. . . ... . . - . .. . . . . . .. • .„.. . . . . .. . . .... . •, . . .- . 1 --, - .1 ---.-----. 7 —...---i-16 - -- '4•- . •.., ~- , .' - . •_, • - .. .. ~ . . . • • :'`• ;.. .: ' -': ~• _.:.•‘.•‘ -- ' :- .:::. . . ... .- . . . • . . . -..-.. ... __ . . .• . . . . . . ~ . ~ . . ~ ......,, " •, . ~ •. . . . . .. , . ~. . ..'. • „ • , . .. -....-., _ . ~,. ... , _ . .. _ , I ,-. • ,- :. . . .-. . . . .. . . ~I .• _ • . ~ . .....:..:,:„.... „ _,,_ • .., , ..• • ••• .... .•• ,• _ !.... . „.. •r. ~ 1 1 , • . . .. • ~!. ..• _. ! ~ ._ ... li•••_. • . •• . , , . . 1... ;__________________ • •• . . . . • .. . . ..,.._ i• ..,, • . • • • • . ..., • _ .... • , NI . . 1- . . • . . . .. . - •• '-::• - 1 1 t del .. . . . 4. •. , 44- • - ' r . • - • ''. - 'Ff2 1E NDO HamD. - RII6NI I T . ACKCIAgU .- @LaWE'I2 . 17 ... amp:: 1;;ZIO1Ala . IL., • - . . . --- ._ . . '' : • --= : CI , AR . E S F. REAL) & H. IffIII Voet's r .Arbr the Repabliesis: • ' IrRESIONT CHORUS. --r " A t ia—,The Foot Trarelier. A hair, all hill the le's choi,ee, Freinont! Tremont Fremont! The hiirden of each triet woke, eFrmont!. Freinont Fremont ! Let etery mountain every' glen • Ile - echo with the cry, r Free Men, :Fremont, and Liberty.? elfours;llurrati; e every woke .with load acclaim - Fremont! Fremont! Fremont! Memts again - our hero's name, Fremont 1, Freroont I Fremont I people's . 'Tge heart of hearts" shall - be irpheived as tempests hea\ - -e the sea, Make way for Liberty." • Cuoaes—Hurrah &c. A noble cause, a noble man, ' • • •IFrenront ! Fremont ! Fremont ! Shall!, well the ranks and lead the van, . ;Frinnont Fremont! Fremont! Free 'Speech in him shall find a friend, The lights of man be win defend, The doughface host shall see. cinoers.:—Hurrah, &c. • The holler thieves shall istand in awe, • Fremont! Fremont! Fremont! . • And own what might there is in law- Fremont! Fremont!. •Fremont! 'And justice, eldest born - of Heaven, To suffering Kansas Shall be. given, • Rer rieople shall be free. ' • r. 'Clionrs,llurralr, Lc. • • - Theri fling the banner to the breeze, • ; Fremont! Fremont! Fremont! The kchcrcomesfron rocks and trees, ' Fremont! Freinont! wont ! , - And ; ' g.erri. again . • . " f4e Soil,Free . Bpeech,Free Press,Freellert, -1 Frei:mat,. and Liberiy." • ' Cnostrs--lluirali Lc. • Lisa; #ug: 1858. , . J. -T. ligi§eelf*Notis. . . . :: -Ii,mIAGIOUS .g PRESS FOR FREEPORL : ' , It was irecently Atatpd, in a daily print *Of. thi city, that .an 'unprecedented movement taker place in • the. religious press of ti:; . . N rih, in. opposition .to the . agressirins of the' SI Ve Piiwer in the W. estern Territoilies,6l , 1 ~ •...,.. our c"ountry, and indirect and open clutropioni: ship of the pause of Freedom. A pro-slai-e.: - ryl reli,iOts, newspaper- in our vicinity. titia : : ble to brook such a truth as this, r boldly de nt 4 the!! statement, and intimated that - only 4 p imaroals, of the west artny of-such pub -ii atiorts!* the Free North—the Con g Te:qa -ti : istlOf Boston ; and The In dept. itile,4 4, itu r . - ht le ',Self--had given or wotil.l give any .1 hi t of . prefereitee for tither of the . pai:iies or pr i nciples that enter into VA pending presi dential +'„iittestion. Our eVitemporarv, - in making this observation, must have shut iti'S . 4es against the hundreds of eXchange news papers lying on its office table, and opened them only* on its peculiar hobby of cotton: It relieft -mainly ,on these exchanges for 4har triaterialSof its. Own eoltimns, and we offer'it) it s ' the, suggestion that.after its scissors shill •, - .havi cut out from the neat week's mall the , J usual quantum to be , quoted, it carefully pe r Use the fragments that remain, with the view of testing the truth of its recent statements. i It takes a good deal of spirit, but not much space, in a plain-speaking newspaper to give al "shriek fur Freedom ;" and if our neigh bor, in , the researches which we propose to it, will ;not overlook any half-columns or quar ter-columns, among the longer - and numerous Moral and religious disquisitions with.which our contemporaries-abound, it cannot fail to" And, as we find, - stubborn articles on such familiar topic as the following, the captions 4 which we transcribe : ." Fre,h Outrages on le Border," " Freedom . assassinated in the ,enate Chamber," /' A Free City sacked . and durned - lay Border Ruffians," " A_ Free Press emolished and thrown into the River," Mischiefframed into a Law," Unjust Judges and Chief Rulers," " .A._ Traitorous Presi - dent," "The United States troops' as agetits of Tyranny,".. "the Great Struggle," " the moral Aspect of the Presidential Question," Th&aDuties of . Christian Citizens to their Country in the present crisis." These; and many others like them, are the titles of articles in religious newapapers. The truth is, the religious press of the NOrth has spoken, Bnd ' ipoken nobly, and if not so repeatedly tis the secular journals which belie the advantage of A more frequent publication, it'has at least ith more unanimity. ' . • - ; 3n We 'give below the names of such of our . temporaries as have net It stated to de clare themselves opposed to e present ef 'bits tor the extension of slavery, together with such extracts, showing their views, as he latest mails have brought to our table, and pa we,have spacalci print. We need only remark ; to avoid misapprehension, that it is not file wont of religious journals , to applaud or denounc* the names of party candidates, end that many papers which have already pven,land will continue to give, their full ribute of influeitce to the Republican party Withhold tie name of Fremont, but use in its ' 4 what is practically its syncinyru—FßEE -4, t.;l t ( t. I 1 Thi• Neav-York Observer ventured to say that The Evangelist