olt 1.1.- i;u\< l.ccn favorably noticed by the Judg ing Committees, und will be reported at length '•! the Annual R"|*>rt of the Executive Com mittee. Competitor* on Field Crops jmiv prr their applications and certificates until the first Monday of Deisnilier next. Competitors are particularly requested to observe the rules i.i this department. Premiums will be paid up on application to Win. Hi WET.T., Kii it, but declined to do so, a> I do not deem anonymous slanders worthy of so tnucli con sideration. But n respected clergyman of your State sends me one of the three copies of this deli ctablc concern which he has just received under your frank, indicating that V"N are en paci d in n general distril ntion of this tissue of li s throughout your State, or at least among her ch rirvmen. I pay. therefore, to you, the responsible indorsee, a rc-|"'ct of which the naked und skulking tiled w as ami is utterly liti wrtithv, and proceed to expose some of the more iluuranl of its falsehoods : 1. '• We assert, anil Wy coatradirtlon. that ewrvor inthh 1 doctrine* i* now an optimiza tion in fax or f Krruiont ; ami we u-MTt aWo thut all th MI- iU -inn* ;i 4*Hxolntion of the I niou are openly co opnitint with the*e organization. * This is grossly false, Mr. Bigler ! find you know it. It is false, that even the handful of Northern Dimnionists support Fremont, us I ahull soon show ; hut all these are insignificant in number* and power when compared with tiie Southern Nullifiers and Secessionists, cverv one hostile to Fremont, and nearly all supporting Buchanan. In South Carolina. those who de sire and expect a speedy dissolution ot the Union are a very large if not the larger par ty ; they hold high stations and edit influen tial journals ; one member of the Cabinet (Jeff. Davis) ran for Governor on the ticket of the "State Rights " anti-Compromises-of lS. r >o party ; and throughout the South there is a powerful interest in favor of dissolving the Union whenever they ran no longer rule it - You know how Bully Brooks boasted in the House that he could have caused a civil war bv merely raising his hand ; you have rend his irrave proposition that the South should march upon Washington and seize the Federal trea sury and archives, in case Fremont should be elected, before he can be inaugurated; and '.tin know that Kcitt, Wise, and other eminent S .uthern supporters of Buchanan, are habitu ally indulging in similar bluster. You arc slandering a very hirire portion of your fellow citizens, Mr. Bigler, and utterly falsifying the record, in asserting that all the Disuiiioiiists— or any considerable portion of them —are found in the Fremont ranks. 2 Following in the same track, your libel proceeds to copy from The Stir- \or!c Standard of April 10th last, representing it as a " T'rc. vant Abolition organ," and speaking of it again as " this advocate of Fremont, The Standard.' 'I hat. Sir, is a deliberate lie. No one can have copied from 'The Standard without know ing that it is of the Gnrrisoniau non-voting S'-huul of Abolitionists, bitterly hostile to Col. l'n mont and to the Republican party. It is ns utterly averse to frcuioiit's election as you are, or as gonr Secessionists allies at the South can well be. 3. Your pamphlet proceeds to quote from " 1 rston Liberator , Garrison's paper— a paper thft supports John C. Fremont." This, Sir, is another black, blistering false hood. The Liberator supports no candidate fur Federal office, being hostile to voting, to the Union, and the Constitution, but especial ly hostile to Fremont and the Republican par ty. Columns to this effect might be quoted from it, but the fact is notorious among intel ligent men. The Liberator will not even sup port Gerritt Smith, and it never supported any Republican or A uti Nebraska ticket. \et the lie is repeated, and reiterated, as if its au thor found a real pleasure in the simple act of lying t l'assiug by several insignificant or irrclc \nnt lies—among others that involved in call ing Wendell Phillips a " Boston Infidel," when he is an orthodox Christian, and then insinuat ing that lie is a supporter of