II any oth.r person or persons, to any law/id writ, Priress, order, rule, decree or command of said courts.' Ncii.Passmore Williamson was convicted of a contempt for disobeying a writ of habe as corpus commanding him to produce before the District court certain persons claimed by' Mr. Wheeler as slaves. Was it a lawful writ! pearly not. if the court had no juris diction to issue it ; and that it had not, Ithink is very to -If it was unlawful, the person to whom it was directed was not bound to oneyiit; and, in.the 'very. words of the stat ute, thopow'er to punish forcontempt 4 •14ha1l not be construed to extend to it.' BLit, says the opinion` - of the majority, hh was cioniricted of a contempt of court, and we will notllook into the record to see how the contempt was committed: 1 answer this by asserting that you cannot see the conviction - withiut seeing the cause, for it is a part of the same record which consists, Ist, of the pe tition; 2d,' the writ and alias writ of haboa corpus; ,pd, the return ; and 4th, the judg ment! It is ordered and r adjudged by the court) that the said PassmOre Williamsore-be committed to the custody of the Marshal without bail or mainprize, as for a contempt in refusing to make return toile writ of ha beas )corpus heretofore jutted against him at the instance of Mr. John H. Wheeler.' As .1 understand the opinion of a majority of my brethren, as soon as we get to the word eon tempi, the book must be closed, and it be cOff ei; instantly sealed as to the residue of , the record. To sustain this commitment we must; it, seems, first presume, in .the very teeth of the admitted fact, these were run away slaves; and second, we must be careful do read only portions of the record, lest we should find that the-prisoner was' committed for refusing to obey an unlawful.wrft, • 1. I cannot forbear the expression of the opin• ion thatllie rule laid down in this case, by the majority, is fraught with great danger to the most cherished rights of the eitizeus of the State. Whilst in, contests involving the right of property merely, I. presume we ay still treat_ the judgetnnts of the United States Courts in cases not within it juris diction, as nullifes, yet, if' a e Judge .thinks proper to determine that of our,, citizens has been guilty of contempt; even it such determination had its foundation in a case upon which' the Judge had no power to pronounce judgment. mind was most mani festly, in direct violation of the very legisla tiv_e authority that created. the court over which the Judge piesides, it seems that such determination is 'to have all the force and ef fect of a , judgment pronounced by a Court of competent inrisdiction, acting within the admitted sphere of its corstitutional power. Nay, more. We confess ourselves powerless to protect our citizens from the aggressions blit court, as foreign from our State govern- s mint inkmatters not committed to, its juris diction as the court of Queens Bench in Eng- _ land, arid this , upon the authority of decisions prononnced in cases not at , all analogous to the one now under consideration. I believe. this to be the first recorded case where the Supeeme Couit of a State has refused the prayer:Of a citizen for-the writ of habeas cor pus, to Inquire'. into the legality of an--im prisonment by a Judge of a Federal COurts for contempt, in refusing obedience to a Writ . Avoid for want of jurisdiction. ,I will - conclude by recapitulating the end upon 'welch I think thli writ should be award :ed. Ist! At common law. and by our statute -of 1835; the writ of habeas corpus, acf-subjici endurie, is a writ of right demandable when , •ever petition in due form asserts what l if "true, would entitle the party to relief. 21 1 That analleption in a petition • that - the petitioner is re st of his liberty by -an order of a judge, or court without juris diction, shows such probable cause as to leave it no longer discretionary with the court or judge to whom application is made, whether the writ shall or shall not issue. , 3d; That , where a person is imprisoned by an order of a judge of the District Court -of the United States, for refusing-to answer a writ of habeas corpus,. be is entitled to dis- ; .charge from such imprisonment, if the judge of the District Court bad no authority to, is sue the Ixrit,..‘ 4tb. That.the power to issue writs of I#.• bets 'corpus by the judges of the Tedeol Courts is a mere auxiliary power, and tljut no suchwrit can be issued by such judges - where the cause of complaint,-intended to be remedied by it is beyond their jurisdiction. That the Count's, of the Federalpov . ernment ere courts' of limited jurisdiction, derivedfrom the COnstitution of the United States and the acts of Congress under the Constitution, and that, where the jurisdiction is not given by the Constitution, or by Con: gress I in pursuance of the Constitution, it: does not exist. ' 6th. That when it does not appear' by the record that the Court had jurisdiction in a proceeding under our habeas eiorpmemt to relieve,from an illegal imprisonmentL**ant of jui4sdiction may be shown by proving the facts Of the case. 7th. That wheie the inquiry as to the ju- • risdietion of a Courcarises upon a rule for a habeis corpus, all the facts set forth in the petition tending to show the want of jurisdie tkin are to be conskll , retl-aalrue, unless they contradict the record. Bth." That when the owner of a slave vol untarily'bilngs his"slave from a slave, State witlibut any intention of remaining therein, the right of the, slave, to his freedom depends ,upon the laws of the State into .which he is thusbrought. • 9th.'