pr- 1 Vihat! hOt enoughet.. Throw An:Ttich l tnotal—ttrow - in 'Rockland-throw. in Queens l That is not quite enoigh, but I - aiu sick at iu y : i heart when I see that. he bought and sOld4ait :t e ls—the,BlaVes of Virginia, Outweigheil - :iii' 1830.811 , the Whio.4 - Farmers Meretiant. Laborers, Lawyer. 4. linisters:T)oetors;Tro.: lbssors,Teuelicrs, 4.f these Eleven , - Roblei: Op: . Went, intelli - gent - old Oonnties. - • :The Federal Rep+. entative population of The State - of .Conneetieut - Iwa, 297,674- , -just a fraction over thei Virginia Slave . ' inn - Ober: But that is.. her OV.!•nk job. When Georgia, thrtughToomhs andl,Stev ;-, ,ns, .eiones . to force, her.to bow . the hn4e to this idol, we shall .3ee bow sheWill . behaVe l ‘ u,u-se,ll. ~. • Iu one more point Ot light I wish to resent,, the *debasing And 4001 injustice oftli . . Stuff RipreSentation. to!nen .South - •- ; • . • • &arm irt2lTci. St. AncfrOr's 'Parish, '1 . 292 3485; • 2353 St: John's, Colle . ton, -.,665.:- 9380 '..8293 St. Arils, Goose Creer,l,' 1649- '6743: Is9lB , St.lohns, Berkley, i . 096 :10069 ,5987. ;St.' Stephens,.. . - - 'ti • 602 814 ;1699`• • Church , .1 - I 529•`' 2803 . 2256 444. Jatioes',Fau.,ea, 1, II 314 , 3428 2371 I St.. - Thaniap and St. DOnWs, • -218. 23371' 1920 GeortotOwn District,- 1145 1779612823_ &Peter's Parish, . r 2317 7466 . 6796 ' -J. 1098 7690 . 5719 ' 190' 73,583.35071 • •gag _ • - ooroit t hose 11 isaintly districts with-their. 'll,OOO Free, and 73,000 Slaves, had,iniB3o, and proably have ;to this day as much pow er, infldence and repientation in thti Con -gress of the United , States as, all the Free -men inflhe eounties!of Broome-17,579 ; Cat . ex.alagns, 10,724, tied:Clinton, 19,344- These . are hard lines—this is tough to be:'borne.— But I suppose as it is :n the bond, We must; to the old vying gOir, ‘! . .-grin Mid bear it.". At this precise puce it stems fitting to in. ~ quir bow : many. Ilepresentatiyes . the Slave power sends'en seee'un of their ..slii*es -by ;that 'despotic,- unriehtecius 'Ruh: .to the present,. Congress. 1 . \ The slave :poptilatinn b,y-Census Of 1850; 3,204,313. ?.?lireC-fiftns of this num ber is 1,92%588 pit leonrse. sendindaS many Members to the 11Ouse of R prc. - eitatives at All Maine, All New Ilaibpshire, All Connecticut, - All Vertnon; All Rhode IS l land, • And one mere. Now the repeal tit", the 'Missouri Gimp* mise, (so kistly designated by John Savage, , ,, late Chief Justice oil! the' Supreme "Cotirt of', New York, thus I 1 • " I can now .only gay.: "First—That as io all parties concernedi consider this measure a shameful violation , Of, a aoletait compact cniered into between Free- Alcafl and Slavery, ,t -"Second—As to all parties, North of Ma-( tuid,Dixon's ling, who support the Incas ttire,'aid are willing thereby to !devote to :••-alavery : Territory? ':now Free, appropriate . language is wanting , to express the abhorrence and d4estation which their conduct 'excites." The rep"cal was effected by's majority of 13. Thus Ole grievous wrong=the high headed, -audacieus t violent Manner accompanying the ,perpetration of the i)utrage, rendering it, to: - every isroud and 'feeling' breast in , the free --States, doubly - bittel.,--cobld not - nave, been accomplished but ft* thiS unjust, unequal,nn fair Slaye Reprenitition. All this io but th 4, threshold to the w,rongs Aieaped Upon New 'Perk, as I shall proceed to Unfold in my_next fetter. - Humiliated and k feeling 4.lm_ deep digradatiun we invite ,on , 4turseltes'hy the iea4t division on this great -question invplvl4 honor, I . elos'e this with thaAnsaltingatitnek of His Excelletiey, -GoverntNr-SmitlC of 'Virginia, on certain meta :* bora tlat w yeQsi freob%., Vork. who «ml 4 not, under tne" tomb Tot' t)rty 4:ll‘.eipliirie, be foree4 Lu Notearoc llcpc%l. I copy I rom -the Pennsylvanii, the aitie!e, written; as do -one doubted, by uPi Forney, Clerk .0t - the House of Represen4itivei, and ,editor Of that :r4pq: From the !Pennsurranient. • ' STIISGTON • "'There was a pretty- full atienj.inee of menibbrs in the House to-day—tnitcly fuller than was anticipa ted t, and, as to-day wasi dull from the dismall.* drip ping rain, and as there iwas no mrp...stit hn..ine.ss pres sing, a grand •" pow trew" was held over the Eve New Yoik Hard* wjtolad; throuilt the Coltiros of the Whig Natf9rtedlnleltipeacer, taken formal4eave .of the DentoeralW - parts: Mr. Perkins, of Leuisiana lectured; the deserters 'roundly on the er.orntity ,of their.offenees, while, Elctra Billy Smith, of. Virginia, not only pronounced sentence of death, but put the -sentence info execniioit 'himself. He gave them 'kis :parting blessing, with 4 iheartiness of .purpose whiCh -will be remembered by: all who heard him. ' Empha-' sizing or italicizing proriOurs is sometimes r .!gaided as ' ;solecism in good breeding, pr as a solecism in cram mar; but - when the peOnoun hi*"` is intended. to represent the aforesaid! " Eitra Billy," it becomei pregnant with meaning; j It, tneant in the present in stance, thaVie cut, he. gged, he roasted, he broiled, -The baked, he stgwed hp lictims and then ' , Served ' • ;them tip on half sh'ello:. tiature'l. He paid :a high compliment in the course of his remarks, to his' name -sake of New York, andattempted to justify, the tfuln- I 'O. • stnPle-boruicide„ on the round that it was.,mere/y kil -1 ling calves for-their wept. The' peace-loving, -capital • punishment hating Geitit, accepted the . explanation twigs a benevolent smile of approval." 4 • _ 'True honor feels an indignity as a w?niid. If a :foreign nation wrong oi l insult an Americin p our whole"! ;people—ho4r be to tlim for , it—with one voice rise i ittp and demand redresol. Have we no s'''tate-pride ?- 1 Ex-Governor Smith spcilte; not as an indiyiutsd, but as representing the aristocracy of the anent Domin ion. The gentlemen Thus outrageously denounced `zand ;bused represented, The Empire State, - It was. ;haughty Virginia domineering over, as She iningined, abject Ne*Tork. Nor was the course cif:Brecken ridge, by shich, with the adroitness of an aecomp lished duelist, he placcid a distinguished Representa ttivefrom New York ip tha, attitude of a thallenger, which he had not assulned, and forced hint either to fight at diSadrantage c to the , hunnlistiortiff seeming to back on; less offensive. If New Yorkitselt in its wilted power, does noi give a decisive rebuke to this .treatment, ass? , redly will be followed 4, anti every Yorkrepiesentatlye, no matter of what name or *arty, whO slZall dare to differ from the Slaver prop= ;agandists, will in time .Lave this gaberdine spit; on., ; . /tespectful complinitents to you, Capt. Rynders, from Comtxprs .REVIEN. 