

firsttme tOur i eeo f e r t , t b e n c v Tty p u r i u K i w,BE. PtAtc s t r e e t ,

" sa , t t . a p a i z ; a a r a n g e w*th \ t r t i t m " b r t w e e r :in? office J L J .

c e aUjo.Qing t h e *a.mf J D t h e t AL r u V . a.D^ es n o r t n - e a s t e r l y . a n e a n d a. t o D t i D o a t l o n of trie

u t t t i - .udbe» t ; o r t b e r l y f rom 11,11 n : ' ^ c iwtj^lfDg-hoose on

feet , m o r e - o r TeSs, to t h e w e s t - n e e iMiatn-fiiLSteriy a l o n g sa id

re o r .e&j,-to t h e p l a c e of be -

i L S O .

Iw u . e tixwn o ' O s w e g a t c h i e ,

eii a s sab-d tv»sKnr m t No . 3 , in ILe, ma;> dttiJ s u r v e y the reo f ,

t l ie y e a r It-av ' e ' o g t h e s a m e -1. d tT i ' he r t b y dee<l from T>avid

a a d J . i n n J . i*srd, e j t e c a t o r s , r e t o r t e d m u^e C l e r k ' s Office

A X i O , -AC J in *-r.e i . e . i . n g t o n T r a c t , tn

^a-d C > a n t j -f p t . L a w r e n c e , | i o t b e t w ^ f i , ir:r- I > e p e y s t e r r o a d

> ,i, c o c t a . c j n i ; f o r t y - s e v e n a c r e s ,«. L. t - N t i . f o n t a m i n g fifty ftr ir^ii t*i6 L o t No o, c o n t a i n i n g z i n n d r e t b s . Lo t N o . 6 , c o n t a i n -r : y - t h r e e i d r e s a n d E h r e e - h a n -

. n ^ i g s ix ty -e igh4 i f i r es a n d n i n e -t * o . K t c o n t a i n i n g s i i ^ y - s e v e n

. n d r e t i t h a . L o t No Q . c o o t a t P l n g i. l n i n e t y t i u n d r ^ d m a . A i s o , m

L.-t b e t w e e n H * » t o r y Lafee a n d 6, c o n t a i n i n g t h i r t y - o n e a c r e s

A . L o t , N o . 1 1 , c o n t a i n i n g t h i r t y -

Ie h a n d r e d t i u i . Lo t N o . 1&, c o n -

r*s a n d t b i r t y - t h r e e h n n d r e d t h a . ^ r e n t y - s e v e n a < i ^ s a n d s e v e n t y -No . 1 \ c o n t a i n i n g fo r ty - f ive a c r e s i r e d t h s . Lo t N o 19, c o n t a i n i n g l t e n - h a n d red t h * . L&$ N o . 2V,

On B « J $ e r S r e e J i ^ L o t N o . i , • r aoTes a n d J o r t y - t i v e h t t n d r e d t h a . • s i x ^ - t - w o a c r e s a n d f o u r t e e n h u n -

;• j t a m i n g e i g h t y - t h r e e a c r e s a n d

fi n t h e t o w n cf S o n v e r n e o r , in

L o a i a t m n g <?ne h u n d r e d t w o a c r e s - d t h S - L o t J i o ^ . c o n t a i n i n g flfty-

C o n t a m i n g o i t y - t h x e e a c r e s a n d |rO*t N o . t&, c o n t a t n i Q g Q l n e t y -

•even h u n d r e d s h s . L o t N o . 14 , sed o n e a c r e s a n d t w e n t y - o n e

It I O , e o n t a i i i i n g ; e i g h t y - t w o a c r e s t a a . L o t N o . 1 6 , ' c o n t a i n i n g s iar ty-y - i w o h u n d r e d t h s , a n d L o t N o . I T , a c r e s a n d a£ne tv - f ive h u n d r e d t h s a . y I d , l a o l . * ,

PA1SE COKVtaSE, Sherifi; Ipaty. .S*-ts)

w t b e a ' c v e rsutu-u, f3 p o s t p o n e d S e p t e m b e r , i n s t a n t , t h e n t o t a i t e

Jay and p»aee above mentioned.—

PAIN'E CONTEKSE, Sherift Ipoty Sherifi [40-4wJ • to the ahovelrioii$e is further post-Ttne lath dfjy of October, 1857, at [ u c e as abdve ofititjooed.—Dated . PAlNE^COHV£BJiE, SheruT [pnty ^eriff. [^-4w]

IS P U O C i L A 3 1 A T i e ? f . t TATE OP KEW- YORK, (

COCS'TTf 0» M i Ll-WSESCE. } M

IGSED, SHEKIFF^gF THE c o n f o r m i t y to a p r e c e p t t o h i m tn

o d d e l i v e r e d , by#tfcua, h i s p r o d a m a -

i-^ous b o u n d to a p p e a r a t a C o u r t of

a n d J a i l Del iveaw t o be h o l d e n a t C a n t o n , in a n d f o r s a i d C o u n t y , o n iber n e x t , a t t e n o ' c l o c k In t h e fo r e -ce o r o t h e r w i s e t o a p p e a r t h e r e a t , i n e r e b y reo£ures ( al l J u s t i c e s of t h e

i l o t h e r officers wljo h a v e t a k e n a n y fr*» appfef t raoce of a n y p e r s o n a t

v h o h a r e taSefc a n y m q o l s i t i o n cr t h e e s a n l i n a t r > n of a n y p e r s o n , • t a r n s a c a r e c o « r n i z a n c e , i n q n i a i -m t o t h e a a i 8 Coiar t a t t h e o p e n i n g t day* of ltSf s i t t i n g . — S i g n e d a t t h e

» 17th d a y df A u g u s t , 1-A7. P A i S S C O ^ V K R S E , Sheriff.

*£& OF liHE^BRIG MA Y-l cached nnder a^warrant: I A W A K E ^ T OF ATTACH-

med by the Bon. fcmaziafa B.James, •apremts^Coqr.fc of *he State of New

auon or&EQRGK S. ACLT,on the ^ r _. , to theJherUf-ofjSt. Lawrence me brig. Mqgfimcer) belonging to the Vgh, S^C^State of Sew Yorit, of TSE J-UET was the last commander, ftsel, her tackle,ipjareland furniture l e of ssid warrant on the Slst day of J-aons who cliilm tobsvoany demands mis or vesaeLjier.^tHCkle^ apparel, or • e ptoTfiiiona-of %tle % of chapter 8, •eTixed-Statutes, entitled " Of proceed-luon of demands against ahlps dr Tes-lameudatory f the same, are required "an* of their uespec^ve claims 'to t&e feuedjj^he said warrant, within three L i t ^ the dat^.of tb# first publication • their remedy against such brig or lited. gaid bfig-or Vessel will be sold If the claims against her, unless the I or commander thdreof, or some per-

- „ j dfechsjge «ald war-

t&wj widUn Jnree months from tbia the first-w^3pcaiioii of this notice-—

k , P- CON\*ESSE, Shexflt. By E. J. CHSPia, U. fihexlH

I HEREBY ©IVES, THAT J£& I partzterahip .eozmeeUon between the Jr m Olxil oom per*)n»l right, or M •.« of the e>t«te oS J.h, CHITSOH, <3e-l i t , aSB hereater ettoh of the «nh»c|»-"-"--» solely in-their own respectWgfit-

a t and beltart.—flswegatohiefSej JA&'H. OHimOH

feCXIOS N O T t C £ .

;is HEBferftr^ . THAI

f„ _ _ J i f e * e k l n mis 8t»te.oa a g ^ e a i b E i i a y al SotonS** S»«BTO» I» efcoteij, to .wtjfeS'T-Oftjf WW i" Joel T. B o u m j ; in the plan of gtejt&cfeJ&uuh-

- " V . rand. Sn-»«/ r, in *e .ptow « 8U»»

.aJp&ISTKD AND PCBUBHED SWSCS tXSSBOAX

Bt HITCHCOCK, XUXOTSOH » STUWEtli. ? Editon and Proprfetora.

Oit ice t n N e w s t o n e B a i l d i n B » » * a J > e l l a • S t r e e t , o n e ' d o o r t r a n i f o r d .

t 3. -i'TCaCOCK.. M. W. TILLOTSOH I . Q . S W L W 1 L U

TERMS OF THE aEPUHUOAN : To Mailaa* Office Subscribers—OneDollarpeTanoom,

j.wsya in advance. To Village Subscriber*, who are I -<fJ by the Carrier—One Dollar and Twenty-five "• » TBBM8F08 ABVEaTISlH6 : l)3»sqaare,one «eek,t65« Vo6tanntwombnths,|600 D Jo. two do. 0 T5 Do. do. three do. 7 BO > , i v threedo. 100 Do. do. six do. 1500 •)' i.». one mootb,l 36 i0o. do. one year, S000 yi.* do. two do _ 1 T5 i]< caiman, one month, 5-00 ^.. • do. three dov 3 2S f Do. do. two do. &U0

do. six do,^4 00 i Do. do. three do. 1800 io. one year, S 00 , Do. do. six do. 88 00

.R.umn, one month, 2 50 * Do. do. one year, 50 00 Tor three months, or longer, at the rate

per year of 110000. BnamessQards, of S lines or less, inserted nnderap.

, V"»l? »iead, with privilege of change, at$eperye&r. ^jfjruamgander oaiitracts, as above, confined to the 4 i$<?rti»er's own boaine&s. Legal advertisementsin-14-teo at therateflestabushed by law,

^&~ ^'i Oommnnlcatiopa mustbe post-paid toinsnre

j„« colamn

VOLUME 27

r . , , 'h, a splendid government mpported by p o w e t ^ l . mnnopol'ea ana ana , , ' * " • - L - u — i i —

"---• - = " - = " - = - ^ = = * ^ = — O G O M S R U R ( | H , N. Y.. f D l * A Y 4 OCfTOjER

ST LAWRENOT REPCBIJCAS ,

F o r l f toT .

>U RC ri

r t . L

1 2 8 J l ' L i ' 4 5 ' 6 T ' 9 1°

; l I S I S U IS 16 IT H IS o 0 21 2*-28 34 J 5 S 6 J 7 ' ^ 3 9 * 0 81 ^ r Q

1 S S •** S 6 7 „ i i . i l l : i i » i *

<-, : « ' • ; 1^ 19 J > ' i t oo -2S 24 95 2« '2T 2 8

1 3 „ 4 5 6 T . S E P T , ) n i l 12 1 3 1 4 • i l « 17 l « l ? 2 « 9 1

« 3S 34 •K'SSf^T 2 S

>4 il' 31 1 2 3 4

5 6 T S- 9 V> n 12 1 W 1 4 1 5 1&17 I S 19 20 21 24 23 *» " * 26-27 2 * 39 8u

OCT

S H V 5 4 5 6 7 ^ 9 1 0 1 1 13 U 14 15 lft 17 1^19 2» 21 22 2S 24 25-26 37 2f 49 29

q l « • 1 S 8 4 5 »

; s 9 l u l l 12 I S 1 4 ' 5 16 17 1 ^ 1 9 20 21 32 2 8 24 2 5 26 3329 80

NOV.

D E C .

.. 1, * Si 4 5 6 f g! BllWll

12 is mis' iaifis 19 20 i21 l22^8 l24 i25

asiTss^'SOiaii.. «t 8i 4 ' 5 6' T< 3

, 9 10. U 18 1 8 1 4 1 5 16 IT 18 19 20 2 1 2 4 2 S 2 4 2 5 2 6 2 T 2 8 29 8 0 8 1 ••

. 1 H * l 6 7 8, 9 1 0 1 1 , 1 2

13 U 1 5 ' l 6 1 T 1 2 1 9 2 0 2122128 2425126 27 2 S 2 9 80 . . ' . . I . .

1 8, 3 ' 4 5' 6 T 8 9 '10

11 12113 .14151OTT m 19 2 0 2 1 2 2 23184 25 26"27 23 29 80.81

i ' r ' s ' 4 5 6 7 < M H 1 1 S 1 8 ' 1 4

1 5 1 6 17 I S 19 20 21 2 3 2 3 24,25126,27,23 29 80' . 1 . -

1 21 81 * 5 ' 6 7 Si 911011112

1 8 1 4 , l M 6 , l T h 8 . 1 9 30 21 2 2 - 2 S B 4 ! » ; 2 6 9T 23 '29 '80l81 . . .

