DUE B3LLAR PER AM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWAXDA : gtpreiian fUornmn, ociobcr 0, ISolj. political Song. FREMONT AND VICTORY. THE I'KIZE SONG. BY CHARLES S. WEYMA>*. ViR '* Suoni la J foniou- — Pcritam. I of tl:c. North, who remember The deeds oi your MI CM, ever glorioua, Joia in our pa'an victorious, The jin-nn of Liberty ! Hark ! on t>. ret-clai3 mountains, One from tiie fields of your tillage, Come forth from city ami village, juin the great host of the free ! As fr> their cavernous fountains Roll the dee]) floods to the ocean, J,. :i the great army in motion, Marching to victory! Hurrah ! K, ho. from ocean to ocean, Fremont and victory ! in Far in tho Wot rolls the thunder, Th. luniuit "t battle is raging. Whore bleeding Kansas is waging Warfare with Slavery ! Struggling with foes a lio surround lier, 1..' -he imploreM you to stay her ! Wal \ 11 to Slavery betray hi r? Never—she shall lie free ! Hurrah ! Stte.tr that you'll never betray her ; Kansas shall yet be free ! IV JUrrh ! we have FWorn to support her ; The prayers of the righteous shall speed us ; A chief in • r conquered shall lead us— Kreni' nt shall lead the free ! Then from those fields, rtd with .-laughter, Slavery's h- rue-, shall he driven, Frc i in to Kansas be given, Fremont shall mako her free 1 Hurrah ! To Kan-s* shall Freed >tu be given; Fremont shall make her free 1 v Men of the North, who reiucmlier. Trie deeds of your sires, ever glorious, Joia in our piean victorious, The pa-au of Liberty 1 Ifs-k. on the g'tks of November, Millions of voices are ringing. Glorious the song they are siugiug— Fremont and victory 1 Hurrah ! J .in the grevt chorus they're singing, Frcm .nt und victory 1 Another Old-Line Democrat for Fremont. Letter from a Member of C*en. Jackson's Cabinet. At the very large and enthusiastic Republi can meeting in Philadelphia on Mondsy, the lion. Charles Gibuovs stated to the meeting that the Hon. Saml ej. D. Ingham, formerly u member ol Gen. Jackson's Cabinet, who had Inn invited to address them, had replied to tst invitation in a letter, repudiating the falee Democracy of the day, and sustaining the prin ciples and candidates of the Republican partv. The sou of Mr. Ingham read the letter, as fo!- iuws - Trksto*. Sept. 22,185 C. Cam** GisnoKs, Esq., Chairman of Republican State tommitue : Dear Sir ; I have duly received yours of lw IT'.h inst., inviting my attendance at a R"pa' bean meeting in Philadelphia on Monday fi ning next, or if I cannot be present, to send vou a few words of encouragement, to those are laboring to promote the return of the Federal Government to the principles of Wash :r -dtOTi and JiflVrjpn. The infirmities of age R iu prevent my compliance with tiie former part of tiie request, and no doubt weaken the rf f of an attempt to comply with the latter. Llkmgh I haw long ceased to take any active pvt in political affairs, yet, in the momentous now presented, I should be unfaithful to r| -dictates of my judgment, and the conscieu • Jls convictions of a solemn duty, if I with 'A any hul that might be thought useful iu b" trial of the great cause now before the •iairican people. Our ancestors formed and Admitted to us one of the best governments *'' ownw n to the world, and it has pleased Almigli j! hoi to bless this nation apparently more -A" any other ; we are therefore bound by most solemn obligations to preserve ourin • "tions as they have been handed down to "b and resist on the threshold every attempt on the settled Constitution of r Dolitiral charter false or corrupting doc and principles. t 11 one side of the great issue hefore us the to hold slaves in all the Territories of the | state* is claimed by virtue of the Con j K'-ion of the I'nited States. This claim 1 a constructive power of a new order ; •(j a j | no ' )ns is as an incidental power, nor in 1 fo" necessary and proper for 1 fo vi XeC,,tif,n f ' ,e P ranf, 'd power, nor have 3 ng, VOra,es persisted in an attempt to derive : |„' f ex pressod or implied term or incan- I hat k °" st ' tu tion. They saw clearly !