N . . ` • 'fP •:. ' g. ..,, ~.i., , , ? , r ' . 4.100,4 Y. - ••• •• ' , :., • . I, • I •. , ..u : l' - , . 4 . • ' 4. ' ' ' ' '., ' ,...,,. .." . . . • t • , , . ' ' . .., . ' ' ' . '''• 4. V,..1 It .411-,1 .1,41 - kt„,, .. .. ,--, at . ..,,..,... 4litan. ....: ...„.. ~... .1 0 - fra,... ~. , , , .. -_, ...,tti . -,- .... . ~ . . ,• . . , ramit05t.iirtt....................., ' -., • . . . ' . . ~ ' - ELLEFONIC, 'SE - 1 i -, ' l-,- . ,toir v' 4 1 - " ' .....', . ,;,- f • 111.tR • 1856 . $ ;•,,. . , . . , • ---- i _ , ~ dr.- ••I . KEEP IT DEFORArTHE PEOPI:6, 1E8.A.8. TILE WARNINO VOICE 110 W .D.DASK.A. 4 ' l''.' " ::',.,:' ,;.. - .e- , , .,.. !.. ' ':-'''„ .. ; ". ~: ',-;-:- 7 . 7":7'''''': , , - ' ll I • r . ' A I• . .1 r : 1 44 0 66 1 , It 7 1 . •, . . .., . -, itI N ... , , , -- "'" 6 . 41 Ca5ta.4%41 044 '".'""' T Irrit/rA4116 00 TIM ' MON. —:1 , 7•A ' it. • • • J n ' " • • • ALL. _ _ _ _ • ..triko4lYArCk.Z : 101 - 4 ,40 *.; .311 it• • • • • ~.tt =;2l MB lots 1. lJ If ,Ig3ttaliFON2'l3, _ , iiiii:iitilidiisr,. , oersitre 0, 16136 :ONLY' tife LTAN DRMOCR tale. NEWS =E= 1.111.9F1":11YO )T CRT wlencmalay, ar , : Marrer HATS, ..--4:5(11n siva 0, or if 1 'd e'ilk A d lfliM 'ita -lite° will b r reintrrul :I l an e l uh i m u lri ' p ' - At i ttli n g i tt V I A 171,1 of Business il l4°llo a s !wort,' , AtAlia sad rates, sod story deeerintlen of Uco ais 3PIFIL XZ7 •I• X Mir IRV. lIIIIIWINID is** neatest manner, at the lowes t ' AI . 34411 the u t in" i dOsPitloh. Haring u t i OLsolleetion of type, we are p re , orders of our friends. • . htlit —OOR4rIC CREED. equal and &tact PC. ti re to all men of tahatorer Oat* sr portuasion, roltvotto or pol.t [col, ' • j•vs; - 1 Ages, tommiree and Armco/ ft 'end -000.111111.8ii nations ; entangling alliances troth 1 11. a. 296 right of State, and Torrttoriem to itellitiatttae their MPS donst.ltic offs t r s i. irowiv ma equality, the toverergnty of MO a Me rikht of the - majority to *Mak frill istionAtten tionally expres fort. t :( 6lio expenditures, intittratititne reihrtfiehtft. • fieseti-, 'Warm of PIM &w ed of osibrrnarsos. 'Won to all sewer rolitleal organ. killasiloll eorruptihtno cot Jx,lihcr. 41. . A sacred pre ...alto,' of the Fedeta 1 Csagehlettiem, and no religion.. trot. jot op, .11/b.ll. NO big o try, or pride of mote, or dIN. ti o aioll Of birt h moon; AMer tell 11 OI (1 , No. 16. Mowed and protertton for the reghts of all. Thg prtserontion of the no taraltcnttrn fro*, end the H i ght of al/ to the rah.. domain imppeet ten of the American t Oppoution to all rhartered monopplies Ciannune brotherhood and gam! will to eille-nobyladably to those of Me ho 'who'd of faitA: trPrefs osy Rex , I reaper( the labori aft rnap is At fosotdation of MA We ilh of ft fry Moglittty ; and the free laborer., of the North de form rimpact firth fbr their prohity and their rn talligoses. .11 are forbid th at i should do theta rorddie, Of PToAe 17111711% , lee nu *Wit 14 Myeloid most cestutderat, 011 for the lo bentail 11111401. —Dace NAv. Wieuld lii pima tA, Ererwaro .'hair I I.ollt 17.'11101110 coltirnts mrrn as 4 friomrs4i, 1,14 1I ta.211.0010. belt *ring /his twio imic_ittelitart POLICY as frVii as Oflr 1111,1 latilllAVlllPl • lltrtr.--tirce • A X tiortlitry ia mast prosprrorri whtre (a - kw emprinaltda fist }rnibtest reward Duct] 11 For tie; Trwelimom Aft! Ritstva tx Mtt.r.9 TOWNSHIP.- The Of Miles asvonliled at Madivon- Saturday 'the 27th for the purpose tit fillaDag a Democratic pole. The pole iv itiertifilboi theft in the country, and doev impelit Moths Democracy of that town and vi- hiatentssell alpeeially the ladies." h is 150 feet high, ;domed with ribbons at the top, MD . ilea* straftwer, U. S. Hag, and a large with " Buchanan and Breckinbridge, tutkm and the Union" inscribed aPhllribri Alter the raisfng three times three illaktliten x wbereupon a tneeting was or gimllol' by choosing the following officers : 4 9 1/11Wdent—Adam Shafer. Eke lifejkidenti—Wic. Allison, Daniel Mil ter, PAM. Kline el ter. qecrstaty--Frederick Kurtz, D. G. Bush was called upon and delivered &spirited address, after which the Deneic rilleilltiklOdied to the residence of Mr. Long, 2 ills eakt of Mintsonburg, in order s ' raising another pole. *Let Long's is 100 high : connains sari a banner bearing the in lirechinbridge, and 11'1:116" an f 0e pee was trimly plea; 11h101( tlislei were giliert, Whereupon illarlOilmilbrilCy proceeded - ho the school-house sajltiersibitsci a meeting. ...ilfhliefflit-TSamnel Frank. G. Kuria, 'llPledat36Y•Kurts MIA called upon to ad * thivassembly, and responded in the riati Gemini, whereupon the meet ' *Aid: Sur. J.Laisonla-Orisiox or Mo. lkiettAN. urns- re *him portion of the op- P6411:61* Wire ban attempting to mike the pahlichativre that " Old Hickory" did not MI "Mr; Buchanan in high estimation "her aillatige that Gen. Jackson wrote a let -4414 ittleiddfi he Aieho disparagingly of Mr. *, [ ;teat ; that misrepresentation has been ilapitialkill Mr. Mao °Aycock, of Nashville, • - ' army to - sea mos - totter. o, liiitst w hi ch a onotatiOn - al t.... 111 = 1 ' , it • shoat, and he fi nds it infe rhano aisakt i'iiionairit , Immediately succeed. ElLl a [loll[ i mado by the Know•Noth • ng in