0.m0.--The Republican nominations in 4Ditio are'very highly spoken ot They are ,•us follows: Stiprcitne Court, Josiah Stott of Mutter, and J. &men ' of Marion; .School Superintendent, Rev. Anson.Smyth, of; Col embus.; Board of Public works, John Wad dell; of "Ross. -.• • " Judge _Bowen .itas' been a leading : Eiemo. crat of- -north-western Ohio, and- Mr: Scott, who stand's at the:: head 'of the tar in the south-west, was foi t merly a whig. Smyth is the_ editor of the Ohio, Journal of Educa tiqn, published at Columbus, and 'is said to be every may welll,4ttalified for die office for which .he nothingted.. - Mr. Smyth wis (tw iner!y a resident ch . Susquehanna tountY. TUE On...NEU * BROOES.-- - -Vg &WUXI ..Pcist denies that its editor, _Col—Green, mut ;Collector Peasleel of Boston, gaye a •dinner to Brooks on Sattirday. It will not, howev er, and (=not hdnestly, deny that Brooks find gel tt were intited b them to aln dinner on Friday; Lind that several other Massachusetts Delegates _to Cineinuati'wer e lament; among %thorn was Dr. George B. Loring, the Postmaster of Bal.eni, AttiSB r .. and - editor of the DeMOcratie - organ there. ; This was the Alan *liofnaade 'the declaration; that i"..Stizoner-got_jutoblat he deserved rt - 111 RIM Ifie j;pepel)4)eqt it E. 11. i'RAEIER, - lIVTORS MONTROSE .PA. Thin day; • June • . .- . ' The Cincinnati Convention. • . • The loil 1 itagony is-over, atid : M r . , Buchan an has'sueceeded - in..obtainhig. the noinina'- . -don - , upon ;the. seventeentli.ballot;; Although th,e.COneention. was closely occupied for five days, and an intlense excitement existed, yet .there was not one dissenting vote,on the plat. form of principles. Border Ruffianism had -it alr'its oWn' way ; and the great, 46 re among :Northern men Was to see who would be fore- . -most .-in Convincing • the Starcholders that _there was no.. taint of Frce:Sailism even about: the hem oftheir garments. Buttlr - .1 real con test WZLS bet Ween the ' Ins ' and'` Outs,' and ~ c. I did-0. the struggle Vt'as long and fierce. pee- 1 ei4 Millions of public-plunderi was to be i , .distributed annually; and . as the olliee-seek- 1 . ers. were more' numerous as - weFt,as hungrier 1 than,the office-hold'ers, the latter were driven . ' to. Ille wall, and compelled:to glee ther brit.l Brier brethren tho inside track' in the race for, the spoils; . , ~ .• 1 .. Mr. thielianan is, now. in' his seventy-first i year. Ire has becii,,xonstatitly in office for 1 the last forty years—.Avas.a Federalist during I the earlier part: of his political life, and'-only, , changed • sides when, Jacks,onisin gained the nseendenuy. Since 'that time he-has followed 1 I in the wake of the party,' has .bee'n eminently .; •,‘ consereritive,','And 'never : cuiliMitted himself i on any important: measure till ho supposed', he was sure . to be on the 'stroll , ' side. He ; 0 . .. was Appointed Secretary .of__Surte by Presi i• - • ctlent Polk, and remainetd . in that administra- l PIIILADEL?Mt MON ; IN G.----.We Can say of . ! lion till it Ibroke doWn ty. its OWII Weight un- . ' -Philadelphia' as the Nora American says of ler:its pro, proclivities. In :1.850 he i the Dem .- - r ;- .• oerats , of Wabe, County, in con was,in fireer of the Fugitive Slave . -LitW, and _ &Inning Y alp' otthe Missouri 'COmproiniso Line,- and the assault cm - Sumner and the,Kan- L ng at last." A great. sas outrages— Movi of, extending it. to . the Pacific; arid he then . meeting ‘v,as' held in Philadelphia on characteried'it as a ``s acred'coinpact.".: - Now ''publicthe eveningof Jum .fith, at ..vhieh strong -res.' he is in . faeOr of its repeal. -Hesaysit,"should olutions, introduced by ex-May4 Conrad, .rot 'be restored," and he . expressly endorses i y the .Nebr4ka bill and the Pierce administra tion. ge*as its favor' of Pie:ice, in 1852. The PennSYlvania State Convention• held in March 1856 endorsed- the administration. of Pierce, and [lndianan has endorsed the f aetion - I of that Curl yeniion ;.so that he stands fairly and squarely on the Pierce and Douglas Plat- I form.. The candidate' .for -Vice. PreSident, J. C. : B reckcni-lOge - crf 'Kentliely,. 6 . an Ari,stocrot,i a Duelist, : and He . was . onel of the -most bitter and proo-Slavery men •in the, -last Congress,_ and for something dome ' 7 l,y, the lion. 4 E . 11. Cutting, of New York, towards arresting the nri-nrrecc thn I~Tetirakis hilt, Breekenbridgetratteng,ed him )in in.orra/.'oornbat ; but the matter was subse- I quently arranged %B'7ithout a meeting. Beck enridge is 'a real" nigger-driver," - both by in-1 stinct and : practice: And - should the country '7; I be so unfortunate as to luive him elected; and 'I; hoe ld. circumstances 'sec in' to require wit I not doubt, like ,his great'prototype,. Iq Atchiso!U leave . the 'chair of State, and head -.the Border Millions of Missouri in their lawless 'forays of pillage unOteurder, upon the F rce State Settlers of Kansas. Whether Tierce or Buchanan should be the next'lreiident, the and meas ures . their ,administrirtion, would be the . The Border Ruffians' would have com plete control; as., they . have at present.. ,NO man, of coninion understanding doubts. this, and no honest. inan. will deity it. The Slave ,PoWer has noiv its heel upon the weeks of the Free State men of Kansas, backed by . the troops of: the I. 7 ,nited States. A . systern of murder, burning, and rubbery,' is now regu larly . carried on, more cruel and revolting than was'exhibitedlgt he ` Austrian . Butch er ";towards the - unfortunate Hungarians. When thel.friends of freedom, in Congress, attempt to,.speak against the cruel despotism under which their brethren id Kansas are now suffering, they are'silenced by the htut,f geen; and ,he tnehanan men of Pennsylvania and of the Norih, unite with -the Southern "nigger-drivers" to preient an examination 'and lieep'the assassin in, his :sent; ,and the doiightaceL editors .of :the North either ap prove.Of or palliate the barbarism,-6r;sremafb