Fremont, when he is his inflexible opponent —I proceed to the following : ' TIIR XKW-YORK Tnir.rsß i* tlic rhief party organ of tlic ;o i'ltiUel tfiMiuifmi-U*. Thai journal tin horn the fc* rrvt'ir. f"f year-, of all the levities, anti-religion*, and revolutionary Uiiotrine* of Kiimpean ultrnit* and destrnc t>lt i ■ oiitr-'llrd hy a corps, anions whom arc-no t >ri>ms iufidol-. It ha* opoiifd it* rolnnni* t the revolt ing r in it* sight. Iti* this dangerous paper. lione editor Horace Greeley, lias assisted at piihlie meetings of blacks and whites in the C ity of New York, where both liod a-id the Constitution have hcon reviled ;itis he who has n serrated with the advocate* of Woman's Itishts in the • line elty. where nnsexed females have delighted in ad dressing mob-> of men in stratus of vulgar violence." • —These, Sir, arc lies—gross, willful, pal pable, malignant lies—and you are their re sponsible propagator. TIIF. TKIBI'NE is the organ of 110 " infidel disuiiiunists." It has never been the " reservoir " of" anti-religious" doctrines, as its readers well know. It has never been controlled by " notorious infidels.'' It never " opened its eclnmns to the revolting doctrines of " Free Rove," except to expose, denounce, ami reprobate them. All the' wild monstrous and absurd theories" which it lias ever countenanced are based directly on that immortal assertion of Jefferson in the pream ble to the Declaration of IndejKndenco that " All men are created equal, and endowed by " their Creator with certain inalienable rights —that among these are life, liberty, and tho "pursuitof happiness." Its Editor has " as " sisted at no public meetings of Blacks and " Whites were both God and the Constitution " have been reviled," nor anything like this; and your closing assertion about " unvoted fe males " addressing mobs of men "in strains of vulgar violence" is swily more sweep 1 " rI y cal umnious, more basely false, than the r No such meetings ever occurred ; and certainly no Edit-"-:- of THF. TIUBCNE ever " co-operated " with r -y such.. laat vou or your scribe (who is said to to be vour'"Senatorial Chaplain, but i hope is not, I should proceed to assert that •• Greeley's Fouricn-ni. f'rw Loveism, Spiritualism, n*r f>o that p/tjffoi ift SectiOiiaJitm w ttic is but natural ami consequent. iV hat would \s to market ? YOll know very liMle, jet yf "Greeley's FreeLoveisni, Spirit ualism.'" Ate., is the basest kind of lying—an appeal from the rra-ou and conscience of the cuiQiuuuity to the prejudices of the ignorant and the credulity of the unwary. Mr. Senator I'isrter ! you occupy a very ex alted statiou, while I am a private citizen, and both of us occasionally address our fellow-citi zens on the politics of the day with reference to the Presidential Election. When Ido so I generally read the platforms of the three parties with relation to Slavery, and set forth their |>oiiits of accordance and of difference. I then compare the doctrines of each party, as thus defined and pro. laimed hy itself, with those of Washington, Jefferson, and our Rev- oliitioiiary patriots, and with the action of Con gress throughout the purer days of the Repub lic. 1 ask those who hear me to vote for Fre mont and against Buchanan because of the po sition taken by thein respectively on the great issue of the day, as Mr. Buchanan truly pro nounced it in his interview withSenater Albert G. Brown. I appeal to all who have heard me to say whether I have or have not at any jiersoually assailed Mr. Buchanan or auy of his supporters—whether I have or have not sought to divert attention from the great is sues tirade up by -the rival National Conven tions to irrelevant and trivial matters, or to the opinions of your candidate or his friends on any question not involved in the canvass.