'THE lITJNTIAGDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AID GENERAL NEWS, &C. JIE GLOB Circulation—tie largest in the county 110rOVIIEDOE, '' Wednesday, June 25, 1856. itAtk:Pzk FOIL PRESIDENT, JAMES BUCHANAN, of Pennsylvania • FOR VICE PRESIDENT, JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE, of Ky FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, 0-EORGE SCOTT, of • Columbia county FOR AUDITOR GENERAL, JACOB FRY, Jr., of Montgomery co FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL, TIMOTHY IVES, of Potter county OUR NEW DRMSS, &c Oun readers, and our patrons in particular, will observe a striking change in the appear ance of The Globe this week. How do you like its new dress? We think we hear every man and woman answer--"it is neat—beau tiful—and its subscription list should be in creased in every township in the county."— just the conclusion we came to, and will not be displeased if we should receive immediate evidences from our num---....c0u5i14, , ,nds that our labors and expense for their gratifiestam-and, good, are appreciated, and deserving of their favorable consideration. This number of TIZEt GLOBE commences a new volume. Ten years ago we took charge of its columns, and by strict attention to busi ness, haVe built upon a firm basis, a Dem ocratic press in Huntingdon, which we, at least, are not ashamed of. It willbd our en deavor hereafter to make it an interesting and useful family as well as political paper. Due attention will be paid to all the local occur rences of our town and county. The inter ests of the farmer and mechanic will be con sulted, and as far as our space will admit of it, valuable information will be gleaned from the farming and scientific periodicals of the country for their benefit. A small space will also each week be devoted to Education, Do mestic Economy, &c., &c. We cannot let the present opportunity pass without extending to those who have been I our fast friends, in the Opposition as well as our own party—those who have encouraged usby their "material aid," and their influence and exertions in extending the circulation of our paper—our most sincere acknowledgements —our heartfelt thanks. To many such are we indebted for the past, and for the future will endeavor to deserve a continuance._ of that friendship. RECEPTION or• PILLMORE.--Mr. I'll/more, the Know-Nothing candidate for the Presi dency arrived at New York on the 11. S. Mail Steamer on Sunday night last. Ile was enthusiatically received by a Committee of Common Councils and his . political friends generally. Salutes of several hundred guns were fired which continued until morning.— The general opinion of the knowing ones of his friends is that he won't be swallowed up by the. Abolitionists, but will continue to be a prominent candidate in the opposition ranks up to the day which will most certainly de clare in favor of Mr. Buchanan. MONSTER MASS MEETING. An immense . meeting of the friends of BCCIIA7 , .:AN and BR.ECKINEIDGE was held at Independen.ce Square, Phila., on Tuesday eveningl th inst., to ratify the nominations of the Cincinnati Convention. It is estimated that at least 20,000 persons were present. Mayor VAUX presided, and, on taking the Chair, address ed the assemblage in an appropriate and eloquent manner, in which he paid warm and glowing tributes of praise to the candi dates-of the Democratic party. A series of strong and patriotic resolutions were unani mously passed. The meeting was addressed by Gen LEW IS CASS, Hon. STEPUEN A. DOUGLASS, Hon. HOWELL COED, Hon Wm. B. REED, (old line whig) HENRY M. PHILIPS, Esq., Hon. Rion- AND BRODHEAD, Hon. A.SA BIGGS, and others. The greatest enthusiasm prevailed, and the shouts for BUCHANAN and BRECRINRIDGE were almost deafening. The nomination of "OLD BUCK." secures the city of Philadelphia by an immense majority in November next. In our paper to-day will be found the speech of the veteran Cess on that occasion. He spoke with energy and enthusiasm while proclaiming to the thousands surrounding him his admiration of Pennsylvania's great statesman. Next week we will give our read ers the speech of the Hon. WM. B. REED on the same occasion. CAN THE "JOURNAL" SUPPORT FREMONT ? The Philadelphia Daily Hews, an old Whig organ, but now supporting Fillmore, asks— "ls Fremont a Catholic?"—and goes on to say: "Col. Fremont, at a very early age, when but five or six years old, was taken charge of by a • society or association of ladies of the Catholic denomination, in the City of Charles ton, and under their care and patronage was reared and educated in a Catholic Institution in that City. And he was married by a. CatholiC Priest, Father Van Horseigh, .in Tktshington, though his wife was then and now is a Protestant." IVe.a.sk, how can Gabe, after denouncing every body in any way connected with, or un der the influence of the Catholic religion, support Fremont? VEIDELADING MATTER ON LYERY Nationality of the Democratic Party. The constant dropping of a little • we ter will eventually wear away a stone hard as adamant. The uninterrupted action of the elements would destroy the strongest chain that could be forged. So, too, in the political world, a steady and long-continued persistence in - tl e p:•onutlgation of any doc trine, or the persevering effort to enforce any measure, no matter how unjust, absurd, or suicidal, if it be not met by a powerful coun teracting influence, will eventually exercise a strong effect upon the public mind. Ex perience, remarks the Pennsylvanian, has shown this to be the case even with what should have been sacred from the touch of oirery American citizen—the Union of these States. That foul word which should never have found a place in our political dictionary, and never-have been thought of during the day, or dreamed of during the night—ms- UNlON—now dances frequently and flippant ly upon traitorous tongues. One by one, many of the old ties which formerly bound us together as a nation, have been broken.