would not open its mouth to speak. But the Observer does not 'mow its neighbors. The Evangelist has: already spoken, and with boldness and eloquence : " This issue has been slowly shaping itself nearly quatter of a century, gradually elim inating other subordin4o-questions, until at la 4 it wenpies the wh6le field of vision and action. Such an issue has been all along in evitable. The co-existence of two such an tagonist principles as freedom and slavery, each sowing to give form, and Ape, and direction to our national piogress Villa soon er or kiter bring on a life and death conflict. The whole genius and drift. of the two forces is different and can by no compromise be united. ..The idea of a liepublic including islavery as one of its perpetual and 'essential eleriients, and that of one based .upon- univer sal political equality are totally different, and involve.,respectively, pririciple., traits, tenden cies rind. aspiMtions, as irreconcilable us 'fire and lee. , They must Collide with each other soosien or tater ; an eiterminating war must arise and Continue till one or the other is de afroyed. EAZIER • EDITORS. " But s never till -this PRSENT ELEC TION has that issue been nakedly presented. We do not, wonder that timid men, who dread a conflict, or who distrust the strength of the national tie which unites us, shoUld Aar 'and turn pale. Nor do we wonder at tha shifts and turns that are resorted to, to.post pone a little longer the mortal struggle, which is to put our principles to so terrible a test, to settle the question' whether - :',freedom or slavery to be the ccintrolling. spirit and formative power of our natiojial life. It is a serious, eventful, sealing, iclecisivelissue,--due • dist has•been coming on 'ever sinte the forrn •stion of the Government—one that touches 'the vitals of our political existence--one that, having come up, can never be turned aside until it is sealed." , - Western Methodist irr'Otestant,tpringfieldi Ohio. . - - = , Wester it Christian, (.110thodWt) Cincinnatit . - "Is this the boon! 101 which Our•fixthers bled.l • Printing pre*iesthat have advocated' liberty have -been ,destroyed,. Alpert .of the materials thiOwn jab the rivet'", and a part made into atilets. toAilliFreetrten! There is no ete*e for extending_Slever,y' into Xan sits. 'Mncz . may talk of .I.lavery being forced tiptm us by the ` titoth , Cr4ibuntry,' but the mother country 'certainryl4o„lOi4ureed slave- Ty on Kati-;t, ; .anctike . ,:,e4f4jorte it there by a -of.-.-.et ; otkte'fis''Oftliis country we look "upon•l7s ,)ne . :9oifinsGod hu nuluity,iehickhaillei.eguals in this or any other Government • ..".Preai'her and MitectPre . sbyterian, Pitts bUrg, • . • Above ail. l the 'superhuman energies no‘W •. put; tO' . olake s involUntari . human slave 'ry a peilnituent and universal ,institution of - our ClOventivient,till conspire to warn us that we are . rapicil approaching' a :crisis whirl . ' has. no .parallel' since the adoption of :our Federal COnstittition. • -Journal and Messenger, (Baptist) Cincin nati . :1 " How .felt le must 'be that cause that dreads a'snmil book,- lying quiet on the shelf `=a book that slaws cannot read, 'end w•hitcs will not r • Northern lndependenti (Methodist) Au• burn, N. Y : . • . ; ' • shame sake; let; usistop this auspi cious: manner .of talking-Tlet us call slavery not, delicate but ABOMINABLE: " Pittsburg Christian Advocate, (Methodist,) Par, • , :-1 • • • The Christian l'resi,:(Aincrican : Reform Tract Society's Record.) " It is .. .the DUTY OF E.ERY CHRISTIAN to vote aconst debasing the Goveratnent of the Unit -4... States, ordained for freedom, INTO AN IN STAUMENT OF OPPRESSION-4ag4inst devoting tlyk vast .Territories of the United States, rich resources of. natOeLand the hopes of eiVilizatien, TO THE ELIO CCRSH OF SLAVE ay. No man *lean negitct this momentous duty ANDSFSCAVE PERS6NAI. RESPONSIBILI - TO GOD,'' , Christian HeraldanOxssenger, (Baptist), New York and Irvington, Ni J. • •• • • Sabliaih Ilecorder, (Seventh Day Baptist) New_ York City: the • • " Conservatism is the bane of society. ,It permits war,intemperehte, slavery anda.host of evils, dnrebuked, tc: Convert hum ‘ an socie ty into a _moral desert . . It spreads itself over the Christian church lile 4 pall of.death. " Watchman 'and •Reflector, (Baptist) Bus • ton: -• . • I• • .r .• • " And we . ask, in al). sadness, if "this is the boasted -freedom of thSAinerican Republic in .the nineteenth zenturi , , if these. are the ',pen ed. fruits of; Anieric4n ;eiVilization? Are these the great princtpleS ju.stice . and liber ty for which Our fathers toiled and died ? It may be well for conservative men, / like Dr Adams and Mr. ChOste, Who tremble . at the very name of a :llipablican party pledg ed to the great interesits.pf utterly, as an cznen enquireofdissolutiun, to if the Union is worth preserving,- winkre-the exds ;Fos. wnicd i tr WAS ESTAB 4 LISLIED ARE HENOUNEED, and Wis,,tmule an instrument -for iiropagting : . s4veri4 over the blar.k: race, and .suppressing enditiidual freedom in the. white;." • Presbyterian of the West, Cincinnati: -- " The issue, the ConteSt,r, is .upon I.lkelcoun try,:even at our . dooti : and thisissiie is, Shall slaveri be ' , nationalized 'kinder threfitars and stripes . of American t Freedom; or e`enfined. as a local institiitiOn its ;own limits ? This is the question. E:Vety 'Christian is bound to speak and . . act in this ' ;natter every zett * . atid patriot is boinid to' cast his vete against the iniquity. Chri s tianity, liberty, conscience,. and theßibledemand it.• Unless the country arise 1.0 redress by-amoral force file unparalleled wrongs it has erldured,*God will wipe out the cause of these wrongs,„Soon erTor later;" . in his iretributiVe judgment, with the besom - .of destiUction• ,and the', blood . of fu rious battle.