Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, September 18, 1856, Image 1

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cjiAITLES F. READ & E H. rEt-.1%.Z lER EDITORS.
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I a", "
1 $
THE BEBE OLD FOSSIL BACHELOR.
' -
Trax—r"Fine Old Irish Cintlentatt."
,Id ball
Illisingiyou a fine a ... j a fine olu i - ___,........ .., mewl In v......._ _
~ I pate. - . - • I •
i as Jefferson. The followin(T •is a., - itoity.
Of a fine old . fossil bachelor-the doughface can- '
• 1 didate : .0 " No{ e*" page -1494.1' • . . ~
. 9 l' ..
, .
Who blithe White house Wished to dwell—hut as rl 1 - •
• I otrmY XVIII. . ...
• i he had no mate, .
'The people thought for one lone man, the mansion ' - " The Particular tlus l tOms and manners that,
‘ ;•
Was too great: , ' • may happen to be received in that :state. .-
I„ For the fine old fossil bachelor, ; ' • 10 h :is difficult to dotertnine orb the stand-
Jr4o - WaS put up-toe- late. 1 : •
•
and by which the manners of a nation may
.. . •
This fine old fossil bachelor to anything would be tric . id, whether c . a/NO/ic -or particular. '.,lt
- ]
shear, is to i re difficult for ainatiye to'bring to t h at And if the party toldhim to, would voiv that ro%nd
. 1 .
sfas Fquare:; standard the manners'of his own nation:ln
; j ' • • ._
' t -
And to liisprinciples was false,and changeful as the milivized. .to hi to by, habit. There must
cur. ; . • doubiless be an unhappyt. influence' on the'
But faithful to ambitirn for thn Presidential chair. manners of our people produced by the ex-
Like a fine old fossil bachelor, . . ' •
t Who never coUld get there. • isten l eof slayery tunong us. •The whede
- ...... commerce between master and slave is a piir
-5* while thiS fossil bachelor' abode 'neat!' other - • .
petual exercise - of • thti most Itoisfrous pas
! • lcies, •
Th i e vandals of his clique tore down a solemn comL sionl, the most' unrenffttingc t. ) t...stp Inc
.•• I ssi 6i- nu I
: ... 1 .
- - ,1 . ditlnt!sd; - one part, and : degrading submission on the
- Aid built a structure black and foul in all the- other. Our children see this, and learn'Ao
, - I
isle's eye's, i•
imitf.te it ; for man iit'an , imitative animal.
A - fid placed a platform on its top that was made . up ...,, ip •
q
i Of lleih - •Ts uality Is the gerin of all education in
- .1, 1- ... Where the fine old fossil haeltelOr ' hint. • From his cradle to his . ,: "n - ravehe is
-, •
...Bight stand and show his size.. • I learring to do what . he sees - Others do. lf 'a
`Aildllti fine old foss _ it baChelor was to the . platfoim pare t could find - no mOtive either iu hisphil
.
1. le4 l• • . , . . .., - anti] Lop N- -or his J Self-love, ftir restraining..
And then they placed the 'party noose - just under- the i nen:per:ince of paSsion ttiNVard his'slave.
' 4 1 / 4 raili his head.
I • ,1 ' • it should always be a suflident one that his
But tb4platform was 4 gallows-drop, and yielded ..,,.. .•
I - ......- to hilttread, - • • Mid is present.. But ;generally it is rot suf
itd Liking ends boots% he hung politically dead. ii ei er t. The parent storms,, the child , looks
j f ;That fine old fossil -bachelor, • 7 • . on, eatelles_the; linealm•nts ofywrath, puts on
Flom the platform stained blood-red:l • 1 ' , _ . . th s r itne airs in the eiri:le of amalier slaves,
` --- =----"-- 1 2-------= -,.2, - 1 ve4, loose -to the worst of passions.and tints
1
eoii)ifp)ie4l:iops.
77 - • \
Fur the Republiettil. ,\,
i"CHURCH Alb .STATE."
RE An AND . FRAZIER :—The :aboVe
caption its made the signal Ofan attack upon
• the Chttstian Ministry, in, !‘ the Montrose.,
Naloci - aV of the 14th; ulf. • Under it .we
119.1 tl4 following-passage • •
professing to have 'received .a c all
• fr,;iu Iteaven AO go forth and preach
‘repent
:ice ti4afalien race, and point ..the anxious
tr:ii-ell4 to „Ale straight and natrOw Path
141Slo..eternal bliss beyond the
_grave,
ilk -t entled from that high position which
Thiiv should ocenp.f and plunged into 1116
ikln slough Of partvpolities. They
bliSinegs it is to kink to the Widfare of the
iAnortal . sOni, have left. it to the nierr:y - of
the prtwling enemy, andpidie to,elet:tioncers
in 4 v cfr.ec,havt:iild their "call . ' for
litcre
• -ijrant me, if you pleaso, as hne awing : the ;
manlier aimed at in the above char , T.., the
rivilege of putting intoTtle 'court. of public
.
Tinion the fulloWing plea! NoT
!Taller, in girth nor spirit, as tic fo ..01.1
anon most..Conein9iVell . show ;
). Ilotyrtei is not a " filthy .slough."—
Webster, wbo is acknowledged to : he the
c•an.lard Philologist of our country, ilefin'es
ilic te.iim thus—i . . •
. ..
• 'l,"'T.lfe science. NT . government; that prt.
q etlqs which consists, in the regulation anti.
ufrveriiment of a nation or state; for the pres
- , d
ertation of its safety, .Peace and prosperity ;.
,I•ompifeliending the defence of its existence,
rights against foreign control or conquest,
t6...aimentation-of its strength and resour-;
-..-s . ;arrl the protection of its citizens in their '
ifits..; with the preseryation and iinprove
t ~
neat pf their morals. 'Politics, as a science
i ~ il • •
• rir an Art, is a subject of vast extent and im-..
. .
if , i tahee."
TW .
,re' 'n
into
illieh6inisters•Ould,ifiley would, '` plunge . :
• 1 -
The l protection of " rigkis" and :" improvp
.
• r!lent , bj.orals," is no mean employment fur i
• .
Ottir4 • .
. . •
.• ,i 1 . . .
