Ir From the N. Y Tribune MBAS. In-tend of regarding thr inconceivable outrages of Which ;the Free-State then of KansaS are now the vietin:l,4e : rejoice that the-Pre:i dential gnio.t is so sons to be deei 4Q,:in the. hupe.that it will nrtt he pot:- t ailite!th'ereafier to deceive and mislead 'aro Peatilr with regard to those et imes. 'as is now spternatical!y d•me by both 'witiri of the Prn-Sla : very:.party. It is not possible that, after the, smoke of the Presidential battle shall have pass ed of the field, then of common hu , rinanity trill stand coolly ; by and, see ;peat:et:lN immigrants Ntoiiped oil the 'Missouri, robbed of their and passage'money. forced to return 1.9 St lomi4 or Alton. and compelled to pay the ii downward passage. as has been dune the past Summer and present A u 'fturpi•toaa Free 7 State metrexcept such as were willing to sneak into the Ter ritory, siagly and unarmed, as though: they wore un : some errand of shame. kill less credible is it that our " Dom n.tt ats" and " Americans" will long 'see with patience the trains of Fr ee- Elati lirunigrants, who hive plodded their weary way tediously, Painfidly t'3rough the is Us of lowa. and Nein as• ka to the hot der of Kansas, there stop ped by a force of Missourians and the scum of tslaveholding society, beaded by Federal authorities, and ordered to halt; surrender their arms, and consid ; ne themselves prisoners. Vet this gi gantic crime was enacted at Plymouth' no the north-eastern birder of Kansas I 'no the 14th inst.—(simultaneously with Ilwder-Roffi m successes io Penn- 'sylvania and:lndiana)—when two bun rlred and fifty men, women and chik Ilren, guilty of the crime of emig.ning to Kansas with the intent of making it a Free State, were thus stopped by' Deputy United States Marshal Pres :on" and 1 ' Col. Cook" at the head of ' a regiment of United States dragoons, , all acting under the orders of Gov. Geary, the gr eat pacificator of KanSas The immigrants Wore robbed of all their property except the clothes they stood in, and placed under guard as pt isnners, their guards having the usual orders to shoot any who should atte opt in escape. Such is the welcome to Einsas accorded to a portion of thosr •ivllose right to boar arms the Federal Constitution expressly and solemnly guarantees, and whom the Kansas-Ne braska bill prr4ssed to leave " per f,-ct ly free •fo form and regulate their two domestic institutions, , subject on'r to the Federal Cotistitution." When were Federal dragoons made wilt and parcel irf that Constitution 7 Republican reader! Your money is paying for all this blood-thirsty wick edness ; for these deputy marshals, these dragoons, are employed in your behalf and paid ut of your treasury. Buchanan Diemecrats, Fillmore Amer icans, the Border Ruffians, who rob, mangle and 'torture the Free-State im inigrants whenever they can catch them in a position where they cannot. defend themselves—the men who ‘s antonly der'ed in cold blood B l arber, Brown, Phillips and so Many others, and who avow theirdeterminai iirs to drive every persistent .Free-State man out of the TerriierY, are your brethren and allies —they rejoice in . the confidently anti cipated opportutdties which your tri umph is to give them to harrass, out f.t.ge and slaughter the remaining Free -Btate settlers without restraint or fear of peril. Vor 'all the crimes thcv have cJmnaittod . i t Kansas during the last Year, as'also for much that they at tempted but lacked'the courage to c•sn aUmmate, they mean to he paid fiber-. ally, as" Kansas Militia" and Marshal, from your earnings and purses, and, if _l_uchanatt should be elected, they will be. Whin the Presidential Election shall have passed, we shall hope to find our fellow-citizens of politics adverse to our own, willing •to heat the truth on subject, in spite of the corrupt as - pti tuts and journalists who now hush