= and with exiiesilie 'lioness Mai diyiseks, kat_ ;ditch we are unable noVto pattleillarisse t 4 tiotwithstandit% the puliber of iperstrali thisikoiessien;sikla asssr.ted byleliretstettAst In . on,ilte New4olford:tipad bit:, , :tpflit* It 0.. tired Ititantfi;se,ithat aa 'Puny enrages had passed' over thirivd lbw ' town In thP , AA • noon liitoreits entrance as it contained. - A speAers' stand had been erepied and ; seats arranged on the greeni nearly opposite the 'Vniversalist church. Ilere the.neeting convened at about twa - o'clock and was or - ginized by electing Judge jes.sup Chairman ; the nf - the'differest Republican As sociations end. Fremont Chlbs in the county Vice Presidents; atid Wirt J. Turret!. B. S. tintley, 'Witt a Post; arid IL Fr f:t.azier t Secrettwiss. , - ; fuels 'to this disappointment of all 'neither emitter Wilson am Mr: Br -1 !Ingalls° was pr eat. ' F., . 1 Judie Jessup,firat addressed the meeting , : in an able and- eloquent speech s and conehis ded - by introducing General Bayless, of Broome county; N. Y.l who• has spent es'mo time in Kansas, and who in a plainsstraight :forward, manly and- effec4ire manner narrat ed occurrences that had came under his own -observation in that oppressed Territory, oor. rohdati '' e sseceuntsi , already before the, c ss th public. f Border ;Ruf fi an optrageS there.-- When ' ueral B4lests concluded, Otere were tood'ealls for "'Oeti.e," and nur.faithtul Rep 'regentative eathe forward upon the stand, and •was was warmly greeted by the assern- , bled. _multitude ol' _ i bis ecnistifuents. M. -Grow having spoken for several hours al most every day" for more than two weeks, thereby- taxing - his powers of enditratiee 'to the lamest, was hoarse';and e - shansted, and ought not to have f poi:en at. all ; still he made, one of iiis most efilseive and eloquent sreechos, showing, among other things, mast distinctly, thathe'has maintained the integ rify of t his principles, but that it is those, who formerly supported and now oppose him that have changed. by finally AeSerting the 'principles of Jeffersow and auceumbing to the Slave. Power against which he and they so long together. battled. That epeeelimust have tOld ivith the luotest Democracy, pres ent Mr. Grow alluded to the disappoint. Theta both to 'his hearers•and himself caused 1: 7 A.. 1.-- ! ,..Arrerbeatri.u, of 3ii..watir.i.. Wilsmi and Btirline e arnes and stated that Gen. Wit - had - 01tEitTrigpumicAN MASS MEETING. I 1 son .protntsed before her lets Washington mil , -rs epe ssi sa as bass',meeting s e m om _ i to fill the tippointreentsin-this and the neigh , rose, On Saturday I was bifar the largest put,boring (Taunter, and he (knew no reason why collection la ; peo 74 ever known in Susque. Ihe was not preseet. . • Mr.-Burling:plosives twine counti. . Thfiiumber present way ea- sick--worn out with Iperiking. After . Mr. ''rionslY cs4imated*from ,8.000 to 15.000. i Grow closed, .a lively campaign song - was .Our esti*to is leoo and w,e'are assured sung , by a gentleman [of SusquelnumaiDes by. men of elperie4 and, judgment present pot, (who !pukes his own songs and s ing s that. that iis not aliWer estimate. The day 'elinj which elicited much applause, and wig proiitious—a_lOar, hritht, beautiful an. was followed ity.someexcellent Music from tamers! ility,' Thewople of Moetrose lusd the Great Bend Brass Band. The Bev. .. - made! preparationiaar the occasion, by rats- i George Landon next addressed the audience `ing verionfings iiiild banners at diflerenri• in one of his inimitable speeches, wherein VOititS. A [troop of fal:y horsemCn s in uniform, i , wit, eloquepce and pathos were gracefully 'Composed In - rosily. Oitizens of Montrose and I blended. Mr. Landon .referred to the base I tridgewater,` was siiti rer4ness, with martial I fal•khood seat from thiS county and publish 'music, to escort the delegations in I ed in the Penneyivaniqii, charging him with to town. , At the head of the troop was Dr. -1 having said in his former speech here that he E. Patrick jr. Marshal of the day, with his I Would tfarnple the Constitution under foot, - -Assletent tdanhalfsSiejor D. D. Hinds ; W. I &c. The creature who' fakricated 'that, false , 1. -Yetspii, L. F. Fitch, and S. IL Sayre.,— I hood should have been present to see how il . I Cerrines I hitgan .to. 'Our in from every ditec- I was trampled tinder foot:The!short speech lion the early part-of the day i and before lof Mr. Landen stirred' and. roused gat vast any of toe ' regular .43elegatrons arrived; our i audience as the winds !do e Often. Some usually 4 let streets were already swarming lof his imagery . was-as ' i bea ful as any Abet .with i'lki le. Not - far' from eleven o'clock, Iwe ever heard or read; b ill not mar _ the delegations began to arrive. s - First came lit by attempting to report Win Stuart, .those front JessuP and Rush, a long train of I Esq. of - Bingleston, Editor of the Broome carriages; with banners and , streamers bear. •' p,,,s-publican, liflUwed in a short but happy let&variona patriotic devices; a nd as they i and effective Speech, which was; very well re- roll. ei,eit: 'ecteentne, Prewded by the fifty 1 ceived by the. audience; after which the meet. i rsemei enlivened lay the 411u:sit of fire an d 1 - adjourned ion ve i n i ng . • . i : a ! un N; 'eh greeted -by theers of the s Pee 1 In the evening - a tor4h-light procession par. 1 lattli/c• it" ' *SS ' evident that .the people were ! - acled the streets, masing a very brilliant dis. I coming. \ i-l!lext the Western d r tlegatiss from play.. A lergeportion of those in attendance I 'Forest •;,.' ll atte,.Friendsville, etpcpput, Apo- j during the afternoon, 'had set out for home i lama ;ski ' ' :Middletown, arrived, with Miles 1 before the meeting re-t i tsgembled in the even-' W. Bliss, of Friendsville for Marshal, and B. I ing.. Those who retnitined were Addressed I Glidden kig., Assistant Marshal. This was `by E. Red Myer, Esq., 'of tredford, our 1 n great ,delegation, with many \ fourstease I candidate for State Senator, who made a good i teams, old beautiful banners with appropri- i Speech, and produced;a faverable impression -ilia declteai st:l4 . as "Freinoit_and Dayton" On the. Republicans Of Sitsquelneona. Mr. l'Uberii ; rad the, Union," "For Congress„ Wm.- Doolittle, of Broome county, N. Y., G. A. prow,". ate. -In this, as . in,the pre- j was next introduced by Judge Jessup. He, "ceding AOtitgation, were a large number of I like General Bay le'..s.s - ; shad been an eye-wit ladies, _showing that, as is always the case I mess to the workings of sivattet soverignty when .the popular heart is deeply moved; the 'in Kansas, having been present, at every deerl ladies bate declared for the right, and are e». lion but one' held in the Torrittiry , since it Was • *elastic for Fremont and Freedom. Al- .organized: lit. Doolittle read fetqn.the re- -' - ‘mtist almultaneimsly -with the West, arrived Port of the Kansi.s !eve:414616g Committee' .