— Even religious organizations, once national, are now sectional.. The old line Whig par ty, which once held a national 'creed and adopted a national platform, is dead. The Know Nothing order was shivered into frag ments, by the mere effort to assume an out side show of nationality. A Black Republican party, confessedly founded upon a sectional issue, claiming only a sectional support, hold ing sectional conventions, is about entering the political lists with sectional _nominees and a sectional platform. The warnings of Washington against the formation of geo graphical parties are every day becoming more openly and flagrantly disregarded.— There are, at this moment, thousands of scheming brains recklessly engaged, with all the energies they can command, in the ne farious work of irritating public feeling, fos tering sectional prejudices, goading on the American people to a phrenzied state of sec tional excitement, and in sapping the foun dations upon which the Union rests. • In the midst of this whirlpool of danger, is there no quarter to which the true patriot can turn with hope and confidence ? Is there no ark left in which we can escape the con sequences of the flood of danger which threatens to overwhelm us? Is there no na tional party—no national platform—no na tional nominees—no national organization, with equal claims upon the confidence and' support of every section and every State of the confederacy? Thank heaven, tho' there is but one, there is one. And it is the Demo cratic party. It is a peculiarly gratifying elretunstanee; too, - that - though this party was always noted for the national tone and spir it which pervaded it, while all other organi- -Jt _. y \ zations have been growing weaker in the na tional sentiment which animated them, it has been growing stronger and stronger 'in that respect. The withered branches of the par ty, in whose diseased limbs, the old vitality and sap of devotion to the Union, and the Constitution had dried up, have been lopped off, and have fallen one by one, from. the trees to which they had clung only as useless appendages ; but their place has been more than supplied by new and vigorous shoots, sound to the core and beaming with health. The true lovers of the country and the Uni on, mindful of the exigencies of the times, sickened and disgusted with the demagogue , ism of Black Republicanism, appealed by the perils it invokes, anxious to thwart the traitorous design of disunion which it is its real mission •to accomplish, have turned with joy to the Democratic party, whatever may have been their former political affinities, because it now forms the last refuge for the truly patriotic, the grand army which alone can successfully beat back the foes who menace all that is dear to the American people, and alone can preserve the perpetu ity of the existing national compact. They behold it alone animated by the true spirit of nationality. They behold its orators ' speaking the same sentiments, its presses printing ,the same articles, its conventions and candidates promulgatirig the same prin ciples North, South, East and West. By it, alone do they see speakers from the North welcomed and cheered in the South. By it alone do they see appeals made to the pub lic for support, founded upon broad national issues, and it alone breathes forth those sen timents which should animate brethren of a common country. Of all the duties which an American citi zen owes to the nation, none is of such vital and paramount importance as the earnest ef fort to preserve unimpaired the Union. It is by the Union we have grov'n great and prosperous as a people, and it is only by its preservation that our greatness and pros perity can be preserved. No evil greater than its dissolution can befall us--no great er danger than its destruction can threaten us. Any internal difficulties, small, or great, we may have among us, will eventually be adjusted wisely and properly hereafter, as they have always been heretofore. But let us always, and under all circumstances keep steadfastly in view these two great ob jects—the maintenance of the Constitution and the preservation of the Union, and then arrange all minor matters as best we may. No more striking proof of the nationality of the Democratic party could be given than its present attitude as compared with its oppoilents. When the wise King SOLOMON was called upon to decide between the con flicting pretentious of two women who both claimed to be the mother of the came child, he said, let it be cut in twain and each take half. The passion of the false claimant led her to acquiesce in the proposal, but the in stincts of the true mother urged her to cry out in tones of anguish, no, save the child, and give it to my antagonist rather than destroy its life. This is the spirit of the Democratic party. All may see that it is animated by the true ' sentiment of 'nation ality, and that it is the true defender of the Union and the Constitution, because it makes their preservation its master-passion, and regards the mere gratification of section al passions and sectional prejudices as sub ordinate considerations, while its antagonists cry out cut the child in twain—let the Union be dissevered, rather than our views be thwart ed. MR. FILLMORE WILL NOT DECLINE.—The New York Express has the authority o let ter from Mr. Fillmore for saying that under no circumstances will he decline the nomina tion tendered him. The following is the ex tract alluded to: "In reference to the efforts which have been used to drive me from my course, they wholly mistake my character. It is true, I did not desire the nomination; but my name has been placed before the public by my 'friends, and there it will remain, regardless of all consequences, unless they shall desire its withdrawal." Senator Sumner's Illness. We do not, of course, justify the assault upon Senator Sumner,' happening where it did, but the dow game now being played by that distinguished Abolitionist, must dissi pate all further sympathy for him and his exaggerated sickness. - If he did not deserve chastisement for his coarse assault upon an absent Senator, he certainly deserves the lash of ridicule for permitting himself to be used as a standing subject for falsehood.— Like the "outrages in Kansas," his condition , has been magnified by lying, Abolition re ports in the newspapers, when at - no period, since his caning, has he been in the slightest danger. It may have suited Mr. Sumner's purpose, after being whipped, to pretend that he was much worse thanhe really was. - Had he not done so, he would have been expected to make himself even by challenging his as sailant, or cudgeling him in return; but there is no possible excuse for his lying in bed such weather as this is, when he could be in the Senate attending to his-public du ties. But the "outrages in Kansas" having grown stale, flat and unprofitable, his bruises were the only material available for Aboli tion thunder. And it has been made the most of; we have no recollection of so 17reaf a business having been done, in any similar case, on so small a capital. In order to prove this, we must direct attention to the following statement of Mr. Sumner'sphysi cian, given under oath, before the House committee of investigation: "1 have - seen no medicalman with him but myself: Thefe hat; been none there. There arc a great many friends present, 'and they make Mr. Sumner out a great deal worse than he is. They say he hae afever. I have never discovered any. I have been his con stant attendant, and I have never known his pulse at any moment higher than eighty-two. I yesterday corrected an article in the Intel ligeneer stating that he had a fever, and the correction appears in to-day's paper. He has no fever to my knowledge. I have visit ed him twice a day. His brother said he ought not to come out, and cited a - great ina ny eases that had come under his observation in Paris, where death had taken place in six weeks from blows on the head. His brother is not a medical man. Senator Sumner, of Course, took the advice of his brother and his friends, and I, of course, allowed them to do as they thought proper. Perhaps I ought to state my reason for objecting to his coming, out on Friday. There was a good deal of ex citement at that time, and I thought that, if Mr. Sumner did not go into the Senate for a day or two, the excitement might wear off." Again: "I think this: that Mr. Suranermighthave taken a carriage and driven as far as Balti more on the next day without any injury." A party that resorts to such contemptible tricks as this to make partizan capital, must ' be in a pitiful condition indeed; but what can be thought of him who permitS himself to be used for so base and contemptible a purpose. We cannot but admire Mr. Sumner's self sacrificing spirit in the cause of "freedom." Lying up in bed, during the present state of the mercury, is no small sacrifice, and shows him.to be an Abolitionist of considerable en durance and patience. Taking the caning which he received with remarkable meek ness, in connection with his month's lying in the blankets, it is the most extraordinary Ab olition performance of which we have any recollection, and should be the means of se curing him the nomination of his piebald party for - Vice President at least. Falstaff counterfeited death in order that he might Ihte, and Mr. Sumner, taking his cue from the knight in buckram, counter feits sickness in the hope of infusing a little life into his miserable party. 