Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, August 28, 1856, Image 2

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    11
II
V:Rdeoeloof, litetottb)ic4ii...,
.TREAO
tatifßOSE
ThitrtidiT,*#glid 214 1856.
REPUBMOAN: TICKET.
FON ` 2 I'ItriST:DZICT, - •
, • •
JOHIsr-CII*ALES 11'.REM4PN'T
FOR 714% PRESIDENT," •
WILL I t A3IL. D;.YTON.
STATE TICKET.
FOR 99101183101 ER,
COICHRAN.
nrif: CC/11/AY.
•
FOR AI".TDITOR OgVERAL
DARtN'PIiELPS,
Of AnnOtremg County.
on frOitiEFOR , 6
6 13.A.ii11% 0 .1 1
:. 0 ME W,ILAPORTE,
•
43f 13r4dfOrd County.
! • '
REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET.
FOR CONGRESS,
- GIVLUSOA A. b'Roli %V,
1 0f - o,UsOoluinna : County.
I.Su4jcct to tiecisiori OA' Congrwisional Confererice:l
h rorf sai-ATOR,
D ANIS D—WAIRNER,
Of Susglie6nnaiC.oiity.' '
ISubject to decision of enatorial Conference.]
NOR REPRESENTITIVE'
SIMEOX d' I TIASE,
Of gusqiiehrtrtualCounty.
jSubject to decision' of Representative Conierence.l
5 ,
FOR IiSSOCLATR 'AMOR%
CHARLES FF REAto, of Montrose,
URBANE BURROWS; of Gibson.
FOR COUNTY ICOMI4SSIONER i
PERRIN WELYS, ofßridgewater.
FOR. DISTRICT ATTORNEY
-.F:RANKLIN 44:IZASEr, Montrose;
b.
•
FOR ICOVNTF SURVEYOR,
JOEL TISEfiELL, .of Ftirest° Lake.
FOR - 104IINIT A cDITOR,
Grow tor valubl4 PublkDocuments.
The Eetinbije44 comity Conventioh.
The result of the Republican Convention ;
- I• on Ithiudayllist,lis.shown by the Oulu-
Ticketat the hlad rzf oufpaper. The see
• taries havefalleil, :up to :this • time, to furj
.nis us with tl c firoOpdings. of - IfitCons en;
tion, which. iliererdre cannot be published
till next Week.' i• ,
. . .
Mr. Gro*ctas ktorkiblited for Congressby
acctamatibn, op. ihe Same Platform on which
he was nominc4e . dltwo yorC.asco.
D. D: Warner i of Brid'aewater, was nom
inated as the c,hoipe Of this! County for State
Senator,\nd Simon B. Chase of Cyreat Bend,
for Representativfr--both _true nepuhlicans
- and excellent n.oniinations.' We consider the.
County Ticket, individually - and collectively,
!,-(mind, it is the junior editor who sa.,Shis,)
as a good l and, strong on., and it i5*,..5,141.e. to
be elected by' a !great majority. 11,; - as is
:-usually theeaSe, - !smile of our friends have
been &appointed in some of the nominations,
we udvise them tp ix= their eyes upon our
glorious baru4r *here "Fremont and Free
. dOnk" in.scribell, and reflect that we are
fighting agent. , la'attle. of principle, and that
- no, trifle 'ihoulde4ustis us to falter in the fight.
Let not the en e 4 find any divisions:in our
• ranks; but, as Out - cause is just, let uspress
, -`forward , imited to victory.
jar An iuteriesting 'Republican meeting
VOA held at the old Court House in Mont
-11090, Oa Mondayl. evening lest. ' Geri. Bay-
I leave Proonte ebtipty, who was 'expected to
'be "'resent at t .' this meeting and narrate his
• personal i everiejein Kansas, did not appear,
:-having an appoiniment elsewhere; but excel
lent speeches ,weke delivered by Judge Wil
mot anolJudge irssup. Mr. Stewart, of tkl•
legheny, county,.N. Y., father of young Stew
art who WO retetitlimurderred in cord blood
by the Border *Sala in' Kansas, was pres
ent•at the meeti*, and the circumstances of
the murder'werereferred to, by Judge Wit•
mot in his sieech.
M illepubligin, Meeting N Yir
Milford,, on g,atutday evening last, iias . Hell
attended and enthnsiastie. We learn that
there were at legit SOO persons present.
r -Judge Wihnotiaixas our readers are aware,
is doing noble whine in the , cause of Free
:Speech and IfreeKansaS, adds essed tbelmect.
it!gr in a telling, and eloquent speech.
11c Tribune's bogtis correspondent was
observed to 4.be !present, taking notes, aid
We- may look foi; another letter soon from
Hutt eximrdinoiy Republican, Mr. Mosher.
lar We tear itom.;Washington that Bu
'ehanan'll friends tire telegraphing and .writing
from Pexmsylvania :that a compromise, must ,
be effected on the Kansas proviso in the Army
AppropriatiOn 1411,0 r the State will be lost.
They need not doubt that. They have
_al-
, .ready gone too far in support of the crimes
icif the Bord4s, to carry Pennsyl
ttla.' though slow to move,
is now Met 3rilder way for Fremont and
Freedom, iiii4sithing can stop her.
Our, readers will hare observed that
jbe original letters we publish from Kansas
ore Musa, witliont signatures. For this
there is s:very good reason. They are, gen- ,
erally private lettehl 7.4 written by settlers from
this 0016 fro tlieir friends here, and as the
lufaunOus oole tbat is attempted to be enforo.
ed attbe against them, makes
i f f e h m i y ,t o '7'4'oloog against the Slive
' , rower, to the writers" names :would
..
tiouitlesi get tgria into liffieulty, and knight
cost 14im' their brie. The letters come to
•Fs fully authen4t4 and we are personally
acepaintiffifithOke mallow. of most of them,
at id know them `to be men of intelligence and
• 4.yllaitcitz,
• 1 1
.!.IFR4IZIER, EDITORS
G. .L
MN
rff - The Repubhcans of Lenox . , a Polar
Raising on Saturday lasV c d A .0 number
l i een
of bitiiens assembled, , and! raised a handsome
Iliekory . -Pole.. 'ninety-Vivo feet in height.
lion. :G. A.,Grow who had an a Ointment
to speak on the occasion, having recall
:ed toVashington by the Preside 1 t's-Prfx,la•
[nation for nn extra sesien, was! of co a rse
unable to be present; but' the people were
ably addressed by the Rev:Mr. I,•ih, F. P.
Grow, and others. .-- - - • • i .