. That if a slave so brought into a free State escapes from-the custody of his master svbile in said state, the right of the master to reclaim him is no) a question arising under the Constitutioanpf the Uuited States or the • laws thereof and therefore a Judge of the United States cannot issue a writ -of habeas corptia directed to one who, it is ,alleged, withheld the possession of the slave from the master, commanding him - to produce the body of the slave before the said Judge. " 10th. That the District Court of the U. S. for the EasteT District, of Pennsylvanian has no inrisdiction, because a. controversy is be= tweet citizens of diffeient States, and that, a proceeuing by habeas corpus is, in no legal s4se, a. controtersy. between private parties: 'llth. That t e power of the several courts to inflict summary punishment for contempt of court in disobeying a writ of the eourt, is exprJessly confined . to cases of disobedience to ISwful writs. ` 'That where it appears from the rec ord that the conviction was for disobeying . a writ of habeas corpus, which writ the court —had he; jurisdiction to issue, the conviction is' corain pen judice; and void. • <, Fin. these reasons I do most respectfully but Most earnestly dissent from the; judgment of the majority of my brethren, -refusing the writ applied for. Chief Justice Lewis said— It may be prop ex t 4 say, that all the other Judges concur . in the Opinion delivered by Justice Black. '1 hava nothing to add to it, but the other . Judegs' whoconcur - may hereafter have some. thing to say in firrther explanation of their views.'! • " ,Qtrinvrat Samosa—Judge - Kelly—The Whider Skive Caire.—On Saturday, Coatis and Ballard, the colored men 41Pho were, coo vict‘d Ba llard ; an assault end - battery upon Col. Wheeler, were called up 6)r:sentence. Atitr. Pierce, deft's mmeel;_ofrered evidence . in extendatiort of aliy pnnisluneOt 'the Court might think proper to inflict.. It was the, submittO. in evid42pee that these men‘when arrested On 19th July, last, were taken to the Cherry etreet &Alen house', Sixth Ward, and locked -in a cell, with three others (at rested foi. the same offence) and kept them' twenty-fitur hours without food,the thermom •eter standing at ninety-five. The heat in the. eell was eo intense that the men had to. strip off all their 'clothes. a They were thence taken to prison', where they; were incarcerated ten 'days, an only rcleaeed ,by the interposition of the Co, rt of Quarter Sessions. The count sel called two of the former co.defendents cf the prisoilers;und they both swore that Bal . lard was not on the upper deck of the boat itt all. Judge' Kelly told the Men that they' had a right to go to the boat iund tell the woman Jape of ber right; but by their action they bad injured the cause they no doubt at heart wished tt serve. He reproved them for the use of vi !cam, andl the threatening language they had' used, he said t6t, is ,the sentence he!Nei about to pass upon them, he hid in view they eircumstances of' the ca.se—tho out rageousjtolding.to bail by the Alderman in an - eno mous sure—the sufferings they had beeP subjecd to, and the fact that a large witness bill ad beep presented against them ; he would sentence them to pay a find of $lO and tests each , and one week's im prisonment. . De Witt Clinton on Judge Bate. ' , , . The case of Prutsmore Williamson very naturalli,recalls that of Yates v. the people which w a s disposed of in the Court of Errors of this State in 1810. The prisoner, having been, coin mitted by the Court of Chancery to the cust(!iy otthe 'Sheriff of 'AI bany . for mal practice and contempt, was brought into the Supreme Court on a writ of habeas corpui, and after due 'examination there of the cause of 'commitment he was ordered to; be remitted, to the eu, F stody. 'of the Sheriff, there to remain in thcsanie conditiiin in which he was at the time'of • the i swing of the writ of habeas cor pus. Upon this a writ of error was brought, returnable in the Court of Errors, and the question I was whether a writ of error would• lie in the case, and Whether that court could revise a commitment for contempt by a judge of an inferior court. As asmember of _the. court, De Witt Clinton gave his judgment in favor pf the prisOner, and in `the course of his remaks, among, many pOints that might have a.-bearing en the case now exciting such universal at ention,, he exclaimed; "Is the, Gothic jargon of Nen-man - lawyers' and the ri dieulons pec'zintry of schooloien still to per vade thetempleS ofiustice, and to prostate ' principle ;Ind right,tit the feet Of sophisticated nonsense i?' JA pertinent question to ask in. Pennsylvatuirat this moment. But the fol. lowing etrdet.frorii.Gov. Clinton's opinion is still more interesting in, its applicat'on to the question now under discussion ; "'lt is alleged that the pardoning 'power may be extended 1.0 . the prisoner, which will afford him complete relief: -The mercy of , the Executive is ohe thing and the justice of the Courtl,another.l,-A pardon 14 not a rem edy in the course of the law. It may or it may not Abe afferded at pleasure ; and is en tirely extrinsic froin judicial proceedings.— The sum [of reasonihg is tliii: That a citizen may be deprived, of his liberty without the accusation of a grand or the interposition of a petit jury, and on the mere fiat of a • single judge ; that this judge shall be without con• trol and the citizen without appeal ; that ti he, must co untie imprisoned for life, unless, the judge sh II relent,w_ unless the Executive 1 - shall pardon.; Thiel doctrine may suit the me ridian bf'Coltstantinople, but is utterly repug. nant to the ginius of a free government. If the Govnoi. cannot or will not pardon. and , if the Legislature cannot or will not relieve,; then a citizen may at any time, on the grounds I contended for, be inearcerated tor life by. a; court compose:l-of a single judge, and with-! Out the'benefit of'a trial,by hi. peers, and the , judge aninot be called -to account for his con duct. For,l if! rightly-understand the posi-, tions whic are maintained ' throughout theyl are these: A court. may commit for con-, tempt whether perpetrated in court or not.