TERNS OF THE GLOBE. Per annum in advance 3ix months Throo months A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expiriation of the term subscribed for will be considered a new engage ment. TERMS OP ADVERTISING 1 insertion. 2 do. 3 do. Four lines or less $ 25.., $ 37 1 / $ 50 One square, (12 lines,) 50 75 1 00 Two squares, 1 00 1 50 2 00 Three squares, 1 50 2 25 3 00 Over three week and less than three months, 25 cents ner square for each insertion. 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. Six lines or less, $1 50 $3 00 $5 00 Ono square, 3 00 5 00 7 00 Two squares, 5 00 8 00 10 00 Three squares, 700 10 00 .....15 00 Four squares, 9 00 13 00 9 0 00 Half , 11 column, 12 00 16 00 .24 00 Ono column, °0 00 30 00.... ...... 50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, ono year,., $3 od Administrators' and Executors' Notices, 0 1. 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac. cording to these terms. ,ntisttitantous neb3s. To the People of Pennsylvania iFELtow CITIZENS : The Democratic State Central Committee representing the State-Rights Democracy of Pennsylvania, at their hest meeting, held at Altoona, in the county of 'Blair, delegated to the undersigned the duty of addressing the people on all proper occasions, upon the fun damental issues involved in the approaching election, and in that which is to be decided in 1860. Nearly every Democratic State Con-. vention in this section of the Union, held since the adjournment of the Committee, has planted itself broadly upon the enduring doc trine that the people of the Territories, "like those of the States," should exercise exclusive .control over all their domestiAnstitutions, slavery inclusive. The Democrats of .Ohio, of lowa, of Vermont, and of Maine, have for mally taken this ground, and from the plain est indications it is manifest that the voice of the Democracy of New Jersey, New York, and all other states of New England and the Northwest, will be proclaimed for the same 4doctrine.* The motive which has led to these auspicious demonstrations appeals not only to the traditions, but to the instincts and the *As showing the remarkable concurrence •of sentiment between the States-Rights Dem ocrats of Pennsylvania, at their Convention, held on the 13th of April, and the late Wm ocratic State Conventions of Ohio, lowa, Ver mont, and Maine, the following arc useful as matters of reference, and,prove that not only did the Democrats of this State speak out in advance of others, but that their hold and fearless example has been followed wherever their political brethren have been enabled to speak out, unawed by Federal power: 'RESOLUTIONS OP THE STATES RIGHTS DE3IOCI3-1- CY OF PENNSYLVANIA. Iles°bled, That we deliberately and hearti ly re-assert and re-endorse the great princi ples of popular sovereignty and non-interven tion, as well in the Territories as in the States, non-intervention by Congress with slavery in the Territories, and non-intervention by the , Federal I:;.;ecut,ive with the franchises of the people of the States, and that every effort to force the Democratic party of this country upon any other platform should be rebuked .as a preparation for lasting disgrace in the first place, and for lasting and deserved de feat in the second., Resort:cc", That this principle of popular :sovereignty and non-intervention, lying, as it •does, at the basis of our free institutions, enun ciated and accepted North and South, by Leg islatures and courts, by Congresses and can didates, substituted in 1850 for an absolete ,Congressional rule, and re-asserted in 1854, after the repeal of the Missouri Compromise; is the only principle that will forever remove the question of slavery from the halls of the National Legislature, and prevent the triumph .of the enemies of the American Union. Resoled, That we regard, with undissem bled indignation and alarm, the attempt of the Federal Administration backed by its de rsml,intc in the North. and the disunionists of the South, to commit the Democratic or ganization to the scandalous doctrine, that, in defiance of the pledges of the Democratic party in 1856 and in disregard of the legisla tion of 1850 and 1854, the people of the Ter ritories shall have no control over the ques tion of slavery, but that slavery must be pro tected against the popular will, not merely by the courts, but by Congress, and per con sequence, by the army and navy ; and that, Tegarding the resolutions of the convention which assembled at Harrisburg on the 10th of March as having accepted this monstrous heresy, we hereby repudiate the platform and ,candidates of that Convention. Rae That representing, as we believe, -a large majority of the Democratic party of this State, we do hereby most solemnly pro test against the betrayal, abridgement, or mu- Illation of this great principle of the "major ity ruling," applicable alike "to the Territo ries the same as to the States ;" and we there fore reject s as an innovation and unsound, the resolution of the late Convention that abridges and limits' the right of the people of a Terri tory to act in reference to the institution of slavery to the one particular time when they come "to organize their State Governments ;" that we continue to hold to the fullest appli xittion of the principle to the Territories, and cannot but express our alarm and astonish ment at its threatened entire destruction, as disclosed by leading Southern Senators, in the recent debate in the Senate of the United States. VOICE OF TILE OHIO DE3IOCRACF. Resolved, That the organized Territories of -the United States, although not endowed with all the attributes of sovereignty, arc only held in the Territorial condition until they at tain a sufficient number ,of inhabitants to au fthorize their admission into the United States; : and, therefore, are justly entitled to the right of eelf-goy.eramenf, and the undisturbed reg ,ulation of their domestic or local affairs, sub ject to the Constitution of the United States ; ,and that any attempt by Congress,, or any of .the States, to establish or maintain, prohibit or abolish, the relation of master and slave in a Territory, would be a departure from tb,e .original doctrine of our American institu tions; and that we adhere immovably to the ,principle of " non-intervention by Congress 'with slavery in the States and Territories," as declared in the Kansas-Nebraska bill, and .openly declaim fellowship with those, wheth er at the South, or the North, or the West, .who counsel the abandonment, limitation,r avoidance of that principle. Resolved, That the suppression of the Af rican and foreign slave trade by the Federal Government, after the year eighteen hundred and seven, is one of the compromises on the faith of which the Constitution was adopted, ana our Union of slaveholding and non-slave holding States firmly ,established; that a re vival of that trade would not only renew those cruelties which once provoked the in dignation of the civilized world, but would Si 50 WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL. XV. consciences, and to the highest interests of the Democratic party. Taught by these tra ditions that if there is one element broadly defined in Democratic history, it is that of un limited confidence in the people, and inspired by the recollection' of recent triumphs, and the encouragement held out by the thick-com ing future, the sentiment has rooted itself in the Democratic heart, that nothing can secure to us honorable and enduring victory but cour ageous perseverance and consistency in sup port of ancient and well-understood Democrat ic principles. Only in Pennsylvania has the standard of an odious and adverse dogma been offensive ly raised. While all our sisters north of the Potomao, without an exception, indignantly reject 'the attempt to rush the Democratic party upon the perils of ttn aristocratic and feudal theory—namely, That the people of the Territories shall exercise no control whatever over the sulject of slavery—hero, in the State where the Declaration of Independence was prepared and proclaimed—where the Consti tution of the United States was framed and founded—where the protest of a great people, free in their own natural -condition, and free by their own immortal manifesto, was organ ized, first in the form of a written appeal to the nations of the earth, and afterwards pros ecuted throne] seven long years of bloody war against the armed hosts of a besot ted monarchy—here, in Pennsylvania, a domestic Federal despotism, imitating the example which sought to crush out the in dependence of the colonies when they were struggling for Popular Sovereignty, has directed its dependents' to place the candi dates of the Democratic party upon a heresy never before advocated by any respectable portion of the American people, Whether it is beciutse men, whose lives have been expose the slaveholding States to a constant terror of servile insurrection, and the non slaveholding States of the border, like Ohio, to all the mischiefs and annoyances of a free black population. For these reasons, with others, the Democracy of Ohio are opposed to any such revival, and to any measure tending in that direction. VOICE OF THE lOW.' DEMOCRACY. Resolved', That we affirm the principles of the National Democratic platform of 1.856, and re-assert the doctrines of non-interven tion therein contained, as the only ground upon which a national party can be main tained in these confederated States. Resolved, That the organized Territories of the United States arc only held in the Terri torial condition until they attain a sufficient number of inhabitants to authorize their ad mission into the Union as States, and arc justly entitled to self-government, and the undisturbed regulation of their own domestic or local affairs, subject Gnly to the Constitu tion of the United States. Resolved, That inasmuch as the legislative power of the Territories extends undeniably to all rightful subjects of legislation, no pow er can iwerent them, from passing suck' laws upon the sulg . ects of slavery as to them may seem proper; and 'whether such laws, when passed, be constitutional or not, can be finally determined, not by Congress, but by the Su preme Court, on appeal from the decision of the Territorial courts. Resolved, That it is a doctrine of the Dem ocratic party•that all naturalized citizens are entitled to the same protection, both at home and abroad, thlit is extended to th,, , native-born citizens, and that even- a voluntary return of such citizens to the land of their birth for a temporary puipose, does not place them, be yond the range of that protection, but that our Government is bound to shield them from injury and insult while there, at ,overy hazzard. VOICE Or TIIE VERMONT DEMOCRACY. Resolved, That the Democracy of Vermont, in the language of the Cincinnati National Democratic Convention of 1856, recognise and adopt the principles contained in the organic laws establishing the Territories of Kansas and. Nebraska, as embodying the only sound and safe solution of the slavery question— non-intoference by Congress with slavery in State or Territory, or in the District rg . Co lumbuz. Resolved, That this was the basis of the Compromile Measures of 1850, confirmed by both the I)emocratic Awl Whig panties in 1852, rightly applied .to the organization of Territories in 1854, and triumphantly ratified by the people in the election of 1856. Resolved, That strict, unyielding adherence to, and uniform applicatiop,of, this Democrat ic principle to the organization of the Terri tories, leaving the people thereof perfectly free to form and regulate their Domestic in stitutions in their own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States, will effegually and forever defeat and put down sectional legislation and agitation, protect the rights of all the States, and the citizens of every portion thereof, and maintain the prosperity, peace, and harmony of the-Union. VOICE OF TILE IIAINE DEMOCRACY Resolved, That the Government of the Uni ted States should not force the institution of slavery upon the Territories against the will of the people thereof, but that•the people of each Territory should be allowed to deter mine the question for themselves, without the interposition of Congress, and s,ubjeck, only to the Constitution of the United States. Resolved,. " That this doctrine is founded upon principles as ancient as free government itself, and in accordance with them, simply declares that the people of a Territory, like those of a State, Shall decide for thegiselv.es whether slavery shall or shall not exist with in their limits.' Resolved, That the new doctrine, that the Constitution confers the right of holding slaves in the Ve7rritories in defiance of the wishes of the people thereof, and that Con gress should enact laws giving slave prop erty higher rights than other property there in, is a wide departure from these principles, and would render the Democratic party just ly obnoxious to the charge of deception and dishonesty. ' : : •••••- spent in effective antagonism to the Demo cratic party, have been put forward as the representative men of that party, or wllther because the Federal Executive has hims4lf fallen back upon the principles whipluinarked the earlier stages of his P4ic., career, it is manifest that this,,,lthurpatitaiiis to be persis ted in ; and a15,,0, that unless it is promptly arrested, it will, andeAlit overwhelm our great organization ik-,ajeafitinued series of mortifi cations anchas'afsteitt. It is unnecessary to recapitulate the scene at the Administration Convention which assembled at Harrisburg on the 16th of March, to which point this same Federal despotism had summoned its adherents to prepare new humiliations for the Democratic masses, commanding them to repeat in the capital of Pennsylvania, the shameless proscriptions which had disgraced it in other portions of the Union. It was hoped that the rebuke so immediately admin istered to that body by the popular uprising at the same place, on the 13th of April, would have taught the officials at Washington wholesome lesson. But tyranny is always blind and always merciless, never conceding to popular sentiment until concession is wrung from it by force, and clinging to power even in the very moment of its dissolution. An address, purporting to speak for the Demo cratic party of Pennsylvania, but really ut tering only the opinions of men in office, hearing date at Harrisburg on the 29th of June, and signed by Mr, Robert Tyler, as Chairman, substantially asserts the doctrine that the.people of the Territories have no rights whatever in regard to slavery,- and boldly takes the additional step, that, in the event of their assuming to exercise such right, it will be the duty of the Executive, and of Congress, to interpose for the protection of slavery. Although one of the gentlemen on the Administration State ticket—Mr. Rowe, the candidate for Surveyor General—has caused it to be understood that, to a certain extent, he sympathises with the movement in which we are now engaged—the Adminis tration committee, constituted to gratify the malevolent purposes of the Federal Admin istration and to maintain the dangerous doc trines alluded to, unhesitatingly places that ticket upon the issut Of hostility to the will of the majority and the popular rule in the Territories, so far as slavery is concerned, and demands an endorsement of this issue at the polls in October next. In view of this state of facts, the duty of all Democrats is plain, They cannot evade or avoid it if they desired so to do. No Democrat, even reason ably impressed with the . justice of his prig_, chiles and the pledged faith the Democrat 4. ie party to carry them out in letter and in spirit; can give his vote for a ticket thus au thoritatively advocated, because every such vote will be an endorsement of doctrines at variance with all our pledges and our princi ples. It is unnecessary to employ many words in the exposure of these doctrines. I One or two extracts from the address of the Administration committee will, however, show how far it is proposed by the Federal Government to commit the Democratic party of Pennsylvania against the rule of the peo ple in the Territories, and in favor of the in tervention of the Executive and Congress for the protection of shivery in the Territories against the will of the people. The follow ing is a specimen; " Where, let us ask, resides the right of eminent domain over a Territory of the Uni ted States? Is it not admitted by all to be with the Federal Government? "Where shall we look for the right and. power to ascertain and fix all Territorial boundaries? /s it not to•the Federal Government? 'Where shall we seek the right and power and duty to dis pose of all lands embraced io the Territory ? The answer is, in the Federal Government. Where in the government of a Territory is lodged the executive authority ? It is lodged in the hands of a Federal Governor. Where is the judicial power o,f a Territorial Govern ment ? In the keeping of a Federal Judi ciary. Where is the legislative power ? Every one knows it did not exist, and that it could not legally exist, until called into being by the Federal Congress, in the organic act of Territorial Government. In all these de monstrations of power, and there can be none others outside of them in a Territorial Gov ernment, we behold the direct, positive and tangible evidences of the presence of the soy ereignty of the Government of the United States, excluding the pretensions of squatter or Territorial Legislative sovereignty, or pop ular sovereignty when used as a convertible -term with these, as being alike untenable in fact, and preposterous in logic. "But it must be borne in mind that the Federal Government cannot act in a Territo ry as a despot, or arbitrary ruler; and here is the diffirence between our doctrine and that of the Wilmot provisoites. It must govern in a Territory in the sense of the Constitution, from which it derives its life and its every function, and it is bound to respect, with strict impartiality, the rights and interests of j all parties concerned, these parties being the States and people of the States respectively. Wow the Government of a Territory is not natural and indefeasible, but derivative from the Congress ; otherwise, the few thousand inhabitants of a Territory, after its acquisi tion by purchase, or as indemnity for war ex penses perhaps, would have the right to set themselves up as a foreign State, if they so and to deny the jurisdiction of the Uni ted States. But Congress, when establishing a Government in a Territory, cannot impart to it authority to do, by feeble Territorial en actments, what Congress itself cannot under take to perform under the Constitution, and can never venture to undertake, except in flagrant usnrpation of powers not delegated, but reserved to the States. "We are opposed, however, to the intro duction of any provision particnykly protect ing slave or any other kind of property, into an act organizing a Territorial eovernment. But if a territory attempt n r ullification or re bellion, in the shape of resistance to acts of Congress, or to judicial decisions in their proper logical and legal consequences, or to any other legitimate acts done in and by vir tue of the constitutional authority of the United States over the same, then the Feder- -PERSEVERE.--- HUNTINGDON, PA., JULY 20, 1859, itrArnment should at once interpose and pft it down, not so much for the sake of slave, oriany other kind of property, or even of the personal rights of citizens that may be there by invaded, though constituting a sufficient reason for the movement, as looking to the necessity of its own preservation. But before the happening of any such act of nullifica tion or rebellion, and at the time of organi zing a Territorial Government, the presump tions are all in favor of a legal and peaceful course of political conduct on the part of the inhabitants of a Territory; whereas, the doc trine of Congressional intervention would as sume the reverse. In fine, we are disposed to maintain on this question and at all times, the fundamental principle of the equality of the States." It is not difficult to discover in this maze of phrases and abstractions the design of the Administration to ignore the popular rule in the Territories, and to substitute Congres sional intervention for the protection anper petuation of slavery. The Democratic senti ment is, that the people of a Territory are sovereign ; that a citizen of Pennsylvania moving into any one of the Territories of this Union losesnone of the rights he possessed in his own State, or becomes less a citizen by changing his residence. That sentiment in dignantly denies that slavery is inviolable, as against the popular rule, and rejects, with contempt and scorn, the monstrous assump tion that the people of a Territory may legA late :Ilion all their domestic institutions, save and excepting slavery alone. The direct tendency of the argument of the 'Administration Committee is to consoli date the Federal power in the Territory ; to plunge Congress and the_country into irre trievable and constantly-renewing excitement; to keep open the whole Territorial question in the several States ; and to render necessary the most stringent Congressional legislation, in order to protect the institution of slavery against the people. There is no middle ground on this great question. Those who deny the entire right of the people over all their domestic institutions in the Territories of this Union must go a step farther, and de mand the interference of Congress against the people of the Territories. If the popular will is to be disregarded, and the institution of slavery held in defiance of the ballot-box and the Territorial Legislature, Congress must authorize, and the President must exe cute, the most despotic intervention prior to the formation of a State Constitution fur the people. What has the Democratic party meant by its resoulutions, and covenants, and commit tals on this Territorial question, during many long years, if the sequel is to leave us in the shameless attitude of denying to the people all right to " form and regulate" all their do mestic institutions, while in a Territorial con dition, and to leave them at the mercy of the changing majorities of Congress, and the va rying factions of the day, while undergoing the trials of Territorial existence ? Is it pos sible that all our boasted professions of ps i tice and fair-dealing to our fellow-countrymen in the Territories of this Union are to close in such a farce as this? It is an insult to the •chivalry, and integrity, and sensitive spirit of the Democratic party to suppose that this usurpation will ever be tolerated.— As an ilinstration of the ma per in which Federal. power proposes to allow the people of a Territory, even when they come to furm a State Constitution, to dispose of the ques tion of slavery, it is only necessary to recall recent events - in Kansas, when repeated ma jorities, rigUeously ,expressed, were set at defiance by the mercenaries of the present Administration, and a State organization de nied to the people, only because they would not declare in favor of the institution of sla very. Here was Executive intervention against the popular rule at the very stage when we are now told that popular rule may operate ! We must anticipate and arm our selves for the future, :with th instructive ad monitions of the past. The Administration committee, in their , anxiety to drive the Democratic party of Pennsylvania from the solid foundation of principle, always recognized by that party, and strengthened and advocated in every re cent political contest, commit a fatal mis take in the construction they put upon the following resolution of the last Democratic National Convention. They say they ari, distinctly opposed to Any compielsory relin quishment, in the name of squatter sover eignty, of the rights of the State of Penn sylvania, as one of the sovereign proprietors of all the public domain or Territorial prop erty of the United States, and we (they) still occupy, without any change of opinion, the ground held by the following resolution of the ,Cincinnati Convention of • 1856, to " I?csolved, That we recognize the right of the people of all the Territories, including Kansas and Nebraska, acting through the legally and farly expressed will of a majority of actual residents, and, whenever the num ber of their inhabitants justifies it, to form a constitution, with or without domestic slavery, and be admitted into the Union upon terms of perfect equality with the other ,States. " This resolution distinctly represents the marked difference between the revolutionary efforts of the first squatters in a new Terri tory to abolish negro slavery or to prevent the introduction of a slave property into the Territory, by the incompetent agency of a Territorial Legislature , and the constitutional and quiet exercise of the rights of sover eignty, by the people of a Territory in the formation •of a State Constitution, with or without domestic slavery, as they may deter mine. In th.e meantime, the citizens of each and-every State, being in all respects equal with each other under the Constitution, take their various kinds property with them into the Territory, and while in a Territorial con dition they and their property are all equally protected by the Constitution of the United States and the Dred Scott decision." It is an evidence, unanswerable and histo rical, that after the last Democratic National Convention adopted thib resolution, now so differently construed by an Administration ;:k• • Commttee, assuming to speak the voice of the Democratic people of this great State, President Buchanan himself, and nearly all the leading men of the Democratic party, de clared that this and the other resolutions of that Convention, referring to the Territorial question, were susceptible of but one practi cal and simple solution. Said the President, in his letter of acceptance, with the resolu tions of the Convention that nominated him in his hand, and while surrounded by a num ber of the most distinguished members of the Convention that adopted these resolutions : " The recent legislation of Congress (the Kansas-Nebraska bill) respecting domestic slavery, derived, as it has been, from the original and pure foundation of legitimate political power, the will of the majority, !promises ere long to allay the dangerous eY,.- citement, This legislation is founded upon principles as ancient as free government itself, and in accordance with this simple declara tion, THAT THE PEOPLE OF THE TER RITORY, LIKE THOSE OF A STATE, SHALL DECIDE FOR THEMSELVES WHETHER SLAVERY SHALL OR SHALL NOT EXIST WITHIN THEIR LIMITS." And the present Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Cobb, put the flame direct and practical construction upon the resolutions, now con strued exactly the other way by this commit tee, in his speech at West Chester in 1855, when he declared that " he would not plant slavery upon the soil of any portion of God's earth against the will of the people ;" " that the Government of the United States - should not force the institution of slavery upon the people, neither of the Territories nor of the Stales, against ale will of the people ; and that, "practically the majority of the people represented in the Territorial Legislature would decide the slavery question." " Whether," he continued, they decide it by prohibiting it ac cording to the one doctrine, or by ryibsing to pass a law to protect it, contended for by the other party, is imMater la t—A mAJORITV OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE ACTION OF THE TERRITORIAL LEGISLATURE, WILL DECIDE TUE QUESTION, AND ALL MUST ABIDE TUE DECISION WHEN MADE." And Mr. Speaker Orr himself declared " that , if the majority of the people are opposed to the institution,:and if they do not desire it en„a'rafted - upcin their Territory, all they have to do is simply to decline to pass laws in the Territoriat Legislature Ibr its protection."— Now we are told by the committee of the General Administration that the exercise of this authority by a Territorial Legislature would be like the rash proceedings of a mob --would be resistance to act of Congress ; and that the exercise of any such nnthority would authorize, the interference of the Fed eral Government at once to interpose and put it down ! It will be observed that when Mr. Buchanan wrote, and. when Mr. Cobb spoke, "and when the entire Democratic party stood squarely united upon the honest con struction of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, the odious theory advocated by this committee was not a novelty, nor was the subsequent' vague and indecisive ()biter dictum, as it is, of the Supreme Court, an unanticipated event. But it was notorious that every conservative Union-loving Statesman in Congress, from Henry Clay in the South, to Lewis Cass in the North, bad denounced the idea of an Ex ecutive or Congressional protection for the Territories, on the subject of slavery, as un worthy of the consideration of a free country, and that more than one eminent Southern leader had declared that the political opinion of no court, high or low, could be wielded .against the sacred and inalienable fran chises of the people when they came to ex ercise their highest acts of sovereignty in re gard to this very question of slavery. Contemplate, for a moment, the position of the Democratic party of Pennsylvania, load ed down with the monarchical theories of this address ! Opposed, on the one hand, ley ,ti;e array of its own pledges, running through more than a generation of time, it would be attacked in the rear and the flank by an in dignant and organized public sentiment, arous ed to madness by the cool defence of these theories, made in the name and _assuming to speak with the sanction of the Democrati,c party. First, we should hav,e it ,contended, against the Democratic party, that slavery is carried into the Territories by the Constitu tion, .to be maintained there .in defiance of the popular will; and next, as a fair deduc tion from these startling promises, it would be argtted, ,(and the organ of the Federal 4d ministration of November, 1857, quoted in support of the assertion,) that slavery may be gamed into the States' themselves, and held there, too, in contempt of the protest of the people. In harmony with this, we should have the accusation that the Democratic par ty stood upon the narrow and destructive plat form of denying the sovereignty of the Amer ,e,an citizen ; that the Central Government was to control the people in their sanctuaries and in their municipalities, and. that the ar my and the navy were to be quartered in the Territories to punish every act of the people, through their representatives, on the subject of slavery, as an act of "rebellion." 'Thus, after a long career of gallant struggles for progressive ideas—after 'baying made Amer ican history bright with the triumphs we have achieved in the name of the peopre— our great organization would be driven back more than a hundred years to imitate the ex actions and oppressions of that British Gov- • ernment whose armies were ,expelled from our shares because they had dared to inter pose the authority of their master against the people of the thirteen colonies. What organ ization could stand up against such an an tagonism and such a record as this ? But if this Administration Committee are fatally involved in their attempt to prove that any act of a Territorial Legislature in oppo sition to slavery in the Territories, would be neither more nor less than nullification or "rebellion" to be put down by the Federal Government, and if in this attempt the corn mittee are confronted by the frank and pat riotic construction put upon the Nebraska bill by Mr. Buchanan and nearly all the lead ing Democrats in the country since the Cin cinnati Convention, the committee are still more unfortunate in trying to show that there is a difference between their doctrine and that Editor and Proprietor. NO, 4, of the extreme energies of the South. The principle is the same in both cases, only the committee, assuming to speak for the Democ racy of a free State, demand that Congress shall interfere to keep slavery in the 'territo ries, in defiance of the popular will, while those who stand entrenched upon the other construction insist that slavery shall be ex cluded, whether the people desire to have it or not, What a spectacle is presented in this concurrence of action between the men whose creed is opposition to the South and those who put themselves forward as the peculiar friends of the South ; and what a oommenta. , ry upon the rapidly developing sentiment in favor of Popular Sovereignty, so eloquently sot forth by Mr, Buchanan and Mr. Cobb in 1856, (though since abandoned by both,) for the adjustment of the Territorial question, and in regard to which even those who have con tended for the Wilmot Proviso are being dai ly compelled to confess that they have hem egregiously mistaken It is a truth which forcibly confirms the justice of the position assumed by the States- Rights Democracy of Pennsylvania, that no such reasoning as that now employed by the Administration Committee in this State was ever heard of from men pretending to be na tional Democrats until that Adrainistra.tion resolved to betray its trust. Never, until now, has it been asserted that the attempt of a Territorial Legislature to "form and.regu late" its domestic institutions in its own way, slavery inclusive, would be an "act of rebel lion," to be put down by the strong arm of power; and never, until the present day, have any set of men dared to place the Democrat ic party upon the retrogressive platform of opposition to the people of the Territories, on the one hand, and of approval of Congression al intervention in fayor of or against slavery, on the other. The Administration Committee have now formally presented to the people of Pennsyl vania a distinct and tangible issue. In do ing this they have rejected the patent pretext that the question of slavery in the Territories is a settled question, and have deliberately re-opened a discussion which would have been closed forever by a prompt and graceful submission on the part of the Administration to the only tribunal by which this question can he finally disposed of. We are again taught by this example the utter impossibili ty of bringing back to reason those who have flagrantly tied from it. Our rulers at Wash ington, blind to the admonitions of the times, un-influenced by the appeals of the Demo cratic press and the utterances of the Demo cratie people, in support of the doctrine of Popular Sovereignty, have resolved to make their new heresies a test, at the hazard of destroying the organization to which they owe their own official existence. As Penn sylvania was the battle-field of 1856, upon which the principle of the exclusive right of the people of the Territories over their own domestic institutions, slavery inclusive, was tried, and where it gloriously triumphed, it is right that upon her soil the same battle shall again be fought in '59 and '6O. And although Democrats may regret that the President, chosen alone hecanse he was true to this principle, is how the leader of those who arc opposed to it, they do not despair of the issue, but will cheerfully accept the chal lenge, .conf i dent of ,p,t) overwhelming verdict at the ballot-box. it is a fact painfully proving the tendency to despotism on the part of the men who as: I SUMO to control the organization of the Dem , ocratic party—the servants of the people at Washington, and their dependents and para sites in different parts of the country—that while they arc bending every energy to com mit the Democracy to the extraordinary doe, trine of ignoring the rights of the people of the Territories o this Union, they are, at the same time, taking ground against the rights of the adopted citizens, thus furnishing anoth er evidence of their hostility to the absolute sov ereignty (f 'ilte individual man in this .free country. Those who deny equal rights to our countrymen in the Territories are not incon sistent with themselves, when they attempt to draw a distinction between the native-born and the adopted citizen. Regarding ourselves as inexorably committed, as well to the equal ity of the States as to the citizens of the States, and the citizens of the Territories, na tive and adopted ; bound by a common faith —not yet lost to us, we trust, by the SUCC.- sive treasons of men elevated to power by our ,congaing suffrages—the State nights Democ racy of Pennsylvania are as devotedly attacked to all portions of the Union, and as sincerely resolved to protect their Southern fellow-citi zens against the encroachments of their ene mies as they have ever been. And they be lieve that they are ,engaged in a movement, the end of which must be not only to rescue the Democratic party from the evils now im pending over it, but to strengthen and to per petuate that organization upon those eternal principles which kayo heretofore made it the bulwark of the Union of these States, and the indomitable champion of the rights of man. JOI.J.N Ay. 1013NEY, Chairman Democratic Stales-.Pig11,4 Com mittee. ger' The New York Tributze of the Ilth inst., contain , / the following remarkable para graph under its editorial head, the correction or confirmation of which will be ioyaited with much interest by the community " We arc creditably informed from various sources that the llon. Daniel E. Sickles has become entirely reconciled with his wife, and is nosy living with her in marital relations as before the death of the late Philip .Barton Key. We arc also assured that in taking this re markable step, Mr. Sickles has alienated him self from most if not all of those personal and political friends who devotedly adhered to him during his recent imprisonment and trial. " The reconciliation between it r. and Mrs. Sickles was consummated, as we are informed, while Mr. S. was residing at the house of a friend on the 13loomingdale road, about half a mile from the former lose of Mr. S. which for some time past Mrs. Sickles has ecenpied„either alone or with some of the merribers of her own family. The suspicions of his host were excited by the repeated ab sence of Mr. S. at unusual hours ; and when he camo in very early in the morning he was interrogated by the host and ano,ther friend who was present, and on his positively deny, ins their right to question him, and refusing to give an eplanation, they shook hands with him for the last time, and he withdrew. It is said that he has since addressed letters to his former intimate associates notifying them formally of the resumption of conjur gal relations between himself and Mrs. Sick.- les." serA boy was asked what meekness was ? lie thought a moment, and saki: " Neek n,oss gives smooth answers to rough ApAes - /ger An indiscreet person is like an un sealed letter, which everybody can peruse. He is no mean philosopher who can give a reason for half of what - he thinks.