Gen. Jackson's own 4.211fr‘ Buchanan is d min of 01111wastaa*Cand if he comes into the deign:f illet iillits will execute the duties with I l lg ielt. till' ' - : ~., , • T t i lbw fincasionos. PARTY LIND TIP FRIMONT Mt . election of the Fremont :o*liiOen In 'Pussylrani& will help the reolrilarfilitone. • Itt triumph wilt Ire •, ,' pr $ , 41 party of which Mr. Fill lifill,Bo/1111 fa hit Albany speech, as fel- Jews r ' , p t." } !:(„114 . ougioset (Tremont) party sue ' iift, eurptea6ty to the destruction of 1/0,4 awed by our } orrfa- , 4... corsited by their Idaod, and beiyailied *At 01'4/aka/pa inheritance." ; • pie Tit in pi Minya trr Aftrin that Maio :vs mop In Kansas flvet weeks, ago; and 411110 tholtufflan" Lane then led an abolition t Kansas and begun a civil War, tkockuunation and bloolahed. )mici - iip, i., AbolltOulats, For what 3 lilleint41" 0 0010iAni• 117 "lid elect a ,!!!!!!//1141114,41,10rit". , ri Compromise Act as ondenm end denounce its repeal. Keep it before the people, that the Black- Republican majority in the National Ronal) of Representatives reflised to concur in the Senate Dili, which was designed to totter° peace to Kansas, which wiped out all the obnoxious territorial laws of .which they complained, and provid.or the settlement of the disputed question in a tnatmor against , Ivliieli no honest, or fair-minded, or Consti tution-loving man could raise an objection. Keep it before the people, that the Black- Republicans, by denying to the people of the Terntorieirthe right of self-government--ore in favor of white slavery—and tins, while they are advocating the equotity bf the black man, they would strike downtantl trample' upon ono of the most cherished tights of the people of their own color. Keep it before the people, that the Demo cra t c party stand.. now whre it stood in the days of Jefferson, Madison and Jackson, up holding the equality of all the citizens under the law, whether rich or poor, proud or hum ble, 'Whatever their religion or wherever Lunt. Keep it before the people, that the Demo cratic party is the only noNtorr party in the country -that it displays its principles and lights its battles In the open day, and in the full blaze of the sun--that it acorns decep tion and abhors trickery ; but conscious of the immutable justice of its cause, and rely ing with a Christian faith nnpoi the intelli gence of the American mind and the patriot ism of the American heart, it looks for its vindication at the wares of all political power—the frit. and u9purchasable vottrs of the Republic. Kip it before the prople, that the, Demo erotic party is the champion of the working and producing classes of 11VeTouTirry, — iiiiit it alw s nys ha , . interposed between them and the bloated monopolies, whic,4.4 the power ' of associated capital, would crash. them to the dust,that it scorn.; and repudiates all the social distinctions based upon wealth, by which the rich upstart would attempt to lord It over his poorer yet more respectable fellow- Citizen, and Create a mimic, initahroom aristocracy in this country, more inexorable and exacting than the hereditary nobility of Europe. Keep it &fore the people, that the Demo cratic party iv the only party in the country which stands up for the rights of the poor and laboring ui/ide man—that wherever the disabilities of the citizen have - been removed whatever the right of suffrage has been en larged, either by Constitutional reform, or by Legislative enactment, 80 88 to place the Ivor man upon a level with the rjch man in determining the laws under which he should bye and prosper, the work was accomplished by Democratic effort and by Democratic votes. It was so in Rhode Island —it was so iii Virginia -it \vas so in Pennsylvania— it was so in the District Of Columbia—and it has been so, we assert it proudly, fearlessly and truthfully in almost every State in this broad Union. Fr FTIA, STATUS OSSA ACIBF.D. Lis the Illack Republican anything (aiya the Detroit Free Prete) but a sectional party—the kind of a party that General Washington and General Jackson, in their fairwell addrema, warned the country to avoid, as rocks upon which' the confederacy would split I la It anything else, either in its onlaniza tam or its purposeal Let us see. Trrcite mtateti were not repre sented in the Convention that nominated Fremont. Fifteen States could not, were he elected, have the slightest sympathy with his administration, nor take part in the af fuiri4 of the government. They would be virtually ostracised. War would have been made upon their institutions, and they would have no other resources than defence_ It is painful to contemplate the then Ism ail& ensuing state of things With a power behind the throne greater than the throne itself, holding M the doctrine that there is a higher law than the Constitution, shat Would constitutional guarantees and consti tutional barriers ho worth to the South I With audacious mockery the Philadelphia Rftfirliis preserved! Why, the political history of the chief engineers of that Convention in , a history of continuona assaultq, upgp the Union and of persistent denials of the bin ding obligation of the Constitution. It will Loa sorry time on this continent when an administration shall be borne into power on the waves of sectional hostility of one half of the States 'against the other half of the States of the Union. EIAIIINIE vi) YounsaLvas.