— You, isir ! have chosen a different course ; we I shall see how the People regard it. l"p to this hour, 1 cannot hear that any member of your party has ever printed the Three Plat forms and the Letters of Acceptance of the rival candidates for President for circulation , among the voters of all parties ; I have print ed many thousands of these, and shall be hap py to supply you with them at cost. But you do not want them—you would carefully refrain from distributing if you had them ; and your fellow partisans have repeatedly denied the fact that the Cincinnati Convention unanimous ly endorsed the administration of Franklin Pierce, and at first voted down a resolve favor ing the Pacific Railroad—the Pennsylvaiiians going solid against it, and afterward voting for an ambiguous, non-committal expression of opinion in its favor. This day, there are hand bills circulated in your State calling on the people to rally for " Buchanan, Breckinridge and Free Kansas, 1 ' just us they were called in '44 to struggle for " Polk, Dallas and the. Tar iff of "42." I observe one of the speakers who ui '44 maintained in a public debate that Polk was a better Protectionist than Clay, now on the stum; demonstrating that Buchanan's elec tion w ill more subserve the cause of Freedom in the Territories that would that of Fremont. Perhaps, Mr. Bigler ! such tricks will win, as they have won ere now—and perhaps they will not. 1 bid you welcome to all that you can make by such a canvass, and remain Your's, indignantly, HORACE GREELEY. A CAM. FROM ONE OK PIERCE'S TRAITORS.— Y'csterday afternoon a gentleman called at our office, to all appearauee a peaceful and respect able citizen. He was introduced to us as Mr. Smith of Kansas. We were astonished to as certain in conversation with him, that it was (J. W. Smith, one of Pierce's traitors, who has been under arrest for about four mouths 011 a charge of High Treason against the United States. A venerable looking man, past the meridian of life, lie has been a prison er until the 11th of September ever since the 21st of May. He has lain upon the ground under a simple tent cover, during all the heats nnd rains of the summer, suffering a portion of the time from fever aud ague, and is now released on bail, not from any intention of do ing him justice for the great wrongs he has suffered, but that Pennsylvania may be clieat into the belief that the administration has adopted a christian policy and give her vote for Buchanan. Mr. Smith has been thus cheated out of all his summer. His grounds have lain idle, his property run to waste. He was arrested by United States authority and after stipulating with him thut he should board himself, and that they (the U. S. territorial officers) would allow him a certain amount jierweek for board during such time as he was uudcr arrest, they discharged him ou bail, and refuse or neglect to pay him a cent, although S4OO is due to him and his fellow "traitors." Mr. Smith, our readers should know, went to Kansas from Butler, Fa. Muny of our cit izens know him right well. He has been ab sent from his late home and his family no less than six mouths. He came back under con voy of certain Missouri friends byway of the the Missouri River, but first had to procure the following, which we have copied verbatim from the original document : TERRITORY OF KANSAS, I Lecompton, Sept. term, 1850. J G. W. SMITH, On charge of high treason, in the first District Court for the first judicial District for the Territory of Kausas. And upon the hearing of his cause he gave bond and security for his appearance at the next term of said Court to be holdcn for Douglas Co. And there are no other indictment? in said Court against him. Ido certify that this is upon docket in my office, given under my hand at Lecompton Sept. 20, 1850. ( j ) 11. C. BISHOP, Dep. Clerk, ( J " 1 F forJAS. R. WHITF.HF.AD. Such is the freedom of a citizen of tho Free States in Kansas. God help us. A man must have a pass to travel in a territory or a state of the Union ! Mr. Smith gives us the gloomiest account of matters in the Territory at present. Geary lias caused to be arrested no less than 113 of the citizcus of Lawrence and vicinity, and some 300 more for whom warrants arc out have fled the Territory. They are charged with outrage ous crimes. The people in Lawrence are in a suffering condition owing to the almost impos sibility of obtaining food at any rate. We content ourselves with the above items, because Mr. Smith has come home to put his shoulder to the wheel, lie trill probably go to Greens burg today. He feels that he cannot do j enough to forward the glorious cause ; that day and nigh, must be devoted to the holy i cause of freedom, whose only hope in Kansas iis in the election of Fremont. We will hear from Mr. Smith. — Pittsburg Gazette. Sot TII CAROLINA—This is the only State in the Union in whim the people do not choose electors of I'resident and Vice President.