EOM EDITORS. in 7 t• oei L ScioMiek, ;- "We Will Subthie You." I ET A. OAKLEY, ITALL. IU " Weluill subdue you . ; Dliglas: cried To fi‘kumer, who his taunt defied, " We will subdue you'—and they tried; .As, ah old Indian war grounds,.Shinnon Brisqed his bitonetr land ea nnon.:' • " We . win stmaxe ,y‘ottli"—ltuit - repl:ts, they • And L with-his bludgeon Greeley bes t s: the da• Assaisir.atioii in the,strects ' • to sag, CoMpetes with negrollriver w,hips, To(wiliten freemen's, quivering lips. • mom " I will. subdue you," utteis Broolas; ' o'i - bile-murder animates his looks,) subdue this' man of books!" . So south Carohna takes the floor, • • • And Senate Balls! are drenched - with gore • " will subdue your Free State,i Sir Ada Atchison, the_mOdern Burr, • • And drive, from ,Lawrence every cur, • Who dares dispUto'our right to save . The °Kansas prairis for the slave." . • —Ndw from each Northern hill and valley, • The t oterilfrom their slumbers.rally! • . The cry, "'Twere shame to longerAally, 014 longer list to syren strains, • • That beckon thus to blood and chains.", Rik that 1,14 , will subdue":- . athey whisper hoarse, "Bra reason's aid mid nut by force ; ; Thd ballot-box is Our resource' Ahd ere the autumn leaf shill fall; •• The Union we will diseuthrall NEW Yolm May 28, 1856, • Bzlzetiolis. - - . .. , 7 From thr Pittston Gazette. • • - .:. • • : StANTETLY-OgIiEEDOII. •corueliui Remsen. t 6 Isai.o ityltd.er • si Esq -i ;;; •• • I LETTER 1 NO. V. ' - .• , • - 'A elatni, sir, .and Judge Bronson i may •cor- Vect me, kin error- 7 -that we are rriustus 'of this fair linheritane ,- .., enjoying. the ;fruit; but • hiittlinir, The inkritance for posterity •to Ite -. handed down withinit detrim . ent or: w a,,t,e.— . [Note!.. The. 4th anti sth ...Chapters of the-Bw.; ute ofiMagna Clutrtaitin the 9i.li ye: c it• Of Kin 7 ,.. ,1 . ~ Henrs , !. 3rd in treating Ot Gantrdian at .d Ward. 1 • contains; principles equally . .apPlicable :aid vi,ion. •_ . . 7 . binding en States.] ~. '-.- i . ~, Awaken all your energies, anil , all your • pin.iiiS,in hii,: -. " Diedication;" as . s . 'crts "•The 1 jealous . ..les, - . and for a time regard ' - asenenti es •_powcr ~rl) . .ing s , Lord;, and :onittions•is not 1 to you, your rights, your wives tifid.children ' an.afbittary power ; they,„are the .1 rustces, ',"every "man, hpwcver rich or de' viit'ed . ,- : who ad not. ... tbejOwner4 of the!estate."l". , -,' ..- i vises submission to "the encroat'lbine• :slave r, . 4 11°14 , that W-e are:.boundhy, - the..most 501',,,` power: , . . • emn - oblbititions that., can. bind . ilinil to do i .-. Anotln.r point - :-.'• - - XS' • - :-_, . •nothingi„and suffer imihing.to by•-dhne, which - COngress v. ill meet - in• abetd,:-sixty days thall'n4troy, itnpair,or lessen;the rights.the (nut- your note into Bank :•,faid . old:- Roanoak • . -. . . .. - ,power, ior the sovereignty, q theLf.ita,,te: of 1" and see how Sotn it will 'come ,:round.) 1 . ,? 1 '..Nets York,nOsitively (')r.relativay.' Aire.aclinrust,the Grand Inquest of the ion will,for i • - enough Marty may %well thmk - a great deal I . once. -do its duty and its Whole - 13% . . N• -Coo moth, of State power h:isi•been Conwded. 1 ' s•'t.- By a thOrop:gli and sear`ellingitiqUiry t ;Tim States exist • in the Union. Whose coin- I whether any. Member of the : Fed'eril li ,,J - udie• • - '• • biped unite Male num I - ter:4.61'21 and overdo ',- iary has so conilueted as to dentanHd- i t'rie exer- ... -.- - C4,NGRE-ISS. •i - . 1820—James. Bliehatiati, FEnsltAt.' , . 4:142 . ..`.not eqd.afthope. of New York, and -vet each i . -cise of the impeaching power ? • •,.' ,- ; • 5 " 0.4. ....1 , ac6b- s lt , ib.shinall, DEmocro.r. 3iiGt) counte.ii„balances. us-. in,...*iate.,• and; united, I . 2d. . Whether . a citizen Of the Republic outweighs 'us. as twentydii - two. I, • . -- i has been iniprisoned, , a t,' svill,r .wanton I v 1,..---Jame.4 buchanamFnomtat., , 2753 So also in making treaties. . ! . • .1-1 and "under a false. pretence kept 'in prison, -" ' Jaccb Hibshman, DF.MOCRAT, 1940 • son, .,.._ . 18,4—James Buchanan. FLDERAL. So t. ~ , o in ilte - co r 4imation. or -rejectit at 'Of 1. Withcait trial., ye , :diet o . ( a ; it . ..try:l4'f his coup- . , .§ 4 ;.-,. - „,. t.7 , • 4 - i , ~,,,...„4 „ .• 7 .......1,. 5 ,1_ appoinaunts. .> ; -.-- ~• - • ?.try, or preenlgnellt , 0r.4 (..Trand Joy. •. . IC7-20-7Tarnri4 , Buchanan, FED:MAL, 2760 So also in the •-lionie. on the ielet:tion of i: -[Nork. • 0 that the 29th chapter. of „he, ~ , " • - Dr. John McCatriant,:liESlOCß AT, 2307 , ~.. Presidents. ‘;-, . _ 1 , ;reat Charter of Freedom; so de* to our an- 1828—JItmes Buchanan, JACRSoN, . 5203 -., . Shorn already so clOsely:oiihe just p• - •weis I ' t 'eestors, - might he re-pubil ' shed ittid broUght " 'William:Mester ND VS - .• • • - 3904 • which by the soundest recci•mized..nrilicinles I hon.. ttl • '''' •1 i‘ d--' , .No freeman shall - -.-. ' '-'' -- ' ~-, • i „t • . IE.. ole 111.1 kil lc 11. 3 . On .the 4th of July, 1515, Itfr. Buchanan ofiustiee and RepublicaniStn, Were. otir4 by I.be taken or imprisoned bat by . ,lawful judg whtm he was a candidate-for an Assembly on 4,' ' oti?v+,e-titer...population, can- ' we, withliuta I menf, of his 'peers.] . 'treasonable dereliction - of duty, bind Oster- I • [Spirit of . Hamden ! animatel breast of the Federal ticket„ - delivered " an, oration . ".in ~, -----i ty in lidditional.shackles by the admission of the victim-9f the most detesta 6. act of ty• L'''-'"'t`'r, in which he showed, his love of Federalism and hatred of Detnoeraey,bv at- • .4.ansaiprofess.edly organized as :: . Sli.i've State i .ranny .that . ever,disgraced our - la . The very 'for thti purpose: of preservinii a 'f. v ••'t , :.