itsilt4it. • The questiOn to be deciqedi at . the next Presidential election isplain . anO :iinple ; yet of indianen'totis fimportance to the, welfare of this Republic;-:aad that is; whether Freedoin or'Siery shall triumph in . Kansas. \Vith.. in ih4extfour years Kansas %S' adknit tel, eitheits . a Free or a'Sla.ve State. The Administration t'i be elected this. year will , haire the appointinent c 1 Governor, Judge; and all the local officers' ei the Territory. • Should Buchanan and Breckenridge be elect ed, rip one doubts, thatShunnon,oiso' me man of like - -pinciples, will have the 49tinies of the Territory in his hands. Atchison, String fello•N and Co., will have full license to burn, murder, and pillage„. to 'their hearts' con- • tent. ' Nothing can be done for Kansas till Bor der Ruffianism iiejected froth 'the control of the Naticinal Government. Elect a Free Man for President, : and the Territory of Kan sas would, be protected from invasion and`pil-. Inge, the natural flow oPemigration from the Free Stat t es would Socn, settle the, question, and Kansas would come in as Free State.-- 'Facet Budhanan 'and Breckenridge, the Bar 'der Ruffians' ticket, and Kansas is doOnted. But the nornitnion assumes another as: peet which claims die careful i consideration Of every citizen,: Seyen years: of the List fif teen, the office of President his been held by the' Vice4)retidents. Mr. Bu.thanan 'is now I ;past the three . seore and ten years allotted to I Man, anal the chalices to h9man api;earatio4 I larel thaylike Presidents tfarrism t+:4l =EN . _ . . . • , . . for and Vice PresideneKing, he will be, cal-1 The Nebraska Platform and lEr. Bne • nan. i led to pay the debt of nature beropa the close [ T 1 .14, Keystone Club of Peiladelpititt on 4.ltis term, should: he be eleAed ;' an then the }-. their eiturn - from Cincinnati, paid ..n visit to idministration - ipf .Frankliu Pieria . • will be I Mf., liachanan- at Wheatland id congratiffate , . . - . . his Parity itself, When cOntrastedwith - Ahat of rhint oil.. h is nanunationi. In respons i .af: the Dueliit and Slarthqder;;;:f Wet% Breck 7 i ter CoMinending the " law. and order" . pirit :•enridge in thaPresWential Chair, every kl..ce that perVadt„.i . the Democracy of this cou J.y, Soil membeyWould lave to go' arined end Iktr..:lfuctiiiian prOceeded to . say : . _ 1 - encased - , in a chat of mail, like an ancient ern. i - "Gentlemen, two - weeks since I should halm . ade o ia nf i e b r spe7lL, l b il t c i h ni mo / s ia t hear en ta r a ; totre sader, .or . his life. would not bawortbas inuch .- ' 0 7 : 4 . a • as. that, of. a dog. Might would then make and drat ran qie.ak forme. Bciag, the repre man-, right and a slavrkolder would then shoot la r at e 'es of iruc c h g a r n u au t l Yetmnuotetratti u u 4 p r u e r , tl, aud id n u o et t a n ipl,i -duwn4STorth•ern Member of Congress ;1.514 - inzathert platform,'andlnseri)to .Y new Aland, -nor now does an Irishman. ' • . ) 0 .1.ce one front. it That platform is sufficiently b-oad ~ ._ and- national forithe whole Democratic party. , This ____.. Most Of the South would have . preferred . the nomination offnerceor Douglas ; because they - already- iral4k their hand in; and have shown themselves cruel and heartless.enough to do the . work•tif the Slave power; but from the indubitable evidence that : the Northern Democracy hive exhibited of a dough-faced subserviency to the, South, they readily ac. quiesced, and will now join as • heartily in i:upFOrt of fitiehanin as they would of Pierce Or Douglass, feeling entirely sure thst he is tone - of their Aind.: ° It:OLTSTY. CO!4'.E:CiiON OF SCHOOL . DIRECT ons.-4. G. Curtin, the State Superintend ent of ls,mmon Schools has called a County Convention of , the School I)ireetors of Sus. County, to,: meet at Montrose, on the f.tBth inst.,' for the 'purpose of increasing. the salary of our County Superintendent.— The salary at present paid in this County is evidently inadequate to compensate the offi cer for his•labors; and as.thasalaries are paid out of a general. appropriation Made by the State, and notbya separate tax levied in each Conti , • the • people. of ,this County 'would ke' clearly acting against their ow i• interest to refuse to give their Superintendent a fair compensation. There ought - to be atull attendance of the School Directors of the County, as besides the question of the Superintendent's salary, there are other. topics, such as duniformity .of.class-books, the qualifications. of teachers, &c., which may then be discussed. Mr. Hickok, the Deputy State Superintendent, is expected to he present at the in,eeting.. were Passed, enounemg the outrage on Sen ator Sumner. • Judize ex-Mayoi•Oil i,in,- ex-Gov. Johnston, 'Messrs. McMichael, of. the North A Brewster, E. Joy Morris, Rev. 11. W. Furness -and others, de- livered speeches strongly condemning . the conduct of Brooks. - They Repu - blieati cause is said to be rapidly gaiting:ground in. that City. • Mr: Most -of the Members of Congress having left Washington, some to attend' the Cine'innati Convention and some to visit their . homes . , our Representative, Hon, •A, GrOw, seized the opportimity fnr r - - • 7" - 'gibers thitit his position 'as. Chairman of the Committee onTerritories and hiq other . du , ties impose upon him, to - pay a brief vi,ssit to his friends in this-County. This (Thursday) evening Mr. Grow will address an- Indigna tion Meeting in • C•urbondale, on the state: of affairs in Katisas- and Washington ;`and on Monday next be • will: be on hand in the House • to take partin:the Brooks investigation. II 1 .7 - H7 Mr. Sumner's great Speech on the Crime - against Kansas." is fur Sale it Chan dices store in Montrose. Mr. Chandler has a thousand copies. - Ten times that number ought to be:circulated through this County. l lt has been pronounced the noblest specimen of Senatorial eloquence since Webster's c4l - ebrated reply to nayne. The Slave drivei.s and - doughfaces wince terribly under it, but 1 can,answer it only,With bludgeons': A NOTIIER Sias.