their consciences 'by withholding the truth so — far as possible and astorting what must be published, until they Can with unabashed countenances talk of tvrongs on both sides" inliansas. If h is wrong to prefer Liberty to Slave 11—wrongto Condemn wholesale fraud and false voting by invaders at an im portant electiou—wrong to refuse al leiganceto bloody, tyrannical acts which evarybody knows to have no otherlia iis of legality but outrage and villainy -wrongtoseek to uphold the flag of Freedom against all the per and craft of Western ‘ll4luriittici theFed epl Adrpiniitration— s wrring to grow ‘i•eary of 4ul?mission to 'every form of rotakry, violence : awl crime—then have the Free-State rotn! of Kansns done wrong a; well ni,suffarcd it- r anci not otherivit4o. -- - • - • THE JOURNAL. C. S. MANN, EDFrort. COUDF.RSPORT, PA TWAT.Stjayl4ol . lll2lg Oct RO, ,V 5567 Repablicin PRF:SIDriT. JOHN C. FREMONT, =! FOR VICE PRESIDENT. WILLIAM L. DAYTON, = A LAST APPEAL. FRIENDS Or FREEDOM !—The Fourth of November is upon us, and the great event of that day will base transpired before ive can again have the privilege of asking you to stand by the flag of Liber ty. Therefore heed ye what we say, and act, that ye may have the glory of an imperishable victory. Remember that in the local elec- tion you gave a majority' of-143 on the State Ticket-4et it be your aim to increase those figures to 600 for FAEMOT & FREEDOM ! The Ballot Box is your sove reig.nty, and it is but fair that you should wake every effort to main tain its supremacy. Our oppo nents appeal to. the Southern dogma of disunion 'in hopes of co-ercing you to ;dote for their Pre eminently Southern candidates, That dogma aims to wrest from you the privilege of Free Speech, Free Press, Free Men and a Free Ballot Box ! Let each and every vote cast on the 4th of November be a rebuke to, treason and ty ranny. Let the voice" of Frk Men sound the death-knell of im pure government, and let your Votes be each an anthem to the imperishable principles of Wash ington, Madison, Henry, Adams . . and Jackson. • Let those principles which caused our forefathers to renounce the tyranny of Great Britain act uate you to resist the arrogance of the Southern Nullifiers and their Northern Doughfaee Allies. Let the threat of " we will subdue you," be rebuked as only freemen know hOw to rebuke—at the bal lot-box. Let it be made .mani fest that 350,000 . aristocrats can net, shall not and will not rule 13,N0,090 of freemen who 'are -not ashamed to earn the bread they eat by honorable industry. Let this be the death-blow to Southern monarchism and threat ened white Slavery. Ye that vote for Fremont, vote EEO IME reedom, R fights, E quality, C ompulsion, Manhood, H umiliation, 0 i:der, A tiarclly. N ationality, q'sT ullification, T riumph ; A bjection, N onentity. Therefore, Freemen, Vote— Vote early, vote determinedly ror Freedom, - .and against oppression.. Strike deep, at the roots of Mon ar„ • chi Sm—a strong and-deathly. blow. An increase of three votes in each township in the . State will overcome . the 2,7Q0 majority which the Shamo,prapy tkave ob tattled on the State-ticket. - - Therefore let your aim be to increase the Republican' vote in each township so as to make your prOportion of the majority offset any deerea,se- xi s hich may be effect ed in more beni g ht.ed t -more shamocratie counties in th 4 state. Friends of Freedom in Potter, stand by the helm Of free institu tions and republican .sovereignty —the. ballot-box —and , urge all voters to vote for their country and for its truest friends--JOHN C . .PREMONTSE,WILIAKNI DAYTON!L. . • Freetuen wisdom of our • forefathers is about to be tram : pled upon by the fanatacism of Southern Aristocrats and North ern Demagogues—the Constitu tion of our common country is about to be-sacrificed to- the am bition of a, professed friend, hut who