>.- the'delegation from Dimock,Springrille;and ; testimony. of invasion tsod iihlation of the bal .. ` .'Auburn, Which as it kept tolling in, cm-rings ' lot bok, by the Border. Ruffians of Missoari, after carriage, with banners flying an d ladies to which he was a Witnesq, and closed with. . - waving ( their white flags, seemed alicost in- an earnest tippets" to the peo ple of•Pennsyl rternsinahle. . - vaults to oppose that l.ind of Deniocracy and -- ' - Egitin,tafter, Brooklyn,- Lenoir, and other that kind of Poptiar i Sove't-eignty Whieh ity t°l`lliit.i that direction came pouring in, in fraud and violetuie would eru.-11 out freedom ti 1 great nembers, showing that the south-east is i and the . Free State settlers to establish Stave an alivawith entlnisiatinfievurgler;ouseause. Iry in Kansas. Gitteien Hotchkiss, E. 44., of ,„ "put erowning exhibition ' of. Republican 1 Windsor, followed, giving the result of his , Mr' .,x4 --thif 'Which nnistastmished our Op- I ehservatiims while traveling at. the South, . PrilelP. and 9verwhelMetf them with dismay kith* regard 'to the operation of Abe peculiar ....lest; ks great delegation from the. North I i n 4itutiion at bone. 1 I.l e had been assured '1 10 Ea This tnightY Itilin, inehfng the j sonic y of the principal. men at the South ' ' delegations - from Great Bend, Auk uehann -a a, 1 that - Slavery sees curse : -: Ile had seen the Bitrum`..l's Oakland, jeekson, Th omson, Ar. 1 truth of that ~.4-,Aterstent, ; lathe.esittlition of scat, Ghaon,Hanford, New Xilfund. Liberty, i s 1 .-)th master and slatre, as Well 4 the miser and F knit , was nearly tworniles in length, I able poor m whites thatiexist amo them. As . and eo tamed thers, 40 ' four-horse-I •,. . , . among o t heres, the evening Is as now „Wea'"ring late; aftor some - and 'll six-horse teams, and between 2.000: more Music from iht?' Brass Bends, the tret and ai 1 I people. Its Marshals were 0. ing adjourned., Thus shappily passed off, 9.5.5. C. M " Innis of ' Pra tt ' New: Miifurdejs e 4out accident or disttirbaoce but with im , . 4 9''' ' " .' , PePoL- '' ' .. - I niense era' ilemsthe gieatest political den ts. this train -were 32 young ladies, from i onetration e r witnessed • North Eastern jp , - , Lenesix*lll eerrileg l 4 9 o l . ef whet; mi. 1 Pennsylvania _—of which we have been able resenting the jiister States of the anion, were I to eve but a -very elo perreetidea in the above dressed at Unifoian r and the other dressed in I re p ort , - 1 , 0 - inotirmag, representing„ - unhappy Kansas. I -- ittefurill also sent a large delegation, in eluding, 'sii: eempany - of Young ladles, ;all , -sahtte, who presented picturesque and . ' ul , appeaianee. .The ,paeseneet of =', 41 **l es at greatly to the spirit ind en wiZttf 'sOf - l'imene andthei t a Y 4 .l l rAtb 144 4/ 414 1 iepeued . cheers " • -,, . c ,'„,111P0,0114;',."-: . •,' -,-- _ ' -.' '. ' fhiari!,! 16 "agoiiin'-tris *ia eontain. 1 a --'. - Al , Ott'KeeiOiliPifing it'itere lz : .. o _ ~ 41 44,itii,„;_itio.iid-thi sit ' . - . 401 . 0). n4l 4l 44. 6 >jirt*S"; o 4 4 o4.irsi . .- ."11041•041104-dfir.tioeir_ondoicrificittnons iviaiho-saiileasiii! . -- lAirimraigerI Airimraiger immy ar i a 'Atm 'l - - 1 , . file 14d61);00e4flieptibliCO. 't . r. F. REAb & g. H. FRAZIER, EDITORS. MONTROSE PA. . t*lattri4o,September 116,'11150. RVPUBLIOAN TICKET, i FOS 21:=D1414T, JpEll4 FSE-MONT. - rop,,lnciiritESTDltirrt \•WiiiitiliA.trila. DAYTON. tAtE ca. 4, upinussiorntit, T.,CO'CIIRAN,. , THO . '. • i Or York County. i i cut InDVI"01t GENERA!" —f D 8,,W1N :PIitLPS, ..- ,- .- of Armstrong County. ~ • ' ;-. zion, SERVEYOR GENERAL, -18)111:1‘OLOItEW LAPOATZ, i I oegridoid.coiint - REP BLICAN COUNTY TICKET. -- ' , I . . . *oR CONGRESS, • OA 1:1;SIll'A A. CrROW,: - f lusqu . eharitia County.. • • [ TOR SENATOR , t REEp !AYER, .Q, , f Brad rota -cotolty. 1 FOR REPRESENTATIvcs sty . goN B. cliAsE, of ,Sps q uelinun . a. CO. AISRET:t M.NE; of Wyoming County. ,on ASSOCIATE JUDGES;- • `''' CII.KI,FAy..it.EAA .f. Mnntrot, ups Nit'sbapws, oraibsau. l l a-,cou f riecotisslottat, :.:, . Tr PERIUNII ELIZ,- . 4441 ridgeivater.- 1 ' 1 414 'intim? ATTORNEY, ' . FRANiItLIN FRASER, of Montrose. 1 . , ;,.- 119,11 COUN_TY stravvrou, r , • . 1 160`,,,,TMELL, of Forest Lake. ' ~ ,• 1-tron I COCICTX ACCITOR, i ' }TA NY, 01 11a ito rd. •• • MI 1221 ==l • W a ' 27l4 Mongrel ! • pemOcrag lamas us that " Fletcher Web s to and represents:: Live of Webs, tr, is . opposed to Fre ; moat and the - B.epUbßcan party" and 'that "James B. Clay, "son :arid representative of Wary , Cittyi - is ppixisifibtoYreciumt, end' tbe I I{Bol).Yean parts" toe *atth"! both naead , wilt the. Pon*ruy, cottaider)pie, to tell theca than the sohavid- nvaseatatives.of . time o +4tga - FlNtel,lisierAmi tbai•bioe been i! 1 44 1 440 1 *, 1 44 : 014 / 4 4 tee #: wiury,4lo!..‘.egip , :to.sespe,4l4. litithait4tMOliat t #l l4l464l4 ireniit' the " ' 0:181L Among the many loßOliitowtrichs • ti Irby the Border Ruffian party to re - Oil itizssion . of rthw ; Goyeriment,, thione in at " ''shore is _jnot the ;I "Ohl', The $ .-I,fij or ,r shr e C Oilideuetface crew i alf you diet .*"‘"9")*5.4"11ill _certainly andlheLtPrhei wit/ heegni :of u Timid', souls I 4:* though the Unto was ow ly formed to enable fifty thou.sand al-ye:lold era lord it - or* - tweiti millaa of Free: men. Such is the plain English of his prop- osition—a - proposition = that mak I principal stock in. all the Buchanan , and tracts whieh tire circulated be St.LArrence and the. Potomac: Su county.is'surfeimlwith webby derAstt. Who, let is 'ash, six, preaching pion t Those who would say to the Slavery, thee far sludt thou go, I , 'there" or those who are Moving en and earth to extend it over all al drimain 'Those who believe, MI 7 , gunge, of the- resolutions of the State Conv - ention at Pittsburg, in ,1 it -formed 1:1(:) part of the eoinproirlses of the Constitution; that slavery should foever tray! el with`the advancing column of oar- tarrito rialsprogrss t" or those who arroitly p~ . claim : that thi , Constitution protec 8 'Slavery, in all the territory the Government .posesses? 