BY DAVID OVER. SPEECH OP HON. ISAAC lIAZLEBBRST. Delivered al Reading, Aug. 6, 1860. Mr. H. said ho felt highly flittered by the invitation extended to him by the committee, to meet the independent electors of Berks county, at this their first muster for the coming politi cal struggle. lie *vas a member of the Peo ple's party of Pennsylvania. As a member of that organization he had been interested in the success of a distinguished Senator of this State before the f'hicaco Convention. Ale did oot conceal his wishes. He was active in giving tbcui broad and general circulation, lie did ao, for the simple reason that Senator Came ron in all bis public acts, bad beeu faithful to the Uoiou and the Constitution, and had ex hibited and maintained that rare virtuo of ab solute fidelity to the interests of his native State. During Lis whole political lifo, that Senator had been consistent in his desire to develop tho resources of Pennsylvania, by a fair and just protection to American manual labor. The united action of this State iu his favor, while it failed to accomplish what her people desired, established the fact that the Commonwealth of his birth was not ungrateful when her delegated power was cast io bis be half. But, said Mr. 11., individual preference gave way when the great question is prevented as to whether the Constitution itself is to be pieserved and maiutaiued, and when the very ease has arisen that the government is no longer safe in the hands to which it had beeu entrusted. It is with the people, and with the people alone, tint tho right exists to correct existing abuses—no delegated power can do it. Tho appeal then is directly to the people —not to party nor to partisans, not to professional politicians, nor to those who have uu interest in office and piace greater than their stake in the country, but to the people and the whole peo ple: aud to those wbo, iu regard to political affairs, have a wish for a good government, and who have power to accomplish their owo wishes. When, therefore, the People's party ratify to-uight the action of their representatives recently assembled in the metropolis of the west, they do so in the hopo that wise and generous counsels will prevail, and that iu the change of rulers now required, oar beloved re public may he administered in the honest spirit of its early founders. Mr. 11. said ho appeared before tne meeting to advocate no new doctrines, to declare no new principles. In 1844 ha had spoken in that county for the father of the American system, and be was now ready again to do bat tie against that enemy who had traduced and defrauded hiui ; and, said Mr. 11., most hearti ly do 1 co-operate with ury fellow countrymen iu the endeavor to elevate that distinguished American citizen wbo, at the same time, and under the same circumstances, on every prairie iu Illinois, raised his voice to vindicate the character and policy of Henry Clay. Honor to Abraham Lincoln for his devotion to Ilenry Clay, and for his uuwavering fidelity to the policy of "Protection to our Domestic indus try !" While, said Mr. H., I am ready to acknow ledge that the great local advantages of the position of this city, such as the magnificent river before us, and the fertility of the sur rounding country, may be considered as the original spring of its prosperity ; still, all will acknowledge that this current of prosperity has been put to motion by the desire to de velop the domestic industry of the country.— To my uiiud no man cau stand in the uiijst of such a scene as is now presented in this valley without feeling keenly tho great importance of this policy which we advocate, ainPwhich our opponents despise. It has built your railway to the coal-pits—it has united you with the Hudson. Over your canals float treasures in numerable. Foundries, forges, and steam cugtnes have sprung up along the line of your improvements. Beautiful cottages line the hill sides of the mountains around us, while all that is wanting to make our people happy, is to strengthen the spring that moves the in dustry of the country. The question of the degree of protection is not of as much impor tance as the preservation of the principle, and that is a practical question. Labor, mote than auy thing else, enters into production, and la bor must vindicate its sovereignty. I speak to nieu who go forth to labor until the evening. Look at your represenatives—have your eye upon the Capital, lie not deceived by party means—look to your votes. Hut we are for excluding slavery from the Territories. Ih ibis, also, said Air. H., Mr. Lincoln pre sents no uew doctrine, and urges DO Dew prin* ciple. The case has been thus stated in its histo rical and constitutional aspect, by the late Whig statesman. The argument 'still lives.' The Constitution of the United States was adopted iu 1788, and went into operation io 1789. At the time of its adoption the state of the country was thus :—Slavery existed in the southern States There was a very large extent