Tiilthis;affrees the almost univth's'ally_ rc- E
~ .:Ive4 opinion, that eiyil Government is " (Jr
.:414-761 of God" and the express declaration
• .i i .ftliti Bible that the "powers that 13c,"--- .
the 4mvers of civil • Government,--:-" are or
4ain' of God." Hence the scriptural Com
-3
14 . '" - put them in mind. , to au
.magisH
1114" Why ? . Because magistrates are .
by the ordinance of GOd to be u a ter--orto I
- .1, -
''nUdoent and- a*aise:to . them that do well."
itipoint, also,. is the opinion. of the St
iprero Conn of Pennsylvania, delilvered ::by
.14le 'Duncan in the case of ITAide,graph
‘ the Commonwealth," 11 :S.. and R.. 400.--
In 4it it is formally 4 deeded,
f 'l.7hristianity,generaleTwistianity,is and al-
I : v:01% - as a part, of the common law 'of Penii
syhjulia, Christianity without the spirittial'ar-;
of European courts : for this Christi-._
. -aril- was one of the considerations Of the
l ctorter, and the very basis of its. great
kulder, Wm: Penn. Not christiauity
•ieditlivon any particular tenets.; nor: eliristi . -
illy with an established church and tythes,
s-Idlspiritital courts, but christianity
I.f conscience fur all • - .;
41(lne Duncan, quotes, in _point the dee
!anition of Lord Eaymond, Chief Justice
Enlaud, as savin •
The true - principles' of- naturalreligion
areipirt of : the- common law the . . essentia 1
iliplesrof.revealed religion are part of the.
(Almon la*. • 'L.-Would hale it taken notice •
(.1:1 We' do not meddle frith differences of.
-lthion, and we interfere only whereithe root .
ufilristianity is struck at." - - •
unsters wlio.let alone, therefore, polities.,
:n t 5 appropriate place, and lit the appropri- ;
'4l , j time; neglect " the true principles of itat
tirpt religion," the essential principles of
tilt revealed religion,, and " liberty' of con
sae:lee.," and refuSe to interfere " when the
?opt of ctiri4tianity is struck at:" They arc
guilty, I.
. •
"aid, Thomas Jeffersori the great epos-
ltrp, of lieniocratie . Frcedoru,in his "Notes on I
the State 'of Virginia," a copy of which, pub , j.
iiiihed iii 1801;nOw lies before me, has given
Piosterity a 'chapter upon :.the subject of
4 1 VeiY,.which shouldcoreyer - silence the out
try professed Democrats,
,against the . 1
fiends, freedom of freedo whether they • be minis, I
Ors of Olespel no t.. It is worthy of&
• G; or
e4reful. perusal , by every. lover of hi f! eon..
t ie .
•
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______________ 77 ----- 7 -.....0r, ,••• • 4 i. _ i • -- -.
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•''' CIL:
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OL ' t ..'
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. • • • p .
e . int-.-- - - - ..•:•:.- .
t'•_ - .--#.._ - ..''.':,;,•.:•_ . it.,..,t: ; . :.'..-• - i.. - ..(_ . -ii:'•-• . a..,'..:), - /.4 - 5' . ••••..:: . .
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. . • , • ... ~ , • • ___
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Mi
FE
d mad
Jws said " We have Abraham for our
ifitthe," and yet falsified their saying by not
doing "she works of. Abraham." I give the
chapter ofJ'efferson.'4, notes,to which I allude,
that I?enoerats. may see whether or not, they
are al kefaise to their s prOfessed father,thoni--
p.
, d„ educated, and - daily exercised_ in ty
v,eannot but be statnpLd by it. with odi
oculiarities. The Man must be a prod
,llo can retain his Manners and rit'orals
prayed "bv such circumstances. ./Ind,
.
what execration should the 'statesman
adol.'wlio•perniliting one'half the l'ciii
tib trample on the Ogllts'of the other,
-firms those, into despots. and these into
Ides, destroy the, Morals of the one part. ;
he amor patrian of the other. For - Ira
t f:111 have. a . country
.in this. ,I,v6rld, it
4:' - he-any other in preference to tliat in
[h lie,i's'.l)orn (olive Inil labor fOr anoth
in wl l i e li . he ilni , :t It'til: up the faculties of
[:ature, contribute as ',far as depends.
,on
radii iduat endear3rs - to the, evanishment
e human race, Or;eittail his: tAWll.llll'!4'rd
-61!dit1011-011.till!! endless generations pro
nz fr'oin him, i IVith the morals of - the
'ile, their in 4 ustry_ittl'so . is destrorc...d.—
in a, warm . Clitnate it - i i manAvill l a bn.f. ir
cell who can mal:.e aubther labor for him.
is so true.‘hatiifth6 p'roprietors of si.i.ives
ry snail prop . 4tion indeed, arc ever - seen
bor, And can fli libertie4 of a nation he .
:' , l.t secure W.liciu,'Nve have removed their
:tirm.basis. a . t:onviction in the minds 6r.
63,)1, that thtl.s2 libe'rtif.‘S Ore of the gift
;0(1?. i That thttv a..%:, is ,t t - i 'be violated
With his wrath . ? - . Indeed I. tremble, for
r ,
11111'S
ME
I MS
igy
undc
ith
Ile 1
zolis
tram,
, him
Thi
1 a v
,
tol•
the
on.
rirt
1 lint
.. :
luntry . when'! reflect-that God is just ;
Lis' justice j cannot 'sleep prever : that
,idering . numbers, nature; and natural ,
meins only, a reN'olution of the wheel Of for,
turo, an exchanof . situ'ation is amon! , pos
1,
:11, t . events : that it mar hee6me probable
by ill . pernattiral interference' The Arm ighty
.has no attribute CVhieh can take side _with us
in ticlt a contest . Rut iit is impossibre - 'to
be. temperate and to'pur's.ue this subject . tho'
4 ! the , arions,:considerations, of policy, of mor
; als.l,4,history natural .arid- civil.. We must
be. etJittoited to hope they will' .force their,
way into every one's iiiiIICI, 1 think a change
already Perceptible, sipee':the
_Origin of the
Iresent revOlution..;The spirit of the master
;• abating; that of the slave is rising from the
u. t, hiS conditiOn is Mollifying; the
,Way I
t
a s n ill d el l s hat c . 'f tl i t l i e s a . N i ' s .
'.
ef o 'i s ir' e ) ra d e , p _ t „ i oa n tr ' i t ill I l j t t e ';ni o l ' tir ni _l (l.l e cei r rP ( at :t t:ic e7 a • events, ts, to be with
comient . of t 6 masters, rather than by
~.xtioation,'t
mv
• con
tiorellan .half a •Century ago the above
s written. Nlmc. can charge the Writer
th biased feelings. It contains the words
truth written in philosophical soberness.—
rho, professinfedemOcraey, dare say to the
itrary WhO profcsSing moralitY, car
Ltriotism, or christianity, dare -say to the
itrary And; who professing either, after
ading cati, Without -a blush of shim . e, raise
.... _
an out try azairis r t,A4inisters e of the Gospel,
fo • attempting,, With their felloW citizens, to
cis erthrow the,' qstem it so graphically des-
Cribes ?• - ' I . ' '; • i . ..' . '
2 ?:-Party - Polities, - hi not necessarily " a
fil l thy slough." 71A pa4y.Of Freedom, of hu
-inanity, of common - law christianity, as op
!
