TERMS OF THE GLOBE. Per annum in advance Six months Three months . . . A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expiration of the term subscribed fur will be considered a new engage ment. TERMS or ADVERTISING. 1 insertion. 2 do. 3 do. Four lines or less, $25 . S 27:', / $ :',O One square, (12 lines,) 50 7.; 1 OU Two squares, 1 00 1 50 2 00 Three squares,...... 1 50 3 00 Over three week and less than three months, 23 cents per square for each insertion. 3 months. G months. 12 months. $1 .50 03 00 , :45 00 _ _ Six lines or less, One square,.. Two square 4, Three squares, Four squares, Haifa column, One column, e 0 00 .;0 00 50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, One year, S 3 00 =IEEE Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. a 6 rtat ,syr,t4. SPEECH —OF— Hon'. JOHN L. DAWSON , At the Great Democratic Plass Itleeting, GREENE COUNTY, AUGUST 21., ISSG FELLOW CITIZENS : Never on any occasion have I arisen before an assembly of my fellow-countrymen so im pressed with the importance of the contest which draws us together. The crisis so long portended by the progress of events has at length actually arrived. The continued ex pression of unfriendly sentiments, and the continued repetition of unfriendly acts, by one section of our common country in rela tion to the institutions of another, has at length brought about that unhappy condition in our domestic relations which our true statesmen have long predicted, and which the patriot has always feared. In inquiring by what causes and agencies this condition of affairs has been produced, it is not my pur pose to condemn indiscriminately the motives of any class or political division of my fellow citizens. lam willing to allow much for honesty of intention, where I must at the same time condemn the wisdom of the con duct, and while I have censure, broad and summary, for those who have been the guilty leaders to deplorable results, I admit that the inquiry of transcendant importance is how we may escape from the results, aid how re trieve that former position of glorious secu rity and fraternal harmony, in which we were wont to feel a common pride and a common felicity ? To the sober reason of reflecting men, there is, indeed, nothing more amazing and con founding than that unaccountable madness, which, for a time, seems to run through a whole community—by which the general mind is lifted from its poise, and made to see things through a distorted medium. It is not without much artifice and persevering labor on the part of those who have assumed the offices of popular leaders, that they have thus been able to warp the public mind from its propriety, and to infuse into it that subtle poison which is now displaying itself in efforts of irregular and convulsive excitement, and a singular forgetfulness of paramount obligations. Could the caucus of the internal distraction, which at this time afflicts these States, be communicated for the first time to one unaf fected by any prejudice of feeling or judg ment in regard to them, I apprehend that in' view of such an one there could be no instance more flagrant of national folly. Could we evoke from the glorious slumber in which they repose, the spirits of the great men who presided at the origin of the government— could we call up llancock and Warren—and Lee and Rutledge—and Henry and Wash ington—what would be their feelings and opinions in view of a contest waged upon such principles as this ? Would they not blush and hide their noble heads for shame fur the degeneracy of their descendants, which could peril on a question like that of negro slavery the existence of a State which is the proudest boast of all time ! The nature of the present contest is, indeed. unparalleled. No precedent is found in all our past political history for any tactics which shall be applicable now. Ever heretofore, we have all aimed, by whatever different systems of policy, and struggled, as brethren and without sectional distinctions, for the greatness and prosperity of a common coun try with which we have felt our own, and the happiness of our descendants to be identified. The efforts made by a few discontented and reckless politicians in different parts of the country to• rear a sectional banner, were al ways met by the indignant contempt of an insulted community. Ever heretofore, if the question was whether the financial affairs of the nation should be managed through a Na tional Bank, or an Independent Treasury, whether the currency of the country were better constituted of paper or the precious metals ; whether revenue should be raised by the imposition of duties upon imports or by direct taxes—whether the protection of do mestic manufactures, and the prosecution of internal improvements fall within the legiti mate powers of the general government, or whether these should more wisely be left to the inventive genius, and enterprising spirit of the people, and the resources of