*. ' wonkl be impossible, aud have now I krf r < U ' IUK on il " higher law," endea | t0 prove that " Slavery is the natural 1' n °j"iaal condition of the laboring rutin, whe f! or >" and as a necessary rorol . '"tn this problem, they deduce " that the evil of the Northern States will yet 4c to introduce it their theory of free ls , that it is burdened with a serril*. and iu borers, unfit for sclf onri Compromise had, by means of some previous legislation, become inoperative. This frivolous disguise was, no doubt, the suggestion of some timid member member of the conspiracy—pro bably General Pierce. " Conscience makes cowards of us all." But it was soon exposed, and the acting manager, Douglas, was obliged to give the offspring a uew dress. Then, for the first time, the doctrine of Squatter Sovereignty was introduced, und a new clause repealing the Missouri Compromise was clothed in a mincing phraseology, full of affectation of great regard for the right of the inhabitants of Territories to make their own institutions. The plan* of the conspirators seem now to have been settled, and they threw off the mask. Atchison, having left his seat in the Senate, was busily completing iiis organization of Blue Lodges of Brigands in Missouri, to force Sla very upon Kansas by violence. The Fre.-ident of the I'nited States was ex erting all his powers to aid Douglas and liis associates in repealing the Missouri Compro mise, with a professed desire to establish Squat ter Sovereignty in ail the Territories. The movements of Atchison, so far as the truth could be drawn out of reluctant witnesses, are fully detailed iu the report of the Congression al Committee to Kansas. It may be well to notice some of the con necting links between the movements in Mis souri and those in "Washington. The Governor of Kansas, true to his trust, denounced the in vasion of Kansas by A'ciiisou and his banditti, driving off by violence the Judges of election, taking possession of the polls, making new franchise laws to suit lion residents, and bring ing voters from a foreign State to choose leg islators for Kansas. Atchison in turn denounced the Governor to the Fres'dent, and demanded his removal. The President, perhaps still trembling tinder the burden of his pledge, or alarmed by Atchison's practical illustration of the Senatorial panacea, " Squatter Sovereignty," hesitated, and sought to avoid the responsibility of an act so bold, by getting clear of the Governor by other means. lie flattered, coaxed, tried to intimi date. and finally to bay him off with a better office ; but all iu vain—his integrity was in flexible. But Atchisou must be obeyed, aud a frivolous pretense was seized upon to carry out the plan of the grand conspirator. The direct co-operation between Washington and Missouri—President Fierce and "Vice-President Atchison—did not stop here. Work hud been prepared in Kansas lor tho courts. Ihe Lea - - ritorial Judge was suspected of being too high minded and independent for the business Atchi son required, nnd was also removed and anoth er appointed, who fully answered the purpose for which he was chosen, aud whose name will fill a niche in American history similar to that occupied by the notorious Jeffreys in English history. Laws had been passed, which, l:kc those of Draco, might he said to have been written in blood. To beguile public opinion, the hue and cry of law and order was raised by the same bands who had taken possession ot the ballot boxes of Kansas, driving off the officers and legal voters with revolvers and bowie-knives. Encompassed by these Outrages, the settlers, in pursuance of a general notice, assembled to gether to devise the best mode of relief. ThffiV proposed to form a government in conformity with a usage adopted by the people of mnc PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MKAKA GOODRICH. " REBAItDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FftOM ANT QUARTER." Territories now organized as States. Presi dent Pierce, in the face of these precedents and the Constitution of the United States, de nounced this assemblage, convened for a re dress, of grievances, as treasonable. His Jef freysian Judge now caught the sound, charged his Grand Jury accordingly, and had a number of the respectable inhabitants of Kansas in dicted for treason, most of whom were arrested and have been imprisoned under a military guard for months, but now relosnr.l on bail— thus acknowledging the falsity of the charge, as treason is not a bailable offense. Are more facts wanting to prove the con certed action between the President and his co-conspirator '! Look at tire official proclama tion from Washington ; their thinly disguised but palpable design to detc-r the people of Kansas from the assertion of their right ; the authority given to Gov. Shannon to direct the military force of the United States at his dis