'Which oracle parties Is preaching nikitreat-, t ening. disunion t - There can 'be n . question attnut the 'matter, wit,h candid raids. It is Ott • li'yehanan. - Party.. That partj i f• -threatens to kindle .the fires of rebellion if the majority of the people of thiSnation pronounce again.t ! ttnii measures and policy. Itl4'your Jeff. baVises,ylitirToiiths; (whit inrlently,boasts ! that he will tine 'day call the roll 07. his slave's on . Bunker MIL)! it is your Itlas , ins, Yules, Colcoxes, Staantons ; Atchisona, Stringfellows and their ntunbCriess cOadjutdrstall in the, tench:man rahlts—.4ho menace' lie Union if ' nut allowed to ha'vt their own way. 44 promAl instil sup p orter of Fremont cannif . t bebamed 1 ; ti ~ saw is ,iin ldv dr of- disunion •! • tittiwill a , • L 'rnion party .break np.the,Unto ,If frinen phant 'I The idea is not'.sirriply a surd, it is 'ridiculous, and proves the Irma hypocrisy of those who insinuate the 'charge .. But why!' resort to such low de ingoguism —'f by the, meandesuitiOf fabrieat on I Why thiS ignoble !'apF;Ebl:_to;the. timidi4 dwelling only with ignomnee--with the lesiq passions' -and . the - shallow 'brain 1 . W hat lenisible mind will be hilt? . None! I•The trick is , too transparent, and has -ben 'too often resorted to, to deceive s any longerf A few by s- . Micky old women, or silly dolts,auto bo tip ' pallo 'by, it, but tliftt even is douhifol. • It is, no yew resort. `ln Jefferson's tithe - the trick vas rampant. The' cry that let} eras a dun. gerous man and 3 disVaionist—that, if elect. •ied he.would burn all the Biblesllicense lib. • ertinisin- and crime, and• conve r t the nation into b great Paudeinonium, was proclaimed all over the !and. Some it deluded, but,not many. . And in our day this , saine•trick has' .exhausted' its powers. When Cilifornia was shoat' to conic into the -Union; the same base ! threat was promulgated by the Men, if her application wasgranted. It woe . ranted, apd the Union survived the shock ! • And when the voting, - in the present Cntigr 1 ;for speak*. er, indicated the choice of Bart'ks, the same threat-.-" elect him and we will,` dissolve the Union" rang _front one end of he . Republic t the other. But he teas el ted, and the 'Union still stands. And so it wil , stand, even though the moj,rity of the Citiz / s. ns of the na. lion should chnose .1:ohn piarksFremont - to preside'over its interests and It,.destiny for"' the next four years. To talk otherwise Is to talk nonsense- r to believe otherkvisi is hallu-. cination worse than madness. •• We repeat no rational :mind fears disunion because the Majority rule. le is,:it can .be Only when mi norities wield the - 'power. that the' fair &V et: of the Union -Can be in danger. The pretense is 'a : build:nig to deceive the . voter. It is a " cloudrof dustr - thrown'up to cover the es cape of' Condemned ir.iscreants - trembling in Apprehension of their ~!doom. It is the last . It estfrt cfa bankrupt party-itsi Guyaseutus to "raise the wind." ' !.. 1! - • !. • • Tut Ocionta Etzcztos.— le t-ith of 'Oc tober, the day fir the general election ofState and County officers, is near r i httnd. We have every prospect of sucev!is at that theetton, but it must be romembelA tha elections are I someti tom lost by over-confide ce, that an ac tual majority may be defeated )yr a minority, it malty of the majority stay - et home; while the minority All vote. Depend upon it, our ' opponents appreciate the fact that if they are defeated in October, old Buck Is surely beat !en in his own State, and they 'will therefore I pull their last vote on the Staticket:. Let i 1 the R,epubitcahs . do the same, td we are sure of success. . Last Fail 'the opposition to the Sham bemocracy was divided and therefore. defeited,` although their united vote then ek-. fixeded that of the Sham Dem'ocraey. Now 1 they are united on-the State ti4et, and strong er by the accession of thousands of Free Soil' betnocrata who 'Cannot swal knit' the pro-slave- , ry planks of the State platforit or the ancin ,nati platform, but are borhe along by the's* ,of e4thusiasm that is kdreeping over the tau& fur Fremont and Freedom. _ The three candidates on Stf • tic li et, Thomas E. Cochran for Canal Com tissioner I - Darviin Phelps fur Auditor p .nest; and Bar: tholuniew ',spate; for Surve . (u; tieneral, we 1 are sell assured . are true and tea:rnest friends of freedom, and honest and eipable men. ~, G.dusha A. Grow- 4 ' the grind and true" , -the ani nious nominee . of of (he Wilpint distriex, need two to his constituents. ' The predate - him, - and, only Assk vote *•-• E.. Weil • 14er, Elriaro d nodrity;-our nominee Po State Senitoi,4lts t he ettdoksci:' - meet of be Republinntuk of _Connty warm =avows of Free 80i1 rittripldepetnt Walt . qtifititied for the position `innbnutin lected. Wite# the' l 4ii**-:4! 4 : i jria 0 11 &4. SiSt!Olf-, tntsitottiett‘inteli tkte io '*W 01144,i :be. r?tifid feesitiad ow the tight ide. . Bii iota pia* 430:hliii 1 %0004)4 dp "0, F** : -1 10#4' 4410: 401,64:-`7..-.. -- 'l4 &Fmk 4Ci principles, though to do so hss led to their ostracism from the party. His vote maybe relied Tito count one every time hi free dom. Alfred fine, of Tunkhaimoek; noted with S. Et Chtisesatepriientativeo from thit district, ialtiao a staunch Republi, can, and likoMr. (lase is latioFing - zallowdy in the cause of freedom. . - The County ticket has already had our commendation, and we believe it has been teacived - with very genet's& ap - prohati sin bi the, Rapuhlicans of the Ccunty. We close by repeating that—not .content with the easy viury before us l in this Coun ty-=we should feel that tbe fate of the Cum. 'try-rests upon us, and that IT I OUR SOLEMN DUTY To Dan.tivorir MET REPUBLICAN von AT THE OCTODEE ELECTION._ I up the ,speeches 'weep the uchania a bal• this isti -:"Igoloch, e Republicans; knoiring their cause to be the cause of justice and htfmanity, trust &good 'deal io - the inherent love of right a mong the people to giVe - success to their Prin ciples. They could do this wit h safety were it not thut unfortunately many 'persons, even in this - region, take.sci little pains to inform themselves of the present position of public aflitirs that they do not at all appreciate the nature of the stroggle now going on. There are some who do not read the papers—or on ly such papers as the Montrose Democrat' which represents our brothers in .Kansits as I wicked wretehns - who are engaged in murder- I ing and - abusing the innocent Border Ruffians , — w ho have no idl.s of the fact that :he so called Democratic party is even now engaged, by bloodshed and violence, in forcing. Slave ry into Kansas against the wishes of its inhab itants. These men are honest, but thisguided, 1 and if they , can only be'madenequainted with the fitcts, they will vote right. At the meet- ing hero, addressed by Mr. Landon, there were some