— The Charleston News states that Governor Adams will convene the legislature on tin- Ist Monday in November next, to choose electors for the State, oat being the uay tixed by law for holding the election of Electors to elect a President and Vice President of the United States in all the States of the Union. ftaS"- It is estimated th*t not lass than 14,- 000 Africans have been landed on the island of Cuba within the last eight mouths. §rui)fort) Etporto. E. O. GOODRICH, EDITOR. TOWANDA : (Efjorsban fflorninn, ©rtobcr Hi, 185 U. TURKS —Oe Dollar per annum, invariably in advance— Four weeks prteiou to the expiration of a subscription, notice icill be given by a printed wrapper, and if not re newed, the paper will in all cases be flopped. Clcbbiso— The Reporter will be tent to Clubs at the fol lowing extremely low rate* : H copies for $5 00 115 copies for... .t\l 00 10 copies for 8 00 | 20 copies f0r. ... 15 00 ADVBRTISRKKNTS— For a square of ten lines or less, One Dollar for three or less insertions, and twenty-five rents for each subsequent insertion. JOB-WORK — Executed with accuracy anil despatch. and a reasonable prices—with every facility for doing Rooks, Blanks, Hand-bills, Ball tickets, %-c. Mosry may be sent by mail, at our risk -enclosed in an envelope, and properly directed, we will be responsible for its safe delivery. FOR FRBSIDKNT, JOHN C. FREMONT. FOR VICU FKB3IDBNT, WM. Hi. DAYTON. THE ELECTION. We have delayed our paper one day, for the j purpose of giving our re iders the result of the j election held on Tuesday. We are obliged, | however, to go to press with very meagre re turns as far as concerns details, though enough ; is ascertained to render it extremely probable | that the Buchanan State Ticket is elected by t a small majority. We shall not attempt to ! give the vote as reported by the telegraph, be cause it is extremely unreliable. The gains for ; the Buchaniers appear to have been made in j the Eastern and centre counties of the State • We have not even definite returns from Phila delphia, but it is rumored to give from 2200 to 5000 majority for the Buchaniers. In the absence of all details, we have ru : mors of a large majority in the State for the Buchanan State Ticket, which of course, are mere exaggerations. The latest and most re ; liable information we now possess is contained ; in the following despatch from HORACE GREE ■ LEY : Wbiwisdav. 8 o'clock P. M. | Gave up this morning, by from 5000 to soon majority j against us. Looks better now, but very doubtful. H. GRRHLBV. It is barely jiossiblc that the Counties north and west yet to be heard from, may save us from impending defeat. We believe we shall do well in the localities where Freedom has been the rallying cry, as in glorious old Brad ford. These localities are yet to be heard from. Susquehanna gives the Union State Tick et over 1000 majority. Sullivan gives a uni form Buchanan majority of 165. We have nothing from below in regard to the Legislature. ALLISON WHITE (dera,) is elected to Congress in the Lycoming district. GROW will have nearly 1000 . majority in this district. From this somewhat gloomy prospect, wc turn with proud exultation to our own County. Here the standard of Freedom has been un furled, and the intelligent, the patriotic, the sturdy yeomanry of the County have rallied almost en masse beneath its glorious folds.