- d cifthe , ar.,tt mus pp- i s oun name - of the, despet. - who, from .tarking the ~Administration of James Alai-, . .: . ~..litical ;equality,liticreasino . bv.an 'unjust adg- his Star Chamber-bench. inearct?,i'ated him, is son ' lie '' h '' l :• . . .. r• - - / "Inne will not allow me to enu,n - airate all -., nienta i tion of -SenatOrs an avowolly hostile , •omniotts of oir..ragel .. Where is John Stan- • power and dititini,bing the already - most ini-i ers?—call JOhn.Somets.l • Te.ll . John Stun the oriii.:a EVit. AND WICKED PROJECTS OF THE - 1 DE:IIO,yIATIC ADMINISTRATION. : ~ • politi&reduced , weight and ihfluchce of. New ' ers, the. gOod people of this fair laud, threat- said - i i . , • ..,Atto again in the. carne oration he -... 1 York ot the fkeral Gro,-ernment I No en- cued with power, want - him.] " What rinfst be our . opinion of an opposi-• erOaeliments an the rights . of. thi South are. 1. 3rd... 'Whether the 'great Writ, of Right . advised or suggested. I would yield, theist land Liberty, the Habeas: Corptni, has failed taut whose passions weresso dark and irmlig. 1 all•eheerfullv.lsn:they 'have &just' claim to. Ito reach the case, and been preyed' -a dead' nant its to be gratified - in endeavoring to blast 1 but risingandre-the distraCtineinfluence. of 1 letter ? . •..- / ' the eltaraeter, awl _embitter the old aoe of . r , , 1 I,Vashing , op .? Af:,. r • t b o c- p.r.s.:•enting tae • our party' diviisions,'as unmeaning as, the Bluel -, 4th.. Whether, - tinder. pretence Of carry- StlV I, us , 4 'ibis: (quint rv. Loa . . can the Dentorra t and Green fzn.:,tins- of the Hy podroine, let all 1 in g into effect the Fugitive. Shove 'Law, I.7,7d ielpartyilare to rail 11,cm:tell:es' IL;s d;Seiples?" good .•:tnen and true unite. to defend. our own. l' ell Judges and Fil;:leral' Officers have gone Again.. in a confidential e,rciilar got up by ` l ll.ii 1 ktio'W," said Lord Chailiam,•" where beyond. their.dathOrity;-aSsuined the manners Law ends, tyranny beginS." - 'lf ;to the out and charaCters of the." Gens cit. Anne of Aus-1 . 11. "' Fe4thli 4 ". f T rageOn ,Kan'Sitiand the .menaces to enforce titan despotism, to` the great alarm of our i 1823. tO secure the e'.. , -.on of Mr. Gregg, theM; .we,,noc . yield, Where is' !the. stopping peaceful inhabitants 7 o_ _.A..tnea -, t,er, dated jun°. 6, • A co i- nm i t t & k,,,. i t: i s r for Governol, ort7; ,- .1 - - - I? , enioeratie ea:mil:late, place.,th"de of .that:ITIYI Not. obi - v . ...the hoped,'will early be' appl . ed -thortnighlyto 1 Mr• .Sliolt2; Mr. Bueblittan said : ‘,. " Mr. Greg;.!, although not a - Federalist, has prestige of cbaracter L gene,.but ;Ana • derived, inquire "into Kansas, out age, with rpower 1 -,7 ~ • i always been considered an honest and'- en from.nutriber.„4 commerces, and* viretilth,' last, to• send for persons and. papers * * * we becorne 'literally bound fOnever in' the FrOrn this, as 1 deem - it, necess,.try andini-I'l i g htem ' fi P ( 4iticifill• :*.- . '• He has acted a le':plin4 Dart in the admin. • shackles of - despotism. - l'speakirnot of dance portant digression, I.return to , the effect'thet . 1" 'return t i stration - of G ! •-neral• Mester. and . deserves erg remote and contingent, "but present and. re-iiitroductiOn of Slavery - • would haw ur„,B impendini,t. : ••• -- '' the• interests of New York: How wou ld it i notch .•I the credit to Which it i 4 entitled.— the I We are assure he resisted with all his- flier -117.hezeneral• expressions of :'.the. Southern Work in the rural distriets t '.. Like most I p-. 2., .the adoption of the measures. which just. - Press - ]nay well be regarded.a the common nos turns it Might be fashionable for a time. tur a. Iv gave. so much offence to the Federalists ofd sentiment Of the ]Southein people, . Hear. he Farmer -Oxbow' might be tired of the' i Laitaster Cotinty.", • . Chaileston.Eyening News.:,-" It is in vain to • iarity and iturepend.eoce of his - hired hands, disgitive it, the `great issue of our day in this and think- it cheaper , and better to 'boy, or - . ..The Inehloir hi Pin gags :' I - • ' . lie was the 'warm and ardent deft of coulltry• is Slavery ior no SldVery.'" "The breed. his own • Itaborerfi.': Alas I he - would 1 . . if the Administration - of Mr. Monroe, the active present phase of :that is the..extension. or non. soon find there "was death - in• the pert.'' • --, t , ad , ' - 4 course; its i opponent of the Administration of John. Quin- extension of the Institutioni It controls the South, It controls the - North. lit pre cludes escape." ,There arid ithus we have it:. 1," There is no escipe," and we . are com pelled to meet . it whether wel would choose or Whether *e would forbear. " How distinct ly does this falsify', the, assertion that the Slaiery, excitement has its origin in the North. "To 'iConeiliate the Northern Aristocracy listen to the Richmond Enquirer The necessary eirict of the Institution of SlaVery is to - part a dignity, a sobriety, and a self-posses f Blond character to the' dominant race."— r Witness Governor Smith's - display. of d ignity and ,sobriety, in chastising the New York . members ! And beheld the .dignity, and ,so briely displayed by the - Missouri -brigands under Atchison and Stringfellow in Kiinsai ! MOre and better: -" Virginia". says the Ett " in this Confederacy Is the impersop aticai of the - well-born, w ell-eif,acated,w el I:bred Alistocrat." "She looks.down, from her el whited Pedestal_ upon her . porvenu *ignorant Yankee mendacious linnet's, as coldly ,and -calmly as a marble, statue."; All -the Five State citizens are Yankees in the estimation and parlance of the Virginia Press. The Charleston. Mercury- boastingly says, refer ring to the too obvious faCt that the slave; holding_ interest avt' l lol,* while the free States are divided, " haveobtained the mastery in Congress,,i and within the *eV twenty yeare: banged its POl - icy that its :action' for the trief* 'Part and'with few, exceptions has,festeredhe agave holding iniekette,;" - Q,uotittions might ? be made by _ pages, all tending in the same point: The in- . 