—Take the Congressional Globe, for the Rat_ Congress. an official paper about which there can be no deception, turn to pages 3005 to 3007, and there yon will discover an act of John 43.' Fremont which ix not 'stated or. ollnded to in the four-penny biographies of the " path-an der." Those two pages toll a tale of ingrat itude and inhumanity, for upon them is re corded die fact that John C. Fromont voted against the Bounty passed for tho benoilt of the " widows and minor children of deceased of /lie war of 1812." Can any old soldier tote for John C. Fremont, or can any one who has been beneffited by that just L and human tat.; support the mini who op persofr it 4 rf be has any opiiit - he certainly pannot. BELLEFONTE, PA., WED opiamcd tife jig* IA nu aountrg ! TIM Immortal Washingtdd Discountenancing 'SECTIONALISM, A 8 TENDING TO DISUNION. On the 17th of September, 1796,'sixty years ago, George Wasl,ington published to the People of the United States his Farewell Address. That memorable document is among the richest and moat invaluable legs= cies bequeathed by that great and glorious patriot to his countrymen. It was, so to speak, the dying counsel of the most illus trious resin that. hag ever lived in the revolv ing tido of time, published to cotemporane one and succeeding generation,. In the dr curristances which elicited that address 1 -the exalted character of itti author—and the pa triotic and profound lessons of wisdom' it inculcates—the author and the iincument re. mind us of Moses delivering Inn Farewell ()huge to the children of Israel. We ti every mon, woman end child, able to read vneut.74ll IrllA ueeply Selcuon • portant cx 1:03 yr uurcrvanTry slligrOry, take the trouble of re•peiusing this hallowed and consecrated State paper, since ninny of its passages are so strictly applicable to ex isting circumstances, that they seem almost to have emanated from a Prophet, raised up . to heaven to point out the shoals and quick sands that now threaten to engolph the Ship of State. We have just finished the re-perusal of Washington's Faro Well Address, a reilili,l4;T -though we have often read it Leto , or have its solemn truths Wien upon on and and heart pith the same ominous a alrful import. They have sem ed to impress us -01414-Wig h .llllll-tArtilly rattor..ace f the character of the great and good man=- almost more thug man—by , A hom those vivid, prophetic, admonitory utterances, were commuumated to the It orld. The one idea which seems to have absorb ed the luminous mind and palpitating heart of the illustrious Washington, when Le penned his Farewell Address, wis to unprtss upon his countrymen, then and thencefor ward, the imperative necessity of PEwil a vat.piviww,hau. Titian WM) uY usdos, sad the chief danger n Inch would as,ml a ad jeopard it, which his prophetic mind fiire , aw would consist iu sections! and ,gragrap/p , divisions. In proof of the clearness with which Washington, foresaw the:, evils, and the graphic and soul-felt eloquence, with which he gave utterance to his admonitions, we quote sonic leading passages from his Farewell Addr,l4. The Addis h 4 is contained in ILA ey's Conffilulton," a work sanctioned by the highest authorith n of the land, for the cor rectnem and exhitiNivenel l s of its statistical and linitorical lamination, from pages 215 to 231. On page 21 . ; w.e lied this " The UNITY OF M i,T wll I eh n slitutrs ONE PEOPLE is dear to you It is Justly so, for it is a main pillar ns the edillee,of your real Independt nee— the Nup• port of your safety. of your prosperity, of that liberty which you tvt highly prize. Butes it in to forsee, that, from ttilletent eau av, and from different quarters, much •-patns Will be taken, many artifice, employed, to weaken in your minds the conviction of Don truth—as this is the punt in your political fortress against which the batteries of internal and external enemies will he molt constantly and actively. though ufteu covertly and in sidiously, directed—lt Is of infinite mordent that yonshould properly estimate the IMITICIISC value of you, National Union to your Col lective and individual happilicc----that you should chef TA a cordial, habitual, and immo vable atta'chme'nt to it—accustoming yout selves to think acid 47 , 4 of it as of the Pal lc dium of your political safety and prosper • tly--walching for itnjercirritation w i th jeal ous anxiety—discountenancing whatei , er may suggest even a auspicuin that it ran, tit any event, be abandoned— AND INDIGN ANT Lt FROWNIN (1 UPON THE FItSI . DAWN ING OF EVERY ATTEMPI"FO AT. EN• ATF, ANY ONE PORTION OF OUR COUN TRY FROM THJE REST, OR TO ENFEE BLE THE SACRED II Ml%7llEll'll . NOW LINK TotiKfl I ER ITSVAI{IOUS PARTS." Oti pages 218 and 219, Washington, in " thoughts that breathe, and words that burn," portitiys the mutual benefits result titareariforli tti end Noel and tlie South, and the (';Wrlrqsjitit-u7re.iit: horrors consequent upon Disunion, witnessed broila and intestino wars, rendering both see- titans in_eamy prey to the insidious machina tions of foreign powers. Tuw REPURI.KIAN PAIITT.