Democrats who, when the speech was finished, reitarked' that they bad never before heard of these Kansas outrages, and that, if Mr. Landon • spoke the truth; they could no longer support the Democratic par ty. We from time to time hear of men 'equally in the dark, in diTerent parts of the 'County. Now, what the friends of freedom in each. Township ought to do, is, to furnish these Men-Vith the Means of informing them. Selves. It is - especially important, in our view, ut no far th Hcay. rration- the lan- MOLY(Ik :49, "that that the report of the Kansas Investigating 'Comfit:free and the Code of Laws enacted by the birder Ratans for -the government of the people of Kansas, should be placed in the hands ofe every vide?, Mit they m ••'-be pre pared-to decide Ceheiherthey: ,ete to bUS tainducli great Vrtings. . bur rien;33 knOw that •these. documents can be procured in Washington or ..New York. Let them . be , proeuroi and circulated: • So, great is ehe odiuin attaahA in this regititi, to The adthiniaration FiTanklin Pierce, to Douglas,. and the'other prideipal moyers .in the repeal of the Missouri tem prothise, .otat the party leaders labor desper ately 'to convince•the people that the party is not responsible tOr the acts of these tractors to freedom and the North. tut 'We have the solemn' declaration olthe party itself, in Na-, tional, State, and county conventions to the . contrary. Not only, did the Cincinnati Con vention wide% nominated' Buchanan endorse ..hot.'lll s iCt•Ce's zaininistration and the Nebras ka bill, but the same,thing bad been previ ously done by the State Convention of Penn. sylvania which nominated the present sham Democratic State ticket:. The following -resolutions constitute two of the planks of the Platform on which the nominees of that party fur state offices now stand : • 'Resolved, That in the ripe*, of the act known as the 'Missouri Compromituict and the passage of the act organizing the Territories of Kansas arid Nebras ka, free from unconstitutional restrictions, the last Congress PERFORMED A WORK OF PATRIOTIC SACRIFICE in . meeting the demands of sectional excitement by unshaken adherence to the fundament al la N. . Resolved. That we endorse the Administration of President Pierce as NATIONAL, FAITHFUL AND , EFFICIENT—foIIy coual to all the emergencies which. the country has had to encounter, and that he has worthily maintained her interests and honor at home and abroad. • • • • .And 'it will be 'remembered that shortly. I after 'Mr. Buelm2ifs'return. from Europe he was waited on-officially by a committee : whi). infornied him of his nomination by the Stat% Coni-ention, and to . whom he. responded in a_ short speech in which he fully and unequivo. LIMY • endorsed the State'Platform: • indeed, .the hearty" planner in which he endorsed thi . tineinnatti platform," shows that the South could ask nothing of Mr: Buchanan which he . Wohld 'not rant, in return for j.he nomination fur the t'resideney which they have given him . . • And should the South succeed in elect in,' him;-we have no reason to doUbt that, in . accordance' *ith his pledges and the; policy he' has endorsed, he will raid in carrying out I the pro slavery - schemes of the men to whom Ihe owes his elevation. . • itarlt is a significant fact that at the prin cipal political meetings held by the Buchan an poky at the North, most of the speakirs are southern Slaveholders, and many of them old Southern Whigs. Toombs, Howell Cobb, C. C. Clay, Stevens, &c., all Southerners and half of , them Whigs till 1854, also furnish_ most of the speeches that are now thought . worthy of a place in the columns of Northern dougbface newspaper*. The reason of this is that the 'men of ability wheonce belonged to the beinociatit Party at. the North are cow acting in the Republican rantiwlttd the sham Democrecy - must eithet' bit to accept the ,small 11-y Of doughface polifitions for speakers, or descend fo the humiliation of clapping and cheering Southern iu4bs who look down upon and despise the.laboring men of the North as so many," white . slaves," and who .believe, with John Randolph, that they tian.buy and sell Northern - voters as they buy and sell their blacks st,lkine;and 4ve camel up , to 'try their hands at that business. But the retellt elections sad other demonstrations tit the North, must= have opened their eyes to t h e Gict that the people,ofibe "Free States etoutotb* sold to slavery,;. 'he Republicans no corn inenda knoti him, ap. fur or chance to .•.otl l 3lv*er - ftwoney of, "d f°r- ;1331- by-letirs of 'Anil Arbir; Alighigsa r ite)Repilblican kir , l3tate: " 6 * . theriZ -‘• ; ; • - • - - • •.; linbbison.andAho alba State lman - , pnnoners in Kansaitimitltelo44 tick BOTli SIDES orTEIZ tausisimi.While ou r Border, Ruffian friends appear to be so Ore . ly tried becauSe.christian ministe rs misfit to 'eserti se. the rights of .free roen, and ►be ;-eartestoiss :44.71ouncei the;ouirages perpetrated; in Kinstis nncler:- the ,;.ttattVe Of ' " - Democracy " itti,PoputtSircrei ,Sovereignty;" we think' it Would' lira nit more :than-fair to take a look at both aidesof the question. H a Christian minister is out of his place when i he stepSinto - the "dirty pool! of polities," to denounce , sin, during the, Week,- then most i surely the lay preacher who ".dabbles nittie dirty pool of politics" and preaches Burde. Ruffianism front .11onday morning till Satnr . sbotild.be the-List tnan in Christ endow% who should presume to teach religiot on the Sabbath. , We Inge heard of satan'- _rebuking- bin ; buttn,en wholtininitte with..th. notorious Snobble around the County . ditrina the weekend preach the. Gospel on the Sab 7 }. bath, cast " the old gentleman" . en- I tirely into the abide... If the .niinister is to be prohibited. from go 'Mg to the "dirty pool of polities" to rep‘roy • .sin anA re buke iniquity, then that lay: filen bor wI o waltoiks in that t' dirty. pt,Ol di ring six days of the week, should his ban upon hiS mouth and his Mouth ht the , on the Sabbath . . - . . utation. I heli"Pli d ilin f p gso e t ritil be asm un -a i at : Mai ge l ..ll l : * e i glit f- c. : l 4l. l a ei i ii : H tdj oi n ift l yo :n.urEtt.einord:nle'r lititit.:ll.? 31r. 114-. I ;0,01 his. t ' a ' ill '')l. g7'll*: 44 ao,:liiaiiecirdecealdvsr‘..7.Pliii., an._ iigrit,. . per:, ...errs upon a,.. Ability. of high intAigrity and valuable experience.l - ah e tal:!:l h i icc, .;; I a s ( nlei:_oi Buchanan . . c. s c .l i a ittm iehi,, g rit t it, fixedly ht fi. i i., - i ' t r h r n o . e a : i., - old ,.:.,saiufie :,: ,iin, .. .. i t ti a t: ::::., ii j : sa ,.. ~-,, ~ , ,:t s jaa,p , ~ ,,, z , ". : .. ;cis! , : i: ,:d f ~ 7 r , „ , , ,,,, ;‘, it d ~ is surrounded, 00,.in PetuisilvMdirby,.itany par _ _ i litical friends, wh and to whom I a unite lay ties of long-cherishedl 1 .whose i hive Mid .seeureein 4 . 