LI LETTER NMI HOR&CE 0113 ELY .Ihe-Dip:ction and Aunibitatpu of • ' Beef Bigler.. NO TUC 11011. WILLIAM BIOLER, U. S. SMITE: Z 4 *:.F qotne time pit, ,a .. 41 anon ymon. and utterly utindorseCl•string , of caltunni— : Rod mis4-eptesentationi, 0; t:tka "1 Abolitioni,4m . nl. friends t:f rest tr , 17 ,,, t 0i,y, and the American ,• has been gratuitously flooded . veer the cnentrv. I have been re po:ltedly'ase-t1 to put my foot on it, hut co . & so. as I do not deem u • llrmtniti sl,a:,ders worthy of zo much I.:,al.44eration. But a respected cler gyman., of your State, scuds me one of the tilree copies of this (I.:leethble c meern which he has just received it ~ter yout flank, i:'dicating that you engaged in a general di,tributiou o this fissile of lies thloughout your - Stale, or at least among her clergy- mmn. I pay; therefore, to you, the r~sPmt it !e indorser, a re.sr ect of which th naked and skulking libel was, and ie t;tierly u.iw.irthy, and Proceed to . expoe some of the more flagrant of it, t...!m:hoods : 1„ ••We wizen. and defy contradiction, that • ry mgalk:vion Vq• sting infidel doctrines uow a orgadi;4atton in favor of Fremont; end we avert alsb that all those desiring a dis ao:u:ion of the Uninq, are utterly co-operat ing with these organizatit:" .This is grossly 'able, Mr. Tiigler ! you know it. It 13 falsi., that even the haudinl of Northern . ippon Fremont, as I shall so m show ; but all these are in- ignificant in num -. . •• • berf and power when compared with :he Southern nullifiers and secession •t.,, every one hoqile to Fremont, and nearly all supporting Bachanan. In Caiuljna, those who desire and expec a &needy dissolution of the Pilion are a very large if not the lar ger ?arty ; they hold high stations and editinfluential journals_; one member of the Cabinet (Jeff. ,Davis) ran for Govet nor on the ticket of the "State Rights !' anti-Compromises-of-1850 p oty ; - and throughout the South there Ti a powerful interest in favor of dis solving the Union whenever they can lotigf.s,r rule it. You know how Bully 11[:oaks boasted in the House that he could have caused a civil war by merely raising his hand ; you have r. , ad his grave proposition that the South should march upon Washing 'ton and seize the Federal treasury 'll:id archives, in case Fremont should bo elected; before he can he inaugur s ed ;and you know that lieitt, Vise, roll other eminent Southern support • .= s of Buchanan, are habitn4ly indulz ti tt. in similar bluster. You .are j slan-_ d-ring a very largo portion of your f.•:low,citizehS, Mr. Bigler, and utter ly falsifying the record, in asserting that all the disunionist —or any coy-. eiderable portion of them—are found in the Fremont ranks. .1. Following in the same track, your libel proceeds to copy from the New - 1 - ,rk Standard of April 19th last, i f presenting it as •ia Fremont Aboli ti•uu organ," and speaking of it again es !'this advocate of Fremont, the Standard.'! That, sir, is a deliberate lie; No one can have copied from the Standard without knowing that it is of the Gariisonian non-voting school of Abolitionists, bitterly hostile to Cpl. remont and to the Republican party. t is as utterly averse to FremonCs election as you are, or as your Seces sionist alies at the South can well be . , 3. Your pamphlet proceeds to quote Flom the Boston Liberator, Garrison's paper—a paper that supports .b.:911 C. Fremonit.. This, air, is another black, blister : ing, falsehood. The Liberator sup ports no candidate for Federal office, being hostile to voting, to the Union, arid the Constitution, but especially hostile to FreMont and the Republi can party. Columns to this effect might lia:queteci from it, bUt_the fact is noturioirs among intelligent men. The Liberator %yin not oven support Gerritt Smith, and it nover supported . any Republican or Anti-Nebraska ticket: Yet the lie is repeated, and reitc,rate4, as if its author found a real j•leasure in'the simple act of lying. i 4. Passing'hy several-insignificant or irrelevant lies—among others that involved in calling . Wendell Phillips a •• oston fnfide' I; h ivhea he is au ortho dox•-•Pbristian, and then insinuating that he is a Supporter of Fremont, whtM fie . is his inffexible opponent-- I,proceed to the following: ;.The kiw York t'ribnee is the chief psrty mg: zi ortfiese infidel disnnionists. That jetty tut! h a ban the reservoir, for yeara of all the anti-religions ond revolutionary doc trines of Europeark.ultrais . ,soud destructive& It is controlled by .a corps, among whom yd.; notorious infidels.. It has opened its Colpumi tothe revolting doctrines of !Free - Love,' io Four:eristu and to the:tearely less timprous ,dograq of •Spifitualisui AU the wild, moil-. shoos; and onsurti theories of the day. Mehl . . ding .the erytaiity— and the ceratin and egnsetrient seat equality of htacks . and whites:, have found I:,vor tt 'is eight. It s th:s d tageruas . papee, Whose editor, ttornCe lv, has a.irs § ed .at ruhic meetings cif lizaeli.i cud whites in :he City of New Y ork..where 1.0.11 lied and the. Constitu ion h tre been le v.tted ; It is' he wh- ho. co-opei.ned will' the t.b. oe.c es 'of - Woman's /tights, in the smite wh re unsex d fern rtes have de:igh ed Ili Adressibg inohs awed' in slra ins of vulgar Tift.se,. sir, are lies— .gros.s, palpable lies—and you are their re sponsible propagator.. The Tribu.rie is the 'organ ofno;.itifidel disunionis - s." It has never been co 17. t oiled by ...po pulous infidels:! It never ;!opened it columns to the revoltiot , doctlines of 'Free Love,!!' except to .e: : :po.t.l,e, denounce and reprobate Otero. All tho."%vild, moustritus, and absurd the ies" which it has ever countenanced, are directly based on' that immortal assertion of geffet son ill the preamble to the Declaration of Independence that "All men are cleated equal, and endowed by their Creator with Fe!- mitt inalienable rights—that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happinee l s." Its editor 'quo ted at 110 public meetings of blacls and }'whites, where God and the .Ponstitu i tint buve been reyilety ntir 411)1111I1g like this ; and yoq r closing assertion about ',unseed fouder undressing m . )bs of men "in strains of yulgar lence" is only more sweepingly calurq- nious, more basely false, than the rest, I No such meetings ever occurred ; and j certainly nn editor .oftbe Tr;buqe ever "co , operated" with any such. That you or your scribe [who is said to be your Senatorial- Chaplqin, but I hope is notd should proceed to asset t that "Greeley's fonrism, free.love:sm, sptrtt ua'isnt are parts of that 'platform of which sectionalism is the soul," is but natural and consequent. What would he the profit of lying if you were not to bring your to market ? You know very little, yet you can hardly be so dull as not to know that this talk of "Greeley's free-loveism t spiritualism," &c., is the bisest kintj of lying- 7 -an appeal from the reason and conscience • f the Community to the prejudices of the ignorant and the credulity of the unwary. Mr. So tram. Bigler) you occupy a very exalted station, 'while I am a.pti• vate citizen, and both of us occasion • ally address out fellow citizens on the polities of the day with reference to the Presidential election. Wren Ido so, I generally read the platforms of: the three patties with relation to slave ry, and set fin th their noit.ts ofaccofd ance at:d of difference. 1 theh corn-. rare the doctrines-c f each patty, as thus defined and proclaimed by its l with those t f Washington, Jefierson, and our Revolutionary patriots, and with the action of Congress through- out the purer days of the Republic. •I ask those who hear the to_vote fur Fremoitt and against Buchanan, be cause of the position taken by them respectively on the great - issue of the day, .as Mr. Buchanatrti uly pronom.