SEE.YIOSi . "-CONTIStED FEON F3ll`,T - Ft - PAGE reference to christian duty ; unles§ it be that of paying tithes of an nise, and cummin, and neglecting , the weightier matters of the law; judg ment, mercy, and faith. But it does seem to me that as christiamana as men, we are bound by every prin ciple of christian ethics, and by every desire that human welfare can inspire, to provide out of all the people able men, such as fear God, Meq of truth, hating - covetousness., and place such over them to be rulers, The qualifi- cations of rulers are here most clearly, . of his supporters were representing. and to my mind, truthfully expressed, i him as the early and steadfast stip- I doubt not, my hearers, that you will porter of that bill ; but in the northern all acknowledge these qualifications to be just and proper. part of the State, where the mass 'of But the manner of selecting rulers the democrats were too honest and suggested by the text, is what I wish too independent to sustain that mon particularly to impress upon your strous fraud, the Governor was repre minds. It is'so different from the nar- seated to be an honest oonent of row, and as 1 think, the anti-republi- pp can method practiced by politicians that measure. • and by christian politicians of the Mr. Speaker ChaSe, of the Montrose present day—so much in accordance Demacrat, who kept Wilmot's scathing with the spirit of that freedom of letter baek a month,. was especially which we make our boast, that it meets my warmest approbation, II I should conspicuous for his efforts to deceive - chance to differ with any of You, my the People into believing • a lie. We hearers, on this point, you will have rejoice that this game is at last up. the charity, I trust, to think me hen- It begins -to work badly in- the south, est. Thou shalt provide out of all the • and His Excellency has been com people. This is thepoint. How does : • this correspond, iny christian brotlair, pelled to open his mouth, and to dis and my neighbor, with your Manner close his adhesion to the Nebraska of exercising the elective franchise, bill, and in favor of the faith-breakers. that glorious, mighty, vet equally re- . Nt')\%., then, honest democrats, that spowible power which our. Liberty ! there is no further pretense that Blo is it not now your practice. to Provide out of your party, and out of your' will you fulfill the prophecy of the party (Wu. those that should rule over ' slave-drivers and submit to the South the people.? Why, if a man in our 'ern dictators I pony can be made a tool of, and by ' • , The following spicy article from-the this meatn; be shuffled into nomination', • piny must all vote for him. even ' Harrisburg Keystone of Augtist 23, is if he have neither common sense or ' settler. and we commend it to all men common honesty. This is political ' wh° have not placed the party collar : sectarianism. - And political sectarian. • • • • ism is just about as anti-christian -as on the neck: I religious sectarianism. Th e y - are b ot h .. The unscrupulous misrepresenta beneath the. christian and the _ patr i ot. ' tion of Mr. Speaker CHASE. by which . he sought to place Gov. Blount in a on higher and holier ground than this. No, no, my hearers,—l want to stand false position on the* great principle ' I want to fief free to give . support to ! involved to the repeal of the tineonsti the able. the God-fearing, the true, clonal Missouri Compromise. has most the covetous hating of any kind and opportunely been exposed by the - Goverhor himself. in a speech made of every pert y, whether he lie w'aj' or democrat ard or .Nr —and Clod :i n Fulton.county on the 7th