ME 1111 10efi r eip)eiif -5 ts C'. F )? -5 :4'.4D k 11. H. FRAZIER, EDITORS. • MONTROSE PA' • • ' ThUrsday; April 17th, 1866. itge Otis foqrth page contains an ~interest 7 ing letter from! the 'Editer 'of the Pittsburgh . Gazette, - .on the Union State Coilvention. '.the Guiett e is Ole leading Republican paper , in Pennsilviinili, has always strong y oppos ed the. Knew Nothings, was opposed,. to Cam. iron for. Senates, and is opposed to Fillmore -,..for.President inishort, it oecdpies Oho-same -p it ion in .politlcans the Net York yet ,will be. sect by ,the Cndors i_ es the.neminees and - the main. featutses c f the . platfoitil of the Union Convention. We May • 'add that:the Tri4neiemmends the,platfoym, • and the 2 . Vatiott/1 Era says nething against . it. We mentiktilhese facts to gloW,'(though it hardly necessary,)see,ms' .,. that iibe Montrose Democrat only intendi to' misleirid;'.lls •• : when it "represents the. Union. Contention as , a Fillmore movement. 'The Triburge, the ,Zra, And the Grazeitte would ald. promptly re . pudiateand expb§e any attempt to increase Filimore's strength; but this Ccnvention by • ,Selecting Pree Soil candidates and adoptingca • tree Soil platfom will have a direct Leaden • ey to diminish / • , If .s, few such `speeches as 'that of Mr. GrOw 'at the Mass Meeting last week , could he heard by every !voter in the 4 County, we imagine there' would be but very few ' sup porters of the slavery party' left among us.— The great.'difficult,y with many. ofThe Demo- erotic party is that they read oilrltheir • party paper?, which, are let great pains to evade-the real issue beforei-the people and to, conceal the purposes and acts of the Slavery propagandists. But when lan opportpnity,Of fers, to hear a distiriguished speak er,, especial _ly one as popular, with the people as Mr. Grew has ever . b4en, they:will go and hear ; him. And the thuS given ihem not . -. lOSt. Many . ‘yhoiNVere before 'wavering, no - say, a f ter. having ;listened to Mr. Grow's Epec . ch, that they are with ;him._ And when • the 600 'or SOO men who heard hiin, retail] tc t4ir Vanes in all parts of the counts', and, talk the matter over with their• neighbors, it is pripossible to calculate the amount of good That w ill result. , it is not merely as partisans that we exult in the prospect of an' overwhelinit* Repuhli 7 can majority in this County next Fall. For :a eve' parts eensider,stions, a small and well united majority is m i nch preferable to a very large one; big these who duly appreciate the hi - Tort:wee flefeatUtg the Slave 'Tower in the next Presidenti.4l election; should have „but one object, to secure every vote-that can I.o;igot for the Free . Soil Candidat4. • If the . People of U. North Will paw throw ' -therriselveo into the 'breach, step the on! ward course of Slavery, such a blov will be struck fer.freedom as will be felt ip , the des tinies of our,, country:during its existence. It 'is ,understoOd,-on both stdes,, :that ;Kansas _ is in some degree a turning point, and , that the -institutions established there will by likely to deterrnitip those ofall the te.rriiery beyc'tna, to the Nprth and Zest.. Stilt : , the, struggle' would not cease, with the edmissioil of Kan ' FT. sas as a Free State. ' The Slave Power has been so long 'aeeustomed to contiper that not surrender for , onC defeat:— Utah, it is - said, is about to i apply - for adruis sion; with its , Polygamy, Negro, and Indian Slavery, and such other pecUliar institutions as ..its ' popular sovereigns' - see fit toestablish; The other;Territories, one after amither, will also-be ap ly i ng for...admission, and we must look: for kdesperate struggle over= each one of them. But even victory of theifriends of freedom will make tie next less difficult; and , when the slaveholders, whe well know.' their own weakness; perceive that; we know% our strength, 'they will at length' 14uietl , sktmiit to let slavery!oecupY the position .:intended ,by the founders of the Republic, ,as some thing whose existence, though dep,loreci,muSt be-tndured, till ,the States themselyns should ,abelish it, or till the'restrictions imnosed up on:it by the general gov etnment in abolishing the African slave trade and exclSklingslavery from sir the TerritY: rica, should effect its gradual ,extirpittion. rif.The Pittsburgh Gazitti states that there are about:l2e papers in Pennsylvania im - d • opop,sed to the ShamsDemocracy, j • %es a list of 409 by name, of which 34 support -the Filknorexicket, 37 hold white 42 op pose It. Of the 39 supporting it, some halt dozen's cold and aitibrocal, and will prob. , , ably zbandon ; sikor seven ofthe' 37 hold ing off may be, b,riiught to adyomite'it,"and the rema'nder, it is belieVed, will support the Re publimil ticket.' .7We ("argue say'sthat of The papers supporting Fillmore thfireis not tinelof prominence or one poSseasing 'the char and influenceaccorfled to a leadinepress. On thnoiher band tiOtading pressis of the State, those which hive the'var of the pcoPle,.. and whose influence isTelt upon pUblie opin ion, ire arntyed in the clasS opposiid to-.the ticket. Fillmore, therefore, 'has -but little - 44,rength in Pennsylvania, and helprobably has still less in eyertother filorthern.gitate. ; - , R . the Repthiican Tciww;hip ornmi tees, or Associationt, mill send to the editor of the lanateannEsi nEPnaucas eop4l of the lists they wake up of persons to arlawn Soil documents are to he forwarded Washington, they Neill oblige us, and we . • lieve;4lo the cause some service: Wallop! *st i ll' there are any Townships whers inch lists have not been yet prepared, the matter Will not be longer delayed, Ws great. good mutt result froma free eirenlatwn3 of the risht dosii'reante' - • , IMM2MIi f . . fugitive Biaves , ie Yukio& 0 the__ first day _of the.,present . 