-t This commitment; Whether legal or illegal, cannot lie exarnintsf or overhauled by any other tribune, but it. is to be considered as final and i ) conclusive, and it may condone du ring the leasure of the court. If . the prisoner is brought up 'on a :writ of habeas corpus, the court is to remand lilm the momeut it is per ceived, to be for a equtpmpt, and no writ of error will lie on this l deciiion ; and although this may bo wicked find oppressive, and may operate is an impriaoment for life, yet the court solacting is not liable. to punishment; fora eortnnitrnent is a judicial act, and it is contended that. no judge can be questioned for judici4l acts as such. Her then is aease (xcluding the favorable interposition of the Executior Legislature,) where an unjust or tyramiical judge may, at pleasure, impris on an inabcent man for life, and yet place punishin'tlnt at defiance A doctrine preg nant vrith such horrible results, can never be in- unison with the letter, or the spirit of a free and enlightened system of jurisprudence.-- And, _although I trust we have nothing to at). prehend froiri such practices in the times in which We live, yet re 'Ought to keep our eyes on futurty. The ill per-vading force of cor ruption and the all-grasping lust of power may raise up for the destruction of unborn generations, men who will _devotethemselves to oppresslon and to blOod. Why are we to expect- an exemption from the common lot of nations ? In the true course of events, we must., indeed,_ travel the round. of human calamity. P,estilenee and war, famine and war, famine and oppression, will visit us ' and we. must anticipate that. in some period the, Tresilii tis and the. Jeffrieses of former times will live again in our triunials - ----men who will imprison under the formSofjustice, and murder with - all the solemnities of law:— And when such monsters arise to scourge the [ human race, let me tell you they will besnp ported, ii,,y the arm - Of power, and will be at tended ,;bv their obsequions satelites and • smooth-Ce4xl parasites, who Will deride the Magna charta of your liberties and laugh at the majesty of the people." 'The.large Heart and understanding of De -Witt Clintori—the man- pot forth as the Northern candidate for the - Presideriey,around whom hose Weary of chivalric political mo nopoly rallied—fully embraced the nature of personal rights ; and with a generalizing spir 1, it which, applying ;his statements to the I present day, • experience- - has . resolved into I prophecy, he 'drew this picture of judicial ty ranny and oppression. But what would he I have said had he fOreseen the entire stretch lof wickednesg to which a Kane can-be ledand I a Black land consent I.—N. Y. Trib. Lewisi CausOtsci Our REPUEiLICANISII.—The fut= lowing extract is contain'ed in the orders of the Popp of tome to Arichbishop Hughes of of New 'York, who has jest returned from a pilgrimkige to the Holy rFather, whither he went tAireport the progress of catho li cism in America,. The cotranandlis ' crush out Repub. licanism.' Readit,Amerfcans! ThePopesayi: oir church is to 4e it must be in A- Merles. Governments and States are totter ing her 4, Every thing is uncertain.. An other par and a revolution may have swept all 'awajr.. My good Amlibishop, I look to you for the future. Spread Rimtainit in America crush oist Repuhtieaaisni. The choral may, before a znonth,flee to . your shores," INDEPENDENT REPUBLICAN. CHARM 4. !MAD AND 1.1. 71. 711.111210, zarroßs MONTROSE, PA, Septe,ber 90, !1119110. II3MILICAN;'3101103A2101118. earn[ Oostunissioner, !ASSMORE ' : WILLIAMSON, . • Of Phifede ' • [Now in „Prison for Loving Liberty and 4ttaticis.] For ,Rept7ratative. ORLANDO 11 HEMPSTEAD. ,1 Of Si sgueftamui Comfy. , • . For Commisaioaser, s WILLIAM , T. CASE, Of gibsepa. I .Fu 'r.4'reasurer. !SELDEN .WOODFUFF ! 4fontrosc For ;Na t i on DAVID' •O. BROWN, ; Of Frfendnille. 11114etion—Ootaber 9th, Republican Ticket. - 1 The Clianty R40E13211 Convention which met here on Monday last, nominated an ex cellent Ticket, adopted the right sort of reso lutions, ihd was characterized thrmighout by groat harmony of action and by an earnest enthusiasm in the cause of RepubliCan liber ty. By the acti9n' of , that Convention the un-' ion of PO great bpdy of Free-Soil men of Susquehanna County was firmly 'cemented, and we take the.fieht with the TiCket they nominated, confideift of success: It wilVbe seen by reference to the prOceed ings else Where published, that on the assem bling of Ire Delegratea, it was fOund that sev eral Townships had !elected Delegates but had not ',voted for the candidates as reeorn• mended, :and itiordei not to . deprive those Townships of a voice in the selection of a Tick et, it wa4 fonnd necessary . to nominate by a vote of. the Delegates, those representing Townships where - the candidates hid been balloted fir to consider themselves instruct ed, and the others to vote in accordance with -what thei believed the preference of their re spective Townshipi. By this means all the Townships' that sent Delegates , were repre sented, arid Still as:it resulted; the same can 4idates r4ceived the nomination that would have doni sO if the other method had been idOpted. 