inst. We i helping me, I will do it iu the future: . find the following unanswerable refu whatever l-rnay have done in the past. - tation in a sketch of the speech taken b+' J. M. COOPER. Esq., edittr of the 0 the tyranny. the bondage, the op prezkzion of party ties. It 1 / 3 S eaten up I Wk . , / .Spirit. who was present. and all the virtue, honesty and freedom of pnblishedtr in his last week's issue: the government. On - r c o untry nee d s 1 "Goy. Bigler said he was a mem to make one more Reclaratiou of In ber of the democratic party. and that dependence.--,I wish that ueclara:ion party had a right to demand whether might be made ou the coming. anni- h e subscribed to the great democratic versary of the nation. I wish that eye- 1 Principle of self-v , vernment embodied ry person. old and you n ,, :T.6,, and f e _ in the Nebraska bill. To that demand male. would declare themselves—free he vas ready to respond. The repub and indepenpent of all sect•ulaniAll— • hcan principle of self-government was of all party tie.i, Nvhetler civil or relit:- :ille leading fezture: the very essence of the adjustment of 1S- O. commonly called the c.: - .rmizoi-rise measures.— That adjustment GOY. Bir , ler endorsed and defel.ded before :be people in the camtnign of 1.-i•5l. and the people 0i1t.,-a—Stl tar a it:eV re:Araill us from doing- and stand up God's ire men and Nv‘;tnen on the broad pia:- fel - not truth. jastic and and eleN - ate . tbe ru!ersiiip u 2 tiieland.— Sticb., and such or.!y, as are compe tent, fear G d and love mankind. - Then ice shout the praises of liberty NA some propriety. Onr claim to be fr.".omen ‘vouAl ha% some validity. Our oblinations as chrisrians. as lovers of riaLleousuess ar.t.i lovers righret , u, tuleN. should. itee.l.us to rue. induce us to act upou God plan. ia the c:loice we make to Aa the re- p':ace trust and authority in the governmer.t from the :th e Itywezt raz,k. NOW then- are sucll men, and :hey are not c0 ,,- ;-ed. to any one political party- orzanizatin. They fl'and in all parties. I . nere are at leas: seven ::!ioasanti tr.en who wi'd n o t bow the knit' to &mi. A remnant at !cast is it fi: mind with hope anC; conrlder.ce. that of the . ration is rot , iven ut:er . reproach.. The Nnli, , r4l ana Szate. Lts-ris:a:ure ;Tire evidence. that there are ye: a.sle men, sz::1-, as Gobi. toxe truth and *:::!.. - 7.- rove:oui.r.es.s Le: thkiSt.' t. - ¢e ana trieL: ones. who have. li4 pJlitical pr_ce tO ;rater upc,n. It: their. Imre. sympa,:ity ar.a ..1-.)- 11...)rt, Le; 11 , 5. pUri.ike zitlC:a 3 C , 3"..1.71,:s until the tyranny. ;he opprt-ssion. cur of ram aid shali QP bin, i.she4l fromthe • world: And as lie day elf ; the nati.on't , It:dependence .Ip prosche-s it-; .45 :zive oui; .:cart; raecimanoa anct. praycz. L„ez au: t-1:2 laZ.t.t. &are of iiivrty and :he shou:s, of free=iwrs, tia2zie 4..ar vr.entai 5Q 1....aa; we ca.ano . : s-ee 11: ",....`llt.' :ion, to: feel seasihle of our re.speai hi.lity. 3,nd the intluenee w may exert ha2iczling the tiav, when to shout the Fai•ses of liberty pot be a Irtocers ; iv.ir when its resptsmse shall echi.eci back from ev e ry i l ear..ever. tie heart of the now toiaatz :9or.janan sztiaQiing with C cairls.. Let us act t.t.e par; ef.the Crxistia'a until t h e rigi:tevas are p:aced in ha: the peop:e-tat the peop:e-- rejol‘ . :e fzz: ;.nit the ef- RI" If ^:CrT .• • ‘''.•••••-- • •A-••• • tno L ...-e 1,r12k2=1 i: cr. as ad- the farTvws therecZeir:arlaili r . fires - - I „ i,,, Iv o . :zezt th, 1 . r4:11 L i eTt .,,.,....i, t 3„,,, : • A.a. , .11_.:Rk-K , 1.v.-1••••-:rk $l.-ellid :..o :...„ 7 ..-n , . . .. .., . are b ee _ . ,_ _ ___, ..., .