•
During - Saturday night, thoßuchaneers as-
Senfbled,_ and cut down the Pole. Border
Ruffianism seems to have its ,hurnble - imita
tOrseven in_Su - sqlichauna,cOunt• ; and the
Hickory, thotigh aTaVorite, with the lovers of
.Thekson Democracy, meets wit . no favor
from the party of4dlibusteriste
extension.
We be ieye 'the dij
Buchaneers who erne here. r'
enlighten the poop e quehal
'on the beauties of .Boraei .Ruffie!
departed, " sadder - and wiser men
at homtl are said 'to hitve called
and Bakalew's few.days' experie
ed him that to preach his kind of
in: this . . regieu.'is .worse than la
away, llc s said to have &clan
ton that it'is useless to attempt
thing inSus4aehanna county, ar
County is good • f0r.1500 majority for Fre
mont. If. he said :so, be . did - not shoot ,Wide
of the trait. , C. L. Ward is upposed to
have been - sumMoned bacii .to Vashington
in great haste to attend to his du ics as chair
man of the National Commit ee, several
screWs having got loc;se during 'hi's, absence.
SOine of the 11epublicansi of Virginia
met .rec , ently for the purpose of -forming a
Tremont and - Dayton. el ectoial - tieket, but the
meeting ‘Vas at tacked ny a
. morfof PrO-Slave-•
ry men, the speakers beaten and lkicked,•and
themecting, broken up . Those.atte the means
used to make : ours' a sectional I.`l - party. If
re' should treat dOughfhees.it th same iiay.
here iit the. North, we should soon make the
- pro-Slavery party . . "Sectional,' in the same
sense.
NVe are told that when Snsoohle, the
Philadelphia doughface*hO ha:S leeti sent tip
to convince the pei le.i. Susquehanna . that'
Slavery is 'a blessing,' saw the great crowd as
sembled lare on Wednesday of last Meek ;
he turned to E. B. Chase and Said :. • .
"If this is- the sort. of people you have
here—if such a crowd wilt standin this rain
to heat that, Preacbei tall Free Soil, this; is
'no place for me—l b:id better gO.hotne."
t.,Thc Richmond
.(Va.)nquirer, , the
leading Buchanan paper in theSotithein States,
WA
"The more. Slave States, the better for the
Free States.- But for fanatical abolition and
•
Yankee-Boston greed (that scekst l o usurp; by
corporations, the public lands,and fill them
with 'White'instead:of black slaiies,) but for
,
these 'causes, the North would rejoice to see
Kansas a Slave . State. Ourcaus i e l is just ; and
-honor, and interest, and security l alike call Lon
us to spare no labor, no peril, no expense,,' in.
order to inake.Kansas,a Slave State. Kan:
sag, 1)40" •
•
Messrs. Strickland and U'
sellers of Iliobik, have been dri, 3
City .fir daring•tosell Fred. Dco
.. .
biography, entitled BcrndN l
dour;" in Which be kives an accol
perience as a. Slave at the Soutl
link of . antisaVery books at thei
offencei
against mob
there, of such magnitude that the
lers are at once driven from the
abami under 'p eril:of their lit
extensive 'business de.stroYed, for
ed to sell Douglass' book. Sue
we could hardly..endure yet here!:
int we :are asked' to aid in exte4
Kansas and all . the broad tern
to the Paciiic. •-• •
ar'The Washington eorrdip lidera of the
Tribune telegraphs that be 4 credibly in
formed that the Ameriaiti Sta e Council of
North Carolina have determinfd to %recom
mend all the Councils in the State to cast
their votes fur Buchanan 4Usteaof Fillmore.
The grounds fur takink such a curse are that
the late elections have proved that Mr. Fill
more cannot carry a single So thorn State,
while there -is no chance of his . r . ceiving a sin
gle. electoral vote at the Nort ; and that it
bebooves'the South to present united front
in such a crisis as; : that she b now to pass
through. Will NOTtberrt Fill ore men take
the bint,? .
::iisr- The report that the Fee l State men
of Kansas have attacked Lecomipton aril res.
cued Gov. no binson and the oter State pris
oners, appears to be 'without f undatiOn. It
T
was no doubt in` ted and eir ulated, by the
Border Ruffian leaders to ficil tate the rais
ing of, forees, in Missouri, to aid ; in extermina
ting the gree State settleis in Kansas; Mutt
say you, rnen o,t 'Pennsylvania? Will you
Who have_ sans, brothers, and friends'in Kan
sas—Men whose 'only offense is a desire -to
make that Territory a Free State by lawful
means—sit tamely by and see those North
ein freemen
.muidered, because that is s the
only tray to get rid of the Free State majority
1 - . - t•
there 1 ,
1 •
The Montrose I lhmovat accuses us of ap
plying sourrifous epithets' to United States
Senators,, because we . correctly designated
Broadhead and Bigler as our sham iDemo
cratie, doughLicf,; pro-Slavery Senators.- . ----
We never yet applied to any Senator. the
Demafratic argumtnt, a gutta perthq:cane.—
Now that the E4itors of*the Demoirat have
takeii the . Senatc--:-tiutt reserve guard of
Freedom," as they call it----into their keeping,
let them pitch into Bully Brook; their Dem
ocratic champion, a little lets gingerly, for
his brutal assault on a Senator.
The Scranton Herald, the only !illmore
paper in . this section of Pennsylvania, has
been sold out o the bucluuteers, and is to be
united with th Spirit ofthe Valley,; he p;o.
Slavery o - of tbat=iieee. ; The: recent'
comae *of the !raid iv now easy. to be, : un
ilerst6od, . ' - -- •
MU
$' The Buchanan Oieets are publishing,
with great guito, raid!, said to have been ut
tered by one Chula,' Remand, WhoM they
call a leading Repnbilean of Ohio," to the
purport that "Washington wait a aco ► ndrcl,
and hecouldaPitin his face," &c. The truth
.19 at this Reinond, is_ a negro and ono of the
Garrison school:bi - abolitionists, who are de
-leidedly opposed to ihe Republican party, and
in,favor Of the .eleetion of Mr. Bitchanan, be
cause they think that, by continuing the out .
rages Of Slavery in Kansas and elsewhere, his ;
election would lead to
.what their' desire,
dissolution of,Aho Union. The Republicans„
on, the contrary, say,with Geri. Jackson,. when
he .was,.opposht . the nullifiers. as they now
are doing, ""The Union must and shall be'
nd slavery- preserved.".
Or Although the President has called, an
extra session of Congress fur the cx press pur
poSe. of mating 'appropiiitions for th 4
it is a euriouslaet, that on the .reassaMbling
orthe House, every friend of the tuitnittistra-.