is the merest sycophant at the shrine of Slavery; who smiles complacently on the hemous crimes of Border Rultanism, and who is pledged to maintain, in •01 . its glaring magnitude of crime 'the obnoxious administration ofl Franklin Pierce, which is so faSt leading our country to the brink of Disunion. Will you vote for 'the distneinherrnent of our glori 7 Gus Union ? Then vote for.james Buchanan. Will you yield to the arrogant assumption of those who ,are living by the sweat of your; brows—by the genius of your minds,by the pr6ducts of your factories, and by the taxes which you pay ? • Then vote for James; Buchanan, the patron of southern Aristoreats, and their true and tried leader. The issue before you .noty simply, ‘ Shall the curse orslave ry be further extended and fos lered in this land of Liberty—ill this, (in all other respects) model nepublic 1" The voice Qt the people is now invoked to rescue us from the impending danger. The spirit of liberty must be sus tained z4ow, or for all time- to come - the blight -will be entailed upon I.l§. • 'Therefore, we call upon all who reverence the wisdom of our fore fathers—who love the prin.ciples of Equality, Fraternity, and their deare4 rights—who • deSire the continuance, of our Republic, and would save it from a' deSpotism more glaring than tnat of Austria —who would' preserve that sa cred- boo,n so dearly bought by the blood of our fathers--7to vote the Union Filectorial Ticket as presented in another column. Vote for Fremont and Dayton, the peoples candidates. Below, with the necessary explan,a don, we givo the Uoion Electoral Ticket which , was adopted by the Union Convention, at Harrisburg, on Tuesday, O. 21. We have on hand • a supply of them for the electors of this county, and we hope the friends of the cause will procure them, and distribute them well in theit districts, Dc sure to have enough—we have an abundant supply : AGAINST, ondage, surpation, Usios ELECTORAL TICKET.—The members of the Republican State Committee, of the North. American State Committee, and a:por tion of the Fillmore Com'tee, met Friday night at the hepublican State Committee Rooms; on Walnut street, Philadelpia, and agreed to nom inate a Union Electoral Ticket, upon the basis proposed by . the Union State Committee, in their call for a Union State Convention,' to be held in Harrisburg on theqwerty-first instant, to wit, twenty six names in - common, the twen ty-seventh name to be different on the tickets voted for by the Fillmore .and Free:lent men respectively, the vete of the elector", if amen, T,HZITNION ELECTORAL TICKET tabe'pro. rata, according to thti.vcite given/by' the. twenty-seven names respectively. It was I also agreed that t t iih Eleciara t et to be voted - I for by the Frithdiat men ehodld NC heeded by the name of John C: Freziont, mid that to ha voted for by the Fillmore 'men, by the narde of Aiillard 'Fillmore. The; following is the Elictoral Ticket cho sen, the Filltnore ticket being the same except in the ibailinif thine: = . Jens C. FnEsuotry, - . ; GEN. JADES ham of Centre Co. • DISTRICT ELECTORS. 1. Joseph Edwards, Philadelphia. 2. George N. Eckert; 3. Mahlon H. Dickinson, 4. Wilson Jewell. " 5. Albert G. Rowland, " G. Caleb N. Taylor, Bucl;s. • 7. William Darling:on, M. D., Chester 8. William M. Baird, Berks.: 9. Mehl& IL Shirk, Lancaster. ,10. Simon Cameron, Dauphin: - IL John McCormick, Nor.humborland. 12. 'Smith B. Thotup,son, Montour. 13. Ritssell . F:Lord, Wayne. 14. El ederiek E.'SMith;.Tinga. 15. Abraham Updeiratf, Lycoming : In. Joseph D. Simpson; Perry. 17, ITezekiah Easton, Franklin. 18. Edward Scull, Somerset. ' 19. William M. Siew.:rt, Indiana. 21t. Alfred Pattersoa, Fayette. 21. Benoit. C. Sawyer, Adegheny. 22. Jacob Painte?, ' • " 23. Lawrence 31*Guffin. Lawrence. 24..Georhe W. Arnold. Clarion. ' 2.5.' Joule's Skinn6r, • [rh . e above is the Eketoral Ticket, aq and corrected hy the Union State Con vention at Ilarr;sburg.