--there is a rich Ling from Wendell Phillips, a loading Abo- litlon disunionist. Wo commend-it -to the attention of .all those who aro anxious to know the real tendency of Black Republi canism. When that party is endorsed by Garrison and Phillips, all true patriots should pause long and reflect seriously he. fore they cast their votes for Fremont. Phil lips says : There is merit in the Republican party.— It is this: It is - -the first If cc tio nal party over organized in this country.• • •. It Is not national.* is sectional. It is the North arrayed against the South. • • The first crack ha.lholeetkorg is visible yoW will yet hear it go With' a crack through the :cogiro. BEAT TIIIB WHO CAN.—Punt 8. Ridgewno., ofilendorson county, Missouri,.s revolution 'guy soldier, ham seven sous, eightso4s•ln law, and' tvreukty-fonr grend sons, all of whom, except ono solution, wilt vote for ucluenan and Breeknuidge. 131 NGTON The flhiek Republicans 4:ably had a meet twelve miles Vora" or Philadel phis. It was a regular- fusion affair, being a Mixed assemblage of white" and blanks. Three of the speakers were white, but one was a negro, named P.urym. This colored gentlemen" made a strong(speech which was preey fully reported in tile Philadelphia News, a Fillmore paper. Frdm it we make a few beautiful extracts, which admirably illustrate the temper and principles of the Black Republican faction. Here is what the Fremont orator said: " What aro we doing ? Wit AM: A HA- I , VON OF ROBBERS, OF LI RS, OF HYP OCRITES ; we are • nation o Wave holders. Wit batten and fatten and ru riot in the holm and blood of our fellow men," "I am, of course, es you knew,'polltically disfranchised r but still, in .lontiment, i feeling, in 'conviction, I 'mica DISUNIO, ABOLITIONIST, AND I REPUDIATE THE CONSTITUTION OF_'Mils COUN TRY, for, I -think, stronger resinous thammy friend hero has- given. Yet I wish John Charles Fremont elected. If I had no other reason, the simple fact that the South hate', Ism would be a reason-why I should suspect Imo to be 1111 honent Man. But it ildln.l„l,N eaume the South hates him . • ehrl fffid I um we is a pains proverb which le a pretty good teat of character: 'Tell me me the company you keep and t will tell you what you are.' He mu found Its Memo affinity 11 ith the true friends of freedom. I n o d endorsed by such 1111211 as GERRIT of world-n ids philauthrephy and benevo lence. lIIS VICTORY IS OUR I ICTofty. DEFEAT TO lIINI WOLi LD'IJE OLFEAT TO US. I WANT NO DECEPTION HE HATES SLAVERY AND WHILE IIE SURSCRIBES, UNFORTUNATELY, TO THE CONSTITUTION OF TIM CtiENTRY, HIS ELECTION WILL BE lellE ENTEIt- INU TO THAT SYSTEM WIT/CU WILL BRING DOWN ITS El IN AND FALL BEFORE A WIEAT WHILE." Time who admire such sentimi ids as the shove will of course votc for John Charles Element. Disguise it. as they may by false hood and prevarication, the -Fivenont move ment all tends to deemion : and such is the great issue to be decided by the American people in November neat. IS A WHITT: MAN AS GOOD A 3 A NI,MtO '— Toe QGItSTION of SUPfiItIORIT mold appear, by thc , following parupaph from the Martinsville, illsositalts that the Black Republicans of Indiana have settled in their winds the lineation cis to`the relative mipetiurity of tlir black and It/mite races, which, after lung study, Mr. I.:Dion-slidiug Batik m ass unable to dcc de upon. The in ealent related occurred at a'Fnmnrit barba- cue in Morgan counly. 4 ,-- e The most 'characteristic part of the whole affair ucculied at ll.c table, A me chanic, a hu had hitherto been it, strong 'Tm 0- moat man, It' as on the ground with his wife and child. Ate given word he attempted to cross the rope to the table, but was met by ono of the marshals and told to Maud bade and give room fur the ladies. lie stepped back as he we:, told, a lien seven or eight WOltioll, 'AS lII,ACK AS 1111. ACM OF KPAOLS: adm nixed before him to the table, and ate %tali the rest of the Fremont ladies and gen tlemen. This a ss to touch for him. Ile lore the Fmemont badge from Ins breast, and so that, although lie a Lid a pour ineelian ie, lie aas yet a little lat.( VI than a ilegro,. lie said if lie and his a it.; were to, he (Must bad( limn a Flom:nit barbacue togise place thine ;u, „ l i e no louver ties a Meowed unto, and immediately , tamps d, the Fremont badge outlet hia feet, iii dccl, , iid his intention to vote for Buchanan. We are infunited that four or five others; dal likewise. It is said that not less than twentj negroes illte,at the first table.” Moaa TAUNTS "TOW FRM().—The TIS lured organ of free speech, feet: iggers, and Fremont, the New York Herald, in alluding to the Black Republican Elector I tjeket, re cently formed in New Jersey, *see the fol- 1 lowing longuage, The Know-Nothing party has, for some time past, been endeavoring to seduce the Republicans into an alliance' do the Presi dential electoral ticket; but the day of mercy has now passed, and there iii no hope for them from the supporters of Fremont.