1. testis to annex Cabs and St. Domingo: To roopen thirSlavetrade by: treaty with Bra.: ill. -To keep up • and --increase the counter ' balance against New YorkiPenusylvania and t'Oer free States by the creation and ad mis =MI . . . • ' '',.-:.--- 7 - - ''. ~ . • • ,-- , . __ _ . . . , _ • . . . , . ~ . . . . . . .. _ . _- _, -.- - _ ~ .. „ . , • .. . - , • . ... . . . .. _ .., . .. . . . . . , • - . . . . . , . . . . . . ~ , . . .. -.. ~. . . . ._ . .''..-.'. .-- -- . 4 .• . . . . -•• ' . . - : ... . . ' ' .. . .. . . .41 . . .. . . .. , . .. 4, • . . • . . . 1 1 . . ~... .. . • , . . - . . . . .., 1 ..... - . _ ____L__,........L....... • .. . . . . . siori, of Sllte States,:hoWevet: small, into. the 'Union, and, ilerTo FORCE .Si.AVERY iNTO . TRE rAti.E Sr' I have before adverted to the injury the.working.men, mechanics ,common• laborers, Hack, Omnibus and Coach! drivers, Waiters, women help, 4e., would suffer, from the intrOduction here of Slave,ry,, in competi tion with free labor. Our... Pities would soon siwarm with Southern gentian:ln,' their' Elm 'Hies and. negroes.- They make capital coach= oleo. They make capital Waiters... SuppOse Oen. Ilarrailson should come, v;•lio owns a thousand, with Other members of hiS fainily, enough to Take the number up. to :1600 ' Slaves. Of course no saucy . white man who , ,Would . have, the - impodence to say . his Soul - I Was his own would be. endured in his eitab -1 liAment. tie too - could, (the fashion being 1 introduc4) hire out to his AriStocratic neigh ..bOrs, some thtee or four hundred at halc,the Fliarge of w4ges . now paid. The gnaw , o isT Quit—and and Omnibus owners wouldsonn fol km 1 Ouit—and the . ladies, tired of haVing help who. willtalk back sometimes, when; Scolded, I or. gad abroad, or stop to ch:mge - .salutations. i: - • 1 twenty minutes . with..a sweetheart, : may east i ly be*.brought . tci See.. the beauty, - ,cif. getting rid of the - sappy sluts—the prolid, irnpu -1 dent, ` g ood-for-nothings," as they- will: be l ._ ternied . and - supply. their; places .., I iy genteel i subservient black's of their own pnrchase!= , I Besides \the Negro woinen, as wet nurses. ate not only regarded 'wholesome but •'superex i.cellent.. 8u the*Whole phase Ofsociety would be gradually changed and . the great.:- body of • our riow industrious, well to live, 'white la-. . , boring poiela , . on, turned - I - Jut of dcknr . s" l , And as the neg,roes would live - chiefly . in• 1t0ve.1,4, our - brick-rnakers".l.and lumber-dealers and builders coulu, in a great deg'ree, be dispens ed with.:' . : _ • • . . • ... . . . . . This is no exaggerated picture, of an exc..- ted trangination, but, what will a'ssuredly• tho..prt:sCnt mighty efravathe South for slave mastery and theoxtensiOn of slave= ry into States now. free, 1411 not firmly, stern ly, ,effeetually resisted- 7 -as thatiOves will wither before the frosts of winter,!Or age, ac cident' or 4isea,Fe, take Avery:one oe us, soon er or later, to the grave. Look labor ers,it is your cause I am ,pleading. Trite as one man—layaside all Old cailSes of di-. we admit slavery; we adinitiol concomitants: - Carelessness waste! moral corruption !• burning negroest bloodbounds! the domestic slave trade! habitually wearing con6ealed weapons ! every man sieepiiio with pistols and bowie.knives--,-and presently the Ifi i community will become,, o many at the South are, like Ebert •I • -ett; who had swal lowed at once, the stupifins and exciting drught of the Caliph of Bagdad, each one thinking himself a Demigod or a Sultan, at least, and givifig orders tobastinado his near est enemy. Let' us look' 'into one of our country farming, villages where slavery has become i domesticated. The daughters no longer tend the dairy—the . .tiiis won't conde scend to work with negroere:—•the smartest of them emigrate—go to sea•-- - rintothe army: "The girls dare nolgo:ane hundred rods alone of an evening. - Thq boys, intiated from earliest ;possibility into fatal (not forbidden) indulgices are, eight in ten ' rendered unfit fur husibands at 25. The joiiaiiong or merry laugh, • • the fine younglelldw, poor but hon est an well-educated a fit f6r member of As. to Sernbi c or a minister, whOhas hired himself -for tbelsuminer to a nei ring farmer, and taving hung up his scyth Comes home,cheer ily liel ing the girls with their "'dewing pails of milks l heard 'n? more. 'Mothers of New York!, f You want'a race of fine, healthy, latelligent young nien for Insbands.for your daughters, and fathers fit your gvandchildren, rise up is your 'might, "- with. broom-stick, churn-handle or axe-helve,, and oppose the in troduction of slavery intolyour farms or, vil lages, as you would a den; of rattlesnakes!, And you, ye fair and lovely' farmers' &lighters of the Empire Stite: if in ",Love's 'yonng dream," you have ei:Ver'• imagined it posible and proper that Yon should tread' in the hallowed (and so fallleaven—blessed) 1 -, • • I „. • --, • - 74Tmkti{:)ibun.I . E): , nllaN i. V.:: . g64_o@,T 'leig,m-a7LE-OV.A,KOLVIG29,Oc;7I footstepS qf your mothers, desire - a pleasant and hearty " nice young than" D' for a mite through life,. I charge you, I warn you, to re sist by every net, by every influence in your power tn.exereise,,the introduction of slave ry among.you: Cause it to be made' the* great, leaing, and absorbing qUestion at the hallot-hpk;.and see (a fig flir old party obso lete naines . and polities) that men, decidedly hostile to the extension of slavery, be alone voted for,for any office from the highest to: the lowest. MR BUGITANAN'S MEMOIR The Lancaster . Register thus roughly rid dles the n'einoir of Allis gentleman, recently published. by. the Pennsylvanian: . In the,intelligencer of the- 14th hist., we find - copifrom the Penn-zylvqpian, -a Very imperfect emoir of thi„.. distinghishcd Penn- , l i sylvaman, Jo 'which we beg leave to add a few scraps of history, omit ted .e . O. doubt by mistake or. ignorance of the flets. We -shall confine ourselves at this time to a few extracts from the " Memoir," and make such remarki and .quotations from the records as truth de mands. The memoir says :---:' "Mr. Buchanan is in- the sixty-fifth year . of his age, and in the vigor of health, intel, ' lectually ari-physically.': - In 1852 Mr. -Buchanan 'in a letter to citi zens of Bradford county, put in tho plea that he wa's . tOo old to make them a" speech.. , -- " . More than sixty years," and asked f %r " an honeirable . 