---The Philadelphia Times, an ably and energetically edited .American ! paper, that at first raised the Fillmore and Dunelzion ticket, has taken it down, and now shwa a disposition to 'Sustain the Republiam cause. It says," There appears to be a grow ing desire . upon the part of many of Mr. Fil -1 more 's friends, amounting to an expectation, that he will withdraw:" r4r.Thirnors have reached us by way of St. Louis, cif l . field fight. bet Ween a body - of Border •Idiffians and .some Free-State men of Kansas, in which the Ruffians were defeated and a part of them taken prisoners. - The Free State men of the Territory are suffering from starvalickn. The.proceedings of the Indignation Meeting at Susquehanna Depot were acciden tally overlooked by the Printers, and the omission wk notdiscovered till it was too late for the i r insertion in this autnker of the Republican. They will appc:ar in four next. ANOTHER FREE SOIL SENATOR.--The necticut Legislature, on the 4th inst., „elected James Dixon, American liepublican, United States Senatorin place of doughficc Toucey, The, vote stood: Dixon It 15; Toucev .101, SCatterin. , 7. A correspondent- of the New York Tribune suggests chat Senator Sumner's , in comparable speechin the Kansas question be read on the next Fourth of July wherever the day is celebrated at the North. 12r President Pieroe and - Preget' ;S. Brooks have been bung in effigy in Concord, New Hampshire. • • For'the Ecomotiian. 31E8814: EDITORI3:---1 see that" my name is published in the - Democrat as - a tnemberot the Vigilance Cotrimittee of the Democratic. party .for Auburn Township. Claiming to be a Free Soil roan, I cannot consistently act k. 4 1, with that party in its present'course, _ and gair.The N. Y. litirkor says: We, liave ttberetbre wish to .bare it understood that I beard but one mania this city. in sptiaking shall netierre as.* member of said of the assault on Sumner, attempt to Juni "ln fy it; and that man's. name, if publiahed. tee. , gwan AnAme. would add no weight to his opinion) ••• I I J . une 10, 1856. ilorious . party, now more than ever, has , demos . - ed that it is the true:conservative patty of the' stitution and the Knicui." . - So' there is - ,to Bono attempt to,evatie issue thiS tihie. ) The Onttorm fully end( l . '.the Nebraska bill, and denies Cungresf right to exclude 'slavery from •any Tert try—a regular Arnold Douglas platfu at , Douglas claitns—and BuChanan approves" of that platform. Nov, doughfaces! prepare to range , selves under the. Border Ruffian baitner., rffPhe Montrnse Democrat, in its issue, informs its readers that the I Committee to investif t ,.de the assault on ' ator Suinner, recommended 3fr. Sumner! pulsion from the 'House. Some may this In unbitentionil error, but the e who tells hi.; rea&rs that the Free State ace answerable for the outrages of the Ii riaus in Kansas; may be exprcteil 'to ell bully Brooks's crime upon Mr. Sumac. the -readia's who would swallow the to l s6tenaent•woulci not stick at the latteF: For lle Ratification in Montrose I . .When the New York Stage• cane town on Saturday c L►n , last he II(' B; Chase was discovered sitti g on - th6 with thedriver,;and when he alighted a hotel many uncharitable pe sons supP 1 from -the Virginia worm-fence that he dc to be intent . on markin g out, that ht. r I • about " three sheets in the wind ;" but ; 'inclined - to think it ,must have been. exe 1, joy that alfectiidhlm—for soon the ji inews were proclaimed ley the exhilarat I 'i Speaker that -Buchanan was nominate i v s r . I that he 'was on hand for the, 'Snifters.' 1 - . 1 news had barely time to circulate tlirou ITown before' the _Honorable gentlrma 1 1 at. the head of a party .cry restiectal numbers. at Init. ~ Before 4 , • o. thr fruti l -‘ 1 • a. .41. i hotel, the ex-Sonny- took a good drink i then, aff'er taking a gad stout' snifter,'' led for the old hanker Head Quarters, I.theY . imbibed, all round. They then ,I* another drink, and the representative of ' sylvania!s favorite son,' after taking,n. stout drink, called for the Cannon.. B 1 brass licld piece not - being in Town, h compelled to resort to the' Ebony Del ci,' who have a small pike of cast inn :t hole drilled iniu it. The colored r, man came on to the ground with,his c; ..when all took a good drink, and then, I taken another drink around,' the torcl applied, ,and our citizens, like the citiz 1 ......acca • I.aWrence, were nrouseu - from iiiinbers by Border Ruffian thunder. • I then fire and drink, drink and fire, un i 1 gun, either . from . .being too much hen 1 having -become disgusted with the which it was applied, burst, entirely de... 1 inethe cannon, and leaving nothing pii l i . " Bn," and that . in a ruinous and shat condition. The gitnnet' . declared that "hei 1 nothing for bid Buchaniel, but,went in fi 1 Cheese." . After the explosion of the g cells of joy ,had go operated on the under., I ling of the Editor that he staggered tosi. 1 home, shouting ".Hurrah fur Jecinc; flu 1 an--.-he's going to marry the widow PUi 1 .. Early on Sunday morning, a friend IC • at the door'of the ex-Speaker and Sonny l 1 • led him from his bed,' and told him thi understood. Buchanan was nominated. to H—l," says the Editor, and. slope On Monday morning the gunner ivasar to get pay from somebody for his gun i whether Chase foots the - bill, - has it cle i ril 4to old Buck, and charges it to the B) . 1 1 Ruffian account, in general, I have n'ot red. • The respOnse to the drinks and the waS--,one cheer frorh Chase - and three from-some boys standing at a distance.! It is thought that if the Buchanan an der Ruffian fever rages in other piths' does here, it willkillthe patient andl out the nurses, without being contagiyti REPORT • For the_ Republican. . LEMON P. 0 Wyoming Co., MESSRS. EDITORS :—As you take an', est in agriculture in all its branches, I th , I would inform' you of a cow 1 , hate, bel Cross of the Durham and native- breeti • gears old, this spring = has had six cal vest did not give milk tillthe-Springshe was yearsooldhaving Lad six . calves in 1 , years—four of which I now have in mil pos. session. Can Susquehanna County beatthat ? H.- 11. 111.th:hail. Sr. Locts,•May 20„1/7....ao. I left Leavenworth on Friday last, al l l i d re gret to say • that great excitement pro r ialld in that city in con Sequence of the sackur of Lawrerce and other. outragethat havell7een cOrnmitted •in Kansas. About 300 b lilted States dragoons Lett Foft Leaven*Ortl4l and it was supposed they were destined tOiltope ka. Peaceable travelers were stop i td in sight of Leavenworth 'and Searehed; attl all those that had arms hail them takenrfrom them: This treatment. of travelers . bet Ween Leavenworth and Lawrence Was veryi com mon. If the so-called Marshal's posse lwant ed a borne and they met' a traveler, he was. made to give it up Or stand the consequences. The CongresSional • Civimittee's liveS :arc •threatened daily by the rabble. 1 !. • Report gays that the - regulators 'were fall ing :hack to Topeka, and threats hull been made that they would burn that city] ,also. A majority of those sacked 'Lawrence were virtually non-re.sidenta—lheY Were from :Missouri some froin Georg,ht and Albania. • 4 • I ,- Stites Moving. . $ , . I, • . FrorpL:The erranati ' Ga zette. !• • ..-,,,- ,The Pro4Savery Nominationi States - . ' I r '' tiil3 i The Conventions held in Ohio, Ornois,.l The Sfaughter , of ye Pro-Slivery.! n- 2 :-'• Democracy met in Nation . ..e , . han. New York . and New Jersey last, Week, by ', the murder of 90 g dons --lautt . be... o)xtv4tion at Cincinnati. - June 2, to' nom .. their harrnonions proceeding s _ dnd 'devoted,. , ri_eik l': :, :7 - `.- ' '7:1.1 1. 1 . Mite Catitlidates'for President and vice Pres. actiOn, have linptirted -new: i t - Op0: and vigor- We make the foil Wing extract•filln-til let: I den!. Bichardaon, the. opponent of Bitbics fo. to the RepuhliOn movement throughout the . ter.in our pOssession Written' ..**Ei Oittl - O!, nail 1 t i hriSperittiershiP,—Herbert!who shot geatirr i country. •*-_feel now, from re- i now traveiing in K naas. his dit,(*d t.'-' fay 1 4t'VieggngtOn=-J. glancy .Jones, PcnnSyl cent developnienits in all thosk States-,:- i o„,g ; 1 \..... ~ 1 . ~ ‘... - :-.--: :;. - 4 I ..-i' .-- .1 Vania's,lead dottglitace in the present,. Col . . (Ohio has never..peen? doubted)-;in saying 1. • I stopped last ni ht in -the n'eigi - iiinc . ood -- gresS—lL B . Wright, . Pennaylvania's moa servile doughface in the last Congre.s.s-Hltat that they are s - And sure," on the present where -the-lately n ordered Jones reSi! ed. issues before ti 4 country, of going dead He *as a young m ii of about 20 Year. of Ward of Texas,- C. L. Ward of Towithdt against the rotten Administration .at - Wash-a age ! A band of fif en pirates met! hi i at. ,Petit of Illinois, McMullen. of Virginh4Pheips I , ington. ! , •B i lanion's bridge, !aitid threatened to s out of Missouri, Breckenridge- of Kentucky The nomination of Bissell by -acclamation j him.! He drew a peitol, and said : "i l lf •ou Inge of California, •Hallet• of . Massachusetts 1 .. in .Illinois-the p4sition assumed by leading I shoot-me, I will she t one of you; fire pon 'Hibbard (3.f Sew:Hampshire,,andAther .pro! Democrats in - Nets' Jersey, With Coin. Stuck= rue, if you dare." '1 ey,told him if he w_ old slavery celeb:rities were !present . as;drde,g le , ton at their;headj-:-, the secession of - a large. give up his pistol, ley would let him - go Ex-Gov. Bigler was iu attendanCe.asl an - out hody,by - puhliO address,of the real Dernocra- f - homo in • peace._ ;H. did so and. started ' for: alder, and.BrookSi c of South Caroljne, was ex• ev. of New York ,Ooin the ranks oldie Slavery!i iitiine, when they ah t him in the - back. fie. petted, but for sone.'eaUse.asd - not attend.- Propagandists, heaves' no question -'on - the - turned,. - and , said - -•! You are as set of ase- - ThereWere• t wo sett - S --- Of - crelegtiteilrdin - Mi s . minds - of intellige'pt men of all parties of the cowards, btit,l! am et afraid to die f He souriii - the-Benton Dernocra-4, Anti:* -,,Bega- 1 lars' or Bord+r ituffian_Demoerata . : the for- result in these Suites. , • . . died rin. a few heurs, I-- . Our adviees frdm Penusylvanla are c U3l -. The . sttin - o party etthree Free-State ton met . : were rejected and the latter adinitted 4 l ' , . , - i Iv 'elieering Ally, New -England is -sound .-- armed, and withou. tyin g a word, 1 sh. tat coimse. The llards'ittid the Sc!fts frOnt New • Then ..chat' stanqi in!' the. wry . oraglutio rri us the and killed .an tiler young nvm na ed York both clairned - admission , as representini triumph? : With Illinois on the • Side of ;Stuart. His two nirades returned th- fire the party in that - State,. and as the SJ(ts were Freedom, the W'r:st stands erect and undil,i. of the Cowardly a-. sins, while on thei .re.: willing.to abjure their Free. Soil he:re.sies an d ! • ded !—Ohio Stab Jou ; ?: • . . treat, and wounded ne Of them.. !-endOrse the pro-Slavery .plaiforto, the matter! particulars! o f th, ! w as compromised n a pon.of 6ach •\ - -, A-- -., --- - . . , . - I learned the full t_ Wing _! ~. ... . ad rtiO " ,. , del- El ses the itu- rm, Itily , ' 4 PERSONALITIES.FWith regard to the charge • 1 - of personality :brought against, Mr. Sumner . by' the: doughfacei-to .extenuate the crime of . . Brooks, the Washington correspondent of the. New York Courifr and Enquirer siVs - : '. " Nov, as to ihe alleged'proVocatiun for this outrage, Broiks and -his backers declare that Mr. Sumner . had been abusive and vita- perative of South. Carolina and Senato.- But ler, uncle to Mr. 'brooks. Upon thiS point I. may be alloWed *a volunteer tny testimony ; and I say that; 114; language of Mr. Sunnier upon Judge But* Was severe and exasperat ing, but nut undaerved.• 1 . have frequently 'heard Judge Butter :wail Mr. Sumner, in de bate, in words and manner so insolent, and with arrogance sc) overbearing, that it appear ed to me, •An indifferent listener, intolerable . r, Lb' luittnat , natures. For language and de meanor, not continuing, in offensiveness w ith his repeated attljicks; upon :I,‘lr. •Sumne'r I heard: Mr. lit ntat denounce. Judge Butler in the Senate Chafitber ItY thu:' epithet which throughout the lurid is.aeconnted a deadly. insult. Col. Bet ion never retracted OM' alio!. Ogized, and bQOld .a little froth about honor , Able satisfaction, itothing foll Owed. .111 r. Bvn- tun repelled' .the' i insults of th- Senator, trotivl South Carolina ill so decided and Veliett.ntii: Manner that t hiA Senate interpo-cd to h•i N liH '44tte its di g n it y , tit, neither the Settatdr nor i , .flON"..•of his re1:41o111 Il3q'Ti 1i1+1 , 3 ,sought to . avenge theOlSO% - gtS , ONO WOO.. ' 1 By %% e'ghty. :did unanswerable argument, by undoubted t14.11, 7 , ,, it unpleasant triiths, by .s l evere. hut p. h 4 and gentletinud:v invve-. (lye, Senator Sauter replied to Mr. : btitler's Assaults,. repcate4 during the session-'and run,. fling through ftil ye ars. . For thus eindleat ing hinh4elf :!