ES OiiieqPesif .iiellttlyltql?' i is 4 e. it - 1i BAD *N. 44 . PRLIAW; EDITORS r i , : i fiAOPiTROSE PA. !ha of October 2, 185t/i'; '‘REP 131*IC A N TICKET-I; FOR • PRESIDEg; lIKRLES FREMONT. ti N VICX . PRESIDENT, LIAM •L.*DAYTON. i . WI STATE -TICKET. R CANAL yylimisszoKEß, MAS N Ott York County.. • • FOR GOITO G RNRRA 1140 D - R WIN PHELPS,'" . .Armstrong Cc' • On SURVEYOR GENERAL, • AA[ 600 ALE W LAI' . ORTE,' Ql_ itradthrd Countv. REP BLICAN COUNTY TICKET. I, 'FOR CONGRESS, • GA USIIA A. GROW, 91 -Susquehanna County. , I FOR SENATOR, ME T. BEET), *YEN, Of I;3milffoul County. FOR REPRESENTATIVF e S, , • falifEON 13, eilAsE,of u, - im.l:llliut Co. AItFRED of Wyoming County: •.i • FOR' ASSOCIATE JUDGER, "CITA!: LES F. READ, o't ittoti t rOse, URBANE fIURROWS, of Gibson. FOE CAUNTIi : . PERRIN `WELLS, of nridgewtittr. FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY, FRiIN OLIN FreASER, of Montrose. OR rouNry SVEIVEYORi.. JOEL ITRIZELL, of Forest •Lalte . . - '• • Fon, pouiry Art tTfll. , '. TIFFANY, of lin'rford. D. OWNER WANTED. At the Re • uldienp Masa Meeting in this place, a sister pensit, with gold pen, was lent to one of the County Committee, by some person whose name is 'Da now recollected. The owner will find it a(thi3 (Republican Meeting. or Hamlin-in Montrose: -. eaa - by the following that Gov. ~11anilin, ( dell Republican Governor of Maine, muiaheti , Pemeeratie United State?, Sen- State,):Coll. peak in Montrose on &tt :llth:. . : • • Gov - xtj i iirill be the newly el 4 list* It disti l ' atoqrom iba urday,.oeto raakpitrmi:Sept. 30,'•1856. Gov. Hamlin of 31aine, will. teak at ardav afte rnoon, and evening, Oct., Liltay - mille on Monday ti.c-713th.-- arrangement. for a Meeting. , ' cry. tridy, ' CHAS. Grnr.orm, Esq. * • Chairman Mcp. Corn. TDtan sin: Montrose on nth, and a. net* make *C., E. Border Ruffian Piety. - ' • Since the `domination of Col : Fremont, in Jung last, films been amusing to witness the•rarions,ttuitsamt shifti 4 thenigger-driving Ifemocraey. When the nomination wias first announced, they made a vigor a one attempt Laugh_ the whole thing ; the nom ' WOOD of :Yet -moat waS -deelared to be a farce ; .he wail ari tutknown tram,- initiet a mere boy,, artd the idea tor nutning him againit such It man as Mr. 13u ehan_in was railed simply' ' ridiculous . The leaders of • the TUlrty kept up the -laugh until every one saw that they were laughing front the wrong.side of the mouth. It was in fact tint a ghastly sMile,stipPressed onlyby a smothered, groan. BuC light soon dawned upon 7 theirbenighted understandings, and it was dil•covered that, insteatief Fremont's being an obscurc,man, lie was eine of the most thstingui4ed sharpers in exist .ence!rle had robbed the great Democratic party, and eonsegnently 'the government out more than eight c hundred thotisand dollars, besides, many cows and Much •catae. I Forthwith every Border Ruffian press lathe land fell to work to give the° people, the dear people light, upon the dark and mYsterious subject, -.And lthit people were looking over-the -matter, the whole country rung with. the hoarse shouts of " Beef, beef, Let!" but after crying Aeef,' till their throats were 'sore, the Buclutueers c up the beef *eel:dation as a.deadfitilure. Still the ball kept nall iztron, gathering force at every revolution, and threat \ • ming to lverwlsehn everything that should attempt ltiipotie :Its Negress.. It—became very evideitt that IN. Fremont was noknow, if wben nominated,. •an obieure man.. The cattle specukttion had failed to pay first cost, the cry.of, beef had•been silenced, and the I;h+ hand was filled , with the joyous shout .of "Free Soil Flee Speech, and Fremont." The old Border !tartar' leaders now began to east about them, • to learn the cause of this grera commotion ; and like Ahab• of old' they soon &recovered Who it was that wig houblingtilm:t lineal. They found that they had %pen sleeping upon & volcano, that while they were %AM' gaiter Ithistrairs of the marten, the Chris Tran Chrotehlsadbeft mangy tinderminedand its usefulness &tamed, and the -Christian ministry had deserted • its high camt;g. Sonia were perWirmammnd them, ' and . f the whole moral world was just on the point of beinF, and pined ; and like the boys in The lender storm, they telt thati" something must be done, and that tioieldil; and some of them having, no doubt, in theli Innreiyoudatul days, read' n the good old boa that I SM=at one dose transformed himself into en Aurgel of lig t, atones took the hint and started a _ Tract Serie* established their agencies, nrd imme 'Paddy &esti:lithe country with moral and religious tracts, 'being! determined te leave no means untried to bringlitrek the church and the clergy to their le: githsate sphere of action, and leave the :government afire court My to Orem and !his party. This is the third - and prdbably the last game that will be played by the BKlrti Riau; Democracy during the present ngsTaigm remark's youth was soon found too old • for !the oh)* of them ; the beef spoiled on 'their hands; and 4heir piety will be threadbare and out at , ciboria Jong befere•the November election. If the . suilicet were , not a serious one, men could hardiy restrain' their risible taculties at the ridiculous *admits nurde by the prior Buchaneer leaders toes , treate-thenetelves ken their infunious position be tore the people. Just, look at it! Chris. Ward at • thehead of a great..moral and religious Tract Society, ;and hisbrother, J. J.; Ward, with Brodhead's frank, tasseminaturg religious intatigeUee among the people • ADA teaching such ministers as Landon, Tenny , Post King, and of a, in what manner they should exer cise their high calling, and where it should end.— Notiriatraurding the great aversion manifested by the Dulaimers tp the ministers of the Gospel preaching I":44im, gilt . ' m one cull - dog that great good has been weeeso / 44 01 _by' Arent , hits far, even in whet the iik4er thesmelvire consider strictly within _ • the datiti 4m Ldte thristale, miistry. Scope 4 the mist sti ff d and incorrigible , old eirmere in the - Cry many of 'boot lore not graced the inside of 1 1 &Web Abl I pe the days hi - their boybiod, are'now .aigereoung lie . mietraerioasisoresitona, and *Oar ' to be Jebermg under deep Areutetratisibui, and to be re 4o 7 —taffal that the thinktiir in 4bcfr eet t ' ev°/6 to,',. diari yike end ter _the..probeipoftfe." wilt ATAlebeii Abelgreal interests of sitellietY iw Abe and sibs mivotion of janitorial Golds, 'We 40 no, Fees. t/he competent judges in such:matters, --, hot' from -,thh, atria 4 deep feeling, penitence, and maims atotottent en the subject of religion maniksteir , 2 by the lesdimi Sucliancers, we have little doubt that Mier Knapp; pugamd, Money, or any other active .„....revivereik,oo ll thonise a shakingartomg thedry hone*, toarn nusione seats would 'be crowded nightly, and dente ttegonithat mightbenoecunphsbedi LMlour <Sy =keen the courtly, through the dit fairest pi, and fines tnytonsedf 4,o 4 l 4seter i ddheillea niio "told dif the'seita 'ot those *tow, 1 inquirers. :New Milfard, kiseit aTha, Kadordimoris , . rose, Bridgewater, ..Dinuick, 401 : Springtitie,•wouid : all be represented; foyeach eoittains many men viho i. are deeply annotator telly MiniStera will negh t wlt:their l' high calling, and permit souls tOi,f4rish. ..