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For The Globe. THE RALLY--A DEMOCRATIC SONG. TUNE. "TILE GODDESS OF LESEETT".-DT A. L. Come freemen, arouse—in your glory beam forth, Come, exult in the songs of the free; Come, sing of our Statesman, the genus of worth, The champion of Liberty. Our enemies in arms, they seek to destroy Our Union, so closely combined ; They'll use all the means that fiends could employ, Or devils in darkness could find. 'They'll call on the passions, the vilest of vile, That hell in her fury sends forth, They'll hunt every archive, they'll seek every file, That gave to these feelings their birth. They'll call on the demon, whose country's betray An not of true merit would call— Who would pass for vile gold his freedom away, And glory in our Union's sad fail. They'd place in the hands of the slaves of the South The arms of Freedom's worst foe— They'd call on the sabre, the cannon's wide mouth, Our brethren in death to lay low. They'd betray us for gold, they'd sell us for spoils, They'd ruin our country's fair fame, They seek to remove by their strife and turmoils, From the Record, our glorious name. Then, freemen, arouse in your glorious strength, To the breeze our banner's unfurl ed— Let the truth be spread o'er our country's fair length, And our foes o;, the ramparts be hurled. For, wit,a-our favorite son, the nation's own choice, To co - request andimrlng - We'll go— He'gstop the ford santier, ated...lmstiAlm loud voice Of Colupbrt's bitterest foe. ulananaitlttcitinrx*bge:, SPEECH OF HON. JOSIAH RANDALL, Before the Democratic State Convention, lIELD AT CIIAMBERSBURG, AUG. 6, 1536. In obedience to the request of the Demo cratic State Convention of Pennsylvania, I claimthe attention of my fellow-citizens for a short time. I am aware that I- have re ceived this courtesy because I have hereto fore been a member of the Old Line Whig party. In 1824-5, the Democratic and Whig par ties were separated by no question of princi ple, but were divided upon the question, whether Gen. JACKSON was entitled to be elec ted President of the United States. In the progress of time, clearing the thirty years of the existence of the Whig party, several im tortant principles were presented, and the wo parties became distinct and independent of each other upon questions of public poli cy. These were: 1. The renewal of the charter of the Bank of the United States. 2. The Sub-Treasury. 3. The Distribution of the Proceeds of the Public Lands. 4. The Tariff. A "National Bank" was abandoned by the Democratic party, under the veto of Gen. JACKSON in 1832, and by the Whig party in 1844. "The Sub-Treasury," the cardinal meas ure of Mr. VAN BunEx, was opposed by the Whig party, has fought itself into public fa vor, and no one now wishes to disturb it. "The Distribution of the Proceeds of the Public Lands" has been superceded by the debt created by the Mexican war. " The Tariff' no longer remains either a political or geographical question; the last Congress exhibited the spectacle of the " State Rights" men of the South and the Republi can Abolitionists of the North, united against Pennsylvania, without distinction of party, to reduce the tariff below its present stan dard. If there remain any practical disputable principle, which constituted an issue between the Democratic and the old. Whig parties, I do not know it. The Whig party has performed its duty, and has had its day. It has been prostrated by the organization of the American party, or the KNOW-NOTHING ORDER. They and not the Old Line Whigs have been the Execution ,ers. They have renounced their old cogno men, laid aside their old principles, and sub stituted in their place a new name and a new creed never heretofore recognized by CLAY, WEBSTER, SERGEANT or their noble compeers. I know there are many intelligent and pa triotic men who cherish the hope that the Whit party can again be resuscitated, but the hope is delusive, and it is pernicious be cause it deprives the country of a large por tion of intellect and worth, which ought to be brought into public service. In the His tory of our Republic, no party broken down has ever yet been re-organized. The fate of the Federal and Anti-Masonic parties estab lishes this fact. There is not at this time a Whig member of the - popular branch of Con- gress elected by a Whig vote. There is not a member of the Legislature of Pennsylva nia elected by a Whig vote. There is not a member of the Councils of the City of Phil adelphia elected by a Whig vote. For the last two years, with but two exceptions, wherever the scattered members of the Whig Party have met in council, they have felt their position, and have therefore, wisely