4 4 .)6-;-•;64c-- • 9 . #4r s. ;PILAW; *IPITON* COIMVPAVOI,tT, PA. ' ttz ; ; Ulg'• ' ' 711 uRSDAy Stows:nig:4'lu MUM= ~; pAbl ~: NojuinaUon. For Presid.cul i . eZ4 4. 2t CA-enzeine, OP CALIFORNIA. .• - • ! • for Vi 9? ftelptent i P7i 1 .44? vr,i7/pw, or YFIe .iPtSTS -.llol4uppi POWITY corvininos. In obedience to an understanding of ...he , County Executive Committee, a pole g a l m 4e2ublicon County Conven tion yi7l be held +alba gpurt ,douse, in the borough ;of pou,ilersiort, on :Thursday, the 7th 44k . of August next, at 2 o'cloat, P;ll..for t he purpose -- of candidates to fill the vari ous County Qffices, to be suppot ted at 'llse ensuing State election. Each !Township is earnestly solicited to send Urec delegates to said Convention.— niii - Unbers oldie County Exec- %dive committee, are requhetea to be in attendance, et said Convention, :Oat e being important businasi for them fo transact at that time. ExbioN. Ch'n. of the pp, p.fe,c,q,s)YP 4 :'19;9174tee . July 12, 1856. Wo hope the above call will re taivis prompt attention in evJry tow.i ahip in the county. Several Townships l .havoi already organized FreMo i n; Clubs and one at least has Selected three deldpie . a . .ib attend the County 'Cianvet:ition:',Lett. all Lthersact prompt ly,., Beldct . t,he t :beit Men 'delegates, so 'that a ticket will be for Med That will reflect credit ()tithe County, and add 40 1 ,g41i AST . c.andidatci fop rg dent. Eevcrythingiiears the Irina fa vorable aspect now, and if our friends will onlY,keep the ball in motion as it has * commenced, they will achieve their noblest triympla 'at 'the coming . election, Thsre will be Union !Two lug at Williamsport on the 10th of Sept. next;to numlnaie a candidate for Congress in this District. TAB SECTIONAL PAATT.—The aaVO• r ates pf 'James' Buchanan, have no phi* of carrying every Slave State. Why? Because the platform on which Ile stands is purely a Southern pro slarery plat Arm, the most sectional of any ever fujopted. It does not advor cap: a single IMeasurp of National in- Irefess. The Philadelphia platform, 'pi the contrary, tair:Z.• the iiieclaration . p . ijiidependence for Oriel plank, nn Fh vrolfare of humanity for its ffatt'de the people aree.4usias -1;14 loi l Premont, and only sfaie\aold j3l'd and officOeekers are Jor Buclitin .Iqr Witen our hunker friends can JJlthai we are in any way rp gpq4sibjef.)r'ihase disgraceful riots in i . *VAlei f we will turn our attention subject, but till then, we pro- 1 p.(14 tniay bare the outrages that every 40r.0"?..esponsible fur, The freemen A ; 6 obrill e4a protect their brothers !Ku . nsas, and therefore they ought to do it. But they cannot do this , by vot iniiu continue in power the men who have madnall the trouble in Kansas. The way to 'reit.4'e'peace to Kansas, and tly'pecure :the settlers their in the rigio pf America citizens, is to vote 'tor J, • o,.. • ieriioni, and every man it:44 t..;yo !cfris'yq his lead knows this ; T5l T'Qle fqr thTIIP4 )Itichlt. l 4 6 sto orse • 4or4}er 11.4anistn; for every s;on)eFßilifladip ;149 tiation is liis fast Mend. • • lar The letter of G. W. §eofield, plibtidhe4 liist week, ahoWs that' the I,m,est ann.-Nebraska democrats of Vioredre. cannot be cowed into the • - suppsill !4' t..l9cinnati nominee, rsit.4!;? aiptinratlon Vonld be only cont;FacitiSit ofTierce . 'a. Scofield and lCgifie ha're'tnn ranch self-respoct, and lore frieam Ina well tti . iyear the col lar. Things is FP Lieut. GOvnitkr ilo ar t e Q rg au . s i o ;l unner l y an 0 14 Una derqoprat is Tonnsylrania, is . atupit taku stump for Fretoutt. ''many ree State ages in ktitfassAttrojtie h i t indicted"Ki rttfusingto silen t ttte ;abject tit Islniery,Sn4 for refusing to obey pi*- i • temied la ve, which General Cass says 'are "a dhigiace to the age iri'vzhich a we live ;" but who has heard of an in ilictment against the nprclerprs of pow, of Barber, of Coleman and' ethers 7 Not a single pro- s lavery man has been indicted for any crime, And yet free men aro asked to supports Presiden =tial candidate who throws the whole weight of his influence in favor of con iinuing this system of wrong and out rage. Tho „Ithaca Journal, for nearly thirty years the old line . democratic ArDn of Tompkins County, has taken down the flag of Buchanan & Brecken ridge. and run up that of Fremont and Dayton. Thus every day Buch'anan is losing. strength, and Fremont is • gaining. . Of We give on the - first page of this paper, /fr. Buchanan's celebrated harvest-hone _letter, je which