Psed to any other party, is nut "a filthy
slough." A pai•ty which would take the ad
-1 inistration of Government out of the hands
0 the . prOptigatid (l iSts ;of." the stnn of all vil
i it
I, ivies;''' and place' in the hands of men: or
,
agistrates . whO " are . a terror to 'evil doers" .
,1' •• l• who . ..
aid "praise tol.hos , h do- well, „
is a par
t/ to be respected and honored, in any coun
' t •v: ' for minisiters6;l* the.. GOsPel. to vote
. • i
with, and defeud/ich a party, is to .act the:
-part 'of christiati patriots:
A party ofSlaveo propagaridism\ of con
“rcssional biudgeonilm, of border ruffianism,
(f . hypoeritieali . pr4ensions to democratic
Irineir4s, may be and doubtleSs is ” a filthy
.lough,,”- into which ginisters should not ."de
i . ;
cend," and for ; which if they . should " eee
,
loneer".. for' paltry ofitce, there! would be la
.l
tentable evidence that they had "sold their
all for filthy hiere." Thank Heaven - such
, .
ministers are .vcry ." few and far between."
They, tike the 4tßev. , Theiphilu' Fisk,' Ed
.1 4t
titor of a puchaOan . :Cimpkn paper, in Phil
ad.elphia, are.etceptiOns to a general srule--.L.,
The Christian' 41inistry of the :1 North have
.L...._ • ••
. .
;cnerally abandoned such a party,
.and . this
s..the secret of file outcry ' against 'them.—
gaily finding, l thernselves in - such a ." filthy
[dough,' have likemen, christian Men, min.
~tiers of truth and righteousness, walked out
if it, and' are now trying to get others out
tont, and this iS4l . ie hight of . their offending.
They have repinted and nOW preach repent
who arniinvolved ;in the guilt
of defending and propagatingslavery. ~
. 8. Minister'S of the Gospel arc called of
Ir
"FRIEEDOE n,KD noia
. .
God, to take part in the pre.s.e4 .contest, be
cause religion, religious liberty, the fair fa-1
bile, of . Christianity itself 'is ndangered. - --- '
This is so, even their enemies /
nd `traducers
being. judges. Witness -the
_1 °Rowing ex..
;tract from a tract issued by th. t national Bu.l
ehanan Committee of which C. L. Ward Esq. _
as reported -in this region is Chairman :,.
.1 .
" Infidelity is no less eager-m its deSiie td
overthrow religion ; and. to thislend Disunion
will 'contribute the only sW-iO. and needy
I. weaponj" ".. . . •
•
' - What is Liberty with9ut he Union ?-- 1
What.would 'Religion be with ut A Consti.
tution ? 'Both •woul,cl be a moc4erjrand a des .
dation... . , .
Oppression and Tyranny wyuld follow a i.
ter-tlic dissolution of the -Union, and religio4
would expire amid the clang_o ' arms, .or he ,
come the slave of the Military despot.`" . • 1
Making due alblwanee for the . hyperbdle
of a heated imagination, the 1 assage quote( i i
contains a truthful acknowle gtnent of. tbp
intimate relatioh between civil and rcligiou
i i
Liberty, Christianity and fundamental, coni.:
men and constitutionhl law. I Although. w L.
May not he prepared to go so far as to say iit
the language of this professed Democratic Na
,ti'Onal Committeen—that,• `"Re igion withol4
'a
constitnii, al" would,," lie a mockery!. and 11
desidation," that after "a dissllnfion of the
Union'' : that " Religion -would expire" &(L;
7c certainly may go so fal; as i to admit thdt
Aliristianity wOnld be endog. - +l, by the de:
. truction-of constitnthand .lawl
we need to ask in juStification
'which ministers Of the Gospel
N:•lto foul, iv defence of the conSt
• . •
:t`ieil as it is with the progress - i
`p But I have not quite done 'wi
ably r.:ii;;lon,this." (lurch an ,
deratie tract.' One •more qu,,ta
d i e true nature of the pitat.t c:
against ministers meddling w
It'rcads as follows :
t:,1'(: ;Appeal finnlly t‘ . ) the hu
est claws of cnir.euuntrvirvll
•
gun! the Southern people zr:
;L ila n o t your enernies,..if
u:curscil of 1n in you
beliwb - e this (.(n ; ' stitntion of (.4
ME
yOU think 'vciur chr:
worth thoS;A
;:ltitsi; ii iu a ‘v()T.AI you have,
't.entaining f;lr those , who !Ivo
stvvi and savethe - Pe'publ:; - .
upon this double hca,l,,d.i.;;i•rpot
4)f Inildclit v. and urAl.olition..
one W. 1117 Ik , ll. to 011 it. fflld•that
John .C. Frtutcr.:t's tc
DM
All,l iS the 1:1::111;:ig
aild peOIIS Crell:4oll§L
nor less. than this. lf elm
elected President, " the. 17oilstitution,:
+'.Ciiristiah.Churt7hus." and " the Republi
itself will be destroyed. . The salt-m.l°ll,a
of the ChAstian Churches, this count
even the Northern'thurches, is suspended
on a political aetioi . .4
election of a President 1.
That action - or result,
_., )eing paiti
must-not , be " meddled wifh,t or - partici i i,
ted in '‘). Ministers of the yospel !. 11;
I I
whom the SavioUr ot,ntankin ,l has-" set I
the defenee.of the Gospel:' ii ust look gn i :
- ly on while the • chmehes are
trembling in ruins around thei
men must not lift up their y ,
the danger threat , •n , s! all "li
that c2M t uot-, but who must '
And is this it I Is this keepi
-filthy slalgli of Party - politic:
Diana of the, Epili2siatis !''