BUSINESS CARDS^ GKORGE WTTHERHEAD,

D e a l e r i»> U r o c e r t e s a n d P r o v i s i o n s , —also,—

floor ,0orn,Meal, Pork, Fiah, Prnit, Wooden-Ware, *c . OGDENSBBURGH.

Water-St., opposite A. CHIHST 4 Oo's Hardware Store, |^"0ashpaid for Country Produce. All Goods de­

livered In the Village free of charge. [8-tf]

B E S T A 1 O P E R A T I O N S .

B L O B K E T T & l .E«i«iO, DENTISTS,

0peratlngftooma,tn EagleBlock/pverSeefy A Preeman*s Store,

fORD-8T., O&DKNSBrRGH, N. Y. C A R D . .

Having associated Dr.Leggo with me in business, the office here will be constantly open. Thankful for the liberal patronage 1 have received,! would most respeot-fnlly solicit its continuance for the Arm.

pj-tf] 8. S. StODGETT.

S H A V I M S .titm H A I R - D K E S S I S I O . ^

HESRY WATK1NS, S h a v i n g a n d H a l r - D r e a a i n g S a l o o n ,

is ras Basement of Royal Vilas' Building, Pord-Streot,

OGDESSBURGH, NEW-tORK. ^ff~ K variety of the best Newspapersare alwayson

his table. f86-tf)

O L D S ' D f a g u e r r i a n a n d A m b r o i y p e

NO. 9 EAGLE BLOCK, Sign of the Mammoth Eagle, Ford street,

OQDKSSBCRGH, S. Y. [ 2 4 - i f ]

THE GREA^ WEST! NEV1N & M L B K H I i

oaLUuia ra REAL ESTATE,

atin O e n c r a l L a n d A g e n t * ,

OMAHA C1TV, NEBRASKA TEBSTfibfct. UAVip i . BBVW. OEOBOX J . OlLBKRT.

Will Collect Debts,Invest and Loan Money, Buy and Sell Real Estate, Pay l&xes, Examine Titles, Locate Land Warrant* for NoiPKesidents, and attend tojill business entrusted to thetr care with promptness and fidelity.

.Chicago, Illinois.

l'OETRY.

R i C l i S :

t i a l l e r y ,

H A T S , C A P S . A * l > *'* K > "

E. W. BEKKDICT, IfAJIUVAOTUBXa ASD DKALSB IS

Ladies aod Gentlemen's I'm GloTea, Collars, Victorines Children's Fancy Caps, 4 c ,

comprising a genera* assortment of his own and city manufacture.

jST" Cash paid for all kinds of Para, Wooland Sheep Pelts, at the old stand, No. Id Mechanic's Row, Ford-st,. 0gdensbojrgh,N. Y. 4S-tf

AND I M P O R T E R S .

Bon. John Wilson Messrs. Corned, Jameson A Baas. C. N. Holden, Esq " " B. 8. Shepard, Esq " " Messrs. Wm. Warner A Co Detroit, Michigan. Hon J 0. Hopkins Madison, Wisconsin. Rev C. B. Smith Iowa City, Iowa. 0. Wilcox Minneapolis, Minnesota Territory. 0 A. Burnham, Esq OgdensbuTgh, N. Y. G. N. Seymour, Esq " " Hon. Preston King " " Prof. Calvin Pease Burlington, Vermont. G T Boardman Middiebnry, " HOD. B f. Agan Granville,N. Y. A.Watrous PS-ill Balaton Spa, "

R . T . L Y O N , COMMISSION MSROHANT AND EOSWABDEB,

No. 5U n e r t v i n - S t r e e t , a n d C u y a n o g a R i v e r ,

CLEVELAND, OHIO. Solicits consignments from the country of all kinds of

Produce, Merchandise, Ac. Will attend to the purchase of Goods for

COUNTRY MERCHANTS, And give them the earliest information of the state of Foreign and Domestio Markets.

Strict attention glven-'to the purchase and sale of. Produce and Merchandise, for the Northern, Eastern,

, Western and Southern Trade. Always on hand, Flour, Pork, Lard, Butter, Eggs,

Cheese, Grain. Hops, Groceries, Salts, Water Lime,White Lime, Plaster, r^sh, Ac.

PRODUCE AND MERCHANDISE , Purchased at a small commission,on orders forahlpment to at' portions of this and other countries.

Charges moderate. t!9-ly} Refer to Business Men and Bankers generally.

S T . L A W R E N C E t r j U V E R S l T T .

ST HBS. UJTLO WVJH.

Where-fans riph sunlight ubon dome and spire Telling bright tales of man's'immortal t rus t -

Where sunset touches with a sword of fire Thfrsilent watches of a Statesman's dust;

Whore mercy tempers jus tics with calm power. And; beauty trembles upon wave and tree*

Goddess of Learning, to a happy hour We rear a fitting shrine to God and thee.

Oh I beantUuljupon * hundred hills Shall flash the starry doine fcttuorn and eve,

Windows shall glisten on a hundred rills, When moonlight hands their silver meshes weave.

Pillar and frioe and moulding rich with art Beneath-our Northern sky shall proudly grow.

Warming the good and patriotic heart feWlih manhood's sweet and consecrated glow.

Oh ! God, whose ministry Is hunt Upon the mountain and the sounding sea,

Within the forest—playing if thon wilt To bless the work we dedicate to thee.

Thou whose proud dome of learning is above, Beamed with the golden pathway of the spheres,

8mlle on thy children, in their toil of love, And keep them, rather, in the coming years.

WKurcnnt, N. Y., Aug. 21,1857.

H E p t ' R E V O C C A L L .

BV cnaaus SWAIN.

ft. rosebud on her bosom, and whose voicp was like the sw«e,t sound of a silver lute. No spangled slipper was on her foot, tint ishe moved as one .that.treadetb upon,the air, and the divine beanty of holiness had

j so glorified her fa ' ' * * " ' — r - — A

| "upon her that she

God.

facet that 1 felt as I gjazed B D ip , le -was almos^ an angel of ^aa

"Say you so?", cries the robber chief.

"Do you mean i t? '

Then follow'ap exp anation, from which it turns out that ' Loi rel is no other than his cousin 'Henrf, ea plain of a merchant

1 11 .1 . . l . « . . . l , r , l a QtT«ir

The Liverppol Ti®es g^ves t i e follow­ing synopsis of the couvjetion-iat Liver­pool and sentence to death, by banging o(

'"",' ,{• r r " " r ~ , , a., the master and first and second mates of —- and no robber; jthat the whole anair , , , , - 3 , , , T r o , . . ! 1 TJV ~

bas 'beenafa rce performed by the three ' ^ M a r t h a and Jane, of Sdnderi-and, Eng-

»nT.in;r. ',r, nrrlor tn cure _1 friends and the captain in order to cure the Honorable Belfast of his suicidal tastes.

A O h a p t e i on Boys.

, m th sioner. in

\ For all Points East and West.

T h r o u g h . T i c K e t s c a n t>e P r o c u r e d o v e r t h e f o l l o w i n g R o a d s :

• iS^D TRUNK RAILWAY, of Canada, .,RE\T WESTERN RAILWAY, of Canada, MICHIGAN C E N T R A L R A I L H i \ D , SEW Y O R K C E N T R A L R A I L R O A D , H « E S H O R E R A I L R O A D , MICHIGAN S O C T H E R N R A I L R i l A D , ? rTBDAM i W 4 T K R T O W N R A I L R O A D ,

, B t L D W I N - S L I N E OF S T A G K S . i^d ail R a i l r o a d s W e s t of C h i c a g o — a t t h e l o w e s t r a t e s

^ ~ 0 f f i - e , i n S t a t e strt*.*t, a t t h e old D r o v e r ' B B a n s u

l s - i ' M b u r « h , ' a n h a r y , 1*J7. [ 7 - t f ]

N O R T H E R N v . > . V

t ^ ^

i lASGE OF T1MK

0SP, THl't lSDAY, J l 'LY

w.U run daily, Mondays AXD AFTER > , P a s s e n g e r T r a m s -?te<i) rva ffiiiows •

G O H G E A S T .

H R S T T R A I N — l e a v e s O ^ d e n s b u r g h a t U : 2 0 , A. M , i i n e a t B r a s h ' s Mttls* a r r i v i n g a t R o u s e ' s P o i n t , : i 45 P. S i . , c o n n e c t i n g w i t h V e r m o n t C e n t r a l ^^'UtfK 7 V r n n , a r r v m g a t B o s t o n e a x i y n e x X . m o r n --p, also w i t h L a k e C h a m p l a i n s t e a m e r s , for S a r a t o g a ,

T-jy, A l b a n y a o d » w Yorfe, a n d w i t h O h a m p l a i n a n d si L A ^ r e n c e R. R.., for M o n t r e a l a n d Q u e b e c .

S E C O ^ D T R A I N — L e a v e s O g d e n s b a r g h a t 6.00 P . 31 . , *,-- v!n« a y R o o s e ' a P o i n t a t 1 1 , P M . , vto l o d g e , ) a n d • r ,--,1 -ig n e x t m o r u i n g h y V e r m o n t C e n t r a l R. R. i„3 L a i e C h a m p l a i n S t e a m e r s for t h e E a s t a n d S o u t h .

U O I N I ; W E S T .

FIRST T R A I N — L e a v e s R n i s e ' s P o i n t a t 6 A, M . , c o n -- ' . v i ; OgtieQ-tburgh a t U , A. M. , w i t h G r a n d T r u n k - t toray E x p r e s s T r a i n a n d A m e r i c a n E x p r e s s S t e a m e r s

- K i n g s t o n , T i r ^ n t " , Be l .v i l l e , CobarK, H a m i l t o n , s a<'*ra F a l l s , ButTiiO, Det ro iL , C n i o a g o , a n d a l l p o i n u W~st.

'KCON'D T R A L N — L e a v e s R o u s e ' s P o i n t a t 2 P . M. , i ~ »'fig a t O g d e n s b u r g b a t T.8U, P . M. , c o n n e c t i n g w i t h • T R. R., a n d Auu:r;oikH i .ne of s t e a m e r s for t h e S o u t h i -d W e i t , e x c e p t o n S a t u r d a y ' s , ) w h e n i t will l e a v e % use ' s P o i n t a t 7 .45 , P . M . , o n a r r i v a l of l a s t t r a i n s a n d

. . ea rne r s . v i t r a m s c o n n e c t a t P o t a d a m w i t h fcfie P o t s d a m a n d

w 4 i e r towTj Ra i l R o a d for W a t e r t o w u , R o m e , A c , a l s o ii Vlooer* J u n c t i o n wi th P l a t t s b u r g h & M o n t r e a l R. R. , ' * M o n t r e a l a n d P l a t t s b u r g h .

( i E O R G K V . H O Y L E , S u p e r i n t e n d e n t .

DfBceSupt . N . R R . C o . , ( M A L O S E , J u l y 2 6 , 1S57. f f t V t O

P O T S D A M AMD W A T E B T O W J i R A I L R O A D .

F O R W A R D E R S

ROBERT W. BUSH, QSSBKiL AOHTr 1SD

C o m m i s s i o n ! H e r c h a n l , Floor, W^eat, Corn, Pork,Pish, W*ter and Uand Grind­

stones, so., 0GDENSBURGH, KEW YORK.

REPEREKCE8: D. 0. JUDSOH, Ogdenaburgh.N. Y., 8, GILBERT,Prest. Drovers Bank, JASCXS AvKaxix,Prest.Og' densburghBanlt,Joaa D. JUDSOH, Prest.Judson BauX.

[*a-in

H E F R F K H 7 I G N T S A L O O N S ^

FIXERON^ R T E B - a O I ' S E

XXD

D I . M N G SALOON I (Two doors from the St. Lawrence Republican office J

ISABELLA STREET, OGPBNSBTJRGH, N. Y. Keeps constantly on hand a choice assortment of Li­

quors, including that rare invention and most delicious beverage.

L a g e r B i e r . ALSO

ROCHESTER AND ONONDAGA ALE! O Y S T E R

Served up in the best Style. Warm and Ootd Meals at all hours. He extends a

cordial inaitation to nis friends on both sides of the St. Lawrence river to give him a call.

[oa-tfj

TO MANTJFAOTUEERS AND DEALERS n

P H E A N D S P R V C G L . i n n . R E R .