—En. JeURN AL.] • THE STATE RESULT Qffleial returns of all counties in the Stute, except Elk. and Tlieun, indi cute the election of the Democratic candidates by a majori•.y of uourly 3,000 ; which we consider a very small majority to crow about, considez ing that they imported Some 13.000 voters into Philadelphia from New The que;tion, now is, h.w mu.th did the Pcimsylvunia .mao.rity cost the Administi atom i whitt portiob of the amount did the lluchatiao lead ers pay.? Toe probable cost was 8500,000, and the propo.C4n of the 'leaders was just 0. The M.ire tracta ble portion of the led had the bill to foot. kENN'A. coNGROSIMAI ELECTION IThlov we present a table of the present Congressional Ilelegation of this state, by which 4457111 be seen that the Democrats have gained 9 mem bers over the O positioU representa tion of last session. In this District Mr. White, the Democratic candidate, is elected over Gen. Irvin, the Ueiog canditlfae, by about 500 - majority. " We have M) official returns bot th Ise of Center, Milkier., and Potter, our friend; in Lycoming, Clinton, mil SuHirai counties, seem t r have .been so stupe fied bY.the icallt, that they have neg lected to send us tbo ofi sal returns ofthose counties. We, Itowever. glean enow , h from the flying returns of th - ose counties, to indicate the above ma.iori ty for Mr. White. We arc much gratified at the truly complimentary vote given in the E•ie and Crawford District for our old friend Gen. John Dick, who is now reelected for . the third term by the handsoMe majority of 40:9q. Gen. Dick is emi nently worthy of the honor thus (lone him. J. Thomas It. F.lorence D. re:ected 2. ErWai - dJ.'Morriii, U. 3. Jatnes Land : : D. gain. 4. 11. M. Phillips D. gain. s.(liven Jones, D. 6. John Hickimin, D. reP:ecled. 7. Henry Chapinin, D. gain 8- Glanoy; D, 9.• A. E .Roberts. 10. John C. Kim' el, 17: reelected. 11. Win. L. Dew irt. I) gain. 12: 1. G. Nlontgoinery, I). gain. 15. Win. H. Diminick ' D. 14. Galnsha A. Grow. 11. reelected. 15. Alison White,J). gain. 16. John J. Abel. D. gain. 17 Nilson Roily, U. gain. 18 John R. Edie, U. ree'ected. 19 John Covodo, 13: 1Y elected. 2') Wm. Mnntgotnery, I). gain. 21 Davici Ritchie, U. reelected. 2 2 S. A: Mice, I. 7 :retleeted. 23 . William Stewart, U. 24 J. L. Gillis, I). 25 John Dick, U. reelected. 14ATca.—We have received the of : ficial vote of this Congressional Elis 7 ttict, which fonts up as follows: . . . • Irwin, v. White D. . Lycorning, 2:63.- 3119 Clintbn, - - 1214 1446 utter,' . 1124 . 675 Mifflin, 1577 1539 Center, 2421. 27418 nilivtin, 346 * -493 Total 99,10 . 995,%) • 9450 White'rprnaioritv LThe fltllowing is the official vote fltr Assembly in this District, by which it will be' seen that Messrs... Benson -and Petrikon are elected by the re spectively small majorities of 23 and' 56.' The popularity of Mr. Benson in his own county alone, secured his election, and the Republicans of the district have ample reason to be proud of having selected so available a can didate. refit et the' &foat of Mr. Knox, in-grouch as if secures to . the Opposition a majority on_ joint ballot in-the X.egialature, and foi: the reason that he was eminently descrying ef:an election : ' , $ $ -$ .i• -', ?"1 CI M tal g: .1 4 I; . -5. TP <, .?* 'Lyeotning, 305.3 , ... 2726_ 7735 Canino, 1473 1.1•?3 1247 1255 Potter, 616 620 1132 1161 T.Otai, 5155 513 S 50'..0 5161 14ajc f tity LI) . ‘2? Pennsylvalm Legitllattao From our Pnitadelphia exchanges We glean the fellpiaing recapitulation of the present political phases (dour Legislature : o• 2pp. Dem. Senate,. •l6 15 11o . use, - 471 Total, 6 . 