1 sorn.time;'eal ied All '''oc.lll' day, arson I H. 3l i f,AVells ofJaekson, a, lad of:twel .e &lirth.ri years, full of the ;spirit 9f fu a froll.,:having first thoroughly blacken:.. face itid ha*lss and -diiguieed himself n , o ut rutting attire; Trent out rutting the`good .eol of the towni?nd passed himself off "as . fu , s lave ju st tive slave just escaped from the South. I: - 1 disguise was so complete, that hisown att did riot recognize him. NoW;it happen. th e people of Jackson have .hearts in _the th sefns i and consequently . When it . .n rumored through the town that a po. r e caped slave - girl had just arrived, much syn pathy . for her WaS at once excited. A sul seriplion was got up and `circulated to f rnia her with -funds, and several worthy ciiizei offered to take her home to five in ihei fiai ilia. : Strange as it may' appear, some 4" est'sympethizers, and among 'ihe tbr to subscribe and to oGret to herb° tl re,. were members o(theHunker p leaders are now sednlOusly engag Nieless task of.attemPting to • crust of the hearts of.the ;the instine Pity- he evening .the supiiosed fugitive w iht.into the Post-office; and in the rt f several persons, the- Postmaste i , Mr. - Harris cOMmenced questio h I , le asked where . she_ was from. SI i " Ole Virgmni.' He enquired ht ,r's name, but that sVe refused to tel I vorthy Postmaster here interposed, ai 'd her that she might tell _the w of for she was among friends:ln a 7 re and shBuld be. protected.l (NV t it br Postmttster . under this itdmini tra , The Postmaster also offered to ak 'me and give her lodging, and, in s orb i.s any humane man would. But a ou ne Dr. Orchard thought he discov re, ,ing:suspicionsly whitilahout the g rl' tnd on his' attempting to get a ,be to 1 - The arm, the boy butsi Out laugh ni and the trick was discovered.' , ' - MO elude her. rep: mast: The 11SSU r story; State, man Lion !) her h. acted this ti somet wrist, BM .: ; 1 - It happened. - that there' wafi a .Repo rem i. . .- ' • mcetil l g in the evening of the same a} a -. the Se 00l House in the npiith , part of the - ,- „ * town; find 'anothe boy, son a neighbo c Sir...elk, put on a similar , disguise m Arent up .and presented himself in - the m et ing, alo as a - female fugitivw' . The effee 'o the'apearanee efa Hee runaway -slave then may b imagined. - :One feeling seemed ti pervade tho Republicans and old-liners pfeS ent, and all agreed that she•shuuld he provi ded fof. One staunch old Deinocrat lA, thinks e is greatly opposed to the, priuci le lePubligins, Actually offered to .t. 1;4 home to liVe with But w ei • .- It , was_di:scovered, as it soon was, t i )le Deinocrat , left very suddenly. 0. of the the gir the eh • , venera home. It, is feel .a 1 (said that some 'of -the old-liners , si e tie ashamed - of .having ` been. led ti eir real sentiments so plainly, and. s r, being thOught Itepnblicians I.lat , i 1 < 1 :en'quite unawares, and acted fr u Ilse of their natures, before stoppi 1 what their - duty as sustainers oft xfpfslaveryi required - :Z.ifthem, p r y. will be pardoned this Offence; u ... _. _ show t afraid o been, to the nnpll to thin instituti haps th, with an admonition to be more circirms myself, for me - to say that I realize the full , , The Worn] to be deduced from this story responsibility of such a duty. Something is, that the miss 'of the people, of all parties, more i required. ) .i " I must lake the respon are antirlavery, and that it 'they' would ibet sibility,?' and nerve every energy to the diS charge of that duty heriestly l and faithfully,— ou f thei real sentiments, irrespectiveof par ty ties-fid - uninfluenced by yarti •leade s, ,I am to see that the child's time. is not'wast a , v i st i g i of. ed, that the parent's money is not squander there wtrald be found' scarcely opposittlop to the principleslie the Republic n . ed upon teachers who are unworthy of their party, 4 the North. .' . I', , . confidence; or, at least if this, is the case, I 1. '• , _ , must see that'it does not have ,the sanction of , in futur • üblishing-day with ix &Edwar s hat - monthly occasion :used to e burn, in, the pahny days of the N w "—a time ofirejoicing to thalov rs fresk and vial periodical lit.stratu e. -rprising, firm, from their neW' Brod,. 'eau, simultaneously issue the I.l' magazine, the hest reprint fro I• lish "press,...- and the best juveni e - eztant—" Putnam's Monthl v " rap. , .is what with Co Morithl of good II& en way bu :,•r}~eri • the En periodic " rftmsel lain • than aye, ' 4rn's" ,oirl Words," ~.and - the choolfeil • current numbers `are Of• moIL: age 'quality and . interest,, "Pu re have an elathirate and: 'mini". tonian .retnini'spenoe,' a -seasonab :f", Arctic -,life', a taithflil..digest. IZME picture Lewes' cl `oethe a - just critique•ouDuyekinck ia, a tine bit of •tat,uial history 'in t. a dissertation on QUinee Treei, a poem. by Whittier, and an iron !OyClop:s. shape of ingeniou.i the, Woman's Rights question, wit • SparrowgraFs humor, and so e' s verses; these go to _snake •up '. t °nee highly entertaining and it - tr_uctive. "The editorial deptrtmet t 1 ull and varied than ever before: A I ble work-is justly tom mended, an i i tonio" should be republished on this ... water, after such an agreeable'he - i is here given this effort by the . r a - 1 biretta° 13erioni." - ssny, on tough elodio number . sbally s more bone's " Dr. A side ofth i ihrmg a-1 that of "I Thu readable •hold Words," as usual; proves thinughout 7 -a most pleasing, gen companion for a journey or' beside stone. Amongst its most deleett l e s. are "Charter' HouseCharitiesl' ri," "Our •ShakeLspeare, • "German 1 - .lotes;" " - The - English Wife," . " The Englishman oa iheDagauhe," 'ooleellow" takes vastly with the ur , tie; wise the heart: ble, pope' Nana Table d' Rovitg ,The chins off = • • tba;n ;Ati thil au:m . ber is an. count of which all publimti r.Kane,and,:a Eary a New or the children relish. These thr• as entirely,meet the literal; wants ly, from , the, educated father to the , _has-just learned to read ; together a monthly treat, of . which the i - nd tasteful should everywhere swri ranseript. of a fern'' ebild w they to tellikerii COunrr Suniusrfirnarrr.