the sepa rate States—upon whichever of these issues the politics of the country were made for the time to hinge, the strife was still for the wel fare, the prosperity, and happiness of the whole country. No mischievous and insidi ous distinctions of North and South—no rec ognition of a line of policy for ono section which was not adapted to another, is to be found in any of these issues ; and no public man who represented any considerable por tion of the public sentiment, dared, either in the Capitol or before the people, coolly to dis cuss the value of the Union, or give utter ance to a single expression in its disparage ment. But alas the change ! Is then the race of patriots and sages passed away ? Has there been any chan e ge in the relations of the vari ous parts of the confederacy, which releases in any degree, the present generation from its obligations for the preservation of the Union ? Has there been any change to au thorize any abatement of those sentiments of veneration for the Union and its founders, which we cherished with our earliest teach, ings ? Is the Union really less valuable now than it has been at any time heretofore ? Can the two great sections of which it is com posed in fact subsist without it, and is it bet tcf... for each to have separate nationalities ? Can two great republics flourish in immedi ate contiguity upon the American Continent, and are we indeed reconciled to the hazard ous experiment? The men of '76 flattered themselves they were accomplishing a work, - which should inure to the benefit of their de scendants for a time to which they were un willing to admit a limit, not oven that of the popular governments of Greece and Runic.— 3 00 ' 00 5 00 7 00 800 10 00 700 10 00 9 00 13 00 .12 00 16 00 -IN v. 50 El= WILLIAM( LEWIS, 20 00 OM VOL XII. MU They hoped rather thafthe admirable system which they ,left for their successors should endure for, all time. They were men whom the world have agreed to praise for their un paralleled wisdom and disinterested patriot ism. But, alas i for our independence if its noblest fruit—the Federal Constitution—is to he openly violated and trampled in the dust 1 Has it then come to this ? Have the glories of the American Union culminated so soon? Have those illustrious lights indeed grown dine and feeble in the overpowering radiance of more recent luminaries ? Have we at length the miserable satisfaction of knowing that our patriotic fathers were mistaken ? Have we discovered that their wisdom was but folly—that the Constitution is a failure— that it is the legal sanction of injustice—and that there is a law above its letter and spirit, which authorizes us to regard its written in-. junctions and inhibitions, as no more than the counsels of well meaning dupes ? And if we are sure of all this, are we also sure that we shall be able to control that fiery and capricious spirit of Revolution whose incipi ent and reckless steps we discern in these sectional movements ? How far do we pro pose to go ? 'Where shall we stop I—and can we stop there ? Will the change stop with the disruption of the Union in two republics, or will it fall into other hands than those of political schemers, who started it for the ac complishment of a selfish and temporary pur pose—into those of military chiefs, who will avail themselves of the opportunity to perpet uate their power ; and will thus the republic be fritted down. into miserable and petty des potism? These are the truly momentous issues which you are called upon to decide in this contest. The restoration of the Missouri Compromise, which is now the rallying cry, is . a mere excuse. Did the parties who de mand it agitate any the less while it existed, and would they agitate the less were it re stored to-morrow ? In 1848, after the acqui sition of California and our Mexican territo ries, it was proposed in Congress for the sake of peace and quiet, to extend the line of 36° 30' to the Pacific Ocean, but at the mention of which the howl of the Giddingses and Hales went forth from the Capitol in tones so terrible as to " make night hideous." With the principles upon which that agita tion proceeds who of us can, upon deliberate conviction, entertain any sympathy ? What is its aim, if any definite aim it has ? If any such it can have, it is neither more or less than the emancipation of the entire black race, and its exaltation to an equality with the whites in all social nn l political rights and privileges. Is there any-thing in such a scheme of policy worthy the name of states manship ? And are the distinctions impress ed by the hands of the Creator himself so easily wiped away ? The idea of amalgama tion is indeed too absurd and repulsive to be dwelt upon. That four millions of a colored population cart be in any way incorporated with, and insensibly lost in the white race, is inconsistent with those prejudices implanted by nature for wise purposes, and could it be accomplished, would end in the permanent deterioration of the white race. We are bound, therefore, upon every principle of common reason, to suppose that such cannot be the object of this agitation. In what other way do they propose to benefit that race?