'di-charge !"- How 'unkind to force hint .Into the Presidential harnes4,— 'Again: . • • • - , -, " He was born in the County of 'Franklin, •ift the State of Pennsylvania, of honest and industrious parentis, and may truly be.calW. Ithe architect.. of his own fortunes.. Having I received a good education: he studied the pro. t fession of the law, in the County 'of Lfil)Ca7,- ter, in the same State; . which has ever since been his home, 111 , 1814, tuld 1815 he Was electO to. the SLAW_ Legislature, •xhero he distinguiShed him , :eil by those exhibitions of i intellect,which gave. promise of future p.mi• nence." ' . - - • . . So he was elected to the Lvgislature,but why not state .bv whom? \V(: will supply the record for 115. - ASSEMBLY.! James Buchanan, FEDERAL; 13051, Molton C. Rogers, DESIOCR.VT, 250'2 Agaitt: . .. "111.1 . 620, James- Buchanan" was elected to, the-Nouse of Representatives', and retained his position in that body for ten yearg, vol untarily . retiring after the first. Congres - s under the administration of Ali , lrew Jack son." . . . . , Ten )Teart , ,in Congress Dem6erat, we but.-let.us'.examine the record and see: - ' cy Adams, and the c,nsistent and trusted friend of Andrew Jackson." Mr. Monroe was elecied President in 1810 and again in 1821', and Mr. Buchanan was a Federalist. until .Is'2B, when be shifted his po sition to a'" Jackson man," and was elected to Congress as such", but not as a Democrat. There must be some mistake as to his hav ing been an . " ardent defender of the adminis tiation :of Mr. Monroe:" , On the 'subject of slavery the" memoir " is not very definite, and we wilt give his, views as expressed in'a series of resolutions report ed by him to, a public meeting, held in - the- Court house in the city of Lancaster on the -, 23d of November,lBl9. James Buchanati, James Hopkins and Wil : liam Jenkins, were appointed a committee on resolutions, and reported the following among. others: " Resolved, That the Representatives' in Congress from this District, be,•and they are earnestly requested, to use their utmost endeavors as members of the Nation al Legislature, to prevent the existence of slavery in: any of the new Territories or new States which may be created by Congress. " Resolved, That in the _opinion off this meeting, the members of . Congress, who at filet session sustained the cat se of Justice, Humanity and Patriotism in opposing the in troduction of, slavery in the State then en deavored to be formed out of the. Missouri Territory, are entitled to the warmest thanks of every friend of humanity." • 7- TAIONTRQSE,- -THU u ,B.SI)4.:V, ,J. ' - . The next Democratic National Con. NOT •Funsnir. YET.—The first remark vention it to be held in Charleston in South. made by Mr. Sumner to .his friends, atter Carolina, the hotne,of Brooki,, the most ultra e,,,,,„., partially recovering, front •theebOlal assau t Slavery, jNullifieation, Aristocratic hole. In made upn him . far his speech in the • the United Stat- , laid lfway unsuited was--"THAT SPEECH It NOT FINISHED YET. I7 to such a loom ntion, i reemen attended. , , Be.ply of Mr. Benton in Be Bomination• for Governor ' [Fran the St: Louis Dow act* iof May 22.] , We give public:lll6h belowto a letter from Col. - . Benton; in - reply tea communica tion from the comtnittec. - appointed. to inform him of his noMinatioirbf the Democracy of Missouri for, the officw,of. Governor of • the State: It will- be seen that he does not de cline,- permitting the use of h's 'name in the manner proposed;, but .holds that matter Un der advisement until. his retnrn home, and, from what we know of. his dh;position in the. 'premises; we are fullAsatisiled that •wheri he does come back to litssouri and finds, as he will. 'find, the unanimous voice of the trite Democracy, whom he has sOlong delighted to serve, calling upon him- With one acclaim to bear their 'standard in the approaching con test, he-will not hesitate' a, mOinent to comply with "their wish.• • - 1 .. 1 itl4 ',sit:v(ll.9 - , :I\ fa y , 1856. To Messrs. Thomas ,L. Tripe, Jacob Hall, Froficis- P. Blair, Jr., Stephen Rice. 'John D.-Stevenson,. James Lusk, Y. P. - Fulke • ~ son,. Z: Isbell, W-11. Chafey, James Litid say„kustin A. King, Harrisolfß. Branch and 11, E. Baker : • . - -- • l GENTLEMEN : 1 Jiaee received, your letter un the subject ofi the nomi:,itions made by the Democratic l, Convetiii,M at - jelf , rson. City, and am greatly, pleased ividi the t' it de of them, except the one whaili relates to my self. . That takes • Inci br.surprise, -and, twist remain under cOnsideratioul Mitil..l return; which will:be-soon, as rani .nearly throngh the occupation which Ilias detained, me here. .In the Meantime, if any Other Arson was thought of ,for the GoVertioi:s . non ' ation . in the event of my inability toupee t, rwould wish him, to ,he brought forward\ at .once,' without awaiting - any further 'answer frOin' i - me. --71 , - . - , - It is my intention to spealcion the state of publieafliiirs when I get to Missouri, but.not in the 'way of a l canvass, nor as a candidate tier-any office, bat,to•4 my part as a eitilen•l in Crying to preserve the peace and harmony of the Union, and to keep agitation and sec tionalism out of our borders---two evils now besetting -the whole United - States; and our •1.