1 • VC hay neither time nor space,! nor is it necessary; to write an extended eulOgium on the Republican nominees. It is well known to the people of this County that 0. G. Hemp stead was long one of the most zealous advocates of the principles of the Wilmot Proviso, to be found lin the ranks of the old peineeracy in this section, that he openly advocated those principieiat a time when they were by no means•aspopular as now, especially With the party to lehich he' then belonged ; and that he wits atuong the first in this County to lay aside old ilifferences and party- issues and in vite, a union of. all the friends Of freedom un der the mPue R,eptiblicains. The ninnination tf was unsought for by Mr. Hempstead, and it was giiteri to him because it was thought he would eriOectly. and ably represent ) the prin ciples of tile Republicans in the Legislature.— From tlivote he reoeived in the Convention, and the txpresskni that reaches us in other ways fro m t the different Towrishils,. we be lieve he will receive one of the largest. votes ever polltd for any candidate in the County. Of our other Candidates, we mil only shy, briefly, at: this time, that William T. Case of Gibson, lies acted, several years al a Justice of the Piece in that township, to general ac ceptance,;is a man of good business capacity and training, well qualified for tliC office for which net is named, and extensively and fa , vorably known in the eastern Fxkt of the county; tB. A. Woodruff, of Jifontrose, is an indirstrious mechanic, well worthy the, suffrages erf his irrflow-citizens, for the office,, of Treasii s rer, and - who bad the misfortune to be "burned °int at 'the same time as his worthy cOmpetitO, H. F. Turret); and that. D. D. 131;own, oftriendsville, is also a good . man,t whose neighbors speak well of him, and who k abundantly qualified to discharge the d'u4ei of the office of Auditor.] Tliese.,:ourd Paisticore Williamson, are our candidat* ; as them, staring on the brimid platform, 4. Freedom, the united Re publicansf of Susquehanna county, boldly and - confidently take. the field. . . ! tar The opinion of Judge Knox in the matter 'of the application of Passinore Wil foralianson Writ of habeas corpus!, which we publish I r is week, though long will repay, a careTul p_ru s sal. The Judge does pot mince matters stilth his associates, but says plainly: "'The retinal of the mirk in a case like the preeent, in without precedent, tali contrary , to the uniform practice of the beneh, and a - f gainst the universal understandingo the pro. fession atid the people.; but • what is worse appears to me to be in direct viola tioof tie 'law itself." But it is refused,and for ho Other reason than by making-an ex oi r " : Passmore W il l iamson, t o tench the people of Pennsylvania that their liberties are las nothing compared with the interests I or eonvenience of the lords of the plantation. We must learn meekness and submisaion ; and if.shive traders choose to introduce the traffic iai.human beings into Pennsylvania we triisk,in no way interfere ; for;:. if 'we do, - we may discover, as Passenore 7illiamson has, thatin this country "'bite men as well as blackl may be deprived of their liberty without is crime. hereafter let no Pentisyl simian df.re whisper the word Liherty,' oi he may faTinto the clutches of Judge Kane and our Supreme Court. rms ix Hearoun.—On the evening of the 14th ins`, a dwelling house on the farm of John T4er, and, occupied by Mr. Mowell was consuree# by fire. Only a few articles of furniture were eared; The house was new. The fire: t eriginsted in an old building adjoin ing the house. It was first discoiered in the' vicinity Of a barrel of ashes. , The Occupant hmrever; states that no ashes had been plain; the banf l within nearly a tort:eight,' IlEirsOressitations Corieoted. . Now that Passmore Williamson has re ceived thwßepubliclui nomination for Canal Commission r, the Montrose Democrat l con descends to!take notice of the tact of his ex istence andi.imprisonment.: The list .Demo. era: . has ani, -article that; either ignorantly fir designedly, shamefully misrepresents the whole case.;' After professing to have care fully examined the facts, that paper.says: "Judge Lille i e eied-the writ, and Williamson, In itead of malting the lege return, so that the ques- Sion of the fweaom oohe slave. could be bled, con' tented himself with denying the jurisdiction of the court to make him produce them, whereupon the Judge committed him to jail for contempt of Court:" And agaiii: 1 • I • " The major the Court reply, to this that the question of judsdiction' was not one for Williamson to decide, atut, that if parties may set themselves up as judges of jurisdfction, there can be no power in any Court to &force its process, and that witnesses, jurors, or anybody, else may reruse to obey the sum mons of our Courts by simply denying the right of ,the Judge to try the case." . The readers' of the Democrat, who get their ideas of the Ease from the article referrd- to, may perhap4 think that Williarrison deserves imprisoininent ; but what would they; think if told that at, the hearing before Judge Kane, Williamson ;Janet deny the jurisdiction of • the Court atlallt Yet such - is the fact ! Al though the Court clearly had not jurisdiction, 'it luippened that, through an unfortunate omission on !the part of ; Williamson's !coun sel, the question of juris diction was not.dhen 'raised; but" Williamson was committed to prison, " without bail or mainprize," (that is, ,for life, if Jkge Kane so wills it,) beezurse, as the Judg, alleges, - his return to ; the. writ 'which - tomnianded him to bring back Wheel- • er's slaves, was .!'evasive, if not false." ; Wil: liamson stated in his return that the persons referred to Were not then, nor had been itc, any 'time, in his possession. Judge Kane replies, ;that when the bolored melt carried oT Jane Johnson anti her children, Williamson was acting in concert,with them, that by' legal constructionl their; possession was his possess ion, and thetefore his return that the alleged Slaves were never in his possession, is incor rect. And this error, if it be an error, in not not considering Jane and her children, ns' in his pow.ssicin at the tlrne when