Lion Voted against the appropriation bill,. and
every Republican voted for it. The !Pemo-'
cratie Senate also refuses to pass the bill .as
it passed the liouse, although in that form - it
makes all the appropriations. asked' for to
meet the Indian hostilities to which the Pres.l
ident refers in'his Proclamation as a rcasoti
fur calling an extra session, acrd . only ndils et:
proviso that the United States troops shall';
nut 'be used to enforce. thebOgtis laWs enact- ,
ed by the Missourians for the govertiment o
the people of Kam-m4. We hope the Hensel
i~ ill treVer recede from its position.
'-tinOished
cently t . to
fa county
ism, buve
' Troubles
,ff SnoOble,
cc 'con y c
Committee .to procure . Speakers and Doc
uments, George Walker Esq., Isaac. P. Baker,
Abel Cassidy, W m''..M iles.
Committee on Musk., Dimoek Glee Club.
After a few able 'and 'pet tinenVremarks by
the. Chairman, Geo. Grates,. and 'Others, the
Chili tu i ljoutacd - with nine cheers for Freedom
Fremont and Dayton, to, meet at Dimock
Academy, Tuesday *ening, August '26th, r,t .
half past 7 o'clock P. 11 ' . Upwards
,of forty
THE BucttAmins GUILTY OF FORCERS'.-- names were subscribed to the Constitution
We leatned not lon;;*, since that setkral pro- and By-Laws.. •. . 1
Slavery-Amino i ts, among them a speech ofi I will now give you a of the Oro
synopsis.i
Stt.‘phens, 'of GI ?a, lately a Whig, blie
ooratic rendezvous, viz :the P. O. pt rsuant
ceedings of the Bucks . .ho met at_the Dem
now a leader of dal:Sham Democracy. hard
1
been received this Co - untyfrattleed Ai itit thti I
:i
to ecall i k organize aßuck and Breck Club;
name of "'G.. A. Grow M. C." —4,t excited ca l Published at'a muting or the Unterrifted held
little surprise that Mr.* Gro‘", one
mOst prominent friends of freedom in the ;
of thl i on the
evening of Aug. 21st., after three con
! sistent speeches from three consistent, politi
llouse,shutil he engaged in flanking ptosSlav& l .,,! Cianx,. Viz i C: L. 'Ward, Benj. Parke and E.
ry doetunetits to his constituents, bnt the follow 4 B. Chase.
. . I
-. ..
ing.correspondence, t:hichwe find in the Brad . Well, Sirs, .1.11C: :democracy:, after • waiting
, 1
emocracy
throin
iu Seean
o
do any
that this
ford Reporter; solves the Mystery, arid shoWS
that Mr. Groom's signature. has been for Ail
by . smite reckless Buchancei-s in Wasiiiii4-
ton.. - To what depths of rascality Will tiol ' l
those pro-Slavery politicians 'damn/
Here are the letters: - *• . ' 1 •
111/itAx, 'Bradford Co., i'a., Aug. 8, isisi). i : -
-Stu: I herewith return the title page of a Ilutbati., 1 for the Repub/icatr. ' •
an pamphlet and your Frai+k on the wrapper for an i : . ' "
explanation. Is it.your desire to circulate such pan}- • : . Core for Dysentery ..
pliiets,; or is it an imposition upon you, or does, the; Tithe equal. quantities of. tansev ) , calwort,
.
pamplikt contain -3-our sentiments? Please.answer
at your earliest convenience. , -
• . , 1 1 -motherwert and thoroughwort-boil fcr an
Yours, respectfully, EZEKIEL Cully. hour and i . lrall in water sufficient to cover
Hon. G. A. (how Washington D. C. ' - • *
1 1
the herbs ---then. strain off the liquor, and boil
down to An . extract. Dose : two :common.
1 . .
I sized. pil6 once in - two:hours fron rising in
the morning until ,bed time ; .or the quantity
of all at °nee, as the circumstances may re
'quire.. Also, it may be taken in the form of
pills, or disiolired in tater. • ° .
I have . known the worth .of ;the abOVe
'medicine to some eXte k at ; for more 'than a .
dozen .years; and sucalias been its . efficacy
on mySelf, several of my family, and others
to. whotn it has been administered this sea
ion, that I now, in the performance 9 r a duty
which -1 feel bound to diseharge, make it pub
licly known, without the- hope of fee or re
ward, except the knowledge.of its doing
good wherever used. Some may
,smile it
the-simplicity of the article. 'Never ; mind,
that: make it and ttse it, and sure 1 am that_
you will laugh fun the benefit you. will re.
ceive-. 01 many' applications- 1 haVe. never
known one to fail, even of the harder cases:'
If it does no good it will do no harM. , It• is
not-a purgative; but it is an' alterative and
tonic that May be relied upon, withoutleav,
ing poison behind to. corrode and do - mis
chief in the system'. . .
' 1 might refer to eases, but that is unneces
sary ; hence I have only:. to Say that 'any
family, having tried its efficacy, Will not fail
.
ever afterwards to keep a supply for an emer
gency.—r-N. B. When the_ herbs are-,in
bloom is the time .ffir making it. Soon that
time will pa=s; 'and neglect may be balanced
by pain and medical attendance. ' . . ' •
S. A. NEWTON'.
. _
. DEAR Stu: Yours.of the Bth-inst., is received, eti,;
closing title page of a Buchanan pinntilti'et And enver-,
ope with his - name franked thereon. The frank is
not my hand writing, nor have I sent any snchtiocu - -
ments. For the only documents of any kind thath.
hare sent to your office this session, left my room for:
the city P. 0. last Friday, the date or your•letter.
The frank must therefore have been forged at,
some of the Buchanan clubrooms, or by Some , peti• - •
son sending that kind of documents into my district. I
Host truly Yours, -t
' • flAtrstt.t ,
..4.lGrtow.
Ezr.i.t.m. Crane, :Van P. 0., gradford Co., ra. 1.;
.•": 1 . 1
•
• .
T, s• EXIIL Aso" Co-scErrt.—Not withstatd-1
ing the unfavorable state of, the weather, thin
• .1
prevailed on Wednesday. and Thursday - last
we are pleased to learn the, Young .I...adies
St. Paulls Cirurch, realized;froin the gale bt,
their articles, a sum much beyond their fond-!,.
est anticipations,' having disposed. of nearly,
everything exhibited. , •
. .