Sp o Trs ej s, "(Y rict. •It 'won]
propriate in this c...! for the
.
in doing the only' thing- :chic
, churches. to wit, in preiymin
1 John C. Fremont to the Plo t
Would not' be ." dabbling in
il i would not •be " descending I
i' slotirdi' not selling,.their - " cal
,
1 '
I ere!' becanT:.! "our craft is,
.But„ suppo,ce the cal catai
plated, SIUMId be• . the result
James Buchanan to the Pr(
Bose,', in Border Utitianis
gressioits in and , out . of Co
by. the .Cincinnati platr
indorsed by Buchanan, ther(l
signs of danger, o both chi
liberty? What then o ? "
the,ease Yes; and "
Rambler,' "is the arcessur
' Ye who. desecrate God's
governmea, pollute. the watt
tics,ticS,.and flatter the ministr3
port your fugitive slave
or justify yOur platfiaus, .1 1
Border Ruffians, and all ;
to have been. a Heaven bor
, stitution, , by the Bible, rail
ministry : have, in the -fear oil
of freedom-and humanity, if
They are past heeding purl
They will "open their .rnout
They
,will heed what the.
said to David,..her king.
over men must be just ruli
God -," mid give 'a firmer a l
at/cc to the, "Woe unto the'
righteous decrees, and that
=I
ness which they have prescribed; T 4 turt#
aside the needy from Judginent and to take
away the right froth the poor of my people.":
They Twill speak, and what 'yo4 dread more
than-all, they will use the (sover,eigney-of
ballot, in toppling down Arpucid ilt:spots, the
old citadel of -oppression itself. - i•
• . "'`•I.:POST. •
• •
Montrose, Sept; 1850.
,
8V5„91.4 is forty
,times the size • of France.
rind ovor a:hundred that .4„Engta4(l, • •
\..
MWrE:BNIa
AIOTRO
'ills . is
of the interes
410. and 0ti. , ,h 1
ttition, ident!
)f ehristianits
h this remar i
Stag;" Dci
lux NVill SllOl
tit of tha
ith polities.
'mane :Ind Lo
. If you ti t
.our brothel
liiru men v.,
eye,
\v ol to 11;t2-
,thin
the..
veneratlim
!ma
nit yeAir
t. tnoi s ~ c r
Thy re is- !nit
to (cpinise
-the prt,si,lo
this .. _rafr;;.
nothing nli
ni
tottCrlli„
! Tht.
)lowei-er,
flito uo:j.," not
nOt bark". '—
ig Out of "Ithe
r" "Cireillt
rhu. lii - qicst
1 lie qu i te up
nuinistrs• tu.aid
calf- save the
.4 the Election of
i i sideney
rolities"—ithis
I into the . filthy
for . iilthy I In.
‘l•ndan7ered.:l'
rophe cop
IMRE
sidoley
~Slaver's
irress, ind
and the plat
•, should he;
iil . and roi ,
! that
121112118
burden o
rdinanee
rs of party
!-- whenthey
s, opologiz
ierees„ 13n
proe.Sla
Patrjarel
fin now,. th
God, in tb'
mu-do - bed y
Hollings nOy.—
iis for the diimb."
.
.toelt of hrael,"
lie that tuleth
g in the ear of
nd Jokier utter
,
in That deer - 4e un
write 'gri cos-.
( 4
aelamqv. igLAws.i r ry Ara), \G-.2©1-I\qua."
E THURSDAY, SEPT.
mg
igiscell4qeoq,s.
Bold Avowals—The Election of Buchanan
to be a Step . Towards Disnmon.
The Southern potitieal . Press has never
been". More open and frank in its avowal of
political purposes - and plans; than it is during,l
the preseLt 'canvass.' The triumphS of Slit-kl
veryAluririg:the past foiir year?,—th'e sue-1
eessful repeal of the Niissiouri Compromise,
a measure for which:even Mr. Curious nev
er dared to hope;—and the ready, eager ,
promptitude with which the Democratic Par-
ty at Cincinnati - yieldM to the exactiotni of
-the Slaveholdiug power, seem to have inspir
ed• the political leaders of the South with the
belief, that the time has come when they can
safely and 'even with advantage to themselves,
make open proclamation ot,the projects they
have in store for the future. •
In proof of this, and
. as, an indication of
what those ptojects are, we invite attention
to the following leadi n g editorial front the
Itielnnond (V as E4tirer•of Friday, Aug. 29
_ LOOK TIIE-Ft - TURF FS THE FACE.
;'Every tine's experience attests t e truth o
the, inaxiin that,' very often, the way twat.-
rest' dang,er is to meet it.
-half way: To pre
pare fur it is often to avert it. The ostrich,
by concealing its head in thU sand, does. noi
elude or disarm the huntsman. To close our
eyes to:impending danger, will hilt increase
that claimer, and- precipitate our ruin. To
yield to e• Black Republicanism Will neither
Mollify its anger, nor satiate its hungry rapac:
ity. Give -up Kansas to - them; give them
all the territories; and, like the horse-leech,
their thirst for blood will increase by its grat
ification. Teach them that they can, concier,
and ice can submit, and the &sit of victory
Will stimulate their new.nern conrage ' filr
fresh prCtensions - nnd further.. victories. Ti
t reason to cry " Peace ! peace ! when there
is no peace." There. is, there - can be; no
peace. no lasting union between the South
and- Bieck Republicanism. Either Mut po- -
litical heresy 71111 Si be efectually and fizrever
put dozen, or disunion is inevituble. If come
it must, the sooner it comes the better, for
our cnemies increase joy,.the half tiiiliiou an
nually, whilst our own numbers.are almost
stationary. ' - . 4
•
" A multitude, like which the.populons North
rout'd never from her flozim t o iniqto press
Rhine or Danube, when her barb`rous suns
Came like a deluge on the South, •
And spread beneath Gibarthar to the LyLlan sand,"
The multitude ready to rush doWn on the
South/ is 'gren?rr; hungrier, more Lrapacious'
than. them.• "The actors are the same. The
prolific, Teuton or Gothic race, seeking homes
and food, our the one hand ; .the descendants
of,Seuthern Europeans attempting too rei el
'them on the other. The scene only changed
from thin banks of the Rhine and Danube to.
those of the Ohio and Missonii.
, "Forewarned, forearmed." 1`47 . e see The
numbers, the ,character, the designs of cur
enetnie.s. . Ler us nrepo:re to.
to
them. and
drive thenz ro yield zoo them, to eon.,
hectic to the bsidize them e as the Ro
-1 mans did, v Lercase their rapacity and.
encouragci t 7essions. Give their. - all
the unsetfl, .ory north of 30 deg. 30
to -day. and to-inorrow, as
tficy *win. ( . 4nitn-'all south of 36 de- , 7. 30 min.
yi e ld . that too, and the next day .they will in
vade the State:', expel the 'staves, and seize
upon our lands; for. - a grarianism is already
a part of'-their programme--4he ballot-bus
their sword - of Brenntm
"The election of Mr. Buchanan may, old
probably: wi ll oriyinate a reaction in public
opinion that wilt cneltcragc the v e.rtension of
the conservative institution of Slavery, and
• the extension of the British and Southern Eu
ropean races,' for the very pnrpose.of stem ,
tning and turning back the torrent of infidel
ity, materialism, - sensuality, agrarianism, and
anarchy, •that threatens totiVerivhel in us from
the prOlifie hive of Northern Europe.