he told , em , they were fire, i made by Judge Kane t ostensible, ground for imprisonment without !Writ! a ' But it is further said in the Democrat: "Mr. Willizimsoli Carries the key to hi pris , on, and will ioe released the moment he Obeys the mandate of the law, and makes a legal t return to the writ.' • ! ••, • • What is the fad in relation to that'l l Im mediately filter Judge Kane. had given his decision thn.t, Williamson had been guilty of contempti ofl Court by making an ir+rrect return, anddirected him to be committed to prison therhfor, !Mr. Gilpin, Williar'pson's 'oounsel &tied' leave to amend his return , which was refuied by Judge Sane! The al leged error in his - return—which .waslirOba hly the fault, of his counsel, if any, oneHwas eagerly seized upon as an excuse 'for thrust ing him into prison, where he is to be kept, as Judge Black tells us, "until he shall make proper submissicie—which means, till he• brings backthreeHfree persons to be' delii•er ed up to Wheeler, ' as slaves., It is believed • • .that Passniore Williamson is such a man that, if he !canncit leave .his prison till he makes suchisubmission, he 'will never leave it till he lies it for his grave.. But he will hardly be :rermitteti to remain in confine ment many months longer; for the minions of slavery must see that his imprisonment is operating Powerfully against them among the people of Pennsylvania, who con f ider it an insult iitid disgrace to the oimmonWealth, and who, ivill insist,upon the protection guar anteed, thee) by the Constitution. The .DemOcrat claims to have examined the cast with.'great care. It certainly must have required - ;ouch care and ingenuity to com press so muck error and misrepresentation into so scnall a space as that paper has done: The Suslitiehamta Democracy's Platform We ieani that some of the Sp ft Democrats, 'claim that their last county conventiouadopt, • I , et! a resolution approving the course 0f Gov. Reeder, and denouncing his removal, And an other condemning the action of the late liarrisburgiDemocratic Convention foi• not endorsing, crovernor Reeder, and for' endors ing the - national administration. - We sus 4-pected that ithe trick of publishing among the ,proceedingi of that Convention resolutions that it did not adopt, would succeed• in de ceiving sonie good simple people, and i for the edification Of such we will endeavor to show why and hdw it was done. First, emit° 'the how. • We quote from the Democrat, Sept 6th ; R. B. Little then offered - t h e following resolution : Resolved, -That the phitfOrm laid down bp-the Deinocrat ic Conveati n last January, and re-a . tkrmid by the Cos:lre:Won last week, embodies . the position of the ' Democratic party of this coun ty on the gezeral political issues befOre the county, and we therefore adopt that platform, and pledpiourselves to abide by it in good 'faith and fidelity.' It willbe r perceived that this resolution ap plies only to the platform adopted la4t win ter, for when; we 're - affirm ' any thi L ng we say the unite thing over again, and not some thing else :!and certainly neither the removal of Gtiv: Reeder nor the action of 'the-IDemo .cratic State Convention could have been de nounced 1;4 winter,for neither had then taken place.. But why then were such - resolutions , published tiniong the proceedings of the , nom iriatineConvention 7 It was to give seope to those looseipciliticians who desire to 'play, on both aides of the question. For eSample, ?loch a. politician is - electioneering for •the IDerriocratic' ticket. He approaches a Free Soil Demos rat, and asks his support, but the administration is pro ,slavery, and the Fltirrisburg platform- Is pro-slavery, and I am afraid that by supporting your tick et I atudl lie voting pro.slavery—perhays to sends pro,slavery man to the U. S. Senate.' This is giving an ugly 'phase to the :matter and looks like•losing a vote, and accordingly the 'electioneerer' pulls %Democrat out of his pocket, 'we him the proceedingsl of the nominating convention, and.reads the resolu tions condinuting the removal of Reec i ier,and _the action the Harrisburg conventi on, acid tbe honest! Free Soifer goes; away satisfied ,-that, the Dinnocratic party is a pretty' good • Free Soil party, after all, at least in this coun tyl • : • - . . The next num - thepolitician meets claims tolbe - a national Democrat, and easily swal loWs Pierce and Douglas, Nahraska‘and Kan sas!, Kane, Black, Lewis and all. alte na thinal ' man 'finds fault with both the !condi : dates and the platform as squinting too much towards Free Soilism—perhaps refers to the !tame resolutions that satisfied the Free Seller, as; particularly !obnoxious and undemocrit ic; ' But, my dear sir,' says the politician, those resolutions are no part of the' platform of the Democracy of this county and never have been adopted as such.' And. in proof ofthis lie refers him to Mr., Little's resolu tion quoted above; and he then roceeds to convince hint that there is a greatdeal of na tional Dembcracy in the resolutions that were adopted, and especially thit ihcre is nothing in them that • shows a dis`position to oppose in agion any pro-slavery nieasure that. itaa receivedor may receive the IsUpport . of the national peinocraey,the party (hat the res olutions declare is always right. And so the Itunker is-satisfied that men who Will consent 'to run on such a platform must! be . sound . Liemocrati, and is inclined to suPport them, especially when the . other adds by :way of clincher' that they are all going:to:support Piumer, andi the Representatives arapled 4 ".aed W•l i against tnot • • 'Thr t. Era .7ays! that " the Democratic !party. has its head in; the 'South , and its taitiit the North." Very: true ; and am incubus, Stilled the Black Power, rides on its bai k, -gmierning and guiding the *hole an imal. ° l e of the smallest fibres of its at tehuated taili the part that extends into SUs qnehantia cotinty, is dissatisfied with iits ar.d in a! weak and softly sort' of Way- as becomes its rtherent - feeblenes4and proposes that the sable monarch should be . unhorsed, an:d the goddess of Liberty placd in his saddle. ThiS is rank rebellion, and we expect nOthing else than to see t i .hiS pre. sdtnptuous tail of the party cut off without ; . mercy. - , • alt is a fact, although probably few else- where conld!be.made to believe - it, ;that the oracles of the. so-called Democracy,;. of Sus. .; , county 1 - • . • quenanna cou propose to adhere to they , - great Democratic party as' the most enee_to. . ~ . a; mode of Opposing. the aggretfsions of §laVe- I .