-Toptiy, one' of . the characters. in, Mitt, Stotii . ,,li UntkilTasa, was:, unnit•Slieecaidetiseitriliily solit*ttilkinipi.e!. ss hey; 4 „„st x , rs ' w ith triiinotitiffy of her:Ohns4il:!sa, itins, with' t h4 . lo e fi c t. that s*a was*te gre slOiler liting.-4- Th 'r e p l at !ha:chant** work • ,dti*l.ttiiiiinifes t. • It o tatieb this' sanieSitiiit,aint ;tie trill, r each oiiiii: iaeo - tt'''' fessing their manifold ins'and..immerous transgres sions. And what must be thefeelingsnfa truedical ted Christian minister like those We haven:lined, who . rhoUld In; called to intercede and pray lbr a congre •gatiOn .ofsin-scarred countenances like those stiehmt L :array would exhibit. His first eSelamation would no ' doubt he, "Oh for a forty-pora/!n potter!" When we run over in our Mind-twoot - three dozen 0! the men who would. no doubt oecupy.,.that'ausioas'seat, we woltid'etanntenil to ilieseWholliaft their spiritual welfare in ihargeOhe prayer-of the geod Old . rritilittial minister,vi!o resitletbin the satticliteighborliolxLwittj I a 'Amity of the nante.of • Baker, cOnsisting of, an old 1. Mau mid several :OM At it° . were thehardest:cascs iit 1 the whole eiunitry around. ;Many ritreu the prayers and tenet offered tip •by.thegootklnart for the Baker; tinnily, but all'apparetitly. to.noparpos,p. They Were 1 as Inv . E . lne and ungodly nal ove.r.ii ' But one day one of the young Baker's was bitten by 4 yattlesnake,erlien he suddenly became very penitent, wild the services of the good man, w.ere at.once eallo into reqUisition. Be found the young man as ankiouS and penitent, and as de.siroui-of receiving . religions instruction as were the Border Ruffians after the. Baffle election. The case appearing to be an urgent o 'e,. the minister. at once engaged in prayer; after there, ;) wing manner: ." 0 Lord, we thanktbee that thou bast sent a rattle snake and bitten Jim Baker. :Send one to bit.e:John anddoe; and send the higgest.kind or one to bite the old man !. for nothing but rattlesnabeS will everin:iiiii the Baker canal). to .repentance.';' *sperate eases nftCn requiredesperate remedies.- Ilattfesnalies were the remedy that just reached the case of the Baker family, and, the good man Prayed !that it 'Mild lie .followed up.. ." Politleid preaching"! has reached the diardenallillelalleCt'S, and the most anxious inquiry and deep solicittide are now manifeSted by men who ' Were supposed to have sinned away r their•day of grace long-before the BOrder Rtiflilna 60' 1 , thought of Kan sas. All the exhortations and lini l e ns that they have .:. beard thus far in their lives have 104 them unmoved and as hard as".ever, " neitlimOtetter, lint ralher worse;' but` when they saw theThristian minister folk/ Mug them into the" dirty'po(il ix polities," and • there au , ing all his efforts to Pltiek , them as brands from dal b u rning, their' hard lien tat once relented.. The samemeans .w ( li - itit have pr need suchwonder -4 full changes, if followed up, a ill acepreplish still great er results; and in view of the uneXpected: and as• to:iti d ieg, success accomplished by the, clergy thus far, . bow• loudly are they caflcd upon ';t - ci put forth every etfort in a cause that has been :erhivned., with such abundant and nriloolied , for sit-Nits. Between'riow and th e Ith - of Novt;mber, we may! , reasonably:!Ook . for, : scolb s of new. and aniotia" inipdrers—and 'atter i that time let all 'Christian. ministet and .Churches unite in one vigorous- and combined effort for the .. benefit of the envious and pepitent!; and unless there 1 has been greatdeecit and Itypoctjtsy on the part of : inquirers; :there Can ltaidly fitil to,'ltp such an-access- 1. sion to the - Christian church as ties not been par- :dieted iii modern time.' HoW D. S. Dickinson vs. " S qu atter . t Bove . • • - .reignty." We, have already published abniuhuice of, proof of titOlact that the doctrine of thehltpidilitan party on the question of Slavery extension; . was also the. doctrine of the. Democracy- of tliC North ilo%;,11 to about the time the Jlisslouri QomprOinise . win, 1 retie..al .ed. The following extract will t.liow what doctrines on this subject were taught- by Daniel S. Dickinson, —a notional Pe:not:rat pr ,e.retilrucc—no longer ago than .11147 . .' ; ': iVe publish it tprii.eipally . for The , benefit of th seliiiiid souls who notild like to support the cause O Free .li.ansas and freedom in the Toni ritotics, - y it are . afraid .to do so;I:for -E.t.at it is:not national: . E.ttrart from Mr.. loirkirisdn'fiGrecii Speieh in the I.7niled Slate.; B(tm . i . e, Jlarrh 1i,18:17. • ; . , "If we obtain any portion oe the',';!dexican Ten ito-' ry; it mist heclone: . by conquest. or bn conventional "arrangement. : Altheugh we have already conquered more than half 'lke:area:Of that Reptit.lic, and note . bold it by military possOsion, we hold it thus, as *ell . for our own defence:and indenmitYlas to compel her, to negotiate for peaiie, and have nojerisdiction. over it except.that . ormilitary rule: Sln California or any' other pentiow be ceded to us in;a . treaty : Of peace, it would still require the legislation of Cosigress to provide for its territeriat gevernment, and upon that occasion, FIIORTgI the centingencv happen, we can leg islate for fruition i fand not for luipe.!i I have not par taken_ of the !excitement which has prevailed hero, and shall net.. I hare no gloomy /vie biding over the dissolution Of the /, - niort. i'olitirirtux conic/nor (17.1- F - so/reit if tit'ep would,. and wona noilf thry,eonbi.—' It will live on, ,long after we are alli laid in the ilust; and pillar after pillar shall strengthen and adorn the edifice, while others—the venerable and gray-leaded; who. are yet unborn--shitil oecupkthese seats, and • these walls - echo to . their 'voices-.1 Ii would not tare added one single. word upea- the suhject.of Slavery, but it is due to the occasion that My views 'upon it should be fully_underatooel. ". So far:asl am advised ,or believe, theyreat mass of the people at the North, entertain -but one opinion on this sqdect, and that is the . same . allich. is.entertzined by tnany'at the South. They regard the institution as a prep: moral and po litical evil, and would that it body° e.ristenre. They are not tinawve o f the diffieultiet6vhiCh beset it, and wlonOt it tend to provoke sectional,jeidousv and hatred by Maned and cry discussieno:, - they will not listen-to the cry of the fanatic, or favor the designs of the political schemer from the Ninth or from the 'South; !Mr - Will they ever disturb, 'or ,tterieli upon the compromises of the ConStitn. ioni " They believe the institution - to be local and domestic-:rte be establish ed or abolished by the States thent4elves, and alone subject to their .rotitrol i and' that'Yederal legislation can have little influence over it.. ; But being thus