—As so ophile) Seema,to prevail wi t me that in case of T w e resigned of , a County Superinteni School I) r ect ors should' proceed' to • - . • __._ sUcumtur ' quote th section o ft lb Law relining to the subjeet, as full° , 4i 411 4aeles in :beelike of Comity dent obeli be fled by the sivehluatitt of intendant of Cana en &Wale, atall the ant , Convention of directors- when 'by eliStiNg ate !shell be fi ll ed by electi on in the mina sooner, foible fait .."ft 4 tb". Ytisto." . 1 . ' "T'h'e'adds is of the ilep - üblica n / tional Executive/Commiuee, which vie pub. .r. lish this week,/ie written with much ability, ni and calculated li!_make a d4epitnpresnion on nd the publin'tnho.l. 'lt is understood to be from bit the ppd of Fratteit'P. Blair, of Maryland, r e . who presided at the Pittsburgh Republican 4 9:Mvention, and i'whose long life passed in tile /midst of Slavery ; , together with his eminent ho peeuliarly , qualifies Mgt 'for unfolding er the evils of the institution.' Most of the southern statesmen gf the present day are so !ir extremely sectional and fanatical On the sub. , pet of slavery, tnat they can see nothing but good • cvmiected hwith it. Mr.-- Blair, on the es. contrary, looks ; Upon it, as it used to be look . ed upon. by all wise andgood men, North and sb • South, as an evilidi ffi cult to be got rid of, but whkch wilt be curse to, the country.as lung ne - a- as a has existence. ,r Ma gar The repert of the proceedings of the •e- Union. State doni , ention z as published in some he . of the papers, singularly misrepresents . ' the 'y, remarks of Judge. Jessup in .tme particular : in In counselling a anion on the single i ne .of at' Freedom likainst 'SIM cry, he said, that no one . of peed sacrifice hislpeculiar principles on oth. er questions to efrect such a union. For in as ho hitnselfibeing in favor of protection, es- should remain so, while the Free Trader in- could retain his oWn views on. the tarifftre9- _ _ • ng tion, yet both could net together to exclude ae. Slavery from tbeL. Territories. 7 The report er_ eis made the judge say that he was in favor 11. of Free Trade. it 'I23P- The Lackawanna & Lanesboro Rail road is likely to.lie built soon, and will con stitute an important outlet to our anthracite . coal fields. By Means of this road, and 'the e contemplated extension into the. State of New t, : York, the Northern portion of the Wyoniing t ' Coal Field will be pro •ded *ith a very di d rect communicatiOn,b meansof roads branch is ing ofT in every dlicc • n, with Central New . r York and Lake Ontario. We. learn that *the surveys for the Lackawanna & Lanesboili f road will be commented in a few days under the direction of Mr. Trantwine. MT" The Mpntrose: Deinocrat seems to fcome gut for our .Representative,.Mr. Ingham. d i very warmly. Mr. Ingham; representing the • Republicans of this district, is, of .course, more strongly Free Soil, in sentimeirt than theav era,re- of the; opposition to the sharn Tiemoc- - 9 me; throughout the State. Is the Democrat ° [honestly disposed honor hirn. (or his pin; . 4 - ciples Will it rtree to join With us insup:. • • - !'!••, porting him for a re-election'? • s PROLIFIC.—A SOW-belOnging to Mr. Reu e ben Harris, of Jackson in this County, bore, a few days sinee a litter of twenty-three • • • pigs! . Foy!hz . Republican. • . Teachery Certificates. • There is probably no duty devolved upon the Superintendent Ikhich requires . a more ma ture judginent, a more careful diseriminaiion, a more candid, Upright, and conscientious de- cision, than that. of granting. Certificatei of ability, and merit,) to thoie",,who .propose to )-, , take ellarge` i bf our ' - eornitien schools, , .. It would i l be but ti sitht, satisfaction or re -114 either. to the earnest, ahatious,parent or. ;~ ~.:: ~• a department specially intended to guard the interests of both. child and parent. " To the furtlierance Of this_ object ihave thought it might he proper to publish .the form of the Certificates . to be gra . rited, tpgeth, , • , er wit h explanation. The blank form is. as folloirs AV0.... " . GOOD FOR ONE. YEAR-ONLY - TEACHER'S CERTIFIATE—Pro . visinnaL . ,-.; .11fts passed'a4 examination ih=the gllowing Branches, with the annexed - result: 1 Orthography... . . Grarrimar... Reading • : ..1.. Arithmetic.. Writing:. ,- ' ..:l• Teaching.. ~. I .... • Geography... • • County Superintendent . ' of 1 . , • : ' County. .. ..... -A 85 • 1 - ' EXPWATIOS :,—No. IL, signifies Very Good ; 2, Good; 3, Ididolling; 4; Poor-; 5, Very Poor'. It will be seen, lby looking at the above form, that a teacher may be Marked at any intermediate number from one to five, (those . included ;) or from " very yckost,7-to " very poor," i;hich woufil most certainly, include any who, might pree r at thetrivelves as. a 'can didate for a certifies e. And. I desire to ve it distinctly .uncle stood, by all', that alhere i mark a teache Ur's on any branch (or" poor" and `° ver .poor,") that it is equivalent to an absolute refusal of any certificate on the branches thus marked. is not the fact that they have a certificate, but rather, what is" the grade of that certifi-. cite, which determines as to judgment in re gard to their - qualifications.. I make this ex - 041463n in regard to certift ,cate.s. that all may:have, a vied understand ing iivregard to thern. - And [desire, also, in future, to cultivate a good understanding with the people - directors and teachers in relation to all the deities Lami called upon to perform ; feeling, as 1 do, that should- labor 'harmo niously.. together for one common object, that of elevating ;the chttraker of our Curatnon Schcols. - , 1 sincerely hope that no one Will expect of me anything less than afair, honest,and faith ful disehirgo of thosi duties which I consider attach to . the position in which I am placed.