of un-occupied territory —which was understood was destined to be formed into States ; and it was then determined that no slavery Bhould exist in this territory. The motives which prompted the north to recognize the existence of slavery io tbo southern States, and to give a representative to those States, founded iu part upon their slaves, rested on the supposition that no new slave States were to ho acquired on the southern frontier, and slave ry wis to be excluded from tLo northwestern territory. Not only does this clearly appear from the debates and history of the times, but as a ba sis of consideration the south insisted that w-.ere slavery existed it should not be inter fered with. A Weekly Paper, Devoted to Literature, Polities, the Arts, Sciences, Agriculture, &c., &c—Terms: One Dollar and Fifty Cents in Advance. With this the People's party of this State unhesitatiogly acquiesce. In the Convention and in the first Congress it was a conceded point that slavery, in the States in which it existed, was a matter of State regulation ex clusively. Congress had not the least power over it. ( All agitations and attempts to disturb the relations between waster and slave by per sons not living in '.he slave States are uncon stitutional In their spirit, and productive ot evil and mischief.' No patriot should counte nance them. The regulation of slavery is with the States where it exists—the responsibility, if there be any, is there. But our opponents are not satisfied with the recognition of these Constitutional rights. In a speech delivered by President Buchanan, from the executive mansion, at tho opening of the present campaign, it is contended that this old Whig doctrine of non-extension of slavery, deprives our Southern brethren of their rights in the territories. That, as the territories were acquired by the common servico and cowwou exertions of all—that they have the right to carry their slaves 'as slaves' into the new territories, or as the President states it, 'Any set of Principles which will deprive you of your property is ag iiust tho very essence of Republican Government, and to that extent makes you a slave.' The argumeut of Mr. Buchanan is uot ori ginal. It was urged by another with great force in the Senate in 1843, and was thus an swered by Daniel Webster in his speech on the 'exclusion of slavery from tho territories.' "They say that in this way we deprive th;m of the opportunity of going into this acquired territory with their property. "Their property!" What do they mean by 'property!' We certaiuly do uot de prive theiu of the privilege of going into this newly acquirred Territories witli all that, in the geueral estimate of human society, in the general and com mon and universal understanding of mankind, is esteemed property. Not at ail. The truth is just this; They have in their own States peculiar laws, which create property in persons. They have a system of local legislation' on which slavery rests; while every body agrees that it is against natural law, or, at least against the common understanding which prevails among men, as to what is natural law. "The Southern States have peculiar laws, and by those laws there is property in slaves. This is pure ly local. The real meaning, tbeu, of Southern gen tlemen. in making this complaint, is, that they can not go iuto the Territories of the United States carrying with them their own peculiar local law, a law which creates property in persons. This, ac cording to their own statement, is all the ground of complaint they have. Now here, I think, gentle men, they are unjust towards us. How unjust they a e others will judge; geuerations that will come after us will judge. It will not bo contended that this sort of personal slavery exists by general law. It exists only by local daw. I do not mean to deny the validity of that local law where it is established, but I say it is, after all, local law. It is nothing more. And wherever that local law does not extend property in persons does not exist. Well, sir, what, is now the demand on the part of our Southern friends? They say.- We will carry our local law with us wherever we go. We insist that Congress docs us injustice unless it establishes it iu the Ter ritories in which we wish to go with our own local law. This demand I for one resist, and shall resist. It goes upon the idea that there is an inequality, unless persons under this local law, and holding property by authority of that law, can go Into new territory and there establish that local law, to the exclusion of the general law. "Now, our friends seem to think that an inequal ity arises from restraining them from going into the Territories, unless there be a law jirovided which shall protect their ownership in persons. The as sertion is, that we create an inequality. Is there nothing to be said on the other side in relation to inequality? Sit, from the date ot this Constitution, and in tire counsels that formed and established this Constitution, and I