the institution of a localsovereignty,. and /I franchise pe culiar to itself, at, denp . that such' sovereignty or, its people, can justly claim the right to regard it astran .sitory, audio erect it in the Territories of the Unittd 'Rates without 'the authority' of .Congress, curl *II believe that CONGRESS MAT PROIIIDIT ITS INTRODUCTION L.NTO THE TERRITORIES while they retnain melt. .And farther that ITS PROHIBITION IN THE IiuRCITORIF.S trill, 1 by giving' them a free population, ,as . they become i States,tenel to "'foam amore perlict-ridion,estabtish 1 jiistice, ensure domestic tiarfiti!llity, pioride for the common .delener, promote tlie general:welfare; and se cure the blessings of liberty tb ourseiVes and our pos terity.' .They hare not resisted the admission of - Slave States, because they were to :inhabited; and holding the numerical power in both houses of Coa -1 IT,resty the Slave States have increased nearly three ; fold. . Alit believing it is fpr the 'general tedfare,'— for the benvit of the States, and notfor any part of the, that ,Free territory sieratd reniain.so and that l it is the legitimate sal feet of legtslatio—ticit desire, - intending' to distur b; existing rights, at all 1 proper 'times to &truss,- in that spirittweoininy breth ren ift:.a common ItouschOld, the intiiiences its erten *ion is ~.c alculated;* to exert.tiponlhehitman, race and the distisies of the 'country. Arutthey doubt not 'tat, if,. upon, the whole; it shall , appear that the Heaven-born principles. for 'which '.tliis, Union Was . fortned will be best - pi:imputed by soil" prohibition, 'that those who believe their pecunilry interests or political relations' will "be thereby:prejudiced, will yield ! ins becoming spirit, interests oa comparative ly trim - 4440 'promote the generalweifire. Slaver , Is slowly apd silently.rolling its dirk Wive towards t tropical . I.atn.tnid God grant that, - in 'his own good time, itisuliects may there .aid happy itustitutions es sell as s congeniii tiiitte:r - .. ... - . %a. Dr' The country's winger to-anY 414 BYPeetii lea! fulniinatioos from the pulpiVwbich is desecrated by cleriewl denutgozues, - who cloak their . ' trestioa'tuld ' irdlainy under The guise of relit 14' wf.'`kieiiie " - if* shore •is tree, our countreioriditjon is la- Inettiable indeed ; If the Oreschers areAtitnoch purer thaw the great body -of the veopieltist they trinst keep deli of polit'T to prevent . ix;ittittlikiillon, and 'yettrattori And Whit . iafiieotis wretches jicoiiie" general 'mast ba w l woOdcr that eten Borderfindiapologi.s, ts atjaong the baser Sot ,” AbiliblOilin the dirty poi& ofisolitics," in a country - the ministers or religion theinselres a re 4 Addi.• tither the ifdlennium t yet very far 09; or the iviite!i: of the' abose - is the "itireeat.!of:a bad Cause;:. add Aerffore finds"array e d amt; tarßemenitiqr,thAt every voter an* Ws been asserted tat Jisysibeforejeleetion i - end **at i Oc tober EVE I . l'o - 1111 fffl . •• r-4-,rkilifoottme-lkneorrat twVin tbe Washington Unionr a base and elan charging Col. I , 'neptiont with d' hi United States army in California itith be ":74' *nan isipting, by yok sworn tkatittwo theis;4olir,' ,Col:'Fretho t gea, w . -Al i'velkOter the COON the? fiaoerT Ccirtiect Pi:m(l6l,-4hp -'young Men's Ceti orlioutrvie, will give to that itethis county which shall poll the Mire Republkati vote at the cowing Cir and-hantLetne portrait of .John-C. 1• re lyfnueecl, belog . the- stun° now tO•be store Of tteztley.and Wad.. of IL 'S. tintimi' Cireene, N. Y.; init(fleAroyeiity fir6op big laet. Nei-Jives lost. Noinsurnuce. The ROpublican Mass Mc• wandaon Munday, Sept. 22, was and eritlinsiaStie.' • The . numb - erjn ab , mt 'lO,OOO. Th 6 speAers G. A. Grow, 4..C.S.mith - ,E,4i., of .C.atiandaig, Browning, of Qhio. - • Thalneeting tit rrirly,.BiPt: 23, still,gk:eat. numbers of,. the ekize. ford - fun) Tioga being in attend! peatscrs were' Mr. Grow, P. G. WiscOnsin, and J. 11.. Smith, of C:i 'Senator Wilson met Mr. Ord liantsPort, Sept. 24th; and went otiter _appointlitentS. He states wanted' to go - to Washington to di sinenithat no one else mild do, II 'consent to go till he had the . proti .grind stumper should be sent tr pointMents with •Mr grow. A I went to Washington, nnt.the go to filllus place did not come.. Mr., Grow is spending a wee county, Pa., but :will return to S. and sPeak. at ,Friendsville,Saturda October 4th ; at : liusbville, Monda .d October Cub ; at Auburn-Centre,. tertmon;.October 7th ; and at Dirl _ . evening of the saute dal.: wil abl e to speak iwvery - Township tiott,•'as he intended. . . • Tut; Turnusr. contains a notice. ing lately held, by sorne,Of the . chants of New. York,eity, to devil, aid the desperate cause of Buchan; sylvitnia; ft was decided that a - Must,bc ;mule to carry the State an at the October election, and more, were subserjhed by the weal present for that parpose. It is X 50,000 had been previously con, thatcity foi• the same purpose. a Maine paper that the price of there estimated by ,the..oflieehOl Pierce, befOre - eleetion, at two dol Probably the Maine election , has the Suellancer.leadera that the est too: tow ; and th4nie accordingly the "ei'mruptiOn•frind" for Pennsy ping thereby to succeed better he Maine.. We think they will lose cy and meet with another. Maine - if the Republicans 'di) their 'drily tend The _polls on the Fourteenth • • Fir, ‘Ve mentioned last jwciek that Hon. Lewis C. Levin, Filimoreite or Pli t iladelphia, and ,fiirmerly Native American Ille.presenta. tive of the First district in Congress, lately t made an attempt to-get the Fillm re men of Philadelphia. to repudiate the. Lli ion State ticket, ai tieing too strongly iZep . fhliean--L. wh . ch .attempt most signally failed; .`The 'l , enitig Argun' states that Mr. 'Levin has since-been placed in an Insane Asylum. ' Weshoulit judge from the insa e ratlngs against Fremont, and the Republicans with whic'h the prineipal organs of thc., Fillmore perty are filled, that the leaders-of that party generally . Might •to 14.bn:tided over fa keep- . ers. -If ,the . object of ferocious and I et , groundless -onslaught' upon our udidate is to•prepare the way for selling ou their ful 16Wera to .lueliiinae, in thatease, nd in that case only, we,can perceive some ." method in i their tnadoess,"•but inthataise, ins cad difid Lunatic : Aiylum,.'another State nstitutiOn would better best them: , "1 . • , ._ 'For any, one to allege .that a FREE Solt. DEMOCRAT must- change hii political principles in,-order to" act with tho Republi can party, - 60 Sheer nonsense:. " 'he simple truth is, that Men of all parties atl " he North, with comparatively - few exceptioni, have al- Ways . been oppoSed to . the extension' of Slave ry and •wlett -t he Slave Power of the South . 