- I .' s pledged to do,it. Shall the throne Of havejellowship With THEE, which trameth mischief jay a - law r . —Ps: 94 - 20. \V on • onto them that vise iniquity becadse it is ill the power s of their handl-7-"lic. 2'; . 6 lt i stime for TREE, Lord to w'otk: Or they have made void thy law. " —Ps. 1 • 19 126. • Free Presbyteroa; YellOw Springs, Ohio ": d • • "Revolutions iinever go. back, and if the slave power is • Oct end 4etested on its own granitic as it will . be by ilhe election of Fre-• moat, 'other triumphs of freetici r m must, inev itably .foll Ow. if the slave. power now tri umps iti the ; cl4,tion of Bdchanan, either the entire continent `gill bacoVered with slavery,. _OO blood eyed to . .the h;,= bridles '. will flow to . Wash out its stain ;.• • • Westminster ' ate Preabyte rian,) New . -WilMington, Pa. Maine Evaniettet,;tContregational). Port land, Me 4 • "Maine has Spoken and'repoken most loud.' ly for freedorn; and her ,'voiee will sound ()vex the land like a trumpet. We rejoice at the result with no narrow partisan spirit, and we wouldlaseribe ilk praise to Him to whom much pfrayer has been offered, and who bath givetrus the victery." ThetrGenesie 2,vange/isi (Presbyterian) Roeheiter, y. illorthttester* Christian - Adithcate l {Meth odist),Phicago:), Rett 4 giona l erd&l (C4ngregational) Hart ford, Gonn. American Ba ptist,N4wLY:irk. Michigan CkJstion :ern/4, (Baptist,) De troit - A.To.N7ililpElTl:i:p 1 f "And yet it is dernanded,, the Pour' , AND THE RELIOId think at these enormities. - flounce the sins of the Old Ph outrages that were enacted I years ago, but those of the ii somehow eonneeteCwith Po not toe touched." Congregational,q6urnal, • : " Come, old. Harvard, an ye younger masters, turn. a your text books and your 11 porgate from them every set vors that unfortunate assumi laration of our Independenet i are created free and 'Baum. "Shade of Jeffersen! w this? What a calamity to: thou didst teach and cause, tc damental principle' in our sy faith, that every man has an to " life, 'liberty, and .the p, Truly this is an age Christian Secretary, (Ba, Connecticut.: "But the Free-State men not only their natural env ruffians to contend with, bu States Government. They hemmed its by.MiSsottri and —their supplies 'cut off and threatened with annihilatie4 his mercy. protect' them f the spoiler ! " :Oberlin Evangelist, Obe :" By all that is fe'arful in —by all that is sacred in f —we urge our tellow-citize election Of the men whose the -bre.* the freeman's -4 FREE - TRESS, FREE ' SPE: FREE MEN, FREMONT -AND Morning Star,(Free i; N. IL: "Such. is the sentiment . . act, and the. CINCINNATI . Pi. an infidel doctrine. I They against, God and man.," Christian E7 l a, (Baptist) •Lowell, Mass. "We know. not what -demands slavery , .will not set make, or what outrage on Free dom, Justice and Humani y it, will not yet perpetrate!" ' - - Central Christian Adtocate, (Methodist) St.. Lfiuis—a journal 'wh eh 'circulates in a slg,ve State.- In publishi g the latest .news from Kansas, derived ti *rough the Border Ruffian journals,it lamen s that . -- " There. is not a singre free State press iii all the . territory; to tell is own tale. Care/ was early taken that they should lie quiet be neath the waters of the R i anSas - and Missouri - I rivers." i . . PPuritan.llecorder,(Ctingregational,) / oston,. Presbyterian L'onnerst i nd Adeoc le, Pitts,- burg, Pa. The Examiner, (Paptik) Ne),v-Yerk. I . Northern Advocate, (Meth gist,) Auburn New-York. ti The Pacific, (Yresby•--'- tional) San Francisco, 9 California Chris7n. dif l t,) San Francisco. Religious Expoptor, Oregon Territory!. Pacific Christian Aa Salem, Oregon. In addition to this H there are doubtless other names w hich for th e present escape us. In fact, we kn ow from -t e - usual number. of our exchanges, that we ve not mentioned all that deserve a reco d on this honorable catalogue. \Ve hope t at friends minim we • mfly have omitted will , rdon our oversight. ti t , i - .. / We may, say, alse;%,, , kt ,everywherethrei out the North, the cut. MEN are for Fm moat, Wherever welneetkthem, And froui whatever place we tea or-thern, they are ranging themselves on he side of Freedoin: There is at this monien as ,j . t seems to us; no less unanimity - among the great body of ministers of the whole North against the fur ther Extension of Slav y, than there was in NeW-England when a, Outlanx- of three thou-. sand denounced the Nebraska Bill. We have not the slightest dciubt. that if at the election in NOvember the ballets e.v.st by ministers of the gospel should be specially designated, the majority for Fremont r would comprise so many of the whole 'number, AS TO RENDER !ME. VOTE ALMOST UNAN -MOUS. All honor to them ! •;i'' . And in- . the inforinktion, as well as the I gratification, of those , of our readers, who have a special interest in the. clergymen of New-York city, we w i ii i l mention that, 'as we have been quite' relia - informed, Rev. Dr. DeWitt, Prof. Robins n, Dr.. William Ad-. ems,. Dr. Prentiss, and several others still more conservatiie, ineluding. Dr. Joel Park er, have come out on tie right Side. , We know not hoW-nny pulpit:or any press can 'excuse itself befei•O the bar Of conscience, fial. withholding its, influence, whether, it43e great or little, from ilso great and :noble a movement as is . now going an in our country fur constitutional liberty , --for free soil, ,free speech, and every sacned right of free Men ! .Every man, whether in , the; pulpit or .out of it, whether in the church or out of it;wheth- , er holding a pen or geiding the plow, every honest and patriotic citizen, has now a. dlity. to_ perform toward the Republic .such as,his . never before devolved upon him' ; and as the .providence of God haS laid the responsibility of the issue of the present crisis upon; the North, by giving to !the North • more than 'ample power to,avcrt it, each man's dutY is made doubly important and imperative. ,And moreover, as the,press and the pulpit are not only the great safeguards but in a large, meas ure the sources of public opinion, it is sk nianded Of them .by e very interest of free dom, and justice, and humanity, that 04. should exercise every power they possess - to further the - cause which is now simply_ wait ing for their united aid . to. be triumphant.