— FOUR THOUSAND majority is a verdict of which wc may well be proud. It testifies to the country, that in victory or defeat, through good or evil report, the Freemen of Bradford will ever be ready to vindicate the cause of Human Rights, and tht interests of white la bor. Otir County Ticket has a majority of about four thousand, running with great regularity I from the highest to the lowest office. We ap pend the returns as far as received', from which it will be seen that Laporte has a majority in r try election district but one. Later. —Later despatches received at Wa verly say that in all bnt 11 counties the Union State Ticket is ahead. The 11 counties gave last year 4000 majority for Nicholson. Another despatch received at Wavcrly says the Uuiou State Ticket is elected by 5000 ma jority. f-CBVKYOR ORV. CASAI. COM. J.aportc. Roirc. Cochran. Scott. Athens Borotigh,. i .... Athens township ( .... .. .... Albany. 98 55 CO Armenia, GC 1 CC 1 Asylum *IOO .. . .... .... Burlington 128 47 1.07 28 Burlington born' 7 .... .... ... ' Burlington west ISO 20 110 24 ' Columbia 175 45 179 57 I Canton, 310 .... ! Durell, 190 81 190 81 | Franklin, 120 36 110 38 j Granville 224 6 224 6 j Oerriok *IOO i Litrhtleld .10 ! Lcßoy, IGO I Monroe boro 31 24 31 29 | Monroe. ICO 39 I 20 Towpnda twp 32 32 46 37 | Troy twp 137 87 133 84 ! Troy boro. 84 56 84 56 I'lster, 40 Wvsox, 144 108 1.96 115 Wells, 10 Wyalnning, 173 78 f;2 80 ; Warren *2DO 1 WimJlMinr. ! Wilmot ! * Estimated. 50o 1070 LETTER FROM 8. D INGHAM. On our outside we publish a letter from Hon. 8. D. INGHAM addressed to Hon. JOHN LA PORTE. This, like oil Mr. INGRAM'S produc tions, presents in n clear light the benefits which the freemen of the North would derive j from having Kansas a free state. He views ! the question in its true asi>ect —whether the i fair lields of that fertile territory shall be giv-1 en np to slave labor, and "skinned'' by that deteriorating system, or shall be cultivated by free hands, and become the garden of the country, covered with fruitful farms, and dot ted with thriving towns, and churches, and school houses. The freemen of the North are to decide this question in November next. If they would preserve this vast territory, capa ble of maintaining five millions souls, for the possession aud occupation of their children, they must vote so that negro slavery will be forever excluded. They must vote to extend the blessings of liberty, and not to degrade free labor by the degrading contact of involun tary servitude, beside which free white men eannot labor, without sinking below the level of the negro. If slavery is fastened upon Kan- Ms, the freemen of the North are virtually ex cluded. Legislative enactments are not more inexorable than the laws of cause and effect. All experience has demonstrated that free white labor will shun the contact of servile ne gro labor. The two cannot exist together, with profit and pleasure to the white man.— Missouri, one of the most fertile states in the Union, with an unsurpassed climate, and the most unbounded resources, never enters the mind of the farmer, who contemplates " going West." Why? Because negro slavery exists there and disgraces and dwarfs industry. Free lowa, on the North, with not a tithe of its ad vantages or natural resources, is filling up as by a miracle, with a hardy, industrious popu lation. The price of lands on either side of the Missouri line, which divides the two states, illustrates the beauties of the two systems of slavery and freedom. The best of farming laud is vacant in Missouri, while in lowa land of not as good quality is eagerly sought after at treble the price at which the former could have been obtained. If tlic farmers of Bradford are willing to forever deny to their sons the privilege of set tling in Kansas, let them vote for BUCHANAN, and thus rivet the chains of slavery upon that fair land. If, on the contrary, they have a hope that some day their children may be thriving farmers in Kansas, let them vote to preserve it to Freedom. The election of JOBS C. FREMONT will secure this glorious result. 9&r The great question to be answered at the polls on the 4th November is not, " Shall Americans rule America?" but shall slave men with negroes, or free men without them, occu py and control the lands of Kansas, and the other unsettled territories of our America ? There are three tickets before the people : Ist. The slave-soil, or negro and bondage extension ticket ; candidates, James Buchanan and John C Breckinridge 2d. The 'alf and 'HIf. or sort 'o and soft 'o not extension ticket : Candidates, Millard Fill more and Andrew J. Donelson. 