" The election of Air. Buchanan would he a
reactionary movement in favor of Slavery and
conservatism.. The ei?etin of FREMONT, cep •
tain and „immediate disunion. 'The election
of Fnumorte amid Fulisidiit the 'Barbarians,
by yielding theni the land north of 30'deg.
30 min., increase their nut4 - rs and their
rapacity, and only postpone disunion to a pe
riod *limit would be more perilOus than, at
present. Besides, 'his eleetion might go far
to wean the affection, confidence-, and attach-,
rneilt of the Catholics from our 'institutions,
who are now their best stay and support.—
They might, then think that the 'rule of the .
Pope would be better than nb rule—the goy- .
ern tnent of pirates better than the anarchy of
infidelity. Conservative, as Mr. FILLMORE
and' most -of his friends pretend
.to be, the
,compromise Which they propose is but a step
towards Black Republic-anism, a. subsidy
'of.
fared to the, Goths. The. South must not
,yield one inch—the religions, Patriotic and
conservative North must not yield an inch,
but to vote fur Mr.Fit.tssouE Fill be to yield'
an ell.
Let' the South present:a compact and
divided front.. Let her show to the liarbarizi
aris that her sparse population, offers little,
hopes of plutider; her military and self-relient
habits, and her mountain retreats, little pros;
Teets of victory ; an&her firm union and dei.
Noted resolution, no chances of. conquest
LET HER, IF .POSSIBLE, DETACH PENNSYLVANIA
AND SOUTHERN OHIO, SOUTHERN INDIANA AND
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS, FROM THE NORTH, AND
MAKE THE HIGHLANDS BETWEEN TILE OHIO ANn i
THE . LAKES THE DIVIDING LINK„ LET THE,
SOUTH TREAT ;WITH CALIFORNIA,!AND, IF, NEC.
ESSARY, ALLY ,HERSELF , went RUSSIA, WITH
CUBA AND BRAZIL. '
" A coital - ion danger . from without, and a
common neceSsity. (Slavery) within, will lid•
sure to make the South a great, a united, a
vigilant and a v arlike people. Outside pros:
sure and lesidenece.ssity, are the only parents
of true national
. greatness. Greece, Rome
Judda, Carthage, Plumnicia, , all owed 'their
.greatness solely Ito these causes. Their re.
moral introduced' laxity of morals, effemina
cy, misrule, anarchy and final ruin. -
"The North Wilrhave no principle of colter , '
sion within, nO . com Mon danger binding to,
gether .frOm without: _The situation and
straggling eitent.of her territory, will render
union difficult. The predominance' of differ
ent European races' will make it impossible.
One half her territory; (that in the Eas.t,).will
starve in 'a sear if divided front the Western
half; and yet the division is :Ore to .take
place. Socialism, communism; infidelity, li
centiousness and agrarianism, now scarcely
Suppressed by union, with the' conservative
South, will 'burst forth in tt carnival'of blood.
Lite social system of .the South is sure to
beget strong iuui prmanentloverumentAl
,Y,
1p
he
, pa .
ley
fur
1-
:filtl
em
n of
up
ag-
rsed
MB
larall
ME
the
4,1/-
civil
poli-
BEI
• f , )r,
i ioks,
Very
• I In
t the
lial
8,1856.
institutins ''and a lasting t;onfedetation.— members wei
1
That of he North, will beget revolution' with they. would";
more rapid iteration, morcbloody wOentlon,. very." .
and more d i rein t consequences; than, die sam o • Here was
~
sysfkm has brought forth, fur seventy years against the r
in Western .Enrope. -.. of Kansas, f
"May abolition be put . down, infidelity ban- I and having i
ished iforn the land, sectional hatred appeas- ties' in other
1 ed, and tile Union preserved ! If not, let the surd ta'say,„
South be prepared fi►r the worst." . ILion of;the
..
'ff Here is'aprograthute for 'the Presidential
campaign, set forth by/the. leadindorgan of
tte. dontinent wing off.the Buchanan party,
Ind boldly avowing the secret Motives and
cherished objects of that section, which de
serveS. i'attention. The great object of the
South iti supporting BUCtiANAs is to promote
the extension and perpetuation of the " con,
set vattie . institution . of Slavery." \ 'And the
votes by which it is hoped he may lie lectc4,
are toecoi,:ne . the basis Of a secessio mote , '
in arn t and the fmnation°ofa.Sontlarel
1 - Confed&acy. The South has abanaoliCd•alk'
1
hope that , lltert A ..ts can . carry' the Northern'
States: I' In all the estimates that bas;e.been
made l t. supporters of the votes titit are
to giveltim: the election,-Pennsvlvania and'
1 the southern portions - of Illinois and Indiana,.•
are relied upon with no more confidence than.
. any other sections of the North. 'The Rd
quirer gives us nt once the reckon' and the
object of this .reliance. It : proposes to tle,
I tacit those 'sections from : the North' to bind:,
them in. sentiment and interest with 'the Slave
States,4nd to- secure' their' adhesion - in the
formation Of a Southern confederaCy... The
line taieh tthinds the- liuchanan - rota is thus '
to be 7nade:the line of. Disunion. The States
which IBconAxAs ) carries, it ix, hoped, • 'may be
. upon
:reliedas seceding StateS. i ;
They South, mOreover, is to enter into ne
gotiatfotts.with other States and Nittfons for
the prinuoiiOn Of : this great -design.! califor:
nia, it believed, may be-seduced . into . it:
•
,
Lino if : ,neeeSsat, the &nth k also to
'With R)issia,Caboand biro:ill. These schemes
cOme, ;from the party by Which the!Republi- .
can risovement.i4 stiimatized as sectional.—
; And these avowal 3 of theM show conclusive
slY ilia wh;le, fin. the purpose of gaining faVor,
the etintroliing leafFers of tile)ltteitanan par-.
ty,--thwe men and those sections by which.
..,his nOmination wai'acheiVed i - by which his
7telectit , n is'to ne accomplished at all, and by.