'forced' the.Slavery.extension tssue i upon the country-Southern -- - Whigs and - Pemocrats forgetting all other questions and nniting,On ii, that issue -the people of. the Nur -h, finding: that the only - Issue, hive in like anner uni ted in opposition-to slavery -extension under ,1. the naine of RepubliCans. It is evident, that: ' 1 - while the different parties maintaiii the posi tion they now do en - the Slavery question, a Eree.Spil Democrat cannot cons . tently act with any other eristing4 party than the-Ile publican. lf fhere iris any so - blin as not to see the trutli'of. this, We trust tha, like the old Dutch doctor's 4 6 Buchanan-pupiles," they_ will soon get their eyes open.. - 1 t lee men who :uphold ando e seeking -to extend to Free territory that Mo t t undem- Oeratie system, Slavery ; call themselves Dem ocrats!. • - : : - s Tl)e men who - are . . threatening to dissolve the Union, if a majority - of the peoPle decide in Ewer of freedom for the Territlories, themselves the peculiar friends of ti l m Union ! The men 'who go to Kansas to rnbrder and pltinder the inhabitants, and trample all law and justice under foot, call .themselVes "law and order men !" When you see a vessel - sailing u "eoli - a'rs,'you iney'tepena thaeit chief. !this .fusme delusive practice ing a.base.purpose ,arith s fair ext beers resortedto by: the emissaries cr since the devil entered e Will or the beasts ut the'lieldto ' de fitr Eve. won — pti` Chan- 4 i 6 0 tan: iel L. ShrwOod of pgainst ir. Grow, for Congrtss,-.Witt. It.:Piatt, of Wyoming, igaind 'Myer, for State Sen#tor, and Sohn V: Smith, of.Wyoqiin t and aben T. ,f3teptli4pgitiMq3iMeon:B:, Ch4se Ear, for - Repremntatives. -• Iz ! • eeple4f, -- ri' The tickets Tor , et.a9sartictr printed and rratilylfor disttibetion to;rnorrow, or (Friday,) atia our Republican frign'ils - in 'the tuuj James e ipate,i ! different. Toynsliips w l plefs,C 6 o l and get • tbetn%e oiti*ttilifit. is s very cm a.,( 1 , 0l havethe important tea taro twr the •Alse*Rt‘pOlicall ir ter Fill IT ottlivg Tntet. keep ibe frielide of freedom from voting,- this year. "Shrieking for freedom," as the miserable doughfaces it i :eannot seeotePlisly much;but Toting for free- . 1 dom earl. We who, ;is have read of the -manifold wrongs inflieted lin the Free -State men of Kansas, nave , burned for the power to • do soniet blip, to red ress..those 'wrongs, , iave , opportunity t e • The •eyes of _t whole i ,eountry ore ftexg4;up4.4o PLainsylvi, nia,‘vatelting With . iiitenSe,.! solicitude :for the 'result the Stet e. election, .)Sittoy,thinii that election decide _whether the court try.goesi for•freedent or 'slavery',.wlether 'Frominit Buchanan. will .be_t honest - President: - member it is pcoetible thSt the 'vete . of any one of us tinny turn tho sole, and ' there fo re let no one "fail 'to vote, and to vote on the right side. Let us defeat the Buchancers on. the 14th of Oettlter, and the victory. is almost.. won. Ft-LT-melt of SuSquelianna; shall it be rut Freinont Pt Tarim calt,elegant seeu at. the s, senior, at Itlay ting at-To very large attendance wv:re Tian. if Elmira, and 11/4{r: *as !arger s.of Brui tnee. • The Noble, of nantlaigua. w at Wil t to fill the 'hat he was ')•some 111;- 1 Int did not ise that "a I I fill his r. .11 1 ilson I stamper In the I,,yeorning Garelle i n Buchanan paper, puhh,he4 at Williamvort, Pa., the residence of M. Snobble, ifve find the follow , • dune? has at last succeeded in finding, an OppOnent to nolet him in public dihrtissiett in Wilmot's District. The dis. came ptr . near, TUnkhanneek in the presence ofiin . limmense gathering of people. llis opponentas lion. (.I , alu4ha A. Grow. It is probably. the last opportunity of the kind that ,Mr. Schnabel will haVe . during this carapaign.; 'They were afraid of him before, and will bo infinitely inure so now: - le achieved a most complete triumph, .gie &mit is thus given by the , Elmira Gazette: GrOw . leadniT in an exposition 'of the Repulpli can creed. l spoke nearly an hour. After. he had closed Mr. Sehnabel,'arose and! addressed the meet ing in that clear and forcible manner, Which so emi nently characterizes his deliverY: Oar informant, who bas no" partiality towards the Pemocracy;:says that Mr. Schual!cfs demolition Of Grow was the Most eloquent and 14aSterly specimen of oratory, logic and ,historical fuctsaO which he. ever listened. . .in Tioga isiptehanna afternoon, - afternmn, uesday of )ocli in the hardly he efure elec. lof a meet- Aten mer- At the concluAon of.his 'speech a delegation of over one hundred asked to he received on the Pesnoeratir side, and went ores and, deliseiid the; r'hanners -into the hands of the Buchauan turn!! .Such a complete, triumph was never achieved 1.),V• a. speeeb—and this is no idle boast. i We gather the facts from one of our More respectable citizens:who was present on the oemsion.'..!' I - I' • The above statement,. which is totally falSe i t in its chief wrticulars, has been already widely circulated in the-- pro-Slavery papers. The discussion was held in" this county ; and, will the edito;Ls of the Nantroc Democrat, one of whom Was present, explain why _their paper , never infernted - •the-publie . of this re markable accession to their. ranks ? Changes fang] Fremont, to Buchanan - isre . ton rare to. pass unnoticed, 'as the raPidity Ilvith which 'this reported surrender (ifltltC. one hakdrectiA I-! • • i blazoned in' the .Bueltanan papers, plainly , show. ..The truth is, as Wes claimed by the. Republicans Pi.esent, that 16...Gr0w triumph antlyl sustained his cause:,!,and that Fremont gained strength instead of losing by the di , - . • i •cfussiOrt. Ibis was - honestly - admitted 'by some of the . Buchanan men; and was felt and tacitly adazitte4 by 'other4 Who showed their 1 •,.' , ' - appreciation or g)eir champion's discomfiture by niaking all' kinds of nose and disturbance, while Mr. Grow was speak;ng, to_ prevent his being. heard. -..- ,This region seems just rinw- very fruitful a I • , • , Buchanan electioneering falschoodß, which are first published at a dist:thee I, so that they may get al l good start 'before they can he bontra dietcll., The siory of the Rev. Geo. Landon's tram-ling the . ..4' mstitutinn under foot has bare! • had time to travel uplfrem Philadelphia and , bee refitted; when hare comes another 'from Elmira, i equally -false." , It is 'alleged, botcher, .by the BnehaneerS'in this - region, that ]his last about the Glenwood surrender is " i Fillmore lie." If so, the Democracy muste be very .. ready to adopt it, fur, we- have seen !din several Buchanan pipers, and in no others. .: -.- . . means to li in Penn reat eillot r Buchan -20,000, or ihy traders qatill that iributed in Ve - see I; , - oteis - was I ers under !ars each.