— The ticket nominatalis an insult io their teetli'—it. isplain, Simon Pure, straight out, defiantly, dean ftemblican. No mistake about it. And wort of all, the dilegatietv Ilion the various parts of the State have gone to their homes glorying in their courage at hit\ lOg nude it no ; and confident, too, that the ticket they have named will be right side rip in November. The Flllinoro party in Pennsylvaina is he mming, iliwo m istsisoix.a6 - 1 . 6ary....f its ii npri ue i - pled 'kid ern, a There telnieY tif the Wooly Horse team—willing to do all the drudgery and al low then rivals to enjoy all the honors.— Thu State ticket 1:4 out-and-out Fremont, and pretended ' , Minoru papers are urging that party to support it, knowing that its suoceas will he their own :Amon. They halo i>eati openly warned in so many words, that if the fusion ticket succeeds, it will be a Fre mont victory exclusively of Fretnent men, its success must necessarily Wean to the benettt of Col. Fremont alone.: Yet th e professed" friends of Mr. Palmer. Are w it. ling Toltild - thar al d - irr glerifyint-ther-pro..- moot cause, although they constantly . meet with jeers, taunts and insults from th ose they are striving to benefit with their influ ence and their votes. IN not such an exam ple 'of sweet patience a rarity in ttla !ticked world. - .► •' „,NYnectut as einem TirK KT 3 Thbdlitibte. hats l°Udi lam t t att lPwllle 1 , -1) 4" 4 sylvan fgr irenoaby ioin 20 torooona jority,antyiet tk j j y I iaTIO Electortal Ticket ill flotd I Cannot a„noin who h a lf a n ey'; r iz that the Ticket now pip}, to re ' pt'Filleibre la pledged - W,Fronabot l• So disgracedJi'frood was never Wong p i e r 1, stniteit to' the Inhilo Pie • FIJI, EXTRACTS FOR VIE PXOPLR 2EII The friends of Colonel Fremont claim that he is a worker, and great business man, in proof of which they allege that during his twenty-one days' service in the Senate he intr Aduced eighteen bills. To those who know that most of the bills introduced in Congress are prepared by the clerks of com mittees, employed and paid by the Govern ment, this feat will not be deemed vary mar vellous. Few bills are reported to Congress, which a good, clear-headed business man could not prepare in a few hours. If Colonel 'FreinonCii friends had informed the public how many of these eighteen bills he induced Congress to convert into laws, we might judge of his sagacity in their preparation and the contblenee reposed in him by the legklatille department of the Ilovernment Vire have known many persons to introduce a score of bills, %heti few, if any of therm ever commanded the appioval of Congress. It is an easy thing to introduce bills, but a far different one to give thencthe impress of laws. We have looked, in this connexion, at Got. Frynont'a account as a Senator from the 10t11 tilthortiloth of September, 1850. Sept•r.-80, 1850, mileage, 10.270 84,108 00 per diem, 230 days p 1,840 00 Dec. 2, 1853, additional 41uttt,e -14441110944 Cottgraw - February 11, 1856, per diem for detention by sickness on Jour neying home Ow the lst ses sion, 31st Congress, 85 days, 688 00 Colonel Fremont's friends tell us wheth, r during-these 230 days, for which he charged and received pay, he had not am ple time to'prepate his eighteen hills without overtaxing his mental faculties f Will they tell us what route mint be travelled to make the distance fmm California and buck 13 856 miles Will they explain ally he was not satiatied with what tie eh Arged at thi time, but demanded an addition three years ' afterwards 7 We should like to be inform ed where he was sick on the road eighty-aix day, when returning home in This I Ixemuul._ • twenty-nue days and no more, and that he !Tceiv . pl $..8,110,40, being at the tate of tbill. 20 per day. We think he might well :Mord to draw eighteen bills for such a per diem From his returning ;and iziabing an addition: al Chant in DM, and again in 1454, a e ;...7et a glimpse at his ruling pas don. Do his sup porters believe the compensation received by him reasclialile am! proper? We suspect that most people will Come to the conclusion that the 65,928 received in Dihd, at the time or the'_rni'e, was an ample rwpensation, and the: his return and demanding oren two thousand-dollars more, revtrals a trait in his character which few will appland.—Wash rugion Cason. LABORINO Mi&N LOOK. AT THIS —While. the Atiolitionedii who favor the state le ket nom inated to please David ‘Vilmot, Steven 4. and William F. Jolinkion, three mw) who hat e done mon! to A boli tioulsu Peurigyl vania thou any other three men irilhiti its hordern, are publikhing in the Ledacr, cx tia•lxlromSoulhctu papers, to operate 'Toil the wbrking (lases, they forgot that limp 0- te .4 e of David Wilmot, Bartlioloincw La porte, a candidate for Sul e) or (knee:4 on the Abolition fu , ,ion State ticket, voted, n title it member of the Legislature, with a me.tgro few of kindred spirits in favor of Mr. Smith's 1011, grctnq thr tvht of sufra;e to neer, ors in the fn r of that prortszon of the Staffs Con se itution,lthat none but wh,te cdisens sh ould enjoy Mai sacred right. To bliow how con -ostently Laporte is connected with the Fre mont party, look at the pro c eedings of tha late negrO convention at Williamsburg, New York, contained in Ile Philadelphia Daily News, of Friday, September the 20th, the leading Fillmore organ of Pennsyleania. We copy the following from the News The Negreaa tot Cosincd—Declaration en Faro, of Fremont and Dayton.