suppose in all men's judgment since, it is received as a settled truth, that slave labor and fiee labor do not exist well together. I have before me a declai*ion of Mr. Mason, in the Convention that formed the Constitution, to that effect. Mr. Mason, as is well known, was a distin guished member troin Virginia. He says that the objection to slave labor is, that it puts free white labor in disrepute; that it causes labor to be regard ed as derogatory to the character of the free white man, and that the tree white man despises to work, to use bis expression, where slaves are employed. This is a matter of great interest 10 the free States, if it be true, as to a great exteut it certainly is, that wherever slave labor prevails, tree white labor is ex cluded or discouraged. I agree that slave labor does not necessarily exclude free labor totally. There is free white labor in Virginia, Tennessee and other States, where most of the lal>or is done by slaves. But it necessarily loses some of its respect ability, by the side of, and when associated with slave labor Wherever labor is mainly performed by slaves, it is regarded as degrading to freemen. The freemen of the North, therefore, have a deep interest in keeping labor free, exclusively tree, in the new Territories. "But, sir, let us look further into this alleged in equality. There is no pretence that southern peo ple may not go into Tenitory which shall be subject to the Ordinance of 1787. The only restraint is, that they shall not carry slaves thither, and continue that relation. They say this shuts thein altogether out. Why, sir, there can be nothing more inaccu rate in point of fact than this statement. I under stand that one halt the people who settled Illinois are people, or descendants of people, who came from the Southern States. And I suppose that one third of the people of Ohio are those, or descend ants of those, who emigrated from the South. And I venture to say, that, in respect to those two States, they are at this day settled by people of southern origin in as great a proportion as they are by peo ple of northern origin, according to the general numbers and proportion of the people, South and North. There are as many people from the South, :n proportion to the whole people of the whole South, in those States, as there are from the North, in proportion to the whole people of the North.— There is, then, no exclusion of southern people; there is only the exclusion of a peculiar local law. Neither in principle nor in fact is there any inequal ity. The question, whether it was not competent tor Congress to prevent its further increase was met and answered by the same authority io the same year. Congress 'has full power over the Bubjeot. it may establish any such government and auy such laws in the Territories as in its discretion it may see fit.' This was certainly the opinion of Wm. Pinkney, as derived from his celebrated argument on the Missouri ques tion, when he expressed the hope that the whole subject might be disposed of by a 'proscriptive prohibition of slavery in the Territory north and west of Missouri.' Does Mr. Lincoln proclaim any new doc* BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1860. trine? Listen to the old Whig champion in the Senate, iu February, 1.859: "Sir, I have Baid that I never could vote for it; and I re peat that 1 never can and never will vote for it; and no earthly power shall ever make me vote to plant slavery where slavery does not exist." Two weeks later, on the 20th of Feb tuary, 1850, he said again, in the same arena: "From the earliest moment when 1 oould con sider the institution of slavery, L have hel*r and 1 have said, that from that day down to the present, again and again; and I shall go to the grave with the opinion, that it is an evil, a social and political evil." Look now then at what has been the course of our opponents upon this question. It is not that the people of the Territory shall de termine the question, although that is the view of one fragment of the opposition; but that the Constitution of itself carries slavery into the Territories. And what has been the prac tical effect of this judicial construction? noth ing more than this, that slavery is to be forced into the Teiritories as au element of political power. That the youthful territory of Kan sas is to be dragged into the Uuion with the iron collar of servitude upon her neck—but never is to be admitted as long as she persists in wearing upon her brow the civic crown of Republican Freedom. Against all such reasouiog the people of this State most solemnly protest. Nu judi cial construction of the Constitution has to this hour ever justified it. But, said Mr. H., it is supposed that Mr Lincoln has placed himself on a platform, a portion of which is hostile to Americans of the opposition. If Americanism was tho hos tile aud proscriptive principle which our oppo nents considered in 1856, there might be some thing in this suggestion; but 1 Lava uever