•, ,_ z , . :..ne Isaseu or Eare L-..111....ed t:te e•A - zer.; - - - --•-•:\ t-. , .. , In. r.... ~•-..1.3., . e _ , „ - ozzltaz: - _;, - .:-• thereof to 1z...e their life; let z.l•:.:les 1 • - ' r..." - ' A ex'. - - .-:-..=. •::-.ce- E..- , : - 7 .., V. - --..: . - - sww , i4s:eaa cz w ..... 1eat, 2:11 cix , ee ! ri ,„ . we --- --•----.. ud .... . , i I .-.7 , e-•.• I ?.",:: Ni - -...- I r ,- ...: ----e: ;. , 4 1-- 8 a rafte----.-i-- . ter: . to ,•,- 7 -e , -.; -cr'••at I - z-ave, 2.1r-.T ir.L.4.t . -3.1 ef t•-••-riec." 1 st•awer yes , ..e.--thc, e. • THE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL. TEE DOUGLAS Fain - TIIIINING TO ASHES. ;We have never doubted that the aggressions of. the slave power would eventually so arouse the freemen this Nation, that they would rise. in their strength and wrest froM the oligarchy all the advantages hereto fore so tamely yielded. .We believe now that time has come. We have abundant evidence that the repeal of .the Missouri Compromise will not work to the extension of slavery, as was expected by the men who pro- curedthat repeal. The bluster and bravado of the slaveholders has roused a spirit in the Northern States that will certainly make it impossible fur slavery, to go into Kansas. This will be the first real triumph gained by freedom over slavery since the adoption of the , constitution. -L And hoW and by whom will this be gained ? Nor by those who cry peace. peace, when there is no peace Not by lethargy and inactivity. Not by trusting to party leaders. On the con trary, if the repeal of the Missouri Compromise had been quietly sub mitted to. as the leaders of the old line democracy advised, and still ad ri.Fc, Kansas would as. certainly be , come a slave State. as South Carolina JNO. S..3IANS, EDWIN fIASKELL. }EDITOR! FIDBLITT TO VIE PEOPLE COUDERSPORT, FRIDAY, SEPT. I, IS•i4 • SMOKED OtIT AT LAST. . We•have been astounded at the cre dul;ty of those Anti-Nebraska men i who believed Gov. Bigler to be opposed to the Nebraska fraud. Nine-tenths rendered a verdict in its taco:. The saine principle preci,ely war. iacnr: poriitea ittP) the Nebra,•ka had defended the cornpror.iise mea ures. and he w;ittid defend tbel Ne- - braka which tounded upo n the ureat•repuilican principle of self 7.l)N-eminent: This ca did ar.d manly declaration of Gov. hizier show_ . tiat he is of _t or. -Z2._- firmly utNon the dernocratic b:or,Eh; into uzar - ket I .le • - ' - pi...rforrn in 1"54 as he was 'in and brands the contrary alle._ -,- -ation Mr. Chase as an unfounded and ma levolent fabrication. dis,7l.-.2..ceful to its author and .must to :he Croiernor. EEMEI It 31r. C . :": 114 .r,;.c;r dies.:z: consilqe:zey. of priucinie. and his rio:-..... c:r:,.-”rlse,: to ..kie with :he free-oil w . nizs or. a vi:al dernoc: atic principle we :ras; he will be cn:::e•it to do ~-.:o with such company :h.ere the z_zumueN. the Sewards the Gree:evs. the G-. - -.1 - 7i.sor:s. :he Pzsc:kers. the Fred.luglasses.. ke..-31^.(1 not Seek to d'.:rlli . rl.:s Do-.zitior. nC Lai el. a . ..sent:7.r" zaat sr.:Ea:cis wit e. him. or :ha: he •Tives- the-le:lst coat:- t) tile tTeask-zrab.e to et the free-scilers. Here:. , ..:'.er. who will Ge neve cr.R2t wrntea ar said by Mr. - . S.... , eaker Chase A cacdiJate. :a tulle to conla. wh-o faisirit-ti and star.- i:_izead of will Czaed }Jere is the reck:e.ss ci:arce hy eS'eaker compare it ;i: e zveival cf. the G\.