WE WILL PURCHASE SEVERAL MILr-liona of feet of Pine aod Spruce Lumber, to be

delivered at this place, or along the Line of the North­ern Rail Road, during the present Winter, or in the mon tha of May, June or July, next, in quantities of One Hundred Thousand Faet, and upwards. As we are pur­chasing for Western Markets, manufacturers will find it decidedly, for their Interest to ascertain in due season what is most desirable, and to conform strictly to itylei of Lumber best adapted to our trade, aa the large ma­jority of lumber manufactured for Eastern Markets, is quite unsaleable in Western.

To parties disposed to forward for Sale, on their own account, we would Bay, that we have ample facilities for the transportation of any desired quantities,

fff" N. B.—Any enquiries by letter, addressed to us I here, will receiye prompt attention, I O g d e n s b u r g h . D e c e m b e r 19 , 1858.

1 8 5 7 .

B A R C I A A Y . , H A L E I.L. T. BARCLAT. O. J. UALS,

It was a rustic cottage-gate. And over it & maiden leant;

Upon her face and youthful grace A lover's earnest eyes were bent.

" Good night," she said, " once more good night, The-ervenlng star is rising Wgh —

But early with the mbru1pK>l%nS Be sure yoacall asryou pass by\

As yon pass by, Be sure yoa call as you pass by."

The spring bad into summer leapt, Br*wn autumn's hand her harvest threw,

When forth a merry party swept. In bridal garments, two by two.

1 saw it was the maid that blessed The evening star that rose so high;

For he, aa I Buppose you've guessed. Had often called as he passed hy I

As be passed by, Had often called as he passed by.

MISCELLANEOUS. Better than Diamonds.

A Core fbr Suicide.

The scene o{ the following story is at Oravesend, England, in }852. The Hon­orable M. Belfast is giving orders to his valei-de chanibre, J.iri). Jim is to admit no one but Sir Richard Linn, the Baronet Kithsdale, and M. Clifton; and to bring downstairs his best dressing case, his tow ling piece numbeT thrte, and a certain choice picture. Jim bows to the earth before the honorable member of the Cham­ber of Commons and exits.

Monsieur Belfast looks mournfully at the pendule and then, with a slow sad step, enters his bedroom. After having shut and double locked the door, he opens the window and gazes on the Thames, which flows beneath. It is low water, and a bank of yellow mud lies below the window. "No no " lie mortnurs to him- £ ^ 1 hVli a young man, he is in an anoma. self, it would be a dirty death,—nnwarthy \om condition, for whici there is

T.._„;,.„, <•,.,-,„, il.B win- ' ugsisnied in Nature. T i eya rea l '

Death Sentence - — - — . - - . » , . ^ i[

froiBi oFa^atfloliey, of which the present nation-al adrrfirjislSiatior, jgthe'defender and promoter—j

> m « i tn oi«wo*» .that alaverv^mignt* legislative chosen by.slave-.

„. i:t.„ n n iV,o or.il on.! make

•al aanurjBtraaonistneaeienaer auu P " " " rTT. p.coantirjil^rj^jeri pi-slavery, ttiiat .slavery^ni#»

| jbe sure to", jent*" » i<»»inlntiirft nhoseQ bv .slave*

. L. LYON k 00 l*-tt]

1 8 5 7 . & CO. ,

WM. T. M1TBKB.)

Ogtlensburgh, November 81,1S66.

H O T E L S .

B A L D W I N H O U S E , CORNER OP 0ATHAR1SE A DIVIBION-STREKTS

Near the Steamboat Landing, OQDENSBTJRGH, N. Y. JaasHUB BALDWTB, Proprietor.

Oarrla?esvrtll be In readiness as the Rail Road Depot, ! and Steamboat Landing, to convey Passengers and Bag­gage to and from the House, Free of Charge. The best of Stabling and the largest amount of Stable-room of any HotelinOgdensburgh. 41-tf

W A S H I N G T O N H O T E L , KEPT B7

J. W. CARRIER, Washington-Street, Ogdenaburgh, N. Y.

This house has been thoroughly renovMed and re­paired, and Is now open for tbe reception of travelers and cruests. The bouse is large and oonvnodious, and is pleasantly situated near the business portion of tbe Vil­lage of Ogdensburgh. 12S-U.)

E V t l l A \ l , L H O r l l . , KKPT BT

R o b e r t W l o d , MAIN-STREET, PRESUOTT, C- W.

a^T* The guests of this House, are transported to and from the Rail Road Depots and. Steamboat landings free o? charge, a* [8&-ds-2m»]

S t o r a g e , F o r w a r d i n g Sc C o m m i s s i o n M e r c h u n t s ,

Blue Warehouse, below Walker's Point Bridge, MILWAUKEE, WIS0ONS1N.

Dealers In all kinds of Western Produce, on Commission. Agents for

N o r t h e r n T r a . n s p o r t a . t S o n C o m p a n y ' s 14 FIRST CLASS PK0PELLEB8,

Connecting at Ogdensburgh wtth.Railroad for BOSTON, sod tbe Ogdensburgh Railroad to Rouse's Point, thenea by first class Canal boats, via Lake Ohamplain k Wbite-hallOanal orNEWTORK..

AGENTS, OTIS K.ttBiU. 10S 8tate Street, Boston, Mass. JAMES P. CBUBCH ..Rouse's Point, N. Y. CajtwrouD * Oo Ogdensburgh, N. Y. CKiMBsftLis, OaawaonD k Co Cleveland, Ohio. A GoDiBD Toledo,Ohio. J MYEKS 19T Broadway, New York.

I J L. WutsBB No. 8 Coentts Slip, New York. RicaiBB CaiiPts Whitehall, N. Y. E. R. MATaswa Detroit, Michigan. MvrmtH * Co Chicago, Illuiola. %&~ Property forwarded with dispatch to and from

Sew York and Boston,and to all polntsin New England, via Ogdensburgh. ' rs8-tf]

WEDVE3DAY, J u l y 2 9 ,

G0LNG N0RCE. Acc*m.

^XlTS Wster towo- *«o<s«~= W s w r t o w n Ssnford ' s C o r n e r s g r a n ' s Mil ls P h i l a d e l p h i a i s t w e r p K r t n e ' s G. .Qverneur H.chville H e r m a n Canu a Poisdam . . . Potsdam Junction

>l«atis

OOLNQ 80CTH. Acc'tn.

Lsavs Potsdam Jonotion —. • Potsdam Canton dermou. RichvUle. • 4-' ( ^ . Q v e m e n r Eeene*s A n t w e r p P h i l a d e l p h i a Evan ' s Mi l l s • • • Sao fo rd ' s C o r n e r s Watertown. ' WsteOown Junction.

O T T A W A

...s as . . .9 08 .

- " .9 80"= ..9 45

..10 05 .10 15 » "

GEO. 'B . PHBLPS, Bupt AmiTlSiEseoTT H , B i l - w » T -

m

s a r a m w A r r a n g e m e n t .

OOaMEKOTSO OS MONDAY, MAT 18TH, 1S57.

M A I L TBAJLN, 1 EAVES OTTAWA A"E 1: 45 A. M., ar-• t riving tn Prescott at 10: 15, A M., oonnecting

It Junction, with Trains going East and West, and at Prescott with the Northern Rail Road Trains for New Y'-irk and Boston—also with the La&e Steamers going West.

L e a v e s P r e s c o t t at 13; ao, p . M., on the arrival of the Qrand. Trunk Trains from East and West, and the Northern Bail Road Trains from New York and Boston—also the Lake and River Steamers {rom the East and West, ar­riving to Ottawa ©ty at hi 00 P. M.

A C C O I T D t O D A T I O * T R A C K , Leaves Prescott at 6: SO. A. M., an arrival of the Brand Trunk trains from the West, arriving; In Otta­wa OJty at 10:10 A. M. i.

L e a v e s O t t a w a . , At l l i 15 A St, arriving Irs Prescott at 9 ; 48 A sfc, connecting with the Grand Trunk Trains from the East I

. m_ . J l m t k t h e j^jjje steamera going West. 1

H A R D W A R E , Set

~ CHANTSY & CO., • WATEB-STBEET, 0GDEH8BCHGH. N. X

D e a l e r s I n I r o n , S t e e l , IMnila, G&: S n e l f o.nA H e a r r H a r d - W a r e

Wflod and Willow Ware, and Manufacturersof Copper Brass, Sheet Iron, and Tin Ware.

Agency for the sale of India Rubber Belting, Hose and Packing ; Dqryee, Porsyth A Co's Scales and Bafea,

Ohllson's Furnaces, Metropolitan Cooking Ran­ges, Ac, Ac. 41-tf

A T T O R N E Y S A N D C O U N S E L O R S ^

E. & N. CRARY, A t t o r n e y s a n d . C o u n s e l o r s . .

li^cas,! i U D R I D A 5 B W E S T P O T S D A M .

Will promptly attend to all Legal.buainess entrusted to them.

HDWA&n CBABt, 1 St. Law. County, j saraas caaaT, Madrid. f N.Y. ) W. Potsdam.

C H A S . J. K I N G , (Formerly of the Firm of Myers k King,)

A t t o r n e y A- C v n n s e l l o r , OtTICE BJ AVERELL'S NEW BUILDING, FORD 8T.

^^Professional business entrusted to him will be promptly attended to. .

~~ E. H. NICKERSON, A t t o r n e y a n d Co u n a e l l o r

Waddlegton, St. Lawrence County, N. Y. ~" W . A. C. BRIGHAM & CO.,

Q e n o r a . 1 C o m m i s s i o n O l e r c b a n t s , Dealers la Batter, Cheese, PoTk,and all kinds of eouutry

Produce. Consignments respectfully solicited, and cash advances made when desired.

NO. 8 ED8SIA WHARF, BOSTON. w. a . o. BaidBAK, L8i-tfl Bamrri. r o « .

B B S S B S S H . each month.^^^

The snbSoriber is prepared to sell PASSAGE TICKETS in this Line. Also,Draftson ENGLAND, LdELAND and SCOTLAND. LAND W ARRASTB bonght at New York Prioes.

GEO. N. 8BYM0TJR. Aprils!!, 1S67. 128-tf 1

G O O D S . IN QUALITY AND

EYEBY Stjlt

POalTJM, OGDENSBURGB

C A U B I A G E . f A C T O R T T . I HAVE ON HAND and for sale, the moat complete lot of BCrjO-lES

"**» - - - and 0ARR1AQBS ever

offered In this place, comprising; 16 OPEN BTJ8G0S,

& BIDS SPRANG BUGGIES, 10 TOP BOGStES,

At prices defying all competition. Work will be sold with a written sflpmation that it shall be strong and d u r a b l e . T e r m s U b e r a L

teff fivery d e s c r i p t i o n of w o r k m a d e t o o r d e r . f . A. OALLAGHAH.

—' " M a»»>,nn». 0. 0 . Mrsas,

I was s tand ing in the broad, c rowded , s t ree t of a large ci ty. I t was a cold win­ter ' s day . T h e r e had been rain, and al­t h o u g h the sun had been sh in ing b r igh t lv , y e t the long icicles h u n g from the eaves of t he houses, and the whee l s rumbled loudly as they passed over t he g r o u n d . — T h e r e was a clear, b r igh t look, and a cold, b r ac ing feeling m the air, and a keen n o r t h w e s t wind, which quickened e v e r y s tep . J u s t then a li t t le child came run­n ing a l o n g — a pour, ill clad child, her clothes w e r e scant and t h r e a d b a r e ; she had no cloak and no shawl , and her little bare feet looked red and suffering. S h e could no t h a v e been more t h a n e igh t yea r s old. S h e carr ied a bund le in he r hand . P o o r l i t t le sh ive r ing ch i ld ! I pitied her . A s she passed me he r foot slipped, and she fell wi th a cry of pain : bu t held t h e bund le t igh t ly in her hand, bu t j u m p i n g up, a l t hough she l imped sadly, endeavor ed to run as before.

" S t o p ! l i t t le girl , s t o p ! " said a swee t voice ; and a beautiful woman , w r a p p e d in a h u g e s h a w l a n d w i t h furs a round her , came out of a j ewe le r ' s s to re close b y . — " P o o r l i t t le child," she said, " a r e you hur t . ' S i t d o w n on th is s tep and tell m e . "

H o w 1 loved her, and hrjhv beautiful she

looked ! 'Oh, I cannot," said ihe little girl. "1

cannot wait, I am in such a hurry. I have been to the shoemaker's, and mother

- JE^j§|jgg£[ must,finish this work to night, or she will 1st, and 26th of never get any more shoes to bind."