•;, wholit his administration will be as tlioroughy
shaped arid directed as that. of Fitanctax
' PIEO'E liar been, aim at dis Union as the ul
,,
object , , ,
;• touto:e elf bleu. endeavOrs. :The pow
:et- imp piitronage of gr. tkcnANAN, if lie is
O
.elect, will used be to stn , re , then them for
•,••
,such 't consummation whenever tin: time. co;
At still!, ity - th , .•:r. judgment; have arriv eI. '
. , .
Who are Respollsihl6.,
:Initntieing the charges Frentnnt
partyi, And Eini,,arnntrAid Sii;2letie, , , were re.
Nu)lo./le I;ir the blond 4161 in l'ansa•:, we
had, inarked -extract: front an article in -the
Daity 22a; ba could
riot Find rnuni ui last -Here
ilie6tre:'. Vend
ME
FACT; Alldt:T I:ANSAS VOTIS9. •
\Vc heard a gentleman. ,fssert yesterday,
in We most positive and emphatic manner,
(hit : lig the troubles m Kansas had . &Owni
out-cif the notion of the Massachusetts Dili
grant Aid Society :—that they were the tit l st
to Old Oren hitt - ) the Territory to 'vote; and
tbaOthe inv,asion of the Dorder fro 44
111isOouri was' in consequence of this interfe
renc!e, and for the purposd of resisting and
defeating it. This is the old stOry of the
iWoff Sand the I.enub,--- . ,as a glance at facts
EME=M=l=
investigated by tite:Utnittee appoint.
• .. .
ed 1 - iv the House of Itcpresentativc; . :—and
tlie.iii'ack•ascertained • upon evidence of the
i.. ,
nu* iniisputable character. •
The first election held .in Kan s as A-as on.
.the 29th of Noveinber, I 8-51,—f0i,. a dbleiTate
to Congress.. , The Emigraut Ail !Society re
ceiVed the • .hurter under, .vliielt nil its,action .
has been performed On the 621st of FetAtarv,
1855: and its first. company of einigrants
left. Boston On the 13th of. March, 1855. • It
ii - n o t. pretended t of course, that they took
anv part in the first eteetion..
The second el-tiOn, and the One of chief
importance, twin , for members of the Terri- 7
tonal Legislature was held on the .30thinf.
March, 1855. It s at this-cleetiOn that the
emigrants sent. cat t by the,Aid ;Society are
c\ l
accused of havingtaken part. As they were
to become actual . residents, they of course
had a right to vote. 13ut of the Whole num
ber, which amounted to . 169,- Of whom 67
Were women and children, thirtg,seVen onlV
voted. ,The Aid Company' did tint pay the
passage df a single mat,.—did not inquire
how a single man was to vote nor exact any
condition, have-any understanding or express
any opinion whatever, in. regard to thieir
votesnever invested a - single dollar in. !mins
or am munition, nor did anything. else] . 1 the
least degree calculated to excite or Atilt the
slavehorders of the South; All they did ,y 34
to make arrangements with Railroad and
- .Steamboat Companies for. transportation at
reduced: rates, . and . to assist the settler:4 in
making.i locations and 'comnieneing business
in the Territory. Settlers had gone in from
Massachusetts in the Fall of 1854, but Hot
under the- auspices of the Aid Society, nor
with anv reference to the elections. • •
The Kansas-Nebraska Bill passed „30th
May 1854. At a meeting' held at Salt Creek_
on the 10th of Junc,:by , citizens of Missouri,
the . follOwina - Resolutions were passed :•
Resolved, That we recognize the institution
of Slavery, as already exi,stiny in the Terri-:
tory, and recommend, to slaveholders to-in.
trOduce their property as fast .fts possible.
- ;Resolved, That we afford protection to no
Abolitionists as settlers in Kansas-Territory.
- . So they decided that. Aaveryl already, ex
isted in - Kansas, And of course deenied popu
lar sovereignty in the Territory !the right to
say to the contrary: ,On the- 6 24th of June,
at-Whitehead, and on the Bth of July, at
Stockbridge,the same Resid ti t mai were adopt.
ed. Secret societies were formed to extend
slavery into Kansas.
Jordan Davidson, Who was a! member of
this Society; testifie under oath befiire the
Committee that he " was first . ill a -lodge of
the Order
,in the latter -part of Tehruarr,
1854, at Pleasant Hill, Casa Cotinty,'Missou.
si : :".—that he had been told the ISociety "'ex
isted in other States," and. that one gentleman
told him'he had "" belonged to it in Virginia."'
This shows that there• was a tystematie„ or
ganized movement, formed in udvailce of the
passage of
.the Kansa"; bill, 11 the slavehold,
ers of the Southern States and t, especially of
Missouri, the object of which was, in iMr. - Dx..
iidson's wort's" to extend Slavery into Kini;,
sas TerritorT its well as elsewhere." - The
• i
r •.
FRAZIER & SMITH, PUBSDISHXIRS-.!7-VOL 2. 23 . 0.. 36
tO take an oath that
hor " tar the extension of Sla
-
•
r,
a grand deliberate conspiracy
ights and liberties' of tire people
!mined ()made of. the Territory
s ngent4es and au'iiiiihry soeie-
Slaveholdilig State's. It is ab
hat it was prompted by the ste
lEtniarant Aid Soeietv,—fir it
. ..
originated bi t fore that Society had an active
existence, anjd was ih full operation long be
fore the first Company of Emigrants from
the East arrived. . Its.secreey, discipline and
,!
admirable machinery show that. it was . not
got up on te spur of the Moment, to ward;
otfan apprehended evil, bUt was deliberately
and carefully planned foe the accomplishment
of a specific object.• .-And at the very first
election held Nov. 29, '1854, its efTieleney
was made ar parent,--for 1,729 illegal rotes
were • VIA.. , • • - '
.
or:read rs have seen the kuni,a.: , 4 - report,
and know low 'the Bogus Legislature was
elected for Aansas March 30, 1855•': ~.
Well inn 4 the Times conclude:- . '
, Now, in' the flee of .these facts none but
the most re . c r tless defe.nders of the fro - Slave -.
ry tanaticis of the day, can assert that this
11order-Ilufran • cruSade against KtillSaS was
in any' degree,. or to -.any extent„prompted
by the action of the Emigrant Aid Society:
The pretenc 'that this was 41, is •morely the
plea of men conscious of wrong, and :driven
to the elxtre - thy of inventing an excuse for
i
acts which dmit of no defence.
hmoncl inquirer, (Buchancin,) Aug,
29 1850.
Frdrn the Rt.
Required to Support Slavery.