3d. The free soil, or white men's and free dom-extension ticket: Candidates, John C. Fremont and Win. I>. Dayton. On each of the two first one name is that of a man holding fellow-men in bondage, and the other that of a mau of corresponding senti ments. On the third, both names nrc those of men who fin not hold others in bondage, and who disapprove of extending slavery, and crowding out freemen. Fellow citixens—whether of American or European parentage —is it your will that the tcrri tories once consecrated to freedom and your use, shall be retained for yourselves and your childreu ?—or will you surrender them to the control of the slave-men that are now treacherously robbing you of your rightful in hcrritauce ? Let your votes answer. CONNECTICUT EI.KCTIONS. —Town elections took place on Monday in a number of towns in Connecticut, which, though of little impor. tance compared with the imjKMuling presiden tial contest, show, nevertheless, how the wind blows in that quarter. The Hartford ('ourant thns sums up the results, so far as ascertained : " Our returns are from 110 towns—of these 12 give Fremont majorities, 41 Buchanan ma jorities, and six are divided. Compared with last fall, the Fremontcrs have gained in 24 (owns and the Buchaniers in 10—seven of these ten towns were against us last spring, so that they have virtually gained in but three towns. Of the 24 towns gained by the Fremonters 14 arc gains from the vote of last spring, as well as the fall previous ; and of the 6 divid ed towns 5 were against us last spring." The Buchanan papers have been claiinihg this as a victory ! Our readers will judge, with how much reason. MORE TREASON IS VIRGINIA. —Mr. Itow Lock wood, Treasurer of the Tabernacle Kan sas Aid Committee, in New-York, has received a contribution of SIOO in aid of Free Kansas, from Virginia. Evidently, Governor WISF. is becoming remiss in the discharge of his execu tive duties, or so treasonable a contribution would never emanate from the state of V ir ginia. The mails that leave the Old Domin ion will henceforth have to be searched as * rigidly as those which enter it. A RRCNANAN ELECTOR FOR FRF.MONT.—Hen ry G. Webb, one of the Democratic Electors of the State of Wisconsin, pobli.->hes a letter •Wherein lie very plainly and clearly states his reasons why he cannot support the pro-slavery Democratic ticket. Important Letter from Kansas. LAWKKKOK, K. T.. Sept. 22, lsjti. DEAR BROTHER :—I have intended to write to you again lor some time, but have written so often to OIJVK and CHARLOTTE, that 1 did ; not think it necessary. Our Free State ship is near sinking 1 . Starvation and extermination are staring us in the fuce—not extermination by the Border Ruffians, but by Pierce and the force of the General Government. When his last appointee, Geary, came here some two' weeks ago, our forces were all together, and we had kept the Ruffians at their distanee ; he j was so plausible and smooth it was thought \ best to give him a trial. Our forces were seat- j tered and sent into different parts of the Ter ritory, and wo expected of him some sort of j justiee ; a man by the name of Adams that 1 came with him and acted as a sort of Secre tary or spokesman, made himself at home here, and by his consent and assistance, an expedi tion was fitted out to go over the river and rout a camp of Georgians that were over there committing outrages. The force numbered abont I*2o strong, with one piece of artillery ; ! they left here at midnight ; about 10 o'clock the next day they found the enemy some 80 |or 00 strong in three block houses. Seeing I our forces coining upon them, they ran up the ; Black Flag of no quarter and commenced fir ing ; the battle lasted 5 hours ; our cannou could not be made efficient, on account of the ground. At last tiicy ran up the white flag ; our officers ordered them to take down the