--: I hope fici; one will expect me to - brand one of 9 . 13 r certiaates that which my better jtidgment - } i tnust Aleet i n false, fur the sake of personal Amor or gratification ; for, it it is ex peeled by igme, then zone will be disappoint ed. B. F. 1 4wksbury, county Superintendent. • I:l.uiro April 11, 1856. - 3 ja' TwO hundred Yearuiti left New itr. leans, April.lotb, to join General Walker's forces lEl6i:drat Amerlca. General Morns. by was amen the *niers. „." MEM LEI i 4 COIITt / I TIMS4inP. ' 1 i I FIRST WEEK. I s .. 1 O. mOtiont if R. B. Little, Esq., -Willis& M. Post . Was / sWordand-admitted as an At torney, dm. 1. 1 " School Di+rtors of Silver , Lake vs. Thos. Hartnett., 'Verdict for 'plailttiff Pr 84.02,, and-costs. 1 1 , •.: ! 1 . The Courtlilecided to hold an Adjourtfed Court, to meet on' the 9th - day of May next ; at 10o'clocki,i. ts., to grant Licenses to Ho tels and Eatii4; Houses. ' . - Conimonwe'alth vs. Azina Lindsleys. In; diettnent for lassault , and' battery. Vercliet not guilty, and that t proseeut`pr, : ltlattew t it Murphy, pas Ithe cos , i i , 'l d itutts Tha34r and others vs. Jonas =lli, .APpeal.'' 7. Verdict for'plaintilis for 153,12 . ~., , • • 'd ' 1 SECOND WEEK. Edward. Melsjulty va. Oils Ross. Ve fur-plaintiff. ' ; David L Meeker vs:: Mirk Sutton. Jury being unable 'to agree upon a ver , are discharged; b y' the , court. • - .;- , • • . - , L!MI • . ' :Or the .fteintitican. 1 . • • Reiinblians Awakein Jackson..,, . At a-meetiti of the Republicans of J son held on the Eve of the 1-ithtif•Febrit with J..H. Millsin the Chair and L. IX . ~ • son Esq. as Secretary, the following j ti cers were chos e n toe_ the ensuing year.' _W. IL Bartlett, tt, President ; Eaos Bryl Vice-President; Jose,ph FOster, J.. 11.; Mill L. D. Ettkusoll Esq., iiitti.Ctors ; .Evan Tucker, TreasU'r'er; H. M. Wells, Record ~ Secretary" Wk. W. Wheaton, M. 4., d resprding . Sec'r'etary: -' I • 1 On -motion, Resolved, •Ttiat *e adopt the Platf,rm and Constitution !of the Washing ton Rk.pu id ican Association, and act. hi Con4ert With that organization. • ~I . , l• L. • 1,,.. . :1 • •..zottie tv;entptive gentlemen present scgn- Lli ed the Constitution, - and -the. meeting atliet. rn -1 ed after,several i ;pithy and spirited speeches. At an adjour ne d meeting' convened A n•il lst., speeches. were made li,y Enos- llryant, J, W. Stone,-1.11 IL Mils., ' and other's, 4nd , •• m • , the following resplutions,ofTered by DOct. W. Wheaton a'n'il J.W. Stone, Were unaniniou's i ly . adopted and ,d •to•be ',published in biah. .'Ccp unt 'pa rs. 1 I Resolved,; That we consider the leading feattires of the Republican -Party ., as distinct from the ' o,ld Whig'. or ••Petnocratie'' P I . r. ties. • . •li • ••- • .• First, In its i opposition to the Foga Ye Slave Law.k. , . • I r - , Second; Its 'desire' for the restriction of Slavery in the Territoi•ies. .H • - •• ',Third, Its severe condemnation .of Ire Kansas Nebraska Act; and consetpient e peal okthe.'lllsOuri Coinpiroinise,' and • Fourth; Its highest approval ofTempe rance, .Morality,lFreedom and Religious Lib erty of all mankind, and : : -' - Resolved, Further, That We will'stand ft m with the* ' Republican Party' so long •it shall remain uncontaminated w t itli the ,noll .t -ed atmosphere Of ',lntemperance and ifunt 1 Bondage, and we cordially invite cat t‘f w h i tt ever naine, or party, who are in faYor of thEr , `Prineiples,' to unite with us under thelbrt banner of ' Atneican Freedom.' ' 1 • Resolved,- That. we hail .with gratitud untiring energiesla the Hon; G.A. Grp behalf of ' Free Kansas.' • . . I 'Resolved, That'we look with contemn on the effort in the, Pennsylvania -Legisl to gag 'dudges and t prevent. trice speech i North. - .. . A contribution)of several dollars was' 1 . i Placed in the hands Of :Doctor Wheana 1 i. t • 1 the-purpose of prOcuring Speeches and' utnents frtnri Washington, and 'for thel i 1 • [ • . siun of Nitical knOwlecrge generally. -After which theAssOciation adjOurne weeks. • • .. . . .H. M. WELL. ,'Set - - ' C . 1516" us L . Clay. , TA Southern t f 'or re s t ion (hi ni' of the them .Christian Advocate. giV"-the Tolle as Cassius M. Clay's mode Of tnantighn Kentucky .audienee4 by moral sintSionr, He sends-an appnintinentto a given to lecture al: a. certain • time ' ' perhaps p of the natives will send word: that he vri: be permitted to lecture - there ';' he sends word 'Thai he willlileet n re there accordip previeus notice. iThe time comes--; a crowd .is collected, to heai the speech ; 11. ently the') ecturer innes. He pa.'se.4 dirret I% through the crowd,. Mounts the forum, wavtls 'his . hand for attention,, all eyes are turned tn. wards - the . spetikei. .'l He commences with firm, Clear, and decided tone of voice the I fop lowing remarks : - 1: -,1 - ' \ Gentlemen, (says be,) I haVe a few.pke linl inaries.to settle previous - to entering ulna, the main subject for discussion. .I want to . .i.nak three short appeals to three classes-Orpersods (when 'he holds 'n i p a' small (Bible.) There gentlertian r Says.he; i's the great; ebarteri rell , ord of human rights oti . , which allsistiLw 1 and -i • . equality is based,; eserVing , the name o`last, this is my appeal to the relig'ous part of s, ciety,—and lays 4 down , On the stand betioi him. Then he holdslup the ,ConstitutiOn ' the United State. :Here gentlemen, sit' be, is the bond of ctiir, Union, the nohle co - stitution of our 'gip: ious Republic 7 •w v hiehlsa • . ',that all men are Imrn j free and equal,. wit i rtain inalienable; rights, &e., &c. ..:This i •. appeal to gentlemen, -to patriots'and to all Americans, mid be places it with' hiS Bil.: ble ibefore :him: Then he puts his handl hitt Illis poet:et, and br . ings' but an :enormous si. shooter, bolding 4 b4ure .the andietice,• says : and here, gentlemen, is a six • shohte i every barrel of which is heavily loaded wi s