$ , ,
Pson, book
'en out of the 1
uglass' auto- I
;e l and Flee-1
nnt of his ex- 1
, \ The sel- - 1
South, is an 1
iiat l prevails
se' booksel- - 1 .
State of Al.
es, and their,
having. dar
kh despotism
at t. 6 North,
lait it over
b
tory l beyond.
`The Concert given on Thursday evening,'
by Madame ; Bouchelle and others, was veryl
fully attenddd and gave entire satisfaction
the audience, who seemed fully to appreei ,
ate its merits. • ,
THE HOILISBURG TELEGRAPH. '1•0111:11*
Very truly that, in the excitement of the Presi
idential struggle, we are in too much dan,gett
-of losing - sight of the•itnportance of, electittg
the State ticket: It is of the first iin4
t
portance that we should carry thetate
against the Buchaneers in October to prepare
the way for the greater victory in ,Noveir4
her: Every friend of Fremont andTreedoin t i
should labor earnestly for the success of the
/
State ticket.
7 11. - B. Wright, of Luzerne CUunty,'iti
la speech at Pittston, August 19th, asserteu,
that Brooks did right in assaulting : Senator,
Sumner, and instead of merely caning him
ought to have killed - him! Such is
in doui;h;
.•
.faee,DeocracY H
.M — . We learn from the Pittston j'Gazi l tte'
that Welsh 'Fremont Clubs have been fornieci
at Bloomsburg and. Danville. The. Welsh
appreciate the factAhat the rights and. interests
of rreo Labor are at stake in this .contest.
In Illinois there are twice as many
Fremont as Buchanan papers. seVenteer i a
counties of . Ohio there is no paper' supporting
Buchanan. The Press, the Pulpit, andith'e
•
intelligence 'of the North, are arrayed agamst
slavery extension. • •
. - Polk, the Border Ruffian midi at.
far Governor, of Missouri, is elected, slid a
large majority of the sine stripe are el 'ted
to the Legislature.
• Ili FSCts•»
, From the .Montrose Democrat of Au
14, 1856. • - '
"Fremont is the nominee of a seed
party which to-day deliberately propose,
destroy the govirnment unless its own po i
shall he carried Out—the meek repretenta
of avowed disunionists."
From the Republican Platform adopte
the Philadelphia National Convention
nominated Fremont.
"Resolved, That the malutenance o
principles promulgated in the Declaratio
Independence, and embodied in the F •
Constitution, is essential to the pfcserva
of our Republican institutions, and that
Union of these States must and shall be
served."
rff's Joshua R. Giddings, in a lette
the Ashtabula- Sentinel, speaking; of th,
turn of Ilerbert, Keitt and . Brooks, says
" Sc? the Dealocnitie party ;is gin
strenith in the Mouse; but it is by deft+
ing the gallows and penitentiary of the)
due."'
or Nokia Citholio paper in the con!
so filr . as we have been able to learn, sup I
Fremont for President. All suppo
ehanan if anybody. _
A
i •
IV o islliNurox, August 11', 1856. r,
For the Repeiblice%
. • ' , Thum; August 25, 1856..
Mstl'atts: Eitrrorti:-.,-The true lovers of
Freedom in this place, desirous of sustaining
rind spivading the truth, and 'refuting
,aud re
aisting error, met at the Hotel of John Baker;
Aug. 23, at 8 o'clock, p, u.,pursuant to a no. •
iiee posted the - same day, to organize. , a Fre-.
tiontClub. Nothwithstanding the rain fell in
1 )
ro Til fu e Si inx on., e a g ting oo l d vus ly
cia nu i r ed be t c e w or e d r c e p
rb r y es tr en.
rb r ane
. mith Esq.' Isaac P.. Baker 'was appointed
hairman, and A. Cassidf,Secretary, after
hid' the Constitution and' BY-..1,.aws of. the
,Montroie Club wefe una - itiniously adopted,
-I with three hearty 'cheers. !The meeting.their
,under the name 'of "The Dimoek Fremont
Club," proceeded to an eleCtion of permanent
,officers, with the fulloWing!result :,
President,' Masmi • Tingley Esq. ; Vice
President, 4ohit Young; Recording Secrete
ry, Samuel Sherer ; Corresponding Secretary,
Dt..A. C. J3lukeSlee ; Treasurer, Tho's Bab
cock. :-.- . _, , •
Board of Directors and Finance Commit
tee, George Blakeslee, George Gates, Elisha
Tiiiit n v.
until 6 . olelock,appeinted a chairman, and up
on 'counting noses, five persons were declared
present, bui there, being no Philadelphia or
Harrisburg Lawyer present; they were Una-
ble to read their Programme,. and therefore
1 •
(adjourned, silent and dismayed..c.
Brooklyn, Aug.' 25th.
krement Meeting at'Great Bent.
There . .was a Great Bead, emphatically,
last nightcr The spacious - Dayton Hall was
crowded tb overflowing with men and women
to witness the presentation .of a beautiful
Banner tO, the:Premout Club by , the Ladies
of 'Great Bend. It'was ;presented in behalf
of the Ladies by S: B. Chase,Esq., - of Great-
Bend, and received by - Rev: El. H. Clark, of
the same place: Eloquent and effective. ad
dresses were also made- by Dr. Doane 'and
Enos Puffer of this County._ The meeting
was also addressed by Geo. \Vartrous, Esq.,
of Connecticut: The Susqtrehanne;ari Great
Bend Brass Bands and Glee Clubs:enlivened
the occasion with choice instrumental alid vo
cal music. It '‘as a glorieus gathering and
is an augury of xiluit the Keystone State will
do 'hi November. Our friends at Gt. Bend
and Susquehanna are wide awake and armed
and equipped.
We clip the above from •the Binghamton
Republican, and, learn from 'private sources,
that it Was, a glorious demonstration of the
friends of Frem&nt and Dayton, which car
ried dismay into the ranks of their opponents.
No one made any efforts to get up the meet
ing, and nothing but an ordinary b meet
ing was anticipated; and still the enthusiasm
was overpowering.
!fffl
I P
icy
ire
men
ti to the exercises m4ti ed in
the above extract, we learn that a v ry in
teresting and able letter was read y Mr.
-Chase from Dr., Joint 11. Tuosus, of New
York City, formerly a resident. of t p lace;
and who made the Club a very , valuable
present, consisting of a large political Map,
Poster, and .one hundred copies of Coifitx's
Speich on the Laws of Kansas. ,
6 , y
lot
tlie
h of
1 - ,
• rnl
kin
tielpie-
famous-Aarter Oak, at Hart
ford, Connecticut, in stick witi concealed the
charter of the State, May 9, 1689, fell at a
quarter before one o'clock, on the morning of
Thursday, August 21. It, stood upon the old
Wyltia estate, now owned the Hoti. J. W.
