THE PEOPLE'S J 1 DR JOHN S. DIANN, LOVDERSPORT; I'4; ,VJ R 3 U~Y M RNt G, NOV. Cartee,yylpe has been iSit t.i lii ftieticfs IU Lbl9 villa g e , o .63iur4ay .a".Judire Kuile . bas yielde'd to the force of public opiaicin, an d: liberdte'd Williamson. This 4.shiiuld ettteQum . 2-,e .every man to peisevere in of duty:- Justice and Libcr 3in t t he end. . •Wfr, -,We. note, with mtip:p pleasure, ribuntiiteetnent - that . the western 91ilii:itm of the t ' Ehe Irom Erie to the Sl'Keali 'coal beezi . Placed UniJelc6n.ti•act. this''ro . atl Will exert ' .. ,Vgappy influence the prosperity . i,i'veur county. ifia . Mr. Mather continues , to supply iur : citizens with fresh .ine4 of the pest suality sated up iu the !best tylo. • As he has taken some pains to ff it up a regular slaughter house, we catins. t t.hut think it woulcr;ilim to the interestsof our peopja to patronize i pr Aro have beeq presented with very fine specimens of . fruit, 4 the.ETUduCtions . of Putter county or .F.hards. Some gentleman left at the 1:o•use, last cuult week, a few of the largest and best apples wo everta4t r d. .11.ing absent at tho itime : we did tot kilow to whom we pc! e in dzbted fur the favor, butte suspect ,„pt .- • it leas J. C. Thompson, OP The Pittilqrg Dispatch is the :nest efficient' Temperance paper in the iron City. It has kept up a steady zealous advocacy of the zotid cause, and has given all its inflneupe present law for the supple...jun of the traffic in intoxica .. !.incinks. Of what other paper in Pittsburg can this be said ? thutin-ht. at one time, tile Gazette was r • about to take a more favorable posi tion, as regards the reformAtury Moye r merits of the day, than the Dispgtch.; 'but we have been disappointed. Lit Now that the election is over in this State, the_ Pierce Democrats . 1 arc off the mask in which hide themselves. The Icausas-Nehraska Lill is now to be made a party question, and to be defended under the hypocritical pre tease that it establishes !. squiitter sovereignty.' Even in this o.tninty, 7xLe:te, ',early every man of the party Protested that he was opposed to the onlas fraud, we see that an effort is making to bring he faithful into the stipport of that measure. This is what we told themwould he' done. alt the honest ones to read an article in this paper from the N. Y. l'i;entng Past, bet Ore they allow them : fselves to be ttangferred . to the Atch i69ll 1;11 CO:': THE NEW-YORE TEIBITICE We'cull attention to the prospectus pf - s this truly American journal, on our p.m. 1 1 ,6 e.. We pulilish this prospec tus because we comb it is i.t.f the iu teresi. of the people Of this county, to , • take :-.04 read the Tribune. As a , inure financial transactiou, we arc imfielent no ihrmer can make a bettor outlay of frioney than to subscribe for the progressive paper. Every im i ,• paper. voyen t ent in agriculture and in agri al implenients,is carefully noted tu the Tribune. The best methods of . iliting labor, improving stock, and rearing frnit trees, are thoroughly sfischsSed: It is the untiring and over friend of the laboring man, it every spl , iere in which he . may be tonna ; and yet it is an enthusiastic advocate of education, sciznce, and the fine arts. Its position on the Te_m jietauce Slavery questions, is inoivii by all, and no. Wo . rcl of oprs throw light 'on that iint: We,• fl i 7 • . • 1 are i!of now urging our people to take the TribUni Vecaus . d *of its re .. formatory character ; for we assume that every lire temperance' man is al liledditi.'lliabseriber, or intends forth with. to - kr:,corno• such. Our- present object is to show every farmer—every , )aborinj man—that he will increase his happiness, and improve ids pecu •., utarx rinlition by aubsprib!9g for and attentlyply . perusing the N , ew • • Yonk Tninestr. i - • ' ;: - - COUDDESPORVHOTEL. • Wo r .liave : fretptettO expressed our opinion rethir.eStfiblUlment. We Ti - :id'hi'4'ene -- objection to it, and since that is removed, we f , Thou d: to commend it as it deserves, to Qur readei:s and .the. *puhlie, ; „generally. 