—Uur New York exchanges, of Free Soil proclivities, publi sh the proeeedings of the Negro Conven tion at Williamsburg. '1 he sable ions of Africa went to work.iu regular Anglobiaxon fashion, by the appointment of a President and Vice President aid Steretanea. The usual Committees were appointed, and a se t too of resolutions reported, which recom mend the formation of suffrage assomatooki and leagues imbordinate to the associationn, and th'tet measures be taken to urge upon the next Legislature the justice and expediency of granting the new o equal lailitical privi leges with the white man. At a :,ulisequent meeting resolutions were aditiM if ratifying the nomination of Fremont and Dayton. But. the cream of the joke the ultuna-lhulf, of impudence -is the passage of a rc: of ,lion in these words: That we further, recom mend that tit eatiouVtinfhine ',l:lHoriations in different parts the St tde appoint ft Com mittee to imermiate candidates for offico • in their respective localities." A white candi date to he interrogated by his neff,to con nftilments ! fVf; cannot but think that the negro-mania io the North is drawing rapidly to a hand, and if tire fanatics in that reotic?n de-not-get raid oil an their own coin rather 800 lier, OHM they expect the debt - to be li quidated, we shall have to confess ourselves sadly mistaken intim " MgO4 of the Donee." Jeants in one of .his speeches at Nair York, uttered these senti ments: " I have been abroaitin other lan4s. I have witnessed arbitrary poWer ; I have ptople of Miter num dries : but thare is nOcount,:y under flod's heaven Where's man feels for his fellow-man, except in the United States. And if you could see how despotism looks oa ; hew jealous des potic powers of the world are of ourglori oue institutlftS, you would cherislitherOon• sititution sluitUnion in i•onr' Heart—next to ;row belief ih the- Chnistialtjeligion—th4 Bible for Heaven, and the Constitution of vatic country fur gams" • , who hirmt. 4A110 4 /CArtfi.A., AtAke!frers. —Cab trembot do it, 1;444 by en] pyriy,'ind riding on the wave Of r'enstsneo. eta agiAtion.'t , .. non. Wm. B. Reed, of Philadelphia, has. , iDemocrats, when the Abolitionlits talk written i letter to the citizens of Franklin of the . aggressions of the South upon the,/ county, Pennsylvania, in which he thus for- North," tell them that they are nustaktete 4 elbly depicts the consequences of disunion : that it is not true. Point them to the fact that the Soil st'ini "I remember, years ago, on a: bright sum- opposed tit the stare trade and feronitedite nit' mer's afternoon, toiling up the turnpike road en the Cove Mountain, in your comity, and 1 ' „ lA __ when beached the stimmit„turnitig to gaze That the Not th mot in firvyr of Ilia Jai :Anse trrde, and pp/hired its repeal. on as beautiful a hecne as evt r gladdened i , , Point them to the fact that at the adoption stretches off to Maryland and towa rdsthe my eye—the valley al ri2" , fiii 6 -4 , - iir w "l'''''' l of the Constitution 12 Of th e 13 States held slim „,,_ Potomac. It is a familiar scene to most of That six of those slave-holding Stahel axe you. To me it WAR new, , ind its impression . now frue: has never faded from my mind. As far as them to the fact that since the adopt:. the eye could reach there was fertility—the PointCtion of the Constitution the number of free signs of tranquil industry : all was 'beautiful StaXs hate increased from one to 16, whilst all was Peaceful ; it looked—as 11. was —like the abode of a happy and united people.— Orb slasc-Imldinx States hate' ottbr,ordS , • to their nturibtr. The political line separating PennsylvattiO Poipt them toilte-fect that the *fah had/ front Maryland—traced by those old fctylrion- yielded up to tree soil over St QMO square Dixon—was riot visible to the e v ed surveyors, Charley Masan and Jefeimali nines of tt Finery with h , ^aipti6inally slave it. The territory. trees on which they marked it had long la f4TI : A Ild point them to tho'hther fact that the ft fled or tin: marks disappeared. Many a North lia , nicer p_t 3 tekleti one foot of hum Was sepal sled by jt, hut,. ez cept in tin :'round for •h , very, n hilt we.; origiwilly free„ eye of the law, Doom; knew it or cared about ~i I. "I hire oftetrt.'•"..fer painful thoughts are thrusting tiieruselves upon me—re-callkil that scene, of actual beauty and united niter. est, and realized what it n ould be—what yourcondition will be—what must he the condition of every . county of thus 42,..........., Lancaster, York, Adams, Franklin, Fulton. Redford, Somerset, Fayette and Greene : if Idisunion be forced on us, and the rupture be, ar it would be, between what are popu• larly but falsely called the free and slave Slates—between us and Maryland. I n tali ' every roan could be matte to understand ' what a frontier in, even that of civilized life. Its daily, hourly vela none_ mid dan ;ern--its line of cohloiti lionu 4. t4l keep the smuggler, ri and out - the . roA di of fog, tiii, Iron iii , ,tii.c and Libor. iuG• , .io:7. , \ , ry avenue and