"To-night?" said the beautiful woman,

"to-night, ?" "Yes," said the child—for the stranger's

kind manner liad made her bold, "yes, for the great ball to-night; and these satin slippers must bespangled; and—"

The beautiful woman took the bundle from the child's hand and unrolled it,— You do not know -why her face flushed and then turned pale, but I, yes I, looked into the bundle, and on the iivside of a slip per I saw a name, a lady's name written, but I shall not tell it.

"And where does your mother live, lit­

tle girl?" So the child told her where ; and then

she told her that her father was dead, and that her little brother was sick, and that her mother botvnd shoes that they might have bread; but that sometimes they were very cold, and that her mother some­times cried because she had no money to buy milk for her little brother. And then I saw that the lady's eyes were filled with

• • -ii.,i ,,„-,!,„ bimdle Quick-

of a gentleman. Turning from the win dow, he sits down at a rosewood table, and gent ly raises the cloth, which covers half a dozen li t t le bottles, " L e t us pu t these in order , " he mut ters , t a k i n g up phia ls marked DIgital ine, L a u d a n u m , de, S y d e n h a m , C h l o r h y d r a t e de M o r p h i n e C u r a r e de J a v a , Ac ide H y d r i c y a n i q u e . " "Dev i l , I have only six d r o p s ; it mus t h a v e evapora t ed , " he mut te rs , and, replac­ing the phial , he takes up a pistol, snaps it several t imes, t hen loads and caps it carefully places it l ike a sen t ine l before the collections of poison. N e x t h e d r a w s out a pair of razors, s t rops t h e m crosswise beside the pistol. T h r e e knocks a t his chamber door in te r rup t his pleasing reflec­t ions. " T h e v are punc tua l , " bejexnlaims. " I t seems I am never to k n o w disappoint­ment .

T h e raps announce the th ree expec ted guests . T h e y en te r ; they compl iment the H o n o r a b l e Belfast on his personal appear­ance. T h e baronet , Ni thsda le , declares t ha t he looks younger , handsomer , and jollier Uian ever . T h e res t echo the opin­ion, praise his house, w h e r e he can see th* rega t t a s from the w i n d o w s ; e v e r y polite

1 speech seems to m a k e Mr . Bel las t m o r e

BV HENRY WARD BEKCHER.

A boy is a piece of . ixistence quite separate from al) things else, and deserves separate chap­ters in the natural histor r of man. The real lives of boyB are yet to be wr tten. The lives of pious aDd good boys, which mrich the catalogues of groat publishing societies resemhle a real boy's ufe about as much as a (hicken picked and larded, upon a spit, and ready f ir delicious eating, resem­bles a free fowl in the fields. With some few honorable exceptions, tl ley are impossible boys, with incredible goodnef s. Their piety is mon­strous. A man'e exper ence stuffed into a little boy Is simply monstrous. And we are soundly skeptical of this whole school of juvenile patie de foie gras piety. Apple Hhat ripen long before their time are either dissased or worm-bitten., A

So long as boys are b tbies, how much are they cherished! By-aod-by tha cradle is needed lor another. From the tmje that, a babe becomes a

*-~ is in an anoma-i no special place

assigned in Nature. T ley are always in the way. They are always doing something to call down re­buke. They are-inq lisitive !as monkeys, and meddlesome just wher< you don't wi*h them to be. Boys have a peri >d of mischief, just as they have measles or chicke l-pox. They invade your drawers, mix up your looth-powder with hair-oil; pull your laces and coll trs from their repositories; upset your ink upon ir valuable manuscript; tear up precious letters, sea tier your wafers; stick eve­rything up with expe -imental sealing-wax; and spoil all your pens in t le effort at spoiling all your paper. ,

Poor boys! What a*t they good for? It is an unfathomable myst iry that we come to our manhood (as the Israel tes reached Canaan)through the wilderness of btyhood. They are always wanting what they mi st not have, going where they ought not to be, coming where they are not wanted, and saying t t e most awkward things at the most critical time i. They will tell lies, and after infinite pains to Leach them the obligations of truth, they give us the full benefit of frankness and literalness, by b urting 'out before company a whole budget of far lily secret*.

Would you take a ijuiet nap ? Slam bang go a whole bevy of boy: through the house./ H the nervous baby at length, alter all manifer of singings, trouings, soothing?, and malerual bosom-opiates, )u-t fallen aileep V He sure an uiiman nerly bov will be on hand to bawl out for penms sion to do something or other which he has beeu doing all day without! dreaming of leave.

Who shall describe the daily battle of the hai and the bath, the ordeal of aprons for the table, seems to m a k e Mr . Bel las t m o r e andthe bam, tne oruea. u, o.|„„,.„ .„. _._

bu t he res t ra ins himself, and asks the placing and mol-ing up, the endless task ol - i - J - ;. ,„ good manneas ? If there is one saint that ought a r g r y . um, uc i^«. . ,

them to accompany him to the d r a w i n g room, where "por t and cigars will amuse them whi le he ta lks of serious m a t t e r s . " — J i .n , in answer to the bell, b r ings in an immense silver sa lver covered wi th bot t les

| and glasses. Mons ieur Belfast p resen t s him with a purse, s a y i n g , — " J i m , in e igh t days you will en te r the service of m y rela-

r-tion Si. W e e m s as first va le t -de-chanihre .

G o and admi t no one ."

T h e s tage b e i n g clear and t h e actors all present , the Honorab l e Belfast proceeds to quest ion his friends as to thei r courage . H e ascer tains tha t the baronet Ni thsda le , tn hun t i ng the crocodile b e t w e e n S y o u t and Keneli . had near ly been devoured four or five t i m e s ; t h a t Sir Richard L inn up y<=^v^ ..»„ ... .__ had been pierced by a poisoned a r row near societv, a boy secdres in a string I m i , i . i c . i _ *A ,.„ the door for the exquisite pleasure (_ haonagre , t ha t be first became m a i g o . . , .J_._ _t,_:„ 7T„0 , blue, while1 his head swelled l ike a bal loon; a f te rwards yel low as saffron, and wasted till he was no th ing "but skin and b o n e ; but the poison be ing of second qual i ty , h e had finally recovered . A s to Mr . Clifton he had been ha rdened to dea th in all its forms, on the hu lks of P l y m o u t h . W i t h these an t e sgden t s Mr. Belfast feels satis­fied t h a t his t h r e e friends h a v e a full BtOck of ca lmness and moral courage, and would a p p r o v e of his decision, after thev had an­swered his quest ion.

Th i s quest ion was, do you consider me

really h a p p y . " W e do , " t h e y replied in chorus. F u r t h e r cross examina t ion , which w e

good manneas ? If here is one saint that ought to stand higher than another on the calendar, is a patient, sweet-tt mpered children's nurse! — Talk of saintship, sii lply because a man lived in a cave, and was at* teuuous, or becuuse he died bravely at ihe stake ! What are faggot* of fiery sticks for a few hot moments, compared to those animated faggots which consume nui^cs and gov­ernesses for months and yeais, to say nothing of the occasional vatitty of parental coals !

Are we, then, no. ou the boys1 side v To b . sure we are. It is not their fault that they are bovs, not that older people are not patient.

The restless actii hy ol boya is their uecessity. To restrain it i* to thwart Nature. We need to provide for iL Nu: to attempt to fiud amuse­ment for them ; bi t to give tbem opportunity to amuse themselves. It is astonishing to see how little it requires to satisfy fl boy-nature.

First in the list I put strings. What grov.ii up people find in a thousand forms of busioess and

- lor tne eaquioiw H.^«««.v of uutying it again. He harnesses chairs, ties up his own fin­gers, halters his nick, coaxes a leaser urchin to become his horse, and drives stage—which, with boys, is the top o human attimrueut. Strings are wanted for sr ares, for bows and arrows, for whips, for cals'-ciidlest, for kite?, for fishing, and a hundred things more than 1 can recollect.

A knife is more exciting than a string, but does not last so long, .nd is uot so various. After a Bhort time it is lo it, or broken, or has cut the fin gers. But a stri ig is the instrument of endless devices, and wirt in the management and ingenu­ity of a boy. Th > first article that parents Bhould lay in, on going uto the country, is a large ball of twine. Tbe h ays must not know it. If they See a whole ball, the charm is broken. It must come forth mysteriously, unexpectedly, and as if there were no more!

For indoors, next, we should plaoe upon the list, pencils and white paper. At least one hour

F u r t h e r cross exanibmuiuu, » . , .— •-- i----». . w j , b e 8 e c u r e d by that. A slate need not repeat, brought out the opinion d J ^ v e f y g o o d _ B u , chijdren a> of the three drinkers that Lady Belfast ^pWa t 0 < 0 what men do they account.the was fond of'her husband, and that the, Ln U 9 edhalf of 3 . - » - — - »«' «t nencl to be

Honorable Belfast was sound in wind and 1 worth twice as inline u o i i » » ••'— . ,

limb, very handsome, and enormously ncn. But,' when thev were asked whether they would undertake to say that those causes of happiness would endure for ever , like sensible men, they hesitated.

•' You I are right," observed Belfast I _ . ' . . J . . „ / loir t h a t .

[21-tf.]

NATIONAL POLICE . . OAS6RXXE. .

THIS &REAT JOURNAL OS CB1ME AND criminals is in Its twelfth ycarBind Is widely cfrcn-

"—*«*•» mnritry. i t contains all the great ' - ji»~.*«.r. nit .the

T aiw that theiaay a ^ r - - - . , " Y o u we n g » i «"*" "*" — tearT- and she rolled up^he bundle quick- ^ o W n e d to rae 0 I ^ e d a y , that W n ' d gave it back to the little girl : but | , J _ . „ , , „ ; _ , „ „ fftT m v r a v e „ h a i r . -iy, <»" & __.L:.<™ otoo—no not ly, ana gave it um... w. . v ^ she gave her nothing else—no not even

a sixpence, and turning awsy she went

back into the store from

which she had rr^HIS &REAT J U U » « ^ » n d i^idei? c rcn- " V r ^ h„ store from which she tiaa

X « » V - ^ S S - t S a S i g ^ Z oL " 2 she went away I saw

- » S S S S S S S f " T l O - r of a diamond J t ^Presen t ly not tobe found JP " ^ S T ^ n n n n n s ; * 1 .

DENNIS ITTMOTT, A t t o r n e y a n d C o u n s e l o r a t L a w ,

LABSENA VILLAGE, ST. LAWRENCE 00TJNTY, ' NEW-YORK. [29-tf]

BBOWN" & Sr 'ENCER, A t t o r n e y s , C o u n s e l o r s , d e c ,

| V Office lately occupied by James * Brown. r. o. BBOWS .' J. o. srraora.

A|>riH3,1854. Sl-tf

(OB,!«-. _ Superintendent*

connecting With ^ ^ ^ ^ m e ^ g o t o g Weat. and Westr^also with the Lake steanv g ^ j ^ -

Presoott, May 15,1S5T. t W

T. " tssT.

I . Q. SHLWELLV I A t t o r n e y a n d C o u n s e l o r a t L a w , I JTus t f ce o f t n e P e a c e <fc T o w n C l e r k , 1 i t OfJBBHaBDKPH, NEW-YORK.

esT" Office, in ST. LAWEMCS RrprmuoiS fialldlng, IaSJeU* street. [44-tfj-

L a w ,

B u f f a l o t o Ctxicagii, TOLEDO. MTLWAtTKBE, KACWtl, KENQU^, . . .

KEGAS, OALENA, BOOS ISLAND, WELIM TON, DCBOftOB, HAmSON, IOWA CITY. SI.

Louis, ST. PADL, AND ALL PLACES LN THE WEST ANT> SOUTH-WEST.

The following New Low Pressure "steamsrs form the Line from ' " '* '

B u f f a l o t o T o l e d o , Connecting with tin

n i C H i i e & ! C S O E f t t E R W & N O R T H ­E R S I N D I A N A R A I L R O A D ,

P L Y 843 MIXES TO CHI0AGO.

MOBE1S & VAB.Y, A t t o r n e y s a n d C o u n s e l o r s ! a t

OGDENgBTJEGH, NEW-YOBK. Office—Marble Bow, Corner o f Ford and Water-Streets.