— We have never yet heard of any project on the part of those especial friends of the black man, for his restoration to Africa. On the contrary, they have done all in their power, by paralyzing in a very groat degree, the be neficent plans of colonization—to discourage the idea of such a restoration. But it will bo pretended that this agitation does not proceed upon the idea of a superior regard for the black race, but rather on that of preserving or securing our unoccupied territory, from the institutions of slavery.— This, which is no doubt the view of the great er part of the supporters of anti-slavery, or opponents of Democratic measures, brings us to that system of legislation, which is but re cent, and which is admitted to be identified with the policy Which we uphold. The de fence of the Kansas-Nebraska bill is to be found in its entire accordance with the theory of a Democratic republic. We maintain that the idea that the interests of slavery gain any thing by such an arrangement is a mere illu sion. It overlooks entirely the great deter mining elements in all such cases of the adap tation of soil, climate, and other favorable circumstances of condition, as well as the relative productiveness of free and slave labor. These conditions constitute a law of nature, imposed with far more rigor and certainty than any geographical line or Missouri re striction. The principle of the Nebraska-Kansas bill, which is the recognition of the right of the people to form their own government accord ing to the will of the majority, is a principle which lieS at the basis of all our institutions. It is the same which built us up from feeble colonies into wealthy and important provin ces, and which occasioned our resistance to British tyranny and led to the establishment of American Nationality. By virtue of that principle it is that the States of the Union and the confederacy every where exhibit laws framed upon principles of equality and jus tice, and administered by tribunals charac terized by intelligence and virtue ; that the productive energies of the nation have produ ced such fruits in agriculture, manufactures and commerce ; that the works of American invention are sought for their admitted supe riority by the most enlightened nations of Europe ; that we have an empire stretching across a continent from the great Atlantic where the light of the morning sun is first seen, to the broad waters of the Pacific where his setting rays disappear upon its bosom.— All these and more than I have space to enu merate, are the wonderful results of the prin ciple of popular . sovereignty as displayed in our government and institutions, and whose successful working cannot be denied without the assertion that the experiment of a Re public is a failure. Prior to the passage of the Missouri Com promise, in 1820, the representation of the North and South in Congress was nearly poised, and the history of the events of the day shows conclusively, that the contest which resulted in the passage of that act, was one for power, political power, entirely regardless of the interest or welfare of the slave. It was the effort to obtain the political direction of the country and the control of its legisla tion—to shape its policy in the building up of sectional interests by the adoption of meas ures protective of manufactures, internal im provements, and. commerce and navigation, and by the appropriation of the resources of the national treasury—which led to the fierce ness of that struggle and seduced Congress into an over-stretch of its powers in order to quiet the tremendous excitement. The ques tion having been put to rest for the time by the , acquiescence of the nation in that adjust ment, the slave did not, as yet, in his domes tic relations attract any special regard from the North, and the efforts of the Southern philanthropists for the amelioration of his condition were ardently continued up to as late as 1852, when the fierceness of the abo lition aggression arrested and defeated their progress. In the third of a century which has elapsed since the law of 1820, State after State north of the line of slavery has been added to the confederacy, each contributing to swell the influence of the free States, and in the aggre gate to establish largely their numerical su periority in the popular branch of the nation al legislature. The question of political pow er has thus been fully settled, but the excite ment which was begun for extensive politi cal objects has since passed into fanaticism and who were abolitionists from over-wrought benevolence have become the prey of dema fromues who continue the agitation for their individual benefit in the attainment of power and