`lr4Stinunl is assailed,:in. his place by a nertiew of his' 1 adversary, and •beaten with a 41dgeon to insensibility be fore he can risein . his 'defence. The crime has no parallel 41 the history of any eiviliz.,,i ed country exe(44. only in that 'instance- in i , , tin . Which . a Speakers of the Arkansas-Assembly rood descended' from Ellis' scat and stabbed to the I 'tl ne heart a iinbettpoti the floor Adiressing the e i , , T IL( iu ,e. I . cam* forbear one or two other remarks upon lie facts. The assault .upon Senator Stunnerfl is justified .by the assailant • Confederate, - - '• • • 1, with and his beLause he had maul, an :nee- Attack in: debateuport South C t r - olina. Sup pose it .. pose it to be 6-6 that he did; Has not Mits. nnon '• Sachuz:ctts been ,tlie !theme of continued - and ;lying Most insolent 'alluse in the Serrate and House was-dtfrin , 7 the -wh6le Session' ,frina the whole is of Soath cs ? One si)•etun of foul Mouthed abuse Lilo": .. litila!alig ' llani 1 i 1:1 e i di&11:117,1k11/ hadb..•en Pour , .4.. a n was y Iy I" lip .a 2 i . ,otth 11,1,,........1,„,„ . , ~.., Q. :mi l t vet . ator 1 Sumner tram that souree '., slate' Decent - tier,' the • first.eadmitratinli in One house in a motion to &:I or'' expel the State from the Union, and her dele se to hates from the y - ,,',or,'and in. the other ; in this jtrov- Pe rsonal .ollence Vtgainst her Moat disfinguish- I ' the eel and able representative'. e lle moral and the obvious kiss' n taught hi: this is, that star.., tered der and 'ilefalink ion may be pradtieed with ared imphnity against.a Free State, bnt ihat the ' Lr t h e bravoes of the.SOuth stand armed withrblticr: , , ! ri e i. , _ geons to avenge every . wopd of retaliation ' dand- that maybe spoken in response." i -- , , ards - ii THE Muunin OF liExmo.--The American eban - cell, a paper ;whose speciality_ is Ireland and - devotes k l'' Irishmen, o much space to the murder r atted . of Keating by 'Mr Herbert; mernberr . of Con r,ll cii!•• I -gress from California. Referting to the vote' ht .he , I . , bv which: Herbert - was whitewashed, the Celt , ii' • . " I-7 - 0 . sris: . 4 ' MEI MIS c.c. ink itor :Mil Zal 1 rge and MEI MEI box tho . cede pear-. at ,'S of ME i l ex• and The Li the CIE e in the and ME ook CO = -. • " Now, in relation to that divisiOn on Her beres.casei we have a duty tci perform, „and we sled not shrink from discharging• it.- - ' That duty is,.to announce, in unmistakeable terms, to the adopted-em Zens of Irish birth' throughout, the country, that the Denviiratic party in Congress, hive shamefully deserted their ditty, deserted their owit professions of impartiality between different ela.s'ses of citi zens, and that they..have, as plainly its deeds • can sp'eak, &dared the murder of a man of Irish birth by one of - their colleagues to be a trifle wholly. unworthy even,of inquiry. Is the Democratic party mad, or is it orify,rot ten, that it . shOuld so belie itself? With half a dozen exceptions every man of the majori ty fur Keating's murderer is a professed " Democrat." NN'ha't then does it wean ? Or en it mean anything but one thing _that. . an.lnthinan born, however peaceable or loy. al, is only .fit to he used. , set up for a target, and shot with impunity. Thrs is what it means, and to LIU'S meaning we shall hold,the entire party. l i t ti hold Mr. Pierce, Mr. Doughis and Mr2Bitehanan responsible for this conduct of their confidants_and supporters. They were - 11 . iti 'Waal-' d it ound but Ell isyrti IMMO guns °alb MI IMES MEI i tiff e ,ht mg a ME 1111 alt ih ':vatAingtott. it wns for uays the topic iif the town ; of their.friends have 'taken sidf:s aganist . -the victim and against.eoininunjus lice; they are not wholly above suspicion.— ; A few days. ago the blood of Thomas Keat ing was on the hands . of but one Democr4 ; j. it has soread ,since then,_and• it is now urion the - souls of the 70, who. refused all inquiry. I It is on the. Democratic: party, and accursed be he who helps such a party into power, up til that biood is lawlullY„purged away." • MEI three Bully. Brooks Challenged by a gentleman of Copy of a challenge sent' by J. M..Holtnes, Of the city :of New York, to Preston S. Brooks. of South CarOlina: . • I,dhallenge Preston S: Brooks to meet me on any, spot on ‘-.3fasco4 and Di.ron'.B, line, named by . himself: —weapons' to, be g otta perelia -canes—l having the privilege.. to take him sitting with his legs under a desk with hisefane - half amile from him. - • . , J. M:1-TOLMES. What, we are fast coming to. Extract from the rules ofthe U. S. Senate in 1847. "Every member of this body, in widition to a pocket knife, pens ink and paper, and a cart load of books, dial! hereafter be sup plied by the Clerk with the folloWing nec essary artieles:---TWo Bowie knives, one Sharpe's Rifle, one heavy gutta-pereha club; one Colt's Revolver, one sword, and , one brass field piece. Any other articles of 'a Warlike character desired by the members, st be purchased at their own expense. $4 ? AV. Pest. His Own7.lEidiley. ._ . . ~..._ ... , .. , Osstiwattamie affair 4 ''grtt,tup. were admitted.: . - A 'lia!' was . traveliti . i s i. \ For It platform, the Ceatvention mianinips• over r taken by a gee o f Lly . adopted. the Baltitnoreplatform Of 1 a 2, seven Men. -They . as [ upon which Slavery, his so greatly flOurishe, ,'. , from. , He told th• 3e. 1 together with §onie.additionatyresoititio ns .— . .. - - State man 1- "Y i:y'l 1: CI ... RAI °wit* are the:new resolutions on. he 1 • then, robbed hini, a al: I ShiVerY . question. It will be seen that. they '', .. T ' • ' tatton decided to 'hat .to - dist:int:oy endorse. the .Nebraska. hill-- and 1 l: . . maw,. who happenne I l y; adopt the new SOuthern' doctrine that i con. overheard arid saw I e gress has tiO.tight. to exclude - Slavery- from went off and raised no any Territory •: .• . : . . . .• and coiree.aled them y, . Resoled, That, dabbing felloWship-witli,- and 'de anti When they I..Yer v . 