black one, which they did, and agreed to leave the Territory if our men would allow them to | Our forces fell back six miles and rested. We ; had 7 wounded : they had 2 killed and 14 | wounded. Adams, as soon its our forces left | him, went to the Governor and reported. Gca | rv sent a company of U. S. tron in a week, and it mar not in a month or six months ; it all depends on the will of the President, but my impression is that it will open for pre-emp tion soon, and probably no sale until spring ; at any rate, not one in ten of the inhabitants can pay for their land now or support them selves through the winter. Yours of September 10th came last mail.— I am glad that you arc so sanguine on Fre mont's election : on it hangs the fate of this Territory. Yours trnly, 11. CAMPBELL. ftc?" A splendid pole was raised at Monroe ton, by the Fremont and Dayton Club of that place, on Thursday last. After the pole was raised, by some mischance the rope became de tached, and ran out of the block at the top, so that the flag could not be hoisted. J.\MF.S SIMMONS, of North Towanda, performed the unequalled feat of climbing the pole over one hundred feet and running the rope through the pully. The stars and stripes were then spread to the breeze with three times three for the standard bearers of Freedom, and three well deserved cheers for Mr. Simmons. A large and enthusiastic meeting was held in the even ing, addressed by Messrs. W ATKINS, TRACY and J. 11. WEBB. GRAND BCTIJAXAN FIZZLE AT ATHENS. —The Buchaniers advertised a grand " Union Meet ing" to come off at Athens on Saturday last, which we are informed, resulted in a glorious fizzle. The procession contained 11 (1 persons ljy actual count, and the meeting at no time comprised over 200 persons. JOSIAH BANDAU., the simon pure old line democrat, did not ap pear, as advertised, and JOHN J. TAYI.OR, of Owego, dispersed the vast assemblage. From the Florida election we have con flicting accounts, but we believe the Buchanan party has beaten the Fillmore by a atuull ma jority. Kansas News. CHICAGO, Friday, Oct. 9, A party of Kansas emigrants, <-biet(v f riJl „ Ohio, Illinois and Wisconsin, to the number of about 300, including women and children arriving at Taber, lowa, on the Ist instant r!' reived intelligence of the approach of (j ov Geary with 250 Dragoons to oppose their trance iuto the Territory. Tliey, however terinined to proceed on their journey till ii r ,j upon y and it was expected they Would the troops at Little Nebraska River (Jll 4 th. MILWAUKEE, Saturday, Oct. 11 Issc We have advices from Kansas to the U' inst, stating that Gov. Geary had caused to be arrested and confined in Leconiptou on the charge of murder in the first degree one | m died and seven Free-State men, who are m ~" ly under the charge of Col Titus. H. Miles Moore of Leavenworth was aires ted on tlm 2d inst. while at Kansas Citv esi route Fast, by Surveyor General Calhoun", and carried to Wyandotte City and imprisoned ST. LOUS, (Jet. 13 We have advices from Weston, Mo which ! state that Messrs. Rcrry & Walker, havi J i sold some Flour to citizens of Kansas, u partr of Border Ruffians under Stringfellow, pr eceded from Platte city to Weston, and ar rested Berry, denouncing him as an Abolition ist. The citizens of Weston assembled in i force, and after denouncing Stringfellow, and j ordering him to leave the country in five d uv . i drove him and his party from town. Meagre returns of the Congressional e'er tion in Kansas indicate the success of Whit i field, without opposition. No disturbanceoc | currcd. Keep it Before the People. Tiiat Senator Weller declared the Kansas laws '* As atrocious am! infamous as any L>r which cirr found their tray upon the statute 1,,,,; of any people in any age of this iCorld That Senator Bell, of Tennessee, said : " Had I been conscientiously opposed to slavery, and settled in Kansas with a view to better my condition, and had witnessed tho outrages committed bv the people of .Mis.