-veraor—with the whole .i:raii:_-zforw-..zci conduct c.f fte GP- T2^: '--a.! cd wno. wii:rf to :E:e . tiarce of the ev3res.sioa of a cantiE,:ia.:e CEASED We knc‘w f_aa: after r.:)..raizszio.:: cxyareztisnf..4iti to muse persons Who were rrent and tiEter=i=ed ft:2.z ate should resolutions in fsvor t . :.e : • rey , .. , ;z:,..0 f-t r - tir Za-i.7 PL r.7.:m t;:e rt,s, rx-.3 c, We knvx ;Ea: me :hi& For 121E1 i: in wit ME will remain But the schemes of the slaveholders have been circumvented by the activ ity, perseverance and hatred.ofoppres siou of Northern freemen. It has been done by the sacrifice of time and money, which must continue for a long time to come or the South will yet triumph. We have kept our readers well advised of the organization. ob jects. and movenients of the Emi7. - ant Aid society. We have done what we c mld to assist this Liberty , uard, and we have the glorious privilege of atinouncing the.st..ss of that move- meat At the t•aratoza Union ..-knt i-N ebraika Conventierr (the realer win plt:::ze notice that tie lire- anti-Nebraska men who aid this movement) of the Aurrutzt, the following hic , bly im-. portant announcer_lent was made: Hen. Eli Thayer,: the. President of :he Emizrant Aid Co.. n c invited to addre,ss the. Conizeniion and did so wih urich force and eloc i nence_ Ile said ;ha: me pioceer coma: n: - h.:d acne on: rooti; es rd - 7e p::re and than zoverytd oar ;71:her: in the -en'..enien: of NeWtngland. They d d not :care Mils:a• becatt.se they were oprirt-ssecl. cr btc-tt , e they were home. or been—tie :hey They cone to cotr.r:Siitt. their 2iti to iettietnent 012 are in the hope ~f ireeitic :t fr ' , al the and so.:- har.• e:. i:::o with ht, , ave=. Otte ::an h.tc: fo,:r e•i.. and t'c ..t. bo ,vas. In M.l ,, :;ch-.1‘.2.... , . re:n..a MESE th e cf :he ~:::-.-Eh.,;de: KatlF.a. , b!ue . lay wifafr.it hor :e. Mr. 11 r.:e the emi:ea-e = P=`, - ._e frua - .1 Kan ,- .2s nat t!ay... The trre: for :b _nth are b 2, a A se:::er 13.:.1 -..713 r'ed Th the zlvenartient pr.ce. Th'e pnrchl-e emote: w.. no: theref. , re be re in.rea uncle: lbout two The net.: conlpany of ern:zrar. - , , zo on: on the cf . :h ., etnbrlce hear a et- , e:t.: eftheat thel: EM.Lief. Es CJ TC•C L 1 :0 C.:Y..10 c 0:... a We learn z:.-at a :r , C r 7.- ::s r...a e env of D. T. Hail and Joy._ Aver NV a= tie.f,troved :ire c..a Friday ot'ner Tr ere ham: :f1 CLlZere.:: 2%1 DV the c wL-a: s.plount. we are ir: informed. hit hear of zwentv...i.-even s'net - T. the pi-or Fier l l -harcon. biz MEM a"" s -Becatle I delivered tl:e that it cti,and the fa:aerie-se. a:.-:d E.= thaz had -rmne :e belt him. the of z7nst- cazle uro:l:_ne, I. ez.usi--ti hear: to. i‘ihz f,,r ;or. T :. MIMEM2 the ?able: I wtt.ia t.r...e ar.d. tne C e kzew L T ar et: CtUZ There car. be zrz.—ater iary humari .tea- =2.;: o fe WarJ rez-2.:d . r.ow tr.ey o: 2.2. - C• zpz..::.e.,:i zze art-z.:ze b:e -6s Cael- are_ ex_--rteil fne c: c ~_ w:' i P AWAY WITH CONNIONLSES. As our ,huttler .poliAcians have taken a great fecy of late to the Hon. Gerrit Smith, and seem quite 'a nxi °us . ' 'Oat his sentiments 'should be made known to .the people of this county, we think it may be a • favorable time to get a new idea into the heads of some of that gentleman'i , new friends. So we make the followin! , extracts from the speech of the Hon. Gerrit Smith, delivered in Congress April 6th' on the Nebraska bill; and com mend them to our alarmed frietvis. . Speaking of the impossibility of settling the slavery question, Mr. Smith said : Hence slavery - is an unsettled ques tion; and must continue such; until it shall have fled fOrever from the pres ence ofliberty. - It must be an entire l• unsettled question, .because, not only is it not in harmony with truth', but there is not one particle of truth in it. Slavery is the baldest and NA:- grit lie on-earth.-- In reducing man to a chattel, it denies-that 'man is marl; and, in denying that . man is man, it denies that - God is God—for-in His own image made He marr—the black man and the red man, as well as the white man. Mr. Smith opposed :he bill because it was . an attempt to lee-islate slavery into the Territoriei. In ci7¢ his reason for this he said: Nor do I deny the rialit,ofCongress to open the door. for slavery into these territories, - because the. :compromise of ISSO virtually denies it. I say that compromise virtually denies it, because it distinctly and approvingly recognizes the compromise of Ib2o. The compromise of-Dia is as rotten as the compromise of 15.20 ; and as incapable of imparting rights. And here let me,sa , y, that I. rejoice to see the pro-sla , iery party pouring express contempt on the compromise of 1520, and victual contempt on the compro mise of I•'.a. And *ht - - should not all men pour contempt "Upon these compromises. and upon all other com promises,. wl.ich -aim to split the diference - between • God and the deN rear. laughter.] By the Way. we have z.trilting prow .in the instance of this till. that, in 'the case of such compromises, God's share and all are. in the end. very like to he claimed for ' the devil. 'Renewed laurrEter.l - I lave said on what - grounds nt , t. that 1 deny - the right of C,;r:- zress to opert the dooy, I wilt now- Cnese CITI what zroundit . I deny the , roSlnd that the Contitution. the only law of the territorie. 1 n4,i favor of =lacers. and that ~ l avery 611- nut be set up under it. If there can Ise lawini ,laverY in the Szate, r :11011E-V. el-111 - eh...is there cannot be in_ the tern- ti.rle,. • 1:2 Ihe pace. I am oppo , eki to the I—.ll. 1-ecau,e it allQw., =V _ny :'i.:_7 o M.-.,,liri. terr:zon EINEM Hitice 1 4 . - hen the has Ler:: tr-z:lv or uatruiv.iLat :he azlt-.l.laver. MEWS of checkir..• sfaver It Li. COll:3,i•ctl irroTICTA Up Dr tce pro-:.,:avery party. arAl-her the' "per. , n , : e c,f extendi2,-, UM g 214 OREM lz!In - cry ;an IBM übeen-e her piirpc.se i f redwakeEin , the ie (1. - ±:72,anas und s_ ch I HEMMER. I - Li() :c: z...-_-,i: :1,•a: a n , ...verne:.: f-r t'ne i=::_er..e exler.- p:..rz ,r th e v.-,.-0,-k c:* the Elfg f--e )fes.,7-5 MEI :r. e v. I . - it oil fife innocent ai: 31 , c11-e:h: arAl me in exc:aim, 55.: I read: - , . . 7..e:t2er r r 74:,-.1::... Ve: - i - i - k art y L : .C. ' .: OM i~r:a. .i,;. i.:C .:7 MI be :t lco:k z 7-71. 7 :::: L is, there J i. e :V. :ND. e EEG MEIMMEI •••(:.. , -Ici I , e ;:..--::,' Refer:i.n , ir. amci- ma:ure End Mr. S7l-7.-.L. I Ter. ea.: t?f t'=e7e. 1 - T . =;:. 2.re ire erivai. and 'nave CE DS pate: Civ - i: ac cei I ~ ~ ~ terE- 17.12.\ - I , e , I .: - .1VeiV ir) tl - ze. Sti:e,4 :::13li lie Ed - smeo. :r.%r - 2 ttese an. sna a-)r .t.: - . -,- .1.71 - ;: 1 yr: all band,: In tLi_ . . in.tance, the vrci- :^c::;:2,7:.'i. tne ::I,ic4 . truib ha Irie:cled- to MOE= rc'J-_:a - ;•ery nar- _e. :1 - .e MEE EIS SMITH. Here Of a. =se Mai .c.sr rre. ran =I HEINE B: ME ca_._t Ls.._ .;- • L. BY.:- V. Lk:,: (S~c~ a. _ :c~ betliG- 4 2 truth makes it necessary. It does so, because it is necessary to pr these rights. Does this paper Ten the tight to alter or abolish the Gov- • ernment It.claims it, for the sake of this great truth. It claims it, in order to provide better security for these rights. I do not forget, that the Declaratidn of .Independence. has fallen into repute among the degenerate sons: of the men who adopted it. They ridi cule it, and call it " a •fanfaronade of -nonsense." It • will be ridiculed, in proportion ,as American ,slavery in= creases. It will be respected, in pro portion as American slavery declines. Even Members of Congress charge it with saying, that men are born with equal strength, equal beauty, - and equal brains. For my own part; I can impute no such fill• to TIIO3IAS JEFFERSON and his fellow-laborers. I understand the Declaration of Inde 'penitence to say, that men are born with. an equal right to use what is respectively theirs. To illustrate its meaning, at this point: if I am born with but one foot. and one eve, and an organization capable of receiving brit •one idea, I have a-right to use my one foot. and one eye,_ and one idea", equal with the right of my neighbor to use his two feet, and two eves, at.d two thousand ideas. • • • • • • - a. But suppose, that after the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. an American .slave had asserted ; his right to liberty, might he not, as well as the patriot referred 'to, have called on his countrymen to acknowledge and defend hi= right? Certainly: and a thousand times, mare emphatically. For the right of the patriot to di since his .allegiance to the Crown is but a deduction from the great centre' truth of the- paper, that all men - are created equal, and . have inalienable rights. But the title of the slave to his liberty —that is 'to one of these inalienable right_: is the great centre truth itself. The right of :he ;lave to Lis liberty i s th e ° T eat ;:untain-heed right. 13ut title of tht. patri,•t to be rescued from his peril is only a derivan from that tbuctain-het-A We-add az , a reason, xvily tl.is Treat centre truth of k.uraar. ecinaiitv -and inalienable right to iiherty is entitled to suprernacy in ail the zhnpintr,ar.d interpretation of American politics. that. but for -it. and for tl.e. niaCe it 9ecupies in the Dealaration of inde pendence, there would have been no Arr.;:rican Conztittition, and no Arne:- i,..in nrfT.ic.n and 11,, Arnr•rican lil.t:•rt But I'.ir the ctirnmar:6inz and atlua t): cent:e trutn. tif.t have been arr,used tU their -.achievement.. It wzi: in (.1 it 1:;:i.s. by this sig - n---that ( - -,,1r f;:ti4ers =1712 !rant:lLT pri!:cir.:• - .7. a::,:z :1 BEM ir.piratlorl. ;Le aid—tile M=SMIO vv4 •Lifl.t! LAFAYETTE CO TiI,M.A,S (_.E....Ex4,s :voux. never ha:-t!ci.:-...:. the can-e. Arnerki. is I c0t.1.3. is 1. ,, : - .c.t- - .vtd. t.: , it ! a la:Ai uf Koscit - sco 7 MIZE . - . )iri:leri 1.7 er:\ in L•i• TIF , MA klEi- IBM FERS, - )N. In Lib,: Afr..cart Nutt, b:5 eV,., Oprn ci - rare a fv....,Nve.rtL•a: MMM= EMI Mean a frauc. 610 EM is=J : Uze t.._. extent::_^ American. Gri ' We 1. - ..-1.:-:. , 12: T;:~ca•; ev.r.;:a:, eLE:er. .Mr. W.:= :-.. -r, ret - ,: , i5e.: , ,:•::', , . r:..anr.e7s L (.:~~ WiNffM -,...i,... - ii-. aLd (A:zi.z t , ,'t .E.• k, - .- 1:: in ecturin , - ile:d. V:e WC-re ,-,i'-',..: :••Ise on IRS 1. , -,-..eze,:i wi:h eaz ; -Ef We ;V1:11 D:nel." vLs.:: a: : 1:. - : cz v : Y_ -`r 5Zi •YO X :7:J W 2, . —_- - • s • MEM ()ye ._-:ed c;n_=-sec l ~-> "cre, crf f . -.,•—:::-. -;.;•:-O 1.1.-.c.-_-.1,1 , - -;.-::::e in ~c~.?5_ tne paid th-15. 1,-_:end:. tr; L-vw f__~~- :LLS o: al)ers ESTES ;tea: :17 4 :7: 4 :e a- r..:- D BEE " erer L1..., • N= Aczairi: f.r - zn2^t Z.:, U- ElZlffill i c.: rei:o,- I -N-.., ii,unri . - t:.d t.rewa. f.,:: •• Fr,e/ior: aritl r MEE a:1:1 irtv L€ • EMMEN A:rcn VerVol _'-i.ine: - i'can 2ii,eil =IBM=O -- ,1 :1-:. p'E-...---.-7.,:r , (..- ..,.c-.7 LE-Z: , :re 6: v \Sm. J. V. A 7 K r:::: - Dc. -..:.....C.:.! ! .J'1.7. - ... - : Zr.....