'But the fat knight, after playing the braggart and cow ard, was kicked to one side, instead of re ceiving his expected promotion, and so will Mr. Sumner be despised for his cowardice and laughed at for his baseness in allowing himself to be used for the vilest of partizan purposes. There is one great relief, however, in this ruse of the valiant son of Massachusetts—it will sooth the savage temper of our neighbor of the Gazette, who we feared had some idea of going to Washington to attend to some of the "Southern bullies" himself. Now, that the testimony of Sumner's physician is clear that his patient was at no tune in the slight est danger, we expect to see our neighbor withdraw his recommendation of sending prize fighters to Congress. And, above all, we hope that the editor will not think of vis iting the national capitol himself; or if he does, we trust his visit will be only to sympa thize with Sumner and "the cause of free dom." " LITTLE MONARCII," your production is a gross plagiarism, and you deserve credit for nothing but withholding your name. You should go to school and study Cobb's Spell ing Book. Your orthography is too bad to come from an Author. Mum—Gabe, on the `peljurer' question— guilty, eh? From the Pittsburg Union SPEECH OP GEN. CASS,- Delivered at the Democratic Ratification Meet ing in Philadelphia on the Nth, inst. Fellow Citizens.—l dm here among you to night to bear my testimony to the importance of the question, about to be submitted to this confederated Republic. The peaceable elec tion of a Chief Magistrate by twenty-five millions of people is always a trying duty for them, and interesting spectacle for the oth er nations of Christendom. It is a glorious power, this power to choose a national ruler, and glorious has been its operation, as well for the prosperity of our country and the sta bility of our institutions as for the encourage ment of struggling freedom through the world. But circumstances give to the ap proaching quadrennial exercise of this power, a character of grave, I had almost said fear faresponsibility, which it has never before assumed. We have fallen upon evil times. In the expressive language of the Scripture, we have waxed fat, and prosperity is bring ing its tribute of presumption,and dissatis faction, and• arrogant dictation.• Since the memorable day, in this very Square, when that great deed of independence was done which will make this spot immortal, there . has been no day fraught with more serious consequences to the destiny of our country, than will be that fixed day of popular deci sion in November • next, for which we are now preparing. The integrity of the Union, the' freedom of religion, the right of man to govern himself—these are each assailed with a tenacity and activity of purpose, and a boldness of action, which call for the powerful inter position of every true-hearted - American whose patriotism has not fallen a victim to the strange hallucinations of this period of strange things. Little could the men of Sev enty-Six—little could the men, who consecra s ted in the Hall, 'under whose shadow we are assembled, by words and deeds - the right of conscience—little could they have thought, that before all the generation'that witnessed and approved and participated in their world renowned labors, should have passed away, another would have arisen to repudiate their work, and to cast reproach upon their mem ory. But so it is—the Catholic must not worship his Creator, agreeably to his own faith, nor must an American, Evince in a Territory, be 'suffered, with his fellow-citi zens there, to administer the government, for the common benefit, and by the common action. And you, •my fellow-Democrats, who are now around me, and who have come to this convocation of freemen, know ing your rights, and always determined to maintain them, you participate in the gov ernment of this good old Keystone State.— Keystone now and ever may it be, and no man dare say you nay. Your intimate do mestic relations, those who pass the doorsill. and reach the hearthstone, upon the enjoy ment of which, so much of the happiness of life depend, the relations of husband and wife, of parent and child, and of master and servant ; these family conditions are control led by yourselves, and the power is of the very essence of freedom. And think you, if you should remove to Kansas, that they would be less dear to you, or you less com petent to manage them ? And yet, .if you were there, it is claimed by the opponents of Democracy, by all of them I believe, that this power to re g ulate your domestic relations would belong to Congress not to you. But that a foreign legislature, foreign to the Ter ritories, because they have no representation in it, has the right to dictate on the-subject of these relations, and. that it is its duty to control one of them at least, that of master and that the right of self government does not belong to the people. Do you think, .if you were there, you would approve such a mon strous usurpation ? He, who would do so is as unfit to enjoy the privileges of a freeman, as he is incapable of appreciating their val ue. It is a pretension better suited to the banks of the Danube or the Neva, than those of the Delaware or Kansas. Do you not think, that here or in a Territory you are capable of judging and acting for yourselves without the aid or interference of meddling politicians, either in Massachusetts or wher ever else abolitionism has led captive the head and hearts of men; or political ambi tion directs it against the Constitution. And the great doctrine of the revolution, the great doctrine of human nature, that man has right to govern him self, is the Kansas Act, the whole Kansas Act, and. nothing but the Kansas Act, so far as respects the principle involved in it. And in its preparation and in the - powerful and enlightened support he lent to it, and to which its final success is greatly