14 , - - • .1 - politiml and soei intimafty; and the' lotii,of 'frieutfship I shout ;v . years I have exert .d revs Iftei bring •ritiotit, chanan's nominati n. 1111848 and 185 I - g i rri s ealous and ardent suppOrtef. On.i ittany- of his. tatie'haVeditme, tlYe•seape ifi o tii r e tti ti o n s i( e d li w bo u ; i c h a each occasion I. w in. the National Convention as v ia ' s one of his . delegates:: , rat cannot getAWay. - - -• . •. These ties are 4iceedingly strong and hard to ser- ' 1 "er, especially witli one who is naturall y of -a conserv- I . 0 1 1 cdd ative cast, and sit* to change old habits of,thought • tn The Tribnne ofto-day and action; and 11-have resisted far monthS, the con- find j'aint l ß ,l u t e t h m a 6 t s ta i n i s s q ,,Th uar e e ) li out- in f • ( d i t. f .e lJ p °l- i i iiterest what the ' hoary-headed libet t .rictities that wen urging Me to my present declare- .ji will ' h I don. I have dili ently *aught reasoni and at-- I 1 it r • . f riends, ' l of to day said about the gallant rin d ‘1 ts: THE .m 168011121 Coasep.oNiltiE.—The - Rtichan- I•m1.1t-8.11) wave e l f •tile pain i i:r • breakilig UP tiii-48. 1 soctations arid an tutting myseidront my old f• i . e . -asu,tg. an orators ,who have lately swarmed over I.but all in vain. y . lOve. of country and hatred•of 1 young hero_who.is now his antagonist, f, ) . Susqueltanna_county in a rain effort to weak-. . oppression id • ,•. I , ?:it' t•eliiici - and inclnra- ' vest • 1,, would ~ . .. 1 et s . tions either to de tide my judgineptlbr still my. con- i a,5,.P.„7, , ,%,t - htehnehbe t a- simple . lll : ree 'id ; . rio l I li oT l i :t i : ns t a i'l' ka -e edr : es t ; rtedu 'P th e ll k i k ti l en this - portion of the " Gib r „i tor „f•Fr o otloni " I science and La compelled to forfeit my self-respect I•. In 11 0''5 f 2 'C4.)I: iii, had conthietediliti. assure their bearers that, the passage, of ti e •!. by committing .,, what , l believe . to be palpably wrong, I, L , ti or•eise enroll myseti in opposition to the ..,emocrattc 1 (1n on o r. debts which ,:ii - nt!iteteadi,tonim is., s 0 •1ii5.1 ,, - Missouri Compromise in 1820, was a gre. t 1 . party . • :. -. 1 hiS official capacity es. Governor of Culik.. - and. p• . i nit t o h i e E s x e c r s ~, triumph of the North. It this is correct, tl el.' I see no reason able hope of justice svm athr i -.: • h v i i ; e o r f ' at the - • for the people of Kansas in the -success of the .De- States'. e South did not know boW om o h she Was et• i,mocracy. lii itsirat,ks, and with the potter to con- I . ,- 1 r . p. ii , t le ;nited States to take testimo • ' . . % titled to in - 1820 and; prolablY would nit 1 oaths action, nth found the Border Ruffians of Ills- I. , __. testimony is • i Sour; and their accomplices of the South, who have . ' eit§e. • the first witness before. that Co' mr i ii. s . • sion .was James,Bnchanan. We lar have knimn to this.day,' if' Nerthernidinta - ! - - 1 Co • • - and all. 1 . • i •traineted upon t, e kAnstitution a the e,, s entiut faces, in their meek subserviency Ililil tl )t- 1 principles. of our Government, robbed Kansas of its J ottition before '6i. - t readers tilts - thorli - • ar 1 i civil liberty and right of suffrage laid wa.... , te id tern . • , - • • ._. made the discover. for thein. - • The follow _ .mg tort with fire and. sword, and repudiated even ervia- . . ' • - , , - . • ••, -,-....i• letter written by Charles 'Pinckney, a It:tiling ration itself. .. ' . - ' - i 1 which he testifies: to. were rendered to the . enunciation of At •i 1 s ' country b - Col. In its platto I. find file . .p . , It pe i . . y. - ,Fremont, was Secretary! of statesman of the Sited), :4 11 hots in what light ! . - et which would pu the rope. about the necks . et men for` State. Of course he occupied the-very best . the Act was vie Wed tit liiat dav : _ • •exereisitig the c nstitutional right orpetitioning Con- m pOsition to judge accurately of :the valie.cr' greys fora State Government or a redressof grievan "SONGRESS HALL, 'Xiarch, ", 15'40 'COL. Frein t'. ' • • d' f on s.serrices, an o the nat„ire: ces far worse th tt thp4e which led to the war ot,the ..-. • 0, . 3 o'r/og:k at night. - "Da. Sat :—I hasten to Inform you thin. this mo. slid.charaetor of allMs official transaa . vl - 'Revolution, and ivleclaratioh •stigmatizing is " armed in .,. ~,,, hi „ earried :.11 . e (pie, ti ai l to. admit N i i ,,,,,, ini resistance to la the moderate and . justifiable self- . jAt the period :When. ,Nif: Buchanans ;de :defense or men hatnefully and infamensly oppressed and all Louisiana to the Southward of-31i degrees 30 pOSition was taken - he - had Withdrawn frost{ of-- minutes -free of the restriction of Slavet•v and g ve r -, by ruffian viele e and outrage, beyond all Iranian en- , lice, and was liviun. in retiement at •Wh[at- - the• South, in a short time, an addition of - six, and 'durance. . . •eg perhaps„ eight inembers to the Senate of the ISM eel of the nation as: c 1 . , I find. the win party with. d; ..4,. _. 1 I. . land, 'spending his timehi a manner part'ivu- . ,SlatetC It is considered here, ty the sherc-hold, nu ent tarty . a 1 'ro riate: to his advanced fears;-. • National Co . nreotion, .but •o . ne I n ,ti .a is, . , .. sip , p . i in . States, as a great triumph. . . . • expressing na.",tunqualtfied admiration' f ,l. Admen- meditation , upon his past. sins, and in soya, istration which Itasietit Itself as the tool and aCeoiri -4 With respect, yotp• obedient servant,reflections uponl • IT his accotinta .ii ity to a Iligh '.Culida:s Pixcisxzr • inflicted upon Kan4as •'and price of all thetArongs • ..• by o r , tribunal. He had no .octinpation,.atil.his . - . its veditlity andlimbecility broughtthe country to an i .... 7 .—......_ .. . , . . .... • - whole time was-given to repentadee and ...If. - ..Lewis C. Levin,. k ilireorei A merit lit attesting. War. 1• . 1: . . ~. I I I find all its Represertatives in Congressovith three examination ; with the aid of the Tresbster. of Phi.adelphni, lately 111adc-mt,atiempt to individual exeiptions 1 laboting in earnest Zeal, by i nn an d Qiraker lightS.bv 'Which he was Isur: Sell out the Fillmore party of that City .to speech and wad, to corer up the iniquitioS of this Ad. rOundeit Under these ....circumstances, 'With • • fur ministration ant the IThrder tuffians of Mis Sean i, and - • Buchanan, and called a public nieetitvi' • •-=;, • • t 0 , t ,......,, q w b• I , the oath of God ht his lips, James flu •to suppress a air ! itnc.stic-,atien 11 L. ,1,.... ic that purpose. His object wa.sto get; the . P ill- Otock both hunianity and republicanism, and defy t h e . elnitia i n then 'testified.. We. commend this bit Constitution and dab l: as. Of testimony to our gallant friend, - ColUnii,- adelphia Americans to repudiate .tlie Lin 'on 1 fi , • id these .same representatives, after the . truth . ... :• '' .done Stockton, as it piece of genuine 112 leaf State ticket, but the attempt was entirely un.