>otiri on the rights of the Free .State inhabitant*, and had I felt my neck galled by the yoke of a usurped Government, and hail lo>t all II |K; of relief from any quarter ; if resistance to MK II oppression is treason, SO HELP MK Grip I WOULD HAVE BEEN A TRAITOR p That Senator Bayard, of Delaware, ml; " While I op|Mse the proviso, I feel free to sav that some of the laws of Kansas SHOCK Kit TDK MORAL SENSK OK Til K (H\| MI"MTV, as being SUBVERSIVE tF ALL NATURAL IUGHTS. AND A FtH b USURPATION AND DESPOTISM" That while Democratic and Southern Sena tors thus denounce these tyrannical laws .1 AS BUCHANAN IS PLEDGED TO FORCE THEM UPON THE PEOPLE OF KAN SAS WITH THE ARMV OF THE UNIT ED STATES. TflK BtCHAXAN" AMI I*l l l.'!;K FlflOX !V New Vokk. — Gov. Floyd, of Virginia in his spreeh in Wall strrrt, said: " I find from a sojourn of one week in NVw York that the enemy of Benioeracv is not tiic American party. There are b<>>uh of nnvn between the Demcerary and the Ameeinin purlj/ I will tell you what these heads are They are the bonds of justice, of truth, jiatrintism, and of right. (Bravo.) They are the bond* of the Constitution and of the Cnion. A Yoiee—How about the foreign vote? X!r. Flovd— I will toil you, mv, friend— " 1 thank thee, Jew, for giving me that word.*' (Laughter.) When it was proposed, on one occasion, to the assembled chiefs of Greece that they should invite their great ad versary Hector, who had dealt death and des truction in all their ranks, to an entertainment and feast, some of the sturdy and resolute un objected, because he was their enemy. Nes tor, the wise and considerate chief of the Grecian host, projiosrd a union, and it wa e agreed to, and the ntalworth, through the rig ged and the daring chief, who had objected, linally gave op his objection with this dcilarn tion : '* Let him come. It is right audit i proper. We will feed him here today the day of jubilee, and we will cut it out f him to-morrow, the day of war." Now that is the answer my friend about the foreign vote. will settle that question after we have sued the Union. Your city is on fire. There is a conflagration raging. In God's name i !wi inqnire who shall go to put it out. ;Cries "f no, no. J liet us put it out, fellow citizens, ft d the lire companies will fight in peace afterward' [Laughter.] Now, what I have got t<>.yv is this—and you will excuse me. 1 trust, frl'o* citizens, if there l>c a little egotism in it eftusc if there be any subject that I l.ate m'>J to talk about it is the subject of myself. 1 have never expressed an opinion that I to retract—never. But 1 say this to yon n"* —such is the change in the aspect of politic affairs, that has fastened itself on mvo>'< ence since I curne here to the North, tlmt the head and front of offence agi>in?t • who offend against Democracy —I who ? 1 by it against all comers and goers, in no k,rM and insignificant way—l, ns to whom the■' not a man iii the State of \ irpinia, or m ' ■ South who would say that tin re is any of suspicion against lii> faith to the Ikino ] 1 ic party—l tell you here now, that I - 1 elector of the State of \ irginin, and g] ;i --bc chosen—the world of oppression fli> 0 qnv could not prevent nic—l tell yoti, citizens, Fillmore men and Republicans. L can show me that the candidate of ' Hcpubliean party can only be beat'" 5 vote being cast for Mr. Fillmore, that rire 1111/ rote for Mr. I'lUmorr, if the -'' o}>rus and swat fates mr. [Great And I will tell you something more. Democratic Virginia, that never > HI . never faltered—a voice—(" Ncbcr tire aye and never tired either, my friend, British flag took its receding eourscaef " waters of the Atlantic— Virginia, too.' lip and stand at my back in that m"' l *" '. , 1 in that rote. That is all that I have say." 8*2?" During the delivery of MR' speech at the Merchant's Kxchanc .j- , a Wall street broker, a Jew. name' . > s quentlv interrupted the speaker, ami a . the audience, by putting impertinent M _ In the conrc of that pirt ot '.he a' ! Mr. Banks which referred to Col. ljS | the Jew exclaimed, " W asn th" ,0 " r , .. *,| ed ?" " Yes," responded a voice i" ' j. "and a better man than he was some of yonr ancestors about t'> t ,„ a years ago." There were no more lcl • I ironi that source.