th powder and cold r[gICI, This is my appeal ii mobocrats, and I will blow' its" contents throle the • heart of theArst :man, who offers tO lay . his-hands nn me to silence me. in . tury nap. tine State,•or gag freespeech in my presencel This be lays down upon the stand, with! his two•former appeals, ready for action, then:he cOmmences a perflet storm agaiitst the peettl.: liar institutions, enough to wring the sea l of cld Kentucky from every 'pore. 13y Itbi., time ate all awed into subtuiviiiiri sileAce, =A Senatorial Change*, On the 4th of4farch, 1857, , the Senatoriai l terms of thA folloWing gentlemen will expire —Jobn R. Weller of California; base Tou 11 cey, of Connecticut; Charles Suinner, Massachu , ;eits; Lewis Casu, of Michigan; ) John. R. Th4;mpsoti; of New Jersey;liatoil :Y ton Fish, of New .York ; Riehard rodhead:l of Pennsylvania; Charles T. James, of Rhode, Island-; Solomon. Foot, of Vermont ; iiettryl Dodge, of Wisconsin. Of th ese., only Oturl - voted against the lliissouri Comprotnise r -.-I The polities' complexion of the represents.] tion frit= the Status noted, will depend upon' the result of the eleetions during the pmient year. .... In answer to resolutions or, CAlagreiN President. Pierce his stated that there is noth ing new in lbs i3tats Department in regird to glinefts !Ir edentriti 4T.r.Tfalc, l 7 l affOrs• • il . Reriinbeika Preaddent*llionvk , circular o the Notional comofitte .•ed at PitiOutigh . on *24 of' 1 85f: ——. *I . 1 . 1 . • We solicitlYourattention t .l 1 O the 'EIJI which has precedgd i I this :paper. "It .is 'not ,only to, recommend ,t) the peoplelha initnediate se lection ofehigatei from 'the ;Several States ; equal, in riti J;io. to three timed thft.represen.:. tation in Cc ros to which each Slate is. en titli,d,',to, Eq. ton ?he 17thj of.Nue; et Phila. tI tie delphits.toeSent such indiv'duats'as they may - thinly :st4suited \ to upho d the,' eau-:e to which are "devoted as Candidates for the Presidency and, Viee•Presidenqy ;,hut also to invite the tnemhers of all Parttes Who feel it to he thed4Mitiant issue which should control t , the election toi meet , at the sante time and place, to co Seri, with the cOnVtintion tts-to the best Course .to !crown their Cc nunOn Wishes with surge . ..1. O 'wishes of the par ies Which' will be represen ed at Philadelphia has taken the naive of Ile nblicim, because i . was given to that foUndeol4 Mr. Jefr,) , 1 rso . to embrace all who love theißePuhlie. _ .1 There is no Dem ocrat who dOe - fUnt,love the illeiot bile, "There is no Whig whO does not !bye the Republi c : There is no Anterican who idots not love the Republic.. And we' f.ndty 1 ho nt there is no naturalized eitii i en Alto doeSaict, . 10%1.e the Re, ! public. • ..1 . 1 , . i ! , I But it s hint :-..iso'important movement ‘ . :liieli Wit', desirei to ly inatiger led Piall he desigi tl . s partiCular .1 atinl, 0, that it 7 1 -1 united, and .ireelivq . -., Wh.). , . to; 1 clas. , es who are ' - bo,lile to the h Slavery int 1 fr4e 'territory; ul sis- - .li(impeuding danger, to v mon'trcliet, which will be notliii 1116 grand p ineiple of reprei! slot' of slatvi l likii»g inonopoly,l cater the rightS Of the, people in the Union w ho raborHwith their A tickei . whieh *lll not - agitr to detrart franifite rights of pose of the zubjet within tier ing to their soriFeign will i ) to destroy't efrlpedttil tit-whit fit subject Of invistigittioil, Witl ear' its aggresiive pi-4er ill t tk nal way. ''..,:„. i • ' • Thu riunts of ate t.boring slat • this ques,tioi ' hasfp beet] bet far rusetitatives front the North,anq intere:.t. ol.the:,•lftvelii,lders, wl . t o ,tirrel der the lands to hhti: fr I were set apart' ti,t. make L e to, rich th e wo4inftinen' of liiiili i own no . itvc,t,i, Who shourd end cul t i rate , and 1 i id:Prove then) 'w toil. P . re: itie . 6ro great !Ulm in this'causel--;44 one inipeilin.: tiou of the rightstotlabor, the., ti , etnent of fi.sti, misguided .r who have Viitlat4 the fitith Pie the two sections. 4if the Union •ti their eompin t, ,aqd their oWn, Sentatives in MiseeFresenting th es ai-tituents int . lie .: ret,ealilig obeying the r, 'in:sink:thins lin I them. mg I he ict, ME ' nt, a les, Icier El Can there . men of all r design of del pressitats of ritories, and of the Far V the sterility i ever it tread; ers in the I. four millions' of free whit l States wl3ll o ty m hon ils 0 1 ! IClorth lit,t • een,tis.). twenty-six tti regiinis of tit inter to the views of into MB :111, n t IMI MylItTS ,WUU It arn, (e ea ing thin suffrages of the Free-S ta te settlers by disabil lities, will be a loptedond the ‘.h!' l ile preceed= ing w:11 he sus anted by, the Military firer of the linited States, upottihe.prinetPles and un der the Authority ofthe 'the Pres idenC4rue lamation: , -- e. .- , I. . I - • rIZEA Here we mirth close our Circtdar ; bit i may we not trespass. upon thi l t paiience Of those we :Address by exposing the workingS of the : 6mo:ion whiCh those . who art4..gate to hesn selves the charucter . of penmerats are itsbor- . ing to 'impose l ! upon out, : vire') TerritOries, And upon the'Principle asterted by them, thl,t it is a Nation:Jib - I'4lEu: i 4 The atto: , enient to oxen the fr'e Llerriteries te . Slavery, by repealing the compacts upon tits. •Subjeek., be gun with , the nullifiers of . South 'arolina.--s- We will beginiviih that State, to 'nuke en exhibition of 410 'sort of kovertutteot itl- will enforce in the :Nest, frthn its ;results in the South; . - Popular sovereignty in South Carol's,* thus exhibits itself; Sixdistricts in 'that State, in the rice and lunlKstaple eetton regpn,.Where the slave population is Most densei!euntalning a population 4149,03 whites,.ele4t.a major. itrof the Sena 4., leaving in a Minerity those representing 20,O8O• white"' in :iheirest ;of the State.. In 11 districts, .77,9361 whit es .. elect 28 Senators an's 64 itapresentaii*irbilo IS hat Ihe great 's •, ee steceessie al mt. try any. 111 be strung; y nut hiljliose rodnetion of ice at "this ari.. ite fora corn late4 to assert i n)g and 11112 OM wit, Stiq uni l t its a vi very) II Ns In suit 10;i 1t10.6 zwetii *rate itltt I, Cher the chas preseotativ'es Ifred !bet W . Pell eucft either ui 1„. , l altti /1.4 rypre - wio tor t heir •teto, dis retcyclice to Ike . 