he ad vocges the ez4enslon of the Missouri . Compromise line to the Pacific ocean. If Congress had the power to pass the Jeffersonian ordinance of 1787, and the Compromise of 1820, which Iluchanan so zealously supported in this letter; then the following resolu tion adopted at the Buchanan Conven, tott which met in Coudersport on the 18 of June last, is the lowest kind of Rio -Slavery pettifogging—disgusting subservieny, and contemptible for its affepte4 wisdom above that of Jef ferson, Matfition,tlnd the fathers of the conititution Resolved, That the Constitution wisely puts the question of Slavery out of the jurisdiction of Congress; that it is a local institution ; that when a rlew State applies for admission into the Union, Congress has no right to reject such application on account of the exclusion of 1 - !q . rq slavery,. or its toleration therein by the municipal law of such State. la We learn with regret that the managers of the Sunbury and Erie Rail Road, have located the route of said road up the Bennett's Branch of the Sinnarnahoning. This- will be a serious injury to Coudersport, we fear. .The mouth of the First Fork, forty Julies dielant, will be our nearest point to the road if completed by the Bun nett's Branch. PERNSYLVARIA FOR FBEMONT As our hunker friends can give no god reason why a democrat who de sires to secure freedom for Kansas, should vote for Buchanan, they try to hold on to the wavering by telling them that he is sure to be elected. that he will carry this State by fifty thousand. If any aro deceived by this silly boasting. we pity their intelli gence. The N. V. Etie. Post, one of the most reliable papers published, has the following letter from a Philadel, phia correspondent who is much more likely to be well informed, than the rnen in this section, who don't know what their position will be next year on any question. The Post's corres pondent says: .The elevation of Judge Campbell by Jones Buchanan, after he had been repUliated by the people of Pennsyl vania, Will make "Jordan a hard road to travel" for "Old Buck." Vie dem ocratic voters of this stile defeated the election of William Bigler in 1854 by near forty thousand, owing to this con nection and influence with Judge Campbell and James Buchanan If there should be a full vote at the polls next November in Pennsylvania, the coriihmtnition of" Old Buck" will be equally great. He will find it as chfli cuff, t" carry the "Old Keystone" state as to obtain the island of Cuba by force with his-land piracy principles. The solid, silent, solemn vote in this city, in favor of Fremont and Dayton will aslottish the Union. The blood-shed in I.an4”nd in the United. States Senate, has awakened and aroused the free' people of this country, and more partictilarly those in the free states.— Little Delaware, with her meagre number of 2,490 slaves, I are well as sured, wl,ll cast its vote for .F'remont and Dziton. "Blood will tell," even the deinocratic tithed of the Buchanier, and it is now 'perfo'rming 'wonders in this electioii cainraign. • The "blood of Don*" js' al3q worlangin this matter, and the peeple are deternitined to' rid tliemselves of Pierce, pouglas and Buchanan, and be free. - Pxvincli Herm. arHugh Yuung will speak to the people of Roulet on the !I? Wronis of the . People*of Kansas," at the roil School liouse,- on' Pri4ay, the 18th instant, c 5 o'el?clt s. If.. L' The Missouri river is no loon! a piaie higtway. AW;thiN;rti f el State men who have attempted ;9 go np tl u! rider to K.azisas fur the lattil zee weeks; have been compelled to s'f" turn,4 aimed ha . ida, of MiSsourians, ` white armed' teen from the South have gone up on nearly every bat. To all which the Becluipan . press, yitfr a single excap tion,zre silf ntes the grave. The lif souri bemocrat, to its honor be it spoken, condemns in vigorous terms this 3periviolation of the constitution, in arresting the emigration from the free states to Kansas, But the party as a whole, has no • word of reproof. Having arrested by force of arms, the emigration of men from the free states. and having destroyed every free press in Abe Territory, and imprisoned or driven away every prominent free state man, the Buchanan men bad the impu dence to propose, as a peace measure, that the people in Kansas, on the 4th of July last, shall elect delegates to form a constitution. This is such peaco as Russia gave to Poland and Hungary, and such as Despots always give, Thank God, it is • not such, a- peace as American freemen Will accept! They demand o indemnity for the past, and security for the future." • Any bill which secures less than this, will never receive the support of men who de! serve to be free. • Bppr4l.o DEnntlllAT& Faaltruirr• —We have befltre noticed the warm support given Fremont and Dayttnt by the Buffalo Republic. Mayor Stevens, -who received 1000 Democratic major ity last fall, and three Democratic 4.ldermen glw4em at the same time, 4rp members of the Fremont Clef), May or Stevens made a speech to the Club •on receiving news of nomination of Fremont.