, « , AH proftaslonsj onsmeii'entrusted to them will I 0f~ ADDITIONAL BOUNTY JLANT) obtalnedundei Ubelate" Act of Congress; passed M»rch.8rd,ia55.

aspaoi KOaais- .{IS-tf] m n n H. VA»T.

. rAJ t«e r j j ey» jponnse . l , o r , 4"c»» Gives his entire »ttentI4*%6 the practice of hisprofes. sioni andsolioitspatronagsv •

* ^ ~ QfBce—flornerof fsrd «nalsibeU«^tre«t»,Oi-

she first admired me for my xaven hour.— Should I become bald like you, Cluton, should I lose my fortune, orhAvetowear a wig, 1 should no longer be perfectly happy, therefore I am determined to de­part- before trouble comes."

j -—- , i After announcing tihis determmation,

W s s T ^ a r f ^ i t ' r o H a d bfe The little g.d fae l h r e e f r i e t l d S j o n b e i n g a8ked their

S f f i T a T e r g h e r a moment, and with her ^ . ^ a p p r o v e d to^Mf* 1 0 O K e u - ,.t._ . i — iLor-were be-1 f - .. -.i. „„ ,.r,or.imitir Tobmh strikes

?$; fbr air months, tbe glitter of a diamond pin. Presently should- write their, she came back, and stepping into a band

,.,„. :-~» inroll«d dffi. Theli t i

onuaeu u.. . v,. f letter and a bit of pencil to be worth twioe as touch as any slate.

Upon the wh >le we think a safe st-earn of wa­ter nearby affo-dsthe greatest amount of enjoy­ment among all natural objects. There is wadmg and washing; Uere is throwing of stones, and finding of pebbes ; there Is engineering of the

" n to the principles) we fy^«J£&& forefathers. But i« an f ^ ' j S e * faltered, and that day was lost Let Owse contributed to this resx.lt * e ^ t t a " ^ ^ of the conseqnenceB of their^acts a cons^H almost csrtain.totie foUojed b y ^ e c * ._

'HttlC bare feet, coldtep than

•fore, ran qnickly away. 1 went with the little girl, and I saw

her t,o> a Barrow damp street, and into a staalL dai|c room ; I saw her mother—her sad,-faded mother, but with a face so sweet, so patient—ihusbing and soothing a sick baby. And, the baby slept and tbe moth­er laid it on her lap, and theibundle was unrolled, ami a dim candle helped her with her work; .for tho'ogli'ft wgB'iiot j e t night

i ., , her room "was very dark. Then afterja !£S~ - .tP*1 while she kisse^ her littte girl, and bade -fevumM0& .•» j^her warm her poor frozen feet over the

' ••-•• , l opinion seriatim, appiuvcu wu,ou~.— • - - u j o ^ wtucn (eoupy our iate« ,™ . - - - -they were be-I r . i t h ^ unanimity which strikes K,]™ a r e found in the occasion*! hours ot Doy

sent the gun number three to the baronet, crocodile-killer, the enamelled dressing case to Sir. Richard, and a painting by Ostade to the Doctor

j hhr warm ner poui u.^^^. edanty fire in>trie- grate, and', gave'.her a little piece of breadt for she had^no more; atid fben she- heard her 'say her eVening prayer, and folded her tenderly-to nerltbs-

<, „ J'I.„» „T,iT.*tali her Ihat Ihe' an

i t a d e t o u ie ^uoi* . . . .

" Adieu my fri«»d,"t murmurs Nithsaaie, wiping away a tear, '

"Think of us somqtimeft,. my gooa »ei-Tast," sigbs Richard Linn. *

"If you choose firetarms," said Br. UUt-ton "put the barrel to the temple, but not top near. That is the best plaS, «o.««ur ofwounding without killing outright. — With this bit of advice" Belfast reUWs.be-

doni

the^laee of S f ^ r * * , ^ * m^ er, iS * e piwff ^ - ^ ^ *<*•

--«,«:pTfeto,»:#' »"a" °f *'*•• | ;<mrt of *PS^»*te - ^ f " " <" H*™"

, - r f«»Ta*w| f f«P- - «-«8e«S***'

{ -•J,o_«ie*«iBie CoAt fbTfl»';»on»th' ^t2T«5«df Aiuni 0.. » * » . »»"-» I*r t r»r* 'Jle •*** #& V*****?*'

Jfoaotie* • St. L»rr*ce and Pranklin. PS** tLSO'jO.BP'ELBCTH) FOE

,i;ncoCIETY : t

^ r o ? £ ? | - , . m . t h e 8 . a P , . o f N » .

% place , < . ^ I & J ^ ' J Allen

i a l n ^ i a d . T & a . H;. * « £ $ • , , Hods'wrt.. ,

tiof. 6f8a- > f <*&*** **>•** **3 -•

\r^y^?WfJ4 TTEADtSYV-•jW ".fA-rseiiiT rJ-S-A^: •;

' f'-- .-,-r y£%, lJtrtti* C<-c^7-

wesrmxr Hsknopolis. t-i. vwn, etnar, Leave* Bofiatoofendwii «jB4Thnrsd»Ji.

• •ITT OF S J^ i lAiO, A. D.exaraa,Com'r, Leaves Baftaio Tuesdays and rV&aya.'

inCTSSBN WCB1QAS, t . B; 9otD9strtB, Ootn'r,-Leaves BnfStIB Wedneadaykitna atHsaatS*

Leaviog Sfiohlgan Sentuern S»a Road Dock, toot ot MAin-Skreet,Baffilo,eTeryeTcmngT(«nnday»exceptea>, at 9 o'dock,or immediately after 4he arrival of the Bx-pr«n Tram from Boston, Albany and Hew-York, through to Toledo without liading, where passeursrs, take the to t-oicoo wuaous ™-^ri£i.?lh1ea«o?»»llraiirtn«r»e»r-

JUDS30N & POWELLi * t t i o r n e y s a n d C o u n s e l o r s a t L a w ,

OGDENSBCRQH.ST. TxaiWBEKGX CO., N. Y. Office, No. S Eagle Block, Pord-street, up it»;lrr. >

toseros » JOTBOS tST-tf] /oawPowni^jj!..

* 0. W. BALDWIN,

O S D r a 8 B T J S 0 a ! ^ o A W t ^ l ^ i | & . , t l . Y. «-ly Office In Oustom-HouseIluilding.

~ G R O C E R I E S A N D P R O V I S I O N S .

^--Wfeit."'^1 , . <«t^."i. , ' t t

With this bit of advice" Belfast retWes.be- • ^ . t t a t o ^ f t ^ ^ S i A f * * hTudthe sc^e. into the darkness.o! W 1 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

^ y ^ a i W Wded ^**^T£?£J%: I chamber. f S l r ^ . h e a r a *he no.se o£ a no^togeou f ^ , * ^ r ^ P I Z „m Weied'ner, andrtoW. Her fjiat l i e an a , $ d s a r o b b e r , feaW ope» > « d ea ,,„,. But boys have hours of geat

'£%&'*lX^_'r2^ ^ - B^i8J?{f ^ ^ ^ boy wants and tHe

Mm to listen ai IIIB B.OJ»«'° T««= «- -•<-

I r th tTo lmand gorgeous daf t ia f twA* ^ s t s , hearing the repor^beS^eHw, S a 6 a d e l w i t h ^ t h a > . ^ begW to talk' 0**jto*#* t r l . ^ 1 nf which spared to to|# ^ u . / r a d v Belfast can now marwiier pi

I

i, the next evoning after oeatuigatObiesKstsjuh a

)uth.W«»t«»n4W*BBer»«Qla*asiienigiMi .-. . Passengers, by delivering their Checks to the Ageaton

the Cars, can hsVTe.t^^^A«MM con-rejed to the &m%, tree of charge,andeiiaekt&thrasgh. .

Parties destined tor Kansasiwilsand this* most desir-ihlerouWtsripeexl tndcoSortl

POT the prompt dispatch et »r( i , n t , the'Lme has oh-aqoaled facilities. AH Preirlrlttoaid be marked "0»re of 0. sorbes," Agent of OpmpanyijhjjraB,. Buffalo.- '

At ToleuB.thSldne ofSAefcSeji etmseew srlth lihff TOLBOO, WABASH ASB wBaaaaT^gE9A0.'

, " <6onii, P o r k , *?SV % % eW-TBEMS, 0ABH. Ql«¥^» l t ?°& m p v O h e e a e , WLi^sSfrfs Peaa.and alfWndsof OormiryProdnoe.

i u > « o o ^ 0QDr Bttm6H ' O. L. HO* i l l > .

T o t e d b , Qfs

B n d g e , ffl* w i t h

^ ^ ^ „ - B o a n ^ ^ 1 W S J f S r a can b . parchaaed at aU Sail j

THROBStt « * » f S , S f EAStl «n£rAgen«s of the' Road i n i Steamboat 9mca Wri,f^!J.Sew, York j

B. t. rWat»,'Betrol«; " " . J J v 9* , i? ' -S ,T» /. •

'...;• *."','- '-•'•: V. ;."eenersj Saperintenrltnt,; E7.SA DOWNEK,.3ErAv.'4g?nt.

March'ITM^ftf- ._ ".-

D U C G S A N D WIEDICUMES.

'E.Simsxsmm,.

\ . ' < b » K l f f l « - » m * t s t r ? C l V r 1 \ ' - -"

w& : t<i»ta'ToC»,Cnrl»'»ia. Braids, ikpVori h»h.dvoi;

'-•V4»Qit fr^f+^j -^..-^ __ :

^ p o r t i o n of which spared to ber-wdrilat ; give wannth'-airl c6rnftrrt?te: h»%iirable

y If such ..-'thoughts' pame, em.aBuaiiJ;ol ftilleasaht coitage^nrl al, opft SKQ deftriy loted her, audi irjioiejatrijne ha^ kept winit - frdnvhe* And .... . , biiiS whoconlfJl never dbttie btck^if tihtieJ thoughts did come reptnihglyj'' th^t*' $&% came anotheri-and ,.t^«t widow's''tstt^f wtlTe clasped^ and tr-- ^QO''* r;finr(>rl,lovi-.'jtl: -deep contrition,!!as.

." ItheiS conffl ence and caresses, -cverv u«y ™»»»» , I somi one < Ider-tnttri Wnjself, to sJwm.*f_mV &>

tney^reis >"frolicsrOT0fittBen6raLiis» very i&£? Sbnrceoff offering. One of * e most.ctomta form; of s tfahDM, i? * « which' "tuseito rec-

Lthat Lady Belfast c a n n . o w W m ^ m % ^ V SfeMtnSet fM a little ohijd, but als?

sin Hen ry ; the o t V , ' f t a t ? $ m . J # k j i t t l . , o iiMren. ; . , ; . , . . . ^ y

* o i bear of the banktnptoy of hig,bauK!r,4 r : ,A l hoi iandi.thtogs aro blamed m j ^ j a m ^ .

d i a R b o l a i ; i h i i t Belfast was• .**#%•**,***> ^ W ^ ^ ^ S f f r i i S S M ^ ^ *>* ijS|rimg»ira*: probably have dietjof apoplexy. • 'YoUUWr'^""-1*—' -•<""™ri,ns*aiBnfom-owB

d'her Mx^"\.- ' p n bearing these unpleaiant truth?; th| | i ikings + -Mi'P. in a rag?, vows vengeance against th4 cousin .Henry,; the banker a n d . j h ? 0)4 cousin ueury^tuo ^ » r . . - . - r » . —--•

doctor, and is i e ^ r m i n e § ' ' % inoSjsvhitn,; self in life." s H e gives Lowel t w o t h P * 3 c ^ p S a n ' ^ h e f e : m M ^ i g - l seir ,n ...e. •,, A « « . ; » • - - - - • - . . ^ *

S c ^ i o ^ a 8 - S £ e a r 4 t o ^ S i f o r O T e me, for thou doeat all things; ^ : m M Q b c e . DecsendingJWr£ l e r i S - m * * * Wjtfieei^ j M t ^ t o to the r o b b ^ h o a V n ^ ! ; p r o ^ e a ^

1 !:.:i." ^ *M*n*r **'*^-f

•M. u..u«,•»"5J£-gt_«5..;rs»t

trii. rrsraAics Oa., i

- ' , « « »-"KOW-.« ITS riFXH.