cretion ; their employment to make arbitrary arrests after the manner of those which once filled the Basrile of Paris ; the employment of foreign brigands, umler the mask title of the enrolled militia, to blockade the great highway of the West against the .transit of emigrants seeking a home on United States lands ; in addition to these things, the indictment of a printing office and hotel by Grand Jury, and summary punishment of both by burning with out a trial. Would you not like to see a copy of these indictments ? This act must also have been done in imitation of Draco, who senten ced a statue to be banished for having fallen upon a man. At the same time that these indictments wire executed, the town of Lawrence was sacked, and the people robbed by these famous police executioners. Not content with" these outrages, prowling brigands from the Blue Lodges and from distant states were indulge nt ly encouraged to range through tiie territory, rubbing, banishing and murdering in cold blood, its peaceable inhabitants, avowedly to extermi nate them froiu the land, under the hue and cry of obedience of "law and order," that is, the law and order of Missouri invaders admin istered by Judge Lccompte and executed by Atchison. Appeals to the President were an swered by reference to the protection of these sacred laws, as coolly aud gravely referred to as if they were the Justinian code. When un der th*nienace of the hut invasion from Mis souri. the people of Kansas sent a special de putation to the President of the United States, iie not only peremptorily refused them any re lief, but insulted them by reproach, for having meddled t>o much with their institutions, in stead of minding their own business ; meaning, evidently, that he had provided for their in stitutions, through ids confidential friend, Gen. Atchison, and it was a grave offence for them to interfere with him, and grossly presumptu ous for men " who do their own drudgerv," to attempt to form institutions for regulating so ciety according to its "natural and normal condition." "When the President made this reply to the Kansas deputies, lie must have been so absorb ed in the uo'.ngs of the conspiracy as to have lost all compunctious reminiscences. He was so determined upon the execution of their laws, that he preferred to jeopardize the whole mili tary appropriation for the year, rather than forego the employment of the army to establish this Atchison code. The facts I have thus adverted to constitute but a small part of the indisputable evidence that might be adduced to establish the charge of the conspiracy among certain high functiona ries of our national government, to interpolate a new and false construction of the federal con stitution, upon a point of fearful and vital iu tcrcst ; to accomplish which solemn pledges have been violated, and means employed in which tiie great principles of democratic go vcrunient have been wholly contemned and dis regarded, and an a< tual coup d' ctut attempted, more abhorrent to freemen than anything we have been from infancy taught to condemn in the achievements of tiie old world. To those who have been trained, as I have been from youth, in a devot'6ll to democratic principles, tho measures 1 have thus cursorily presented to view must cause additional pain, as well as alarm, from being the exclusive de vices of high public fnnctionnr'e* placed in power by, and reputed to represent, the de mocracy of the United States. We have cherished with ardent devotion the benevolent sentiment embodied in the term that designates a government made by the people for their Own good ; but how revolting to every sincere, ai # - dent, patriotic democrat, to be compelled to see Ids time-honored patronymic prostituted, not only to the destruction of sacred chartered rights, but to the establishment of doctrines subversive of a democratic charter ilself. There are many examples of corrupt men, who, relying on tiie prestige of an imposing popular name, have used it ms a mantle to pro tect them in the perpetration of diabolical crimes ; but who could have imagined that the name of Democracy could be thus effectively abused, before iu model republic, abounding with everything necessary to hu map happiness, was eighty years old ! But all is not yet lost. If high officials nave prostituted our name, ai d by vile machinations bet rayed us, we have onr principles to stand uj on, from wliieh we can make battle at the ballot box, and rebuke back