ab stained from forming a Ticket to be voted for at the polls. In New Hampshire and .A.las sachusetts they rallied at the polls, and the result was paucity of numbers and total de feat. But, I ask, what good would be deri ved from the re-organization and triumph of the Old Whig Party? They do not want a National Bank. They do not desire the re peal of the Sub-Treasury. The most ardent friends of the Tariff do not ask for the re-es tablishment of the high Tariff of 1828; or even of 1842 ; but all they ask is, that the Tariff shall stand v7 - here it was placed in 1846 by the casting vote of the Vice President, Mr. DALLAS. All the old issues have been settled, 'and as a natural consequence, new parties have sprung up, and new issues have been formed. The Order of Know-Nothings have violated the letter. and spirit of the VI Article of the Constitution of the United States, -which declares that " No religious test shall ever be required as a Qualcation to any Office or Public Trust under the United States;" they have established secret socie ties, secret oaths and obligations. With these $1 50 75 . 50 WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL. XII. 1513 principles the Whig party in its days of pow er and numerical strength had no sympathy nor affiliation, and there is no part of the Union where the Whigs were more inflexible in opposing these political heresies than in the State of Pennsylvania. In 1845, when the Whig party met in the City of Philadelphia, after the defeat of Mr. CLAY, the duty of opening the meeting and setting forth their principles was committed to me. I held in my hand at that meeting, the charter of Rhode Island, granted to Rog er Williams, which contains the broadest and most comprehensive declaration of religious LIBERTY AND EQUALITY ever yet penned. I read its eloquent and energetic platform and said, `THIS IS THE DOCTRINE OF THE WHIG PARTY," and pointing to the ruins of the Ro man Catholic Church of St. Augustine, burnt during the disgraceful riots of 1844, and which lay within a few yards of the place of meeting, I added, "THERE IS ITS DESECRATION." There is not a nook nor corner in the vast re gion of our country which does not contain Old Line Whigs who are willing to stand by the Constitution and the Union. But their numerical strength is far exceeded by their patriotism, talents, and public - spirit. This is the body to which I have been attached, and I feel the deepest interest in the course they shall pursue. The Republican party is SECTIONAL, and its success must, in my judgment, lead to a sev erance of the Union. I do not believe that the great mass of that party anticipate this result ; but if it should be consummated, their regret will be no equivalent for the damning injury thereby inflicted upon this great Re public. I appeal to every Old Line Whig in the Union to avert this calamity. The South cannot and will not remain in the Union, un less their rights are guaranteed to them. If we were in the same situation, we would de mand our rights in tones as imperative and mandatory as those which are now used by our Southern brethren. How is this great evil to be avoided ? I . answer, by the election of Mr. Buchanan.— Every vote given to him is a cheek to the pro gress of the Republican. party. I know there are many Whigs who approve of the admin istration of Millard Fillmore, and are willing to trust him again. Every vote given to Mr. Fillmore increases the danger of the success of Mr. Fremont. Every vote given to Mr. Buchanan potentially seals the fate of Mr. Fremont. But Millard Fillmore in 1848, '5O, and '52, is not the Millard Fillmore of 1856. When he was elected Vice President in 1848 —when he became the Acting President in 1850,—and when he was a candidate for re nomination by the Whig Convention in Bal timore, in 1852, he professed to be a Whig-- nothing more, nothing less. The Native American party at that time was in existence and proclaimed principles in terms far less exceptionable than those now avowed by the Know-Nothing party, But Mr. Fillmore then had neither part nor lot with them, he stood upon the ground occupied by CLAY:WEBSTER and SERGEANT. What is he now? He has been initiated into the Order of Know-Noth ings, taken upon himself its secret oaths and obligations, and this at a time when his friends were presenting his claims to be elec ted President of the United States. lie has since become the candidate and accepted the nomination of the American or Know-Noth ing National Convention. In a correspon dence between the Order of United Ameri cans of the State of New York and him, un der the date of July 25th, 1856, they say— " Both from your past official acts, and from