•• own State above a 11..., I consider ,a slavery agitation (and its nat- Hal offspring, sectional 'antagonism) the greatest curse, both socially and - politically, which could•bfall our Unftin ; 'and that curse is now upon us, and brought upon us design edly and for the worst n,l purposes, . The -Missouri COmpromise. line, the work Of pat riotic men; had stood ithoVe thirty years, and: there was not one among those contriving its rep&l whes . was not upon the record (in votes or speeches) for its support up to the time of I its abrogation; . and Mr. Calhoun him - self, as I late. as 1848--0n1y,,,,tw0 years before. his I - death, and after he hiVl, `,reached the doctrine of no- power in Congress totlegislate •uponsta very in Territories- s -tetanhated the idea of repeal, and declared that the- "atleinp - i. -i ' to ido so wohld." disturb the peace and harmony o!:he Union." It has _been attempted and accomplished; and the ,peace. and harmony •4 , 6 , . , :•iay . ' . Opt of the repeal of ON compromise has I sprung forth a new test o 1 Deiiiocracy, which i e‘ipiiil s ts in exacting party allegiance to the priuciples.of the Kansas Nebraska Bill.-- The first inquiry upon the Niairt of this new test is, to find out what those 'principles are; 1 and the result is diaMetrieally opposite,,as it ; comes from one side,or the other of the Po temac - River:. From ttai North the answer 1 is, squatter sovereignty ! 'as being, the inhe i rent right of the people Of • the Territory to I decide the question of slatlery fur themselves, 1 and to hate it or . tut, just ai they please.— [ ,in the South that Miiiition is held to be rack 1 detnam'rhery, land that the pcoplc,of the Ter i ritory,. no more than co,ngip . ifs,:have not -a particle of power on the subject; that the Ctarstitution 'lorries slavery Pith it, into eve ry Territory as soon) as acquired, over-riding and cuntroling ail la ,vs against it, and keep ing it:there, in defiduceof the people - :or of Congress, until the! .Territory becomes .a State and exiludeS ilt. 4 - Ihus the advocates of the test are as opposite as light and dark ness in telling, whatilt is; and surely they ought to agree upOti it' before, they require othere to believe in. t. - . • i , . It is irnposSible t believe in both I ;' and I believe in neither.. I believe in the old doc trine, that the Terri orie l s are the property of the United States l iandl under- the guardian ship of Congress; and subjel, to such laws as Congress chooses t 4 provide : for' them (or to pertnit them to make r fur themselves) un til they bccothe States; and - after that (the ehildreu - ar;ived at twenty-one years ofage) they are out of guardian i ship.and have -all the rights of their fathers. - That is my belief, I and has - been 1 the belief ,of the , whole United States until lately, and I espe.elidiv taL; lielief of those who - now deny it, and wfioare, upon the - record.(stid that often and reeleut) against -their own denial. i Witness (ea go further hack) the bill for the' admission of 'Texas :in 1845, on which all Om l v i Med for thatodmis , sion voted for the' l - , e-establishment of the Missouri criproin se brie in all - that part, of it south of;the.Arkansasiriver where, it -had been 'abrogated . by the I laws and constitution of, Texas. , Witness, 111 so- the dehates and speeches oi:i the - (;trgori bill in 1848; also, the attempts to extend the comproinise line to the Pacific, in. 1850; also, the votes of sortie of these advocates in favor_ of the Wil mot proviso; and,! abcive all, the protest of -the ten - Senators against the Admission Of the. State of California it 1850, because Congress would not legislat uptin the. subject of sla very iii,the - territo y which was to Wintose it. With alrthese authorities and evidences in faVor of the old doptrine and against the new test and its ahthOrs„l think -the old De mocracy May be 'alloWed to dispute its bind ing. force, :at all events until its:advocates , e,aa agree in.telling what it is. Respectfnlly, ' . :TIiOSIA,I3I.I. BkiiTeli. , • "But I deny tha the laws of Meilco can have the effect attributed to thorn, (that of keeping shut» ry out of New MexiCo, Ca li fornia, and' Utah.) As soon as the treaty between the countries is ratified. the sovereignty and intbOrity of Mexico, in the ter; ritory eeillthed by '4l becOme extinct and that of the United States Is 'substitited is its place, carrying with it/the 'Constitution, with Its over-riding control.. over all the laws and iluititations of Mexico incon T 'Anent with it."—Nr l Cagtoutt, Oregon-Bfieeek, 1848. E 2 --,, • •.' he Voice of the' im. . . _, ' TM PRO-9;LAVERY DEM6C7t,ATI ' NOMINATION. . • • 40m the :111 - . 17 . . Erenitaif Post:- - \ ,-' W a do riot attribitte the Ostend Conference' tin • Minifeato to Mr. BuChanan'S instigation: It w a . both n wicked and. a'foolish affair in \ which' e engaged, and well deserveit.the-ri buke it et froth our Secretati - of State.--S \ m\ If the ad t ice which Mr. Btichanan was then persuaded to give bad been taken, - a war would have epsued-,a War of unjust aggres s t sion, the fires \of . which might; e blazing yet, and in which our commerce Would.have been 'consumed: - Yet nobody believes that the scheme was MCAtieliatian's invention, thotigh he adopted it and Made hittiSelf reSponsible for it. He was.piished into it by thosewho had possession if hiM, and by whose sugges tions he allowed his conduct' to be influenced he was floated into that enorthity by the cur. rent, in which he laV, as he !svillsyet be-into Others of a like character -if he should sue ceed in the.coinpetition tier the presidehcv. • If' Mr; Buchanan could sec' no hart- in seizing Upon Cuba fur the protectioti,ofsinve ry, it IS not likely that he will entertain any scruples.' concern i ng the seizure of nsas by slaveluildcrs and' their !Rely u. 