i \

\ffc KBfiS KOv7 OS^ B A S B I COTJSTaT , W M S t o S ^ o a r t h oT iu iy qctanvttUe,, I

^«SiwlKSW 'HatiH:yowatrCti.<i«h»«j»»hw'-•---•...' . ..' ._ . ~[-29-t.r) > . , . - ' '

f f t r ' M t o ^ ^ , . . ^ a i e r . ,

wiam blaw«w« ^t^-^'W^tta s p i l e d aaihtwed > ^ f % £

f- l'M„ orkte had never knows hefprev ^ m

*N W f ^ S S w S « % « ^ « r S d r a w i t l g & $ $ * $ & f f e S s p o i l / n o t h i n g . k ^ 5 a ^ W t y , f i t e t i w

UaaVno voice likP-,rnu3ic,;p , » ^ P £ g ^ o f t b o M - Faoscu*^- that. ho. shall

3 f b A o h b r a b l e M . * * a | t ^ U * a £ h , h £ ^ S f f S ! f f b & i l following eughr nights ni ditches; 6r m^'^efcyfgwcjt* WVU

, -i of robber spies;. At the end of that time

"sild

k^mk&^t^'^n A«Q -" naitt.1 '* **ersrs.-

LVOV * t O * S I E 1 1 * ? EAaSlSTtBi ASD 4 t f S » * - W * * • " * ' ^ j

***2&£2°*%i o m o s , J^,»ir»ci«r-J^tm-L ".-pn* ^ « " w

B IHE&BSCKlHEElitTIJISfiAPi • • a n a - . ' ««Mdets^lnaiswisaeittf'S«r*ettf^^ mEMf t in . thee^aps^sfss . j A w ^ e n ceeoaSt f<

1 SertTWi Je«tee» to- «fc »Wprlttor», of tfc* a»l4«M«4

ii^V^*r^^°*niWa«^w;., "BniieU.ABrll'SH^lW-. .' - 1«>-«W

'i»

bS,-Jnar««~. 'J j , . . ' . . - _ _ _ J - i ± 2 S l _

0 » . , . PlUt»l)B«Plll** .

. I o r tooth H«xe»i , . Iff n'EPlttftTO APAETMtNW-

; - j : ., At I -»

^ J B L O T W I K Q BILWHI I i TTJ»rr^I»fStf-*S3> ^ R SALK AT THU

fc""*riiT%Hcock» mj*w<# * wwnui. « « | & i t , H » I .

\Zbi % aa* young, happy ttcw, ««»*

taetit, t * 3- A " * ! i ^ T w l s » W » M » . . * » ! • • wnnaftdieS

^y.ritfany. »••«-*- —- T-J—--,- "•--*. • - * There h<i mitbea. him pick . tho pQalatof Lo/d Kehdalx: pan of hw parliameutar/,

ico'llfiar-uea. IiO»«l . e 1 ' 1 ^ m £H9 s to1?1 ' |'liandk°Khicf, spreads it. « « lilt, the 9fr ' ienimil Of % l e , . w i ' « » I ' i » » 0

^dtilevury.oa.* st.ates.-Tte H«jo«g» 15 rUhe* WX of tk,- ll.eatt*r. lea^ng «8 ha tUd cloak behind, and €eS'to « • r 0 ° -

Xt^Lin Bbgftntstre^. As soon as I thVbaiuli* wlurns, the II. P. eWlaims;

"jLo-w*!, J"00 a r e a 'noi'stor, »« ; * a W I W u l i y w ^ W f T H ! " , * „ . r m i i e d m a t - "JUO-W^ }'«« u l c ** « « « « « » . - . , „

tS3wll»l**f»l«.»«-!,• ' ~ ' „ • «

• ' ' * • . . ' ' l

e ' • • . • ; , T v

u : " W e h a v e hoard a n d ^ a d rrMich la te ly

of the ' w a y in which seamen a re t r e a t e d in t h e commercia l • marin)e, boitf th i s case t h r o w s all o thers into t h e ' s h a d ^ w h e t h e r a s r e g a r d s t h e b ru t a l tor ture-wh^ch accom-•panied t h e ext inc t ion of life o rHhe delib­e r a t e and sys temat ic m a i m e r ih w h i c h i t w a s carr ied 'out. Rose , if, appeared , had sh ipped on board in the m o n t h of Apr i l , and the of torfftre commenced 'be fo re the v o v a g e begaiv.. Tie w a s ' u s e d i so shame­fully t h a t h e absconded from t b e ship, was b r o u g h t back, p laced in i r o n i a n d from t h a t t ime unt i l dea th released h)m from his sufferings, the cap ta in and firsf, m a t e s of the y essel m a d e his t o r tu r e their'idaily spor£ I t was proved on the t r ia l t ha t h e w a s flog­ged e.-ery day by the th ree* p r i sone r s ; t ha t a large.mast i f f dog wa.s set to w o r r y him, which tore the flesh fromjbis body in la rge slices, caus ing t h e i bloojl to flow in streams , and leaving, bjehiiidf t he most I ghas t ly w o u n d s a n d u l c e r s ; r b a t a n iron 1 bol t was pu t across h is m o u t h ajid h is h a n d f ! chained to a s t rong bolt in t h e d e c k behind his back ; tha t he was pu t in,to an e m p t y Cank and rolled a long the defck ; t h a t his own e x c r e m e n t was forced doxyn his throat -t h a t he was sen t aloft to furl sails, and se; vere ly bea ten witli a rope before m a k i n g the a s c e n t ; t h a t a rope was fclaccd round

I his neck, a*nd lie was raised frpm the deck to t h e e leva t ion ol th ree feet, w h e r e he was suspended fur some minutes , and tha t wlipn lowered he fe l fon his back like a ddad iiiini ! Dea th a t 'lengtli, uxjre char habit- than his -persecutors, pu t an end to his sufferings w h e n his b o d y -was found to be indented with the marks; of t h e rope and his wounds full of maggejts. Tl ie evi­dence w a s so clear ainll ind isputable that the th ree misc rean t s were found gui l ty , bu t the ju ry , from some ex t r ao rd ina ry obiu»e-ness, r e commended them, to m e r c y — m e r c y . t o w a r d s the wre t ches , t he recital of whose deed m a k e s t h e blood of eve ry lis­t ene r and reader run c o l d ! ' * B u t Mr. 15a-

[ ron W a t s o n , despi te t h e warning , senten-| ced the trio of m u r d e r e r s to ,be h a n g e d by

the n e c k — a merciful p u n i s h m e n t as com pared wi th the i r b ru ta l and cowardly treat­ment of thei r u n h a p p y v i c t i m "

lolders, who uHiaaUive on the, soil,,and .make ilaws which! hotreernan'couH bear; tb& legisla-jtnre and these »aw8iJB*6mpheia by the' -president* and congress i and thejfreaidentis tiowenfoKsmg'

1 nhem, because he'says htfctaaspp dispensing pow­er. But how does it happen, that this Legislature. jand these lawS exist? yi$t> are r"""""!iv">

for them? ws exist • „ n 0 ajg reauauDiuo

dor- t s e n y Who called tu'em.. into being ? [The party which has-inow conbr,t,!0{ ( j j e ggjj. Bral Government, the partly against Jih^ebj^tg con. tend, the party which seeks to carry %e, g^ate of ]New York at rhe coming election, aria, wfiich would be emboldened to- re-opett the slava^rig if it should succeed in bearing down the d«mo. cratic republicans. • - t .

™ - « , t f ^ ! ^ ! ? ^ ^

- ' V» JBifi 'JratJUH»a["«»s -- TB«AlfenadA«:N»*rSPAEBE*A01SXv _

i A-g.niW6r:ajffispen»n**'I«ldlta?# t o t * e A ° ? * I iraaimriB eASStfesoawnoiBat thejame rate teq.nlre<i by us. Hto6nWer*reat ' "

JOSTON—ScoIIay's Building, Oonrt-Street; •illrWJTORTft arflmBBaBjMmgt" . _ _. „ . fHTLAMiLPBJA—K, W. cor. ™ r d «nd Ohesnnt^a. lAI.TMOBjgiw.Ioi.North.anagayette-S^eets.

fiorf^ttfSoutffiesrxSi resoliifion, respecting the reclamation of fugitive slaves, was adopted, ffhe majority address and resolutions were then abnpted.. • . . ;s.. - ' f , c „ ' The S&te Committee then reported as tollows:

Dist 1—E. D. Morgan, James W . Nye,, B. J . Msniere. ' ' , ' , ! _ ; Dist 2—John G. Floyd, A. P.Stanton, Lewis. C. Piat t

Dtet 8—John L. Schoolcraft, J . W. Forsyth,

POLITICAL. T h e

Qonvent i n a t R e p u b l i c a n S ta t e

S y r a c u s e . *t

ADDRESS AND [RESOLUTIONS.

Below we give the Address ahd Resolutions of

the Republican State Convention, held at Syra­

cuse on the 28-1 ultimo. , We last week spoke in

t-ommendation of the meifc whot e names are on the

Republican Ticket, in ahothercolumu of this pa­

per. W e in>ite the ca.if.-ful attention of our read­

ers now to the address and resolutions which

were adopted by thdxjooveutioti, reported by Mr.

FiELH.

T H E ADDRBSS. Fellow-CItksena of the State of A'«p York:

Two dangers threaten our institutions—slavery and official corruption. The 'republican demo­cratic party is hostile to both, and will never cease to combat both, so long as thei- exist.

The influence of slavery hastbeen injurious to the country ever since it began. From the time when it stipulated for the continuance of the slave trade twenty years, down to She time when it of-' fered two hundred -millions for the purchase of Cuba, it has beeu the jfreat, idisturbing element iu our political system, It has ever been grasp­ing, encroaching, aTofeant and domineering. It has spread in extent ahd increased in power. It has appropriated to itself the) greater part of the offices of the government, dictated its policy, for­eign and domestic, and so debased the public sen­timent, that multitudes now. proclaim slavery a ^jod, and its extension a proper aim of Govern­ment. H I

Since tbe last Convention if the republicans of New York, two'aggressions ,have been made by the slaveholders whibh ares unexampled in our history ; the decision lof the Supreme Court of the United States in the case ofj Dred Scott, and the letter of the President to ttie clergymen who ad­dressed htm on the apitirs oi Kansas. The decis­ion in Dred Scott's «ase followed naturally upon the Presidential eledjion. Hideed, it is hardly too mdeh to say, that b i t for tlie untoward result of the election, tbofdecision wbuld never have been given. If we had elected Sremont, and inaugu­rated a new administration (devoted to Freedom,

-i:--~ -,.-Q,it,f-r.£i8Dr have been

channel, oesiuea u n a . »»...b.., —.., _ . tive to that nameless attraction of beauty which especially*hovers about the sides of streams; and though they may not recognize the cause, they are persuaded if the faot that they are very hap­py when there are stones with gurgling water around them, ihady trees and succulent under­growth, mosa ind water-cress, insect, bird, and all the populat on of cool water courses.

But boys ar i not always boys. All that is in us In leaf, is hi them in bud. The very yearnings, the imaginings, tbe musings, yea, the very ques­tions, which ocoupy our later years 4s serious

' - - " ^ J : - *l--» « n n o o i n n n l h o u r s of b o y -

r ^ t e r r ' i F S e effort, o f ' * , democratic repubh-• * " — I . I

-When we say aus, we u«.« o— 0

isfy every friend of freedom, and every lover of good government, that our success now issoarce-ly less important than it was at the lastJPresiden-tial election. If we can hope ever to retrieve the losses which Freedom has sustained and is con­stantly sustaining, we must stand firm now, and show the state of New York as the immovable bulwark against the slaveholders' domination.

The other great evil which menaces us is offi­cial corruption. Official action is not unfrequent-ly affected by the hope of pecuniary advantage, and in some instances—very few, it is to be ho­ped—that money has been paid directly to official persons for their vote or influence.—The meutioa of such a fact is enough to excite the indignation of every friend of republican institutions, and of every honest man. Already the good name of Our country has been injui ed by the stories which »re current respecting the state of things atWash-ington, at Albany, and in the city of New York. There are jobbers in legislative grants and otbet private schemes, hanging abont the capitol of the nation, and the capitals of the states, who solicit m mbers of congress, and members of tbe state legislatures, and offer to the feeble minded and the wicked, unworthy inducements for their votes. These two things, fellow-citizens, must not be al­lowed to last, for they sap the foundations of our instil .'tions. Corruption must be destroyed or it will destroy the government,

Thatthere%hould be men of such unspeakable baseness as to Bell themselves as they sell cattle, is bad enough, but that such meu should be abie

[ 30 to deceive the people, as to reach> places of I 6-ust, almost surpasses belief. One would think

that an honest people would be sure to have hon­est representatives; "but such is either the facility with which we are irapbsed upon, or such the vice of our plan of election, that we do find ma­ny of oar representatives corruptible, and what is more, we .find sometimes thatthose who have beeu corrupted are re-elected.