• ry. They intend to put a• stop to slavery I extension jti4t, as soon, as they can firing the I rest of the party : ,to their way of thiUkiiig on the subject. 1 Ancrthey are willing to wait till they can convert the South, where the bUlk of theiti party lies, to. Free Soil priaci pies, before anything is done tor the; cause. of 1 flieedow. Out - what if the tnischiefs'.-we ap. prehend sho l tild all have occurred before they succeed in making Free Soilers.of- the - slave, holders'? 14ight there not be room for a doubt abouti their having gone the right way to work, •an 4 placed their reliance on The right men, to avert the 'dangers that threat. eitus 1 . . A . 1 i• . • * The-Mail for the Plice: 'Alter failing with both Reeder 'and DilW; - ..s . pn, the PrOdent has at last found! just the 'titan the sla4-drivers went for Gio-ernor of 'Ennsiis—Wilson Shannon of Ohio. 1 The last that was heard from - the new Govenor he had got as. fur Westport, Missouri, where. he was called out and made a public speech in which he declared it as his judgment that the pres ent spurious( mob-created Legislature of Kan sas is legal,that its acts are binding, that he will exert Ais authority to enforce them, and that he is in favor of slavery in; Kansas, In common ting on this indication that the new 'Governor is willing and eager to becOme the mean tool ofSlavery,and to aid' in tramp ling the liberties of -white American Freon' en tinder foot, !for the purpose of securing'the United suppOrt of the South to Frank Pierce Oor reefection, the Philadelphia Nor'th Amer- (Can says :• Yes, Governoft:Shannon, of Kansas ip need-. eid and rtqufred to serve a purpose %of the politicians at, the White House. He was se-, tected for the 1 job just as a farmer would choose one Of his meek aud-comPlasi ant don keys to do 4 piece- of work which is rather to hard - and igtioble to be put upon a more Val ued and highspYrited beast,- and When the task is pcifOrmed the poor creature_ will' be turned into !the - fields to pick his chance and scanty ; living with other vagabond cattle. In the mrantitne the project of makinn. Kary,a4 4lave territOry will go on bravely. With the Self-eleciedilLegislature declared legal, the, public arin4 placed exobviitrely in the.. hand' of the pro-Slavery settlers, arid. the prisons of the Territory put. under. the , control of the 'l..eavenivorth Jail association,'. thti MisSouri .;. - "knvaders.will gain an e.asy .domination, and have thingsall their own way. But . a ques tion will retnain to be ,settled which a higher tribunal than Mobs will have to consider and detertainl., i The' ongretis of the; nation will eventually be sked to admit Kansas into the Confed `.ra i astli sovereign. State. :At should Only h adMitted with a republican Constitu •tiOn(a d we believe that no . State; can have Such a constitution where a majority of ,he 'Citizen arel disfranchised . .-by violence - and a il. Usurp ion.l This is a consideration which it May b well for celtain parties, who are ex ercisin ul i e in Kansas by virtue of fraud and Force, to ponder before they presuine to pe tition (or the admission into the Union as a State i tif the domain they have subjected to the in mods ; gO.vernment'of lawless ruffian: ism: " ; It, - .. plib OCRICY IN LUZERNE.—A DemOcrat ic Cou ty Convention met at Wilkesbarre, Sept. lth, inominated , a County ticket and resolv d, 'that we re-affirm the Democratic platfo .s adopted by the National Conven tions a Baltimore-in 1848 and 1852 ;' ' that We full • apProve the Compromise hleasuies ;' that he sovereign people. of the States and E r erritiries I t have the unalienable ; right of Maki thOr own laws ;' ' that we approve the ac flthoGeneral _ administration, and believe t a they have been conceived iu hon estyni.,:ii of purimeland carried out with a view., to the happiness and welfare of the nation ;' and ' that vie heartily approve of all the 'acts and votes cif our late Congressman, Hendrick B. Wright.:. * . - . . . I- Can anybody doubt the genuineness. of the lanzerne Dmocracy 1 - f 1 The latelit news from Norfolk and Ports. 'mouth repi.esent the fever as decreasing: 7 - ;We trust the news is correct. A few more yeeks of sUch a.pestilence would depopulate -those doomed cities , 1111 BRPUB.LICAN . ____ . /15 11 3• — tINT Y cpNv.tliVriatiT 1 c Republican County Conventioh: of Susquehanna county' met at the old Court House in Montrose, Monday the 17th day of I Sc number, 1855 ,- arid the following named petsons were 'chosen as officers of the Con-1 vebtien:—President; Hon. Charles Tingley, of Irlarford ; Vice Presidents, David, Taylor, of iirtnony, and Chauncey _Wright, of For es Lake.. Secretaries, Harry Barney, of A r ' limn, and Geo. T. Frazier, of Oakland. 0: • motion, a committee of three were ap po nted by the Chair to examine and decide 1, of credentials, viz r Wm. Foster, of Mont ' rokSamuel Brush, of Oakland, and Dexter Stley,,of Ilarford. Delegates . from the fol. , , • lo ing electo districts appeared, presented thi it `credentials , and took their :seats as mem b sof the Convention (except in one or two - ca p pes where some informality existed, and 1 w ierb the delegates were admitted on too tiqn.)' ` ' . . Apokuron.