'tnyr iders, fur ,6 a the - same purpose. Pon .4 .1 , . that bat. tle is to go on as it has begun, unless stoked by the defeat of the Cineirinattmliciate ; there is to be no cemprombie with the resi , dents-of the tegitory; no alackening*of the persecution by which they ire -to be-driven out that their their places may be supplied by the slave drivers and their gangs. ' IfMr. Buchanan is elected; the seat of approval will be silt by the people of the United States an .alltho fraud, all the violenCe, all' the usuapa tion, all. the burnings, robbeties and murders, the news of which, tin' so tn..teiv . months, has been the . melancholy burden Of the mails fionl the West. He will be as easily,persuad e d ?eito a co•operatiOn with t hese atrocities as he as into the fully of the Ostend Manifes to:.. 1 . .. . I I„ eking i p their minds whether ' they r. k ...„ . are to suppe r ~..? tir, to oppose; Mr. Buchanan's it nomination, the pL.ople . of lie linitedi States 11 should Carefully consider his behavior on the w ;occasion to which we refer.l No part. of his .ed, lifc so , completely illustrutes hiS public char- go' deter, or so fully gives us tet understand what ME "we are to. expect from hin3 if he should be-. II: the President of :Mir cenifederaei. 'The Os- an ! tette Manifesto'was not an !affair of haste ; is • it was not. the fruit of a s idden impulSe ;it an , Was determined upon after long delibnation; mi it wag a step telen with a full knowledge of ho, all its reitaions and conse - cfbences. ' - ' It was' a maturely weighed prOposal to our. int Goverrimont to act the part of 'a pirate and sto :robber against a nation which was anxious to; ter preserve our,.good will, and really to . settle hat its difficulties with us on the falsest terms.--` , 'c Of that character' must we expect Mr. Buchan an's public Measures to be it we see hint in St; the Executive chair.. His first. impulses, all may not perhaps b,Cwrong, bitt, they will be ti feeble, and they !will he asisuredly t oYercome by - the malignant. .influent by which he is environed, and from which he wants the force -of character which is neceSsary to set himself tree.- . . . , 1 I - . . 1 We feel justified,- iiit.4.,„' ,:t., .-'..;siai l i-! - our voice of warning against tlitCsn t pport of Mr.` Buchanan. .After the, Ostend Conference and Manifesto, his proper!part ! 'is '4) - sol ate ilence; in regard to public affairs, and'his - proper place absolute retirement) From! the N. EiTribune. • . . ~ . A great 'deal has been said in deprecation-, 'of sectional candidates! f •r' the Presidency ;. . but if Mr. Buchanan is not a sectional candi date we.are very much at, loss where to look for one. The only North rn.State taken in to view in selecting him as the candidate is Pennsylvania ; .and, _'even. with respect to Pennsylvania, her supposed wisheshavebeen regarded in makine. the ;nomination! merely because the vote of Pennsylvania must be had to eke out the' vote of the Southern States, pr else the , Slavery-extending party must I?e, defeated. • , • i . 1 • . The 'supporters of Mr. -Buchanan,... while they entertain no reliance whatever on get- Ling a single. Northern State except Pennsyl 'anfa and Califortlia-4-wheh last.they reckon as quasi-Southern—eileulate, with confidence upon - sweeping the entire South. Mr. Bu- I chanan is the Southisi Sectional candidate, and has been selected because, while, he •is !willing to be, as Franklin Pierce has been,a mere tool in the hands of the BlaelZ Power, it isthought that he' has a particular weight fin Pennsylvania; the! only . Northern ; State, California-excepted; which there is the.slight-, eSt- - idea of indticingje Serve in this - inatter of Slavery-extension as a pack-horse for.the Slave States-made to carry all the weight, and finally% to be rewarded with kicks for her pains.. That is - a treatment under which the -rest of 'she North has Igrown restive, but which, it is thought;• Permsylvania, - for the sake of making Mr. 'Buchan - 1n President, will submit to,. for one Presidential term longer; thongh . Why Pennsylvania should submit to ' :be kicked'for the sake' Of Mr. *chitin, is more than we understand. " Mr. Buchanan is confidently relied upon to unite allparties.in the Southern States in his 'itiupport-old -Whigs 'as well as.old ''Demo-1 Urats'and Young Fillibusters—and that not from any res pect for his political ch aracter ~ or confidence in his abilities, but merely be- . cause he, has put hiniself on a Slavery-e. xtend ing platform and ia. pledged ,to exert all his official' authority , an d inflitenee - , should he be elected, to give i - Kansas 'to- the Slave States. 'This is the sole. end, , aim, and reason of his nomination.; this is the platform on which he , 'stands--a platform which totally ignores the Sorth and all Northern' interests, and 'looks 1 1 kolely and .exelusiitely to the extension of i Slavery. After this we hope* the 'advocates • And supporters of Mr. Buchanan will have the decency to hold their tongue,s,about 'sectional ,c.szialtlates. - • J.. `. . . . i . . 5.,,. . ~ Fro* the Ohio State Journal. .• ' The issue is now- fairly.joined, . though not 94 3 boldly .as we had, a right to.-expett from i:the - boastful and defiant language of the Smith lern AristFiemey .We would have preferred 'l,ilither'• Pierce or -Douglas---not because the ;platform:; doe's not; place Mr. Blichanani dia . . .itincily , ough. on the Slavery Extension'''s. :sue—bu 'because' there would have - been i more , gl ry,. a 'sweeter. : satisfaction 'in beating 'downt e_ chosen :, agents 'of :the Neiarti l ska ;'slitille, a a 'fair- hand4O-hand - fight ! than in ' battling .Witha repreaentstive of the, principle 'who has inot ! been . ani active party:tO -the nut sag& : ' -. In Mr. Brickenrhlge, 'however, we hive an active agent. in the passage. of the ,i . .0i11. He ference to his Of Missouri' 1 1856. Er . • - - • FRAZIER fSc SMITH, 1:rUi3_1415112.115—....