place—to the prejudice of the country, and at the sacrifice of its peace and the sta bility of its institution. The progress of time showed in the continuance of the abolition excitement the total inefficiency of the act of 1820, and its unconstitutionality having been almost universally conceded, Congress pos sessed the clear right :which it exercised, in the passage of the Bill for the organization of the Territories of Nebraska and Kansas, to repeal the same and vindicate the consti tution by the restoration of the true doctrine and thus to remove the question from their deliberation. We insist, therefore, that the wild excitement which has run through the country upon this subject is a delusion. It has no genuine basis. It cannot be sincere. It has been raised and is supported by such leaders as Sumner, Giddings and others by whom it is used only as a specious decoy, to elevate, or continue in power, its unscrupu lous authors. Besides the Anti-Slavery, Free-Soil and Republican parties, and the Fusion or Black Republican, made up of the two latter, an other division of politicians antagonistic to the principles of the Democratic party, is that of the Know Nothings. Their two most important principles are those of hostility to foreigners and to all who profess the Catholic religion. But whence has arisen this idea of a crusade against the civil and religious rights of so large and respectable a portion of our fellow citizens, for it is in vain that we shall scrutinize the writings of the fathers of the confederacy for any senthitent so utterly ab horrent to those principles, which breathe in the Declaration of Independence, and live through every line of the Constitution. A movement somewhat similar was indeed once attempted soon after the Government went into operation. The celebrated alien, act was passed in 1708, in the first year of the administration of John Adams; and though this measure was adopted when the public mind was justly in a high state of ex citement against France, for many injuries and indignities, yet this was not sufficient to reconcile the people to the palpable injustice of legislation, which created an oppressive distinction against foreigners. The result was, the unequivocal condemnation of that policy in the signal overthrow of the Federal administration, and the elevation to the va cant dignities, of the Republican party un der Mr. Jefferson. In view of the great services rendered by foreigners in our Revolutionary struggle, the ingratitude of any measure which should contemplate a selfish exclusiveness, was in dignantly rejected by the honest patriotism of our ancestors. No odious discrimination against their adopted brethren could be tol erated. In their view, our liberties and in stitutions were not of that feeble character, that they needed the defense of laws design ed to bring into odium any portion of their fellow citizens, to whatever land, unblessed by the light of freedom, they might owe the accident of their birth. The ratio of the for eign to the native population could not have been less then than now; nor could any im agined dangers from such a source have been less. Notwithstanding this, our fathers deem ed the principles of freedom asguaranteed by the inimitable features of our Republican system, of that degree of excellence, that any slight misapprehension of their nature by those not previously accustomed to their en joyment, would speedily work its own cure. Liberty and equality, under the due regula tion of law, with the avenues of social and political position alike open to all, they well knew to be elevating and ennobling princi ples, and they deemed that the natural im pulse which prompts every man to study the welfare of his posterity, would form a safe guard of inestimable value, and one which might be safely trusted, to preserve the poli tical rectitude of the adopted citizen. So our fathers thought, and the result has proven the wisdom of their conclusions. Another element in the composition of this Know Nothing party, is that which discrimi nates against a portion of our fellow citizens on account of their religious tenets. It bold ly proclaims to the world, and challenges a contest upon that issue, that Roman Catho lics are unfit for official position, and are dis qualified by their principles from participa ting in the government of the country. It is pretended that by their principles secretly entertained, though publicly they are permit ted to disavow them, they acknowledge a su perior allegiance to the Roman See. While we have seen no evidence of this, and while HUNTINGDON, PA., SEPTEMBER 17, 1856. -PERSEVERE.- by the purest and best men of that denomi nation, such pretensions on behalf of the pa pal power are entirely disavowed, the char acters of certain of the most distinguished coadjutors in the work of our Revolution is an abundant guaranty of their falsity. Is it for a moment to be credited that the mind of a Baltimore, of a Carroll; of Carrollton, or a Lafayette, could ever have admitted claims so -destructive of national independence.