so considered it. Iu 1857, the American Convention honored me with the Domination for the highest office in the gift of tba people of this State. In that canvass, I spoke freely and unreservedly to eitizens, native and adopted, in various sec tions of the State. In this city I said 'with the right of suffrage as to the foreigoer who has immigrated, or with his privilege to be naturalized under oar present system, we do not propose to interfere.' It was to the faith ful and honest administration of the naturali zation laws that the efforts of the American party were directed; bow entirely Cn*wUUg the reoent developments at Washington have strikingly exhibited. Nor did tbe American party prosoiibe any one on account of his religion—the argumeut was in favor of an unlimited freedom of reli gion, and the unrestrained right to adopt and practice any form of worship; the only qualifi cation was, that there should be DO combina tion to control the American ballot box. To these sentiments I have nothing to add or alter. I believed then as 1 believe now, that the times demanded the organization. Let us then unite aud press ou for tbe ac complishment of the great purposes of the People's Party. We are all Americans, link ed now and forever to the fates aud fortunes of our beloved country. The party of dis union is in tho field—the Vice President of the Republic bears its standard onward and for ward—the President from tho windows of the Executive mansiou waves encouragement, while a motley troupe are uiarshaliDg their forces conjoined beneath tbe impious banner of a 'Southern Republic.' 1 do not desiro to state the case too strong ly. I read from the address of llendrick R. Wright, the presiding officer of the reoent De mocratic State Convention: "After Yancey and the DUuriionists went out of the regular Convention, it occurred to nac (hat it would be profitable to me to go in to the Secession Convention and ascertain tor myself the sentiments thero proclaimed. 1 did go into the Yancey Convention, and dur ing the two hours I was there, as God is my judge, 1 heard nothing but with reference to the expediency of erecting a Southern Re public upon tbe ruins of the present Uuion. If Mr. Breckiuridge bo not a disuoioni9t him self, it must bo conceded that he is the candi date of the disuuienists. He is, then, in tbe hands of the worst meu that this country has ever seen. Those men are fixed upon a disso lution of this Union and the erection of a Southern Confederacy. Ido not care what their apologists may say; 1 have heard their debates and L know that which I do speak.— (Applause.) Disunion was the cry of the dis union movemout at Charleston and at Haiti more. Breckinridge is the pliant tool of tbe Disuoiooists—the men who. proclaim front tho housetops that they want disunion. Audsucb are the men that the Democratic party of Pennsylvania are asked to support. For one, 1 never will submit to such burning dishonor. 1 ask the people of Pennsylvania to ponder over this statement. The authority is emi nently respectable. The facts are carefully stated. The subject of discussion—a South ern Confederacy—the place,—a Democratic Convention! Fellow citizens, our path of duty is plaiu. Fidelity to all sections and at all times, and obedience to the constitutional authorities of the land, will make our Union perpetual.— With our Uuion as it is, and thorough frater nal fechog between its various parte, we utay present ourselves to the world as a grand na tionality, fostering its own labor and develop ing its own resources. Let us move on in defeuce of theae great principles, just as we would move on in de fence of those stars and stupes, the proud em blems of our native land. Let us meet disunion with Uniou. That Union which gave us the Constitution. 'That Union which with successive strides of prog ress has crossed tbo Alleghenies, the Ohio, the Mississippi and tho Missouri', has stretched its living arms almost from the Arctic Cirole to the tepid waters of tho Gulf: has belted tho Continent with rising States; has unlocked the treasure of the Siera Madre, and flung out the banners of the Republic to the gentle breezes of the Peaceful Sea ' Fellow citizens, let our watchword be the Constitution and the UnioD. KEEP IT BEFORE TilE PEOPLE, That a Democratic Senate of the U. States, avfeated the Tariff act, which a Republican House of Representatives passed. That Henry D. Foster was in Washington city when the Tariff bill was before the Senate, aqd that instead of using his efforts aDd re puted eloquence to secure the passage of an act-to protect the interests and the industry of Pennsylvania, he wa3 in secret conference with tb# administration, arranging plans to carry this State for Breckinridge, free-trade and slavery. , *fhat a democratic Seoate defeated the Home stead bill, because it proposed to apportion the jiiblic domain among the free white laborers of nation, who would become actual settlers oil and cultivators of such land It was op posed