—Nortlt American. This defection of Northern -demo crats opposed to slavery extension,from Buchanan, is a matter of course. Ti; Cincinnati nominee° _having' stepped onto a platform that secures him the support -of those desiring the exten sion of slavery, it is . not possible - for him to receive the vote of any- intelli gent man opposed to such extension. Mr The following is part of a Tele graphic dispatch from Washington to the N. Y. Tribune, dated July 10 : "Gen. Lowry, former private-secre taty of Governor Reeder, - arrived here this evenin g from New tigla.9(l, where he has been stumping for Fremont. He is about taking the stump in Penn sylvania. Ho has always been d Dem ocrat of the Hunker school, and voted for Pierce." If any of the anti-Nebraska demo crats in this county, aro yet in doubt as tp.their duty in this campaign, we think they can easily clear up their doubts by answeiing , this question to their own satisfaction. Why is it that every old line democrat who wont from the free states to Kansas, who has ex pressed a preference, is in favor of the election of FremOnt '1 There is but one answer to' this question, and no man who deals honestly with himself can mistake it. THE NEW SCHEME OF THE SLATE POW= • TO FORCE SLAVERY INTO KANSAS. It is astonishing with what avidity every Buchanan Press has rushed to the support of the hill which lately passed the Senate, the object of which is to make Kansas a Slave State. This of itself • shows the spirit of the Bu chanan party. It is under tho,cornplete control of thS Slave . Power, anti every vote Col...this party, or any ()fits nomi nees, will - be a vote justifying the out rages in Kansas, a vote to fasten Slave ty twon that Territory. The object and nature of the Toombs and Douglas bill, is thus clearly set forth by the New York Times : The Conspirators are approaching the consummation of their work. They started two years ago to erect a new Slava State opon free sell belonging to the United States. Desperate as tile undertaking seemed it is upon the verge of success. Formidable as were the bar- Tiers which had been ereated-between Slavery and Kansas, they heve all been prostrated. The solemn compact which the North and South had made, which all parties and all Sections had respect. ed, which thirty years had sanctified, was first repudiated. Outrage. mur der, civil war, have all been invols.ed to crush the will of the people of Kansas, and force Slavery upon that Territory against their wishes. ' They have done their work. Four-fiflio of the Free- State settlers of ;bat beautiful mien have been rouniered, imp! isoned, or driven into e3tile. Their leaders— r abe men to 'whom they Woked for guidUnce and support in their 'efforts trierect a Government upon the basis of Freedom —have been indicted for treasasi and MEN=t!I=MMI are tenants . of theAfpgeiins_orplafwal-; power. Ilieirlietil!ee have been boiai ed—theit- cattle- .stulen-- - rithelC crops Oestroyed... Feee speeeh4—t4e irf alsen4ling and petitioning Ehr dresis of been deni ed tliem...lunted like wild beasts by -the ruffian horde- who have invaded - the-. Territory, they have been driven -to seek. shelter elsewhere, and are now fugitives- throughout" tip 'teiiiTtli dud' breadth or the Isletheia States. All this.has been •accomplished lry the .direct aid and countenance of the PaEStinriT of the United States. ,And now Teems and DJITGt..ts, thafring leaders in this great enespiracy, step in to place in his hands the power to finish. the work he.hasso %veil begun. Their bill, crowded with indecent haste .through the Senate on Thin sday mor ning last, empowers the President to name Pal: CommtsstoNetts who are to have absolute and irresponsible power in the affairs ofthis deemed Territory : —and one of the acts they are required to perform is to record the names of those "in the Territory at the present time, acid to confer upon them, and upon them alone, the right to vote for