the assurances and views expressed by you on many occasions, as having similar sentiments in reference to these subjects, to them of so much seeming importance, the successful establishment of these principles, as the fundamental Rules of our Government, they believe essential for its tranquility, and a continued progress in the developement of all its greatness." Mr. Fillmore in his answer, dated 29th of July, 1856, acquiesces in this statement and replies— • "My position before the country is well known, admitting neither of disguise nor equivocation. lam the candidate of the American party." Mr. Fillmore here proclaims himself the American candidate, and adopts the creed, oaths and obligations of• that party, without disguise or equivocation." In the Secret Lodge of the Order of Know-Nothings he has sworn that he will neither vote for nor appoint a Roman Catholic to office. If elec ted and inaugurated President of the United States, he would be compelled to swear that he would require "no religious test as a qual ification to any Office or Public Trust under the United StateS." I ask, under such ch., cumstances, which oath would he keep, and which oath would he violate ? Are the Old Line Whigs prepared to endorse Mr. FILL MORE, thus presented for their suffrages by himself? 1 know no difference between an individual joining the Order and giving his vote to sustain its candidate, except that the latter course is more effective in carrying out the tenets of this party. The friends of Mr. FILLMORE have assailed Mr. BUCHANAN for his OSTEND communica tion without admitting or denyinethe sound ness of the doctrine therein contained. I would remark that the correspondence of Mr. Evnurqr, as Secretary of State under Mr. FILLMORE, after the death of MT. WEBSTER, relative to Cuba, is more offensive, and ought to be more obnoxious to the criticism of con servative men than the OSTk,ND LETTER.; and it should be remembered that the diplomatic manifesto of Mr. EvERETT, was issued under the immediate supervision of Mr. FILLMORE and his Cabinet. Mr. Everett is probably the best ,educated Statesman now living, he is an erudite schol ar and a sound Patriot. When in Congress, he took higher ground in favor of the South on the subject of slavery, than any Northern Statesman had over done before, or has ever done since. One thing is curtain, any opin ion upon International Law promulgated by hith, is entitled to respect. Mr. Buchanan has been in public life upwards of forty years, ho has filled the highest offices which his own State could confer upon him. Ile 4: - has occupied the highest seat in the Cabinet during a most eventful epoch; and he has twice represented his country at the Courts of the two first Nations in Europe. His pri vate character stands without blot or blemish and beyond rebuke or reproach ; and it is a high eulogium upon his public life that the " Ostend Letter" is the only act which is des ignated by his opponents as the ground of attack. There are many Old Line Whigs who are altachedto their cognomen, and dislike chang ing it—this is an over. scrupulous nicety.— They must change their name—they must recognize the title of an American, Know- Nothing, Republican, or a Democrat. If they refuse to elect either of these names, they must retire from all participation in public affairs. Gov. SEWARD 15 reported to have said. during the present session of Congress, in caucus, that he cared nothing for names, but that he looked to principles alone. The remark showed he had a clear head and a sound judgment, and was worthy of a better cause. Time will not permit me to discuss at large, the question of the Territories. I hold that the Territory ceded to us by Mexico was pur chased by common treasure. The fifteen Slave States contributed their portion of the fund as well as•the then fifteen Free States. Territory should stand on the same footing as admitted States, and the right of the peo ple to hold Slaves or not, as they please, in the Territory ought to be commensurate with the rights of the people as they exist in the thirty-one States. There can be no just ground far any discrimination between the two eases. New Territory is surely not more sacred than the old thirteen States, or the present thirty-one States. The will of a ma jority prevails in the cases last enumerated, and the same orthodox principle should pre vail in the newly acquired Territory. What is the doctrine of the Wilmot provi so? It is the sixteen free States declaring to the fifteen slave States—you are part own ers of this Territory ; you have shed your blood and expended your treasure in acqui ring it, but you shall have -no share in its en joyment or profits. Strip