by Democratic Senators with whom 11. Lv Foster sympathises, because it threatened aujl would have curtailed the spread of slave ry* It was thus opposed by an administration which now supports and advocates Henry D. Foster, because it promised to biiug free States into the confederacy, and thus change the slave ruling influence of the United States Senate, it was opposed by the friends of Henry D. Foster, and that opposition seconded and ap proved by his silence, because it tended to ad vance free instead of slave labor—to briog capital within the reach and control of honest industry, and to place that industry, beyond the influence of speculation. KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE, That in a crisis ot great danger to every in* terest ot this country, involving the welfare of labor, the progress of civil and religious liber, ty, the perpetuity of the Uuioo, as well as the saored rights and dignity of the North, Henry D.-Foster is silenced by his personal fears.— He sees the South striking down the industry ot his native State, and he applauds the motive which nerves the arm to inflict the ruthless biuw. 110 sees the South pushing forward in stitutions that are disgracing, degrading and da lining the noble aspirations and achieve, moots of a free people, and he lends his in flueiOue to two work by an ambiguous silence which hie friends call "independence," and which Stepheu A. ltouglas claims as the great principle of "uon-iuterventiou." KEEP IT BEFOBE THE PEOPLE, That the Republican party advocate and are pledged to secure the passage of an aol to pro tect the industry of the country. That the Republican party are pledged to secure our territory for freedom —the free la bor of the white man. That ihe Republican party are opposed to direct taxation to raise revenue for supporting the government. That the Republican party are in favor of opening the territory of the nation to improve, meat and enterprise, by the passage of a home stead act, granting lands to beads of families who will become actual settlers thereon. By such a plan it is proposed to briug the land of government into market—creating competition by tbe encouragement of emigration to the West, to torui new commonwealths of freemen, each adding to the strength of the Uuiou, the independence of free white labor, and tbe power and glory of tbe country at borne and abroad. KEEP IT BEFORE TUE TEOrLE, That Audrcw G Curtin is in favor of a Frotceiive Tarifl as passed by the Houso of Representatives—and that lleury D. Foster aided secietly, with Biglcr, to defeat that same Tariff bill in the Senate. That Andrew G. Uurtin is in favor of free homes for free white men, to be apportioned out of the public domain, while Henry D. Foster is in favor of devoting that domain eternally to the uses of slavery. That Audrew G. Uurtin is in favor of free speech, free schools and free press—while H. D. Foster refuses to acknowledge cither tbe 'reedom of speech, schools or the press, by bis lileuce iu the present campaign, his sympathy \tth an institution that banishes freedom of speech from tbe hails of its local legislature, muzzles its press, exercises an espioo ige in the jost-offices in its localities—and with the whip and thong seeks to crush every man and every orgicizition that upholds tbe sacred light of lift, liberty and the franchise. Will the people of Feoosylvania ponder those (ruths ? The comparison that we here make between tbe two candidates before them for Governor is true and just. The Repub. bean candidate, A. G. Uurtin, has no conceal ments to make. He is daily before the people advocating the immutable principles of justice to all interests ; and equal and exact laws for all men. He does not falter when freedom is up for discussion. He does not shrink when tbe Homestead law is broached. His iips are not sealed or bis bands idle when tbe rights of laboi becomes tbe issue. He is square and fair on all these great questions. How is it with bis opponent, Henry D. Foster ? Let bis opponent's own position be taken in answer.— Let Henry D. Foster's sileuce illustrate, if it can, tbe plans of chicanery and deceit by which be hopes to be elevated to tbe chief executive control of the interests, industry and prospects of Fenusylvauia. Tbe distinction between such men is easily drawu. Tbe difference is as easily defined. The people will have no trouble in discovering in Andrew G. Uurtin a man for tbe crisis and the Commonwealth — Harris'wrg Tt.legraph. Uol. Orr, late Speaker of ths House of Rep resentatives, has written a letter stating that as tbe election of Lincoln is certain, the South should secede at onoe. We think so too. VIULIFYING THE DISTINGUISHED DEAD.