delegates to form a State Constitation. , Just at the preCisci moment when the Prise- State settlers have been driven oat— when not one in Ike of them is there to claim his right--when those who ternaie are without leadors, ,without organization, without food,—and when the Territory lies, unresisting in the hands of its Missouri conquerors, the occasion is seized to confer upon its inhabitants the right of saying whether Slavery shall exist within its borders ! The whola scope and purpose of this new bill is tofisten S.itz eery upon Kan sas. • Douglas, Toombs acid their abet tors have this in view. Th e y t i n n y; that their bill will accomplish this oh ject ; and that knowlodge.—the ceriain ty of producing that result--.has been their motive lor positing it through. It puts the Government anl the fitte of Kansas into the hands of President Pierce mid the Senate of the United States I—,stid no Man of cornmon sense can doubt their determination to carry Slavery into Kansas, at any, cost and at all hazards. W. Y. ROBERTS ON TOMIRS' 161173.1 S BILL, Ex-Goveruor Reeder, Gen. Lowry, Lieut. Gov. Robertl, and all the other prominent tree state men of'Kansas, have denounced roornb3' bill as a plan to subdue the people of Klansas, The Erc. Post of the. 11th, has an able letter from Mr. R. dissecting this bill, which closes ay folluws : 1 7 [1. - The entimeratioi of voters is fixed at a time when many of our citi zens have beet, driven from their Mimes and from the territory, gnu 'f'vlien an alined moh, , F ourebuked by gov'ern mem, has blockaded all the avenues to the.country, not only preveutiog the return of the few who- might be able and who might feel an inclination to return,frorri doing so, but rubbing and . driving back all now . emigrants from the free states who are seeking homes in the. territory. Thu-3 forcing. upon I the people a finality at a most inauspi cious time and proposing to establish the institutions of a state when the I country is under the government of-an armed and irresponsible moh, \Wilt a mockery - of popular rights! And what a fraud upon a people who weee induced to emigrate to the territory. under. a pledp from the 4overumeot that they should he left n• perpctly free to establish their own institutions." VIII. In adition to, this,tho bill, as far as it is intended " authorize the . people of the territory of - Kansas to form a constitution and state govern ment," is gratuitous. We have asked for no such authority. We contend as democrats, that we have authority whenever a makirity of the people may so determine to call a convention, form a constitution and, state g warn, meat, and to apply for admission into the Union as .a free and sovereign state. We hold that the people are better judges of when this shall he dune, than Congress can be, and that to judge of, and to do this is one of the rights expressly reserved to the people by the constitution of the United States, and therefore, we have. not asked of Congress au authority that expressly bclo.lgs to us under the constitntion ; but what we do ask, is, that - Congress should fulfill all the requirements of the constitution and extend over us the protecting hand of the. national government. - We ask of Congress no impossibili ties—nor unconstitutional intermed tiling with our domestic affairs. Con gress cannot " give us' bachour dead," but it can wipe out a legislative. gov ernment established by fraud and vio lence, and institute another that shall reflect OK; Will of the people. It can I refund to our PeOple all the losses and', &images that 'they' have sustained by reason of this fraud, and restore and.se cure to them tvhat is more valuable than gold, and sweeter than life, 4efrcg enjoyment of all their political rights as American citizens. We 'ask a nation's disapprobation of a fraud unparalleled in the .history-of the disgrapeful\act, and let.the idstory of it go clo w n to • puiterity with a nation's condemnation Indelibly engraved upon its forehead. Let Congress, in . the place of re pealing certain laws of the territories ilelislatureel.lecause oftheiririlterott Iffets, set them all aside beiiiirise of - the inhere* defects in-the Power that ; them. Let•this be done', tail thu while ,subject is Osamu) Congas' 4, the wiring of the people may be redressed,. their constitutional' rights restored, and peace restored to the country and-to the terriory, the constitution itself vitdicater),. the theory Dr nunAnterfa-- encesaved , The great principles -of popular