indebted, my friend, who sits beside me, Mr. Douglas kept steadily in view this great controlling element of our institutions, and made it the very corner stone of the Kan sas government. And he would be a rash man, not merely a bold one, who upon this, holy ground of freedom, made-holy by its as sociations should deny the principle or con demn its practical application. If every portion of our country would limit its interference to its own concerns and leave each political community, whether State or Territorial to govern itself, subject only to the Constitution, we should be the happiest and most united, as we are the freest nation the world has ever seen. But this eternal propensity to pass beyond the circle of our own rights and duties, and to Undertake to direct the conduct of others, has aleady worked incalculable mischief to our_ Union, and if not checked will work its ruin. And how is it to he checked, but by the action, • prompt and fearless, and energetic of the Democratic party. That party alone stands erect between the Constitution and its perils. Its rival, and sometimes in moments of ex treme danger to the country, its co-laborer, the Whig party, the old fashioned Whig par ty is prostrated, broken up, severed into frag ments, each disjointed portion seeking new combinations. Our party has a mighty trust committed to it, the trust of defending and. maintaining the heritage of freedom which we received from our fathers, and which our children have a right to demand at our hands unimpared, as their birthright. And magnificent indeed will be its destiny if it is not marred by the wickedness and follies of our day. The Union has brought us lib erty, prosperity, power,. glory, whatever po litical benefit the heart of man can conceive or desire, and it is- yet in the infancy of its existence. • Hold on to it, my friends, as I said sometime since in the Senate, hold on to it as the shipwrecked mariner clings to the last plank, when night and the tempest close -around. him, I have told you that I came here to bear my testimony to the importance of this great electoral question at the present time, and in all truth and sincerity 1 have done so. The Democratic party have nominated as its can didate for the Presidency, your well known and universally esteemed fellow citizen, James Buchanan, and for Vice President, a citizen of Kentucky, John C. Breckinridge, worthy, by his talents, and services, and char acter, of the confidence indicated by his se lection. And their election will he at once the test of the strength of our party and the pledge of its Union, and also of its stability. Well then, may I say, that the election is a . momentous one. So momentous, indeed,' that the personal claims of the candidates al most fade from view. And yet I neednot tell a Pennsylvanian audience, an American audience indeed, that James Buchanan is among the ablest and purest, and most expe rienced of the statesmen of our country, fit ted by his qualifications to fill and adorn its highest station. The Executive Government will be safe in his hands. Abroad -he will maintain our rights and our honor_ with de cision and firmness ; and at the same time, in a proper spirit of national courtesy ; and at home, his guide will be the Constitution, and he will jealously guard within the limits of his duty, the rights of every section of the Republic. The name of an American out of his country will be a passport of honor, and within it will be a guarantee of constitution al rights, so far as regards the general gov ernment, which no man will touch with im punity. And he will find the colleague we shall give him, (Mr. Breckinridge) a faithful co-adjutor in the same great cause. I say the colleague we shall give hill', for they will both be elected. The decree has gone forth, and it may be read in all the signs around us. In the favor with which the nomina tions are received, 'in the confidence indi cated in the result, in the reports that reach us, and in what we have done and, can do— and that also, we will do. And these consi derations, while flaky furniSh_ confidence for hope, furnish also motives for energetic ac tion. We Shall, enter the contest, not for victory, that as we see unerring indications promises 'us, 'but for the extent of that victo ry, not for a majority, but for the numbers beyond it. What we want is a most deci sive result, that to the power of the Constitu tion, the new administration' may add that moral power, which depends on the convic tion of public support and co-operation.— And all of this is within our reach, if we carry to the work - but a small portion of the zeal and energy which our revolutionary pa triarchs carried to theirs, when in yonder building they mutually pledged to each oth er their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor. And nobly did they redeem the pledge. Go ye all and follow their example. While hailing the bright dawn of the ri sing sun, let us not neglect the steady light of the departing one. Let us do justice to the performance of General Pierce, while wo do justice to the promise of Mr. Buchan an. The retiring administration has been a a truly Democratic and American one. It will live, and honorable too, in the pages of our political history. Its great measures of external policy meet my warm approbation. They have been just, firm, national. And in relation to its internal policy applied to the affairs in Kansas, and their kindred difficul ties, which have been 4 great source of em barrassment, it commends itself also to my judgement and support. May the retiring Chief Magistrate find, when he returns to private life, in the consciousness of a faith ful discharge of his duties, and in the re spect and regard of his countrymen, the re ward of his labors and anxieties and trials. And his noble address the , other evening, to the Democracy of Washington, in fact, to the Democracy of the Union, at a mass meeting of ratification, which called upon him, and the sincerity and earnestness with which he acquiesced in the selection of his competitor, and announced his continued adhesion to our party and its principles, are entitled to uni versal commendation. I listened with deep interest to his eloquent words, and I trust they will be conveyed by the press and the post to every corner of the Union, to the re motest log cabin upon the very verge of civ ilization. They will show to the American people, that disappointment in the high_pla ces is not always followed by ingratitude, and that there are Presidents, who under no cir cumstances forget what they owe to the Dem ocratic party. May peace and happiness at tend him in his retirement. From the Cincinnati Enquirer, Junto 2. The Occupation of Lawrence---A Truth ful Narrative of Occurrences There, We have obtained, from a gentleman who arrived in our city yesterday, a full narra tion of everything that occured at Lawrence, which we believe will be found to be faithful and truthful in every particular.• It pre sents a version of that affair, the very re verse of that given to the world by the .I.‘w York Tribune. Our authority is Mr. A. J. Weisscnger, formerly . of Kentucky; brother of the former proprietor of the Louisville Journal, a gentleman known to everybody in Mississippi, and respected. for his honesty, hi? , mildness and his high moral standing. Mr. Weissenger is a settler in Kansas, and has returned with a view of removing his family to that country. He was at Lawrence, and constituted one of the posse ordered out by the United States Marshal to aid in the execution of the writs against certain parties there. Mr. Weissenger states that before the entrance by the Marshal into the town, and while the posse called out by the U. S. Marshal were asssembled at Franklin, near Lawrence, several armed parties rode out from Lawrence, and fired upon individual and smaller numbers of persons connected with th Marshal's party. One body of five rode toward a sentinel stationed at a bridge near town and fired their rifles at him. Two men of the Marshal's party, named Cosgrove and Branton, were met by five men, armed with Sharp's - rifles, near town, and were asked what party they belonged to. They answered the Pro-slavery side. "Then, Sharp's rifles is the word. for you, boys, " was the reply, and forthwith the whole party began to fire upon Cosg:rove and Branton, who narrowly escaped with their lives, the balls passing through their clothes and hats. Cosgrove and Branton quickly re turned the fire, and one of the party fell dead from his horse and the other galloped back into Lawrence. Those and other occurrences, indicating a settled purpose of hostility and determined resistence,produced no little excitement in the camp ofthe United States Marshal. The posse was composed exclusively of settlers in the Territory. There were no Missourians there, except as spectators. General Atch ison was there, but his missson was to urge peace and order, and he addressed each com pany, urging them to behave toward the people of Lawrence with the greatest kind ness, and a respect for their property, per son and feelings. They must win them back to brotherly feelings and intercourse, and remove from tir.lir minds the unfounded hos tilities and prejudices which base demagogues had instilled into them. General Atchinson's speeches had excel lent effect in allaying the excitement produ ced by the incidents of firing upon the Mar shal's men, to which we have referred. On the 21st of May, the United States Marshal, accompanied by eight or ten men, entered Lawrence and acquainting the people Whom he met with his business, proceeded in a quiet and decorous manner to arrest several parties against whom he had warrants. He then returned to the camp outside of town, where. the posse was assembled, and discharged them, stating that he had no difficulty in ex ecuting his writs. Sheriff Jones then, as an officer of the Territorial Government, called on the posse to aid him, and with sixteen men proceeded in a quiet and decorous mq.nner counselling them to obey and respect the - law, and intimating his determination to do his duty though he might be killed in his tracks. After making some arrests he preceeded, to the hotel kept by Mr. Eldridge and held an interview with General Pomeroy, demanding of thatperson age the pUblic arms ; which the people had openly employed therein resisting the lawful authorities it was his right as a peace officer to take possession of Pomeroy, as represented by our correspondent, conducted himself in the whole transaction in a most craven and abject manner, thereby giving the life to all the pictures of his heroism and prowess. Having obtained possession of the cannon, Jones, under