Surely these thing3 need only to be known to be corrected. There are two remedies; the first

I is the election of honest men—this would be cer-[ tarn and complete; the second less oeitain and

complete—legislation. The legislative remedy which promises most success is, first, a different mode of legislation, and second, penalties against what is called " lobbying."

The only mode of legislation which ought to be kjiown iu our republican system, is by genefal laws. Special legislation is opposed to our theo­ry, and is the source of • corruption. Our present Constitution inculcates' most strongly the duty of general legislation only, and yet in the last sess­ion the legislature passed 81# statutes, of which only lu6 are general. The rest were purely spe­cial, and very many of them ought never to have been passed. Special acta are those chiefly from which pecuniary benefit is derived, and therefore the only ones iu which there is any motive to cor­rupt a legislature. Cease to pass special acts, and the services of " lobby agents" will be no lon­ger sought, and tbe source ot corruption will fail.

And in these cases in which special legislation is resorted lo, i» it'uot possible to prevent the private soliciting of members ? Why should it be anv more proper to ask privately a member of the Legislature, to rote for your bill, than to ask privately a judge to decide for your side of a con­troversy ? It should not seem difficult to regu­late to a considerable extent the soliciting of bills; to require that it should only be in public, before committees, and to punish all irregular and private applications. We commend this sub­ject, first to the electors, in the hope that they will see to the election of honest representatives, and mil imUh f/icm when elected ; and then to the Legislature, that they will adhere to general legislation, whenever it be possible, and uiake an effort to prevent the irregujp and private solicit­ing of bills.

Official corruption has been most glaring in I the City of New-York, where a struggle has been

carried on for several years between property owners, seeking to maintain their rights, on tbe one side, and spailers and plunderers on the oth­er. The struggle is still doubtful. The next election-will probably decide^ whether the city is to be given up to spoil, under its present munici­pal rulers, or whether it shall be saved by the election of a different class of officers. The Dem­ocrats, as they choose to call themselves, and as we are willing to call them in contradistinction to Democratic Republicans, have already raised the taxes, i'n three years, from less thau five to more than eight millions, and are now striving to continue tbe present city government, with the Jisyor now in office at its head, a mau of whom

,.it is difficult to Bay wh'feh most to condemn, his private or public character. The elections of \ this autumn will decide whether the Democratic

| Republicans shall drive this man from the post he has dishonored, or whether the Democrats shall retain him with, his subservient aldermenl

councilmen and confederates, to impoverish and despoil that devoted city.

Citizens of the State ot New-York: fellow elec­tors : the choice is before you. You are to de­termine whether the State shall be governed by a party calling itself democratic, which believes in the inequality of men and the right of one to buy and sell another; and which in that part of the State now undtrr its control, presents the worst instance of mis-government which this country ever beheld—or by the Democratic Repnbl;cans, who believe in the equality of men before the law, in the inalienable rights of every human be­ing, iu a simple but firm government, in the eco­nomical administration of affairs; and who will strive to secure the purity of the elective fran­chise, and the purity of legislation.

.C..L. Beale.- m , _ \ Dist 4—Edward Dodd, Wm. A. Wheeler, Hen-ty^lhurchiu. „ _ . ,

Ditf.6_D. ft LiMeiohn, J . 3. Briggs, 0 . Litte-field. «*v * • 'Dist 6 ^ B . WiUiams, B. F. Bruce, A. 8. Di-

•^en,- '°5r- ' C. Smith, Alfred By, Duvall

Dist 7—M Ransom.

Dist 8—E. .G. SpsMrW p. Dorsheimer, A. 8. TTpham. - '- -.. • A vote of than|S)to tnaisicirBof the Conven­

tion was adopted unanimou%j a^/er which the Convention adjourned Une (fe.v-

Bttr. Giddings npon.tfee^ejiffiejjVa letter. tiiroiaNrpiED mragioN. *

uuwu.. .. - -Jive secreu^ ucm^ „.,„ „ r ._ lem discussed in latter life that is not questioned by children. The ere uion of the world, the origin of evil, divint foreknowledge, human liberty, the 'immortality cf the soul, abd various other ele, ments of slal Orate systems, belong to childhood. Men, trace tl e connasttAns 'bf truths, and their ethical applii ations and relations, but the simple elements s)f the most recondite truths seem to bave gained in them very little by tbe progress of years.', Irjdeed, all truths whose root and life is in'.the Infibite, are like the fixed stars, which becoma-no larger under the most powerful teles-scope than to the natural eye. Their distancelia. too Vast to niake any appreciable variation in

[•magnitude possible. They are mere points of figM. '

cene do not avert * 6 B f c i fc iecUoa from T l . e . n e x t s t e p w | l p r 0 ^ f l y b e ^ ^

- ^ ^ f e £ ^ . d o p t e d a t t h e R e p u b l i c n S t a t e C o n v e n t i o p ^

Net? Yorlrcatf hole ^ V ^ ^ . - J t present " P ' a t Syracuse September 23d, 1867»

Meithat conflict w « * « t f » i * g # - g £ £ £ J> | o f t h e Btoe of New-York a d h e r ^ ^ ^ between the 6e«j and .fha slave eiem

d o c l n e ^ f e « t e £ f y j a S . " tional esectttrve-. JKr « * W * d l * * • U u i o n > slavery in every W f ^ S i * ] Constitu-

• tecansoi t i s W n i z e d % the " J * " ^ £ha- t

tton^ Slavery, b j ^ f c ^ K W t e n c O iustmmen^to'exlstinywaiere, todi\ t» «™> h?a part o h t a f T O Sf* * ^ r S j ^ H , 'i*> not L n follow fiat * # ^ e K S d n ^^^d^XSo^^btedly which tfrey-abnoi . { J ^ K X a i r existence cf r e c o & the f f e f J ^ ^ ^ S fe

. Professor S'liliman and fortyitWo other distin­guished men of Connecticut recently addressed a letter to President Buchanan, upon the Subject of the difficulties in Kansas.

, Premising that tbe right of the people to enact their own-laws and elect their own officers con­stitutes a fundamental principle in our Govern­ment, they delicately and appropriately expressed their grief that the President, through Governor Walker, should now employ the army of the Uni­ted States to compel the people of Kansas to obey laws enacted by residents of Missouri, and to res­pect Territorial officers in whose election they had no voice. ^ t "• To these charges Mr. Buchanan was, from his position, under no obligation to reply; yet he ap­pears to have been irapressed*wlth a belief that he could so answer aa to render his guilt a t least doubtful in the mindB of the more unthinking portion of the community ; and, after mature de­liberation, he replied, admitting, if the charges be correct, " his name should be consigned to in-/amy." To this the whole country will respond a hearty amen. .

But our wonder and astonishment is excited when we read the whole ot Mr. Buchanan's an­swer, and find that he tacitly and tully admits ev­ery charge and averment made against him by * Professor Silliman and his friends. He does not deny a single fact or averment advanced by them. Nor could he do so, as those facts have become mattei s of official reeord, and have already passed into history. But, admitting these facts and charges, he attempts to justify his conduct by saying that whjnJbe.came into office as President he fount! the laws complained of in force, and tbe<-officers iu the exercise of their functions, and then urges that it was his duty to continue that state

[- of things. In tins assertion he falsifies the whole history ^

of tne Kansas difficulty. The Free State men, comprising three-fourths of the population, had never acknowled nor obeyed those lawB. They had withstood all attempts to enforce them; and now, at this moment, Mr. Buchanan is, by his officers and by the army, endeavoring to enforce enactments of those Border Ruffians, which have ever been regarded and treated by the Free State men of Kansas as the enactments of foreign usurpers, without either moral or legal force, and insulting to the self-respect of American freemen.

But suppose Mr. Pierce had, by the power of tlie army, compelled the Free State men to obey those laws, enacted by the border ruffians of Mis­souri and the meu appointed to office by them, wduld that fact justify Mr. Buchanan iu commit­ting the same outrage upon the fundamental doc­trine referred to by Prof. Silliman ?

Had the argument of Mr. Buchanan been ad­vanced by some pettifogging attorney, or tyro in morals, or bar-room politician, we should have -regarded it as unworthy of notice. But we are mortified at reading such aa article from the pen of a President of the United States. -Does Mr. Buchanan, or do the leaders ol his party, suppose the people of the Free States so ignorant as not to hold him, who sustains an,d enforces these in­famous laws of Kansas, and carries out the des­potism and usurpation ol the Border Ruffians, guilty to tbe same extent, andjustly liable to tbe same penalty as those who enacted them ? Every intelligent citizen of Ohio would say that the man who advised, aided, encouraged, sustained or sanctioned, the invasion of Kansas, is just as guilty as were those usurpers who, with force and arms, invaded the Tenitory, and seized upon its Government l

At the time of that invasion Pierce, and Cass, and Douglas, looked on in silence, saw the out­rage, aad theu, assuming all the responsibility of the invasion and usurpation, they took upon them­selves the infamy which attaches to the laws and to those who enacted them, and openly attempt­ed to justify all these wrongs by charging North­ern men with having gone into the Territory in great numbers to vote, and thereby exerted an im­proper influence in favor of liberty and justice. Thus did they, publicly and shamelessly before the country, admit the facts, and then attempt to justify this forcible usurpation, this revolting des­potism, by charging others with iiUent to do wrong. In this subterfuge, this miserable effort to waive responsibility, Mr. Buchanan united, ap­proved the outrage, and ran for the office of Pres-ldenfupon the express understanding and expec­tation that he would pursue the same coarse, and carry out the objects of the invaders and usurp­ers. All his appointments in Kansas have been made with that object. HIs*n6le influence has been exerted for its attainment, and he now stands before the world .involved in all the moral and political guilt aDd crime of that invasion, and of the enactment of those infamous laws, and stained with ail the blood that has been shed to enforce them. But the President, assuming the invasion of Kansas to have been just, the infa­mous enactments of those Border Ruffians to have been legitimate and constitutional, and the men appointed to office .by them to be duly authorized to rule the people of Kansas, proceeds to de­nounce the Free State men of that territory aB rebels, insurrectionists and traitors, in abont as good set terms aSiGeorgelH and his associates denounced Jefferson, Hancock and Adams,.and their assopialeSi for resisting the Stamp Aot and the mininna'whom he appointed to office, and

— ' — „ A on . rmv to serve the Free

ty 01 l i m c , w v. — ~- " - - . J£ bility and firmness t i tbe dqofflf8 "\ ~j w v e r n . I T""m^i o rJwhom he appointed to otace, ana e.s.ofthe republic, that . « ^ ^ S t l « S w C ? ? ^ « npury to serve * e Free ««P» I9 t h e ^ ^ l ^ l t S e exlnt to which £ U of Kansas just as to $ « d i B > « ' ° " *

1 %

iaH&econiideration for their boy-nature, ™&\*aapprenticeesapis.Wwi.f*£°^/#mfetBr' irt.i_~™«J^Ao=onrl rmrBsses. EvBrv boy wants 1 T £r j.»joay v e reclaimed; but ^f&vtdthO

brings him, no laws of our own State, tot*

htoi, WfinbmtL -,of OCfUgriESS.wl to'tra^-thatf--' masters into I there! held to when, free"™ Now — *

'laws

State. .Soi'jOSS^toKansas

t t he pare congruous ana proper, „ c u » y oMldten' ir^uesteptenupott&ej^sale otpurow,

IliMngs tiddftHirafe^We attempt to. m 0 'jheniby a.ioan'tfSepaenj «na\not by a cbildSg* l - - - ' i d o r j 8 t , ^ | j - r ^ t f i ^ w r l . s « f . « i o l « g ! ^ '

tbe one iand ; petted,Mattered,and wSgRLai Tihe" othe'—it is Mtoniablhg how m a n y « ~ J ^ * work tn Ir way up Wan bon .e^m*uWft .K^ '

i'ofbeiei »'«nd; friendi. ''Huthan fcjffW JP? ^ elemint of,great-toughness in ^ S ^ - ' d B * * * i»o«Hni a .«? wide:pf, our^«roW?[7In _ „ , .»« ,

1 fcanylo! ildreiare spoU^.bnfclrhl11« wany ,*re

r*^?f /-.-. iii'-. - . - ' ; • **•& God to b* th* / . The «fuatry Is appoint^ o ^ ° ? » ^ n

jOottdrBi 's nursery ; the «*w ef?>* ro .SEL, , in. ' S o r m a l i g n s p i r i t « : . : * " $ * . $ « & & £ J

^™*e(i o f ^ » r i i f m ^ ! m ^

meat is the maintenance OJ'U'UM-" . . 0 — , test of a just administration is the extent to which i t carries that doctrmetoto practice, ' Resolved, That fris a contradistinction tu terms t o call-that manS^omoerat who believes to roe right of one«rfn to enslave another, or to design naxe t h a t « 4 ^ a l 0 C r a a c ; government.which swriesJ slaVjerj'jr# ^ wherever it?goes.

qriBStWd. That slavery and official corruptionH • ^ ^ ••• - ' 1". oFthe ballot-?i%a, That Slavery auu v u u . . c .