— coni,irieed mate was increasing ltanta, ho o than in heir mon lefen t here, and all -at !f. October. • Those of our fellow:citizens who attended the Glenwood meeting, and *read the • above 'article from the paiti organ at , Stiobble's home . , will understand, by' meansheis attepting to build up a reputation, and will appr elate how raid' . reWlee Can., be placed the on tue reports of meetingS.that appear in the, Bueha l nari_ papers; 'I • . T., .u.EMA [MAIMS —_-0116 ' 't.VCO3 Cat hull C ifor the sake - of 'the mischief they think, it wikdo, (for. they don't :pretend that they will Support hiin,) allege that Fremont is. a Cathodic ; and thereupon' face and cyesof the fact that a .Multitude Of Protestant news papt contain the most i l positive proof by Protrtant clergymen and others that he is and always has been a l'intestant, - ,- the New Yorlii . Espress, Philadelphin' News, &e., which .1 represent those Catholic -journals as- full of ,hypiterisy and falsehood on -other subjects, chooSe to believe them in preference to:the .Protestatit journals on the -question - of Fte 7 mom's-religion ! . . - If there are any honest Denuttrats who have been deluded into the belief t6t :the . charge ofprO.slaveryism brought against the Buchan an party" by the Republican papers is false, ire ask them to read the opinions. or the re. ligio is press , pnblished . .on our first pageiand then ,Conslder' whether, it more probable that the clergymen and religious .newspapers should ,bear" &lse witness,!Or, that the politic ians who, are . lu office Should atteMPt, to .dc ceive the people so as to retain their . offices. Mr' "Der Negerbosern (ihe Nigger-kissers,)_ is the senbrigiset • applied by the: Germans . of Lehigh eounty, to the abolition party of this stow—North Branch Democrat. • der filic :We shotildsay . - more appropriately to &maw °mom' lately pe , gion,, who seem so much, duce " plan tation = , manner' ored population. • e4ns inia of cloak- bas if evil ev i ost beee- I ae motii- tarlutke IPiiniot an lingame havo beensiump i some time 'past, in .Centra They meet, with most trit r . THE PAGE . F 0! Stint , elated recent that every male tneeibei.:( church over which he . pill !beat mid -Dayton :man- . • • -, - : . •,;.....• :•,71 ..,.. -77 7 - 77. 7- 7.77,..; - ,.,--Z7 - .7 • •,...., • .7.7: - ." ---- : - . - . -- ,.- •"7" ,- ... ,--,-,- - -- ,: r - r 0 l- Ili i, ii• . d - .' . an.messon e 1 enee,.an integrity for: the level of 1 - Oillii)tlille4 10i)$g ~ : . : , their ownitO i gii , cence, they arc envious of hint,;---,_ --_,.._-_-_-_,-_7...:....—____=.__=_.-..--__-_=-_-_-_-_-_•--=---...---.. - .,.._. - .=_ - - - - -- 7-- -- 7 - - - - - -- --- - . . WbriL-411.?•Chait cter, Position; and inflUencii,4;tf hat ~ . , - ~F'oi. the.Republieon. , ~:'- i . - ' •. 1 - - same Jellitittital.e ' s much abs.vc and Itevotatios.eof 'the Ahem I/41'00db) •!qiassillififitinf'.-iit Atiso siiiieipioy' dackguards ilk.' theitii4i . f,tt lofty* . 1 * , •:''.,,.i . ", : :- .--! Great !fait •';'..• • -----! 1 - • - enifice - AboveAbc mud ill on' whieb it ' ''''' - .7 4 .." t :...c 4 if.....4!t.tv..ilati)),.SePt. 2 . 1 , 1. 1:35(ii.,- ~• ' '2.: Wetti , ineti, , nly : I mits. already exe* - 1 .,.. MEssitotiEDltp,lll;4 , 7 : llaTi . ng :.-* littl , !:ti , lettatre; I-at- .press nv eitkoire't ons in regar4 ,ta.;',,-jh,,,t Oliii,article, ..iendc;k*t GrealilOchapith ll(aSs-.3(etiOthitt citim inight,aappos c a 'twin brotheiiif tl i=, wh ere in . se ett l 4l o (i ly e li t l ro wl 7, l ' 4,..,i,:e,,x -off at 'dreat Bend ottrOolktli inst. The meeti thad 1 the writer in vie of the sins of Mr. Growi'tlMt i l (coUld ...... ....- been advertised thronshout thisland adjoining coon- IWe'believe its fl. choods.truth,) we ties, and a ;treat 'effort Was made to effect a enerall_politica . l saint !tat come arnengus,wery: lot " thchand turnout to heat:ex:travertine Bigler. • The tes It Was 1 ofJoab" so visili v impr'es.s . ed,upen it. • ' I ' - • I nn attendance ofbetween ;600 and '7OO, the elega- * The'intelligen . masses of this i:'ounty know well tion ft:ont the State-of New York, Reptddleal s, and•l what value-to pla e upathe testimony of these false women and . children ineludcd' In conselptence of !. witnesses, and to them I elfecifnily submit the case, the illfiess . of-ex-Oovernov.illigfer, ( w h o . w ai l afflicted 1 feelingassuredtl at the verdict which they are about vith i 4tver,and.ague,) other ainali;is we're ealled ,to 1 1 . to render, will ,hr ng sbarn;,,and confusion, upon those . ilie:ilind..4 italtdi 11., Little; ES.fi., was first „intro-1 1 who 4z knciwingt e right, wilt yet the - Wrinikl. Phrinic." tluced to'.theAudience...:-..11e infertned •• them ...t ' i bat. , , , •-• -••---%, -- :::---' '4 " Dx3todater.,7 '' . - ' was an abolitioniSt in 184 4 3, end ',came out for t e De. 1. !-: .. - r .I - but _not of the 13uchauln stripe, - • , , meet:key in I 85.1; when he; salt l an:',cffort lm. de to I strike down that 'great and good! maul, Go,e, tigr e i; .(then ti,catinidate for re.4.4ectiono ~,on the slay .r.y is., 1 ,.. suti, :: lie considered it his dul l y ,to come out,and. lend a hand to sivc the, qovernot. trent dcfeat as lii , • opponent's *ere Making use of a false iisttato,:defeat him. The slavery issue Was a Know,Nothing pent, and a sectional affair. lie had a ;florid:A Of Slavery agitation. Washington And Jeffersol in favor of quelling the agitation, as were • alll `patriots. Theßmigrant i .'t id Societies were : bad institution,' sind the greatest;enemies to pl l c sovereignty. Ire asserted that there was troth' voring_Slavery in the eincinnatiplatform,. And inn oppOsed to slavery in the .Ilefethlican pia and then wound irdi his-remarks by- a• philippic a the Itepuldican party,•slinwing it to be- section cause the South !does not support its. In il?eil ,l From present apitearanccF, I thmk Mr. Little a about.sts successfulin saving Mil: flueltanatt fro. feat in this contest asisciwas in ' , ,saving Mr. 11i.. 4 1 18.5.1, . • 'Amu' 'would apply . some, of Bu this, re. inclindi to intro onr 45,417 Hon. Anson Bur. pi it togeiher; foi Penusylvanfo.-- Tphsnt CICOCSS. IPerry, Wyoming politient *pee*, or tfie , Presbyterian bsided, , was a Fre- i Geo. flartl-m, esq., of tilinghatuton, neAt add: the meeting, and made :in e \ tranrdinary efiiirt ctipy,the time until Mr:: Iligler, should arrive, sail the Democratic .tvasa very old pat tA etul :lames Ruchanakwas atiohl anil t: fed !DemoeratAhad IW.1•I office insthe State, had boon irethe C. S. Vlate, and hail heenlo-RusSia and Tingland ; and he now; shot' the - people ought to mahle him 'resident. Ill: 1 finer poured out the tials . of his wrath upon ;the Mlergy Who date to expi:ei4;their political ibidnions 4 .:11.* I am happy to say that the a u•lknee seemed to: on this pokion of his reinack,:.: Towards the tie illustratecrsquattCrsovereigniy by showing that: from the South With i:114,000, in Slarrs,:had as a right to carry them ;into our,Tetritories fir si c .. , • tion or otner purposes, as a man-ft our the ":"tty', to take .fsto,ootria bids and mOrtgages fiWifiCl Purpose, until the . ;peoph_.forna:d a State Ccuistit': when they. could deeldel, whether they would slavery. : I . suppOse that for the" future the liemc is party - Will assert their tree principles, that th stitution carries Slaver Y wheiet:er it goes, or ever the flag of our Llits:l is ;given to the b l reez Gov. Pigler then eamh forward and nutde:a very short addresq, in ; which he assert;ed that the grin ;iples contained in the NebraSiza Act were the sante' p inei pia: advocated by Washington land JefTerton. 