Stuart. Crowds are visiting the ruins, bear.
ing away portions of the tree as sacred rel
ies. xjA
I:
ning
auo
- jurt,
arin.,New York The Buchaneers and
Fillnioriites are likely 4 to unite in support of
Buchanan link President, and Brooks of the
Express for Gorer4or, .
try,
~r t s
Bu-
. PROM KANSAS.
cerreapondence.of the N. Y, Tribune.! •
KICAPOO, K. T. Friday. Aug. 15,1'56
Pernitt - me to give your readersthe facts
relating to the existing .troubles 'near, Lair
rence, which threaten nein, to bring 6 war
upon , that city. We aro not perniittel-from
our nearness toldis.souri publiSh al ; paper
upon tlieborderithat'.win deal in Refs, and
fearing. that your. readers may be misle . d by
such false statements as are made by the pro
'slavery journal; I have thought advisable to
send you this extra, and then give the facts
- -
of the case : .
Front Juitrital E.rtra.
Tar. ihooni - Issun TIEGrx! Ur SovEnv.t(::
TO YOUR DUTY! _PATIENCE I!. CEASED TO DI
xtrki-An Expres.i-from Lezzirpton has just]
bringing iiitelligenu of the attack on, Fran
Lane's men, the murder of the Postmaster,
of the until, arta deAructiott-of this Post-011ie
r
1, of
y val
'The attack was made . onthe town late in th
ing, on Tuesday; by ; upward. of a hundred M
men. They attacked Judge Fain, and shot)
the shoulder. They next attacked the Par
and afte'y rObing it of ILL contentA, :Not Mr
the.Pmlttnister.- They then set fire to a !a l
coed wagon•alung.side,of the Mice, and in
and the Office. They condemned to the flay
after a parley, agreed to spare them, if they
jzens) would agree to leave the Territory. in 2
never to return. All the arms, private ant
muskets and cannon, were. taken by them.
tack upon Lecomptim is hourly
NOW that the h4sue, - hhx)dy though it ma
forced upon us,, let us he up and doing.
quarter be given, but war to the exterininati
'nig...remits be the motto.
Lrarentrorth, Ang. it, -.15 . :43.
The above string of lies was called 1 ,
these facts: 'On Saturday last a comP:
the (chivalrous sons of the South" wl'
I
been !entrenched -at Franklin tin. son
past, plundering and robbing Free St,
tiers, received reinforeements,.swellin
netnbers- to about seventy-five. .- Thi,-
tion- to their tiumbers caused the sett!
fear that their disposition -to plunder
also be increased, and they resolved
down their first attenipt- On Sunda:
they stole from the,Stage'Proprictor,bl
Lawrence and Westp3rt, tWie valuable
and one mule. The stage •driver :IP
to the itizens of LawretVee and vicini
asSist• ‘to retake his horses; LIP
of . uldred v6l pteered and star
Franklin, where, Owl hieves .were ene
Upon arriving there they limn& the
had taken possession of a large log e
Making " pOrt . holes" through the sic
had their rifles presented waiting the
of the Lawrence br , f , ": - This was Illle
to-them; tliey not having. anticipated
many of them wet e not prepared for
on consultation; however, they conehi ,
retake their: horses and other propert
I had been provioasly-stolen from then
hazards, "peacc(iblyil they could, In(
/heti racist." 'A- messenger was -fir
with a flag :of truce '
' who- appt oae
house and hailed the leader of , the ~
telling him that some horses had been
and.they were known to be in his poJ:
i that a company had come from Law!.
I obtain the horses, and inquired. opt
terms they would he riven tip to the!
ful owners. The leader of the baud
plied that they had the horses, and
asked nor gave lnar , ler ; that ever,
die betbre they gave up a
any horse.they had taken. The: me
(a Misso - ifir 'Free State tnan known
congnomen c.,f •Penn.yltaek, who hay
robbed. by the same , rang on a furor!
sign) started to join leis company; bu!
reaching them, was fired upon---tW
passing through his ( tlothes, but not
hkn. Ile threw hint3elf into the ger
. .
crawled behind a little knoll beYend their
reach. After the company learned of his
success they started in a body, but its soon
as they came within 'gunshot, a voley was
[
fired from within the house, instan Ey. kill
ing Dire man by the name of Sacklat, : and
wounding live others, one a Mr Ilobt, sup
posed mortally. Thu 'Free State Krum re
turned the lire, but without much eruct, as.
their enemies were not exposed, will edict,
every
one - of theta was becoming a Mark for the.
'thieves within. The Free State men retreat
ed,and after holding another tons illation,
loaded- a Wagon With hay, set it on (fire and
backed it against the•building. The chiral-
is sons - of .South Carolina and The nOle sons.
of. Georgia did not-wait to feel the fire—the
smell 9f smoke was sufficient. to eanse those
" who were neither to give nor accept quar
ter" to rush from the._ building, where they
met the Free State men, with -arras pre
sefited to. receive them. Most of the thieves
surrendered at once, but a _detachment of the
Free State Men having been sent to extin ,
ginsh the fire, some of them escaped. . , -.
- The Free-State 'men disarmed them, and
after learning where the stolen Property ;Was,
set them. at liberty.
..About . eighty 'muskets.
and rifles - ,4 quantity of ammunitionund about
fifteen horses were taiten. from the, thieves,
'most .of which had previonsly been stolen
from the Lawrence men. The property •was
returned to its rightculownerS. Several of
the banditti were slighilywoundedcbut none
killed as we have heard of. -As to 'the- rob
bing and burning of the P_ ost-Otriet., killing
of the Postmaster, &c., it is only one of - the
many lies told by the- Bitch:weer papers pub
lished in. this section for the purpose of 'ad-
Vancing the eause,of.Alationa/ Druiperacy
a party which I, before I saw Kansas, thought
it an honor to belong to—but tidtv l'rind my
self where every have? of peace and quiet,. in
Kansas is found—for Freedom and Fremont.
The charge that Lane's Company ',were en
gaged in this allitir, is also false, and is start
edl.
for the purpose of creating prejudice a
gainst Lane and lnsrmen. - .'
I
Lane's: men have, not yet reached Law
rence.. Last Monday they caine into Topeka,.
about.4.oo:Men, beside women.and . cliii44„,
escorted by a company of 100 Topeka . men..