- ced it in his interview with Senator Albert G. Brown. I appeal to all who, have heard me to say whether I have or have not at any time personally assailed Mr. Buchanan or any of his supporters—n Nether I have or have not sought to divert attention from the great issues made up by the rival Na tional Conventions to' irrelevant and trivial' matters, or to the opinions of your candidate orids friends on any . q uestion not involved in the canvass. YO, sir, have chosen a different course ; we shall see how the People regard it : Up to this hour, I cannot hear that any' member of your party has ever printed the three platforms and the letters of acceptance of the rival candidates fun President for cin, culation among the voters of all par ties ; 1 have printed many thousands of these, and shall be hapry to supply you with them at cost. 11 . 4. you do not want them—you would carefully refrain from, distributing. if •yog had them ;'and . your fellow-partizans have repeatedly denied the fact- that the Ciricinnati convention unanimously indorsed the administration of Frank lin Pierce, and at first voted down a resolve favoring the Pacific Railroad =the yennsylvapiana going solid against it, and afterward voting for an ambiguous, non-committal expression of opinion in its. favor. . This day, there are handbills circn lated-in year - State, calling:on - the peo pie,ta iully for "Buchanan, Bceckip• ridge and free Kansas." just as they were called in -,'44 to struggle for "Polk; - Dallas and the Tura a '42." I observe one of the speal:::ws who '44 mailtained iu a public debate that POlk wat a better p:otec'tionist than Clay, now on. the stump demonstrating that Buchanan's election will more subserve the cause of freedom iu the lei ritoriei than would that of Freniont. Perhapf-, :qr. Bigler, such Dicks will win, as they have won a .e nowand pei haps they will not. [ bid you wel come to all that you can make by such a canvass, and remain, Yu!:rs, hitlignantly. lIOII.ACF. CiItEEET,Y THE JOURNAL• .11N 0„ S. Cot Eros! PA 31orning Oct 14, RepublicAn Nominations. • JOHN C. Pa.EDIONT - OF cm.ticrtsl4. FOll VICE PIIF.44DENT. VUILLIA.BI S:L. DAYTONI NE} JERSEY: ' severe c!f the .5.2111!!". Editor, 11 r. :Tun!, will be ample in:- cuse to our readers for the lack of ctij torial in this windier. fear tha . the readers of the Jwirnal_will i e de prived of the valulble service of gr. M. for several weeks, from the fact that his disease has taken the form Gi a ma lignant typhoid fever . , The Junior, however, :veil! d / the best he can to make our reader; forget the Aiellon to which the ,!1* tli,Serrior subjects them. GREELEY vs. BIGLER Beef Biglet has at last secured the., attenti:m and parlicAlar nut ice of liar= ace Greeley, (whose . letter we publish in another column,) and the notice is neither very complimentary nor un truthful. Greeley handles Bigler with out gloves and with sl rtrp.cirov , , hut n morel - M/0y than he deserves. When a Man (?) stoops to insinuations against the pet sonal character of a candidate for the highest office in the gift of a . free people, 'he should he rebuked in the most comP'ete manner, a la Greeley ; and we do not hesitate to assert that Horace hat spoken ;lie sertim.enti of at least two-thirdi . of all goui awl gent citizens of the United, States. We are rejoiced to, see the true position of .Mr.l3i - gler thus shown up—nut only in matters at issue between him and Mr. Greeley, but between him and a ma jority of the citizens of the Union ; as represented by the Republican party. Men who, for political effect, persist in confoun.ling the Republican with the ultra Abolition party, against the most, positive evidence to the contrary—: the open and avowed sentiments of each— differing as they- do, as ,widely as the prinCipip of Shamocracyand Darnoc racy-7can have but little respect for the intelligence of their fellow citizens either at the North or At the South: There is neither fitirness nor ingenuity' in the argument. if argument it may be called nor do we consider that it is re totted to with any other intention than to avoid the force of the true and great issue of the present contest. It is equally as base-as the-question rais el by Bigler in .the Unitrd States Sen ate, as to the personal character ofCol. Fremont, and which the sworn testi mony of Mr. Buchanan himself so tri umphantly refutes. The real issue bp tweet' the Republican aid Democratic party is, " shall Slavery be further ex tended' in United States Territory;" and in attempting to confound this Tie's"- tion with that which utterly annihi lates the system of Slavery, the opposi tion party, or rather 'parties, &Oct a willful ignorance of the principlesthey I,are-fighting-again4t.