13nt he did not.inforth-theLitiSembly that his prineiples, and belief differed from -this . in 1847; wlen he v.i...1 i r l the State,benate, 0r.in.1854 when he-expressed his opin ion (privately) against :i he Nebraska act. ; Gel con- Emed`hitriself to toontbl' bill—Which ought to Iltat'h saved the country. lIIZ represented that the Topeka constitution e x cluded 'free colcirdd people from the Territory; and here 1i..!13. ChaSe read the plOeiama tion of the election icings, but; the audience u icier steed it to be a part ape (bniititution, beeaul.. the Governor said so, instead of I:eing merely: arc mcndation ti. the LegHautra; . : = ' l.-- The Bon: .Ausbukt Dirdsall, ; of' Ilinghainton merly a partner Of the clebratedstatedmaniwlto grettcd that he Was notj born hqirginia," : cone; the serv4:eit. The-burden of hiS speech wad, to out who John C::FremCnt war:, ! where Ke.rwas and who was: hisfather!.., ancli; yenture to say tic . . allusion to the mother ofTrenunit excited the el prol)ationof every respetable Oerson in theaudit It was especially inti!icstingte the ladle , . I hearei eral Ituchane ors condemning it. Tfie gerilleman lived South for the last few years, and has undou l t ly acquired the habit, that should be offered: as te l t 1 el ruse. . • • - , - • The names of WasliiTzton an , l Jefferson Ni--ere I .., firmed by nearly every speaker, probably berausthey saw their names in the political han4ilk issUed by the ..irOrlthern l'enn22lll , a; flan. On the whole, put down dd . ; first shnm 156m0c meeting in Great floral a. an aid to • Fronont. linchanciers openly declared thinnselves ;oppose such iloctrittesn. were-adrocate .l d. Give thetn e'r meeting. " ! • ' FnEitorr For thi. Rcpub4ican., . I • .. . The 'Democrat' and the Xtepubliean 1; /decting r . . , . ,'. • ... ~But,noiWtr,llll, Sept, 20,15" ~. Mmuts. Einvirts :—I hare jUst finishishetl re st, • - • 1 that astonishing ,editorial production in the last ocrat, purporting to be .a description of the. I Meeting on the `2oth. Iti a desCription so : intell and chaste, it seems a pity thati there should be ing any iinportant featutewhich‘rnakes a . good acceptable to the masses:—;this lack 4 one 'whiel, . 1 though evidently of no sort of Consequence to " nice young men" of the Det4crat i may be the worthy of some Consideration by many the '.‘ li elass..A' and that is truth. . I have looked; carol through the article to find two !connected !Rent i el that are not stamped with a lied but I hrivelsougl vain. It does-not contain such!a redeeming &m i l . any more than does the (10.10d:ice party of Wine 1 modest editt;is are such fair representatiVes. 1 nearest approximation to truth IWhich 1.14 v . able to ili.Sover: is in reference to titteto of . . which was kicked up bythose "ungallant , hUrsen (a as,-for' such Unparalleled ditpravlty !) • and.. 4 the editors Say dew into the eyesi of the "!rite.,4, That a dust was kicke'd up I do not tlenyc. buti mistake. is' as t 4 Where it lodged, that toeing, in I 1 not in the' eyel Of Freinont women .or,,Treniont t but ini the eyes. Of tlie, ( linchanan men Present... dirt which has, tdoWn- . p from their gioneciti-n. • slavery has mails th . : sight' sol - tender as to be tremely sensitiie - 'that kind of duSt which il y from the triumphant march of thousands.ot Frets ers.; But the pure air of Not-ember, which . I sweep the entire North, will elenr away, the fog, so far . a id; their Vision i the t they! Can see hoSts of I men with Victory" inscribed on their banners,wl now theiimuddypereeptioits will enable them (4 1 1 1 only a "crowd Of women and children."' ! • :._ ' Passing by their stleering . allusions to the la. "bleeding Kansas," " Parson T r indoo," and that bib man, G. A: Grow,. no too ‘X-a1; to merit :a r, I will step to notice but one thing ' further whi. more stiperlatively mean than all the rest. - - i - - • I his Well'knotth that the Dentoerat while . the charge of' its late editor, openly'and wickeil ti l sidled the privat l e ' character Of citizens of . the 11. becariie they chose . tO 'differ fiom . hin in Polti npiniOns. ,; When a eliange`Wasialked of in the- ( ittitial ileriartreent, arid the piptent proprietors - We. About taking ' the place o f L',.11.-da,se . :, Many, ate' lin, democrats h who' It constant- - subscribe . -ei Pressed' it! hope! tbitt:the degraded , standard': ' the ~.i paper would _ be irrupted in. the hands. of :those. who as yetimeorruPted by - the. bribe's . of Pei political leaders or' the 'spoils of'oflice. 'illitqo sociiir are they clothed viith,the!itiinets,(l) . of the . station than they gitre :tit - in+ taitableevidene4l`thai - the mantle, ;of,. pit litiS'failen-upiin ihetu, hy going . straight . to-Work aWO • very htiSitieis.in,lwhielt 114 - 84 tiktiniously gloried It is :a. jeMnieeti rcitnarlc:- that the l'iMii , ', editors. ax ihtt . cji, all of the'icudignity uttd,fahiehixtd, with o tit. anY f., :theability, ahility, of the 'old one.' . in .:the article Lam U Me, they' manliest an eageinesS"'tO 'ape''snil . !: folio in the footsteps'et :thilr "illustrious 'PrOdecekstw by aiming their venom tiy444o'4soip. "TlO,' , ..ca; ' WO "the rea! jessni,;" g ,and, by:fiii!waY,that is juS the 1 ,, thinftltat troubles them; actinic he is . too grrizt kt, , • 1 , :higlefie udertt'Pepaaicrin, ietingl . 'at Tni,*nnoclF,.. rmi, Wyoming. C o., Sept. ii 2,18.56 • spit t- 2 1'he"_Repuldieani0f . ,,Vityciniipg !inn last Friday,' Sept: - 19; at. Timk ght 'gallantly did they turn out, it he ipOlitfc:ar. meeting •even held• in the on. G. A. Grow; Rev.tett. Landon, a'yer, of Bradford County, were the heir remarks were reSpOnded td with husiasm, many of the pcmc c rats re, ley .had the greatest 'Confidence in what he, stilt]; and henceforth they Int and Dayton. • (Democrats" had their meeting, an court Week, 'there was not so largo' the Republican'; ; and fill one-third Were Fremont men. T c great Simo-! d to be present but dt I not conic. erv. R. B. Little', of•Montrose, and a• 1 Luerne, a brother, I beliele.,'of the ; - .san of tharn'tme. • .. ; o •tn d 'their . fienni , .s . charged' them with 'y patty, withotit the least proof; that platforth crintained nothing . uphold- ; . - and.that granting to the people of e right to say whether. they would I not, wits construed by their enrinios -M slavery„ He said, that the •popular wtts passed to give the people of the • and that the rights of the people of sere as dear to them in the territories ; (entiour., is ie - not ?) that in sub stion to the People of the territotiesi„, be as one hundred , to one in fitvOrtif asked us to look to Kansas for the e said that the Democratic members 3 always held that the MajOrity'of the . . Kansas ,were in fitvon aOf free stale . ..../ • :),(1,006 now in the,Territery i .and out ter only 5,600 pro:sin - dry—thee their lin fal;or of FreedoM the world over; trees had . not made a yrc!kal it in Kan, Id have be'en no trouble, -that the CM cinati plat fot M had nothing in it in favor of 'slavery: He charged the Republican party with being 'vim posettolf all nu nner of men and beasts; -and having a majority in 'ongress, they refused tO repeal thp fu gitive slave law as they had promised ; or to abolli-h t he slave tradin the Districtof Coltrrabin. He said the Phil:1(10p iia- platform - was, madei'up-of . a great flourish of words and wrongs in Kansas,; and that tho 4. Wrongs were not now' at `issue ; Mattltat the Repitb- Leans were resPonsible for those wrongs, that the Re publican part)l lay in the way of the.Democratie PaN ty (what a pit•• '.) that the line of 2c.