--3T,014 - C91,- - .; 24 . _ was alleinher of the House of Represe.nta: fives,; and idistinguished, himself by._ his arro gant teal in the cause, and by a less earnest, though suitciently ,noisy demonstration at's duel with Xi. Cutting, of New York. It remain° now foe the Republicans to Meet this larrair. in .open, fair fight. The issue is . plaini, and it is ono that should arouse the earnest zeal of every true-hearted man who has a particle of love retuaininv for the, free institutions of his country: We 'must put forward Ourfb - est men-- , trien on whom-all the oppc>nents the present corrupt Administra-. tion can Unite—limn, tuo, nu way doubtful on the,great • ' With such men, and in such a cause, we. cannot fail to 'triumph. A failure would be the, deathl knell of Republican Liberty,- and we has:e Ptith yet in the integrity and pair'. otism of the American,eople. I I f 1 _ Who is Col. Fret ontt , —Ans*ered: A Wa r qiington correspondent of the Cleve land ',Jerald, answers the now \ Cominon gaes• tion, whe is Col. X'remont ? - . GA g r emout is a native of'South -Caron . ,na, andlis descended - from the Puritans . 'of France- the Huguenots—from the tnen . who Were consecrated to Liberty, and the 'rights of conscience in -the'baptism of . fire and blood. HixiNillSkborn in 1813, and' was graduated at Charleston -Cnllege. - His family were very. • poor.i He struggled . against poverty, alone and without-friends,.asked and, obtained em ployment of the General Government in the Exploring Expedition in the R'ocky Mount- Gins an the,' Pacific coast. He is a man, of individ al energy, of iron will, of true hero ism of lehartieter=and frank • and candid in the extirerionlof- his 'opinions on all ques tions af public. po Hey.: Ile was for freedom' in California, and gave his inflUenee to make • that grot State free. . FOR. Tins, he was de feated by the' s eveL p rop a gan diit s, in a re-e : Aimilto the Senate. . . __ . Col.{: is'a member and a cvmmu .aut of the Protesnt Episeopal Church— a mnit': of great sin r,ilicity and 'purity' of e—lieloved and respected in all circles here he is kniiwn-- - --ha:4\a thorough -knowl- . ge of men, and is well\versed in all our Ivernment liffairs.. Ile is il'acifie Railroad an, and an ardent advocate' of River mid arbol -• r-improVements. In' al his feelings, d 4nipathies, he is a Wester man, and . * desirous of seeing the prairies orth , e'West; d.the coasts of the Pacific, dotted All over , ith , the hOmes of the' firiner—the school I ,use and the church. • - ~ . . - Diing all his expio - ratielis among the oun sins, and snows . and :l ige, and cold a. d urn - IN - lin D Over drank anykliinff but cold w; '\ •;---and here let me 'sty that t'ul. Fremont s, xihat soinany.public,tnen lack, rsrrn. IN DO AND STRICTLY' TEMPERATE MAUI'S: ' . • : I believe .the poor- boy :4 - the _.,ealmet;() .ate' the 'Path-finder of the. Rocky Mount- S, l lwill Ipreside',as Chief . Magistrate ovee destinies of Our great Republic. 11 " ,EIiSCOALTIES. "- It may. be n. e tor . tl o'se who are diSposed to appologize, for' the b mai assault uppn Mr: Sumner, on the ground : of "violence"and ”:personality' in actr.ta , r ,ppr4ons.of his speech, to read: over, the Howtri m g,-tro ineknber , Conareis from ; Georgia, 4.A1 la , few inauthPs.ago.: EOM Well, kentlemci," said Mr., Stephens, " yoti - make a . good deal of' 'clamor. over, the` Nebra , ka measure, but it don't alarm us at all. We have got used to that kind of talk. You `lave threatened before - „ but you - have never . performed. You have always.. caved" in, and you will again. • Yo uare:a mouthing, 'white•livered'.: 4 let, Of course you i Will . op- pose: the measure; we expected that";-'but we .don't care for'your oppeattien." You will rail, but we don't care for your railing. Yon, will hiss' but so will adders.•' We expect it; of ad dw i and 'we expect Itlof you. • You are, like the devils that were 'lpitelied'over the, battleinentslof heaven' into:hell... :. They set up alhowl at-theirldisteotnfiturc, and' so will you. But their fate .was •Sealed,zand so' is' yourS. You must submit to the yoke, but! • lion": chafe. Gentlemen , we have got you in' our o•wer. You tried-to drive us to the wall. in 1 50, but tiines - are'clianged. * * * •You wen' a weiyling and-hive come home fleeced: Dot+ be so impudent as to Nmplain. . You will only be'slapped in the face - .• Don't re sist. • I You will only be . lashe cl-ipto obedience. Legislatures of Npw York, of Rhode Island, of Massachusetts, Northern Divines, optti)- nents of - . Nebraska everywhere,. two. Merely adders, whose vocation is ,o hiss ; they,, are simple howling 4eyils who: shall - be sent to . . ha' I , FiVate letter . froni hicago says that more than three thousand citizens of. 11110 . haVe volunteered to go ti4;Kinses as •erni- grantS. About Oue thon - 1d will be -dent; thatl beinir considered us the full gnotaO4hat state. , letter further says that:the-Oil grOits are; all prepare& for both the Peace tl-.. pur4nits of life and. for self-defence,. and tini theft are picked_ men Advice has been. stt tote - free state men to maintain theirriOts at a I. hazards, and to pernlit no more towns-T. to be destroyed, even if their defence should require the sacrifice of This LS the.right sorb of.talh, and when 'fiVe thousand • fresh fre4state ,mien arrive in: the beleagured tofy . , as they: will in `Mess than a 'fortnight, there will be an. end the•outrageS whielk ha+.driven us to the verYbrink of a general eiti war.., We - do not;:eetinsel. unnecessary seVprityr; but .it would'Uot be unpar,,donatge --tO Make a few hundreds of the Southern-ruf ilaUs - taste the fruits of . their.overbearing bar barl!ty_.: They ure i surfeitedlvith blood and _rapine;' and. a most olohemp;:and- lead would be . the speedy, and, certain ,enie xnal4y. .• , • .