— Mr. Douglas and bis backers are fond of refer ring to Clay and Webster as authorities to sus tain their shaky creed. But they dare not quote the words of theso revered statesmen by which the doctrine of slavery oxtecsion is in dignantly rebuked. Mr. YVebster, in bis celebrated 7th of Maroh speech, gave utterance to this significant lan guage: "Sir, wherever tbore is a particular good to be done, wherever there is a foot of land to be staid from becoming slave Territory, 1 am ready to assert the pricoiple of tho exclusion of sla very. I ana pledged to it from the year 1837; 1 have been pledged to it again and again, I will perform those pledges." In his Marsbficld speech, in 1848, Mr. Web ster said: "If my friends, tho term "free soil" party, or "free soil man," is meant to designate one wbo has been fixed unalterably—to day, yes terday, or for some days past —in opposition to slavery extension, then 1 may claim to be, and may bold myself as good a "free soil" man as any member of that Buffalo Convention." In a speech in the United States Senate, the same year, he bad occasion to discuss this same question of "property" in slaves, in its appli cation to the Territories: "The real meaning then, of southern gen tlemen, in making this complaint, is, that they cannot go into the territories of tbe United States, carrying with tbem their own peculiar local law, a law which creates property in per sons. * * It will not be contended that this sort of personal slavery exists by genoral law. It exists ouly by local law. * * And wherever that local law does not extend, pro perty in persons does not exist, Well sir, what is now tbe demand on the part of our southern frieuds? They say, 'we will carry our local laws with us wherever we go. YVe insist that Congress does us injustice, unless it establishes in tbe territories in which we wish to go, our own local law.' This demand, I for one resist, and shall resist." The "Little Giant" appoals to the sympathies of "old Wbigs," by claiming that he staads on the same gruund with respect to slavery as Henry Clay. The impudence of this olaim will appear from the following: "Slavery is a social and a political evil, * * and no earthly power shall make mo vote to plaut it where it does not exist."— Henry Clay. "I don't care whether slavery is voted down or voted np in Kansas."— Sena f or Douglas. And yet the former was Southern by b>rtb, while the latter was nurtured iuNew Kugland! So true is it that "the renegade Christian makes the worst turk."— Chic. Jour. The division journals supporting Henry D. Foster are publishing a paragraph translated from a German paper, printed on the sunny side of a sunny and beautiful village in Cen tre county, by a most rampant office holder of the Buchanan administration. The name of this fiery newspaper is the Bene/iter, and it charges Col. Curtin with having OD a certaiu occasion spokeu disrespectfully of the German population of Centre couDty. Of course such small talk and weak charges are not desigued to influence the German population of Centre county—the GermaD yeomanry that have been there for seventy years, struggling with the kinsman of our gallant gubernatorial candi date, uutil they huve made the rallies and the mountains of old Centre, the abode of peace and plenty, with a genorous hospitality une qualled in any oiher portion of the Common wealth. Such charges as the postmaster edi tor of the Btrichltr publishes and are copied by the venal press advocating Foster, are re garded at home in CeDtre county as not only talse and malicious, but supremely ridiculous. Instead of being the defamer of any particu lar olass of peopio, Col. Curtin is the friend of every man wuo deserves friendship and re spect by the rectitude of bis purposes and the j decency of bis actions. With the German ; population of Centre county —the old resident j German families, the name of Curtin is a talis- ! man ot enthusiasm. They look ou "ABdy" as their friend and advocate, their counoil in eve- i ry difficulty. Among his clients are hosts of \ these very people—among his warmest friends ! and supporters are the German farmers of Fenn, Brush and Nittany vallies. We now j write of what wo know. We know that "Au- i dy Curtin" is personally and politically one of the most popular and esteemed men in Centre county —and we also know that our young friend, the editor of the Bene/iter, the post master in Aaronsburg, Centre county, allows his enthusiasm to oloud his reason, and his prejudice to misdirect his judgment of men and measures, wbeu he asserts that Col. Curtin does not respeat and is respected in return by ths Germans of CeDtre county."— Harrisburg Telegraph. JOHN L. ORR AT HOME. —It is not every one in South Carolina that echoes the senti ments of Mr. Orr iu his reoent letter. The Charleston J\'tws responds to it in the follow ing pungent paragraph: Mr. Orr is oomplaisant enough to declare that would or would not be his "assent" as to the course whioh may have to be taken in the event of Lincoln's election. Indeed! The 'oracle' declares against separate secession.— Who proposes it? Ho oatoties at a straw. If action thus becomes necessary, it will no doubt be by, at least nearly all, the cotton states.