-- .N. Y: Independent -.I .. . '• • , • : - NO CHAN - OZ IN T: deputation of the Na ; tee waited upon Pres; ago, to ascertain if th his policy in relation ing was the close of "As representativ sas COmalittee we whether any cliange ministration is to , be President=--" No, noise,". READ AND PONDER I 1" The New \pentqcraticf Doitrine.. Slavery not to be mfine(l to the Negro Race, but to be nude tl4 ,jinivessal condition of the laboring classei of society. The people'. of'ithe Free States have so long Oyielded to the arrogant demands of the. Slave ligarchy in the South, that,Ae- latter has comet° think it can carry ant measure it sees fit, no matterhow d e grading , " it may to the character of the free white Men: of-the by some, that l'us paws shall They may de risees, and the three thousand ing ;Infante are I es, and 17V181 i tipeord, N. A. : Yale, and all. ut! Bring out raries_, and ex tinient that . fa- Lion of the Dec . that ALL MEN - Not many years ago the Southern slay.e= holders were contented to havetheir . "lutian Chattels" protected in the States where they held -then).. . . - Next, they demanded and §6cprea five Slave States from acquired' territory, Fa., Ark.,llii., and Texas,) while the :Free States have onlyseeured two&-lowa and Cal ifornia. • lat think ye of the nation that Le made a fun stem of political inalienable right Irsuit of happi i)f progress t."-' Next, the Slave pOwer demanded all 'the territories,- .. .and broke down the Missouri Compromise, which secured a part • of thoie . territories-. tolree labor. .Next; they demanded the right to come in to the free . Stiates 'with their slaves whenever they choose, and stay as huig as they please,. and the United States Courts . seem about to them,yield to arid-grant this outrageous de mand. • ptist,) ,Hartfurd, of Kansas have tes the border= also the United are completely Southern troops they themselves . May God !ttH ,om the hand of But the krit,:thOirowning; the • diabolical, assumption is, that Slavery is not to be con-. fined to thUNE . G . BQ RACE,, but Must , be made to inelude.lab s ciring'*lllTE MEN al so. This doctrine, • which is so . trionstnufs and shocking as almost to seem inekAliblecis now openly avowed i'and defended by / ircry th w any of the nespaperS 'arid 'publ' men of the South that support James Buchanan.. The doctrine is Also proclaimed Eby some Northern newspapers of. theled Demo. f cratic party, but not generally w so-r th such bCild neSs as in the South. 'To sh . the exact ex tent and nature of this doct'ine 'of. enslaving WHITE MEN,. the extri ts, from Buchanan paperti, and from the speeches .of Buell:man , men are given: •.' / -.— ' Thußrchmond.E.Sminer, one of-the lead ing Dem - ocritip papers in Virginia,piently , supporting Mr. Buchanan, holds thefolloW ing 'language:in AA •late issue "Until . tly, 1 the defence of Slavery has labored eider great difficulties;, because . ! its apologi ts, (for j they, .itere mere 'apolo gists,) t halfv;al:grounds. ~. Therecinfined the def ec of Slavery to mere negro : Slave ' ry ; t ereby givin6!up the Slavery principle , and / adinittirim otAr forms of Slavery to be wrong. The line of 'defence, however, is noN /Changed. The. South'. now inairitains'that Slavery is right; natural and necessary, : and does not depend" upon difference .of COM PLEXION. Thulaws of the Slave States : justifij the holding:ofiVlllTE MEN in 60n doe." - : - . • - .. . . . _. lin, Ohio: he pending crisis recdoni and . right ns . to ensure the flings= to emphatic sign— ECII, LAME SOIL, ; ' ICTORT !? " Ii Baptist) Dover,' of the Nebraska ATFORM. This is , who su s tain it sin rinn and Congrcga dilimnia. sidvocate, (Methti- (Baptist;) Corvallis, vocate, (Methodist,) I EKANSAS POLICY.-A 'omit Kansas Commit dent Pierce at few.days Piesident has changed to Kansas. The follow- Ile interview :--- . s of the Rational . Kan ,re here today ..to ask n this policy of the ad. expected'?" sirs! There will 1)e Another Bnehanan :pope', the leading one in South Carotina, says :- " Slavery is the natural :ma - normal condi- Pion of the laboring mon,whether WHITE or black. The great 'evil of Northern lnt seci ety is. thatit is burdened with a-sertn - 4 , class of MECHANICS and LABORES, unfit 'for self government, and yet clothed with the at tribntes:and powers of citizens. Master and Slave is a relation in society as necessary as that of parent and. Child ; and. 'the Northern States will vet haVe to introduce it: - Theii theory of free government is a delusion.": There's ."DemOcratic" dUctrine for you, with a venceance ;1" our.theary of free g_nv ernnient a — delusion,"---"laboring men wheth er white or black 'to be .slaves." :natters arc coming to apretty pass with us. The Richmond (Va.) Enquirer, Mr. Bu 'ehanan's confidential .Organ, and considered by the." Democratic" party. as its ablest-pa-- per .. .in the South, speaks as follows 'in a re cent number . . " Repeatedly have. we asked the North 'Has not the experiment of Universal liber ty FAILED? Are not the evils of FREE , 1 SOCIETY INSVFFERABLE? And do not' most thinking men - among' you propose . to sub-14rt and reconstruct it?' 