The people's journal. (Coudersport, Pa.) 1850-1857, July 24, 1856, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE JOITR.NA.
JOHN N. MANN EDITO
liorziLlig jut, .24,1556
M
.Reptiblicala Nomin.ation.
FOA PRISIDSNT
mum C. rßpaoprr,
=ill
OF CALI;;ORNIA.
Foci vicz pi ! . r.sic.KN : r.
WILLIfiT Li DAYTON
OF IiEIV JEIISi.Y
FOR CANAL a1:,IMIS.110b LR.
Thomas. E. Cochran,
(p iCnK CcVNTY
„ FOR ArII/TOR at:SET:Ur.
Varwin Phelps,
•OF ARMSTRONG CO.
TOR lIURVLIOR. 6411 ii RkL.
Bartholomew Laporte!
OF BILtDioRD CO
,EXPtrIILICAN COUNTY CONVENTION.
Ir. obetliencettran understanding of
the County Execusive Committee, a
Dplegate•Republicati County Conven
tion
will . be held at the Court House,
in the . borough of Cuudeisport, on
Thursday, the 7th day of Augu s t next,
at 2 o'clock, P.M. for the purpose of
tommatincr candidates to fill the vari
ous to be supported at
the ensuing .st~te ,election. Each
Toviiship is earnestly solicited to send
throe delegates to said Convention.—
All the members of the COunty Exec
utive Committee; are requseted to
be in attendance, at :.aid Convention,
thole be:tng important business fi;r
theni to transact at that time. •
ISAAC" BElso
Ch'n. of th? Co. Executive Committee
July 1.06.
NOTICE
_ .
The Electors of Allegany township
who arc opposed to the aggres.don of
the slaye Power, and in favor of pro
hibiting slavery in all the National
Territoiie3, aro requested to meet at
theßaymand Selloolrhouse on 4 . ;'riday,
Auguz , t bit, at four o'clock. P. 4,, fur
the purpose of choosing Delegates to
the County- Convention, to nominate
County Officers, and tin niact such oth
er business as may bo necessary.
R. W. BENTOrf,
iSext, a the Republican Assogiation
MEETING LT raE BAKER SCHOOL HOUSE
Jotfrom : I would like to haN'e
you give 'Notice by way of the Jour
nal that,thero will be a meeting of the
.llehrtM Fremont Club, at the Baker
Hotise in Hebron . , on Frieav,
the lint slay of August, at 2 o'clock, at
-whicis time there will 'be speaking
and _6oging. .isaaC Benson, Esq, will
lie present, and we itivito the attend
ance of all who are wide awake in the
cause of Freedom, and those who are
Elfd we give a second and a special in
vi; anon hoping by their attendance they
may be awakened, and take hold and
help clt.ar the way for free soil, free
gam, froa speecl-, and Fremont.
A gEmberi ()r TUE CLUB.
are several articles of
. •
greivinterest on the outside this week.
Amnng there is the letter of Col. Fre
moot, accepting the Republican nomi
nation to the Presidency. Every
in "nut ci slave to party, will read
..this letter with increasing respect for
the author.
rr There is-a letter from ,u Ken
tudtinn, oo the outside, whichtvill su
fest . ; the cheek °revery Buchanan man
in th 6 free States, r.ho is not . the
I"
ject s nye ofthe oligarchy.
11.1 (5 free State Legislature: of
.Ir-etnrian aspernblerVai ropha on the ,
• - 4th of-Jiity k but was dispersed by tire
,arniypf tbo . ,lruiteci
. t . tafes acting by
'ortitr of; the Presi4ent; Whar:•authori
)ty had the _President. for exUrting
. 4.liia.Daspotic -.Power? For a full
. etaternant of . this important question,
bee article from the ~eq.:Po.ll on' first
page; : . •
OZ7' The.reseletion to' expel Bully
j3;C:ksfassault' on Senator .