concealed in every thiel.. t -the' murderer striking down ills victim to toy and flying with the fresh blood on his Mimi, te, It fur clot terrJtery to morrow - -the• tuck ering duo strif the hot blood of coif, i hij. noon dispute - all this u (mid he the dad) doom of every HOU Omni country o f tin. State; and ■ir u•s the beautiful valley I hare spo• ken of would be distressingly I.l',lteha the e. . Moody, iine•--rrhtch ilkumen must trace This is true, though hard to rOnceine. Pennsylvania, and you citizens of Franklin coauly, have so long re pot.ttl in the s Pry centre of the Union, that ) ou ( annot, understand how y(1,1 can become a frontier, and how yllll'i will suffer when you do." lEEE 34110 40 WAsnis'ivroi.'s List MONtenes —Guy. Wise, of Virginia, delivered an nratlon eta the •idle of July, an which thus ilestatrthesrilao Last momuds of Washingtot, " Ile died as he lived, rind what n beauti ful economy there was an his death !. Not a faculty 14'114 impaired, not an error marred the moral of his life. At the age of sixty • i sax, not giallo three-score y tars and tea, he was taken assay while his t. actinide wits lr,i rect. He took cull, shglited this o. roptoin;, say ing.:Let it go as it ensue.' In the morn ing of tlSi, l4th of December 1179, he li•lt illness; called 111 bin Us LI ACI:r, Rotalltags, to blot d him. Ire was much ngi i tan-knot! Washington slid to him, • Don't he afraid.' When about to bind rp his numb- said with difficulty, -more.' Alter ell clt a la had failed, he flenignatAA the paper I lie natant for In. will, then turned to bliss iar and said, • I lind I am tr, , ,ing; my b« rli cannot continue fen„. I Isdieved from the Ilrst It trould DO you arrange nay accounts and nettle Illy L.XAS, as you know more Slut them than any one else, nail let Mr. Raw lings haunt rec•ildinj ant odor lettere which he has hegain.' tween live and sax o'clock, he said to his physician, Dr. Creak, • I feel myself going; you had better not take ally aim e !rouble l i about me, but let nee go off quietly ; I can• not last long.' Shortly after, again he said; 'Doctor, 1 the hard, but I am uot'afragl to go ; I believed from my first attack ; I should ' not iturvive , it; Inj breath cannot last About 10 o'clock he made several attempts to speak to Mr Lear, and at last am just going. Have me do:Weirdly buried, a n d do not let my body be put into um fault in . less lhaniura trays MUT I asia Lear says, ' I bow, d asseat ' lie looked at me again, and said, •do ynu nails r taml me r 1 replied, yes,.sir.' • ;fit well said lie. Anal these w. re his last anoads, nod well Ins la ~t Nturds were well.' Just before he ' expired lie lelt Mt at pul.n ; Lis baud fill ! from his wtist, and Gi urge Washington was no more. ITICAI kieicaorrtus ,Some of dtir run terniviraries are giving' the glaring iitoette dines and iunking inconsistencies; of the ltlsc6 Republican Abolitionists, Frorisiewmg them ac sele.s.t tfm felon • To claim to be is Rya/di-me p t vi and Oyu poll r,prirenhon vontili.itv a randi , Mar for the Presidency, representing only 16 States out of 31, winch compose we Ra vi ! . To claim to be all anti-slat:ft v 'll7l - and then t 4 soluct A •41%011/iiiier as A candidate . _ fur the Presidency ! _ To claim to he the TART! in favor of liter.- AMC in filttir of the blacks—rind then pro• pose to enslave the WHITEY Who emigrate to KANSAS ! .To endoi Sumner'n abuse of South Ca rolina or sou Caroline turn --and that ticket ono from tliat"Rtate to be their stab (lard hearer' To °bairn( to ho in the opposition party to Derma:racy, and then select a renegade flow our ranks as thoircaralidato for President. 'to clamor against the Helectflin of NE W nes, anda.lien put one in nomination whe had never had but twentrono days of polit ical experience in his whole life. MORE DEAD COME TO LIFE,"— CAPTAIN DROWN, WOO ACCORDING TO TUE KAASAS LETTER WRITERS, WAS BRUTALLY MURDERED BY "BOR. DER. RUFFIANS" AT OSSAWATTAMIE fB ,GUT, IN A LETTER DECLARING TUAT lIE rs ALIVE. HE ALSO STATES TUATAIVENTY-SEVEN MIMS - MUR DERED AT ills WITU hUM SELF ARE NOT ON Y ALIVS lIDT Dr}.)- /NG WELL.—PAi/a e •hia Ledger. • 17 Aim A. B. Qui4 thoraihis ieoi4once 4.1 ItoVert ,MOVlday, 40, IP 'into U r . Q u ill b be c s o, (Dr Some year,,, sOlt ,lf the Pennsytvanis Oolontratiottiliutkitx. ~. nl'l ~ Putut them to the fact that the. free coif territory has increased from some 300,000 square miles fn 1787 to over 2,000,000 of -]quire trmiles in ISSO, whllit the territory now dedicated" to slavery is not as Ism as it was at tix, tithe titc creased la teziatory over st ven fold, Whilst the South bog decreas , d one-seventh. And in nearly all this territory nhich,haa been added to the North, slavery existed by law at the time we acquired it 117 treaty...—. This was the case with both the Spanish and French purchases. extendnig from the At lantic .to the Pacific. • Point them to the fact that in 1811 thai Northihol hut more members of Congress than the 'Zillah; 11114 that now, in 1556, thit niervi-eri to fifty-three. Aid 3t t, uldi all th] :e stubborn, indis putalrlr. and lindoim.'ll farts Alatlrl,.! thew in. time tare, these '• Rued , min ].,hritifers" are con stantly. decrying the North for glibmitting td Soother] aggrtss.on," to the demands of the power, AREVOLUTION IS CERTAIN V 1: Y ly OURS bk. it I. I lit: ',te it *oh in this age, that ve.evrei -4 1`wet• therearromew wa n lent in boi ug ruad• ovary day, let one ,1 mitt "After a therielli man/ligation of the Klux.iutn, with a view to ttbtath a pug In.