• • - - DituocnAcr, as laid down by the Pinein. nail Convention and indicated by the admhi istration of President Pierce, is o f a peculiar caste. But that the' party, with all its Uni-• fern/ devotion: to Southern interests, cherish es in its ranks the most deterin,ined wiments of Shtvery, is showri by the progress of events inithe territory of lcansas,, where all the lead " ln" men uf:.the Free State or anti-slavery t party,. are, or' were, recently.l: l ernocra s, as for example, Robinson, Delabayr , Roberts ,; Reeder, Larte,-.Dietzler, filet all -that ,we hare 'any knowledge ;_may. of the:prom inent men of the Republican party, : lremllut' few years ago, of the barn° - faith, as' for in stint*, Fremont, Blair, Bissell,-Chalikerow, Trumbull, Wilmot, Hiehmin f , Prkoa IChig, , 7"--7---1-T =I El ' •:14 , 1 , A Private B00111,.„ckr. tjui=eMlif Drinking ,' • 4 1 , One ..paxtieulai:4l4 ;damp, Arizzly suldisagrepable day; krthelatter part of IST.9; vember ' a tallignunr, Aneeracsbit4 , eusikiM er, .drcssed in a blue iva t Vath bletkPlSuttons, with iyaller' striped.pantaloons, and calf skin te.rnAinatinnslisat plitsryAnd alone in a lit tle room situated in a certain little tavern in ~t Before tim-litta'•a little= I• l nind. table, on whose marblizvlittle pitcher of smoking punA`Eveillen hots' and - a lid glass, Ttle InErvAlna'xlas nothin' disk* was his second pitcher t l '.4lftlif[tila sienna emPtY, One Olt---f minute . after and-fewfxtolacti see--have, f -Pitcher Or'o l `t hS'ikra,ll `pounder by draulie press:- - • York rani TiiiiT'Witer" 4,600 his head in the cleer: , ' salt ; 'Of course laitterearing telt cgulot ladle it_ out:, . '..th;* :Toon, ,-...4Moreipunekand•utmig.%;_. I 2Aree - -; vaiter.*lthdreircand. ins few a returned Fitiktl/ 1 14 , Pitelker , a:Patch- 8 a York was beginning to feel glorionw,_ whe on raison his eyes„he sex figtt s,own rA!..I \ -a pier glass direetlY..oppoeite-. ry , - i. lIMIS his eyes ag,u 4 - • = = thwadni,AW4.4 , tiiw.), sitting right . . "§it,aiti'mic sweartfier.o3 - V . pudettee 'for ,snul, _is4k• Priv* r sir; -for • He waited ei4iiectintlit • 40 , held ,its".peace... , - was saying, sir, that this is - my, pqra room-r--mine, sir!' :cried. York„." fetching. Voice ; an - octavehighet,tluiit No answer Iras'nuae; and he' rang - the hi furiously. " The waiter insde - his - tippet ,- : - 'Ring, sal' `Yes; I. did 'ring. sate recital' . `Yes, sa ; this is a„private , rocim, 'lt is! Why a ; fellow sitting rig opposite me now, on the - other side of the ble. Rot - his impudence- 7 , Sa.—fellow„,sa - _ `Yes, there he is.. juse never trAit Bring on some _More punch and:a couple glasses.' I ' In a 'very- shcirt. lime the-fourth - pitch with twto glasaes,matelis-appearince. York. filled one or the .glasses;:ant,tl shoved it over the table. . 'Will you drink I' said Ite;tuldr4shag \ figure in - the - glass - . yoit We4' An so he did, • ' : ' tter drink i -old i tellovr,' continued, `Yeurisinor is getting7col.44 ant Yint-len if yon was fond cif the - thing:'. No - answer being returned, Ycitkfien (the pitcher, ind twig the beiVagtatiti :popped the waiter,. , `Ring, - sa-l': : : be sure I d i d lib-bell 'l' .Ir - - - -2;„ - 'Yes, sa, this is d .- privitirroom; 'A Pretty 'private! room this 1-f-fellow ,settin'g right opposite; :that 'take a - glass of punchl*hen its 441'6(1-h r-r-red nosed man at thal. - mind; bring more 'p i ttneh, -- and;-t-t-. ' ['li try him again:. - ; , • Presently s pitchernumberfive,andg to match, Was borne in withAue state:. 'Better try boy;' - ` coaxin,gly to his double.- The - reflex' looked . good natured;! big Said nothing. . I W6ll,!'continued York :with a - sigh,. isn't the most,,,infamou.s.; ,N 9 yer, nf_in drink the. punch:. And so he did. every It. minutes .to end - 04 pitcher rang the bell Stiperfurieusly.. Tke Came again; - `Ring, . - • certainly Wh r y . should. Where is. the man—Who keeps the— 'Boss, si 1 Pilsen ss.' , Shortly after, mine hostot'Auict ,little niati'*ith imottled, calico patte and a shining bald head,- Made his ance; _ 4 4V:What 'a : t 4) I.dernandiiii singi - and assuming an' air ofdiiitSit' ''Five punches-five levies: f ! There's the money; sir; said - Yerfr4 -Over. kite 'sOin. !And now ,I.wattt why, when .1 call ter. a private ra'!" , should put:tne-herti.4iith `'there's nobody liere,4 , irtit'yto.. , 'Nobody! - PO yeti - sr;S-siippose:.. ; 'DO you think I ant -; drtink.4 look there! two cif 'ant, by jiagor; !Well sir, I musty een t fsl3, ,kcaretf - ‘-' 'us two:' 2 'You can't, eh r And York - dr. landlord to the _there,_.;Lo ok llea be, pointing gliA jlllo,,rascals - no*. One-!of y 4 to - be your:brotherkalid , :thiVoth: Lord:forsakeni,:ineanest lOokin 1 ever Pawl; 1•11 r. ANicrari.-- en. Pit ow, one o Mexican: ilriglidieke, p+mativeln his orders and•- porapbus oratorical " style of delive which: he RlT , ,se,rvPi' even battle: ' ; oceaiston t ..dnring ate ; eng,agement, - Ca .1 can r commending the -Flying Artil I called .out to this oiri4ei; in:: his usual "manner Captain has com e • ; Duncan, , without; ik_Wordo his men, who were: standing: by the already shottd :171 ed out "Itu*!!' The men were' tilt: pilsed at the order-4here'being no lar object within range—when :an o headed Irish , sergeant stepped , uprwt yer hollOrvltittig 4 bOLWO atrr ; theOidß'i , 4 the General saf ituttit hiedcomer PiitslOreatiotte' p IkkgkutiberOurg, -- the of 11 4i4r.r04 4 44 44 . C9 ,1 0e ffi. 04 - Otitilse*ttiplt:OPPWlong , r ivithdeniAcititiaiikr*:'surn* ,. . , l I;Azliiiifiiiii*ciii"th,tter:=lleibtrei 16*i - it* the heals - ' :<~ .. r .... ~.f~~} M - - s.l IME • '. . MI 7~ ~.~ +- a ._'-~. ME MEM ..s:3 ;,~ ^,:, Did'iit raik fora MOE CM ME IN • ; 1 - , ; h ?'' l~X•~' +i4 ",~ ~ F: IN 1 - L ~! ~~: -_ln. 1 ii/e, 1 iMIMM tit - a • t L - 4,1t ever 1 orlt, rely. this E nt alter - ..',.!, ~ 11. \ - \ 1 1.3 seal'. kik , nice,. MI eking ,kitow • .Yqn Meer ran' ere, eF but I • ,of the contik. ire's (like Is-the _white 'rrolk'd atber - :4 - 3eiroi: • - in eine - &isle MEE MO - to ply *l2 PartiO. d grey ti ollszti ric,Efot 'ololiar t iji t ita , 1.r41014i ;roluf'4.. 1 ..- i t bold , . .... j ic , br z -