'siring the cooperation of, all who regard the preset , ' - • eatinn of the Union and the Constitution as the der fired and killed •y• amount issue,, 'and repudiating. all seetiorial,p ar tl es ', • inen„ - The other tW -, ig and platforins concerning domestic slavery -phi . wounded. : 1 . • i!seek to embrolitlie States and incite to treasok a nd . , . When I was near the mouth of the G ass- 1-armed resistance to law in theiTerritories, 04;490 avowed purposes, ir h ettri r rr i iatek must end' n civil , . n e e n d io i e n t h yr • ec . og .. • hopper, in my pre. eat route, I .came near coming in eimtact wlitli Inc of these Son beta w iii aLa a n nd d li i d s o n p n l io t n h , e, the eiticipmlees can contin j? piratical guerrillt(titids;r I did meet t\ -0 of is laws - estabilshing the Territorieti of Kansas and Se . : them. %%lien iii nigfkt iJi . Leconi ptoit a*l of the braska,- as embodying the .only'soimd andtSafe solo.: - United.. States trOok. The first 4ue:tion tion of the ialitery' question upon which:the great na.' tional idea of the people of this sirliolecoitritry cin re-, th-tt they asked niejwi- - ; if I had .i.'f Unity ---L ,!.. • , •., • - ," ,-, ' . 2 .' ~‘,, ;.--•.., pose in its determinedconservatism of` the Union—: .: • NeNt, ‘'. - Are suit a 'ree-Statecttlan", t es, , non-interference by Congress with slivery in States I salt!, " I tun not' a. hintied• of my principles and Territories; that this was the-basis of- the cow.' 1 pi-Ornifes of 1850, , confirmed(by both the:Dettmertitie . . :in y %. Kt . rC, or be fo i i e -auk lintij- ."., :: .fite • re-: pl iei - 1, " Vie are Piro-Shivery men la t we and Whig-Pinlies hi' nationaPconventiowmtifiedby. • , , - a-'- tir . e gentle - men, and . :1 you are nit; and; plied to tli organization of Territories in 1854 1 t- ' alint, ion] .we are iwo, We will; not airtir by the to application of this - Demeoratic prin. , y (li Two ineti Wtire chopping wo al• a' ciple to ttie_org:Hdzation of Territories and the a - dmis . i:•114t, distance off, ".and ; . the United Mites sion of new Stites, with or without domestic slavery, lisiltey mai , ..eieet,. the . equal - rights of all , the States troo l ps being an theicipposite- side ofd th • riv wiu be preserved . intact , the ..original, comp Acts-of the '. el.; 1 thinif . they It :4 icitiethitig \to Ido' tvith constitutions maintained inviolate, and the.perpetua - the'n• gentArmailinie , s Judging font . nalo- _ timrand expansion of this - Union ensured to its at: . gy, ;if they had_ met lie in a lip-plate, st ould most capacity-la embracing,,in peace and:harm onr, •lia , .:e lieen robbed a: the little. 'llloil r e v . I had every-future American State' that pay he constituted .). • or annexed with a repubicarform of goyern in eac - wifil. nit, and tht, / 11i.Slaver‘ trios lhad Resolved,. That we recognize•the right of the pee. with rue would .44 0'11)1.i:illy, in their' :yes, pie of all the Territories, inchiding liansaS 'mid lie. I have made tne•giiiltly of treason. • H . . . braska, acting through the' fairly , expreSsed will et - tilt; • . 1- . . majority of actual residmits, and Wheneter the niun• . , _ - 'of their inhabitants justifies . it, to forth a mud-, Who are the pepihar Leaders in ±: 4 sai. „ b til e u r. eit, with or without domestic slavery, and be ad. .:. , I • An impression se4 iris to. p . revai i esten - i v.:el y liinitted into .thl.t. tinian upori tetrirs of equa ° lity with the . •: „ tlirc!nr , liciiit tlie:etiunkry at 1 that the lead- 'lother . §t4tes* . • ' When' the .ballotings cot:intended the votes . • ers l of the fnoveinint -in favor of Ma dug a t ' free State out of lilts Territory have all been were found':to. be. diVided ...between . Pierce,_, t ßuchanan, and - Douglas; Buchanan,- running strOln , anti -slavery ion . in former titn s, or; ie' They have„ , the highe. .The .plattbrik - i iand also' the bak, in other words,. , A iolitionists.• - tits; were. telegraphed k.i.Wa.shington, and ', been the very rev •Se of this. Not t tie -or loti -, , , e 6,1 thanflilloWirsk response.wda returned - lry Ara.: then) ever had any sympat.hy with the Soil or Liberty pa ty, nor ever acted wtb i t : .1 old DouglaS:,.. ' ,:,_ --- `• W,tstaiXoros i ', June.s, - 1856 --6 a. in: so far its we are i formed. The five Most , • pro'nfinetit men .'ark i lGov. Robinson, : lent.. "1 , have just read so lunch of• the :pilaf-kin 'Goy. -Roberts, SeAtitors Reeder and I ane, as relates to the • Nebras'ke" bill- and: Shivery and 111r..Delahay, tile member of Co i. re , B question. - 'The adoption : tit that_ noble reso. i I'. ' lotion by the unanimous vote of a!! iii meet nailer the ttte.l Constitution. i .. .. Bites ziecomplislies all the objects ,I - Irtd lir ' .'Elie first was b . I )rn in Massachusett:, 'and both there and in tralifornia, where die lived View in perinitting my "natneko be Used be fut-iseine years, itetiVel'y supported One I the fore the Convention. •If agreeable 'to - my. izreat parties whii:l- divided the - nation until j friedds, I would .thueliprefer exerting all my '185:2. He was, rhither a Liberty Ma or a energies to elect a tried statesman .on that 'T,`,4,.‘..., : ,it0r In fir l .t.' ihrolicrhma hi s v h o t e ' platform to. being the - nominee myself. .:1:, - - aft e.Vents, to notelet my liartre 7 t)e ' used ' in -. lit until he - einigrt.ted to Kansas, he t ok a decided part agani4tl them and - their pe uliar such inatiner as to disturb the harmony ache.' 1-,,. . . : • , .do trines. . . - : • . I• - party or endanger kherSuec.ess of-the work so • I ;mit. Gov.ltol erts is a native, of Fay .., , nobly begun. - . • " S.: A. DotkttA.S.?' . : ~ 111 l cm. , coulkt . .lind vas a leading and ctive l' " WitsnixOiox,June . 5, 1856=4 I.‘-2 p ni ' • nictinber of die Det ocratie Legislature vhich I • " Mr.. Ruehanan'having,,Lreceived - . :a , nlaj ' er- -- as4mbled in Harr shumin 1854. 1H was,. rity of the Convention; isilt . niy. - opinion, en , ~,, , &w i n the time ofkh Introduction Of, the Kan- . { titled to tliOlornination 1 1 hope thy. friends • • ~ sas-INC.braska bill, ititO the Senate .by ID uila.S. l - ' will give - etre' et - to the voice:Of the !majority •-iiiitil its passage, a tram advocate and riendl of the party." • S.:A. Doiroi.As,'.!; • of its prinei.,les: Ii • - . • • . . On. receipi• of this dispatch . Mr.' Richard very one in I .this State knows . H. son . rose in •the-qinvention, and •• stated, find ReHer.. • .All knout he ts a Penn4lr• man' for the sake of harmony Mr. Douglas desired • anti a man of talenfsl. His devotion ~o the to withdraw, - believing ,that theiDemocracy Democratic faith procured from President wo . tild do. well to - unite : : and vote on eiilo . Pi rev his appointhrent to theGoYernorshiP I of - the Territory. - iHis warm 'adVo ey :Of pierce . " -Buchanan ': - The Illinwe'Pqt sq atter sovereignty him in dire t con- I , , tee with the . Free4seilers. In truth, h• lis ! ~ Waa receiVed with • immense cheering , -;The seventeenth ballot -was then:taken and every vote was, cast for Buchanan. .. COI. Itchardso.n said.: Every member of ben in collision with theinkhroudhoi t , his l' pol,tical career. ' " I , . , • . • 1 . the Convention Iris endorsed. the; political - -,-. wa.s. el t - -s. ... . --.....! 