— But grant that Roman Catholics may be pre judiced against Protestant institutions—that they may sympathize with every thing Cath olic in the old country. Grant that their rev erence for papal authority may be of that profound degree as to incline them to a wil ling obedience to its injunctions, however un favorable to Republican institutions and gov ernment, yet what is their proportion to the mass of their fellow citizens ? In 1850 the whole Roman Catholic population in the Uni ted States was only 1,200,000, one half of whom, it may reasonably he supposed, are of native oricin, born and reared under the in fluence or freedom, which having thus imbi bed the taste will remain with them forever. That is a baptism to which there can bo no infidelity. They may recognize their reli gious duties as Roman. Catholics, but they will never accord to the Pope any other than a spiritual authority, and -that too in matters - within his spiritual province. They will al low him, perhaps, the last decision of a ques tion respecting the immaculate conception ; but in a question of governmental forms and institutions, they will assert a right to their own opinions and choice. But allowing a blind and superstitious reverence for the Ho ly Father may incline his followers to accept in all things, even his wishes as laws, and that these may be sometimes, unfriendly to the interests of freedom, yet what, let me ask, will Roman Catholics ever be able to ac complish, with the argils eyes of more than 25,000,000 of jealous Protestants upon them. During our colonial existence religious per secution was not unknown among us. Peo pled-by refugees from persecution in the old world, it is not strange that its fell spirit should follow them to this; and thus in the infancy of our settlements there was little charity of feeling between the Plymouth ad venturers or with the Quakers of Philadel phia and the settlers of Jamestown and Saint Mary's ; or between the llnguenots of Caro lina, and the Catholics of Florida and Loui siana. But the difficult circumstances of the settlers demandinc , all their energies for the success of their enterprises—constantly men aced by hostile savages, soon diverted the minds of the colonists from the persecution of their fellows. The perception of a com mon danger and a common interest soon dis placed the unnatural irritation, and feelings of mutual respect and attachment gradually succeeded. Titus at the (Lae of the union the fires of religious fanaticism, may be said. ' to have died out in the colonies, and the hap py period of universal toleration seemed at length to have arrived. But why this retro grade movement again conducted through the agency of secret orders ? Do we so soon tire of the kindly offices of fraternal regard; and are we at length driven to discard time hope of human perfectability, and to settle in the conviction of the satanical philosopher, who declared that "the natural state of man kind is a state of war ?" Is danger still apprehended from the in crease of Catholic influence ? Look at Rome herself, in age and decrepitude, throned amid ruins, and with decay all around her! Look at the history of the Roman Catholic settle ments in Maryland, Florida, Louisiana, and the Canadas ! That history illustrates that, whether from their inherent nature or the circumstances by which they are surrounded, inertness has been the character of those set tlements. They have been circumscribed and paralyzed by the active influences around them, and have presented no appreciable ob struction to the onward march of Protestant intelligence and energy. Shall any of us, after this review, refuse justice to Roman Catholics from dread of theirincroasing pow er? The idea of such au extended Catholic influence arising in this country as shall prove destructive of our political institutions, is in deed about as reasonable as that lately pro mulgated by Miss Murry, maid of Honor to Queen Victoria, who in a work written upon this country, expresses her fears that the Mormon custom of a plurality of wives is in danger of spreading throughout the States. It is to be esteemed a most fortunate cir cumstance that the admirable institutions which we enjoy, did not owe their origin to any single religious sect, but that the Cava lier and the Roundhead—the disciple of Cal vin, of Loyola and of Penn—met here upon the simple platform of equal, civil and reli gious rights, and agreed to sink their pecu liarities and prejudices of sect, and to unite on a government which should serve for the common protection of all. In the Revolu tion the blood of all freely mingled for the establishment of our Independence ; and the Federal Constitution was the solemn compact that the demon persecution, should no more unsheath her bloody sword, nor re-kindle her accursed fires. No