'Still no an swer. This gloomy silence is ;another eon- . elusive proof, added.to many other conclu sive !evidences. we'..have furnished,. that free society / in the long run is an impracticable .forni,of society ; it is everywhere 'starving, demoralized, and insurrectionary. "We repeat, then, that policy and human ity alike forbid the extension of the evils of tree society to new people and coming goner': ations. " Two opposite and conflicting forms of so, ciety cannot t among civilized men co-exist and endure. The one must giyo way and cease to exist. The other become uniter sal. • "If free society be unnatural, immoral, un christian, it must: fall,- and give Way to slave 'society`-a ; social system old as 'the world, universal a man." • • And the`MuacOgee (Ala.) Herald, another valiant Buchanan organ; says "Free societYl we sick of the name.--. What is it but a conglomeration of GREASY MECHANICS :FILTHY OPERATIVES, SMALL FISTED FARMERS, and moon struck THEORISTS.? • All ' the Northern and especially the New England States are; devoid of society and unfitted . for well-bred; gentlemen. .The prevailing class one meets: with with is.tbat of mechanics struggling to be gen teel, and Small farmers who do their own: drudgery ; and *et t who are hardly fit for as sociation with alSouthern gentleman's body, servant. This Is your'free society which the -Northern hordes are endeavoring, to -extend into Kansas." : . . And the South 'aide . Democrat, another prominent Bucbanan paper,in Virginia,whose editor was supported for Clerk-of the Hods§ of Representatives by the present Congreso abuses everything '''ll,EE after this style : "We have got to hating everything *it! the prefix FREE, from_ free* n grow (lOW and up throughthe whole catalogue—=FßEE farms, -FREE labor, FREE society, FREE will, FREE, thinking, TREE .children,- anal FREE schools+--all belonging -.to the same brood of damnable isms i But the Worst of all thesenboniiinitions is - tha modern • syS tem. of FREE SCHOOLS. , .. The New.-F4,- laud systern of !free schools hasheen the canSe and prolific source of the infidelities and treat sons that have !turned her . ditiesinto - SedOntis and_Goraorrah'S, and her land into the com'- mo'n nestling-places of hewling ,Bedhunitea. Wr • a borninatelhf system ; because the schools are FREE."' e is The Washington Union . i the national-or pa of the . " Pfmocratic' 4 party, says that, the Y t ., p0T08E4.. , 2 1 . 18 honest hetolo free 11. Kansas " Are a'AirSERAI3LI4 4 , RABBLE - who • "have beehtr.. sb litany ;CATTLE to that country. lhe New York Pay:Book; one of papers in Neat York City that snppo Buchanan, proposes to enithiVo poor Amp's, GERMANS antFl ISli, w poverty. and he ; unable :.to their fhinilies, Hive zu a ihejjay :net words in' peakingof the POOR' PEOPLE : . ' "Sell the - parentS of these childi SLAVERY. Let ..our. Legislature law that whoever Will : take th*par take care ,of them and 'tbeir OIL I'S in sickness and, in . health, c ()the' th , them, and house them,L-s all be le. fitted to their services ;; Id let the sa islature decree, that w l ever reeeiV parents and their OTHLDIZEN i and their services; shall/take care . of th Lo&q-As THEM 'LIVE." .. . So much for ektracti‘frOm ‘.` Den, newspapers. / Now fOr a:'feW fron 1 craties : speeebes.. . - S. :W. . owns, lat Democratic from,Lo siana, in an elaliorate and t D ly prept red - speech; published in th ingtoi 0,/obe, says . i "A" call upon the opponents of Sl very to pr,6ve, that the. \VII ITELAIiOP,E ,S of hi; North are as happy-, as contented, o • as Com- Vibitable, ~as the -Sinai of the . South; In the South theslaves. - do not suffer! on tenth of the evils'endured by the , 'Avbito laborers of the North. Poyerty is !inknow to the j i i Southern slave,-for as. soon as the naSter of slaves becomes-too poor to proyAde l foi' them - he SELLS them to qnhers Who can take care of them.; , This, sir, - is one of the eieellencies l - )f the. system of Slavery, and. this the supe perior condition orthe St' mtheriT 'it over the Northern .WHITE laborer. According ; to -Mr. •Dowits,, .Democratic authority) all that. Wale ldbprgr .requires _is 861111 him wheli he falls into poverty philanthropy • Beautiful : . • , , , Seriatrir ; Clemons .9f Alabani. _red in a speech in the U. S. Senate, that the oper.•. atives of New England were not a# well sit uated nor, to comfortably - off As . e: . slayes the cultivate the .riee. and cotton ft .14 of the 7 ~th.,,,-,•-•- ! '. -,, - ,.11n a •recent- speech by . Mr: Pierce-Buchanan-Democratic ;eant `.Congress from. Missouri, that:gent tinctly asserted'the—, :" The some construction of the Congress to exclude Slavery from States Territory, Nionld justify ilia ment in excluding foreign-born • GERMANS AND IRISH AS \ "NiIGGERS.." , , ! Here a Missouri :Democrat cia MANS and 1111$II . indisetiMim NEGRO SLAVER. 1. Mr.: L. H. GOode,•another Atchison Dem ocrat ..,, Missouri, in . a re of the Free State Men of KansaS, !denounced the Lattoetto men as " WHITE ILAVES." • i SENATOR BUTLER, (the un le of " As sitssin Brooks,) a shining liglit in i • the "Dein- Oct atie . galaxy, declared in a speech. in the U. S. Senate this session—:. • - . - ' . "That men have no right . to VOT.E unless` t hey are possessed, of• property tt.4 required -I:iy the l Constitutioaof South Carolina. There no :man - can vote Miless he owns en negroes,, 'fir.rgal estate tO the rake . of ten thousand d'ellars." , : ' ' ' . 4 JAMES. BUCHANAN is the Prisidential 'i candidate of the men and of Owlwho .... 