4y diflicufty is .who veri(tg the ma,ises ie staveki(ddet in , t free, inall t he hint Wends Hsi her'it are 347.( ite4 States; they 41:tveS ; titerti 6 witting. the In the gr6zBt tiYnn: the op the neW Ter: by regions of S'lni•vry and ast sl►n•ec'w►i hulilj nearly P. six est hat LE ~ .1 1 iit?'Earlittion ni .the 4iiiiiierti li. til slaves, ain i ti - i•re are.t w en frec-f. white piiiitilationl in the ingViir ; . the - . mien,-INe sinee the kr e the interi t sts •of theNe i .E.i pits ..f the peoplb in the vita . isst to be bat 4, to' admin. fl f l 't • 1 -; ', l to the full I( n, to hi. Wm : 1-'?, - '4u which the 3 7.00 i) slave inejilge.thenisOv '..s ? llii their V• sOnnatize a , : 113:: eft Iteptibli o oitilii niakel a const l eilation ; t .r . iiibfies, etinst tuteif of . the i r e . ;giitarnh-h'et) Iva , ilave,.4 leir tastifry: aril their laws tiOI that: Win-0. Arel i thy eall9A thef wiiiiid redeei - 1 their ehite e S4iiitilliy re l serv . in t ,cr to then' life r t tliraltlorn itniii sect j n them ,islavdry there, aiiil-which brakes - a.." : ; oppres4pr Of an im, °1110o:1 On ? Are they), caller . thej4,'•olild ire.: t the slite- is swtiir4,in his ,littkinpt l r to exL r fatistes 'The sobs l i : f . the Free 1 I . e \rtt).eady eaq ,flair iiitliini.the l Whleh thqir-fathecsltatight them', •i - l'as their •inheritanee, wider a If more thaif thii:ty year siaud, Wit, 1 W ! file MEM . ---- "districts, havin g ,181,145 whites, are -repree jsented by 17 Senators and 60 repmentatives. Thus less thanloee third at the Free " I pi.ipula,,j; tier in the tteg*qearter region have thesit; premettontrolnfOhe State, - J The Legislature el ee teat .4 , this t hird appOi nti 1 the .4 udiciary --froth the Salo. trio bench toeotitinen juSti t justi ces of the pestle; elects Senators in cen4eis and the electots tfPresidentjand,rice-PreSl-: dent of the Unite States ; fer the people are: not all Owed ,tiiijYt i , it all for the electors of President J,and] Vic =President Of the United. 1 States, this beoigld me by the retten borough Legislature, 7 10 de ante -of the spirit of the'' Omstitution aildlth, interpretationof•&cri other State. t.; • . . f .4I • . - The Governor jof the Siete •ie also elected by this body, Whieh represents a minority_of the •State- DO 4j;grdes and land exclusively —for no maul id eligible to itjunless he has! real estaie to( th?.. valuel of 47,000, clear of all debt, or fiveihimdred acres of land end' ten myrtles. filtir I .an thiletate of things, be changed , unless twiethirdinf Ibis land ,:uici negro citialifedjbiAly emisent t”lthe.niteration of the Constittitiont-aj thing. , tiever to be jjex jpectedSj .. .. i . I• j - In Virginia l and Maryland the system of minority goVernine it, to g ive 41e,eontroi -- to. the slave sect+ tt i er the greater'white pop ulation_ in otheT pOrions of the State, prevails, t but in a less flegr •e; but in all the Slave States, , whether cr ntrived by constjtetion, •-prOvisilln or lit, the result is that the slave holding, class iis i shvereign throughout • the- South. . 1j I ' , • - ft results from The concert pred aced among the Masters byt .heir common interest in an institution whi ch t Fab 'only stand by force. of artificial means, 1 Ilhe Oar -4 themselves and J the nonlslaveh4ldiei are, as indiyidpals; nat urally ieclinedlagaik it ;. -this makes it 'ne cessary :that the satieowners_sheuld 'bgeome, a phalanx-anied witted, disciplined army, to 1 sustain by political intrigue and united force all . I :etlacks iiptm it, There is no one all-absorb bet influence alnorl its enemies':' to combine J e, ej . J adversaries in ile . o. itit at. . The j consequence , ;is that the 3474)06 rasters forever animated :by j the same insiinct, can always • vampish partial and deseltori• opposition, as standing armies : .in abst lute IGOvennneetti keep I mil ! lions of :Po pie in !siibjugation. - The monopy • oly i which !teary 3.000.000 of black men +give. , to unired atiihorit!) Which Colllnanck thee', inakes it. • impoZsilile that. any. single-handed 1 emote:titer in the ifield of 'labor l ean, in eulti v,ating` the prorite'sdif the fatil,jenter ace mar kett with the - slap esi of the South on equal . footing- with ink j uho wield thej force of ten, ' twenty and thillty', l . and hundreds' of slaves in ('companies- - The ow tiers o f slav , es command the markets; theY put down. the:individual.' competitors; they Utly out the !little planta tions Which , it the tlle earlier settlements,sur :round them, tuttfort the end, th'e rich' lands :dl become tht e deirmins, smoothens rich planters,— Hence We see in iiillier sTithern,States the poorer classes are ;either tenants at will, or, %banished to thelpoiirl land of the'ii i ills: take t i ,' , !! the life of idierl, hiniters or fishermen; or, at ,•ta.it,'the more iindulitriou4 'ailiOng them . be. , collie day.lahork.roii•ing, from hand to mouth; hi a' word, theyt i t re stripped by thetiligarchy of slave Owners, i whO command their wages;J , •J their tenements' , anif,gof course, eyerything. Tlrelass .who lioldt a. monopOly of the s'eil_ eatt‘etiminand very i !ling) " "Hi:. ti-aks .