Fe hona and cullege in the Smith
that Slave S9ciety is the com-
The Schoo ,
".Evc , ry
should teat
i , riyhtpli ..and notmq . l state-of'
iv doctrine short of this'eontaihs
tlie7germ ;f. r, it be not the I
!natural form of society, it cani,ot .!
should prepare.for its gradual''.
,e abolition. They slum ld [ also
o OTIIER fury: of .society is, ..i -tlie
ottr•or expedient. Thi:ro :Ire et
!ars, such as desert o r mountairrl:
,-4. where the-small patches of tor
el' ~- .
-t ii t - aal
umuoquat Li - to' S ia rat.t,
husband, -wife and children:—such
1, SWeden, Norway, Switzerland;
f fAi:abia—stieli also a New-Eng.
Ezistertt,,Ne‘s=-Yorli and Eastern
hia, whit_ t,. Ihr.lifTll adMirably :I •
eamincret, manufactures and fish
ilefitted fOr fall-hitt. , or: grazttiv,.---
`re requir . ed ,in the. Former. pur:MILA
I 3 lie latter. ' I 1 enee, fiegro Slarery
inon, 'Whir
society...
abolitiOn i
rightful 'an
last, and
but alum.
tecrch. that .
general, tti
eeptitmal
ous countri:
tile. latid . it
family ilia
as Laplatn
and parts
land," and
P tnnsvlva l
.
( i . .i n a ts p . t e a ( r t e.
1 Freemen •
it.
is found 1 be the best form of Slarerit.
"nut - (ler .should also, tench that the
'Ewes sh( (lid be of a dilTeren: race or nation
frtnn the t asters ; and-tale wider the distinc
tion' the 1 etter, as in such cqse the . slure , is
less
. opt to eel degraded, or wish to assert his
freedom a d . equality..
"To to di sneh doctrines we trust . have_
Southern eachers and Sonthven cehOol book-4.
It is from the 'school that. ',optic opinitin pro
ceeds, an the schools. should :be. set right: -
"No teac ier should be employed_ in aprivate
family 'or public school at the South, who is
not ready. to teach these doctrines. Parents,
trustees .t •Isitors should lo.,!; to this.thing."
• - "Be c autiful doctrine this! - , What heart, ex
ulting in he proefs'and hopes of human pro,
gress, doe not leap with joy attriecting such
:I paragra h as this, in the leading - organ' of
Southern pinion,—the_ oldest and.most pow
-1
erful new :paper. in the Southern States,—the
- f !T emost. hampiort of the Deooratic Part y
Democraticin the ve • of grace_ 1S i 6 I.• . While the whole
world lia gazeidpon those brilliant pages of
history w Lich record the struggles o f .ua tions.
to hefre ; 7 - W,lfile the last century ha 4 been
made retwned and glorious by th .2 -uprising
of the m;sses of .the peoprle:f4iinst.their op..
'pres . sors; .- ...
and while the gaze of the world* ,
...
fixed upot
itrzil t eae l a i tbd i t : tie7eat t l i pi,r r lEui eit ittlili l Aai l. ,ttti e ,.
t.,: p e:
1.7. 1
e i t t i
ic,)lllteeihpkrtebi,y:ai:nfi,:teiirslietti.,:fi,ti
to
iloi s s : ,:c l ,.lillel t lifei‘vi . h. ... , :
ernment ohnded on the doctrine that "'ALL •
'me; up - 0. demand fromthe leading .
iti vv. and organ of one great section
ne - Ilepublic,-1 hat its Schools .atid
should teach, that Slavery is the
, natural, rightful arid ao,rmal slate
—and that "no 'other form of socie-'
le genecat mom. or expedient !"
a relapse in public sentiment is in
y the. short paragraph we have gout.'
I What •wo - uld WASHINGTON, PAT- -
My, .JEFFERSON, GEORGE MASON, Qr
: great men of Virginia in the early
.tr history, have said tothe utterance
sentiment 1 . Nay, what wouid the
ant in Europe to day say - ofthe prin.
'eh it embodies] Theie 14 . not. a
lithe face of the earth Whera it would
-d fine a mon ant aqusrand I rue. - In
n Russia, in he most - degraded des
)f .the old -orfd,'w here Slavery ex
, maintained not as the. " best form
P "—not as the "OnlY. right• and ex:,
orm,"—not even as a'fortii in support
a single reason, based on jip.tiee an d
ii be adduced—but only its a hard
I. The Youth of Virginia—the chil-.
he Old Dominion, of the State which
th to WASILINUTON-oUt, of whose
mt. the. Declaration of Independence
effistitution of the United States—
taught to regard the slavery of the
classes as.the only natural and.the
It cm idition
.of SocietrtT': -- - • ,
aragraph illustrates the complete as
- Which' Slavery tied:s to establish
SOUthern mind, and, so - far as pos
er the rainti of the whole centitty-e—
-the North find it difficult to Under-.
o completeness and excluSiVeness of
Here everything is so frce-7men
d speak, and write and print Mid
freely what they believe to be true,
a hard to realize the actual tyranny
]livery has established over our South-,
thren. - How thoroughly It rules all
. action, we know froM incidents of
curente. But without careful study
tot credit the absolutism of . its sway
e literature, the education; the social
religion even, of the Southern States...
n • therardares td Write or print_ or
word in reprobation of Slavery.-'-=
for in
.his chair, the writer at his desk,
lergyman in his pulpit, reeeive their
from Slaiery. and • must de its bidding.
ver logic and reason may say,.---,what.
„swam History 'may teaeh.--.whatever
nciples of:Christian brotherho4,kaay
~;,,.all must b© subordinate and see
to the higher law of Blavel,'
, ,
=M
El
This is the,pOSiticin 11 . ,
terest- at the present
its exoctio.ns risen.. Whether they Itl11,136:1
conceded, or resisted,—whether SlasterY-rshilk 1
he thus in3otied by thU;na
tinn tp.chlOii9Zl -
-as. the " only natural and rightful-firtn c
Society,". remains to be seen. -
Pacts are Stubborn Thi* • •- '
it- is. a fact, that Franklin - Pierce &tine io- 1i
''
.
~
to power: upon,a pledge not to renew the slaJ
very agitation or disturb the compromises!
on- that subject. • .
It 19 a fact, "that, in , violation of that i)Jeciger
he has i , iven sanction to and 'made-the repeat. -
of the Missouri Com promise the leading mem/
ore in his administration. - ' lt'
It is a fact, by that repeal the slavery ag t f.
itat ion has been . renewed and- slatery sit T .
tended into Kansag, a Territory'haretoforW
consecrated to freedin by a solemn compact .