1 .who hold these odious views. party ".JOHN C.'FREMONT,.the tree lie.publi- . Can and true Demoerst,. who has ~corked' his - own way from:poverty - to gt4atr4ss pays the following high tribute to the dignity of FREE LABOR, and yet his enemies: hie the mean ness to assert that he is alslaire-h9lder. Col. Preniont never owned _a .dollar, in human flesh,' Hear what he says abbe "free lab6r.". ! . FREE LABOR--the; net rat capital which constitat6; the real wealth . f this great country, and ..laeatee that inte,lli.q nt power in the masses, - alone to be relie d -on as the bul , l ark of FREE INTITUTION .- • , The Declination of Gov. Win. F.i.Tohnston of I , the American Nomination. ,To F. H. RUGGLES and S. M. A .EN, Chair att man and Corresponding: Se iiary of the Ameriran iationdl Committc4., i DEAR SIRS :---Patriotism deands of the American party its disapprob tion of the, 11 measures •of the present Natio al Adminis tration, as well as the dereat of th se who have willingly and cheerfully endorsed and are pledged to support Lis foreign ttid domestic policy. . . Its selection of rigents to and I meat of our, affairs at -other Con rendered it obnoxions to the c of the American people. Whe Administration assumed the eti doinestie affairs, all causes of had been removed, and peace concord existed among the Sta of the Confederacy. , ' With a controlling influence ments of GoVernetent, we ar the admissions and declaration and advocates, that at this M sectional strife and angry ag ous to the permanency , olour el have been brought upon the lec evil' things are jUstly tittribht and ambition. • Our character . among th earth has been degraded by announcement, on the part _that our Gov e rnment was ut hie' to control' andcheck tbt ings for the possession -of 1 weaker nations, :falsely tyl t among our citizens. The revenues ,of the ectunt Voted to sustain tt wasteful adminiatration of our affairs Adieus for the; judicious imi rivers and harbors hti,ve beei fused ; a Territory... 4 the 1 been desolated and depopulel while within its borders lal acted and others adjudged tempted to be enforced by that art flestruative of the free people. To restore the Govem ettt to its legit mate purposes—to _preset. a tho.U_Mat and Constitution. Mont dissoluti - and destruction -;--to reestablish 'the high eputatiori `of:our country abroad for fair dea ing and'jfiat action toward other nationti—to evoli our surplus revenues 4o national impr vemcuts required FRA ., • . for the security of commeree and the Safety , of travel4—to preserve to free labor the cast and tertgLplains of Kansas in obedience to the corn • of a purei*d wiser generation —to abrOgate unjust, tywniasl and wicked laws, an. to protect , thireitizen against OH the two James • AfER •o may support odious d trine of constructive judicial . son---wo §eeni.to be the dictate of ration- al patrito ism Ind enlightened 'humanity: t . the entirocondemnation: of these tnenstro s abuses and Usurpations ; the defeat of the no iiinees of • the Cincinnati Convenstion ors . ex ,v rum is an ad ii s, tted neemsity..- ,J -1,, - To ac . inplish this desirable resOlt, united action m st be secured among:the Opponents of the national AdMinistrations • - • ''' . W 116,1111,1 that the A rtrican paiity; whnse. candidate .for . the Vice-Presidency .1 became by the. akion of the Dle*-Y.ork Convention, coinehlei in these. - views, and that their can didate for the . Presidency will carry them Itv, to effeei and feeling that it _has heretofore ev,..ry. effort that the correction of these 0 wronas A T cmanded of . it,, to secure harmony of action eniong the opponents of the national Adniiniltration, Mid 'convinced that it is, still willing to place upon the altar of our country's yellitre 11 its proferences . forpea, and know. t , in the in the event of success its sacrifices nod exe tions.will be respected and regarded, MEM pass a l eats and tPING, , feed, me I (.0. these o,taius ',tern AS oeratie" Demo- Senator ea re In I- Wash- and wit a full: knowledge that, in all its. ac tions, it has been and will be controlled' mere by a defire for the public welfare than by any Selfish Or partisan • motives, 1 do nOt'resitate to appeld to-its patriotism, that ." for the sake of the, Seause'' and fur. the removal of all groundl of disaffection, my •• name may be withdrawn as a. candidate for the highly im portanti office -wi d th' 'Which -the partiality of fronds, undeserved on my part, has connect ed it . g this is done; we shall.have - the proud satisfaclinh or knowing that So far as . our par-_ ty cony control events no cause for distrac tion and dissension can be charged upon tis. Shouldithe Committee decide. that it 'poisei r . .ses no l ipower to act, in' . the _premis+,l-shall .consider it my duty_ to assume therespon sibility of, dwlaring this letter a . :.withdrawal of my name from-Ale list ,ofkandidates.. It may be excnseilin me, so7lately,honored by • your confidence, to . . ventureya- few:words in defend' of the conduct I shall pursue as an in dividual citizen and meinlirr of-the American partys - _1 shalt.vote fir CO. Ficiriont—.-"i . : - 1. -That he is honest; "cipable and faithful e il to th Constitution': .. - '- -: :. - : - 2.- at he is the nominee of the New-York Cony Constitutions of the 12th. of June last. '.' . 3. , tint - he - digappreves - of the Men-gimes' of the Ptesent National t Administration:" •.• '' 4. That he - favors:the admission of Kansas, as a ]roe State, and is utterly opposed to the:. unjust and and anti-liepublican laws therein en acted! and attempted to 'he enforced:; : laws and judicial divisions disgraceful to civilization and bunianity, and repugnant - to the great chartbr of American liberty.. • . . . , .