They presented :quite
.a formidable appear-,,
:ince: A, string:of wagons upward ot - sta, mile
in length, loaded with farming implements,
household furniture, provisions, &c:; and up
on idose. examination the.nruizle. 4a rifle
might - o&asionally be seen, in some 'conven
ient place for the ocenpants of the ;wagon to
lay hands upon at, a uinumi4 notice: -The
Southern . ehivalry who started frOm West
port;-- Leavenworth, Weston, • Atchison, - St.
Joseph and this place, to intercept land-, pre
vent theirentranee into the Territory,re
beyond the reach of gun shOt, following in
their wake, and probably wondering if " One
chivalric son of South, wit really equal to,
lour. Northern Abolitionitils.". From the
filet that they made nolastiledemonstrations*
they rmist.have'come to the conehrsion• that,
even-banded, the Ahdlitionists (as•they term
all Northern men) might Show - 16 m a- hard.
fight: : I " ' --:
.---Sincti .writing' the above, a messenger..
has.come in froth Soldier Creek, who reports
that a:Free-State man has been.. robbed and
murdered by another gang 'of tuford's.ban
ditti, and that the VAiole section of country
thereabouts is in arms. A' severe tattle is
expected to' come off there to -day:; . A -com
pany of Ruffians from thiS place aunt Lear,
enworth have gone out to rechfiarce nuford7s
gang. -. All *c ask for now is that Missouri
shall stay' at 'name, and:these ruffians . Will
get so handsomely whipped that ItheY will
want. no mdro fighting very
,soon. ' The Free -
State men have become so exasperated by
their, iepeated Murder*, robberies,' &t.', that
they, to a mul t i will turn out to ek i pet these
villains from Our midst, ur, teach them - -that
there is a laW in Kansas-ti first law of Na
ture (self-protection)-7—and :that, that law will
13e curuivivi, ~ -, i:; - 1 t:, w.
- Bigler o
Wizen any thing
done at Washington,.
picked to dolt. Wo,v;
be blade to assail th
by a resolution of th
vouches in the•Scittl
Col..Fremont,yrith
son instrumesiVWns
A fte:i. Oigine
MO
Senate .for . the 'pectin
Live (it' not of hirnsel ,
U. S. Treasury, it in
that he would have t
himself; but •n P
Washington is not
;K! AND
F A VIA-
I prayed
klin 'by
-obbery
noythbig, and so the,
plishell through a fit
[lou this subject
says. ; -
' :.‘ A more shamele - 0 proCeeding, has rare-
ly, if ever, 'occurred ti Congress. GoV. Big
ler knows, and his peinelpal, James Buchan
an, knows still bette • 1 - that. the' inSinuatious .
.... • - -
conveyed in the resui l ntion of inqniry, offered
on Saturday are. maliciously • unjust ; that
Col. Fremont's aecouilts have all heen,,pas
sed upon by a Conuwee ofOing,ress,aniong
' whom were several (- f his political opponents;
that the only accusa ions which ever reached
Washington in rega 4. to -them, came thro'
Col. Mason while CI yernor of'Calnrnia; an
avowed enemy of GI. Fremont, and . ally . of
'Gen. Kearney in his ivarflire against the. Col.
they also know that ithe Court took no .nd
-1 ewe of his.,chargcs; 'hat Presideuf TaYlor a
.3' leitr afterwards. apt - ointiel him d r Corenais
sionerto run the Bo nidary lieb between the
United States and: 71 exieo, thereby practical
(ly pronouncing the accusation 'referred to
1 tnalicious and grout dless ; , and that snbse
quetely to that even ; he.wasehosen'Senator
of the United States or the first 'ballot, by
the Legislature of C lifornia, when the lines
in, regard to these :accusations were well
tknown and thorPine i l l V canvassed. They
.know these facts p e:fi!etly• .well e but they
think that the mere act of an inquiry of this
kind being itistitutet by the Senate may prej
udice liiin with tilos' i who arc 'net aware' of
the vulgar•and Iminanly spirit in which it:
-.
originated: Col. Fremones accounts were
settled a. year ago of more -,' they-were cari
fully canvassed by a. i eornmittee of the House .
Of Representatives, few of whom was . Extret
Billy Smith. of Vir e eiinia, notorious for_ his
strictness in
. such, ne tters, and were unani
mously passed uponland -.9.111e , 1_ by the con
currenee of the Itcese. Not a complaint
has ever been laid leAre the public ley the
federal officers, nor mm intimation that his
. aeceunts were, open ,to exception ;• but now,
when he is a candid ite fur
.the Presidency,
his antagonist che'osis to avail' himself of the
control 'which hislm-ty has over the govern
ment arehives,• to hist:4llle an inquiry de
signed to impeach hsThflitial integrity. It is
a - cowardly preeeedi lg. and 'will harm none.
but those l,y whom t is instituted, for there
is nothing required to insure Colonel Fre
monts election 'but emili:o7 - with his life,'
1
which like a key 'in • one'.o=e'ocket, grows
brighter the more itsis rubbed. . .
\\'e are surprisedtthat it did not, occur to
some of-the oppositaLni SenatUrs, when Sena
tor'lligler sat doW-n,RO invite a senatorial in
quiry into the use of. the seal of the .A:MT .
lean legation, during Mr. Buchanan's mission
in England ; for the ilissemination of red l*
pnblicandocumentst through Eerope ; and in:
regard to the issue if .free passes to •aban-':
dolled women ff-oni the sauce legatiim ; alsO, -
for a copy of the letter ..which Mr. Buchanan.
while Secretary of State, wrote to Mr. Polk
reeommending- *50,000 to be .deposited ill
Simon. Cameron's bank, for the purpose of
being used to buy uPthe Washington Globe,
and establish the .UniOn newspaper in its
place. This hitter letter is now on file in the
departments at Washington. It contains
sufficient evidence, we are credibly inforreed,
to send its author to state prison, under the'
sub-treasury law, : ad was - one of. the gross
, est, if not the gros. est case of malfeasanee in
office which has ( Ccurred since the Sub-'
Treasury law was assed. . Why is not that
letter called for am ~ produced, that the'coun
try' may sec the , end of men that are pre:.
seined and supper ed .for the highest. office
in its gift by the *1 hole combined forces of
the e•overnmenr, al d for Whom, yes, by. whom
Ithrough an ignobl instrnment, the character
he even."
ind fifty
film in
.t-0111ce,
Crane,
•Se coy
urned it
►tes, but,
(the eit
-1 hours,
public,
Au at-
be. is
Let no
n of the
neither
ly man
hair of
ssenger
by the
I d been
CC ocea
kblre
ba Is
injuring;
sq, and
and w-ell-carn - ed fa no •of.one of our purest,
bravest; and Most Useful citizens is wantonly .
and calumniously 'as-Sailed?