=.•:',0 had regard only to the Lo i fishma puiehase, that the Democratic party wiped it out ; that pOpidar sovreignty might take its place 4 and that they could not take Popular soreignty . thete without wiping -timeline out. He furthermore .s;tated that there was .but Gyre Southern 'delegate hi th 4 Phititielphia coaventlo l n,•andhe was turned out! ' Ille charged its with being political ab olitionists, Which came with very. had grace front one who but !al+ short years ago, made an.abolition speech on,thei Foulth of July ; te e the bbath School ' . Children in S i pringville. . _ . ... _ Mr: It sigh neat spoke; and the gist of his argu ment was . a tirade against 2.fics. Stowe for writing Uncie Tf.»:t . s C'abipt,,. (whichlte tickpowledged he had read With team in his eyes,) as being a tralter to thej institutions ofher. country. jfe alleged that Mrs. Stowe, JOhn P. Irak and David Wilma were the ljadeis of' the 2.cpublican party: . •,1 •• , 1 A few more such 'speeches as those if Messrs. Lit, tle and Wright, and Buchanan wont hii've enough f far a corporal guard in Wyoming:- '•; . - i 1 Be - assured that Wyoming Will speak out itiNovein- 1 ber from her , I fountains and yalleys, in thunder tones for free soil, free speech, free Men,-Fremont and vic- I 1 tory I' ; • -1, ' WYOSIING. I For th Ara - si -LIST RE ; • 3f tssts. had a Islas Lis unock ;a tt r! ! EMI iug the ftli''gest county. The and Mr. E. R. IMM were good speageia% and the gre'atest en markiiig • tbai. Mr. aßliv and were for Frew , To day , the ithhoog'4 . it, we i 'number a.; at tiEtlim , enrser hl' .Bast expectl . The :Teal:en.: NI Mr. Wriglii, ofl EEO dough,face Co ME Mr. Little ca o oe lk hching the slat•& the Cincinnati ing the chari;e t hy: tcriitory ti have slavery twee' tainlv in s()vereil,9ll.y /lc tvri itory peace the territories IME •i in .11ie Stat e :82 witting the quo.' the vote wotth. EIMIII *O,l Trt2,:doto ; ant :i;otit of it. cula ;* bad of Congl eF•sba l inhabitants of SEM Itlon, Izave wrat- Ahilt there 'wa or that num,: ploroun and if the BEI BEI as thcie voul fib' I rc .. Cfld fOl tl, t his Mil EME •c v _ has tea- MO rifle Two to loh- For the -Rep'Wien» Au Republican Meeting in Jessup A large number 131 f the free-sgoilers , Of 'Jes - sup met at the hotel of -.Daniel 1161F 4 -oit Thur . sday evening tlie -18th of Sept: :/856, firthe Purpose :of fertning a Re- . pUblicmt -.Association. or. Fremont Club of Jessap.- -The 'number Was so great, .:they could not be coni;. Pressed within the building. ." The meeting was 'called to order, .rifid they 'then proceeded to elect officers. Robert Griffis wai elect ed President, :I)aeslntsibtl;.l3iMjatuid Shav, Samuel Roberts vice -Presidents; and.. W. A „Fattrot Recording Secretary. The following named' gmitlemaa 'were: then appointed a committee tddraft Constitution:mai: Resolutions: J.: WI Smith, s vl. D!olkis, R. S.-Bin:h ard, John S. //owell, John ilancok, John Bartlett,- Andrew Caswell r . . The committee having retired,- Win.: Turrell, Esq., id answer,to 4 call, addresScd the meeting-At grea.t length and:with much ability: His remarks were 4tentivelylistened to, after u licit, Rev. A. L. Post and A.: Chamberlain Esq., each, (it being late) In jelly. and • pertinently ad dressed the mooting, eliciting great applause: . !rho ecumitte . e . then reported a Constitutiert auxilliaryto the Republican A ssosiation cifyentrose'and Bridgewa, ter, which was ntunerously signed together with the following- resolutions, all of.tvhich were unanitntlusly adopted. SE Mn -1.1/ass igot t Jack- hese tight beer ;fully l ines lit in cut, the The men dust MS EMI 1 e ex. , i t s fact, (The resolutions' which entlors . e 'the' Itepubli9nr. phitkarth and candidates; approve the :course of Gov. in Klinsas, condemif , the so-called\peinocrtatic. 'party for aiding in. the 'exten sitm of sle'ry,- appro.i-e .the course' of Hon. G. A. drow, ondors \ e\ilm 'State - ancicottllty tickets, declare that the Constit7 gives CongresS:sOverejgol er.over the. Tetritoriks, and apprOve.the course of the religious press anii,tll9 clergy itt.i sustaining the cause cf freer' 'a; the want of ,room.) nen, The ISM MEM MI awl Ut47l o~ MEM Ihmdaff,_ ...41(4 , tt Club. At.,a meeting of Citizens. held in Dundaff oethe eye:ling of the 2.oth of Sept; 1856, for the:purpose of organizing a Freniont Club, Gen: E.' PhitMey was unanimously appointed ebairmaiyaml T i ltotnas'gr-1 ham Secretary, and the following proceedinni'w had : - , no- DIY? •h is TM • Xl)king opposition to, tio'aupport 'and'exten sion of American slavery under, the authority of the genoml pverranent,.mni .determined to. do all that in us lies fo`i the cleciion of John C. Fremont oa the Frt sident of the United ,States: mudding to restore the GoVermilent of: this 'eoentiy to the pure piaci. plea htittrthe *fie, piin6y upcin 'which it Rua adminia toted In the'days of WiMhingtori and jefferson; we, ,citizens s of . bUtidAiff,'•Plifford, assOilato cnirielves finder; the Ibtowing ' • ' • ..Article This fiSsoelatiekti= Sli;ilhig tudled - " Fremont vld iceithinr Clubk:of•Dundaff, vicinity. : 41 4 '2. TL :6dicers,ol ieldub ahat dent, two Vice Pret4idents, two Secrintrica. a /Wally urctr Fl4F‘ceconuniue4 of - three; anti 4,11 Executive Committee. • Art:..3. The aims of the club shalli be elected by the club, shall iii.tfOrtuihe tluties ordinarily apper taining to the oilCeiibiAvhitit they are ehoSe . n, and Piesi- EC the .. . . . siiill hold their respective offices . until their su e _ . . : orftikivi',clisen.... :. • Art. 4. The club shall hold regularmeetings eve r y turdit4 evening and the Pre . sident -or. the two i s I; Or itidei* may at any, time in their discretion c, ) ,;„ ' yeti° .tbsit;•'-.- club by advertisement inihe p a Perstir by iii tio' . f otsoilicikt notice. . . • . . . '.. Art . :* This constitution may be ausended it pr iAui . reibig of the CNN provided that notice in wri t i 4 , shall have been previously given. . . i .___ The meeting Alien proceeded to the election of q. ricers and. the . fallowing gentlemen Were appointed.: President, Gen. E. Phinney ; Vice- liresident, Tlinmas G!ahum,_John Montgomery t Recording retary, Thoina.s Arnold ;• Corresponding, Seeretarv, Silas G. Warner;' Treasurer, Henry E., Bodge, FG nimee Cnnintittee,-. Jos. B. Slcieum, Henry 'Calker: }?I Ward -M., Tingiey;,,ETriclitlinittec, Burditk;•Billings Ilurdef maii,:JnO. tol eiiiliii,"drin':Maitiornecy, Then ; D. Reese, F41.(4.Y Bails,,eha!'. son, Wni.44eilltr, Mortimer *Tains, D. 11.' Win. H. Sloctim,,P; W. Chamberlin,.E:2.