5 Uplivaiciou cone on jolty ballot on 59int By the above it will be seen that the gppositiim have a majority of in in the Senate, and the Damocrats - IT. - '0 a mar jority'of G in the 1 - louse, arid 3 on joint 1.)allot. This, DO doubt secures the election ref a Pemoci - itic IL S. Sena ,to rfrom Pennsylvania. We had hoped for a better result, but the darkest hour is always that which immediate ly precedes the breaking• of the day. Ot i tr flientls nmst not allow this defeat to di,beq.rten them, hilt Nyark ern for the good raure in which they are en gaged and success will e're long crown theit.efro-ts. The genitet •.f true lib- erty is Apt - 01(1 . 1:1g fist in the Ise: stone State, as well as in all the Not thein States. ‘Ve hopo •in another election now . pendin2. oqr good citizens will Wipe out the st4iii with which the late election has defiled the good name, of Pennsvivat;ia....' OUTIttG2 IN IS lxsas, eTI3I In any which has preceded it, is de tailed in our. t.degraphic dispatches from Chicago. A patty of peacealde emigrants. compelled to proceed through - Nebraska, by dm insults and violence with which p trtiqs g ring up the Missouri are visited, :;re Made prisoners hy a Peputy Marshal, hack pd by seven hundred U. S. trour.. charge is piefeered against them, and their only oftorrsq is that they (b , .sign tilling the soil of the territy-y with the their 0 . 1711 hand;, instead of the toil of I).mds'inen forced from them by the lash. 'How many such outragos must be perpetrated to •aronse tht:r tuiiin masses to a just'appreeirition cr tlsc villainy of this wkde Kansas transac. lion. from its inception iu the repeal of the Missouri Compromise ( to its fruition in the -ad nission of Ell:1.0 ; •( with slavery eternally f;xcd upon its bantier.—.2 7 .!ittsburg Dispoci4. [The dispatch alluded to above ‘yili be found on our finit Jourt. Thanksgiving in Pennsylvania, PENNSYLVANIA,. ss--ht the name and by thf: authority nt the Comm,m wealth of Pennsylvania. Idirte3 Poi - lock, G ove A PI3I.C.IIIAT • Fellow Citizcns:—A nc knoWlA.kineut oldie goodness of Al miOrty G-,nl, and of our constant de pendemee noon his providence, is ern r inenily becoming a free, and enlight ened people'. As the -Giver of every g ood an d ter feet gift, H has crowned the past year with griodoess and caused our paths to drop with runes:S." Our Free Institutions, our rights and priv ileges, civil and religic us. have been cotinued and preserved ; Science and Art. with the great inter ests OcEduca thin, Morality and Religion, have been ad' anced ; industry, in all its depart ments, has been honored and reward - ed,. and the general c , edition of the people improVed. . Our Cornmonwealll• has been great ly blessed. "'lie ravages of disease and death—of Famine - and Pestilence— have not been permitted to come near us; nor have Ulm horrors of war dis turbed the peaceful quiet °four homes. l i ne Earth has yierded her increa,e an/i richly rewarded the labor of the husbandman. Abundant prosperity, with smiling plenty and the blessings of health has been ours. Acknowledging, with • gratitude, these blessings of a kind Pi 9videnee, let us "enter into His gates midi thank giving and into His courts with praise; be thankful unto Him, and bless his 'tame." . Deeply impressed with the impor tance and propriety of the duty, and in Accordance with the wishes of many g•ood citizens, I; JAMES •PottocK, Governor " ofConiinenwealt b of P ' ennsylvan'ia; d'r hereby recoommend THURS.RAY, 'TDB 20Th DAY or NOYiMi ni.n NEST, at a day of general thank.st giving'and. praise throughout this Stat4;'llTia earnestly ' implore the peo-. pie tbat, almta!iting .from ~ all3, f oridly business and purmits on that day, they unite in offering- thanks to Al- Mighty God fur his past podness and mercy, and humbly beseech Him fur ii.continuance of His blessings. Given nnder my hand, and the Grea Seal of the State, at Harrisburg' this 21. st day of goober, :hi the year of our Lard, 18.3 G. hod of the . Commonwealth the eighty-first. By the talivernOr. ANDREW G. CURTIN. Secretary