-- • But Bigler has, gonp still further, and confounded Republicar4sm with Infidekism, Frec-Loveism, Foutierism, . and Spit ituttli ; four ipms, wAy, to wl.ieh he is secretly, hut devotedly attached, and I.vhich fact alone-is sulu cieat t ; refute any insinuations 'Of a. connexion hetwe4u theinand licanism ; therefore we need not pur -1 sue that argument further. • But we refer out readers to the letter of Mr: G- eeley in another cdumn, fnr a fill definition of Biglet's position. We would. (Al. the 'atte:n.iel of Our rea,lers to an article en the fir pageof this paper, from the- plush nrg Journal, entitled "'he Wrongs of li:au• Fas." It is a candid statement from a truthful man a-ul his heroic . 'la tighter— a c mli:niation of the statements of Rose Jenkins ; and we are pt ale to I p!ieve ttith hose, that half the wrongs of li:ansas .tre not clepietec) in the let. tern which are wr ten to their ft iemis in the States by the Free State settlers of Kansas. On the same page will he foUni an article from the Indianapolis Journal, IrhiCh should forever close the mouths of' Buchaniers (in Potter county, at 19 tst,) from endeavotiug to excuse and apologise fur the gets of' the Pro-Slave. ry party in Kansac. And yeti the in, here given is Init one of bun- Oreds which exact frur.the Llind and pitiable fill ):., , Jr, of Li. iclytn'in in this section, the excl:rm tin : Weeding Kansas ! What d I . 16r Kan- Verily, what 4Q you cart fir 2 7 (ce Kansas, when you wilt stand up aril excuse the villiruons acts of Mii•- ,souri and South Caroline t ufri ins there? you de can. for slave Kansrli iq pros peptiv"e; turd dint; tipaigh quietly urge I, is the test of the Floclrinan politied faith, not only in South, but .here t.t the North. -But the major ity.of the pen- . Pie at the N a th have been led by wire pullers, as lung as they can be , as the filentls elf flick aml lirecli hill tiiscov er to their everk :Ling sorrow, on [lto. 4th oh November next. - a private letter front the western l•n! t oP thi; c , ,anty, rye learn chat :John Ih. Killn,grn has keen p otic.ttl trly severe L . :p.m the .biurnal in his pu itieal sret•ches t! ere and case- where. Ile Ittrs al c , taken the great pains t.) widt.avor . t., Inalitn the people believe that the Sen . ' ,r editor, ;ti t % J. S.:ll,tnn is everythin4 but tt-ht lie m,•;. ttttly ii--;J•gentlem•or, in the iti , rhest, sertse of the w pt esent, ill ness of llr. Minn tv:Hild totturally in Yelvil the Jt,nior its the nece,sity of . taking Sffillt! 1101e . Cl! I.f these. personal sl !filers. but the only. notice wo shall take of them is to say that, considering their,sour,;e, they ate betreatit our no tice, as a1..1 is the calumniator; but that they are in every way win th - y of their p.q•nulfator. lie is welcorne.to injure the Azetaa/ all in his power, if lie choo.ses to putblie so de:spat ate a course. Konsas Cortcspin fence of the fitultat F2OLI E 1N5,13 T, 6VRI. 1717 - R, ' Sept. 2,1 15.16 This is Runday, but can hardly he called the SObath. This moraing thu pbysical ‘vould.seems Ile in tudson with th political-lath.are dark n, of glooniy. It rains now a little, has rained a good deal all nig:it, and al. thongla we have had no frost,' nor will have. any I am told for a month to conie,• yet the coldness of tber air and other things remind us, that the " mel anclloly days". are coming fast upon - I. have said that ,the w'i Id here looks dark and , rllotriy. It st ems that Vie National A , kainistrativr will tint restsitisfred till Ka tins is subdued. Pierce well know that whiskey Shainum did not know enough to subdue us, hence he is • remo:ved and Geary is sent here to fill the vacancy, 1.06 c Sunday' when this city was on the verge of I,e ing ".