-Biller, G. G. Reynolds, M. C. ,s,tuart, base L. Arnold, Jilo. Gardner, cfilts;s o taliarattiVilinrilb er, Christopher Feels. , _ On 'notion; it wasi rnstilyeq, thpf the p!oceedinp of this taecting•tre publisheti in the ktdepeneitti• 1t. 40 prblican i and Carbondale ,Transcript.' • - For the Republican: Chase vs. Snooble. .. . . . . Bfkssr.s. Enrtors :—Every one who halt listened to the.. harangues of the " great Border 'Ruffle.' chain. pion,". (Snoohle,) will reColleet that , lie charges the paternity of the , Missouri Comprom ise upon.the old Federal party' of 1830; - and he . therefore argues `I. that ' Messrs. Grow and Wilmot,: by weeping dyer there. peal. of that o mettsure, prove to.the .'world. that dr y . are Federalists," , Now without insnitpg•the intelli. gence of your readers by an attempt te refute so p a . • tea a 116,1 will offer the counter statenient . of lii, quandont; fricud and confederate, E... 11.. Chase. • --i n the ifon &age - Democrat' .of Jalje•tith,'lBs6, in: an ed. itorial, written to refute the idea that the Dentocrat. • is party was in any . butnner.'resp. onsiblefor the re. peal of the Miisouri Com . remise, he Says ;...: ''. • . p i t " We' have not the ali' Il eat etinfulence i n - th e.rc j . , fusion hi." opposition/w • ' these meaMake to the ) epeal of the Missouri •• . - . - tntis e. nal tine trot f r esdablished byrdinisser , , • / f "" otes, a deasojratie OA g rex., and rt,„, democratic Administration, and has beya deresarrat;c dads - in!. in Penn•gplrania tAe.pan th irty years. • We. shall oppose; with all our energies, the attempt to make the demeeratie party occupy 2 different platform'. now, SVe shall stand by the old landmarks' of the party, and try to do our duty." ~.. Thus you have . Chasecontradicting Snot:dile on a. question 'of fact, ~ and or einceinitia life telling the truth! Perhaps It was a blunder, hut charity Would presume otherwise.. flow tidthittily he Las adhered to his pledge to a oppoSe with - all his ever. gies the attempt to. Make the Democratic party . ot copy any other platform," .your readers and the pub lic;'well knew. To.dity we 6nd-hint banded with the repeaters of that "Old Democratic measure," - ig. noring " the Dethocratie- doctrine of tenn.sydrania for. thirty years"—the . . and corrupt political charts t's—the voluntary sear. enger for an orgaidAtion th feeks no more exalted leaders than Bully -Brooks and ‘tnurderer Herbert: . - What a lahrtentable Qpeeinien of " easy virtue!' One more reference 'to the extrset.r - ehastrittays thatte, , Missouri • C'omproxitise 'laps been. Democratic doc• ; trine in Penusylrama for thotri ...„ . This n an. other - truth. Now is .it difficult.' to distinguish the real. Democracy..in , , titisompaignith.: ; Which party supports the Missouri. Co r n tpt emise? .. The Fremois paity to be' sure, and the 'Buchanan partiare.exult ing over its repeal. Thereupon it follows that the Buchanan party, (which is headed by a whilont Fed : I. eralist,).is 'not the party of mire Perpfxraey. Thank you, Mr. Turn-coat Chase, for ihis,(aecideutal) truth. , • :. „A Tats Dastocur. ' .. r . . Buchanan on squatter Scveieignti.' • 13elow we publish th e letter of -Mr . 1k - ehanan written in 1 . 848, explaining hisllerks County 'letter Ni . ..,l:itteu . the! rrevious year. At a time_ when the County i 4 tilled with )44115. , . _cal -pimps, pl i velaiminct to the - people . Ithat tin, " • lis•soltrico - iiipi-pntise7 I:ia,s. tincOnstitu. , aura- , and that congress- had jib' right to 7 legislate fur the territories.(one ballot whom .never read the constitution in -their lives,) - it is not a.little in terOting to refertothepPin ' ion of Mr. thtehanzin,,befl4re his dentitywas . swallowed up - in the .Ciiicinnati : Platform; and .we would advise every man who is ton.: fronted with any ortheß4rder'Ruflin4-Con .Astitution eqou • nterS-t6 just refer tl.ipm . o the following' letter - of thki tion..TanieSlPlat ft.ttni, and. then leave, them to solye; the tom . ilia between tire: constitutional, expounder at their icisiire - :. -: ' - I . ' - • '' ' ' l ' . . - . . ._ - - .. • W;tst . irtn - Tort; August 21, 1848. -- . — .DEAp. ISI4 i.l 1:1 . ..CiU - St. received . yottriof 'thiolf2tit inkant,,:in.y.hicii-Yoit submit to mu - ) '4l6'..ibltoWitig . fmragiipli„ aild:A § k _whether it COnfains'aii.ticeuritte vOrsiOu of thC.conversa 'trOn betiveen . 'uS,einteerning my - 11erks 'coup ty letter, on . the . occasion .to ‘'which, you re fer : . . . •i - • Happening to meet ''3fr.".Buehanatt at the President's levee, on rilaty;e euirtg,liallat, his attention to this letter 'ana,aslaid him if lie intended to be tutderstjod the, population of. a Territory-1"r aii„unargan- , ized capacity had the right: to control the question of - Sla7 . veri in :such' Territory:; declared that - do stteli; idea' - ever been: ' maintained that the construction,, put 11110 n his I angunge.l)y - Yancey.- )vas st, perversion of it,pfain. ac i d otiviqua,ineatv• inT ; that . , ..in his Opinion, the itilMhitants such; Mid no ,politiCat'right4 .[although they . possessed all, ;the 'private right's ,off nerican that :they; had uo pOwer Vtliituyer . o4r the, subjetlt of Slain:. rj ; .and they could neither . interdiet not tabtish it, „except 'when assembled irt:4Con-' ventiou to form st, State, Constitatiau.., :40• further authorized‘tutdrequestedine to ni4l,L .• . .uty public . Use , of the declarations' that , l Might, thin): 'prOper, to, ecirreet, „an'Y siou ivhieh;Afr. - Yaneey'i; 'cOnstruction, 0t..144 langinige in the letter- might Lhave • made." • , W _w ith the addition hich I have Inserted ' between brackets, this statement is,sulistan tially and almost literally correet, according to' my recollection, • , In my letter_to Berks county of' theli2.sth s , August, 1t47,1 had siiid, ," under ;the' Mis- sourt Compromise, Slavery was fore,ver =prk. - .' hibited north of the parallel- of 36 'degree*"' 30 minutes, and south of this liarisllel ,Ofe question "}vas lett to ,bo decided bir.tbe Iwo , plc." What peoplel , ttideutitedli:the poi> , ple of the Territory, assembled in cotixeution to form a t State Coin3(44lth"•arid' ii,liicaiitois \slot' in the Unien ; and not the , first 2i4Hien titters, or "first tomers,"*ho . Mlght r iiitkon to arrive in the Territory assemble4lltglab; lie theeting,'_ If a dont - ton thisgtibXct t,c0414 possibly„,Ne \ xist, 'it is ,removed, li;f e ltapiext sed- cmding sent e nce of my letter; i.'firoceed to state; "Congress on the - tit1100don: pc Tex— as, adopted the s ‘ arn`ei - ' riiitp,""&r::',Cla . What _ was this rule" The loftit: t.esiguttou _'for annexing texas to \ t)r, -Mtta;,2tioi - ,0 . ap ; proved Yareh Ist„lso . , ; tiniive:r§ the: 4 que.4- ' , tion in 'the thllowitig `*lsrda :' . 4 Anit'stich states, Its nia - he:fornia'tlitt'otthii Vertion .. of said - "err* r - ' Vhig:siAuth, 0 ' 36'ilignss_. k_lh, 30 minutes ficirt ' la titude, commonly kmAn' as the lkilssuri Courprentliel 4,.. ;hall le ' admitted into the - Pnion'..)ittli' 'ol• without .., Slavery, , as 'the people' ill fait' Sia6(iskifig damtsgiPn niay #ate." - Saciiivit' the, des.' • . eriptlon ef.the people i to Wiled 1 .- roferrtA, \i!! niy 13grks county) . ettit:. ''" ' , . N., 'Any - other construction of" the Irm lettet a - =I Ii
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