Holy Brotherhood, with inquisitorial instruments of torture, was ever more, in this free and happy land, to assem ble in dark conclave, and interfere with4the rights of conscience in any—the Episcopali an was never more to persecute the Puritan, nor the Puritan the Quaker. Such, I say, was the spirit in which our Government was framed; and when we depart from that spir it by setting up a religious test of qualifica tions for the exercise of civil rights, we be come traitors to the memory of our fathers. And now, my friends, after this hasty re view of the relative position of the Democra cy.and the opposition forces in regard to the principles at issue between us, let us cast a glance at the magnitude of- the interests which aro imperiled by the unatural war fare, which is now waged by the factions op posed to them. How great in all the ele ments which constitute a prosperous and mighty state is this confederacy ! A popu lation for the most part homogeneous, and of the best specimens of the Teutonic and Celtic races—with a Territory of boundless extent, and a variety of soil and climate adapted to ':' • -.. T''''' .... .. =. :, -.- \.. ~ , , . ;-:•:1111:::.• : • 11.. • L k-, • \;:' ..' ::.,., almost every species of production—with lakes, rivers, mountains and plains, all upon the most liberal scale which a beneficent na ture has anywhere displayed—with the State governments for the protection of local and domestic interests, and the administration of justice, and a national government with spe cial and limited powers for the care of our relations as States, and those which we bear to other nations—with the wisest distribu tion of powers, balances and restrictions— the greatest equity in relation to personal rights and the rights of the constituent States, and the best guaranties for the preservation of both. The means for the religious, moral and intellectual training of the common mind, beyond what any people have ever possessed —all circumstances and causes conspire to invite us to a career of virtuous prosperity, such as no nation, however favored, has ever hitherto enjoyed.—The field is vast indeed— vast beyond our capacity to realize, for the exercise of the mighty energies of this rest less 19th century, in the peaceful triumphs over the obstacles of nature, and in bringing the life of man into harmony with the physi cal and moral laws of his being. What is there to interrupt our march toward the con summation of that sublime spectacle, a nation everywhere beloved and respected above all others, for its power, and still more for its justice—leading the age in the wisdom of its political and social institutions, in eiThrts of commercial enterprise, and in the useful and liberal arts—without a SOLUTC of complaint on the part of any individual on account of personal oppression or privation of any of his rights—with the full development of the resources of a mighty country contributing in the degree—great indeed, yet in which it was manifestly intended by the creator—to the general comfort and fecility of the world : What but these internal dissensions break up these fraternal relations which should subsist between all the members of the same political community, in order that general happiness may be the result—turning the en ergies and capacities which should be exer cised for the common welfare, to the purpose of mutual annoyance. This disturbance, if not already at the height, calls aloud fur the efforts of every lover of his country to arrest its progress to ward that fatal result. Let every such pause before he encourages further, for any selfish design of whatever Bubtie demagogue—under whatever specious pretexts of philanthropy or excessive regard for his species—the move ments of parties formed upon partial princi ples, which contemplate the advancement of sectional interests only, and which openly contemn the provisions of our common bond of union. It must he plain to every intelligent and honest inquirer after the truth, that the Democratic is at this time the only party which upon this great national issue stands unaffected with any taint of corruption, and is sound to the core. Look to the history of that party. Is there anything almost, which has in an eminent degree conduced to the greatness, the welfare and happiness or the honor of the nation, which has not owed its origin to that party? The charter of our In dependence sprang from the pen of Jefferson, and that by which our Republican liberties were established and their preservation se cured, was the work of the wise and. excellent Madison—both Democrats whom it is ever safe to follow. It has been under Democrat ic principles and policy that the centralizing tendencies of our federal system have been successfully resisted, and the rights of the States duly preserved—that the General Gov ernment has been restricted to the exercise of its legitimate powers, and the dangers of a latitudinarian policy avoided—that