of the Commonwealth. Nlr r llo ARE I.43UNIONISTS —The grew: orato t r pad slcznuis light of-the i i tieli.anan party. i n South Carolina, Preston S. Brooks, in his recent speech at Ninety-Six, said : "We have [lie issue upon us now, and how ale sve to meet it ? I tell yon. fellow-citizens, from the bottom of my heart, that the only mode which available for meeting it, is to tear the Constitution of the united States, ti-ample it under foot, and farm a Southern Confederacy, every f.,..t.L Q of ivhich vill be a siaveholdieg• State, an d pridongetl Cheer:4.] I 'WI tic v, it, :is I Striliti 141 . 00 face. of my. believe it or; my responsi . - bility to you as. your honor-11d repro etttative, that tiln only hope of tini South is in tire South. and that thri only avi!aitic ITIVa!IS of MlZ•killg that Ilial)C IS tt cut asunder the bonds that tie us .tot,:•ellier, and take our sep;.onte position in the family or oat ion.. 'Nese at e tey tylniotig. 'racy have alv.-.lys IRT:111:ly ffrli!ti:1:1! , „ 1 bane been' a DbaulioLkt lioni the time I e.,.)111.1 think." Tiiin is cx;)'ieit ; attd want 1"1 1,.v; ity,;;/etliati.; comicc DIE Now, frith, w-eit tit.; South to come squar e up tu 3/r. 1311. chntian. Let us do our whole Let us tp,t the exert invent 1.1" utt , fiiencli, nod it it kik, then ',VC C 2.1 Wl6l th o e mre ,'t% i C . c. ask tiled! to adopt . eouusels -fur the rum: rtit 11:nt zind that togcthtir. It i very plain That thi,:ki the III ! thauttri ty ;.; Cue party dis• IHMMI Great 'nuts in the Kicaigan Swamps tide hear very (list essing serial e , ,tri•ts suffeiitig in Michigan, it; cMisemience of the dense smoke from the Marsh and bokfii es. lir the vi : Batt:e Cceek it is said that cimzumptive pmsons have i ; spasms, cattle lavp tufrocateo, am; poultry dropped dead.. Thowaiols Acres have burnt over, end immetrw damage been catiFeil to propel ty. • Nie have al,t• been lay..reci With tho pet 11:::1..la ietter, fr ,, m which we make the 11,11,,wing , act. : • It cut:iriict;c.•d la-t day, a - iid Tliuisdity the wi!.d wciit down, anti e brrat:l uE aii tat / * nig. Tin: Sin ,:st• } set Li t.) Ln gruurvl, find liec,nit• Taiiir,day, after -I couldu't set ecru the ' , nth cloder v •tir RE AI ntl threv o'cluck stalled t tau to the saw mill. :Mot t one (11l to l. yr a in lc, aMI e,Naiag !LILA I Jut twice, and over a niad I kuov ai well as you do to •go Massed the boauling teii feet id it; and to the end the t oad, about ten.: ltd.:, and koew where I was' until I heat d the boys laugh in the hou.-e. One - of. ()Pr pica started tram his house to get a pail of water at our welt (the Only one near.) a distance of pbout sixty rods, and a sti Light road (there are no fences in this cuuntry,)'he made' a perfect circle and g ut lu pine Without the* water. The stage on the plunk road came in with a . man to ' each leader, and another ahead e itir a lantern ; run off the plank and tipped over twice at that. :Omit ten o'clock a man was heard balloing ; our, of our then went o b it and tuts Tered him, and theta: came up two men and two women, and wanted to know where they were. • They had • beep to a neighbor's to Pend.the 'but could'ut find their %.Fay back I could mention a hundred that go: Inst and could'ut liod the way back. Onie, riding horse-back, the hotse stopped, the man gut off, and found he had run againat a log ; felt arthtnd for the`tuad found it, but could'ut find his horse again until Saturday, when the smoke began to clear away, anti found hiM just where he left him: To-day is the first that we could see ani t ilistance. -The woods are on fire all around, and 1 hear that the big marsh, about 9.000. acres, is oil burned, up. . One man lost 10Ct to us ofhay. . We have lived through it, but it did - seem as if we conld'Ut breathe sometimes: .- - - THE matt ivlu) carried the thing ton far, has le.V it &tip... The Sherdf is after •