— Do uot be so authoritative, Mr. Orr, — 'Othello's occupation is ;none * The people of the state, and of the South, will not ask the opinion of a rnao, who during his whole career, was never a champion of Southern rights as against the in terests of national or northern Democracy, on what may pertain to southern action. His'as sent' or dissent is not of the slightest moment I or weight. VOL. 33. NO. 34. Tbe Success of Buchanau Democracy. It has succeeded in dividing tho American people into sectional factions, wherever its rale and influence have extended to a political or ganization. It has succeeded in bankrupting the Trea sury, filled to overflowiog when it came into power. It has succeeded in driving from its support and respect, the ablest men who were engaged in its elevation to power. It has succeeded in changmg a surplus of twenty million into a defioit of fifty million of dollars. , It has succeeded in disgracing tbc country by eqoouragiug piratical raids upon nations with whom we are at peace. It has succeeded in opening the African slave trade, after it had been pronounced unconstitu tional by every administration since the forma tion of tbe Constitution. It has succeeded in defeating all legislation tending to the encouragement and protection of American industry. It has succeeded in defeating the Homestead bill, providing free homes for free white men. It has succeeded in silencing candidates for tho most important offioes in the gift of the peo ple. It has succeeded in demoralizing its own press, by suborning it with threats or bribes. These eoDstitute a very small portion of the "successes" of tho present National Adminis tration, which the people of Pennsylvania and the Union are expected to endorse by voting for Breckinridge and Lace. They are expect ed to endorse these "successes" too, by voting for Henry D. Poster. Breckinridge and Fos ter represent tbe spirit and tendencies of tbc administration in Pennsylvania—tbe former by his ingratitude iu assisting to destroy a party which created him politically, and the other by his silence and duplicity, is hoping to delude the people into his support. — Harrisburg T*U graph. SPEECH OF MR. LINCOLN. At tbe tremendous demonstration* at Spring field, 111., on Wednesday, Hon. Abraham Lio. coin was forced by the kindly violence of his friends to speak. He congratulated them on their unanimity, and said : "I confess with gratitude—be it understood, that I did not suppose that my appearauoe among you would create tbe tumult which I now witness. [Renewed cheers.] lam pro foundly grateful for this manifestation of your feelings. 1 am grateful because it is a tribute such as oan be paid to no man as a man. [Applause.] It is a proof that four years hence yon will make a like manifestation to the next man who is the representative of the truth on the questions that now agitata the public. [Cheers.] It is evident that you will fight for this causo then as you now fight for it, and even stronger than you now fight, tnongh Ibe dead and gone. 1 most profound ly and sincerely thank you. Haviug said this, let me now say that it is my wish that you hear the public discussions by our friends here for the purpose of addressing you, and let me be silent." ID striking contract with these modest de clarations are the stump harangues of Doug las in New England, which bis own best friends there deeply deplore, and his parade through those States with a few fawning demagogues at his heels. TOE GERMAN PRESS OP INDIANA. —The Leavenworth Zeitung publishes a list of the German papers in Indiana which support Lin coln and Hamlin with their political standing ID 1556. The following is the list:— NAMES, 1856. 1860. Volksbattle, Evansville, Dem. Kep. Staata Zeitung, Ft. Wayne, Dem. Kep. Post, Lafayette, Neut. Rep. ZeituDg Terre Haunte, Dem. Kep: Freie Blatter, La Parse, Dem. Rep. Froie Presse, Indianapolis, Rep. Rep. Only one German paper in the State sup ports either of the Democratic candidates. NEW JERSEY. A prominent Republican in New Jersey writes to the New York Tribune, that "the Republican cause is steadily improving," and from the best information which he can gain from all parts of the State, the vote will be about 107,000 which will be divided as fol lows : Lincoln and Hamlin, about 56,000 Breckinridge and Lane, 22,000 Douglas and Johnson, 26,000 Bell and Everett, and scattering 3,000 Total, 107,000 Henry A. Wise has pronounced in favor of Breckinridge and Lane. This was to be ex pected. Mr. Wise, true to his aDcient devo tion to slavery aud its atrocities, is perfectly consistent in declaring a preference for his candidate representing all the interests, in stincts and influences of that institution. Let the laboring men remember that the Re" publican House of Representatives at Washing ton last winter passed a Protective Tariff bill, but that the Democratic Senate defeated it, and voto accordingly. The edisor of the Marion (Alabama) Ameri can tells a brother editor that be is a Southern organ-grinder, with a Northern monkey n his box.