• rirpiforoachmeat upon the purity of the ballot-'Tara the»great evils whichjEhreateti our -ihsti-

-• .u_. .L„ yiomncratio Eenuhlieai

threatens to *enu au artuj w ««. . v — State men of Kansas just as the British King sent Lord Howe to serve the people of New-England.

We have in times past awarded to Mr. Bu­chanan talents far above those possessed by Mr. Pieree; but it is certain that Pierce, nor any oth­er President of the 'United States,' aver put forth

[•such shallow -sophistry as that *hlch oharaoteiuea tbeanswer of Mr.Buchanan.

Tie President's wh,ole defence rests simply up­on tihe averment, which is untrue, that when be

— J - d "—"Jo nf ITonaaa were oom>

/fifth 'doantrf.' J>p this,if for nci' other; reason; ps.fi jo-Is migMh»^o an effort eyer^ year to remow IAeirisJiren^ftr^ genaeirtpnths fotinj the citf to ^ecojotry.-.'Jpor tbe best effect it is :4*Sl»bt«

I'tbAt # 2 «»ouIa utterly leave ft^cily. behiild then- ItisaftsurAtogo Into the counlft to gpd all the luxttrie*qf»dty. It is. to get tla of jMm thatthSJ go. Men ajpo carsbcred and hum'. petcdbytooniachechvetuencejns, city, they growirUficW.: Thoy foso a rtellah for natural t?eau» andtbesirflpio cccMpatioh^ of tdral life. OurCkildren need A Separatef aBd special tnlriuig in eoWr* education. "Wo *e«d them to ths PolyMchnirmo for;cjglit. month*. Bat for' io«ir montli werssnd themtd God'eschoolui tha open-ncjjind stnjplicity'tjf the couatry, A dip&»*» in t h i ichool will no. 61 service lo body and mi'"1

Whilej life lasts, ' '

*'toisseetio*ualdlti», and Idoot »eM a

" tree,*; ' i»piied the «ertant; *'»n empty

barnjrequirce no tbttek."

tfa?,-?ppr^ 0ari mto Kansas,'

'baek]ii bu tg* 9 master taker hmvapil taffibla*8 of Kansas cr

-} mikimm. wn -mam t Fnugr-'b* taken by theiir

y , -tTJe time may jleliapsrcorne' apprentices may be taken -by le^haife t h ' Sont&SaroHfla; the e-a^uht*beinWoduotipn of free

j£r tte'Writr^lhoS*lshl»faauig;-SBier step in theiatli:#S«ggr^P.d,. is like-le the re^poidngl#ihc?:?Blave trade. We t see on what pra iplolfti «»nihe .refused, if

le lite doctri*s of th 3 Preeidect and the Su­preme Coart be t^uar-d sdapljoiiB from the Oonsti-' tutioi Wehaw >r»rD ad'thecountry agaihstthia' a»i ul! and lo^fcl consequence. Already we see

for snW*af*fnti'«id We ieball Beverj-foithwSB". if thdftur years of Mf Bnchanan's AdmioiiW-j

.tieitty«|ii»j»jj ;W«iuld>h*ra seemed as.tf-**™"*^-brAiinptimor^toj^ljaWe tbm a«'-iej .pssopri ^ w r ° 4 * e l . 'Wheal «*'«« extenaonis-o

;iiBivoiJif*«r» fcacdMs over tpo free lilioki#wWw»f*rr«*-sr'~':-'

aerviepoy to Obtain it.'tiiwW***1 *****& * ™-fioo prsparad to admit fiat f jtf «n* thttwhatever ter­

es instanllT slave soil.?--(iretation of the Constira-flag of:this country goes,

into whatever ftBW*e* chains and mansclns in

_ BOB, a»iirine.scH aShotteaV toaMt eentimeusa, *> fteASonabte to our history and tra­ditions, th«,ei« nb hobet'Of rescue, bat UnbetmU ^tl max of -aeniocratte repubUcius voters.' .

Iti»ii«»y*d4rkeiHWtbetoultwu, ,Th!«i* ibi darkest hour of the night. Never before ha* a docaine bjscn procMmed, which not only no

— ....»„„ »,„!;„„ nationolfchrijteijdotn,

acomera upon w r r v - .. , j . - r ~ - - j^gi, js untrue, tnat wnen oe

i e^rcat evils ww^hlhrfiaten^ur^sti ^ e avermemg»«" rf Kansas were oom-ipns; and that the W g L J ? * S S - ' ^tfto1M * a w l X t o » enactments of the Jf whl resolutely and positively sn-u^gie „ ^ ^ g » m < i ^ p M

•w^SSSass-sss feisiv- vz

gptopria«Bg the public f teff 1 ' p a i p t i l "

rethrnand'fauMttl a d h g t o ^ tecting-tilW*5 wl *.,.mr,t.ino- and-nromQ68&#«?; t*g '~r~Ifel*AM.. I1"

I • R

m

m

33"

m*'; \

*\'i ~Ml -n.L ^ i 0* - i . h"JS. •

- - 'I *

w " V : 'V,J

,W l '[^J^H

'**' „

'•- - > ':• J

ffi%& V. i ' y ^ •'. - *

'm^i atVVw^i

8 * - '

mm

aoarter. mL ^ o r a R ^ W nnnhssS^^aU' w « S h » irMedJctated'tortaem ^-pe»vu«-5 ^ S l v 4 T h a t ! - ™ " j ^ 2 S S i W ^ ' ttriEfaSaMnM^^ »}ti__^„ i5uiaujiuiuuHrt<''j'-»'5!>s"--'». r . 1 r&and>^uTper»n»urJi!ussouij-5iMwuu,i,o, „VM.

hoEuog'that,theSta,te * p a l r t f # | ^ v * P o * k t t e ^ t ^ officers wen appointed hy slavehold--•••- .^ _ _ t . , u - i s ' - a r Jwi^ • < ?I«M Mssowito rale pyer them. H they te-

'fu?eiffieyaretSBie shoii'fBirltsfyfiiieted, Now' promptingaad;pror#QiDg»a.a«bWtecting*Sw^ winttel^aBC&^at sueVdespe^sraf. inSeerL --teresiBofproper^###* te.H?y^|S«WA- .fees^rao|:4ihtaato.it wi^Et|tor. - ,

with tfiiiWelPaiionjof-the common- - « ^ ^ « ' - r a S . . „„ • t ^fW a i -wealth from tb|*»|SJ^nnM^e^ulstoal andI. r ' ^ S ^ ^ ^ ^ S t r S f e B <&.*#' firmi ^ S ^ ^ w ^ s w"«fr *mmr ^ T ?°SS»p 'e£Be, that labor raw

, * j S f ^ S ¥ W ? l e d g e ; 6 U r 'stfefl i^^Tnonraition to the gohetnel- — . ^

ffi SeTobby power hvlegislafio^ whareby

JSiraierent pesies have waited to W ^ «

aesolved, That the ^ a t M t * " - J v k * & \ „

rjy w v w i « i u •*]

.le#deiiwd morality i . . SPelioW-cWteni, ( '" I this is aelavB Re" 'rh^' l t*?<wN*' If:tbaVbethfc*rt»

tfon, * « * * £ * * £

Its fold*. B o B , m

Resolved, Tttat too IOUM«J«- *-.»™ . v - — . 1 never alfew4»| huinanj»ipg tone b^wjltte-13B(dl

caped from another state,' and reclaimed under ti»eciwtitiition ^*6,1feltedpates.., ^ »,.;...,

Supreme Court of the United States 1» the ***e Of: DredSoott, encttheletterpr %e Pretfiderfttoflie memorial of theclorgymenoatha aBkirs of KtnsM,

.contain doctrines to which Aa people of thj| i State * m nBT*r consent, be. the .coneeqwenoee ' thai they may. ',.T.-. '. >- ,-•-,,-, ...•'/-i-i..-

Resolved, That the practice of railroad com. paniei, in giving free tickets to members of as-aembJy and other officers, cannot be. too highly coudemned, and we urge upon the neat legisla­ture to pass laws which sbsll put & (top to the

Resolved, That the mpnittous lr«nd» at

fee,, we tr^t %5,..ow edito». sssm Ar tHf tfalt&l^" laiatje.

m tlus-miawe'f-ofMr. finehanv-• * itenablniamg tyrguny he .

i the country navfKi and reesmg mm lm IWMQ.1I h?ha? *e»ay eomiaittg; sntl . n^rcienB'tS commit, ajpu* :6ar Gov. mt and against mwldnft<«pr^tlfe9;-wobrdi-' Mplrtijg events be. aa'dg:up truthfully.—

^history, and pws dowa to'poeterity irtv^

Mlhkt aefci^tes not, hoip*|^{»e $o assume »d , , maintaw poeitidni that wfll not tense a hlush » •

:.(- .I'M.fissfcli! ''tssw^e-spjgsgs,---^- ~

i ^ . , .«MM-3^j%w^/:::<- '•"'•"'-

Thetravel from the ea»t" -• ^ - *^^ **— a

A -rine been ©roeliiinieo, -wuiu" " w i i u S i n ttatfon,fiuTn* nation*? f M ? ^ " ^ Besoiveo, - «Bme m»»«v» . -«» « s S ^ n l y tt^V«aioapOTdr-«««M"»*«^ tioaa which have lately been perpetrated,,p«*»-S.f tt.W**M» *,l«'1«POB

rn8 ?£*&• m i a tbe city oENewtwMeff lan- ,^ 0 "

l ^ u p u i e n A o u r ^ o m ^

iSwditiaiprS, t b a t w ^ m v r f e e m « » 5 g S 1 the cou-Wof our ifiwedom-'ormg ***;f*fS!' !ro'mTatiree,Fwi4«'i^<.i.«ry--tba'0f loT-iog, praiaing *** •** l ldint '>

The

earnest aiumuvu v.. w , .*«^-.-«•.* boaod by the higheet wmtid^rttaMj root of an evil, tad pan whatever f ^oesjiry to pat an end to It

Hr. Briggs, of Onondaga, j ^ — A ^lalssk mttmitirmA a . a « M l

, then by the GranaUffehtt h»B08*;' of conshlerahle importinon'''*» t w * t *W*t*

, to bejby the ^ b t t r a ^ - # » « ^ * J i ^ | ^ " h6«t?fl « 60^aWiSl? ,*?- ,R" f t* ;,*?§ ^

i S i l P ^ mteot-d itfcmovenwtite.

tfiTof «Krtf»em a*a. .$»} wpmpHm* ; ^ J S f t d e a v t » * W»Tlntew, -9 to* <**;

I S iwsm their error, wh*. ta-f no4 cce LUB-

baSb trains takinc their «»••* *>» c—xtoetik*

of th* TMUtk oas«M»r «fPgP?'[.W» tl-ey pceoess ibrerip* twqrhWjirt* *?» * « M > * M I ^ U U . -••--* - < - - w .-

Ill

i ,V ' - '

II

irom*atcttr»^F»»T»!^»,»^«ry--tbatotiov .Brtogi,«fOK»dsm, W ^ K l T ^ S t