- speedir for the morn cowman ilia of litito.11,11) I have at, in Itrtnging tort-hat a,) I. 'llO en your have filial - ed since lI 4atrudese hen, end it iallolll eat, motel ILe mina pnioulat rasa the W 0111.1), - R .% ' Ol4 Y •.1 JiEIrAIiOLD'S (11.‘..NTINIt PREPARATION RIUIILY 0 0 ).)c1.'„IiTRAT1II, compouND Ff,qrt) EX - TRACI& BlicAra. Cur all •11daa„dsof th« liltuldor kidneys, sifority aahl sestina 6r,Vl/16 JUSTOTHL AVFLICTIao It QutC3 4.114 , 44 , 11 of the fascicles, kidneys, passel, 40/fogy, ob.' , rnatan.. lo autuidalrits, letOrtS, ALA dII 111.114141 a Fri - ri 1114 r. oln ciocs:eenail nAprudalieles :st hit V(1174 AND I.I;I:III..I7'ATED SUFFLEISRA. and Alt Im proper d h sages horn the bind dor, kl I ~.y1 MILE or saxual cat FE nrar r ana, MA whether *LIMA( /a f. o w h.'ertstasuee they may have celgLnatad , shod way 15(5N11 STANDING, and rlayr lei the frau. he I:1, , )031 1711:' PA Lio CII inios 155e1d ou by abueu, a meat terrible e wince has blqught thousands of the human tennis Ls eulinsely par, b, !hub 1 , 10,1• g Um bra tat 1 , 01. 0 s of Fa meta, and blyghting In tie - bowl the 01 many a noolt Beth, oast Ins eurod by the use of this I s`. ALL115i..1.11.5 . 425:1:155Y„ an I isa a mu.L inn also li most benelit •veryinsdy, 110555 the sompll delte.ste to the coolined and gee ' spa', .I,e; in .did. ow equal Is t / Ire fund- ,rtoa has.• 5 "Idris/ 5 1cl the 60111/10 disease, wea j once seated In llio aystein, undermines - Illations tui tion 555piog the rosy s 041 dents of life, rrzot, , ovc}: Tu ( : it 1: .1f F. 1)Y - AT CiNu he leprous dsstOutent, wboae ett.ct Rot ta •e-I, an eon 5 s'y 'Kith blood of man, Thar swift or 1550 - 150tver cones througi, TI, rtator - I ;ate . , lied 111:5-ye of the holy, Curdling, lijos ase - r drlSls , l•ln,:l tuts, Milt. The out. guy bloed II 1.11 ARS. of" UrbolC!ColTattellr* , ll. PrACC DOCTUR 4. lIELIAIIOLD'S EIIOIILY CONCENTRATED 120)1P5 5 C ND FLUII) EXTRACT OF BUCBV, pr•parod thtecay according to tits liutu Of Pharmacy and Citcrzset4 s relit tine greatest accuracy and okernbralkhostledge and care dorotsi In its comb:l.sWe Ita p Ap.)%r ity bus extended so all direel:utbl, end whether used in tool, c ,antry. hospital or pet, ate practict, has neram ably given the meet dareaded stet eaelalweisied *store,' ea, and produc • I the stlutary and leo „,41 e.fr,cti Tt TALI cbo end Tl - 11hl rfl ibII - R,• 101 ernes in the I's itcd !states and firttlah l's n rule:, 1.1 both 100 , 15 0 aeo.l prital, pleCiTu• Witt p , ;test eu‘.., 4,0 sueltritAobl,,,fklot Ilse pro,ri of , 1,0 0101 , { •I.l2lnlng ho La contradic ted, t 1555 II •Irohold Hi r ehly Cuocentrated Cum p.51.555 Flul I httraet Ikt You, Is tlin insert byloabla I petrel) , eVer offered I. the art... 51.1 The billua 101411lary leatirsuel.l Is, 1,31,0,1,1.1 so the proprietor 1/1 fainotose, atuluaduik” W•4l knows, la "SO ta /V; k: AND FAME 1 Celebratedzbyetriansarot 511stIngwialnal oie rgy m • gee Pro7tmasr Donee'. Vialitale• stork oil the POMO- Ike of l'i,baie, and onset of tho lake standard works of 1r,Ak;..0 - I f is a madieine which is fsolterdly pleasant la ITV tole en I color, but Immollitt4 in lie widow. and la Oaken by pelbOne 0r slily, vex .tztoot hindrance from hueilo es et usetliCal atlb ie.,. as •xpl 1011 dirwe• Uns• fok - us s'o.l on amide number 0 1 rnliphie and retrhail s l s, ,0011Ilrates 10 coil lute Ilse 11i0el skepti cal will ea , II IpOnle Priee SI per butt'. UT nix bott les to 155. Deliv• or, .1 0, any address "'revue , ' arid Auld by, All 'l' Pr alai and Analytical Chemist No :52, rsoulli Tenth et pert, I,olubr Cliebt 1.11 1, (.1.111:10.1y butHioge,) Phildelphia To he had of Rotary Ilnickerlioff,Rellefilide,Piii, and of Orugssishiatnt deallralhiougliimt that:sated Stat.*, ('anon and Drill a / 1 Provinces TRJ.wERKT,Y DATIoN MAIL, LINE or FR AGFA tweetv.if h f r i,ti.l.6o..‘"PLC and /CAILT.U.SUM,, saves Conrad Ife nee, thrtieforM, every diem- day, Wednesday sod Friday, st 7 O'CIOOk, A sr., end IOSVON Hartbao every Tuceday, putoredtsy ilaterday at 7 o'clock, A 11. This subscriber reqienifolly intorno As tragenug pubha !list As has ri , tiaild nu Ibis settle, • new lime of StAges, for the annotomodatien of MI who :my wish to pars over WI road The, Stave ass ewe erad and comfortable, and the horses art tabulated 'to give eaddhation for speed The drifts an, isobar, obliging sod eXperialleed. NO *grime her - ssivt - we frpsvett-toassikis-bial&-anki-SUhititlibii— , ?nest pleasant to pnssiongers. gra - Egpreeis Freight courted at the BiaA! rates J,Je MICHAEL RlTln=s:troprietar.. Asr Bs o,ly - yz s, attsTALIA)OII APRs, sad, 1)ACI lf REOTITES. • Token daillratepttuideityreel Ea 6 T Alq,_ IN lIIBISP P SALOON . . . Anode 041 , 0% 41elleonle, Pauto6 ' gapoidcoissioa free. LT" CWAIAII. Asplsodiill: - 4 1 i Riot .PorhoweyrisidApeacy 'oft 'lilted 4111 wa J ti 60 ooksod XA Ag exßmln•Aek 40 1). . • etl -7c ' POl * * • MEI INI LEI 11111