But it is not tot ;late ; let us have thatlet
ter, and let us has , it_settled, whether a cab
inet minister can I wildly use the friUds of the
general govermne it to establish newspapers
with : Or. whether • the penalty' of confinement
in the state prism folloWs the transgressions
t
Of a Secretary of tate, as well
,as of Other
persons in 'the em - doy of the general govern
ment. Let us ha , .e the letter at once."
Frani . thz Ri hinond ( l'a.j\Enquirer. . .- .
1211
. Thi True Issue.. • '. '
• The Dernocrati of the South in the pres-.
eat e,anvass.eann't relT,on the old ground of I
defence and excite for Slavery ;lb'. they seek
'not merely to ref in it. where it is, but to ex
ti
-un
tend" it into reyi ns where it is known.—
Much less can th , ,rely -on the mere constitu
tional guarantees of Slavery, for such reliance
is pregnant with the admission that Slavery.
is Wrong and but fOr the 'Constitution would
be abolished. T is constitutional argument ,
for Slavery standing 'alone fully j i ustilies• the
abolitionists. Tl,ey areclearly right, ifSlaN'e- ,
i )
ry bcmorally w 'ong, for to get rid of tt tin:
der the constitute ii i .or by amending the con:
stitution, is con topSedly, impracticable.
In truth . the cobstitUtion cannot help. slave
ry-, if-it be a viol tion of the laws of God and
ot• morality. Ii that case the constitution
should be change ,' or the tree States should
secede, rather th. tt continue to guaranty what'
they consider i moral and. profane. ' The 1
constitution eann t help slavery for another
reason: . That i stitution- extendinp' through
'fifteen States an interramified with the inter
ests, the feelings and the- very existence. of.
millions of men, is Much stronger than the
constitution.. It ould be far easier to change
o
r violate the onstitution, than to abolish
slivery. Besid slavery is'" older than the
constitution,-eii. ed before it and independ
ently of it. Wel derive no right to our slaves
from it, and Weaken our cause by seeking. to
rely on it. ,
Nor. will it av lit us aught -to show that the
!leg° is most happy and best.situated .in the
condition of Sla ery, If We Stop therc, we
stweaken our eau . by the very argument in
-tended to advan eit ; )2lr we propose to in
troduce into tie • territory httmait beings,
whom we assert an, U for liberty,: self-govern
ment, and equal association with other niqu . .
We must go as eP farther: We must show
that African 'al 'very. is .a 'moral;: religious,
natural, and pro ably in the general, a neees
sessaiy . institute it _or leeiety. . This is the
only line of argt eat, that will enable south
ern democrats '..maintain .the doctrines . of.
State equality , a d. slavery' extension. -- .
For if Slat be . not a legitimate,
,uscrtil,
moral de• xpedie t institution, trepintiot with
out reproof of . onseienes and .the blush: oi
shame, seek to elend it, torn esert our equality
with those Sitaei having no such. institiitioa.
. ,.
Northern Detocrats need not go:tus f ar.
They . de not 'see •to extend Slatery; but only
-agree.to its ester aeon (is a matter, of right on'
.outpart. . The , may prefertheir own social.
system 'to otire, It is . , best they shoald,— .
thir friends are cosoivatlyes at bowe l and
11 1 1
treicont.
1 1. liarly mean is .to be
,
rensylv - =lnn is always
lien a dirty effort waktict_
Integrity,of 17retnen
Senate, calling for "
•
i . tent of the aceonit*Or
e government, the 60 7 ,
Senator. Bigler, of , this
.l ing bill through the
ary benefit, 9f
at 4 the expense 'of the
ght. hai e been stipposed.
en chary, of so exposing
F:insylvania democrat at
ermittell to stickle at
meanness was tecom
lug instrument.
:lie N. Y. Evening. Post,
. ~.
ebriseVatives Offht
religion I, oskarrimi
lustful ';'
~and of
while t.- i may pp,
tern; i.liby .Will have
thict-tkinisikillso..rigi
sapciiineifalike.by,
of: '*rt - i',' - •ind, and by
injunctions of . scrii-- -- 1 - 4 -_----- ----r- -. • .'•
sistently : maintain that slavery is burriorall A :--
inexpedient and profane, and i
'
yetcoutmie to
. .. . . -. . .
- submit .toits extension.
_.. We kw w iiiat we utter bold truth ' The
v
-time has 'io% - rived ' , When their .utierance - .
rk( sikrp
can be no longer ostponed. The t, e issue
"shatildttolid out so boldly-and . clear that
none may mistake it.
,
Tho' above article needs no, com.-
I
• spea ks-for itself: . -/- -
•
W' We give the !following. vote
rioast,.ot ! the second day. of thoex tra
the question being on ; concurring in ti
ated - amendment! to tIA Arrn,ir Apt
tion bill striking out the proviso again
the United States troops to ;enfo - ree ''t
der Ruffian laws in Kansas, to shopl
steadfastly the Sham Deinocricy
Americans: sustain, the- - aghtessinuS,'
very, . and. .stand, by •each other, an
steadfastly the liepiibliCatis Stand by i
pressed settlers of Kansas.:
YEAS-Meis;rS. Aiken, Akers, 113 ,
Bell, Hoiley S. Bennett,Boeock,l
Boyce, Branch, Brooks; Broom, Burn
waladcr, John „P. CaMpbell, Ciinguuni
ell Cobb, Williainson R. W.. Cob'
Craige,, Crawford, Cullen, Davidson,
Winter .DaVis;.Deriver,
.Dowdell,
Etheridge,. Eustis, Evans, Faulkner
ence, Thomas J. D. Fuller, Goode,
rison
. Harris, Sampson- W. Harris,
L. 'Harris, HavekHickman, Hoflinar
ton, Jewett, George W.. Jones,
Jones, Kelly, 'Kidwell; Lake; Letchei
Icy, Lumpkin,:Alexander K. Marshall
phicy Marshall, Samuel S. Marshal
well McMullin; 'MCQueen, Stnlth
Orr, Packer, Peck, Phelps,
Powell, Quitman, Ricaud, .Rivers,
Rust, Sandidge; 'Savage, Seward, She
A. Smith, -W.illiara Snee
phr.ms, iStewart, Swope,. Talbott,
Trip.p . e_pUnderyrood, Vail, Valk, 1
Warnei:, Whe:eler, Whitney, William
slots;: Danie'_ B. Wright, John. V.