-my my life Who tak,cts the means whereby, Ilit'fA",, .1 - lenee itiohe Siittlt, I the nionopoli.sts of the' hind and blink jlaberl Of the cotenry, al t hotigh numbering but 347,000 out of a, population , of 6.000,000, in vl!?!'2ue lit theiricc.wer, over near Cts millicinsOlslaves, arej absolute .in ail s 'the State Govlerements. They are the Governors, thelLeiirs4ors, the Judges, Jus ti6e, Sheritfi ; tle.: 1 ; use all in all. i .:_____> ---- - - The peteer wtlicit. combined action - gives t) the slayeheldine eltise over the Whole South is wielded will: tequall etrectAii Olhain contrOl . over the Nerth. The Machine. it moves L there is On a_lari i s large .'e tle, and this \ instrumen..J taliiy of its :mien {{ 'Visible to the least. dis cerning • eye. I.F.N..ri; eortherttl,:ispirant fur the Presidency Ina,' lie looked upon as a pow er in the handsi if the South to Mote the ma . chine Of the c Fe eral peve r timen t according, to its w ill. We iiirm tae• the experiment be tore, your 1..ye5.1 Nir Pierre- . is ! a candidate J , . .4 11 I Ag r , for rej.eiectom „te th e residency • sir.,lJoug-, _las, ilr; Criss,- 4r: i3t t chanan, arer i fropeful ri-' I vats:iciteh• hat- -their partisans to the differ,-: eat sections of the l'tth; Some, forty or fill ty i4kind.office.hol ers and dependents en executive favor rely ripon one or Rile other!or, these'.lto make tlion s i ecure in their pciSts,--- It is k!nown to all (quire people that not, one of the. rivals pin, command it majeritY of the Northern vote aka+ the other ; nor, ind Ced, rig:MO :in oppiqtait l o any other siarty. .' For :entic ! e-jot' tie in, the .0 es of the South decide t tip enestion of e'oni 14t ion ; Old then the rjo,. sibility of eieetini &vends absolutely iipon a united Southtrn slipport. Tic Southern ntion. e-appoisat- L.February REMO to .14intli of • blinds ? ih u view . w es to dis fleet 'Tit- 11121 111 to 174. 3 - -CODStit,tl volved in the re . p, ith in the i Ve voted tor which .eh• U)' who dig them o (Sir nw•n blended slayeholders, th •refliri.. h4ve the tate of:iill these keekers (if t el Presidency;' of i thtil,so. called! Democtithic' party, entirely in their . hands ) ! I ' T , . Add here 'wee fin i in what consists th , a: t -, whiefilis now vautitk u to be the Democratic party pqr exceiliace lit is complised of the office-holders ttin)er -The preset' t • Administrie. tion, headed by: th4e . .chiefs who itfre chalked to, to leontinue • tihent lin• o ffi ce, through the unite& vote of the S inth, and the chance vote of SoititTNortl ed.] 8' ate, obtained by plural ity—the re-ult 4 the ivision of their oppo nents:, growing opt i t petnia{ preferences or party Idissensionk 'ripe Denioci-stic 2 party, which the Adinin:istilatiton calk 'it.' own, hits •no basis be .t the iiligiolchr of, th e (stit It—we might-callivtlic phi oligarchy, returning to it. the •appAittion iwhich it is so willing to give to others, InicanSt it moa appropriately belongs to.:it.self. Thi leaders ofi- this party in the North havp proyed thetinte! t ves entire ly worthy, of its! .eunfidenee by bandoning every principleofidenakerttey once !their boast. They have abandoned the principles of the tatliers of the lie6ul4.ii, who 'considered it as Ai. , first attrinutelof he new. Omer tif , things. - estunliShed by' IN). 1e.% oliitimi, that it would arrest the Spread 'lof 'SI ivery throngtiout the continent. .It dal kid to itsitillOedizite ex tinction in tilariy )1 tlnf States, arid the first i act under the °Cot stitu ion was to ;exclude it from the whole birrtto yof the Union'. The . DettioCratic - leadls ;Vithe new order, at the bidding (1.• the SoptW..rn nullifiers,! have bro ken ailithe compp 'O Lets. and comprOmises. de signed -ti, establish le Republici in the ter rietrieS, tr u e whi(..ltivery -was eXcluded.:—.;.. 111 doink this' they -ht% .` put under font the representative ;mu; i .; defied the will of their, ititittediatelcotis ituents; (oh receiving instructions' to re eigp eiracts haVe refused to (~bey"; and. in tori have givenutbe nuts'. g t striking example ... e t a I utteitabaudoument of the cardinal doctrine. of democracy. • The spread,ot; liberty, notlidavery i is its..diAinct . . ivp priaidiple. 1 1 1 , . , - .I . 1 '' They; haveshoefit !hitt the will. of 341,000 slavtianiners in the .St4th is mitre' to them than:that. 'of tweitiy millions of freeniew in the North. The 14ieis of this'spitriouspe-,. -i • .1 'mousey are but the e satraps urs.,Koe F il mas ters. I '. .1 1 '2l I The late ;which li w it ' . k with it Detnueraeylwhit government uf.slairentiri `the testimony whilh We the most distinguished which we find Collate(' I Westoh, ' • I.• '• ‘.. • -. • - 1 !I Mr. *vets of 00 t s a: peopie afflicted grime Up under the lief* may be seen in give in the words teen :of ilea -party, n 'a - pamphlet, by lir. url, in ► paper on "DornestieVaiiufaeturerrt in the 'Souk* a t :West," published in . 1847; * - • , "The free 'population of the South may I A divided 1: - two ilar of thi l Ye'''h°4e and. the - , - . 2- uon-slavehold e r.. arta a wart that the-relative numbers ofithese two classei hive ever- been aseertattled n an State; bait I stn satisfied that .the tir.Vslave - holders , faroutpurr ber the slavi,holderis:-ner. haps by three-to. one. In-the/more southern portion of this region • the niai:slaveholdery possess, generally, but very stnaThrneansiatid. 'the land which they possess is almost univer. sally poor, and that a scanty subi siA.nce is all that On be derived kuin its eultivatition ; and the more fertile soil, be. ing in, the postiession of the slaveholder,snus,,' ever-remain out 'of the: power of those who have none: - " This state - of things is a'grest drawb ac k; and : bears heavily upon: and depresses the moral energies of the prrorer Classes. Th e acquisition' of a .respeetrible position in- the scale of wOlth appears so-diffittit.,- that they decline the hopeless pursuit, and marty•pf them 'Settle down - into habits of idleness, and •becOme the passive subjects of all .its quences.. And I'lansent to- spy that I have observed of latyetr3 that an evident deter': oration Is ; takiag place in this part of - the pop ulation, the y,outiar portion Of .it being le ss • educated, less industrious, and in every.point of view less respeetable.than-t4ir ancestors.)