-=--Harry Barney, Jonathan rne.s. , . At'arai.—Albert Bushnell,-JuliusTylef.. Kellog, R. B. Davis. D. Warner, Perrin Wells._ Bi!ooklyn..—H. W. Kent, R.S. Yeomans.. C49cOnut—S. F. Carmalt. Charles Nealti. 'Cliprd.-;-Not represented. mock.—C. 111. Tingley, L 'J. Babcock. Ditnday.—W .H. Sloctim. - - • . Franklin.-S tillman Vuller,•W. W. Pier (.) . • H: . Pieree," J.‘,Hosford. Fo,rest Luke,—C. Wright. A. Tilden. Gieal Bend.—Nelsori Baker, Chii.'s atam -. • Gjbson.—W.' P.Gardner, Jacob, Denni. 'l4tford.—Dexter. Sibley, Char-le.&-Ting- . . . .Ifarmony.--Ilivid Taylor, P. L Norton. 1 !...li;ekson.—J. W. Cargill, Bronson. IJe,ysup.—H. R;" Sherman, J. W. Smith. • Lizthrop.—Noe reliresented. - I .LOnoz.—S: T. Miller, H. N. Smith.. Liberty-L- 7 Albtirt Truesdell, D.;D. Brown. Middletown,-7-11. F. Handriek, Norman Montrose.—Win. Foster, El'. Langdon. i'Vew B, B. Wade, J. W. adford.. oifkland.--Siat - nuel Brush, Geo. T. Frazier. , W. .Granger, N. Shoemaker.. Sifringville.4, l i. P. Stevens, emus Will ;. , , ,Sl2 , er Lake,i—D. D. Gage, B. S. Gage:, Stisquehandq" Abram Cuon,J. B. Scocil.l 'Thomson ; Collins Gelatt,L. 0. Banding. Wappearingitha t in . several Townships no •tedal been •talcen on the candidates, but ;1 • ("legates onhil had been' voted for, the fol ft viUg resolutiOn was adopted: ./W' saved;That all proceedings for the choice e: ndidutes at tha : township' elections be dis p used with, and•that the Convention.do now 'p tweed to nba*nate candidates for the differ e t Offices. 00 motionjt Was resolved that a'majbri- Iv Of all the 'VoteS'east shall be required to eifeet'n nomination. • • $;. 41 The nominations for RePresentative Were qten made as follows 0. G. Hempstead, •of Brooklyn, L. Hinds of Susquehanna,. C. 4 Lathrop, of DiMock', D. D. Warner, of (.:F; Read, of Montruse,jOtir. of!';Grdat Bend. The names of y i esSts. : Warner, Lathrop, and Read were thdrawn, When the 'vote was- taken by and, on first 'vote resulted as fol. 1 0.G.:• Hempstead. • 46 I-14 P. Hinds . 6 . John, MeK inney'; , Perrin Wells • O Hempstead was therefore declare(' Ole nominee Mr .13,eprelgentative. • • • The nominations.- ; for Treasurer - were, c. Simmons, licintrose, S. A. Woodruff, if - Montrose, E. W. Hawley,of Bridgewater, nd the first vote -resulted as . follows : M. Simmons • - 10 A. Woodruff .. . • -•:. 38 HaWley •• s • -•- 7 ' 54 ,, A. Woodruff was therefore dePlared the nominee for Treasurer. • • . • For County CoriniSsiner, Perrin *ells, of pridgewater, -Win. T. Cale,. of Gibson, David Taylor, of Harmony, Denison Thom as, of Springville; and' Benjamin Comfort, of llarMony,were named as candidates, .and '; . vi:lttd for as follows: • FIRST VOTE. Prrrin V r ir rn. T. Case: Darid .Taylor. Benjamin Ccinafort Denison Thomas:, . SECOND Perrin' Wells.. Wm.- T. Case • • • I)avid 'Taylor i Benjamin Cointort. • I:lenin Thomas.;, • TRIED VOTE. Perrin Wells Wm.. T. Case 'David Taylor • . And Wm: T. Cage was - therefore declared the nominee for County Treasurer.. .For Auditor the: candidates named were D. BroWn ofFriendsville, and-L. ILTur: of Forest Lake, and the vote was as fol.' lows: • • D. D. Brown • 48. Turrcl.,. 6. • On motion l , the Convention 'proceeded to elect COnfe'res to, meet Conferees of the 'Re pit hlican party of 'Wyolning and Sullivan cOunties, t 4. put in nomination candidates for the !office Of RepreSentatrve ; and , J. W., H. Bradford, I,f New Milford, R. S. Davis,' of Auburn, John Young; of Ditnock,-and Amos Williams, of SPtingville'were. elected 'such Corifereet On moti t, the Chair appointed a -standing retnittee 'for the ensuing year, as tniOel F.Carrnalt,,J; W. .Cargill, lliams,;l Stillman Fuller, D. • D. 'aae P.-Baker; G. B. R. Wade, P.- Cotinty Co' AinOs N . V W4rner:, MEM The Pla forfn of the .. Republican party of oPerinsylvania, adoPted at the Pittsburg State IConvention, Sept. sth, was then read and un flinirpously I adopted. (The State platform, Flaying been published in our paper last week, is here omitted.) - following.additional resolutions were Piel read and enthusiastically approved and thipted. Resolved, That"thei imprisonment, . " with nit., bail mainprize," of Passmore pon; or the grounds alleged against him by IJudge Kane, is an ,unwarrantable and), dant • eons encroachment an State iinhts ail 1 per . 19 INI3 ..19 ..27 -12. -34- aortal liberty, and without pr,ecedent in 'the' - judicial history of our conntryi; and that W a :, -, hail, the nomination of Passmore Willirims cm , as the Republican candidate kir Canal Co.lOi missionet, as affording the freemen of. Penn. sylvaniii an opportunity to vindicate-his eon: •• duct and to rehuke the tyranny of Kane and j• hie accomplices of our Supreme Court, and we pledge to Said nominee the supportofthw' Republicans 'of Susquehanna County. 1 ~ Resolved, That. the candidates for Itepr e . sentatives, who receive the Support Of the RepublAms of - Susquebanna County will , • be expected, if elected, to vote, onlyl for g known-and consistent opponent 'of- Shivery- (.; extension for United States Senator, and in 3; no ease to give their. -support -`to a politi c i an p i o f the school of Simon Cameron; A bystander handed in thefolk•wintwhicii -was adopted amid loud,cheers : Resolved, That_ the voice of . Public &jai. , i meat should be expressed throughout th e Old Keystone State,-on the second Tuesd a y of October next, in ton producing as po. tent effect upon -the doors' of, a Philadelphia , prison', as did the blasts of the rams' horns in daytvd old up9n the walls ofJerieho. , On motion of Stillman - Fuller, the follow. lowing resolution was adopted . unanitton i .' 3.. ly : ' . Rt:a."!reci, That we hereby Pledge!to 'the candidates 'tn!: day nominated, our earn est - and united support. 0. G. Ilempsted, the nominee for ;Itepre• sentntive,.being -called for, responde4 - Iniefly„e expressing his approval of the platform- a n d resolUtions adopted, his thanks to _his fellow citizens for the -Unsought honor conferred up on him by the nomination= he had' , - , ceceived, 4lid his acceptance of the post assigned him is a standard-bearer of the Republican, party n the present campaign... He was warmly kreetud on coming forward and on retiring. lAnd thereupon the Convention, - haying nvinced much harmony and enthusiasm thro - adjourned sine die. - I. • ' From the Carbondale . Traneeript.. • ' 'DESTRUCTIVE CONFLAGRATION. Over Twenty Buildings Burned-;-The b'etir 1 . . part of our City in Ashes. ,Loot 00,000, .Carbondale is again the Scene'of a"deetnc-- tive and desolatingfire At ahout 2' o'cloelt Sunday .inorning; the flames were disbovered bursting from the fourth .Story .of the laip , : and commodious hotel on the eprner of Maio • and Dmidatl streets known, as - the, Bronson House,• which with - a portion of theilirniture, • • the stables and out buildings attached, were' speedily a mass of ruins. ' From :ttie Chotel. the, fire spread south to the 'store owned encl..' occupied by . Almond -Crocker, Grocer, this.. and the adjoining stores,oWned . Gillispii . : Love ' otupied, respectively. by - Miss . P.:Perhare, Millinery and - fancy geOds, :Jos. eph Alexander, merchant Tailor and IL Freeman & Co., Merchants, were consumed. ' At thispoint,„ through the most strenuoils exertions, the fire was arrested at the • sto l 'e of ;Wm. R.. Baker - &.C0., though thestore is soinevvhat damaged.: The Standard Pri t• ing Office, in the upper part of Baker's sto was removed, much of the type o' we believe not much of the material will - lost. The . fire crossing: Main street eiit caught the large building owned •by Messrs. Harrison; Scurry and Watt, known as Teinp. erance the. first floor' occupied by , K. Morse, Merchant,' and the.upper3storyhy the Olive Leaf Lodge of Qdd: FelleWS, and "; • •• the Good Tempfars. bOth lodges_ losing their furniture and regalia:. The Wilding. owned and, occupied by jAn Kase, , Cabinet :maker, immediately south and adjoining was also - consumed. Extending north, thebuilding Of, N. Farnham, first flooroccupied by W. Burr, jeweler, and the 'upper part by Mr. Farn ham as a'stiddlery-7the store of Dick.'. son (*Co q and the; large store :building - on the corner of Main and Dundaft streets he: longinn•" to the estate ,of Peter Campbell, de ceased, oecupied bvlAndreWWatt, Merchant,' ' G. R. Crocker, drOcer,. and :Alfred Dart's.. Law offieo, - were in flames and reduced to . . ' ashes.; thence . thei flames • spread north on - Dundaff street, b i nning some intervening buildings of little value, to the store and the adjoining dwelling of Stephen S. Clark, which were burned, ,here] again . •by great exertion the progress 01 .the fire was stayed by savinr. , the dwelling house [of Mr. Clark, which hoe-" ever is very much damaged. Ttie fire crcra• sing Dundiff street . from Campbell's building next caught in the 's•tore of .Win. IL mond which, with the row-of three buildings adjoining on Diindliff . •street, Shoe" ShopOf M. B. -Corby; aiid the, Law Office of Lathrop & Jones on Main street, awned by Mr. Akit.'," mond, and occupied respectively as'itCabibet Shop by J. F. Kinback, a Marble and Tomb stone Mantifactury by -Mr. Richmond and . sadlery - by Mr. Shields, were all 'consumed,* together with the Lackawanna House owned. by Thotna - 4 Gillespie - and kept by' Peter Foster, where 'the flaines were finally arrant- ' ed. The fire . must have originated from thtsta pidity, earelessuesS or drunkenness of some of. Washburn's L'ireui- Company who fOrined here on Oatiirday night; they occupy- . ing the whole of the Upper story of the tel where the fire was firstdisooVered. The Bronson House, ovaloirned by Sam uel R. Meredith , he having recently purchased it at a cost of 000,00.- • It is impossible for us in the hurry of the moment to• ascertain the ,actual' amount of the loss sustained by our . citizens by this,ca• !amity. rsi MARRIED; By Thomas Adams, Esq., at his residence in Au. burn„ . on Sunday the lith inst., Sr. Jon?: Rims to Miss EMILY Lour, both of Rush township. Y At Harfm:d, on the 4ith inst., bi t Rey. A. MMtri Mr. NOTSE E. NNIVTON to Miss SARAH CAMPMMIIIT daughter of Mr. Ira Carpenter, all of Raiford. By the same, on the 12th inst., at Gibson; Mr. Xa• m J. EIIRGOOD, of Greene,'Pike CO. to Miss Lon. N A M. PICKNRINO, daughter of Mr. Coitbet - Pickering, of Gibson. , - • ' . .ff eh) '.itd.,b,etiiseigeqls,, . . had of J. LYONS kSON Family -Bible's. : • ~ T . beE at in town can be . , Any family needing can have them on trial; ; 1 they do not answer the purpose, Tio charge. , - Montrose, Sept.-18. - , - -.— . FRUIT TREES:' PERSON'S wishing an. Orchard, would do *ell ,to? call at TURRELL'S . NURSERIES,.°+ miles south-east of Friendsyille, where Apple-trees, of the most approved kinds, of good size and , quality; such as are sold by agents for 25 cents, can be had for 12/. cents eacb.. . • • Also, a few Peach, Pear, Plum, Quince, and Moan , tain Ash trees, at reasonable prietv.• Particular regard is had to accuracy of names, no to making a good selection of fl-nit for the different_ seallons of the year, when desired. - • • L - . Y. TIIRRELL''' Friendsville, Sttsq'w: co., Pa., Sept. 20, 1855. flis • • Fire Insurance. - THE undersigned has, been duly appointed Agent, ' for the STATIC MUTUAL FIRZ INN/LA:cell COMPA. PANT, at Harrisburg; Pa: Capital $500,000. safe and cheap a company as any in the State andia sure§ on the Stock or mitt ual plan. - • BILLINGSSTROIJD. Montrose, Sept. IS, 1855. 3.711 NElVlOVOteCerkesJus o frt i y b jws 4 sox