4r. Lane was tete& Lieut. Goyer or Indiana by the Pen shortly : tern his return from the Woody field ; :of ue Isla,. where hel, had :tun high tenow I, •Ilubsequently he as „sent from - the sail . State 1.:37 that party to Congress, and r .cor eqlis vote in favor Of the Nebraska bill. elahay is a . natiVe of. Alabama. Soo re‘ t iirs l since be rem. 1,-ed to . llinois and 4,lit. a bemocratic Dodging paper. When he.i _. moved to Kansas, he took his press vit i. hi and established a .( l uat.i.er.soverei g tity org, at Tleayenworth. But beeause . he , da ed 'deprecate the inviniOn of the Territory at e cry election by the IMissourianstlie thiv: • ' • rou t s citizens of - tilt ti enlightened State re hislpress into the r ver. He is.noW•'de ide ly .iii favor of freed )M for' Kansas. Such are the tne s nl who are the lead rs Free State partly in Kansas, and su h a it political antecedents. 'lfi they , ar at I koists, then no man in -the -I.N'm th c a c having that :sob i t ri4itet aElixe to h;m. •gitial ad cocatest of squatter soVerelgn y still believe t utt.the : people of Kam uld 'be permitt , to govern then4eli, botitinterferenc-i ;from. MiSsouri. hi. ides: . ' 1 . . , . thei the, liti 'kV i Uri the IM Wit TIE - TRUE .WM(. I Republican Cu klistinguiAled d ig the rest, dub who has hereto ] 1 °untie part. 1 a Repubtican,l his Republicant but that party:l lintermarriage. u ,• n fist principle. t the _New Yo' such well•lcho' onds, Robert Irish Martyr,. Mri) an 4 Very many of to that Con - vention last/ fall. :• . The truth is, Democratic party. and imiults the nam er and noetter of hi poqer of violation: and the defender- c inununities. The ty which upholds teOty, is the embc racy of the country ocrets should take colgrhe 'Rhode met at Pr palliated the nocuim Preaident by A VON irora an eye wanes. . ralone, on foot; and wi lily Pro-Slavery iba d 1 stied lhim where he wz, rii. - " Are you a 1 rei .s" he replied. - he d after holding a 0 su in r g him. A Free-'tat Ito be hunting Oa 1).1 iiat was going on. H twelve men, who air elves in brush near b . ; about to hang the tral ' five of theyro . -sla er tied, one of their elf 16,0cy.—At the Nes. J ityention qu)te a natii 01(11:illtS W:0 t; Wiiterrri4n, Of Slime iire held:high rank it tl said he had a wa; and had sought to earl :•rn in the demoei•atiii pa laving becotnedebanehl ith Slavery, he fell 'ha ! and united' with the 1• - - k' State Cialver.4iot It Democrats- 'as u I mmett, u relative t f n E. Fenton, and ot er pose who were del gat Noted the " . SOtt" lek I = s Republican .-is, the • ix' r,Theviarty which = 'a us of democracy iu th . ai Hatt oppressien,!t 'en Of - constitutional r ghl f. &Intuits twin per ;in taxV. of ireedorn; tb .min rights icvall, th • it ii inept of real d:rnd and thither ail:tps: en their way. P~t~ar sr9 • ; - AmerieSS • tai it . idene*, June 3'• and r; than 441!itr..FillotOr of 81 to gi). . a ilcourseof Douglas, which any man might b - e proud of. lie .could assure -the,.Conven- . '" a tiott that, While -the cboice - of - Illinois was, Of course, for herfavorite son, yet she yielded to no •state in 'appAciatiOn of thoi political . character of. Mr. Buchaimn. ' • i• R After the vote was announced as being 296 ' ne - for Buchanift, three cheers were ivet ) fur t e ‘ d Buchanan, three equally 't nthusias' tic ones for_ ; r 7 Douglas, and three moderate ones for_ ' ris A. resolution. endorsing ,the .present. Ad-. fan ministration, was then introduced; by Mr:, • Hallet of Massachusett%l'and :wa:s declared by the Chat; to'be 'adopted •unanimOusly. The nominations for Vice President were, eK Lynn Boyd, of Ky., jobn C. Breckenridge of Ky.; General Quitman of Miss., Benj. Fitz .- 1, 1 -patrick of Ala., - A, V. BroWn of. Tenn. - ,. 6 ` A. Sedden of Va., John C. Dobbin ‘ of N. are and aN, John Son of- Ga. ,On the'!'second "°- ballot, John Q. Breckenridge ? . f. Kentucky es " was nominated for Vice President by.aim [ animus vote: .• ity, • tsas THE Philadelphia Convention of June 17th will be one of the most interesting political assemblages - ever held in this country, and will undotilitoily attraetthousands of people, in addition to the regular delegates,' from'all parts of the NOrth. It will be eni.Phatically a People's Convention, in 'distinction from a political party caueus.like that which:,pre-_ cedes it at Cincinnati. The latter strw Fie against 'destiny, common sense, and the interests of the people. The former will be a spontaneous assemblage of the people and their representatives, from all the old parties . , to rescue the country from the sad rule of a party allied to a sectional and' debasing in-' terest. Many of the 'best rninds in the Coun try will be at Philadelphid,-"arid-SOine of the finest political oratory will bd.enjoyed'by those who p attend: ' But little tinae will `1,20e treupied, from present appearances, in- form -44,7 its bu.sin&s conclusions"; 'se th.l6' there • will be abundant opportunity for the inter= changeof -sentiments, and 'the 'indulgence in these .public addresses which, the. ion and the iiroes so richly provoke.. her N age- es - - •• Wastincorox, June V.—The following*- p spatey,was sent this mornlng hyMr."Burlin: tS, gaW to Charles Lob , of Massaett -1 Eietta 7 • , - WAsarNoTON, Fridav,:June eth.--Charks Halo; ESq. BOston t-4fr. Sumner has' just learned of the remnmendation of Governor Gardiner thnt the Con9enwealth should as sume the expenses of lus 11e desires me to telegraph at on his trope that the re. commendation will noC prOalied,•i, In event, could.he'aceept the allowaneo,proposed, and ho adds: "Whatever Massaubusents Can give kVA all go to the suNering.in Alums." MVP BunweASs4 1 111 ~.~