the conspirators to a harmless retirement. Of the candidates before the people, I have little to say. The great question to be decided is one of principle only. Mr. I n 'hanarv stands upon the same plat form with .Franklin Fierce, and is so pledged by iiis supporters to carry out his measures, and especially the plot of the conspirators, to use the Constitution of the United States to carry slavery into and drive settlers out of all their territories, that wiles* he possess tiie he roic nature of a Ilegnlus, he cannot respond to the demands of a free democracy. Mr. Fillmore is, probably, a well-disposed gentleman ; I know nothing against him, cx cent his recognition of the right of certain states to revolt if they aboard be defeated at | the polls, or if he d'd not mean rcvob, as. he did not net the words, h< must hare ighf- of a coup d' ctat. as has Rinco been suggested by Chevalier Brooks, of South Carolina. Some of his friends seem to have a vague idea of his powers of compromise, but, has any one ven tured to suggest the terms ! Will they give part of Kansas up for a slave pasture, and re serve the rest for freedom '/ Neither side will couce one inch to such terms. It is a settled point that Kansas must be given np either to slavery or freedom, and who pretends to guess what Mr. Fillmore would do on such a ques tion ? Of Col. Fremont I have stiil less to say. It is asserted that lie is too young and inexperi enced. As to the first objection, lie is even beyond the age when the ablest and most-suc cessful men the world has ever seen begun their achievements. As to the second, he will require only a clear head, a disciplined mind, a steady hand, and honest and stout heart, to do all the work the nation can demand of htm. All these qualities have been accorded to him by impartial opponents. We have the fnl!e=t assurance his history of their reality. Thus armed, and standing on a platform of simple construction, founded on a rock, unencumbered by any delusive architectural abstractions, and supported by an unflinching phalanx of free Democracy aud staunch R. publicans, if I have any judgment of the causes that most effective ly operate ou the uiinds of Americans, he will be triuLTphantly elected, and as triumphantly lead this Republic onward to its glorious des tiny. With great considerations, I am yours, S. D. INGHAM. The reading of Mr. Ingham's letter was fre quently interrupted by applause ; and at its close, three enthusiastic cheers were given for the writer. Bcchaniers. The following are among the prominent members of the democratic or Buchanan party. We do not say that they are a fair specimen of the party ; but it is evident tii&t the party, from some cause, attracts such specimens to its support : David R. Achisonnnd General Stringfellow, who have been straining every nerve for near ly two years to carry slavery into Kansas, and why have hesitated at no rascality aud degree of mean:; -s to accomplish that cud—are warm supporters of James Buchanan. Governor Shannon, Marshal DoneTson and Sheriff Jones, and every member of the Bor der-Ruffian lea-Fiaturc. all who assisted in the sacking of Lawrence, and aided iu destroying tiie free papers in Kausas —arc active iai>orers for James Buchanan ! Jefferson Davis and every other noted dis unionist of the South, are now plotting and conniving for the election of James Buchanan ! Frestou S. Brooks, Keilt and Kdinuiidson, the first of whom committed, and the others encouraged, the most villainous assault that was ever perpetrated npon a public man—are open advocates for James Buchanan 1 FhiJeinou T. Herbert, who followed a high handed life in California with the murder of a waiter at Washington—wasat the Cincinnati Convention, and endorsed the selection of James Buchanan ! Ned M'Gowan. the king of the "stuffers," is a full blooded democrat, and says, if his late letter is -.ermine, that- ho voted lor Buchanan in Fciinsylvuuia years ago, and v ill do so again if he can get a chance. The ballot-stuffers of California are all ac tive democrats, and, if allowed to vote, will do as Yankee Sullivan would, if he had not gone " to tho laud of the hereafter," that is, cast their ballots for Jauies Buchanan. MANUFACTURE OF LETTER ENVELOPES. —It is estimated that the number of envelopes made in the city of New-York alone, in one week, is at least 4,000,000. Tiie process of manufacture may be briefly described. A ream of paper, or about live hundred sheet.-,, is placed under a kuii'e of a shape corresponding with an envelope when entirely opened, which is forced down by a powerful screw-press; worked by a. hand lever. The pieces cut out, slightly adhering at the ed ges, from the action of the knife, resemble a solid block of wood until broken up. The flap is afterwards stamped by a -mull ir process, a hov being able to pr 'pare 50,000 per day in this manner, taking one, two or three envel opes at each movement of the huiul. They are then taken by one hundred girls, seated at long tables, by whom they a re. folded and guui ir.e l. A single girl will apply the gum to CO, Ofti) or 70,000 in a day, from 5000 to 7000 may be folded in the same time. In these processes, the girls acquire great celerity and skill, being stimulated by the. wages offered, which vary from twelve to thirty emits for each 1000. The envelopes are next counted, band ed and packed. Some varieties are embused or otherwise decorated, requiring additional labor. The establishment of which we are now speaking consumes not far from twelve tons of paper per mouth, in the single article of enve lope*. This quantity of paper, at ten rent* per pound would fust, $2,500. Tiie machines em ployed to make envelopes arc very curious ly constructed. Each pn'ceof paper, upon be ing cut into the proper shape, is placed on a kind of artificial hand, which 'convey* it over an np< rtnre of the *ire of an ordinary letter, when a plunger drives it t'nrongh, camming and folding it iu the process. It then talis in to a box, which by revolving at intervals, is gradually filled up with packages of twenty live, ready for n*e.' These machines average twenty thousand envelopes per day, and are capable of tnrning out eighteen |>er minute.— Tiie business is in soma danger of being over done For some time past it has doubled, al - every twelve months, until a very large capital is embarked in it, and has reduced the profits to a very low figure. A'-L'orciirrg to Th: }ficJiencnl ITU*, the Democratic majority which has existed in Vir ginia has always come from the 8,000 Ger | marsp beyond the Ridge, who aro ROW" infect ed nith f';f German £e< ?i for Fremont..' GoYeraar Geary's stiscs-is in Paoifioatioa. One of the Washington papers is talking of the " pacification of Kansas." with the remark that the restoration of quiet Rtul order to that territory has deprived the freesoil party of their principal topic in the contest fur the Presidency. We wish with all onr hearts that we could say that there was a real, substantial pacification of Kansas, that its peoplu were put in possession of their rights, and that the tyrannical code to which tiie federal adminis tration has declared its determination tomak j them submit—a code which is now, after ten months from its enactment, admitted by the friends of the administration to be i.he worst in the world—were set aside as the fruit of a lawless usurpation. If that code were out of the way, there would be an actual pacification of Kansas : but while it continues to be en forced the agents of the general government, there is, and there can be, no pacir. 'ation. A code which allows nobody but a bordcr-ruffiin to vote, and nobody but a bordor-ruffian to sit on a jury, which sends every man tc the peni tentiary who speaks his mind on the question of slavery, mrtst, if enforced, lead to a state of tiling* tor which pacification is o false name. Our telegraphic despatch of this morning, in the first sentence, speaks of the territory us " tolerably quiet." Just at the time—on the 20th of .September—flmre were no warlike movements. Yet the despatch goes on to say that the frontier of M'-souri was closed against the free-state men. No man of that class can piss in or out ; i:o man from Lawrence, orar.y of the free-state settlements, can send to Mis souri to procure provisions, of which they are reported to be in great need. The pro-slavery party meantime go and (gene freely, whatever their errand. Is 'his paciucktion '? a state of things which shuts up the inhabitants within the lines of their territory unless they pass bv distant and circuitous routes through aw ilder ness ? Is it pacification when, to them, ali Missouri is a ho ;tile country, in which their lives are not safe ? Then is a seigc a pacifica tion ; then was the heleagm ring of Sebnstopol a pacification. In the midst of all this quiet, Captain Harvey, of the Chicago company, law captured the flag of the South * Carolina ad venturers. and sent it to Chicago as a trophy. They call the territory " tolerably quicd," it seems, when a few days pass without anvbodv being shot, and w hen only a flag is captured. General Lane, it appears, has retired to Ne braska Ci'.y. beyond Governor Geary's juris diction, but if there should be occasion for his presence in the territory, he will undoubtedly be back again. Meantime what is Governor Geary doing ? In a letter from the Rev. Mr. Bvrd, which .we publish elsewhere, written at Lawrence on the 17th of last month—he gives the narrative of the barbarous murder of David Buffum almost iu Governors Geary's presence. Governor Geary went and looked at the murdered man, but he could do nothing ; the assassins went on tl.cir way unmolested ; the murder was followed by robberies, to prevent which Gov. Geary was v.hol'y powerless. And this, we are told, is pacification—homicide and pillage, and troop. of ruffians ddfying the civil author ity, constitute a pacification. No doubt Governor Geary, as Mr. Bvrd writps iu his letter, is doing ids beot to keep the territory qu'et for the present. Those who gave him his commission, sent him but on tlmf. errand : the cry which rose from the people of Kansas, trodden down and oppressed as no men ever wcro on this continent before, had penetrated the hearts of their brethren in the Atlantic .States, and the party which supports Mr. Buchanan felt the necessity of doing some thing to counteract its effect. Governor Gea ry was directed, therefore, to do liis best to prevent the commission of new disorders iu Kansas until after the election, and the admin istration journals were to stand ready to pro claim that he had effected a pacification. ITe was to concede nothing ; he was to not to d.s turb the order 'if things which Mr. Fierce, co operating with Atchison and Stringfellow. had established ; h.- was to maintain the spurious laws of Kansas iu their fail force, lie was to tell the inhabitants that he hhuuld iusist ou their obedience to those laws tili they are re gularly repealed, but lie was, if possible, to stop the murders, bnrmngs and robberies til! after the Ith of November. Who does not see that this is not putting an end to the atrocities of which Kansas is the victim ; it only adjourns them. Tiie frightful misgovermncnt ofnhat territory, f.r which, with ail its attendant curses, the party support pig Mr. Buchanan are responsible, is ouiy sus pended for a few weeks. If Mr. Buchanan should be elected, there will he a plausible pro text for Raying that the people approve of it, and it will be revived. All the machinery of spurious, laws aud usurped officials is kept in its full vigor, to be employed again as soon as the election is oyer. Nothing but the election of a Fresident who sympathizes fully with the friends of Kansas can save that territory from even darker horrors thau it has yet seen.— Ecer.ivg Pes.'. IvTrnrvTrvr; Tvqfnjres.—Tn view of M•. Buchanan's poKfiekl character nnd hi-torv, iq what Pennsylvania county should he r s de '< Answer : Somerset ; or, in view of his horns, UUCAS ; or, as he blows his own horn, Qj-'/ian; or, a* his political career is almost run, ITunt ilte-acne ,* or, a* he is being hanlr-d over the lis, Carbon. ; or, as he proclaimed Folk a better tar.tl man thfcn Clay, Lie-ccmins ; or, as his prosp 'cls are S'miy, J'ike ; or, as i;e is going, to pot., Po'ter ; or, a- his chancc-s are declining, TUr'Vic. Will Mr. Buchanan with draw ? The foliowinq is from the IhsJir.wv4 Fn quirer, oatc ot tho chief orgaus oKtho " nation d" party, yghich 13 supporting Air. Buchan an - " humqer and r-.nise with ih< m. by which Ave hundred Rb flans or.or H"iu Were tnkeu i; to th C. £. RcJffoe, "to assist tTie -17aftetf States in expo.ling Lara's troops, and getting as many of them us b'e urisoners, to be tried by martial law."— This was bone in the face of the statement made by the Governor in hia proclamation,that ho had enough regular troops for all purposes, and did not require the aid of militV Finding themselves thus abandoned once more to tho mercy of a Radian amy, bearing all the au thority of the government to sanction their doings, and not wishing to combat even the mime of the government thus misused, tha whole Free State force under Lane, numbering 1500 men, abandoned the town, and the Ruf fians, headed by Raid, marched into it, with the Govtrnor and U. S. troops, triumphantly. They I'oiu-i the place almost entirely deser ted, of course. J Having succeeded in effecting this feat,Gov. Geary sent off two hundred United States troops to capture the fugitive Free Suilers.