- ,' 5. That he will administer the Government With: the energy- and, wisdom of our earlier Pres dents, flivoring tni.sonc section to the in-, jiirylof another,. and without. doing, violence • tothe interests, rights and-vo' nseiences of any portc) 4 n ofn common country. --- 04 That, an' American !by birth, a Prot+. taut by education and training;the crrelt Orin . party r. eipl+ of - ;the Airieri+n may be safely intrusted to hia-keling and direction. -- : ' 74 That he is thesinost'available candidate before. the peOple, to carry an election 'against the Present National i AdMinistration and its. o norninees and platforms.. ; -.. . . . . \Siiould any metuber of the American par. . ty consider ..it to be' a duty, to act 'differently in. the. approaching campaign, I shall hope thati the fraternal feelings hitherto prevailing liillhereafter unite us in the defenseof Amer. lean] Nationality, ' and, in maintenance of the fun anienl truth_ that our association was. j i foil ed to . cherish, protect, love and venerate ammon Constitution, 'a common Union, a oott4inon country and ncemmon - Pod. With 'sentiments of sincere regardil am, iy!' your friend 'and Qlow-citizek . , , . - , i Wtit. P. SoussTo.-. (good Irthern to sell t.t iteyllords, Oman. dis- power of a United o Govern citizens-- CELL AS ses GER tely with nn ten ge/ wh P° just • RILADELPIIIA, Wednesday, Aug 6,1856. IY- DEAR SIR : ' I spent tin hours with to Li AEI yesterday, at Wheatland. Ills _ unds are beautifully and tastefully arrang d but his house is plain and -unpretending n he extreme—everything has the air of un • s ntatious Democracy. -. But the man him ‘l is the very impersonation of unaffected I betablicanisna: I was never more agreeably i la si ppointed in my life. He gave us a cor. l ii I and frank reception, and talked with - us h the freedom of an old acquaintance. ' I e i lly felt as if I had known him alloy life. i _I said the issue involved in/this election w s the Union of these States as equals.--;- T at the South had submitted to the aggress io tof the AbolitiOnists wi th . a patience that m . ht well challenge the: adnuration• of the w ri d, and, considering the fire-eating pro skies; was difficult to understand. * . , He ri ieukd the doctrine of Squatter Sovereignty, a d said that the South had nazi', for the fire: i 1 . in the history of the, country, obtained f 713 the Government the-cyncession ()Prue yito p inciples, viz.:.that the people of a Territo ✓ had the right, when, they canie to form a S ate - . Constitution; to say . whether . they w uld , or wibuld no hive Slavery. "That by t s legislation Congrees 'had -admitted that t' : Rower was with the people, and not in ingress,'and 'the only, sensible' rule was, t at this could `be exercised by the people o. 'ly when they came to ferns a State Govern -,, ti preparatory. to. admission into the Un ' 1 ri. I give You almost 'his very -words.— . a said, if he: should be elected, be telt suits- .G i i the 'Slavery question would ;be, filially -ttlekkovickd he could carry a- portion of New -England States or the Stateof .New "ork. — ln other iOrfIN if lie were .elected a.national vote, what liewoulddo in the; premises would kave a nitiomil suppert, and; the etreer„th of Free-Soilism, which is section. 4, would be dispersed. The truthls Mr: liuchanan_ is as sound 04,4114* qUatiOri•as was r . c a mn un , an d the ,Vorthern Demoirary re better. Southern men. to-day, Oen many elnoceate_ even done the, Senth:' - - - WliateVer . 0 y , May Wive one heretofore, now-they eel the question boldly, and defend ,-,' the in ligation of Slavery with a fearkssuess that 'heir maikage rts has justly •ndemnation the present nUtieb of our ectional strife and fraternal es dud people I ! in all depart "' informed by is of US - friends merit disZord, itation, danger. erishe'd Union, 1 untry. These 'ed to its action !nations •of the the authorized its• employees, Willing or una rapacious long eighboring ar.d ittcd to exist y have been.de and extravnaut white appropri rovement - of our resisted and ro. United. S mit:Thai ted by civil broils, vs hive been en to exist, and at the Government, sacred rights of .a - .• TER sed SMITI-1, tvtiLISHERS-rrATOI,2.,:NO. resting Disclosures—Mr. Buchanan on Slavery.. •• " • ie Huntsville (Ala.) Democrat contains rnteresting letter from-Philadelphia,-writ to the editor "by a personal friend, .a tletnan of the highest- respectability, fur se accuracy ho vduches," and giving a re= 't of a conversation Ishieh the writer had held with Mr—Bucniantu. ecoily the letter tioni the .AdpoOte, as MIE BE ,-.,. ..,;,.., _:,! :,-.'i'•if:".'f , . =I .1 we might ifo Weil le; tiniterks. - 'They do not even apologize-for it on-the '4otputlid that romnized, in the Constitution; but they say It ix right-, .That,Goti himaellestahliplind it, and' that has the Bible: tor, ita - fiitndition.. If we do net 'auatain these Min in defence of our institutions ,"%ve:deery,e,etettlakinfittiy,l Th; cAtiat toiiii - ,'kuslyPhetiitieftßueuanar and FREMONT. , ' Vitt.ttottnis not in thelnee. No non heretipretends ,my ,thit is. On.• . thew ;1 0 1 61 g?cf:ffor o ; I .P:?nsider his eke tion I)eradventbre—and what I re gret is tiiltt there -- an.lin:foond,_ln, the_ rhole South n single Midi iiot - ` , tote fur him. If they could. onn , him: and hear him talk, . I firmly •beieve th: w4ulck g'ilv*Atery . . , SollaWrp rOW., , , - • . " i .-' ,- , r,t '_, ':“.7.." t . ,1":,= ". I have scribbled ithia'oft , burrieolY, tjetir you will not be a1;10 to rear it. ,' Yours, truly; ' :- -- ". t '''' j - . W. .13. FlounaS, E4q,• flatitiaiiiii; Alit. We commend these disclosures to the at tention of. hotteit,Free.Son Democrats whet have been looking to Mr,. Auktuasior for s settlement of the 'Slavery, question,, which should redress' the : .wrong s intii"eted o n ' the North - by the repeal of the Missouri Com- - - promise.. It has suited the,pcirpoi&of Gen. Dix. JOUN Yes Peays,and..Others who were prominent leaders of the Free.