it of its trappings, and it amounts to this: there are thirty-one stockholders in a corporation, and sixteen say to fifteen, it is true you are part owners and have contributed to the purchase of our com mon property, but you shall have no share in the enjoyment of its privileges or the re ceipts of its profits. Suchdo7trine is sub versive of every principle of justice and equal ity, and cannot be sustained. I am not the advocate of opinions that are new to the Whig party . of Pennsylvtiiiia. At a Whig meeting held in September, 1850, at the Chinese Museum, in Philadelphia, I of fered a resolution congratulating the Nation upon the restoration of peace and quietude to the country by the passage of the Com promise Acts of that year. It was unani mously adopted, and I then laid down the same principles which I am now endeavoring to inculcate. In November, 1850, the great Union Meet- ing was held at the same place, and over which John Sergeant presided. Among oth, ers, I again enforced the same principles.— At a later period, during the session of the Legislature of this State in 1851, a pure Whig meeting was called to request the re pe4l of the Act of the Legislature of 1847, which closed the public jails of this Com monwealth against the custody of Fugitive Slaves. At that meeting Samuel Breck, sec ond to no man in the country, in intelligence and patriotism, presided. I. again promul gated the same doctrine and they were again endorsed 11 . the Whig party assembled on that occasion. These are some of the reasons why I in voke every Old Line Whig in Pennsylvania to suppert Mr. Buchanan. The triumph of the Democratic party in Pennsylvania in Oc tober next, would place his election beyond doubt. It would remove the last glimmer ing, hope of the opposition, restore peace and quietude to the country, and for one genera tion at least, put at rest the present agitation on the question of slavery. The Old Line Whigs of Pennsylvania possess the power to accomplish this great result; the responsibil ity rests upon them, and I have no doubt but that the draft which is made upon their pa triotism will be promptly accepted, and that the great Keystone State will once more come to the rescue, and do as she has done hereto fore, put down all sectional feeling, and at the ballot-box give a vote which will strike terror to the enemies of the Constitution and our glorious Union, which have so long been the pride and admirt4ion of every friend of civil and. roligious liberty throughout the It has usually been the fortune of the op ponents of the Democratic party to have the sympathies of their British ancestors on the, Other side of the Atlantic. It seems the pre sent contest forms no exception to the gener al rule. The British are for Fremont. Bu chanan is "pledged to a policy" which they deem hostile to English interests, and hence they oppose him and join hands with their friends on this side of the water in favor of Fremont. We extract the following from a prominent English pal?er:— • From the London Daily News, July 10. Interesting as all the phases of American politics are to Englishmen, our first attention is naturally given to the contest for the Pres identship. On the choice of the next Presi r dent hangs the question of peace or war be tween the United States and various foreign countries—England being among the fore most on the list. Not that we believe that any possible President might say any American citizen--would directly and ',sin cerely go into a war with England; but ono at least of the candidates in the field is pledg ed to a policy which would render war almost unavoidable. While, therefore, it is under stood that other changes, and many of them, may take place before the election in Novem ber' we observe with strong satisfaction that the Republican party is showing such, vigor, spirit, and resolution, as tofford a good pros pect of the return, of its candidate—Colonel FEEMOIs.M. HUNTINGDON, PA., AUGUST 20, 1856. The British Go For Fremont .-PERSEVERE. - The Value of the Union in a Commercial 'What is the value of the Union in dollars and cents ? That is the question which some of the leading papers in this section are now discussing.. They are endeavoring to persuade the North that, in a commercial point of view, it can do without the South, and that, so far as pecuniary profit and loss are concerned, the dissolution of the political ties which now unite them, would be no great evil—if not a great blessing, This is a sad sort of logic to use in a Presidential canvass. That surely must be a bad and a wicked cause which is compelled to calculate the worth of the Con federacy as one of the conditions of its sue,. cess. We do not mean to engage in this sor did speculation. The whole thing is abhor rent to one's patriotic instincts. But since an effort is making to underrate the Union in its mere money value, ire shall state some facts which• may serve to prevent the people of this section from being deceived by the represen tations of those who would convince them that the trade with the South is of no import ance, either to the free States, or to the wealth, power, and greatness of the whole Republic. Any one who has any adequate knowledge of the foreign and internal commerce of the country, must be aware that the commercial strength of the nation is primarily dependent on Southern labor and staples. Indeed, the one article of cotton is the ruling element of the commerce of mankind. .It is the barom eter by which the mercantile operations of Christendom are guaged and regulated, the price of this commodity at Liverpool, at any time, being the standard which elevates or depresses the scale of the world's industry and exchanges. Why this is so we can very readily demonstrate by merely stating a fetv well authenticated statistics, leaving reflect ive readers to draw their own conclusions. Taking the returns of the last census, which are less favorable for our purpose than later results, but more conveniently accessible, we find that in 1849—'50 the cultivation of cotton and its preparation for market employed about 800,000 laborers, 85 per cent, of whom were slaves. It required to feed and clothe this force, produce valued at $25,000,000; the supplies being derived principally from the North and West, which received- the price paid for them. The entire crop of 1849—'50 was 993,312,000 lbs., valued at $112,430,600. This crop employed in its transportation along the Gulf and. Atlantic coasts 55,000 American seamen, and 1,100,000 tons of American shipping, or about one-third of the entire tonnage of the nation in 1850. This is ea clasive of 120,000 tons of steamatonnage said 7000 persons engaged in transporting cotton by steam navigation to Southern ship ping ports, to say nothing of railways. At the same period there were not less than $BO,- 000,000 invested in the business of cotton manufacture, chiefly in New England. This capital maintained 100,000 operatives, male and female, whose joint annual wages were $17,000,000, and the product of whose labor was worth, at a low estimate, $70,000,000. There were besides 25,000 or 30,000 persons in the 'United States who were employed and enriched in receiving, selling, and shipping the above amount of domestic cotton fabrics. In addition to the coastwise navigation before mentioned, there were 800,000 tons of mer cantile marine of the country, owned chiefly at the North, occupied in carrying American cotton to Europe. In 1849—'50 the value of cotton fabrics made in our own factories and. consumed in the States was $57,134,760. During the same period the value of the to tal amount of raw American cotton consumed in our manufactures was $24,340,800 ; while the whole amount of cotton fabrics consumed in our country-e-foreign and domestic—ex ceeded in value sB2,ooo,ooo—three fourths of the entire product being the creation of domestic industry. Again, the domestic cot ton manufactures have not only exceeded, in the- proportion of their increase, the aug mentation of the gross population of the country, as well as that of any other promi nent article of manufacture, but that increase, since 1826, in its relation to exportation, sur passes in value the whole increase of all other American manufactures combined. More over, the cotton crops of the States equals quite seven-tenths of all the cotton produced in the world. ; while the portion yearly ex ported is about eight-tenths of the total quan tity sent to market from all regions of the globe. Since 1821, our exports of cotton have multiplied nine -fold, while the imports of foreign cotton goods have hardly more than doubled. Hence cotton is rapidly can celling one big item in the account of inter national trade in which the balance has been against us. We may add further, by way of comment here, that more than $48,000,000 of bullion and specie, over and above what has been actually exported, would have been an nually needed; since 1824, for shipment abroad, to square exchanges with Europe, had it not been for the exportation thither of our raw cotton. The aggregate of our expor tations of raw cotton has, since 1805, increas ed uprards of twenty : eight fold in quantity, and more than nine hundred per cent. in value. It is likewise noticeable, that the gross sum of our importations of foreign mer chandize has declined relatively to the in creased exportation of American raw cotton. But cotton is but one of the staples of the South. Adding $30,000,000 as the value of naval stores, molasses and the tobacco, rice and Ruga.r crops of 1849—'50, to that of the cotton crop for that season, and we have a to tal of $142,430,600 contributed by the South in one year to the wealth of the Union. This is more than the value of the entire exports of domestic produce, exclusive of specie, in 1850--more than nine times the value of the total exportation of manufactures of domes tic produce in the same year, and more than five times the value of the aggregate exports of breadstuffs and. provisions in 1850. It is finally nearly equal to the value of the ag gregate import's of 1850, which were $164,- 032,033, the greater part of which came in through Boston, New York and Philadelphia, on which Northern merchants made their freights, insurance and. - profits, the South be ing ultimately, the consumer of, and paying for nearly, if not quite, a moiety of the whole. Aspect. Editor and Proprietor. Another notable fact is, that the exports of domestic cotton in 1850, exceeded those of to bacco, and the whole products of agriculture, the forest and the sea added together. We have shown that the people of the North are the shippers, the insurers and sellers of, as well as the speculators in, cotton, and, of course, the reapers of the great bulk of the profit upon the article—the planter realizing the very smallest portion of the nett proceeds. Let us see where, in this country, the cot ton of the South is manufactured into cloth and the like. The gross value of our cotton manufactures in 1850, was $61,869,184. Of this whole amount, Connecticut, Maine, Dias- sachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Verniont, and New York, produced $52,455,653—within a small fraction of the entire sum. The pro duct of Mossachusetts alone, was nearly $20,- 000,000. It is easy, therefore, to see whose industry cotton supports, and what section of the confederacy it enriches. Here, then, is an exhibit which may well rebuke those who would undervalue the com mercial importance of the slave States to the general prosperity and wealth of the nation. And more especially should it silence those who, while they are declaiming against Slav- ery, and uttering the most violent denuncia tion of the Southern people, are making their daily profits and accumulating fortunes by selling and carrying and manufacturing the products of slave labor. Without the South and its staples, the manufacturing industry and the commerce of the New England States would suffer a disastrous decline ; while the South would experience but a temporary in convenience, in respect of trade, from a change of its present commercial relations with this section of the Union. But let us not even contemplate such a contingency. Let us cherish - the belief that the Union is indisso luble, and foster our loyalty to it by every consideration of patriotic pride and every hope of national prosperity and renown.— Let us realize the assertion of Washington, that " the North, in an unrestrained inter course with the South, protected by the equal laws of a common government, finds, in the productions of the latter, great additional re sources of maratime and commercial enter prise, and precious materials of manufactu ring industry, while the South, in the same intercourse, benefiting by the agency of the North, sees its agriculture grow and its com merce expand." Let us think and feel, and we shall then, in the language of Mr. Web ster, hear "no such miserable interrogatory What is all this worth?' nor those other words of delusion and folly, Liberty first and thtion after wards."—Evening Journal. The Pennsylvania Candidate. It is one of Mr. Buchanan's prime recom mehdations, says the . Philadelphia Argus, that he is the Pennsylvania Candidate. Not merely the choice of the Keystone State, he is also a perfect representative of the charac teristics or Pennsylvania. He was born and raised in her midst, taught in her schools, educated in one of her seminaries of learning, imbued with legal learning by one of her most eminent lawyers. He has spent every hour of his life in Pennsylvania, except when the public.business of the country has called him away. He has practised law in her Courts, helped to make her laws as a em ber of her legislature, is familiar with all her history, and all her institutions. His rela tives, and principal and dearest associations are all Pennsylvanian.. The fondest and best, and most joyous memories of his life centre in this State. This State is the scene and sphere of all his future hopes. He ex pects to die here, and to lay his head on Penn sylvania soil. His whole career proves him to be thoroughly possessed with Pennsylvania feelings and. principles. On all subjects of political or national concern, James Buchan an has reflected-the opinions of Pennsylvania. He has always been with his own state, in every emergency and occasion. His funda mental character, his modes of thought, ''his 1 habitual sentiment and state of feeling, his appearance, and his manners aro all eminent ly Pennsylvanian. The whole world looks upon him as the very type and representative of the Keystone State. Every body knows, that when elected, he will administer the affairs of the nation in the very spirit and style of Pennsylvania Democracy, Now this is enough to secure the confidence of all calm thinking men. For the steadfast, benign character of the good old Common wealth of Pennsylvania is well known and appreciated by the sister States. She cannot i boast of such a galaxy of past statesmanship, as Virginia, or such literary brilliancy and rapid enterprise as Massachusetts. She lays no claim to. the "middle ago" chivalry of South Carolina, nor does she habitually vaunt her greatness like New York. But as Web ster said, " There she is---behold her, and judge for yourselves." No State in the Union evua/.3 the uniform benignity, fairness, and simplicity of her domestic institutions. Her Judiciary has always been famed for" learn ing and -wisdom. Her system of laws is ev erywhere copied for its simplicity and equity. She led the way in amelioration of criminal law and criminal -discipline, and the world is but copying her example. No stain of reli gious intolerance ever disgraced her Statute book or her history. ller population is famed for its industry, quiet, good morals, sturdy republicanism and' love of order. Supercil ious Yankees, or Virginians, sometimes have sneered at the "Pennsylvania Putch," and people outside our State have talked about our ignorance. But the fact is, no State in the Union ever excelled our rural districts in strong common - sense—and this is proven by our State Institutions and our State Politics. Amidst all the sectional agitations that have lashed the waves of opinion North and South, Pennsylvania has been a breakwater. When all the skies darkened with the driving clouds of threatening Abolition, or Free Soil, or Nullification, or Secession, and When the night of disunion seemed coming on apace, always amid the roar and darkness, old Penn sylvania has raised up her giant self to pro tect the Constitution, and her honest voice has called on her sisters to take heed.and come back to reason. She has never proved false to Nationality. She could not possibly. do so. For she is placed right at the Nation's heart. The Nation was born and cradled in, her lap. Disunion would make horn frontier. State, whereas now she is the topmost stone of the vast Arch. At all hazards, to the last extremity, while a rag of the starry banner remains untorn by the winds of discord and kltrife, Pennsylvania must, and Pennsylvania will, be true to the whole Union. She is as conservative, moderate, arid conciliatory, as she is Union loving. Unaffected by the ,graa tuitous fanaticisms of the North, or the pro-, yoked ill tempers of the South, she is always forbearing and impartial. Such a State does James Buchanan come from, and live in, and. embody in his own character. Who can doubt, then, the char acter of his Administration in the very spirit and temper of Pennsylvania Unionism and fairness, It will be a dignified, pacific, be-! nign Administration. 'Peace will spread smi ling all over the land. Strife, will subside.-- State and sectional jealousies will be allayed. Abolition agitation and agit,ators will be re*. buked into silence and impotence. North and South will shake hands more cordially than ever. Under the auspices of honest old Penn sylvania and the venerable President whom she furnishes to the Union, all the difficulties about Slavery . and. Kansas will become the half forgotten incidents of the past. Citizens of Pennsylvania! You know the reliable excellence of your own honored Com-, monwealth. You know - she is National., fain and peaceful. You know, too, that James Buchanan is, in every:respect, and eminently a Pennsylvanian. You know his spotless. character, his blameless life, his proverbial amiability and equity of disposition, his anx-: iety 'for peace, good order and general con tentment. We need not make strong appeals to you. You will delight to do honor to the most distinguished and the favorite son of our glorious Commonwealth. And as all our ter States respect and love Pennsylvania, let them testify their sentiments by helping to elect James Buchanan—a perfect type of hi?, State. NO. 9. During the last few Tears, a large number of ministers connected with most of the churches at the North, have used their pul pits and desecrated the Sabbath with politi cal harangues. Associations of ministers have denounced and vilified the actions and principles of one of the great parties of the country—the press claiming to be the organs of religious denominations, seem'to have con centrated all their hopes in the kingdom of this world—and to differ with this pros and these ministers, is sin enough to call down the anathemas of these `self-constituted vice gerents. Man's duty to his God, and his re lations to a fixture existence—the peaceable kingdom of Christ and its moral power, giv en to it by its founder, and relied upon by him for its propagation—are all forgotten.— For all of this there can be no other feeling than that of pity and contempt. For this there can be no excuse. The present state of these churches will bear out the assertion that in these efforts they have not been blessed of God. In this connection, we cannot but repro duce the impregnable position of a minister of the Revolutionary time, which offered an excuse, if ever a time offered an excuse, for ministers to enter the arena of polities. Dr. Ryles, a noted preacher of those times, gave the following reasons for not introducing pol itics into his pulpit ; "I have thrown up four breastworks, be hind which I have entrenched myself, neith er of which can be forced. In the first place, I do not understand politics ; in the second place, you do all, every man and mother's son of you ; in the third place, you have pol itics all the week, pray, let one day in seven lie devoted to religion ; in the fourth place, I am engaged in a work of infinitely more im portance; give me any subject to preach on of more consequence than the truths I bring. you, and I will preach on it the next Sab bath."—Tackson Patriot. FROM GEN. JACKSON'S FAREWELL ADDRESS. In his farewell address to his countrymen upon retiring from the Presidency, the pa-7 triot statesman and hero of the Hermitage said: "What have you to gain by division and dissension ? Delude not yourselves with the hope that a breach once made, would be afterwards easily repaired. If the Union is once severed, the separation will grow wider and wider : and the controversies which are now debated and settled in the halls of legis lation, will be tried in fields of battle, and determined by the sword. Neither should you deceive yourselves with the hope that the first line of separation would be the per manent one. ** * Local interests would still be found there, and unchastened ambition, And if the recollections of common dangers, in which the people of these United States have stood side by side against the common foe—the memory' of victories won by their united valor—the prosperity and happiness they have enjoyed under the present Consti tution;—if all these recollections and proofs Of common interest are not strong enough to bind restton•ether as one people, what tie will ' hold united the new divisions of empire ? when these bonds have been broken and this Union dissolved ? The first line of 'sepa z ration would not last long • new fragments be torn off—new leaders would up—and this great and glorious Republic would - soon be broken into a multitude el petty States, armed for mutual aggression -_-. 7 -, loaded with taxes to pay ariniths and leader* —seeking aid against 'each other from for t eign powers—insulted and trampled upon by the nations of Europe—until, harrassed with conflicts and humbled and debased int spirit, they would be willing to submit t,o the dominion of any military adventurer, and to 'surrender their liberty for the sake of repose." JOSEPII HISS GOES FOR FREMONT.—The cot ; ebrated. Joseph Hiss, of nunnery investiga c tion notoriety, and who raised such a dust in. the - Massachusetts Legislature a year ago, 14 taking a woman of doubtful reputation 3vitl, him, on one of the excursions of a Legisla ; tive Investigating Committee to which he be : longed, and charging hor expenses to the State = goes for Fremont as the best repre ; -, sentatiye of the principles of the "American'?party, of which he, the said Joseph Hiss, is such a worthy and illustrious member. je t seph Hiss has been chosen as a delegate tq the State Convention of the Fremonters, fro the First ward of Boston. Three cheers for Fillmore—one fess for Fremont. Build good school : houses, employ emu ; potent teachers, and make study an amuse ; ment and a pleasure instead of a drag, as it now is—and what then? Why, we may sow?. be able to ticket our prisons -doors with s t "For Rent," Political Preaching.' A. Picture of Disunion