• -was elicited in Ipite of their efforts, still refusing to ,tobacco, .for him -to chew—verbatim ' ' 1 at. ter relieve the pro ' le float a code of laws imposed arson , successful, as the meeting refused to hear Wan. , • -. d 'll f .'• * -toadmit lows': . theta by a fore• n army, mi sla r re ustab -- - . but passed resolutions ethlOrsing the Ut ion them into the noon, only for reasons Wiiielt, , in the,, " Col. Fremont, tile. defendant:ira ain airrataitat 'cases of nine e ist'ing'StateS; had been I.l2clared ••un-j the cenimencenient of hosdlities between the - nittl ticket. The Fillitnireites:of:Philadel-phia F ay tenable rind or no accinint...•- !. . • . ,; fixates and the R e publie of l llexieo •he -there . aik-.1 . . ..i • . . that on the defeitt of the shain Fenno rash in I find them ist-egat;tding a-Free.Coristitozion atop-:: and commanded'a battalion Of ealifo' mica .Volur,!teer;, ~ ted in a legal,•onstitiltioNal and ealle...'aCtil , fliA:lllall- - • of abent four hundred . .in • •- 4 ' , 4;-' - this - State in Detober, Buchanan will be ‘iitlt- - , , • . consisting .en ~lirs „er..c.s ••• .ner, (and M ile i _n e iii,,ll can don to hart! refiectO : were rely valuable ;he bore a Conapitiiihnd part is dr•twn and the Fillmore Men and . Bitch nate the will of the eorrle,) and ~.4-..tpportinga law td.pro- i the cono l uest of California,d • *' l -. o , , an „to my optynr , u, it liieil 1 suhstin te, which it is to show would Invite , t ,, ti •r "t 1 11 tol - called i' ' ' „. _ . easy . _,. ~ e fn... or- he • then will unite' on Fillmore for Pre.sident ;tint ' ' he Con7ueror of Cwi f 'or - , perpetuated in the Sate Government, t h e i lila' than any other roan:' . Breckenridge for Bice President; Therefore which bad bv - N'ee.tdready seized upon-the Govern- .-.- • ..-.. .• - - . ft ' • . ) _.,.. .. 1 . It...is well knoWrOandAnderstood - that, Set, they think it is best.to defeat the Buchativers tn""t ad' the T •ritor . y. .. • • ' I find then). eft To make appropriations for ' atOr Iligle,r of Pennsykranhi has recentlf , i;xj - - . in October, and hold on to F i lhnor,. - . t -e armr;tratt, ss that army is to be used to et:three: I I en extensive Oroultition to low and grqelisi - code of taws v °tinier, on their lice, of th e -Constitu- ', slanders al,uut the fbrieve,hnd other lies..i!, r.oint don, enacted Iy a I ? e,gislaterp ill7tiO r tti cl76l r the /1 " -s ' ries furnished to his troopseinCalifornia, 1..,- ~,,i. of the United States,. and iniposed by foreign fere,e • • Col. Fremont • - Ind 1- b l'r d '.l. t • .1' , , it s C IC. C L .t: :IL 0 .upon,conquetad and sulangated American citizens. . . ... . 'I II- / find them, in a word, steadily tiding by All their dirty .work he: has been „proinpti'Al h' N.,..„ i , 1. Congressional "ctiCni to make a ,Sl a ve -State iii no: th; Riiehanc.n. hintself. * NoWT.see what Mr... Di. ern latitudes,. td that, toe, itgainlst the will of its in- el...titan in hiS•clepositif.iii swore to• ;1; babiiieds.• • -. , • .- i. e ./ - dow ther't such sunpliix . :v.'? itec l oirr'r •-I find that , e - Menilcs:. , i,,who more than . any other ~ -.-• - .• • i ,-. :-• ~ ,- _, t ~.: fll forces euuh-•r the Cdilltiliandot th&d : jrnakett't, ifei tout TIO approprzaleole had befx- made bee CoMireso to steed out nod Ist the enslavement of his'whita tenet-- -,, '-, -N,• citizens is • used •' i' t.' bv the Democratic _ re 1154 a ret.on Ina tau • . . pay for these supplies. Contrass emil!ineeltliretto aI f 1 party elf his di4triet.. - . • , , nuipatedthat;Col. Fremont weurd. raise a qifoxit ::. I •find in the convass now going on that the, allele,. .. ~ .. . _. to,l tone ortheir T arty press is in the ,same ohection. _ . .... - _.., -battmight by Ins own personaVeletioils, and withort r , viouS instalctious " .' - '• ' • ' - i f , When the firs Moiling intelligence•of the outrages e ~. . - ..,: . •-• ~ - , • . i •. , ._ t lin Kansas rea hed the States, their editorsid•enotince.d .IftirthertOre ; • - such ,wash his Confulence in. 1 ! I.therfoul wron - in terms of fitting indignation. .It I Cu!. FiTrOrit; and so-tho - rougli was hii I was but a sp -medic effort, however ; and hi deference. _knowledge'Or the; tranSactiOns inY . Chlihnia, ito the :oath nil the prevailing sentiment of the par. . . .-- -.',.. c..--• •. „ 4.. i - -_ ... , i luntil Mal. he would-nave pist - d4hese.4l,r4ts., - pinis ,, if ty,, they have dropped , off, one after 1 tie •ether, .. , .. : now so far as I have been able to'aseertaiii, there is had he had :1n fiinds; ttiSlWithstandipg the;. 4 I not a Denim tic paper which dares boldly to justify might more properly hake . been . dram upon ~,„ .• • ~ i . a5 ,0..1 and defend the Free-State party, and denetince their :the Secretary :of • Warl . . Wise- ake'ins.en ; inVaders. It place of eneoUragement arid sympathy • .... ~ a . .. .. -tar, I .for their out aged fellow citizens f. ern; the ..Ntlitli , •• : - INorimt., . , . r 1 "1 h ails mole Id and. idthese Itiltr - fue e 1 there is little else . than j.!ere.iind ridicale for their pp- should ... _ -.p Pil . . ~ . i . I pressed and sufftning conditioni—misrepresentation , nqi gerat knoteledge - of the transact:ons tn.Calkter- PVe , of their mod es and conduct, and a pretended iri c ied. , Ilia, hail 'Congress appropriated any enoney„ . _o2. 1 411 n edit at my disposal,' hick could be a pectic Trot I ulity of the a atements and appeals which they send,,,,---e.. 1 r r at- their brethre I of' the States . . • - t Owes payment, though it trod& hare ban , more coo l' • I find , their speakers exhibiting the sante spirit— I reel to hare drawn tit* leil4 art the Secretary of ire , .. . . _. It-•isome of then ignoring the question entirely ; others I ,-ill, tlierefdre which : fits eleaionecrinz' i of them treatiing it.witi perversions, misrepresenta-.1 pur p oses I ' 'he .; chargedwrong - on the ids-, en, as e• I • • Dur 1 bons and falt.issues ; and others taking Openly the •-. L . .r.,•,•• -.