Sumntr,'sxd strimighettitivite . ma the
1 ltb inst. Fer.expulsion 121; against
...xpult•ion 95. 'As it requires a two
third vote to expel a member. the
twoolution failed. but the majority
was,3o strong, .at yrou.s. : mmeu.ake- I-
.‘h d o A tchison, Stringfellow;
ly
resigned. lie 34 day, : Kitt of I Bully Brotiki, and all that class of:poli-
SoathVarolina, was censured by 10 ticians'siiP - Port Tames Buchanan? Be
majority for acting as the accomplice cause he lias- ceased to be Jame
of !Looks, and he reigned. Solliere• BuUliatian; avid is now only the candi
'die.i.Viti-IWcrn:litifffaifi leth date of the Slave Power. - -Because...4ls
grass, and the Buchanan, _ party is 'administration would Only-be a con - tin
.weakene.d tAVii India - R . o4'4'e: But in nation of Pierce's.
these votes, and iti'tbe di'scussinti pre
ceding them, only one Buchanan man
took the side of law against the Blud
geon. All the rest justified Brooks' at
tempt to force the North to silence.—
And this is the 'position of the -Buchan
'an party. It 'sustains Brooks and
Border Ruffianism, in congress and
out of it,
Ca'Col. Lane has again Made his
uppearance in Kansas. . Will Judge
Lccompie have him arrested?.
Our private letters from the
Southern and South Eastern part- of
the State, are more, encouraging • even
than the Newspapers' accounts. In
; view of all that we hear and see, we
have no doubt of the result in • Penn
sylvania or the Nation.: Fremont will
get a majority in this State,' and will
be inaugurated 'President
.of the Uni
ted States on the 4th of Match next, if
he lives till that day.
Cr He that ceases to oppose slave
ry, or to aim at its extirpation, is not
a true Mothodi.t—does not live up to
the Disciplinary standard. The Dill•
cipline hied. brat to aim at extirpation.
—Northern Christian Advocate and
Journal.
We should like to hoar a man show
bow ho is opposing slavery, or aim
ing at its extir ration, when he supports
Buchanan, and defends the Border
Rutrtabs. - Opposing the delivery o f
auti-slavery Lectures, is another viola
ti;M of the above rule we shalt wait to
hear explained.
1 - " Three river and harbor improve
nient bills have been passed over the
veto of Presideut - Pierce. Thus the
Buchanan men • are turning • their
batiks on their internai improvement
principles, as well as on the Auctrine
of squatter sovereignty; So it goo.
A few years ago, tney were all in•fav9r
td the %Vltava proviso. Then, at the
instance of'James Buchanan, his party
in this State abandoned the Walnut
proviSo, and advocated the extension
uf the Missouri Corr ptotnise line to
the Pacific Ocean. Then • they dis
covered that the 'Missouri Con pro
misewas uncOhstitutional, and %vent
for its repeal ; . and now they abandon
the priAciple which they . offerred as a
justiilCstion for this repeal. No wonder
all men of principle abandon such a
party.
GPThe course of the - Hon. J. J.
Pearce, member of Congress from this
District, has given great satisfaction to
the anti-Nebraska Moe of this County.
Attentive to his duties, and al:cays
on the side or Freedom and Justice,
his friends are delighted, and his op
ponents are silenced. We hope there
is good sense enough in the District
to return him to a post .he has so
worthily filled.
Er All persons in Coudersport in .
favor of securing freedom in Kansas,
and of restoring the Government to
the • control of the people, as adminis
tered by Washington and Jefferson,
are requested to- - meet at the Hall of
the Suns of TemperanCe this (Thurs.
day)•evening at 8 o'nlunit fur the pur
pose of orffauizing for the .iearnpaign.
riP• The voters of Genesee° town.
township in favor of Freedom and . Fre. ,
moot, will meet at the red.Schoel-house .
at Genesee° Forks,:on •Saturday, Aug.
2nd, at 6.o'clock, P. to elect dole.
'gates to the-Reptiblican•Couoty Con
tention. Jtis ftpt....ctetithat Judge Lew
is will attend; and address the meeting..
L There •was a good 'meeting - at,
Ellisburg on Monday evening• last, to
listeh to Mr. Hugh Young as he rela-.
ted the wrongs of Kansas. - ThereTwai
a large audienee, and all but 9ne or
tWe 'uneasy wen liStenod 'attentively.
Our friends in -Genessee are wide
-isivalcrl.' Mr: Yiurig 'started thcv next
morning far• Xens'ai,
-riff, We learnfrom : reliable, }o forma- ;
thin tha✓Toga Couutyis peavly ; uuan.:
imousliir Freedom & Fremont. Protri:
inent men who never bolted a party
ticket, say the Cincinnati platform is
too much for them.
The communication of B. in
another column is most welcome. We
like its spirit, and respond most hearti
ly to its demand for. more meetings.
By all mean.; let there be more Meet
ings." Liberty grows on discussion.
Despotism only dreads it. But wo
dissent from our correspondent's good
opinion of the editors of the Nero York
Observer. We believe they have
closed .their eyes to the light, and are
deterthined to-serve slavery and slave
ry extension,. to the extent of their
ability: And what 15 someivhat strange,
we fear a number
.of its anti-Slavery
subscribers will continue to furnish
it aid and comfort-in its support of the
great curse of the country.
, L. F. Maynard, and
Mann, will address the pe : r i .)l6 of Rou
let at the Red iichool-house ou Friday
oveniag, An 4. 1, on the subject of
Freedom, Kaasas and its Wrong's, &c.
It is proposed
.to form a Freinont
Club at that time, and to transact
other. business in furtherance ofthe
cause, .
Coudersport Libraryllesting
The next Qiaiterly Meeting of this
association will be held on Saturday
the 2nd. day of Augu.t. next. Tue
huNitiess meeting will he held at the
Library room in the afternoon at two
o'clock, at which time a general ar.teri
daace of stoeltholders and those wil
li; g to 'eecome.sircb Is retinested.
Lithe ev'et.ing there will be a pub
lic meeting at the Coml. 11,mse, at
which time all are invited to attend
There. will he an address, the reading
r ,fa paper, and other literary exercia- .
es. We bore him - a ,full meeting arid
an interesting time.
If we had in Ulysses, Harrison,
and Bingham, as• faithful corresp4n
dents as we have in Sweden and Ho
mer, our paper would be improved,
and our labois very much lessened.
OrAticirewill. Reeder has been
indicted by Lecomoto's • GrandJury for
Treamr. - Was it in View of this
fact that tho Cincinnati Convention re- -
solved aizainst inciting to treas.m and
armed :resistance to law in the Terri
tories ?" In case of Buchanan's elec
dem, (a supposition which groWs every
day more improbable) would his parti
hang Reeder ..for honorable conduct d?
or is he to be cowed into the support
of Buchanan with thfi promise 'of a
pardon in case of such support.? .
. These are questions which we sliquM
like to have some honest anti-Neliras
ka democrat a;:sWer.
4nothor Virginian Banished from. the State
Some months aqo a 'Alr. Rey dare I
to speak against the extension of slave
ry at a public myeting in Eastern Vir
ginia. Ile was forth, ith compeilLl to
leave Oe,State.
There were five delegates from Vir
ginia to. the Philadelphia Republican
National Convention. Already one of
these, Joh!) C. Under7oodUt Clark C . o,
has been ci,tiLek, Avila his home - , and
property. •
At a large meeting held at Pied
mont Station, on tie d 2Gth. :of Sono, the
fnllowing• among othor,rosoiutions, Was .
adapted
_. •
Resolved, That. a com . mittee : lke ap-,
.
pointed to wait upon Mr. tilider wood
and inform !dab) the jiistfeeling's 'of
indignation' created by.. his' course :in
the Convention referred, to, together.
with his former .(reputed) cotp-ses in.
regard to the institution ofalayery, and
that they deem it 'jkist . and'advisEible
that be should leMie . the State as speedi
ly as he can find it in his `power's() to
do. . •••
Resolved, That Ehe Alexandria
Gazette, 4.loxaii ari a Sentinel,'
iu p4pers - guirerally, the Phlional In
telligencer and Bileiorwe: Sun are re: ,
Tio,ted to in.ert , the•above
orjustaco ti) the s:iti4nirrof .our. State.
Rdar...SnsigteTntg,Cha' n .'
•'0 e . w . il4 S. nay . ; `Seereihri. '
, In the - spirit,..of this yesolution
Underwood was •inforrnad 'that fio
would nut - le perruitted :rerriai4
Lniger in Virginia, and tte wis"corn
pelled'to flee.
Thus we.see force is everywhere the
argument of the Slave Power. Force
in Kansas, away
the'tTee State force in Missouri,.
toraesttqe , e-very-paper and.every Irian
that_says - a word against the outrages
;of the Ruffians; . force in. the Senate
Chamber,-LO .sile.tice, the ad.vocates_of
'freedom; andforee in eyery.S4ve State;
to compel ., obedience.to the mandates
of slavery, Tflic . Cincinnati Conven
tion was chiefly made .up of mon who
advocate or defend this :system of
foree, and the platform adopted is erg
tirely satisfactory to the Brookses,
Atchisons, Striugfellows and Singletons
who have inaugurated the'era of force.
The nominee of the Cincinnati Conven -
tion says he is no longer James Buchan -
an, (a good reason for abandoning the
principles of his harvest-home letter,)
but the embinliment of the platform.
He therefore gives countenance to and
supports the system afbrce which has
been planned fur , the suppression of
freedom.. Well might Jefferson be
alarmed at the corrupting influence of
Slavery. ,
FREMONT A SLAVE HOLDER
This is the last and silliest falsehood,
which has beau startedbythe frighten.
ed supporters of Buchanan. We 11/I
-ersta tul there is an old hunker is
Roulet Town Ship, so hard pushed for
a reason for his co.trrse that he says he
shaft support Buchanan, becausePre
merit is a slave holder.
. Now this ma.] knows he is not telling
the truth, for Breckrenridge,the can
didate for Vico Presidout - aq the ticket.
With . Buchanan, is 04(.1.4 the largest
and must obaoxiou 3 slave ill all
Kentucky. So that wiluevqr vote:: far
Buchanan will also
. vote forßrec4tezi- .
ridge, the s!aveholde,r, and every Irvin
with two ideas iu his head kuowi this.
• . But John C. Fremont, thou.Th raked
in the midst ufSlavery, is not now, and
never was the owner of a slave. So
has said every man acquainted with his
circumstances that ;las spoken•on .this
subject. We quote a single witness.
Senator Hamlin in a speech at Worces
ter, said :
. •
"John C. Fremont is an anti-slavery man,
and has aiway3 been one froth his boyhood.
Anhough.a.rave of Georgia. and bronght up
iq Sou.h Carolina, in spite of his early associ
ations, he was ever for e'reedom. When em
barking on his ‘ves.ern tour, he was asked if
it was nut his in cuttort to purchase a stave as
a domestic for his wife. Ilia reply Ans, '
never awned one dollar in human flesh ; and
whi:e reason holds its sway in my brain, I
never ! I love my wife with the molt
ardent affection, but that wile must toil with•
her own hands, rather than own the first (toi
l:l'r in litiman fie.th r' From a man thus educa
ted, and thus true to our princm.es, we live
the highest assurance th it with him at the helm
of the government, if he can prevent it, nut
one inch shall slavery be extended over the'
National Territory."
ANARCHY IN CALIFOIINLL
Lynch Law hi' one section of the
country, very naturally pi oducesit in
another. The violence of the Mis
sou'rians in-Marching an army i.lto Kan
.sas for the'rpurposo of controlling th 6,
elections in that Territory will be'ar
abundance of fruit in other Sta . tes and
TervitoiieS. 'Hence we were not sur
prised to hear that murders and vie
fence had increased in California and
Oregon to a fearful extent: • Crinies
were committed in California with iM
punity., just as they have been in Kan
sas. The murder of an editor in San
Vrancisco so exasperated the people
that they threw otTall restraints of
seized the murderer and 'hung
him. -Then they , appointed a commit
tee of vigilance who control the whole
administration of justice. This is a sad
state of afiltirsand it becomes the peo
ple to inquire into its cause.
Upon this subject the National Era
holds . , the .following . • emphatical
guage r which.we, believe is the exact
tiuttt : • • •
•
" has happened in Ca!ifornia, has
marked, to - a certain exAnt, the bikorrof
Kansas, ante tin iy..yet : borreenac,ed mother
ioealiti s; audin this connection we 'Must ho;d.
the Ores:tent ration to fetritil "respensi-:
hiaty. .It is noi_oriotl3,that the men in Ca.ifor
nia who have'cautriburcd largely to bringing
rdiont a' condition of things so ill , o4irati:e as to
.require in tha jukonent of. the People there„
the remedial agency of Revolution, are aPpoin
tees of President Pierce, and managers. of the
Party ratstaunug hint. 11 . is patronage there, is.
in been bestowed on itibicruptilotti
and violent Hien who have abused official sta
tion:to the .worst purposes. In Missouri and
Kansas, as we all know, offiCes Were take;.
,away .from what is caned. , the fle.thon Party
recognized as opposed to ai, atte.oap . ts :o ye
the Shivery coestien fur tianitieition pnrpose q - ,
and given to theA.chisea p4tv.syhjele h eibeen
at he bottoirkof ail the forays on Kansas and
its Peopm, and IS in.td.y bent on the 'propagt-,
dolt aC staved, even at the price of it tsunion.
It . is the character of the men Whom the Presi;
den: has appointed initialises, and their ec,.s,
Which .httNe driv,en the abused fetters to the
necessity of ae:Pdefehaii, - and ltiVoffea the
Territory ill•dnaruhy. and If leo d. . ; :
TEE 1 131AUPEDE nr.iwEarzur
VABIA
'The defection of Hon. C. B. Cut:tis,
G. \V. Scofield, and Chapin Hall, from
the Buchanan ranks in Warren, has so
•
inSpitad of Frempai,'i and
, discottragel those of Buchanan, , thati
abanaeuedino
Cinciymti moraines.
The folle,‘Ving froze the grie Gazette,
shows . that tee stampede 'from the
—_,„
tional,.pro7alwirery candidate is quite
as i)yomisittgin Erie
.. and Crawford'
as in Narree :
If, as'tlf.'i'osscrscr charger; the 'election in
Erie County is proveineelrom going by de
fault only by reason of the " desertion from
the Democratic ranks of a few uneasy spirits
hero in this. City;"' why 'is it that townships
totally beyond the reach of influences capable
of being brought to be.ir from circles in this.
qu iner, are almost un tnimons for Fntmoxr
and Devrax . t flow happens it that this is
the prevalent s . tate of feeling 41 spring - tio2,
•Cormeint, trd, Fairview, 3lc'Keatt, %Water
ford, Norrii-Eastieto? The FREMONT element
is sweepiug every thing before it in these :own
ships, and cc. , rtaiuly it will not be insisted that
the above referred to influences Live therria
created and vitalized it. -So of Crawford
County. The &one state offeeihigno:orious-*
ly prevails there, in entire independence:of
" influences" from this iptaner. Dinocrste
in Erie and about Erie, arc supponing Fat:-
stosrminfully ; but the charge oldie Ojscrcer,
in the sense conveyed, is absurd.
In another article in the same paper,
the Gazette, which by the way i§ the
organ of the old lino whips of Erie,
says, if any ot,e will furnish the name
of an old line .whig who is going for
Buchanan,- it will be taken as a favor.
That Meeting paraded in the hunker
press, must:have been a" dark lantern"
coneern,if the orb to of the party, is
ignorant of th©,
_names in attendance•
The ".black flag" falsehoods will do
the business fhr. you, if you will only
get up enough of them.
Gor..Rer.oen Am So!SANTOS, PA.—A letter
from Scranion, dated Saturday, July 12:h says:
Gov. Reeder unexpectedly arrived here last
evening, on his way home from flutfalo to
Easton. An umpromm time:dog was got . up,
wi any puhished notices wh ttever. An
audience of beYeratitundred soon assemb:ed
to hear fro:u an eye wimess :he story of Kan,
wrongs. Gov. Reeder, in a most crec..
Live speech of an lour and a h rf,. rapid.y
ske.6ted Ma his ory of .he curving ou: of the
'threw;, •We will subdue you." The govern
or did no: ind.cam his preference for the
Pre....lency, excel), in denouocing ilia precut
Adminis,r,...ion and. its :enders in the inkirtnt
terms us crimes deserve. From the w ho•e
tenor of his re ti irks, he cannon, as some have
assarm d, support Buchanan.
PLUNDERING ELLIQRANTi.
FORT LEAVE WORTH, July 3, 1856.
Eorron.o? Missnuat D eatoca.tT ; •
.You will hays various and conflict
ing stones of the - robbery committed -
yesterday oil a number of K. - visas
igrants, at LeavenWoith City,. and ba-:
ing ono of the company, I will give
an account of what actually took place.
The emigrants made no show of
arms, nor did they boast of what they
would 'do, but left the boat quietly
and engaged a team to take their goods
to Mr. Cracken's warehouse, supposihg
that tiley. would bo safe till we could
hire teams to convey them and us b . ick
into the country,. where it was our de
sign to found a settlement• But be•
fore we Could get our provisions-and
implements of husbandry into the ware
house it was taken possession of by-a
band of marauders with United States
muskets, supported' by a large crowd
of Smth Carolinians and Georgians,
all armed with revolvers arid bowie
knives, while at the same time linn'di
of Men armed as tile re 0,
el II Inent arm Were parad
streets. We demanded. their autamity
for the proCeediuri -' s, and were answer
ed, they were not here to answer riu-s-
Re.sistanco was seen to be
worse t'tau folly, and Our work of rifling
our baggage began. Trunks were all
opened, and Oven carpet sacks, some
of them not more than fifteen inches
long, were opened, as they said, for
•SharWs rifles.
Our provision and dry gonils•bn:;es
were broken with axe; and hatchets.
Apart from the indignity offered os
as free Atrrnicati citizens, and our loss,
of more than. one thousand dollars
worth of . ptivate, not public pioperty,
by the hands of these robbers. It was
really - amusing - to see iherri - examine a
can of tea' for a concealed Sharp's ri-
After•they had got -illthey want
ed, not _excepting at least one pocket
• book. taken from the pocket of one of
our men, they guarded us hi the ware
house while armngemsids could. he
made to return us tit .Col. Russell's
warehouse,. to ..exarnine our persons,
and those who had not previously and
did not, 'during the reineVal, make
their. - 'escape,' were examined at • said
warehouse, ..and . then put aboard._.a.
downward boat and sent back to St.
Louis. I haira-not-IMen informed wheth
er their trunks were given them or nut.
_The trunk - belonging w the writer,
filled with dirty clothes and two cloth.
coats, was stolen, and I do not yet know
how many others fared in the sane Way*
They report the capture 'of seventy
guns. The regulators can lio .as well
as plunder. Twenty-three guns Wcre .
WO` had; aid they did not get all
- the slides* .for -even - so many.. These_
Men are- ha dens. around Leavenworth
.city,. and
_swarm out at the. arrival of
.every, upwar,d,.bound . ' beat, and if a
body of troops sight they
squat and hide;*'till••tite.troop leave;
and Iliett!cotitiOue their depredations.
• • t!:, OTTA*4-..
We take the atm° 4rota alaper
publisher iii a Slave State, and yet
there are men who still affect to doubt
that any outrages have been commit-
•
'~ ~5
ted.
James Baeh r anan could pot a atop to
ihedepiratical Proceeding s, if he would:
ty is-in the ascendant in the
National Government • wad in the
State of Misseuri. If he would oblil
ititimateto his friends at Washington
and in .I .l.lrssriari, dia he disapthilves — . ,
of the embargo of the - Missouri
and request his friends-to discontinua.:
it', peace would lat)11. he
_restored
But he does not say this now; and the
same weakness - that controls him
now would control him if- he was
President of Ine o.iited States. _
DIET THBOWSES.
Some years a4o the Journal of Com
merce threatened- that if clergymen
meddled thle question their brat:k
eno - es would be rolled ! —N. Ir..
Ledependent.
•
If ever a prediction was verified,
that has been. ,Of course a political
parson can't see his, own on hie
own back, but other people can ; and
'they see the dirt on it, half an inch
deep.—Journal of annmerce. -• -
" Then they hied them in another
place called Mount Innocence, and.
there they saw a _man clothed all in
white ; and two men, • Prejadice and
111-Will,.continually casting dirt upon
him.' NOW behold..the dirt. whatso
ever they cast at him would in a little
time .fall off. again, and his garment
would be pleat'a.3 into dirt had been.
cast thereat.
"Then said the Pilgrim, What'
means. this l' The she plierds .answer
ed, ' Thi3 is to how the innocency of
his life: - Now such as,throw dirt at
him are such as. hate his well-doing,.
but as you See, the dirt will not stick
upon his clor4 e 3; so it will be with:
him who lives innociMtly in the world ;•
whoever they be that 'would make such,
men dirty they labor in vain ; tur God.
by that a little time is spent, will cause •
that their innocency shall break fiirth
as the light, and their righteou-iness as;
the noon day.' "-- 7 Pilgrigi's Prozrets
• Hr. is my .M;.‘t - !—Bik:hanan wears
the ani4las bia.id. En a speocu at
New York. Stephen A. said :
B•it. 'my friendr, .1 fi id that these
Black Republican murderers and Black
Ropnblican newspapers, have all be
gun crocodile sears [lau;mter
and cheers] over mine ()Ivo humble late
beeatise they midu a Douglas platform
and put Buchanan on u. [Cheers.] I
wish. to, call attention. to a point for a
moment . , and that is whether it is nit
a Buchanan platform a.; well 119
[Cheers.] Tney say it is a D mg
las, because it endorsed every. position
that I have
talon, not only upon tho
al ivory queition, and Kansas acid Ne
braska, but the foreizu [Cheery.]
That is true; and because it ir true, 1
stand• with heart and soul ready•to do
vote all my energies to the success of
the platform and th . e candidate. [[m
mense cheers. Three cheers for D
km] Now, my friends, if you will
for`ao iu.rset for a brie. hi itori
cal account, I snow you that 13./etia r
ail and reystilf have tic stwcii•al years
back—ev 3r since [ came into public
life—held the same position on the
slisVery question from beginning to
end."
. . . .
And yet Democrats who go for Ba
ch:Blau, claim great credit because they
could not I elk!' Pierce or Douglas
atittga Q 4 i rf. : •
T 1 ibi_t:iJ.o . £IW3
The
M.Lssourt Democrat flai &ten so
much abused and traduced by the null-
Mars an.? Pierce office-hut a k r; i n thi s
State, for dthio.uncing thuse Kansas
territorial law's vitiative of free speacli
and imp Jsing WA oath.' and tax qualiti
catioas, as wail a.; other odious rest? ic
ti..-;us upon the right of suffrage, that
we feel - inclined to give these gentry
the benefit ()feed of their own forging.
Here aro the 'proceitlin•_ ; s ktricfpf
t h e Senate upon' the - , 8 3 of livg
las' new hill. Mr.. Gre j Jr, it wilt be
seen, asserts,_ by his amendment, th e .
"power of Coagresa" tci annul th o s c i
:and lezisiate ro , the- territory,
while. Douglas . himself is forced te•
knock' under and support the motion.
Gcn. Cass pronounces them "disgrace
ful to any age," the "whole demo-.
cratic party fdlow in his wake and re
pudiate the black - acts" with acorn
and' hissing.' We present the chalice,
on:bended knee to the Icanba4.• lava
with-Atchison at their - head, ai.d
eon-Intend it to their.tastes., ! Misseari
Democrat. •
"The time- 6 corny wen tikice is
treason 'to God and hnnianity. The.
great issue is upon .us : no man. can
evade it. It is anisiva that I, fie' The,
wo:2ld haire willingiy - warded pff ; but
that has uuw. beconte .
Meet it we must ; nobly -and liravely
if we can : if we cannot, .still we must
meet it." •
,
These iviirds were recently uttered
from the . pulpit by ai "earnest man.
Whn can say they are Wrung
.Tun Taus Issue," says the.Wash
ington---4Aion, ..is •:
-whether emigres s
7t.the - ,people
.of the Territory shall
determine the question of- slasiery in
-the Territories." - • •
_ • This is not so. The issue Is, wheth
er the .pe.ople
„of KallSa3.yr Missouri
sholideterminethe question of slavery
in that Torritory. -Tne' fortisse hay it
'shall not exist there.' ''l7tie 'latter say
•*: shall; and draw the inv4ver • and
owie knife to carry their resolves
into °Get. This is the issue—one
of the issues now pending before the
coo t ry.—Alton. Courier.