It i 9 a rim., that Democratic 'party, hoe,
l e
not only endorsed- t 'repeal of that comprG.
inise and the doCtrines upon which tbfi repeat. ,
etasbased,- but it has also, fully endorsed the
polig pursued by the Pierce administration.
IL re are the resolutiOns . ; ;.--• • . .- i
• -"
Resolved, That claiming fulkwahip with,
and desiring the, en operation ortill who r& - . ..
gird the preservation of the Onion - ander:4W
Cotistitution asthe paramount isaueanditi,_.
pudtating all sectional parties and platfornie. -
concerning domestic slavery, which seeks*) ; I
'eniiii(iii the States, anti- incite to treason and
armed resistance to' law 'in the- Territeriec..' j
- and whose avowed purposes' ofconsttnimat4, .
must end in.ciirl war and distinion-4nit A.
merican Oemocracy recognize end adopt the.
principles contained -in the organic laws. ei• •
fa bl ishing the l'erritorieS of Kansas and Ne
bra.'ka, as embodying the only sound and •
safe sol tit ion.of the "slavery question," upon
' which the -great national idea of the people cifill
this: whole 'country' can' tep:Osein its. dater. - ..
mined consert7atism - •of thei4nion--non-littei.
le renee by Congress With. slafvery in the Statee.
.I:. Territories, Orin the:Ditriot of pcotokint.:
"Resolved, • Thi, - r` the Administration- of
' FRANKLIN - PIERCE* - has seen triii!ti,
i
IDemocratic principles and therefore tevii;tO
dle great interests of the country; in Ai fa*
, of the. violent oppotition Ae has inain4i44
the laws at hone, and therefore we proclaim'
OUR UNQUALIFIED .ADMIRA-••
WON OF 111 S MEASURESANDPOZo .
ICI." - - : • -',- .',. ,-- .-
- It' is aI- ect,.tli at James Buchanan endoraes
all. the doctrines and principles above mterietf
to, ns follows : - • ' . . '••', • :
,!.:
" Gentlemen,. two weeks, agoi would ham
made you a longer speech,- but - nnw . / AO*
leen . p . laced upon a platform of whieh,intot!.
heartily approve, and. that can speakpr enc .
Being the-representative of that great Dino
cratit'parigi and not . simply James Boelian n
an, I must sgaare . my conduct. accordiflg to ,
the platform - y - 11ml party,' and insert no Ok
plank,nor take one from it. - That platform
i-; suftleiently broad . and 'national: fur !the
whole Donor:rifle party,' : TI - ris ghPriolas par - ‘
iv now, moist than ,ever, has demonstrated .
that it is thelLeonservative - party, of Ai CO
stitutiim andTtith thritin." ' . .
. . .
It is. a •fict, that under the policy . of • tlati
Pierce administration, Which Mr. iluthiman
has so fully endorsed,
..slavery,has gone into,
Kansas, and With .it, civil •war B•irder.Wflrt:
aniSm,roblrery and _Murder, besides . despict.
isin.'aS black and damning as Shiverf hi ;ndi%
ons. , .
.1i is a fact, that under 'Otis .liatisas Act_ srfo,
fully endorsed, laws have been passed which;
wouhl.disgrace the mo , t despotic nfition of.-
the .Old World.
.Here is one. Section of the law Of theVerr
ritorial .Legislatureof Kansas, Approved Sept;
15th, - 1855. .-" ' • i
"Sac. 12. If a free person,
,I,4speakinf, or
by writing, assert or maintain that. persons.
have not the right to hold slaves in this .Ter
rtitory,or shall'introducelinto - this . TerritOryi -
print, publish,. write; ei reit late, ( or - Cause t - f)
introdnecd into this Territory, written,
ed, published, of circulated in thisTetittary,
any book, paper, magazitie, pamphlet, or cif=
culAr. containing any denial of< the'right . O.
persons, to hold slaves in .tliis:Territoryiattak
rsen shall be deemed guilty of .felony; and'.
punished by imprisonment at, hard labor for
e tcrm..of not less than two ydars." • I
Here, freemen of
sovereignty". practically carried 'out, Which'
means slavery in all' its moat: odious fonits;:
Here you have a than pledged to sastain thil
I same doctrine.- •
That. man is .Itites BecttAXAm. - -: . •
On this subject What doe's - John C. Frei
inNnt. say, •
1.1-w.." I heartily concur in all tnoVerainti
-which. hive for their object .":I'nTepair the
_•
MiseWefs arising from the violation of geed
idthe repeal of - the Missouri Ccun - proi.l
.1-am opposed 'to Slavery in
street: - and upon. principles sustained.. and " -
made habitual by Jng-suttled - conyietiensi..— -
While I feel inflexible in -the belief. that 1% .
ought pot to..be interfered With %Aare it ex.:
• ists Under the shield .of State' soVereighty, I
-am as inflexibly at posed to _its eitepaitat on
-this continent beyond its present limits.". . •
• Free labor—the natural capitel.whielt..
crinstitutes the real wealth orthisgreat'oetith
try; and creates that intelligent. power *WAG
masses alone to be relied on as the btilWark •,
of free institutions.--John C. Frintorit'sl l et,,
ter-of Acceptance. . •.. •
Who, then, will .heSitate between the tit.°
titen: The issue is, Fremont and Freedom,
..or Buchanan .and SLAViRIi 'Las .
Herald. - . •
.• . ;.
'r. DEMON IN 41724141NG Mn. FILLMORIII
liman.—The Savhnnah Georgian and Jour
nal says :—'rime mice was when we regretted ,
Fillmore's candidacy ; but that was be
fore the elections in Missouri,Arkansas, Noith
Carolina, and Kentaky, convinced xis ttat
he is likely to carry, no Southern State:4--
Each of these was claimed by his Maids,—
In each, his friends have been vanquished 4
Oar tear, e Month since, was that he i night,
by&e wining a feWSouthern electoral votes,
;carry the contest into the 'House of -
sentatives. That cear luta' ceased to en l ist.
"Assured now that the whole South Is
S A F.E for MICH AN AN, We juin OUr North.
ern friends in approving be eandkhtcy, of
Mr; Fillmore. • 'it likely , to do no;
it may do some good, by contributing, to the
overwhelming defeat which lawalts bleck
publicanism at the hands of Democracy:"
ADDR.3SB AT TUE STATIC
New Yorker Ways the Hop
Montrose, Penn., vriH. deli --
dress at tha_State
11
1
INEI
ME
• lora
11
Jessiip, of
eill* *mind ad
'ittertONtii Y
t
IiEiII