-• it 1 side bribe o pressers; but . no one of them advocat. Part of , Col. rmtionti *as sanctiOe4. i . .... , i ing the cata , c of Kansas, or favoring her admission I bins •t . '•• : the inicti , M r . Bitchatian ~... us 1 ~: i s, in• ' adder the Frhe-State Constitution adopted by her peo- 1 rums ordetineS of Prey I idenc,e; and. with the plc: • • 1 - --- ''. -f .' .'' • - -ii,i ..L 1 - . exehasno enterpnsci t . t• we are enab l ed In the pu tic demonstrations. and processionsf 9- / to'blister Wifh - his riW . It Drevions words, the the party, I arc banners and deyices containing brii- 1 .-• -. . • .-,) •s• . . .•.,• tat insults, it ponse to the appeals of, that peoPle I of the sl.intlerr Read the derk tongue. - , . 1 for pniteetio against unparalleled wtongS,cideulated, - I tion .of - Mr.. R uclunt ati. - , Read . , and weigh the .as tio doubt they -must be intended, to pi epare the 1 - words of the retired old gentleman an 4 states, masses for continued refusal ofjustice and Pr otee- 1 ,• man, Wlitit passing' bialys in. pondering, on don, and a• elentlesS persistence in outrage and op-1 • .h •la 1 ' d•li . ' i d -- h 1 - ' - f - i -^ht - op-' the e past enn man t eso emn u un. • .pressiots. - rece n t slat I find rd! t fore hint, and thenierDember - his . , . ~. Democracy • tiers prom - by ambit on for the - Pres , den• sas;Nebraski .. . c 3, - . ---.2F. Y. - Tiibnife.. 1 - -' into t.t RThe Sh:Foeracy haA found one relation to which My. linehanan to be s . better Southern ni l an than Mr. •In I . more. ft is n'tnrnied that: Mr. I)iln opposed . to the steg•Msftion ot* Cub. I .Eillinore•ts oppostA to .public robberyi ft I the ptirpose of supply itig our nigger-wo ing Southern aristocratic dern . (ierat•y- wit million more sla've, he eiM ne6;reigl _supplant Mr. Buchanan in ,the , nfreetit the South. This matter should be en uir before Buchanan . Ss 'd'ropped •A'n Fi more putin his place. with At'eckerrid( BEE = . . . .Tuz SCRANTON . REPUBLICAN.—Mr, rpv Smith, who has been for sever; I. years elated with u s in the publieatiot of this pa has just issued the first utinthsr f a tu, publican paperat Scranton, with- the . It title. It islinent and : handsome shecit f , up with the taste-that Might have been Ape, ed from friend Smith's . .well•known tr l ical skill ; and, if the succeeding nun4)ers :vat the . .first in point• of editoriol ttiet,. , lkill be Tuund a valuable atiiliary in thdgreat cause . it advocatei=. We commend theAtew.. enterprise to the tavot• Of : the frtends cif free, dem in that vicinity. • , : • 1 ' . • Ml — The Sham Demmer/Icy . are b lasting shat; Jrtmes. 8.. cini, a sOn of . llenr;, Clay, supptirts Buchanan. Thoinas Oari.Clity, the oldest sob of the kre.at s!tatesman, stivorts Fillmore, and in an address to the Atn ..ricatts la tely issued, -he snys, " i lfy lather thonyht Brchanan weak and eorrupl,wanting, d i g Gen en::: Jackson. had it, in moral firritntlss.".— A ga:n' he rays, ".l cannot' conceive .11(4 even . any, Democrat of the old line, I pleati Jacli,. son Democrat, could gie ,- him hiS suppcv..; , r - Who could believe, then, that. any old-line :Whig, and . friend . of - my fitther, could' be - - I fouttd enlisted in his cause ?" ' I DemoCiacy in Susquehanna. County in 1847 .. The Democratic'. County Conventicri . held . in pßrtuanee of a call of the County C mun it !tee ot'Whe 18th of January_lB47, • wa_ . tirga n `.. ized hy appointment of the following' Amt 3. and passed the following' resolution :--- 9flicers.Naac Reelihow Eml., Pr sident, Col: M. C. Tyler; Thomas 'Johnson, C.. -M. Gere and John Smiley lEscfri., Victel'resi deata Daniel 'Brewstcr,! and G. A. Grt Secrete - trig& . - . . '. ; - ~ - • 'Resolution—(after pliproving•the 'll can war.)... i - . . . .. . , . -4 ' Resdned, That whatet , or terrifi t y r be conquered from - *sip, and.roinlidij , nexed to the United State2o;W Hotta' luteti, hy iha ficacloF the.Shth.." Ia " The North BrOiiih Demo 'rut taken to'praying for the itie.steuctiO of Re publican speakers while eloquence is con sidered dangerous to the ainse of "tu c k ori3 Breek." It closes an article on Rev. deo; ,14tidou, founded upon !the filse iltptol l we copied last week(rpm ! theciininstilhiunithi, `with the - row:4ll \ lg ejacUlation Mx!, span) him but a Hitler : 3. r i g." 9 .t/ 11111, 0/e ittagieiani IV istsJeilfitii,ioetigk', - (" 4lo4 : utiri tetiltinstaiiits in Moptr* lMt.weell.'Tiley were 401.:aktia - A.aia :404 lite4 l o4fir] , _ . . . A: :4: . • :ti I . GOVERN° :11,EgitratutiOn ift - iiiiiiihm whem --j piiity • qtries . are, ,liso Pithily • I, oN THE 404.14crittiq. XI.7.CTION Or PRESID . T ANIITIIIII,i d'a". ....n., : be , . cpre lil 0 ' . sel , edge. Like all other men in Ab e . ~ 1 sante , st tun lien, hr. mustobey the 'party. sentimetif on 'I ' •-; ' 101;0114.1s' electedi - ,illat • there are Dtmocrits: in . - - • , , a Nr, i nal. Es. _ , • Pennsylvania who - nre lull of inllignation against the I: - . -. • ' Nair-ions, City ,September 18,•4 . 5ta1 . : . COl : idlitt o fd's South in-'--.rgard, to Kansas I. am w e n your eilitorleh ittiments upon it of the 16th hist:, I . z, ih"" e E diipra . cill4 ..E.cnin g Pool : ~. - ...-. .••' • - . . i awartiatta r t*t they-would . use their influence to r . ' 4 - mtrutlltts it-' Tlte letter of your coriespcindent 11., i .dreseth9r iy_tntgs I am well tativited ;,-.but_ they t it atn44 tott"felsirkreportion- .to the whole party of.he l', - ii oo „ seem in common .o irtesy. to detnanti i.reply. Tour.; to puatturi ,- ., la Administration in a-war with his p a i l , : correspondene A aea t i a o t err in saving that I divicE,.' thel - TheylhaVi as yet been unable to make their - opinio ta 21.1Ci.e9s of the Republican party and the eleetinn of I appear and be felt in the party, and, of course; qt. - their candidate;attthat I ant ready to contribute I lant•dia so hereafter... I honor their good intention s , t any honorable effor o bring it about. This not but I cannot believe in their potier. I the result of any prl ference as to limb ; but in spite of I 'repeat that I have, been forced, to these cocelu. it. With Col. Fret tont I-am unacquainted. I har e sloqinfter no slight Struggle with my feelit ! g e a r A it '• never,leen. him, in r bad any . Communication with clittations. Should Mr. . Buchanan be elected, sid itint;direet or italit et, verbal:or written. On the ~ his admir.istration be different * from what my judg other hand, my fee ins of friendship and admiration 1 nient compels me to believe, I shall give it tar tGr . for Mr... Buchanan, a a man , are o f no ordinary char- I dial approhetion, and my feeble though willing ~ i..; acter.and are stren hened by years of friendly intinia- 1 - port.. As I btdieye tiOlv, I must . regard the-De,;. .cv and reel vocal at .4 ofkintiness,unin,terrupted to this '' crane Paity as fu ll y committed to Southern Sectio - : time by a single in''' , tderiumding Or unpleasant Pel-I,' 4 ".o4 l ;t° ,l oird,*l4lo,i'fot,sonte titinkTprtatiltlitts lie .