N „,
~ ..
NAYS—Messrs , Albright, Allison,i. Par.:.
bour, Barclay, Henry Bennett, Benign,Xiincr:
ham, -Bishop, Bliss, Bradshaw, Jalmes H. i •
Campbell, I . ...ewis.P. Campbell, Chaffee;Bay-' .•
ard Clarke, 'Ezra . , Clark, Clawson; I Colfax,
Comins, Covode„ Cragin,CtilliVitk; =refl.,.
Timothy Davis, Dean, DeWitt:o-Diek, Dick- -
eon, Dodd, Durfee;.Ediei, Edwards,LEtitrie t
• Flagler ' Giddings, .Gilbert, Granger - -Gitiii,.
i r
Robert B. Hall, Harlan, Holloway, . horeas
it.
.Iforton; - Howard; Hfig,hStien,• Kelsey,
King, Knapp, Knight, KnOwlton, - Kn x, Kun
kel; Leiter,. Mace; Mattea - oii, Meta ty; KU
lien Miller, Morgan, Morrill, Mott, Murray,
Nichols, Norton, ;Andrew , Oliver, Parker,
Ilelton,. Pennington,-
.Petilt,_Pike, n.4 Priugle,
Puryiance, .nichie, .iibertsi i .biiiii , Sage, -
Sapp, Scott, . Sherman, Simmons, • pinner, .
'Stanton, - Stranatian, - -Tap'pan,- .Th rington,
:Thurston Toda. -. Trifion Wade, Ar akeman •
v ! 5
Wi - air.bridge, Waldroia,Cadwalader C. Wash-
Viine, Israel -Washburn,. Welch,
.. 'Weed, ,
•Woodiuffiand Woodworth-9G.,, • ..! • .
i'.. Mr, Campbell - .rniived to. reecnilder the
vote rejecting the itmendment,aed Lase Moved
t( i ilaY-.- the-motion •to reconsider on the table
1 —yeavor, nays 95. -. . _ . • ..
The 'Election of Blair in St.
The,elt_viion.of Frank Illairon an :slavery
man, 'an- oppcincttt . to tbe'exteusion of` slavery;
of (Es-onion, nullifiCation, and of thopPres-
sion of kaniasand favorable to tl/
e renew
al of the Missouri Compromise; hi t. Louia
must produce-astonishment throughout the...
country,. That the people of. a sl ve state
should elect such 11. representative will stir-- ,
prise those who have not examined tbaques
tion of Slavery,.but not Seel as ha e. Ariewed
it in the light - of its effects upon abor and.
the labo4ing portion of the white rao.• . •
- It also shows:that there is a dep • current
-of opposition 'to slavery' amongst . ' he labor-'
in.g whites, in the vet)? region of lavery it
self, that only wants an 'oppoftunit - to man
ife,q..itself td tell .the: North - that
with us on this jpiestiOn. In; speal
election,. the St. Louis Dernocrat
I says: .
" The
. battle was fought fu are. t.mlasure .
against individuals, and against no man, was,'
this battle fought harder 'thari agait st Francis
P. Blairjr. He waskjnoivi and ' • - egnized
as the; advocate of the working • Men of St. •
Louis, he - was ridiculed as the Mar , who de
fendeda
the rights. white laborin preference
to_that of slave labor, he was alm - • . *d as the
man'who. desired tO.devo.te. the
. ne v' territor
ies of the
. United States to the till erOand ag
riculture of white freemen instead of Slaves,
and yet:as such he. has been el eted. ',All
honor to the noble vindicator of Mc whitelabor - and May this. - be an-eataMple to- the
pullifiers, - that their dark and ini uitoliS . de: ,
signs •rneet .with -no favor in 'this at 'exitik;.
mercial end inausttial 'Cater of e iitiSsis ,
sippi Valley;:,. . •.. , . . ::
.. .
~. •--.
ErestuS Brooks spoke a , an Ann 1.,1= .
can meeting in Ettniiii,2 N. Y., .n Iftic44s.
evening., The 'Advertiser' says- . . S ;LI
.." The, speaker. referred to Kr. Fremoiit's ,
religion, the 'mention vf. which row afaint
..
applauSe from the audience; -wh reapion an
impudent dog . barked,. and sei? ral .voids
cried,: - ' The squirrel's '.gorie I th • squirters_
goner and •the whole 'assembly seemed - to
shout .their approbation of the efereire to
Henry Wtird Beecher'sdOg Nob e, barking
at the hole in the .wall: -_ This w tee much
for the speaker. 'He. tried to -. cover, -but.,
could not ; tho popular feeling as against
him. .11e was in a'rottcm:. bark; ternming. 4.
current stronger - s tbaii the rapids of Niagara.'
He rowed; and.sweat,ind - bloWed; and tugged,,
but all to no purpose—the lightning; flashed,'
the thunder rattled, and the speak r,was coat- ',
pletely overwhelmed by_theentli slain{ raan-',
:ifested. for the Pathfinder. ~- But b fore he left
the -stand, he let the cat out of the bag
pletely. Ho said: ha Was not there to
whO should •be President, but tol do will
could to gist Mr. Fillmore the electoral
of New• York."
' LIFE LI Mrssooar.The , Ohio State
at learns from a traveller:on th , . eat!,.
Mr. - Samuel P. Templeton, ofilluslahttunt
county, who was at hfemphis,-840}hind , eo - .,
1. ;)0
Missouri, on the day of the late d mon the
states that four men were , kll ed at that '
place. The circumstances were as followa t
A slaveholder by the name Of nna, and ii
lalvring man, were discussing th econotnii -
bearings of the slavery. questiou. - 1 Thalabov ,
in man stated that it was 'impossible for lg.
boring'inen to . attain to -respectability,. and
rl )3
standing in a slaveholding . eom Malty; and,
in the-discussion'Tatum called t other 4114:
ar. The man said ho would_ 11Q take( ilia, „
and prepared to fight. Omni rew, his.,Te •
volver, and shot hini thro - ughLth - heart: :A.
l ye
friend the laboring matiliterf ed, itidint
also was shot and ;died instantl . -This-e x .
cited the friends of the - men who re killed,
who assailed the murderers wit albs - 04
sulue?,,imidlbeat thinl - so bad4,thet theft
died . beiore new,
MEI
in the
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e Sep
ropria-
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Bor.
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South
I of Sta. ,
hew
the op.
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13cectie,
tt, Cad-
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Henry
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Flor-
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'hornas.
bons.
Glancy •
Lind
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t , Max.
Millcr;
Porto;
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they aro
in; of ham,
(liento4
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