the finan ces of the nation have been rescued from the control of a colossal and irresponsible corpo ration, and managed through its own agents with safety, cheapness, convenience and sat isfaction to the public; that the imposition of duties upon foreign products has been made with reference chiefly to revenue, while within the revenue limit adequate protection has been given to American industry and skill—and that works of Internal Improve ment have been wisely relinquished by the General Government, and left to the resour ces of private capital and State enterprise. It has been under Democratic administra tions that our National Territory has come to embrace the 'Derides and Louisiana, and Texas, and has been extended till the semi barbarous lands of New Mexico and Califor nia and have been brought under the radi ance of our National aegis. The Democracy have ever contended for a pure and honest administration of the Constitution, regardless of sectional clamor; and faithful to their hon orable antecedents, they have sought by the Kansas and Nebraska acts to remove from the Statute Book of the nation, a restriction unjust in itself, and for whose imposition no legal authority existed. There is one other point of view in which I desire to present this subject, and I have done. We, in these United Sts tes, arc every where communities made up of classes which have all a great personal interest at stake.— Next to the secure enjoyment of the right of personal liberty, which we justly prize above all others, is the secure enjoyment of our private acquisitions made in the regular course of industry subservient to law. Ex perience and observation alike teach us that there is nothing so conducive to individual and public prosperity and happiness, as the free and unmolested pursuit and secure en joyment of private property. Yet do we ev er reflect how slow has been the progress of that right to the perfection in which it exists with us ? True, it ht s for centuries consti tuted one of the principal objects of the Laws of England, as laid down by Blackstone.— True, it was one of the guaranties contained in Magna Charta. True, it was guarantied by the Petition of Right to which the assent of Charles I. was extorted by the commons ; and that it was still further secured by the Declaration of Rights at the Revolution of 1(188. But practically, what after all was this security ? Was it not the very question which brought Charles the I. to the block?— It was the assumption of the British Govern ment of the right to take our property with Editor and Proprietor. NO. 13. out our consent, which led to the separation of tho colonies, and occasioned the erection of our municipal and federal governments with now guaranties for that and all other rights. What is the right of property in other countries of Europe? Do we find, for instance, in France, in Austria, in the States of Italy, that free spirit of enterprise in ac quisition, and that security for enjoyment, when acquired, of which as Americans we are so justly proud ? France, indeed, may read us a powerful lesson, for she set out, af ter having got rid, by the summary process of bloody revolution, of all the abuses of her old regal system, and undertook to frame a government which should perfectly secure the citizen in every right which can belong to man in a state of society, But how has she succeeded ? From the errors and uncer tainties of ill-directed effort we have seen her again and again, seek refuge in the quietude of Imperial chains, Wilt not such a glance at existing facts teach us how to prize the privileges which we possess in the superior justice and equal ity of our institutions and frame of govern ment, and render us anxious for their stabil ity ? Will they not instruct us in the dan ger of parting with the substance in pursuit of the shadow? Shall we not learn, then, how rare a thing is a perfect government, and that if that of these States be not so, we may despair of ever beholding it. Let me appeal to you, men of commerce!— for whom the steamer ploughs the wave, and the locomotive penetrates the mountain and the valley, who look to the stability of your Government, her laws and institutions, for the success of your ventures, and the continuance of a prosperous exchange. I appeal to yot who spin and who weave, who fwge and who fabricate a thousand objects of utility and elegance—manufacturers of whatever name ! —is it for you to part so readily with the solid advantages which you enjoy by doing aught to endanger, under whatever guise of a supe rior virtue, an order of things to which you owe so much ! I appeal to you, tillers of the soil, among whom honesty, virtue, intelligence, and love of country, make their especial abode—who could as soon dispense with the beautiful succession of the seasons, as with the continuance unimpaired, of a system which showers upon you such daily benefits —which is, knit together with your habits of thought and your most ardent affections—are you prepared to disturb the present harmony of our governmental structure, to east it aside and seek in the crude and interested plans of extreme politicians, the means of imparting to that structure a new efficacy unforseen by your wise forefathers? To the great mass of you, my fellow-citi zens, it is of little importance which of half a dozen divisions of politicians have the offi ces of the country,. but it does behoove you to look well to it, that you do not, for the paltry purpose of gratifying an unbridled philan thropy- and misdirected patriotism, risk the durability of interests which are of incalcu lable importance to you and your descendants. I pretend to no special gift of prophecy, and presume not to conjecture how far you may go in the deliberate violation of those prince-' pies upon which the confederacy was framed, and still its existence may be preserved. It is sufficient for me that safety is found in that party which has always aimed in the first place to preserve the cardinal features of our system free from encroachments, from whatever source. Evils or irregularities ex isting within the Government they are wil ling to leave to the healing hand of time, con fident that with its progress they will slough off; as a disease, with the general ins igoration of the system. Thus slavery, in the good tide appointed by the Supreme Ruler will be quietly put off without violence, but with a gently detachinghand—just as nature, in the grateful change of the seasons, gradually lays aside the garb of winter, and passes into her glorious array of summer flowers and autumn fruits. And thus the African, now - the mis erable sport of a mock philanthropy, shall at length, when his true friends shall have been allowed to prosecute unimpeded their designs of benevolence, stand once more upon his na tive soil, and shall carry with him from his bondage the seeds of a Christian civilization which shall ripen into a glorious fruitage lie- . - neath those tropical skies. Passing from the consideration of the prin ciples involved in this contest, it remains for me to acid a few words in regard to our can didates. And here, as a, Pennsylvanian, 1 acknowledge, and you will acknowledge with me, the pride and satisfaction inspired by the fact that the choice of the National Pe- niocracy has at length fallen upon a distin omished citizen of our glorious old Common wealth. If we have cause to ho proud that our nominee is a son of Pennsylvania, we have not less eanse of exultation that that son is James Buchanan—a name which from a union of high personal qualities demands ad miration, respect, and confidence. Born and nurtured in the bosom of PennsyWania, we claim, an especial right to an acquaintance with the development of his eminent abili ties, and their continued exercise on behalf of he - people: Emerging into public life as a member of the Bar r amidst a host of legal luminaries, th 3 superiors of whom no coun try or time has witnessed—when Sergeant and Uopkins and M'Kean—and Ross and. Baldwin and Addison were still upon the stage—his powers were trained and directed in contact with such minds as theirs, His experience for more than a quarter of a cen tury in the councils of the nation as a Sena tor, as Secretary of State and Foreign Min ister, accredited to the two greatest of the European Powers, in equal conflict with the most skillful diplomatists of the age—has given him that political wisdom which if not always attainable, is yet always to be desired in the Chief Magistrate of the Republic, On every theatre on which they have been exerted, the lustre of his great talents have been seen and acknowledged wherever the English language is spoken and read. Nor is the purity of his private character inferior to his public reputation. The country is now about to manifest its gratitude for the distinguished public, services which it has received at his hands, It will not forget in this contest the groat value of those services in resisting the rise of section , alism, in direct attacks upon the institution of slavery—or to au inflated paper currency, placing the wages of the laborer at the mercy of its expansions and contractions I—his op position to the bank of the United States, and to the passage of a general 13ankrupt law I—and his noble advocacy of the annex , ation of Texas, The merchants of our sea, ort towns will not forget the importance of his labors while the Representative of this country at the Court of St, Petersburg, in se, e Limp; for them, by the first commercial trea tvlvhieh we formed with the Court, the trade of the Baltic and Black seas—and his recent maintenance, as Minister to England, of our national rights in the Diplomatic controver, sies carried on with that power in relation to the Central American and enlistment ques tions, have secured for him the ardent ad. miration and approval of his countrymen,