? In the January rt urn r, of De 8 Benin.", in an article' on- s_ .3flam!facturers in South Carolina, we have ani exhibition oG the tears .entertained )4' bringing tog et h er masses tof turnAtveliOlding Southern slue po•• lation. even firi manufacturing parp..,al, pti • -• ' • -• ' - _ . . . " So long ..ts,these poor but industrious' peopleeould see no mode of living; except by:, . a degrading Operation of 'work_ with 'the ne.l gro upon the plantation i lhey were content fa , endtire.life in its. Most . diSefLuraging for Satisfied. that they wereabarelhe slave, tho' firing often worse than he.: Rut the pr„.: giess i. of the : world is 'onward,' and fla, ug hl in some sections it is slow, still it i4 . '' ofne ar d , and the great mifss of our Ooor.white..popuiti lion - begin: to understand - that ` they hale l rights, ` and.- that they, too; are entitled t,.> some, Or -the sytngiuusly wrong; atarth e ,f :s'l.tittibitherto , has granted thei Treinisesi. and attempted to justify - negro S very 834 ' 1 exception to a general rule, or, i wrong, assi matter ofbargain Vetween thti (miim:libel. South. : The laws - of god and (dare are nit mutahle, and man cannot bar!, in diem atiay,i While it is far. inure .obvio s that negroes should.be slay .s than 'whit foe they are c.raly fit tl.labo ~ not, tO.direo—yerthepriaci-, pie y Slaver is itself riglq. craddoes not deJ , y . I pend ,on . di,fireace of compleziair." Under thi, di;ctrine it ti; leos that here a - -his' -.' more direct erislaVentet of. 0• v. e i ace mayi 'be insisted upon ihria.thatiobtaltiellin Mai' Co under the 6.otrivance of debtorivassalage The doctrine is • a positive' simetiOn 'to th., 1 bondage of the-white lace, and . asserts . that " the laws of God and nature are iiiimutable'l in...its support, " and man cannot b:irgarti them away." it is-practically illagritted now in the Utah Territory, where a' inan holds :i - Multitude of women as -Slaves, calling th..:l his wives. What is.quire in Iklr. Ritchie's principl e to yrevent'Brighain Young ..fr(*.in Inkling , ninety white Men as slaves under bills of sitle, • as' well as ninety white, w0n ! ... 0 Miler pretense of the bonds. of matrimony .111`r. Ritchie's explanatinti of the . Southern doctrine Of Slavery:, together with Mr. Dot g. las's act for the Territories, which'" leave: the people perfectly free‘tolilirtn rind :regi: late dreir,dornestic institutions in their- owi Way, ..iii...jeet.4 . .tily to 'the GinstittitiOn_ of the United-.Stittes ; " certaittly.authorizes the M q ., mon.State to come into the Uidoti, with' tlm' Turkish - systen't 1.111 . - bloWn, Wlffeh 'makes slaves of all colors, arid wives uiftiut mini -,.4 , bet. . it .isli , sad commentary on.. Or progres , . that at the moment When the'ne*ittrivesa• the Sultan's firmarr putting antend:!to . the traffic in slaves in his, empirioigitit czar's steps for the liberation 'of the'serfPßti:.sia, and of -their - actual erfranehisemilit in the Danubian Principaliti - es , --We shinild.haye nc.l gro Slavery forced. on one. Territofy . .-4 'am usu rpat ion set up by 'the sword, andi the ii - Olt i of the sfortnons recognized itt'anotWlto hnl,ll . I • a multitude Oldie gentler •sex. inirseivitiule.. under . the unnatural `grew' of .a XlMity ofwiveil• r. -• 'fi-- -- t4 • • 'i We hold that . COrorieis is . ltoundfl .y ther.• Constitution " to - make all needful, rules - and ..., I regulations for the Territories. of thei United, IStates," and. during their plipilagoatid prep- . aratiun to become members of the'4ltifeder ' aey, to prevent the 'growth - withiOheln 4! . f . 'systems incongruous with the pure and.free, the just and safe principle's inanglated by. .the Revolution. ,. ~: • • .. .4 .E. D. MonoAx,Noi ; York; 11.. •.' I'"AANCIS . V. BLAIR, Marylatid r , 1and,,,..;- - ... . - JonS; $l. NILES, Coitileeti(.:o, . I..jAVip W I Luor, Pennsylvania, , A. P. STONE, Ohio ~ ' ' WM. „AL. ( * RACE,' Rhode island,' - JOHN Z. GOODRICii, Massuch\isetts i Ga.:onus . Ityz, Virginia, . • . :•, . ) ABNER R. IIit.LONiELL, Maine, '•'. - , - E. S. WAND; Illinois; ' CHARLES DICKEY; Michigan, .: .. GAO.. G-...F00u, Newaatripshire,, A. J. Brevass, lowa, . , . CONELIUS COLE, California, LAWRENCE BRAIN:AA% ,Veringnt, ~. WILLIAM GROSE, 'lti.liallii,• ' WiIiIAN.SPOONERi W6consin, . . ;_ C. M. h. PAuilsou . ,.Nevv•Jtisey, E. I). NVlLLuats,,Delamtare,'' . .i • .-. . 'Jolla G. FEE, KentuckY,. .... - •'.l AMES RE.DPATII; .IStissouri, LEWIA CLEPLlANE,'DistrietTolumbia, ' ' • - National COlnthittw Washinytan i .Mnrch.2, 1856. "/"opt the: /,3ooki:e.! The - Only State Electio,o to held before Augnst, iiaVe,p - assed, and it is well to loot up the result.. Those three are all Nov England States ; and Pierce had: Yankee pride to ap .peal to in. his behalf. • lie and his party !nude all • the, •ntrnet iu 110- ,power to carry those States. - lAA, the party had proved . fitlse - Anterican and Republican principies,and they repudiated. their.. Own sun,. for whAnn they bad, Voted ~ The , nig • shows. the ehlingn in tour years: . ' Pierce over Scott, 1852:: Fierce% athiority ; 1858. New Hampshire . 13,850 2,508 Rhode Island 167 • 2,85 0 Cnininetient 2,890 . 2,060 • - • • ' 26,907 • • 7,358 A elialige (if34,26s)rtiteit against Pierce "at - will do .tbr. loot and th._ public tcu think upon until - August: An average. loss 6111,0004 i three States, : iney eopvine:o the Dentnerttey that - they tintst snake Kansas a Free'State, a-; it' was?: miletnnly ecivettatited- by 'ar tittheks Act shatild he !—Lcivistliii* :Chron • The tApshria: arrived at Halifax . Apra 14th with tfuee daystiater dates from Europe. The Peace eungrissi was again in' se4sion, the -Prussian diftieutty having been overcome, aud theiepert was that the trea •ty would. be Signed ink the 291 h Mar tth, the day. the. Quabria Wed. ';. . The ` ,_neWa frOn other sections is not remarkably Qom" The•Atnelienn State amine il of Wia. Cousin, liac4 . Fillinore overbisiol, and reeinniiiended .Speiiker Ranks for Presi dency. 1 . • II Ell Ell