‘viped out" he comes here with the United States troops after the danger was over and after the vanguard of the Ruffians had been beaten Lack ley a. handful or men. The next ,ruorhiug they advance Again from the vicinity of Franklin to attack Lywrenc i p, • not withstanding the pi eseireo f the troops,. as I the new governor instead Of di iv ing them out, as Shannon did early in the Summer,. tides down to them, and coaxes them to .go Peaceably ho.mu They consent. Titus and Jones, march with this command to Leco,mpton. On their road they steal horseg, and sl cot down David, Ptufilim, a cripple, fur pro testing against their stealing his. Tne new Governor rides up to Ruffam'y house on the roadside, takeS the dying man's deposition al. .to his • murder. Buffurri - . dies Char night—Geary - . to tow W.:1.-Z "Zp. ;pr.= w,:zott C! . .>s› 0 I v = 7 E* 0 Is va•= — g-lc, ra' ‘72, xtE j.q r=l ,rot p t.:c" 14 n z r 7 ae f E • I I • .. 2 ;: : cA ~. t--•: , 7 ' ' 4'4 1 • = 03 t 3 -.% 2.1' = • - •••• rx - tt - >3. ...oCi• d-.i - ^ ctocwc •-tc^^~- . . I,Ltp :•.; - f,4 ;73 _ • 1 • Z.:, = = "X' tr. 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Nteantirna their It a s••s and g 111.3 are beinq s‘vcre away from them a: fast as pas-tittle. For instance a Italy] goes to NI irs!ril D,iiielgon an'} sa eq " I would like C o , ze' horse +t "Whore do vie; livei". empires the .farshal.. "Q t ! I Hie in P!attellounty. loot mv horse wit gutter! Inkm mr , by . theahttlitiopist.ta" the rent?. 4 , y , l') ..;111 tir t r vo.or IteNe ?" asks the Mars' all. " Y e s 8:r" is the e.nolettirt rejoi " Well, go anti pick hire itut. linos him ;lowa to the nm c ,., ;I t'd Ire , t , ..vton" says I) 111- id ton. Tim fallow then g,tte; to r" , hr r:r Pict; out (tn.!, that suits l'imo tells the man in chart. , :tt that the Mar shal sent lism. tnices it, rind ride; %viler ever asos. Tim reti-vta rzer ally forEret to be sworn, and when - presto I hard to d r .1 , 4, a; they ate some.'imes, for the Allow of CPt t.' , ;•pr, tttey- do s mod willvolt Mlle) PIT wt. I l e be brief ;via about this. I thief: Otero is n t diff-reneat betwee n G, try al 1 S ' Yi r riot. eecont that (- 4arv. I. Cm alder min and is not a daunt: lm l. Teey a' - e ke, rot; ds their boil , It t total if ;t peterand depraved SI ty r t HlO • it rat inn. anti Unita_ demonstrate the fact more Pierce toll Cie N C.onmi!tee that if G ,v. G • a • v toned any pet s r•ml outrage:, see!' person wouldll'. 1117 , : , 1 Weir UP. Yet (learY visited 1) avid Pot frtun. a few hours before he died, and immediately after lie was shot and the nutr:let et iv not au rested, nor never will he, any mm than the intirdniers ano n ., Dan •r, Brown; amiother::.. Why 3 Sim ply because no . free State man will get out any writ under the hogus_ laws . filr their arrest. T tis comprehends. the whole key to the policy of Gov Geary since his appearance among, us But he mistakes the character of the Free Stale men here altogether, for rather than Countenance the infamous caste, every free State man in the Ten 'tory will he murdered with impunity as far a: an appeal for justice to-this code is co,acerned, berme such appeal will he made.. This is his game. t coerce. us into obeying laws which we never made. How much Oapital will he matte for Buchanan out of this will be seen in November". In the meantime every.hody who has tak,en nay prominent part In de fending on rselves framltrmed r4fflair, is hunted by (Fly awl by night by the myrmidons of SheriffJone4, with hit,ns Writs f r their.arrest. It must be re-• mere,bered that the same hitch of ter ritoriakofficers %vim surrounded Wilsrin Shannon, now surrounds G.)v.peary „- an, I thelatter will bpmore or less actuat-. el. by their representations. Woodson, the Secretary, and from him dOwn to the infamous Deputy Marshal Oramer; all hAve a most malignant hatred , of everything with the przfix free. Free Speech, Free Press, Free Brea ' Labor, Free Schciols,lFfee Men, Fre- - t^ C% " " • .) .4 r c - - • •C.r. - .