144. Mills has kii - Wed gracefully,to the will of the :majority, on the questioff of the kale of intoxicating drinks, and •- )las thus showed him`self worthy,the . . -t patronage of :classes. In all other _respects he has been a model Land lord from the time he first took pos.. session of the Coudersport 1 - Xotel. .1-le has expended a laige sum of money to fit up house . in „first rate style 4.i g i we believe we , are safe in sayilf,g that no public house in North pro Pennsylvao:a is so well arranged, all its departments, as his. Such is the 'onifin.n) testimony of all who have enjoyed the Major's good cheer. 11223 The following extract from a letter of a distinguished Western New York er, to a friend at home, will show our :maple in %yhat estimation Comlersport and its chief public house are held by intelligent visiters : As I have a moment's leisure, allow me to say a word in regard to the village where I ern stopping a few days,, Coudersport, the county seat of Potter county; Pa., has really s high standing among the green hills of this State—being near the sources of the Allegany, cetresse.e, and Susquehanna rivers—a quiet and pleasant village nestie4 upotra lap of level land at the fop of the surrounding highlands. its splendid Court House, Academy, and Churches, give a prominence and beauty to the village whoa viewed from the hills. " The Coudersport Hotel deserves an lionrable mention, both externally and internally ; The hos: and ' mine host,' is the redoubtale Mij. S. M. a whole-hearted and pure=blood ed native Pennsylvanian. His spirits a:e so buo`yant, hi' humor so inex.- haustihle, his frankness Si) proverbial, his kindness so genial, and his wide awake-ati'•eness SO remarkable, that the high hills surrouuding•hjs village cannot circumscribe his honest fame. To hear him r..cot..!:t his 'accidents by flood and field,' wiale among the aris= tocracy of Niagara Falls, and at the city of Washington, ' were worth one year of peaceful life.' 'I While he provides yr - m.l).kb men tal comforts, lip spreads lieflire you with the most liberal profu4on, liter ally a ' feast of fat things,' such as fresh fish, venison, wild fowl, and oth er native luxuries too numerous to mention. If you aro a sportsman, a scholar, or neither, you will be made right comfortab'e here. You can walk, tide, hunt, fish, ruralize, social ize, a-liloquize, or 2nountainize among: the beautiful and gigantic scenery of Potter county, And withal, the Ma jor •viii furnish you a borne of rare comfort in good living and good ha-. ima nior." Walker Smith of Ulysses knows how to cultivate a superior quality of ple, a sample of which may be seen at our office. He has our thanks for his present- and his example. We hope every farmer in the county will :nuke sure of an abundant-supply of grafted fruit: It is as sure a crop Ore as in any section of the State. HAnnisoN VALLEY, Oct. 22, '55 MR. EDITOR : It is some time since I found anything worth communica ting ; .but I hare at this time to inform you of a selious and fatal accident which resplted in the death of Mr. David Dudley viho has been residing with Mr. Manning of this place fora few mouths past. While leuinving a horse belonging to Dr•. Mastin, from the _stall, the horse kicked, striking him on the shoulder and over the left eye, fracturing the skull to some Con . - siderablo extent, and leaving him heßseless. With the aid of Dr. hite, Mastin performed a surgical ope ration, removed the fractured portions of skull, and dressed the wound. His senses returned, and his syMptorns appeared favorable for a.. speedy re covery ; but the third day hu expired very Suddenly and unexpectedly. - Respectfully yours, . . ...• 49.31Q5 NonTultoP. No man is an poor but that he can have b e erat spirit, q}• so rich . but that he can have a mean nue. tiur* 4 DsMoa CT EZEMxLI D: ? A friend :in . Clintoii C“tinly , ,sendi us the following precitaii specimedbf pro:Slavery decency, and 'asks to be 'infiirtned if there . is anytlptig TUC Lvicogoan PISTRICT • ALL • PUGLIf.-TWe received 1.01; 1 14e' • inf6rrii fitio4 from Nilljamsjpr . last evening, whielt settles 'the election ofqonNl.3, - Ikea and HENRY L. DIFFENBACII, for the Ite presentative District of Lycom iug, elltitun and Potter counties. In Pinter county, a lurge,number of fraud nlent voters were brought over the line front New ).rork; and their votes freely taken by the. Abolition officers the 'election. More • votes .were polled in some, townships than they have taxable ini.abitants ; .but - notwith standing all this, Messrs. BECK .RII 'D . IFFENB:teII have been clected. They have probably received their certifi c-tes of election, is the frainls were so 'gross, that no election' ()Ricers, with he least Heim to respectability, would hesitate to give them certificates. The Ab litionists set up a doleful lowl about Missourians interleinig at the 'polls . in . li.ansas ; but they did nin hesi tate to import voters ft urtt New York, to overcome .the Democrats of Potter county, in the State of 'Pennsylvania. Oh ! the base hyprocrites ! We have also gratifying information from.the Centre Senatorial District."-1 5 delph ia Pennsyl ranian, We tale this method of informing our Clinton. friend, .and all others in terested in the matter, that so far as the .above relates to thi.s -count}, it does not contain one card of truth; and we challenge the Pennsylvanian to produce a particle of evidence to sus tain_ its Trll7l/SVOLIS blunders. UnleiS some proof is offered, we shall infer that the above c,utiageous falsehOod was' manufactured out of whole cloth ; a:,l we shall nut ha surprised should such prove to be the fact ; fur false hood and detraction are ;the chief in- gredients in .every paper in a free State, that is degraded eneugli 1.0 sus, Lain Pierce Democracy, • Yes, "the Lyconiing district is all right;" atid it is growing more so every day. it is in favor of .putting a stop to di unkard-making ;- and hence its voters have repudi l ated John B. Beck, the pet of the liquor league. The LiAliet is in favor of Jeffer suuiau as. exemplified in the glorious ordinance of 178,7 ; and hence her voters spurned the candi dates of Pierce Democracy. Yes, the District is all right, in spite of the nice little arrangethent of Wm. P. Pucker and Timothy Ives, by which it was thoti2 , ht the Free Soil men of Potter wi.uld be overwhelmed by Lyourning Uld Huukcrism. Tha , iks 'to the excitement produced by the repeal - of 'the Missoui i einryromise, and to a steady increase of indept elite among the voters, the majority for slavery extension in Lycoming county, has been reduced' so low that the majority in Potter for• free dom and ju:tice,,overbalances it, and sates the District ; and the tick of Gen. Packer to smother the voice of this county, has returned "to plague the inventor. Put we ask intelligent Old Line Democrats to pause, and consider the . recklessness with which the leading Pierce Faper in the State slanders and defames an entire county. The above paraglapb is characteristic of Him kerism: The pro-slavery sheet pub lished in this county, has been filled with falsehoods of the same stamp. You can't expect anything. else of pa pers which attempt to defend and tustain the slave poWer of this Nation; for a mealier, more reckless power, d'ies'nut exist on the face of the globe For the Journals Just look at the above. « -‘lure votes were pulled in some townships than they hare taxable inhabitants." Now,' every mail in this county knows there is nu excuse ior'such an asset.; Lion. - They know that in every town ship in this county there were Free Soil coleys u:4o_did - not come•to the election. Then those liaudulent voters from the State of New York. We defy the must unscrupulous Beck man in . the county, to name a single instance of the kind. • Why will honest men remain in a party that is under such corrupt influ ences ? . If any man can give a shadow of excuse for the :above outrage, and the hundred similar ones of the echo in this county, we shall still think they may be houest:in . theiy support of Pierce Democracy; otherwise we do not see hOw to eioid the 'conviction that they are govrried by the same spirit that dictated the above inexcu , sable article in the Pennsylranian. 1 . - _,HOSNEat ON. tritalo*. r'. E... Wel, onme noril" to that point.in which mi.., ari&, personally_ inteTested;- .His htii&tla's notic - e7..us much_after the . ... maner. thatt the. Frenchman , was noticed .bi. theLlii4e.,:-who-tuld;ltin - I.Av "stain) out ot'thu way." Welly- it: is " I itY le • ~ 1 h Go‘ sot - net) % to 0 „nottct.....ya ... o__ . err or, yes, .even by Governor . 8 - eymoitr, so long Ili he d..es not, speak approv ' :ingly. His tirade rei.aSsurestts: :. We wet e beginning to feel; depress ed and to iu'e confidence in t,ur own fidelity to the can-e of prt,biLititql in this ernergency..;4hinking that perhaps we bud beet! ton tame and spit itless in advocating this humane movement. Such a counterblast restmes self-re spect ,and leads us to hope tl.at "our ellin - ts have not been in vain. What a mercy thatihe Governor did not commend us I- It • ‘vrtild have been the ruin of our peace, the sure con.• firmation of uncomlin table suspicihns that we had not been true to the-peril ed interests of 'bleeding humanity. May no word of approbation come frame that quarter. Let the man who, could,..but did no arrest the bli,W which strtick. down the husband and the father, the stay of dependent vro- Man and the guardian of lisping babes —never speak well of ui, nor breathe 1 suipicion up nrour eff.ols by. endorsing ' then!.—Northeru Christ an Advocate. • Bravtly,gloriow ly said ! The pure metal rings everx blow, the heavy claymore cra , bingthrough and through . where it calk. The ex-Go vernorfa re 9 badly in. the 1 ands of the bold Metho dist. The words flash like blades Of steel as they are hailed upon the arch traitor. The heart !meets them with a throb. We Vic:a the men who thu3 speak the until. Kid gloves are not worn by such fliemen. Thank God that a widely circu:ated and influential press has uch a Lot het at the helm.—Cayuga And we love such men, too. •The Northern Christian Ad vocate is the boldest .and mostindelatigahle refOrm religious paper, with which we have the pleasure of en exchange. We have been thrilled with pleasure many times by its powerful appeals for the right and true ; and no man can read it thoroughly without being the better for it. Yes, thank God for the North- ern Christian Advocate, and may its readers be speedily multiplied a hun dred fold And the Cayuga Chbf,.foo—it has emlearell itself to the trite. fziemls of Tempezance throughout the Nation, as the ablest, bravebt champion of our glorious cause. A BIIGGESTION WOIiTH THINKING OP We understand that Gerv. Critten den, of Kentucky, has' been invited and has accepted the invitation of the Boston committee to deliver a lecture upon slavery in that city. Like Sena tor Butler, or South Carolina, and Toombs, of Georgia, and Mr. Hillard, of Alabama, Mr. Crittenden has ac t opted the invitation in the same spirit is winch it was given.—Louisville Jour nal. Now, why will not the people of the South have their ievenge, upon the Boston people for these impertinent invitations, and invite Sumner, Banks, &ward, Chase and others of their way of thil,t.in,g, to go to Richmond or Charleston, New Oilcans, St Louis or Louisville, to give them a talk about slavery I It would ho a capital Way of resenting the insult of these Boston abolitionists, and we have no dimbt . wi.uld Fovea good,speculation, especi ally it' it was understood that every. hearer should hung his own tar 'atid feuthe•s.—N. Eve. Post. The readtjr will not understand the above allusion to insults, uatil he po i uies the following letter• from Wise of Virginia, wilich is a beautiftil cimi mentary •on the boasted refinement, and sucia,Larnetutles of Southern gentle , - men . . . UNLY, NEAR. O:s;ANCOCK, ACCOMACK CO., VA., Oct. 5, '5.5. Gcszt.' cams, : On my return home, after an ab4ence of some days, Hound yours of-the . l9th ult., . "respectfully inviting me to deliver one of the lec tures of tne - conrse on slavery, at Tre mont Temple, in the city of .Boston, on Thursday evening Jan, 10, 1856.; or, if that time will not suit my en gagements,- you request that ; .l. mention at oucc . what Thursday eve ning between the Middle of December and the middle of March next, will 'best accommodate me." • Now i• gentlemen, . I desire to pay you due respect, yet you compel me , to be very plain with you, and to say that your request, in every seek!, is insulting and offensive to ine. . Mat bject of Slavery have you "initiated" lecture; - upon catmot conceal it from myself that you have undertaken in Bfiston, fq discks and ;q decide' whether nili property in .Trirginia ought to remain Mine or Hot, and whether it shall be alluwed the •protectiqu of laws, Federal and State, wherever it may be carried or may escape in the United States; or whether it shall be destroyed by a higher law than con. stitution and statutes ! _-- w 'CFho are you tri isrue dicari OVer a subject delicate: and already. fixediit. its- - yelations : by a solemu compact between the - Slates and hp Stites- which are soVereign4 1 .. Wal . nnt obey :'your. sommons, nor i eciyinfie j<<ur yi 15;a • Yon La>;eiw authoritr and no justi leatiob - for-thus • calling . me to—account at the-har,of your -trilai,tal, tool • for this arraigning an institution, -estab lished by laws which do not reach you, and Which you cannot reach, by cull ing on me to deli nd it: • . • You send me a card to. indicate the 'character the lecturers (of the ht. 4 year.) It yeads : "Admit the bearer and lady to the Independent Lecture: on Slavery, Lecture Committee—S. G. Howe, T. Gilbert; Geo. H. - Wit- Hams - , Henry T. Parker, \V. Washburn, B. B Massey, W. 13 Spooner, J. W. Stone." It is indorsed: "Lectures atthe Tremont Temple, Boston 1854-5. Nov. 23, Hon. Clunles Sumner ; Rev. John Pierpont, poem. Dec. 7, Hun. Salmon.. P.. Chase .of Ohio. Dec. 11, Ho% Ausiin Burlingame. Dec. 21, Wendell Phillips, Esq. Dec. 28; Cas 7 sills M. Clay, Esq., of Kentulty Jan. 4, Hon. fforace Gred,!y. Jan. 11, Bev. Henry Ward Beecher, Jan, Is. Hon. John P. Hale. Jan. 25, Itvlph NUJ() Emelson, Esq. Felt. S. lion. NT ..al.t,aniel I'. Banks, J r. Lewis D. Campliel of Ohio. Feb. 22, Hon. Sti , nuel Houston olrexas. Wilmot of Pennsylvania. March 8, Hun. Charles \V. Upham." All honorables and squires except those who are rerfrends ! The cal d dues verily indicate their chatrcters by supply naming them. And your letter, gentlemen, .i• franked by "C. Sumner, U. S. S." With these characteristics I am at no logs to understand y(.ti and your purposes, You say, "during the next season a huge number of gentlemen from arc Sr till] will he invited," &c., &c. Ir e gret it, if any others can be found in the slavenrading States to accept your invitation. You .plead the example of Gen. Houston. it is the List I would fidlow.. I Lave no (I,M ht you accorded very respectful attention to him last winter, and were very grateful for his services da your cause. You offer " one hundred and fifty dollars to be paid to the I,N•turer, he bearing ids own exp en ses," Let me ' tell you that Tremont Temple cannot hold wealth ent.ugh to putchaso on: word of disc . ussion from me, There Whether mine, Acre, shall be mine or not, but I am ready to rulanteer, with out Money or without price, to sup press any insurrection and repel any invasion which threatens I.r ell dangers the State rights of Virginia, or my i,.- dividual rights under the laws and cdn stitution of my country, or the sacred Union, which hinds SI Lye Stat.: and Free together in one hued of .1, - .:!ional confederacy, and in seperate Loads rj independent sotereignties. In short, ge.tlemen, I will not de liver one of the lectures of the. -cour,e on Slavery, at the Tremont Temple in &anon on Thurstlny evening, Ja.d.rtry .10, 1856; and thine will be no T..nrs day evening between the middle of December and the middle of Ma.: . ch next, or - between that and Dooinsd.?//, which will best accommodate Inc for that purpose. 1 give y.:u an immediate answer, alid at in v tat liest convenience indicate to 7 yott that "the particular ph :so of the subject that I will present" is, de liberately, toji:ght, Ire must. 1 - our uUC svrv't, 1 - I.l''.;Niti - A. WISE To the Committee. Frotu the N. V. Eve. Po=t. THE FARCE, EQUATTER SOVEREIGNTY It is very clear that what ,Nlr. Ca::s calls squatter sovereignty" dues not work well in • K visas. Bet wixt the legislation of Congress on the one Side, and the adminiqration of the laws by an Executive, on the other, the Territory has been delivered Over to complete. anarchy. There is no Governur- of the Territory in fact— that is to say, none whom the people respect or intend to obey. There is a creature, called Shann,m, not elected by the people, but. sent out by Mr. Pierce, who lots declared his inten ti(m to enfOrce tt.set of absurd and ty rannical ordinances passed by a con clave of Missourians, held on the Mis souri herder. Toe people, of coorse, despise and detest him for this decla ration, and will pay-no regard to his authority. _There is no Legislature of the Territory; the body of men calling themselves by that name are not ac knowledged as such by the residents. The Territory itus no laws ; the edicts of the 'Missourians assembled at Shaw - , nectowii are not recognized as such by the actual-settlers, nod arc treated with utter disregard. There are nu . electiwts in the Territery ; at the first attempt to choose a delegate to Con gress, the Missourians swarmed Over the bolder and appointed a creature of their own ; and when a Legislature was to be chosen ,fur Iran-as, they crossed the. frontier a second time, usurped the kill; and appointed' the members. from among their °confeder ates. There have since been some .at tempts. to hold local elections, in winch the Missourians have pkiyed the same gaMe, and, crossing over in numbers, have , fired the site of court-houses with a perfect disregard of the interests and wishes of the settlers. The mock legislature -appointed a day fur th e second election of n delegate to Con gress ; the friend; aul their neighbors from voted ii n d held the election by themselvesrien the residents who desired to make liranlias tr free - St refusing 11).:v oto. The residents have since call 4 the. people together and-held an.-election ritl.their nuns choosing a delegate from their own class. Thi4 is the nearest approach• to •a popular election that hay been held in Kansas niece the pos'sage of the Ntihrask,i bill, and this election the people have been forced t t hold without the previous legal fur inniities by ethic'', if Congress awl the Executive had, done their duty, it wi.uld have •been peacefully_ Witia ted. In the moan time, Oleic exists in li.arisas' a state of things such as Ne might expect .4) find where there is nu executive, no legislature and no hem The colonists •of the country have been forced toatm thetwelves to protect their personal rights. After the i:lroad made by the Missourians Who appointed the spurious ture under the muzzles of their rifles and,lield-PieCes,Ahn feSidents of Kan sas began to ingoire what steps they sit iii take to prevent -the repetition and perhaps still worse out rage:. They knew that walling was he expected from the federal exe cutive.' Mr. Pkrce had not thq cum- age to interfere for their tinttectin i r, eveßif ho had the inclination. Th e y irumediateiy did what they had new: lected at first ; they procured a I.li)piv of arms from the'Atlantic States; and a large number of settiets who went ou t with;.tit polls have 'now' rifles in their caltins, and are certain soon to become sharp shooters. The recett accou,,ts from the Territory show that the settlers ate now armed and Lter mined to resist. .dta another pu t of this sheet we give the account of an offer to nnth the Ilflice of the I.Terald of Freedom, from which the rioter- de si,ted iu conntetnation when. they found that they ‘s- , ttld have 'to face the t ides of the peolle cif K:insas. Tito law now protects nobody in that Ter ritory ; mot protect themselves fr.qn wt (tug anti violence by t tie strong :um. ruder the new system of Irt.4i•l oh m foroh.: T_rrltorics, and the 'Jell' y toitiitted in the eafot ce.n..:nt (tithe liatt•aA levet - Li Lo a state of Lane e, to tile s ttite whieit exi,ttid before th e in. ~tiLeLiel l elm gattiied\ gevekeritenti. But what a ;atire-i, the whore his tory of these Proceeding; on the pru fesr,ionS of tho-e %%oho m a d e a n d ,till tri:.ke such pompous pretences of pro• viding fir the free expres-sion of the popular)will in Kan.;as. II i‘v much hotter would it have been for the w.e :are and peace of the Territ,o y, and 14 the pod name r country..if Con pess,lvhilte the settle:uents of lianas were sparse and weak. aril eNi.,),,c,1 to. out'a!:e. I VII:WIL'd C , 1!1,1•Ii!P4 orsinirlo and 1.;-,ifivral ti tzi,n., Liv ia!! the foinolotion of tile new com- Muniyy- On the broad ;tad ;;l orhou-!` ba sis 'if. F rm,nro which ,h,wd entlara tiff- th• c,dmiv had pus,ed and danger, and had le•comd onaotne enough to frame in sit:err ;tool order its twit system 011-gi,a - rdn and gov ernmen'. There has not been a mad uttered (torn the bo c -indiog by tlh ' , o• professed h 'wool; of impel -sove reignty, which has yet be 'u refuted and turned into noilse•ose by e vents iy.lich ate daily taking place. The people o.f livens-c:, we perceive, are bee oming impaticat to form - them selves in. o a state: We ol uot wonder at it in the least. K. - -inias is a :;piiited young man, with a rogue add con ard for a guardian—f;a• such the federal. governinonit has proved it.dilf -u be in it; dea:iags with the Territory—and we w older not tin, ward i s in haste t.,) get ~ut of his minority.. It is only by being admitted into the Cidoon as State that Kansas can get rid of the miserable Shannon, who Itasannounced himielt as a confederate of the Mis souri conclave at theShavence Mission, and declared his dettirtnination to en force their Liws establishing slivery in the Teri itory. It is only by becom ing a State that they can get rid of. Mr. Pierce's territorial jildges. There. no other other way in which they can effeot u.i.ii protect ,themselves against - the i n t er f e reace of the Missoui iads in then election. With a Governor of their own as the commander of the State militia, they will take care that the polls are sufficiently protected from violence and disorder. It is nut likely however, that Kansas' will be readily admitted into the Union. The •rest , dents of the Territory wi i. present a constitution providing t r the froedum of all who intiabit it. Tile agents of Atchison and other slaveholders, who appointed the mock legislature of Kansas,will not stand idle and. see their pons broken up. They have al ready made arrangements for confront 'ing the delegate chosen by the people with a delegate .of their own, at the ne w s t session of Congress, aad we may o be auto that they will, by seine Means I or other, frame and present their con- - l stitution establishing slavery in [Can ens. The conflict which hail so long raged. in the Territory; will then, be transferred to Washington; and how long the new State will be kept wait ing at the doors of the Senate, is a , point on which we will not offer tt con jerture. I
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