Sovereignty and self-govern ment- re-established; au utrinitTgated fraudUPoittic.saered ballot-lioyibiand ed with marked- disapprobation, the character of our free institutions pre served, untarnished, the confidence of . the. ,people in -the perpetuity and strength of free government stimulated and confirmed, and the bonds of the . Union strengthened and established 'Upon the real of eternal justice ; but refits° to do this, dn d all there propu- , sitions are reversed. If -the bill was designed to eflect. these objects it will most certainly fail of its purpose, but on the ()thet hand tend most directly to Ow reverse of all theSe desireable results, and therefore, filially, as a democrat, a citizen and friend of_ Kan3as, one who loves the Union, and the harmony and peace of all sec tions o f thacountry, I must must earnestly protest ag.tinst its passage into a law. .Very truly, &c., Squatter - • raigat7 AtuaiJas.l ft; i:e Originator. The Investigation into Kansas affairs by the Congressional Committee, has disclosed such a State of fraud and out rage,ashas 'alarmed the Slavic Power at Washington. Hence the backing dowo of 5, dater Douglas from the position that Kansas must contain 92,500 inhabitants, before being admit ted. He now cenc,.;des that the Ter- ritory may become a State with the present populatioo, So that there can be no objection t.) her immediate ad mission under .the Topeka Constitu tion, except that that Constitution is based on the Declaration of Indepen dence aid secures freedom to all its 'inhabitants. We defy the must Vigen irms Buchanan man to punt out any ! other reason, that stadds in the way 1 of the Senate's agreeing with the house to admit Kansas at IMCC. But we desire, now to call attention to the proceedings held in the Senate, when Toombs' bill was under con sideration.• It is thus reported by the Washington Mr. Greyer moved to amend the by addi•ig the followin : N o law shall be made, or have force or effect in said territory which shall require a test oath or oaths to support n s. act of Congress or other legisla tive tlet: as a qualification air an: , civil office or vublie trust, or for any em ployment or profesion, or to serve as a juror, or to vote .at an election, or w hich s h a ll impose any tax upon, or. condition to the exercise of the right of suffrage by any qualified voter, or which shall restrain or prohibit the free di SCU 3ion of any law or subject of legislation in the said territory, or the ' free exiiression - of opinion thereon by the people_ of the said tellitin "A long debate ensued on this a mendment in which the question Of 'squatter sovereignty' was very fully discussed, and also the question wheth er Congress ought to interfere in the manlier proposed, after having left the people to settle their own affairs in their own way. "Mr. Cass said that some of the - acts passed by the legislative assembly of Ktvoits ware disgraceful to the toga in which We live. H itv could the peo ple pass lawsin a proper manner un less they had the right of free diens shin bill "Tile question being taken on the amendment, it was agreed to—yeas 40, nays 3 Our readers will bear in mind that it was for refusing. to obey these enact- 1 ments I'disgraceful to the age in which wa live" that ft•phinson, Brown Jenk ins and others were indicted for HitZt Treason and thrown into prison. : The Senate have repealed some of their disgraceful laws, but they left the virgin's in prison. They have wait ed till their laws should imprison or drive. away every prominent Free State man, then they repeal them, leaving all their evil effects in full force. Will the Northern freemen sustain a party which thus mocks at justice and honor 1 The New York Evening Post com ments on this•actioa of Cass and his associates as follows : N.Jur, it is clear that . if Congress can restrain the legislature of the territory from passing lawsto limit the freedom of discussion, it may • by the same au thority restrain it from passing laws derogatory to personal freedom. If it may provide for the free expression of • o pinion in thq territory, • it may pro vide Tor the freedom of labc r ; if it may declare that nq marl shall he hindered from voting by any test, it may declare what is pf far greater importance IP "iitieStien 6 - filberty, that no man shall its bought anl .sold ; if it may proyide all frailest - the lesser infractions of .the • ,great principle of freedom, it may by a stronger reason provide against the greater: To say that there shall bo no slavery in Kansas is no _greater stretch of autbority in tho fede.rallay erument, than to say that there shall. be cession, and is the asserti4ti of itqf re important maxim of_druman zightsr We must conclude that Mr.. Gass is as great a hypocrite as the 'rest of his associates in the work or irriptiang slavery upon - Kansas:" .We wish we could think him sincere in Ms.tkttach= meat to the idea that the early ssittlere• of a territory "have -the Tien to rep- I. late their own institutitms, without respect to the rest • of_tlfeArtiltin but he.will not let uq, and we give hyrr i up. Popular Sovereignty i 3 •11. — plaustgre, well-sounding" phrase, inventect-'aria employed to get the Nebraika 14 . 11 through Congress. and now, after it ha"3set ved rts . pnepose, even the -in ventor spurns it and casts it aside. For the sake of appearances, he has held to it a little lon g er than the,rest. but the moment it bec , rinea , R 3 ' Con.. venient to renounce it as it , was origi nally to employ it. it is renounced without a-scraple. W. Y. ituneaTs. “Fnestosr ancl , Fnmealt7 19 the in scription on the banner . ung.Plt the 'Republicans take the field: • , • .'Bucitern.v: and Bordei Itzdfaxism7 is inscribed on tlie Aio of our pro . - shtvery opponents. . - . The undersigned citizen s of assembled without regard - to pait po 'itical differences and divisions, believ ing-that “Facenost• NA miN.u. an Sfaecry sectioaal; and being appesisd to the repeal of Eno Missouri C3.n?r0 7 2 mice and the extension of Slavery into: territory consecrated to freedom by. that suletaa compact of our fathers; to th‘s.p dicy of the present fadsral ad ministration, a; emoudied in the Cirt clisa . ti Platform and endirsed by James Buchana.i ; and sit favor of the-admis sion wiz!! het free Stake Con.: stitution ; of tiwrprob iuitina of Slavery a.id Polygamy in the terlitories; - 61 tnaintaining the integrity of the Con stitution-, the 'rights of the States, arid the preservation of the Union, , gin 0r..- cler.to form a more perfect union, es= tablish justice, insure domestic tran ; quility, provide fur the common de:- lease, pro u.ne tae general welfare, and secure the bleisingi of liberty to unr• selves acid pUster:ty, " by Vita -election ofJoitg C. F k tEsl3Nr to the Presiden cy, and Wita.t.tst L. DAyr:,N, to the PresidJacy.of the United States, liere:)y alyt, as-our Declaration of Pi inci pies, the Platform of the Phil adelphia Convention, and eiiablish this Constitutitin for the "Fremont Club of -" - "ft, ~ DECLIRATLOS 1.12." L3iiiCIPL:I3 CONSTITUTION'. ARTICLE 1. Tile tide. of this shall be Tun FREMOI , IT CLUB UP, ..-litrieLE 2. The object of this Asso c. iati4i, s!iall be to aid in the election uf.l'asx.isr and DmeroN, by the di3-. suinination 4)olitical information a mong the peolite, and by all Other lion ortinie.meatis calculated to advance tho gloriou3 cause of "FttENI43IT and FaBe.- u'osl: ARTICLE 3. Any legal voter of may become a un,:mber of this Associ ation by subscribing to its. Constitution and Doclaration of Principles. AIITICLE 4. Tile officers of this Asso ciation slits!' be a President, Vice Pres ident a Recording Secretary, Cut res ponding Secretary, and Treasurer.. ARTICLE 5. Tut: - stated meetings of this Club shall be held on Special meetings m.ly be held at suc h o ther times as may be designa ted uy the Prezideut u-a tall inserted iu the papers Sarin able to the cause. Ma. 13unt-INGANII's SPCECIL is said to have conquered a peace. The firm tone iniintallied by Goneral Wilson and the Northern Senators and .Rep re-zon:..tives generally, has contribu ted to- this result: - - .Butler, Brooks arid Kitt roar as gently as. Sucking doves. South Cdrotina has sent on au its whips, canes and paddles, so that until a new supply is received tram Northern. -artisans, her slaves must, to a great extant, remain unflog ged but no use has yet been made 91 tnein, tilling-1i the provocations havo been remarkably frequ . eitt., geghaps these' quiet dines hoWever. will trot la .t. Northern men are on their guard lust : now, and if Wilson and Burlingame allow themselves to be. caugnt with . their legs under their deslS, the chiv alry. may make au onset with pistols and' bludgeons, and the:Sumner out rage be repeated. We, however,. at- IA tome the lull to the nomination-of if,elnurlt, and to the uumiStakable , signs that the people of the. Neitharfs -about 'to elect him. This is the rea son why the white feather is, exhil?4, ed. so plainly.--Baton Telegraph.