-.n. r. H._; is a a 1 ElTer . cfr. • 1 ESE rare. -_c' BMMII EIIMMMII ~: .:J :S BEESEE3 OM L.:, 2::2:27 ,: , r_ 'to „c: ("Iv :::.e_s2 of e GERM tri :r3r and The -Her.ck-: stantly tging to puff itself into note. riety" by; publishing wonderful, dis coveries that have no truth in them. This Kansas bill humbug was an in vention of the editor to attract atten tion .and procure subscribers. - The New-York papers did not think the story worth Contradicting; but the ;Washington Stdr of the 7th of August explodes it as follosi's The point to Which we now particularly refer i 9. the Herald's, story that Congress Li s passed a homestead bill or provision applied to Kansas and Nebraska. This, in few words ; is absolutely and usivaiijfed/g false, as all will tind to their cost who go into either of those territories under the expectation of being al lowed to take up United States lands within their boundaries without paying for them. The Herald ha4lnrented this story out of the action of the National Legislature in pas4ing the bill to extend the public land •ystein of the Government over the Territories of New. 3 , lexieu, Kansas, and Nebraska, which con. tains a lavi granting homestead to actual seh tlers in New-3leitico only. Settlement being the cheapest mode of protecting that ten,. tory front the hostile savages,. now:giving more trouble there titan in all the rest of the frontier appurtenances of the United States. ThiS clause in the,bill has not the slightest reference to Kansas and Nebraska, whatever. CORRESPONDENCE. SUCTH CREEK, Brad. Co., Aug. 12, 1-: FRIEND MANS: You are plead say : We are ilkidedly of that'the cause of Freedom nerd - L .,t hc :.acrifictql. and we trust will not It, in the comimr election in this state. The Free Democratssimply ask that Judge Pollock will say,. the time has come for the North tc; unite in opno ition to the encroachment; of Slavery: and that he will use hip effort:sin far:,- of the Tepid/ of the Nebraska Let Judge Pollock say this, and prezume the friends of Freed.rii ia Pm.nsylvania can he united in his support." The IVhig State Central Committee make the following declaratiun in their ' • " "Tv the doctrines of the act of 1; 80, Waich relidved th br r eonstifutional 113;:rilLS froni a r•Tierous.social the great Ordinance in it, fu:l scope, :aid benificent prind p.e-s—to a re , olute,•determination etrt-ct ti.e a?,zo/ute anti twin.: reptal ag t . T roive portions of the Nr- Lraska - ni;l--to the protection of the jar , a;ial ri.t:-Ity ij ecei:y liinaan 4-az, ti v .• CoroAltutkal of and tho Constitution of the by MaiLtaiitillc: trial J./ • Jury and the wri: of crrr i ntl—to- a- - nertiri , Z Of tLe . dde of of th e N,t.th we.l vi the S.,lttli, and t.r, the in tesri:•,• o: the Lever a 0 raucii enciarrt.d az whiz') a want,w wron, :s party of Perilisyl‘ania. and carciiaattA, c re tcb-atril y pfedzed. rrrour.d they are content to z.L;i :supp..,rt of vi:e. tne c(A;iiera:: i:Ver: n eeman is PenL--dvariia." Pray tt:li Br-tl,er :?.I,i Freemen, MMfil IT:A t: c.f . i . prill , :ii,:e ti:a:i part.:4- a-x:iv vc, , tr,; • rather unizi- their ea,::: -, f,,r zi:e elettruc:l.-.4. 1u:11 aLd Sia•.-er.- ~: ~'c,~eG'. ~ \t;2 .t.z.lve -er iv ern-.:VC-,. MEE ;% -. 7.v, if EI:E.. fr:enl, Mal P , ,LLricic are c , : , :!.. ,, :. rov - . :7 ) .-:0.77.. ( ; ::(1 thi:v ir,.. , 1: on :fp P:atf,rm. Ii EfEE t i Free Soil men EMS il• X 7 ':::^: , r , _? ". 1 2_-, -'..1.• .-i. r.:!.:/,:: :.irr_ ! Tr.a: i W . . 7. 2 '5 a f aul the A. 7.: \;e: :'•rre_ a P:.,.;;5,',• 71.1.r - ri:: , ..r: .....,,e• r.... - ‘l:t - re. a_.- rezin, J- p:: IMEI LLivf. BMM MEI We • WEEEIa ►i Jae_ P,:- ME z - .ven Lc., 1. - .. - 4.:r.:',...nar.ce t-, E f. 1, : :::: a a: ..,vvr.....,_-:.;. (.'t . t,.. 7; •.• _r.. - J. 7.. r I - .r C:i7l:-..e .7r,r2rer.:lon we G 72 ~_ ~ ~G~. tZa:. 51:a1: I.:, Ellis R.,bjec: apm. ;it; KAN.S.t.5.—}2•Ya. 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