•,, ing ; and 1 would arty time tNic:IA him .priiniptly f rapidly teudiss-, anal quit it, we ll asitutrd iltaCitl nd indignantly a .', init. pert.enal attacks 14)11W:rep-I dt#, -I ,s ll nYtoantrrildentinthritt'llififtindrthis-esii gj yt . ' t ) Ela CM rfd el-b,l to go ii..... _,_ _ people ; and that the inhabitants of the Territory have no rigl' t to pass Territorial laws to forbid* it or e f exclude. it. Democratic Representatives'. from, Penn sylvania n, in the Senate• and the House, hold and proclaim these opinions; while other RePresentaticeS (+ern - Pencsr I cturia, with Democratic leaders froth tidi er States; defier° thenlirelves publicly • to. be- ;non committal upon this heresy t - the inevitable tendency of which, it ''s easy,te show, will be to prevent almost entirely. the 'formation of any more Free. States. . - Having o "ginated a movement myself, to aid dur people by s ndin e ,e. them men and money, and haring prosecuted t with the strictest avoidance of piny character a irl studied neutrality as to the political cancass,and having , cal:neatly - asked the akiperation of Alen of II parties,l have failed tit eillist•in it, to my knowle ge, a single Democrat.. In the Conceit . • Lions of :*CI rebind and Buffalo, called 'without din: Unction of , party, in furtherance of this . enterprise, there was id Democrat. present but Myself. • This cannot bac been from •any want of generosity or of 'Means, bat only in - defertnee to the , - preCailing tone, and sentim nt of the party which is enlisted upon the side , . f the question. . And-not only Pave. they: ahstaiped . rout aiding the movement, bat in their presse - Pan ,by their private influence thefliaCe en deavored o cripple and -retard it - by sneerii* at it,' iw-, 1 warning - th cdintaunity against it as treasonable, and * declaring i t the money would be:.m.isaPplied, thus I endeavorin t,o 'prevent . contributions . even from ixi- ftiendi oft e measure. ' , , -- r =•: ' •'- - . - • I Might -- on with this catalogue and - enumerae O l o ther Indic 'orts,.if necessary; proving :that, ilie r t . , tuy veiling tone of theparty is:hostile t 9 Kansasi but I , n ' ni consider it onli'ilccessary to, add ' that - what - I.liace - c- said relate but to the North. - Theßouth,-where - the ol- great ma of the patty is to be found; makes no ' pretension as a whole, to the advocacy of anything . but pure order•Birtßanism.. , . . - - ------- -- What,tmit have 1 11 he Free -s.tateinen of Kansas to, expect fro - a Democratic . Atiministration,eceti if presided 4) er by• Ar. Buchanan ? •if he could be left: i to set um •Ilistami impubres, unaffected by eXternal influences; Snit free from all pledges and obligations;: , eipreas an Implied, the case would be verf - Oiler?. ,out.. Ent unfortunately, this is nOtso. - Hitt eleetion *Mild itg dully be coasidered•ddecision against uti, • ivbaieier , ay. be his . own. private .feelitigkr , :„Bis ofil- -- Citattt IV, bingtoo, iniftillivlev... 2 4 lll 4se , • "POI would i il limts** ril ~to It in.r4P ,fltent. 0 0,fill01 el iltb._oiir one , mien. At infovinatiou would come through c-dis tOßetria- iiiii; :and lastly,- be-kauld‘not aid as With . - vat having - licit made np - bla utinCtn be ahandoned and warred, Upon_ kg : itinnwn . peFty, .",_ Ihe*lqt4 would. •, dans hiiti - rwiilt *lO4 1110. fol &WINN' end turn npon .l4nt with 'be.4liteieitel(64ll4, - givid at lea 4 it'faitioe tit thilini liein:Henioeiaay' Would' tbiktirlheir tiaani. pie, ,‘ • He • ould thus be left yithoittAtfatty..iatimp 4- ::Pltlitia', Idatietelnidout.lthlf 4l, bd.: 090. =o l . l ft - flint - . mir 1 1 4 4 X-... #..fxrs-Orde RePlOtlitAik ...Wi CAnfi4o 11:0 - Stiti . AkitlitlifeCE eiret hinv - ikAttrAdir 4 . -•• •,,, , - ' ....::, ti , ::.`,. , !.t ., •,,-, :' ,- -; 1 t.:' '''' 7 ... - ,, t ' IMI EOM e Dernoerats South; and a rairtiotrof :the f. the Korth, boldly repudiating the Kan :bill, by insisting that Slavery haa a right o Territories, spite of Congress or the fice of ryiy personal feeling: • - The-Hougtiof,Aaroz H0n..W...1.1. WuttE, after addressing tilt Morristown Biteluttilen , Club, declined the cballeng,e of 'ICY. SAM'FL AARON tO a dirs. cussion, giing tk. following as his realon: ' "A proper respect for my character as a Deno , .cra4 entirely forbidi a discussion with a _so tiled minister of the gospel, who had desecrated the pi 'pit, and soiled the - sacred roles'of his office, he dry ging them in the slimy Pool of party lolitirg, toi , proved himself a traitor to' his God, his , untry, ,ltd the Constitution," . 1 if the accused. perpetrated. all , 'lin . ) abou - *irked, thing 4., he certainly is a datigeroiA ' chatacter. But we may tierlizip . ? "gua within an inch of the mark; ‘ilien .iye exprfss our"baief that an avAwed °pi - as:llion to Sti: - very, Wa s the blackest crime. of i n-hieli the ltev. Mr. AARON Was guitfg. - Of[ thisßev. Mr. ‘'i ARON ivP know within.; but we iee menther to have 'read hi Bible history of a Celcbratccl ,mnn--:a Rev liqr..,Astt-4, who is addition to hi :4 peColiar . duties,. Itt'Minister or lirieif, so' far, "drat:lM hie 'eleeri . rube' i n the - sliiliy pool' - of Politics,"''' as ii to 'boldly 'preach ,ion-e - stelis,iitit 0 Sitlyt.i - y - t Whim his `countrymen very fur •irett pieaebed: . Abetititfefista:. this waii mit ,ail: " With' thtf•gin-diiin and'eo- I . oiietation eit ihn God; ef Lihdityi. :ha- con. tot-need a'cruitaidesittiailist' shtvery, lentil the Sittre.driverst ef: all Egypt trembled _hcf..re - hini. '-itie4yer.ver;! We read - tho-thii..Hr. Di vine; in company with his itr6ther' Maio, an illakritias layititin;-Of .great4tibility, roe. vered -with these free;s,eal doctrines, ma - fina l ' ly..suetended in - esiottliAhing, A free State in 1 Canaan. Tbu , .. w., see : .theit :Ws. ,Republor l'arty;•itt tho ant.iquity:,(o4i existence, puti Free. MtPokory_ into tbut r Oade... , Iti't - tritt4.-ki;7 , : *- :elitr e Y , .10) 01 ". 1.1 certain l y n e t -ds • Pt i - rifOng4 and ir. - . gh, how $lOl i tb' 1. work-lie done,l , NM :the...tali-my poolrril• [ rift': it' 4:3l l ----WP 14'ie-NAofe:d hag and '-' l ' 1 1) . , \V_,11 6 , , Oen, iiil4 . l44"thi Work 'of rear ' il'gl 'llA-41*ht'.0r,4 _iii. honest 'arAl title metil 'lf .POlitic'et, fur t —tei*bittil'skt` foul, that a , decent vicar` tiniiiiit-st4i&''n_Oi:.Vf4lieut did 1 grit:43;:-:ilten:taiAi illOcctiif--`iipr'iativo -LA 'lkit all 'goal nSiii'oo.'•fianistern-'4iistr to:;.th') ' 1 . 4401e egiii 10,444iatilit41"VOIlhrt --?1 ; 4E1) 4; ME 13 IS El Kil ~ H ~