the instruction, it is said, of the Ju which presented the Free State Hotel and ,the press of the Herald of Free dom aspublic nuisances, proceeded to des troy the 'hotel, after removing all furniture out of it. The cannon was planted in front, and several volleys were fired into the house. It finally caught fire and was consuthed. Na other house was burnt. The press of the ob noxious journal was also destroyed arid type removed. During these occurrences most of the peo ple remained in town, and they were not mo lested. The only' display of feeling was on the part of the people of Lawrence against. their dastardly leaders,, who, after leading them into their midst,' cowardly ab:•ndoned them. They declare that neither Reeder, Robinson or Lane will ever he permitted to come into the Territory. Two of the men of the Sheriff's party were killed by accident, one by the falling of bricks and another by an accidental shot. Not a single individual in the town was killed or wounded. The most rigid discipline was enforced among the Sheriff's posse, and the severest penalties de-. flounced against any one who should appro priate at of the property of the peopte.— Nothin[ , was stolen. Robinson's house was. burnt. It was the only one destroyed besides the hotel, and. Mr. Weissenger declares the universal belief that the torchwas applied to it by the citizens of Lawrence, who were greatly outraged by his cowardly abandor. ment of the town after he had betrayed it in to rebellion. When our informant. left all was peace and quiet in the town of Lawrence and throughout the country. The people were returning to their homes, and if the miserable demagogues and agitators could be. kept away all would be well. Such is the narrative of an eye-witness of all the transactions that have been exaggera ted into such a terrible picture of outrage and oppression by the Black Republican press :. an eye-witness who, too, is an honest man ; whose very countenance,. even if it - were 'not backed up by the highest testimonials any man could present, attracts the confidence and secures the belief of all good men in the truth and honesty of his evidence. It will be remembered by our readers that this town of Lawrence, at the instigation of Reeder, Robinson and Lane, had assumed an attitude of open . , avowed, .flagrantresistancn to the officers of the United States and of the Territorial government. The people had been prompted to this by the counsel of reeklesS agitators in the States, who sent them arms and amunition, and words of incitement _and delusion. They had promised before, when, the militia were near town, to make no fdr-' ther resistance but violated their prornise,, and, for some time past, the town has bris 7 tied with arms, and several overt acts 'of re-. sistence have been committed, and a great deal more threatened. Now, as long as we have a Government; its authority must be maintained and the laws enforced. This must be done though a hundred Lawrences perish. The Territorial - Government of Kariras may be a very bad one—its laws very oppfes sive—but these must be corrected; not by Sharp's rifles and rebellion, but by.the usual peaceful remedies, whiCh•exist in Kangas, as everywhere else. We rejoice that the legal, authority has been vindicated'; and s piirticu- . larly that it has been done, considering the. circumstances, with so little violence. We do not approve the destruction of the hofel,, nor that of the printing press, and doubt the authority of a grand jury to order such acts.' But these, after all are of small consequence. compared with the great benefit of restoring the reign of- law and• order, and impressing upon these victims• of the wiles of the most shameless demagogues that ever infested any country, the duty of peaceful obedience to' the constituted authorities. Keep these pests out of the country and NVC, have no fears for Kansas. Leave the Terri tory to the • operation of the wise and juai. cioils provisions of the bill now before the United States Senate, which gives to the reg ular and bona fide settlers of the country the full determination of all questions relative to its government, and the conditions of its fu ture admission into the Union. Let the peo ple shut their ears and turn their backs upon the outside agitators and demagogues who, having no interest in the country, desire to make it the arena in which to fight their party battles, Let the people go to work and turn up the rich virgin soil of the country, exchange their Sharp's rifles for hoes and • harrows, and their powder and ball for saws and axes and all theimpleinents of agricultu ral and mechanical industry ; and in",a taw' months the ridiculous and criminal attempt at rebellion will be forgotten, and peace, pros perity and industry will reign over this beau-, tiful region. OUR RELATIONS WITU GREAT The latest' news from Europe give a much more peaceful aspect to our relations with the British .Government. The tone of all the En glish' journals is essentially moderated. It, is clear that the people of Great Britain do not desire war with America. There *as no particular thought in England that Mr. Dal las would be dismissed.. Things' will all get. smooth again before very long. Coming—The 4th of July—but we don't hear of any arrangements outside of the Sun day sehoolts, for any appropriate demonstra tion.