—- It seems to bo considered treason for them even to Ace from their homes, A body of these unfortunates was encountered at a cross ing of the Kaw river, and finding themselves thus pur ned, they, iu a At of desperation, arc said to have fired UJKMI their pursueis, killing a cousin of the Governor, and wounding sever al others. Tuis Arc was returned, and forty of the Free Soil' rs arc said to have been kill ed, and ninety-Are captured. The long threat ened general expulsion of the free-state settlers is thus actually undertaken and commenced under tnc* patronage, protection, direction, counsel and authority of the national govern ment. 1..e force officially denominated inva ders and insurgents, and called by the Border- Rnffians " Fine's men," consisted of three fourths of the able bodied northern settlers.— They had gathered from their farms, shops and ollices, all over the territory, to repel an army of .Mis- ouri invaders, who "threatened the de struction of I.uwrence. Tne Missouri assail ants have been aided by the Governor and the L nitcd States troops in accomplishing a pur pose which, singly, they wonld have utterly failed in. Not content with this, the Gover nor has under' ken to expel the whole bodv of tho Free Se.lcrs from the Territory, To this end he has already employed the troops against them. Leavenworth City, the largest settlement iu Tvausas, has been entirely depopu lated by the same efficient aid. Geo. Smith prevented flic Free Soil majority of the citizens ironi defending themselves, refused to repel the bands of robbers who kept the town in awe, and threw several companies of troops into tho place to prevent the Frec-Soilers from Law rence helping their brethren to protect their own lives and property. He drove the families who sought protection at the fort, and the AF.-'sourintvs drove them away from tho town. Thus Leavenworth is ruined and de serted. for when the Free Soilers left, thero was no population or business remaining. Os sawattomie is burnt to the ground, and its citi zens arc killed or imprisoned. Lawrence is purged of nearly ail its population, and an ar my of U. S. troops seat to expel them from tin* territory. Thus the three most Aourishing towns in Kansas are ruined, the bulk of tho population forced to seek safety in flight, and a standing army of Missourians tuken into tho service of the government. Splendidly impartial Governor Geary has proved himself ! Tie ha? deceived his north ern countrymen with promises, and has ended by betraying them into the hands of the Bor der llufti-.ius. The worst aims of the latter, hois now effectually accomplishing. Su:h s , the peace .Mr. Buchanan's regime rr.uni.se-> to Kansas and the Union. This wretched fannti , who disgraces the name of Pennsylvania, jj his representative. Tim policy he is pursuing, war counselled by, the Democratic candidate for the Presidency. Let our citizens think of that when they vote. Those who believe that Mr. Fillmore would, if elected, favor the fr-'*- doiu of Kansas, have but to look at his news paper organs in the present canvass, to satisfy themselves of tin: delusive character of such expectations. They all defend the administra tion policy in Kansas, and even now, when every mad brings accounts of fresh outrages, which lire thy northern heart with indignation, they are busily engaged in representing that Gov. Geary lias settled the Kansas troubles, —PhttatTa X.rtk Amerian. P iTTi'vT " XoN-Sf.quiTF.r.s."—olr. Sumner lie? the mark of Cane on Ids brow, but it do t. foiiow that he was Abel to defend him self. Dr. Kane stirred us up with his North IVl* Expedition, but it don't follow that we are to he knock'd down hv South poles. Toe M ssoarian bullies nrc verv in c <"dont 'n cf now in Kansas; but it don't follow th\v can sass ns with impnnify. O.ie might have been safe in the company of the quiet Poole, but it dou't follow t a' tin? proximity of hlu.-tering Brooks is equally ■irreoable. Mr. Brooks may I ke to cut people Apiece* ; wi'h his cane, but it don't follow that they i ought not to make iiiin cut his stick out of [ CpUgri ps. Mr Brooks may be very fond of " Uncle 1 B ifler," but it don't follow* "Unit Mr. Sumner may not be equally fornl of Aunty Slavery. Mr. Buchanan may bn nominate! by the Cincinnati Convention, but it don't follow that jic v!l fee c-l-vu-'K—aot by a jug full.—J'A-'.r