-Soil'royeitletit in 1848, and who are now anihitieto be re-, ad iniued •into „the-,ranks.ef:Ahe - tiatijeal (/) Detnoeraey, to repreeentilar.:,Buouasas as . conservative and moderate in his views =of the Slavery.quastion, ~ They fiatie both tts. , serted that he is' in favor - of fiitpiditir.sitkftr. 1 eignty—that he is for allowing•the peepie of the Territory to admit ottexcluile Slavery as they may think PrOperand;ll . iit he Would repress the fesree and violence by Which 'they are deprived, of this right: r , J- ... This H u ntsville , letter' Shows' cl early enough that all ~these represenOtis ard•bt‘ A terly unfounded. It proves Jiml iri - enimer , Ration with Southern . PrO•Slavety .Democrats i he openly repudistes.theidoetrineitt".l3quati ter Sovereigpty;"' as todid' iii . ls4B,ta lila Alabama letter ;—iend-that Isit aktosia,l4.full sympathy _with'"theses who' " 'defend th e In. stitutioa of: - Slavery" as righ t and:praper in itself. - ' • ' - • Mr. flerena'Nan'S'aecTarati6n, that he can s'ettleAbis question ) ; "provided 'he can`' carry . New York And 'a _portion of. the Newir . ,iig , hind States," iii" pregnant ii i - titeeitii" It implieg - that he intends'to.iettleit iipetrirba sis not aeceptatlisto tAe .7 preisi etagAl'it the North,—hilt which he hopes to enfor6:eplO4 vided _he can itaie New-Yorit'itifd 'Turd New-England to - baek „rani.= This - :lti the old game; trying to divide the Niiithi for* id i•ancement and benefit'of Slavery:l -.--: ..'Ti'k • • We commend these' airovitils of,. Mr i litr , CIiAIiAN: I B principles and - policy to the: non of Remoerata throughout thwifortinsu States.-6...1 7 :- Y. Timer. . - - : ' Political .Preaciiing, _,„ `A corn Munication wilt be, found in-another - column on a question , which is, Muelt talked . about but not much considered's_ There in ti ~ great outcry in certain : quarters against flit-. 'cal preaching, as if ministers had (teased or ` were ceasing to preach from the Ilibl a.' - ' Par: - haps we lire mistaken:; but we ilo:ligt - ,6,110ye that to any considerable extent,ctliepastnrs ot evangelleal-churehmi this;side nf:the:P* , ,:', mac have been ibetrayed intri - the 'error of : • what is ealled_in an obnoxious'seta* political - preaching. . Here and-, theii:'-one- its*. -.l ? st ; e t r l y found who has committed himielf,lnthe - poi; pit, for some political party, "ore me political . candidate but as a body the el aro hisbits: `wily and conscientiously - cautiOni :on Viiki side. Here and there one may Java uttered himself on some purely political-`question - which is out 01 Place in the - pulPit ,dr any where else on the Sabbath, but we are din& • dent that such instaeees are rare. ,:- :.',' , , E , -.37T. It isnot preaching polities toltreach against , the oppression of the pOor r or the : sale op ofthe needy.:'._lt is not preaching polities to:presteli against slavery. At isnot preaching. polities, to preach that the. aw. of, God is higher than any act of congress or any political platform: It is not .preachin,g - polities,. tb,preach that God , will visit national crimes ,with *WOW retributions. it is , not Political ...preach:nig; to preach on the question, who is responsible for Rational. sins !, ,It is not piditicill prench ing, to preach.on the sins and, duties, oounnete ed with the„rihi of autfrago,, ,, - , - ',' -. We admit that, in a sense,-all ' inch . preach: _ ing may be said to be pOlitical.hai,ati important political_ bearing. But' if this iv _ "political - preichin,g," in the obnedious inmse,_ what Was that of which wobeard no m u ch in 1850 and 1851 r Whodoes not remember the sermonstwhich were then preached=ye published and diattibuted by_polittmlriorn mlttees 1 If to preach' agnuist . itaiery. is preaching politica, What is , to preach fop slavery ? If to preach," We ought tOtitiey God 'rather than men," is preaching politics, what is it - to 'preach that the e; is no higher law? ~" Whether theft, Murder tandiadulterii ihitt _ . , be punished,is a political , Whai er capital punishment shall hi abolished ilea ~ political question.' NV - battierlygatay - and unlimited divorce shall thi. allowed- is a tio -litical question.. Whetter the, theater-;shall bo'condemned-as demOralizing ihstitittioh, is a, political questiOa. Eiclude , from .the pulpit'all such subjebta„ you forbid the. tbapreacher to use tlie - Bible for. a tiztaxkok. Tna NeW - York-AMeilean Celt hio lotti article to prole that there is it - regular liar : , • gain and sale between thersupportcrs'nf Fillmore and Mr. Buchanan, by which - thiA , meriean vote of the Biatole - to be throirti ter the bachelor: !! "The Know l Nothing.4 State-are to cast,' their iotes for the' MO*nitO Electoral Thiket, thus seedling Ne*Vdtkibrt , _Bucluman, while the Democratit far t itersd.: ticable ' arp to. trsosferi theiti'lrotanutoclhe Know ' Notting State 'DeWit t - , eritlut'Erlistus Brooks for our next Gloreritm". - • The 'lloll.== Johtt , ,lL:Bottst,'ft`viterin' politician of Virginia,'} lately deliverrea speech at BiehmoulafOn *guff 1112 dieted the idea . that; at wiedcd the Union if-Frettent were eleetegt< nounceaonequivoitally'Ae*tal assault on Mr. Suinner;‘ , ` - !The RiehmonOltaquirer denotnuxis this speech•as !".111ack itepublkstyr end-trusts that Botts mai,b,olamitial tvid prosecuted owletlllo4o fbr - the' "PM P/ 401 / 'of ineeediar , language, , „ 'YARD CLAREK, •060,41tbe•Valmore utpt t opal members-o(-Caugst*fmn. - New1Cort -St a te l / 4 - isw-annunneedii4dateriainaskon ,4 o support Fzetnont and Dotton,antradao3o the policy zof *Ow ,iteputomi piutt'OD =tha slavery ,issues RIM r. CM ME MIMI IMO MEI CEIMI BM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers