A II U = U II IM A de H ` . .; i , l'- '" 1 1 i C lA.RLES.F. REAL? : H: I'RAZIER EDITORS. , I , 'r o.4).kipßi9q ,80119 f car As airpeebiten of Owls" e:rigistal campaign poesy, we will h a ck the following, contributed for the ismumennur REPODAICAII, against anything we ist re f xel, seen : 1 t '1 I(' r lORDEIC Eltote..a..The . Word' Jordan is to signify Mason & pixon's line.,4l.tnhor.] - I Will sing yz a song that is not very . long, , Of the' slave-drivers and hunkers .accordlng ; :%. , A 1 d the doughfares, took, will find all true, I. ien they laid on the other side of:Jordan. A nd little Fnrnk Pierce h a doughfaee too, • '- For he Is rated by the South according; lii,s whole career will end tp a year; ~..., Then, start forithe other side of Jordan. ' . , The Smith is in a stew to know what to d 0,..• And the NorOi'will have a word it r; For Ramis fok slaves the South means to•havei, And.tliaKorih means to send them over Jordan.. New Chase and Zing David bc4ide many time; The sinies inter Kansas mean to enned in ; Bat they will find to their Cost the labor Is lost, Whenthey land on the other side of - Sondem is §t4net, *• Douglas • Co., .11ow, Ateheson, and C .i . ibinnori too has a word in,, r l d To help them, ini tdi 'seat* their , boon, ' Ti they can't Mai on this side of Jordan. - .4.. • intre is old Davie Wilmot, a man of some note. .4 o will stand bathe cause of freedom; battle he'll fight for freedom-and. right, And stay On this side - of jordan.. • • . itiit the northern 41cntglifiets---will soon run their Ace ; Aqa tl,- d the South must ,follow according.; • . - d the North isill film stand, a patriot band, r Fretiont,, on this side of Jordan. . &Herbert. to vent his wrath and ire, spot . poor Paddy according, • .. • &don't regard law no more than straw, _ • a - ,re he lives on the other side of Jordan. . , . d:Brooks he mauls great Sumner the brace, pour out his 'wrath according; o , tlie.n leaves his seat to make aTetreift get to the 'ether side of Jordan. T. 1 A., T. in Kansas they bum both village and town, freedom according fill that land with slave-driving - bands. a they can't stay on-.this - side of Jordan. To to Bur ine, Free Soilers, fight,with union ararrnight; f Fremont and Free State according; d lei the World know, wherever you i go, lthare Froadant on this Side orddrdint. Frie .spgecti . 01d-Pree Labor our motto shall be., - the South may boast in; Weli : go the whole hog, over pountain and bog, 'ToMep it the other 'side of Jorhan.. • Faieiell to oldluek and the negroes also ; .M;(1 he white house for Fremont aceoglipg,; Le't l qld Buck find a stall, in . Bachelor's' hall, tin the other side of Jordan. _ I..'!iloiiiiqi' ifi'frdikylt.% Dmzt 14,431wrica—Shail &tend f, ed I. • ennkor Don giii in ii boasted that the itepublilai4 'could not go imb one half 'of-the I.• Statm Uf this 'Union and carry their principles with them,,`; This boast, to the shame of Kr. Douglas and associates b e it spoken , is true 'lt is Indt,"f i lnwever, the whole truth, The people of the !..outb themselves lire under an iron, despotism that contr its Iticii2ZOni utterance as well at that of the tititeSs of othetgtates. With the aiukie exception of Dela Ware, there is not a alivehohring State in the iUniori in which the free white citizens eau speak, or irite,LOr cote their honest testaments , lilts freemen, semirac . ilt6 iuMpeif 'zibnexions to the stave Wirer. The six and a quarter millions of non I liar ellohling whites Of the SOuth are thrast ttripSechl less mid powerless in the hands or the three tundrei shiVeholieri; as the blacks themselves.-- !We Oigarchicoestiustes the supreme political, a:‘ anti:-.:Autrionalnwer-, the interest of slairery is the grist grakand ate reqUirentents the law to which ev fiery and every body must bend: We appeud a fei • eta from our - exchanges, showing Whit kind of free' om white men enjoy in 'Alio states, and what kind bran institution Kr. DOnipts and his friends are '.tryini to force into Kansas. . - NurrrE IIIZEDOW IA YERetwu. Hr. J. C. tuderwood,-of Clark Co., rrrgin' ii, at tendeil the Philadelphia• Republican Contention, and made vpeech therein sowing filmset( opposed to the eiension*slavebr. Travelhig leisurely home. Irsrd,' ,t after tbe,Ajournment of the Conventicm,he was met ai Washington by intelligence that his attendance - 414 4marke Delegate had greatly incedsed his se!tglitiorri arid 'caused *fierce excitement throughout tie county, and that be must not venture to :elan) tellislhOmei Fueling on inquiry that there was no mistake in thill information, he stopped et Washing= t 4,1 aid relit e friend; Gen. Frauds E. Spinner; H. eirom Herkimer Co.. „New. York, • for his tamii f p ,lienchr resides in/4 * . T. Si e tell,*Tini/eit b i° tiseqled 'surd his borne of 800. acres of lands ' li4:nyespolLdiiifol tllB Ei , ettlniPogt, writingtm4 . . , - . , , ',ashington says : _ ' • 1 ' i .- Yr. Untlenrimd,' the ruginian who was ati sum quilt expelled by his Pro , Slavery rteighborstrotnthe 'ol,d;Doininion,' for making:a speech at _ the,Nation *l- heiniblidni Conventioh, leaves ‘Wathington this Loon fee New Ye*, withhis family:: In order' te prepare for the ithantionment of his fine km "ill the y ley of the- Shenandoah, he was not allotted to: aI)P nearer home thanth.,U city, and a Mend:* `of grass Volunteered, as a friend, to bring his &m -it, theme to meet him in Washington, so as to join him' hiriAnwney to a free State. ,Tbe gentleman ttliaperformed this ulle e infnate me thas all manner Opsteroms . stories are In circulation among the t m) trio* umghbors of Ir. tlndersood to bls PK* ()mot the Most absurd of them signally die ' PI - i the igntamme prevailing in the rural districts ofi slave Statery namely : that be was in the habit of tog negroes and selling them at ha l f price is Can i lam also informed by the same gentle. was t daring hie -mteinsien to the place where /4 - nderwiteCreades. whatever , the 'more littetal ) orb' neighbors uttered any sentiment...of 'sympathy for 11 int or Lev sentiment of an Anti-Slivery eharae ter, "Odd firstlebk back over their shoulders to mak su re they were not omehasuiprobably with the inakei that they might Almre bictattosost sig. B . t testitittaty to the oppressive surveillancentu t ter Slkir t h free' speech, free action are Impossible." - . . , : 11 1° Geno Pie of Woodstock'. Shenandoil Co.; ' l74 4l . aise attended _ iiillPhaladelatia Colventiono— % retUrgi:ll,loietini Of citizens. Was Cs4o and 1 41 s %% kir !. 7 adop ted eara itatff l lidsta b ed im .wthe t° leilTe r bthee StatenentOr . Algariaa ManflU COX, frien4 at 1 4 =04 natt Thom — Vla i * mew to foni Wean in Wheermilkir:ihn 15th dam: Tbit, :le 0%64 nag wine pro weeks berme; the . -.- --, • • ' . . t ...-Vr" ......_ , •••••= 9-4, ttAN. -- yot 4 . Aigwei.,----T'Al.."-,-,0q.7.,•;•`41,---;•"*X4,e4,411-40,00e19".4.1r -r ,.. ..). ,- .0 .. . :,,,,,,, cr- ,, :-.J. , ,, ,, N,,,,...t.4-t-i-.0,,k0..t".. , .4.--41...,4 , .-41,t, - t ,- * • - , t,.,.• -- ...- - -,:- • • '. --•t.'- ' '. • . • . . ~ •. • . ..,_-.::-; ..,-,... „,..,,,,.? : :.• , ....,,,i,.., ~,,--, ••••..i . 1 .:, T. - : • , ,,-...--...,..;..:-.70..,..., „ - .... ...?..2...7,,,: . . ~, . ...7-1- ; ....: -,,. ,•‘:,‘; •.;;;,It. •,:•.; tp. 'ii - - i.z.l.:l•T:; t -;-? . , - . , ,t. f . -, , , „.. 1.4 ..fti.,i,,5c...T.:"..• ~ A i ti...,,‘,[*: ' . 2'2 ". S ' "• . : .. . ' • . ~ ... ,• ••. - . i: . . . _ ; .- - -41- k -4411-, ' -t 415, 1 tt t • -' •'.- _. - • - • , . ,•• `•.- . • I.''.,- •, : n ~ • . .. .._, ..•..:• , ....: ..:, .. ~ , , ... ...,....„: ~ . ~..._,... ..•.. ~ ... _• •• ~..,.:„ ~,,.....,..... : •i-ti1..:,-.: - - :•4_-it t :-T . ' rt--::771-!..'1 5t.,7 ? - ',.:it;;,.. ci ~...,..7! , :A . : 44;.1"......,,, :" •1 . .A .„ip , --- - •.- .. • ~. -:. 1- % ... - , .---,: • • - ...,-,,---,,,-... ~...:;,.-.,....., -1 , • ,-,-- -...- : -,.'.-- ....7.--.;._--;.` ,-, ' ''' 43, '". k , . , . . 4: ..:1; ,:;,,.. ..,. -; :*.l .. . f ~ : • ~ ~.. .„.,...,,,,.: ' ::,. • • ',,' 'cn. lilt-. . - 7-,- - • _ . . . x. ~.• ..„.. . . .. t • ' 1 :! . . , - e i. . . .., .. ....„ - -1 • 1,,:. ~,..,,, . 1.! ..i....,,;. ~,..i ~,;, 3.,., 4 . r. , ? ._, i ;_ . . ...4ti4;5ti1194.i . -4 . .f .? '. .1 .. it:',..: - t , t2:ri .. 7`. . e 1 . 1 " ''''. i ! ' : ~,,. 147:- kct-2.7, i, ;:. ft 77:: ~.7...,...4',....:-." • t: - -:-, 4‘ t r .. : ''' • . - I ! I, " '. : • 4 . s ~ ...t ,7•4•-i ..,.. t ...i: ..... , •• 7 _ . •'' . 1' ' '..... • .!,•••i i:'/ ,• •7' '•'' ..:, J . ... .. ' . I a - - ....44 " 4` , r . 1...-. '' ' . . ' .- • , . . -. „ .. - 4. . . . . .'.. , . - 7 , -4?: : . .'4 , -.. 4 . 0.. - *., - 0 ,- .: . 4 -. • i . • . . -- ~. ~ .. 1 4 1. ~; .. . 4. ~ t ; ....,-! . . ~ ~ . kl- ~ • . : " t -. .. - ~ : . ' -• . ••=.- - '' • r'-: - -..T; - -.----•:.-2 i;''•l . - • - ' ' : : '' ' ' ':-, . . -;,Ptc4f.'g-- - -- - t • - , -,1,- - -,: • ~., ... , .. ~. _ 41 1 s . . 7 :..i. , ,,...: _ 71 _ ...,,...„ ,. : nt, ,-; f•V. f,lt. , '.• ..‘ i, ~r , :i.... • • - ',Z ~-: •:, . 1 : ,-;!'.., - ;.1 r;....:,;,, - . - ,!.-:',..,.:: "1.4= : ,;" ` - 1. - . • •,: - i.1 1 ",r.r.,1 - 4.- , -- . - tt".''.... , • • • • - ..,..,x .....,, ~. ...,,, t •••••,..........,- . . , • '. -•._- • - , it" I *-1 " ` . : ...: , -t,. , t. - . — I . , - . .` ; "T.: - ..:„... - .. • ',..-;.--......`-:: ••...::` ...;....7.; - .`:- --- ..... - . - . - ,At:. - ,.;,.: . :t="44.r.- . ' - :`, - ..;";....`1: - .'•'- ` ;• i . 1 :' ~ • - ,- - . .r. • • ' ... 1.14.. - cl.. .2 „,, .... , .',,, •T ~. 1 . .,,, ,, ...x.144.:,,-1 . •.•-ri' •_,,,! il: 1 j - ',. ' .•-•,, , .-.. ' ' ;$.,..'.• . :... - : .','': •'- •. : ~. 2 • •,..- - , ' ."1- .'• • ~ . : :t , .-. '' '','. ,':, 1 '. - • - ,•..'"- ' , - .1. • -4 , - - ...-, . ...,, ',.... • :;,.,...,-- cE,... ~ . , 1,-,. .. _ ~.. • - , , - ,‘-..`t .„ .-- - - ~., .. ;.: .:: -._, ; : , I _, -._ , '.'..t . .' . , .... : ,,..7 : , li,,t.F,"jt; it' 7 i--3. - U 3 : k . ' it ~. . , . :, .1. , e . , . • ' . .. -.• . . . . . , 6 , . .-. . .. . . ... .. ..._ _ . . , . . . , .. . . . _.., . • .... - „ i :ti ' t l' I .' - - • - Cr y ' aim) . 21lertiglr'ACAUME/7"-EVIA i.g;2 - 'Y'_a _ ____ • ,1 7 man of those present were eteciqrse hostile to the. objects of the meeting. Or- G. I . * 4 4 commenced a - s p eech ; which the rowdies interrupted and stopped, breaking up the meeting; and greeting Br. Smith, as he 'Came out, says The .Arpti! (Buchanan) "with stantry kick* and knocks." - the ;narrative is thus continued by The. Argus:- • . • . • " Ite began to - thint ofescaping atter be had reach. - ed. the Post Office corner, which is about a square and a half from the hail door, arid made an attempt to run, whets the crowd upon him and a general skirinish enrnird' i in which wounds were in ..t.ticted on hen gentlenur,i , Hr: Ward and Mr. Hard • The. latter is a ming ouutivrho was not in any way connected with the affair,and received his wound, which was upon the ; brina, accidentally; Mr. Ward's wound is of a very serious nature, but is not regard. ed as mortal. 'louring the melee Smith made his way, up Market strcet,.!ruid succee ded in taking . ref. ; uge in the MeLure.House, where he was arrested and privately taken by the officers turd lodged in jail." -1 1 • The Wheeling ranee (Fillmore) said the people of yirginia : ` don't wish Orli/alto to do with ,Fremont congregations, and, there Is an Owertohebning miens in the State whieh reilipart them down whenever they ate agfeniPted2i. - • , CASE. Ali A A highly respectible booksellirig firm of Mobile, , long esta'blisheirtherelbSts been broken up, and its, members compelled', to fly for their lives from the fir : . ry of the mob, all on Recount of the selling of some books supposed to Abe 1 4boritile M ! the away Of, the Southern politicians. the . lifobile: 'Minster of Aug. 17, 'publishes a ?cries Of propositions adopted- at a public meeting. - SO , ' . 'ectficlude as follows : MEM " They (the hohkfellers) - are dangerous persons in a slaveholding community; and ought to be ejected . front - • " It is, hotveVer,'deshablethr the purposes of ex act justice, and in order to preseriv that exalted con servative character. . i •which has always distinguished Southern communitms, l that this ejection should be p.aeatikle and .without the least personal violence ; and the committee would deprecate 118 the last zof 'evils, and as a stain; ; upon Southern character, ator resort to violence; hey any , excess in accomplishing the end.propOSe&.. 1 ' ,`,!The-tommittee, therefore, recommend that three persons be appointed I, to wait 'dti Messik William Stricl;ratd St Edwin ,Uposon,and announce the co - 6'th*. sign at Which the meeting has arrived, and to Inform them that Toilets they7teare the city ieithtn flee tic" re cannot guarantee; t4lo' personal 'safety. 4 • "Stain upon Southern character," Pshaw! „„ born" ;;LikROLISA.. ; ' - • We find in Zion'a.ifereld the followinestatentent of 'the expulsion of a Cieriyman froM"South Carolina: t‘ The iter.-Georg.e_..lo. Boardman has been expel:. led from his pastorate trt Barnwell, S. C., for declining to attend a public, meeting to express appiobation of lir. Brooks' conduct:c lit. Boardman, hating no wish tin harticipate inthe tnetiting, Wilk not present, *here upon a committee was despatched to his residence to inquire the reason.,, ?4r. B. quietly replied that he' preferred to have no'', patt in the proceedings. Upon this he • was required: tO:give'i, catceorienl answer to the question whether,he sympathized with Mr. Stun:. n . ee and hissiews. TOwhielt Mr., B;answered in sub-' stance that he „wished I not to be,alitts" catechized, but if he must" answer, . nd, otherwise as an honest man than to;saY yes. This was enough, and he was at once iota That he could have ttrentylour I holm; to lea v e Resistance or refusal was useless ; and making such arrangements -its he could -in tliat brief :period; , Mr. ,Board man itiok his depar4 , ture for The North," t That is what Might. Buchanan and Fillmore call tali AntifiEit. Nationa/iim. • T. • A . .rzsg tis:z. . • . Is, • • The Galvesto • rsi of July 8, contains an account bf a meeting of ihe"iiitir.ens of that City. to take into consideration, the pleopriety of permitting Lorenzo Sherwood to iddrese the people in defense of his eimme in the Texas Legislature. The offence of Mr. Sherwood, himself a slave-holder, Consisted solely in expressing on the floor of the House, the opinion ..tin4. "die Congress.of the Unit ed States. has !Ai Constitutional right to legislate on thessuldect of i Slaveryi is ',the, Territories. For this avowal Mr. S. eras not bnly!ohliged to resign his scat in the Legisfath;e, boZ his fellow-citizens resolved, in the meeting reported -by the l•lews;that be should not even hard therivflege of rief,ense: 'o'4e ettrali, from the lettei- addressed to Mr. Sherwood by diree lion of t he tang: , • GAl.vrsros, Monday,. July 1, 16156, LORENZO At a public meet ing of the.sitizeas of Gilvestop, convened this mortf ing at the Court House,- in consequence of your pub lic notice that you' would makeon, 'address this even ing, in defense blyiiir Course in the last Legislature, it was unanimously resolved to notify you of the well considered sentiments Und' resolute determination of the people ofGalvestim,', as follow/is,: That your. righti in",ctpnition 'with every other citi zen; b 3 Wee opuuon , I , :free 4liscusainri, and the largest liberty of self-defenCe,tis fay recognized, and will be respected.(!) ; • 7 - - But therein cone,suljeet;comteqted with your course in the'Legislattfre.--that of Slavery—;on which nei ther you, nor any tine ,entertaintng your views, will be,pe_rinitted tb apjieiir, before Idle community in, a public manner. ' You are, therefore, explicity and PeremP WAY not lied,' that; in your speech, "Trot p ntit Up permitted to touch; in any nianner,lim the buhjectof tilivery, or your opinion thereon, either dim* or indirectly, or byway of explanation, os otheririse. • " This 'notilca tion is nigised by the chairman And 896' retary of the meedeg. 2 ., After *ddresses by persons, the usembly alionrned to meet again at the time and place appointed by Mr. Sherwood to delis eihis .address ; theitto) see that the resolses of the meeting were-enforced. if - , • , ; HzrccY• The Cincinnati Gaactie Boxi.C. B. Runs, athis c!iy, made a Republica' Speech in Richmond, lid., a few nights since. The next morning a stranger #tepped up to him in the cars, addressed him by name, and , entered into Conversa tion. with hint. , He told: him: that be was from Ken tucky, that he bad head his speech the night before, end that he cordially approyed every word of it.— Be. said hilt:Wier owned eighty staves, and that all bit friend+' awdrelativei were: slarelioldera, yd they AnuesitY &soused tAel aS,Za peeled' priratety, mid all thought eauleklreatly benefit Ifentueky. to .6e rid of her Arm, 11011,1ide of Xerituckians,-he said, &Ong% the awn"; 'lily; 41541 deg they dare to * ma k i Wiety, • and uadbi evik !perches aft Mr. Beatles, - Maly would be etholieked I a a feriyears.-- Path is ne. doubt the ficC - The' mm-slaveholders and Anliagiveirmin St **South 'dare not eipress their : sentiments, 'although 'thei ire-undoubtedly nuns is many of ~ the Boinhers - Bates; - WherkFreedom becomes national , Onee - ":trwirei erwi3 l lol7 joetional, this *2l no honker bathe ease, and the net older of th e Skye Oda ill &re to robe - his vogee against The tranny :which Wow'r' Ids Bps and o!herWse mr . esses . • . tileA.4ol**A'Pitt4lo4 *N!nr,iiertulf thitlicia of Ai:J*lre gime ke• support, codes 4148 ' pliragrapil fivie ths s Gmeite, .and adds: 4 Tlie:'e,heieli itateictintet th e - facia in the • c they.SuMV Ads . 4 W ProwAteditelowt 4 . 4" . ,ce viiich i ist siverat immeime'ejfeet, aviAl there Or tolitfeeeteehr.thire • their hossec*ietioit ho their" i &or and sal teameot # u °°!i i t : ntee; the trhote toutarN ioatfootackywfll4eeidee her pi•Op9rfts • The - few itti l o - olerry,their aiticiipnces fn thek_pecketieee bestrode& themselves; 'to fed the gegueDije Of truth and an d traleientu. j. If Mit lahO rOr ti W i sp* *kid4oo4l6. Wit ,liitaiekeititti:therehtito. itikorto ll ****betoktlibut gitilektotihilisiiktiftStiokik lizontestqldiy ziore.4llll itatitibcidh ibe ' preettlok Most: -iseltbettemit4diteletet-01 r ' . =M • MON the eters which form the Union ceive their light from the Coosa Statal." The fact is undeniable that the desire to , be rid of the politle:kl drivers direriihOut the Southern 'rifted into silence and inactivity b; tivenesi of that despotism which 4 the moblegislature of Kansas - , 1 andexcuse to ilic 'assault upon , . at WashinitOn threatena with 1 and pistol, the - Northern.tnan who, ice and brutality by their right thought- and action Of • Southern :tackled as the limbs of their eldil is heavy on the necks, and parnly s the iongu6 and. arms of all inen. It is a night= they can not move to shake. iff, Remove the yoke of terror; give iiii: munity to free speech, and defens re strength to free action, and there is no manner o • question that the political progress of Slaveritwonld be finally checked: le The cause of Republicanism is _mtrional ; it proposes to 'emancipate the white 'pen of the South, it propos es-to prevent the enslavement of the white'meu - Of the North ; and it will enjoy, if nthe vote, certain ly the sympathy and good wis he s of multitudes of Southern men, who find hope nwhere else. Such men look with abhorrence and con empt at' he North ern] man who with the.power t act as ho chooses, undeterred by fear, lends hitusett to the designs of the slave oligarchy. ' Democracy in forme .It is proved that not only he party; but the Northeen Dentocratiparty also, and to an almost equal extent, st. od .opposed to , the . extension of the system ( t human bond cage Over the free . territorle - of the United States. Look - lit the past; , -at d ,then look at the present, Lucifer, son o ,mohiin g , how art thou •fitllen ! - in liS ,;the whole na tional domain, outside of the tate.s, was btu,' ited' to .the Northwest Terri oil; Thomas - Jefferson, the great louder of .10 Democracy, , the derr.i god at whose shrin . 0 . 1. party was k a oht to pay the. most devout nd undivided al i. Tolitical homage, there being U'other name given among men to compare with his - tanie, In.their estimatisanhe it. w Whq proposed cat, from all that t ‘ erritory '. -lavery and in-; voluntary • 'seviiiicie (except a,i punishment for crime) should be excluded i f . .i - rever." And Congress ratified the proposition by a unani mous vote; giving a quit:clitih deed of .thei 'whole soil to liberty, under Whose magical influences it has risen : to be as happy .and flourishing an empire as may he found on the face of the earth; eonipiiSing the now great Statei of Ohio, Indiana, Illinor. : 2; lotka . and Wisconsin.. Ile democracy of Thomas Jef ferson and of hiico:uijutors, tlius looked to the elevation of the htiniiin family and the se curityuf the inalientible rightof man. tith• erwise their profession. of reg rd for the.peo ple would have beeh hilt a eh ailtnd'a lie.--; ( 1 ,. Trace the party record dawn t 1819-20, when 1 Missouri, havin ., ; r. , adopted a sl• ire constitution, - asked Congress for - admission into the Union •:-.. .as a State. On Which side o that question did the Democratic party o ' Pennsylvania stand ? They stood shoulder . to shoulder. with the other party, in solid 'column on the. side of liberty. resisting, Veit h all their might; the. extensiriii Of the area of sl . very: A res olution was. introdne..sd• into :e Senate and House of Representatives of this . Common-. wealth, instructing their Senat )is and request ing their Representatives in Congress; "to vote agaipst, the admisSion of any State into the Union, unless said Ferritor shall stipulate and agree that . thejurther . ntroduction of slavery or involuntary servitud- except 'for the punishment of crimes, who et the. party Shall have been. duly convicted; shall be pro hibited." The — Pentocratic party in each house.kas largely in.the ascendant, andevery • Individual. member of that *Tarty, together with the entire minority, votto . sustain the .resolution. Among the ye , (nays. there l et s Were none,) . stand . recorded t e namesof ex- Governor Porter, ex-Senatorl . Sturgeon,. ex- Senator Wilkins 'William J. Puane, and Jo siah Randall.- Thus the D.niocraey of 1820, in this State, and in other Isiorthern States eqtially, manifested (even a 'id load threats of disunion) a patikitic adher nee to the-prin. ciples of the Democracy, an. of their great leader, Jefferson, in 1787. .The annexation of I%as, .t was claimed (we do not decide with how much justice) did not involve the principle • slavery-exten elmlt was already a slave empire; and its „, annexation. to . our. tountry was - urged on gronnds -of national policy, a. had been the ease in the Jeffermnian perch se of Louisitina. Yet Vin. Buren, the leader of the Northern Democraty, (as, qtay, the nalonal Whig can didatt fOr . the Presidency, lso did,) took 1,3,, ground against' the annexatica Of Texas, to; , gether with Silas _Wright; nd &numerous array of Mlowera; -who, we m -herb obset've are for the most part enlisted iii the present movement against, • the; eaten ion of slaiery over Kansas; and a'proposition ,then Made to divide the new empire beween freedom - and slaverY, was sustained by a majority of the. Democrats-- from the free States. But there was no portion 'of the Democratic par ty of the North in that , day, that would not have spurned the thought of perinitting the institution of slavery to enter any of the free territories of the United Statos ; no portion of that'party here that ever :inceived of Cal boua's sophistical theory of n•ri-intervention, (the chief and sole article of be Democratic Creed in 18.504 which permits . avery to make its home in the territories an 4 defijts io Cop. . .. gress the right of prohibiting it. In the month of Feb'ruary, 1847; Mr: Cit= holm introduced 'his celebrat ::. resolutions in. to the Benet.; whiebin aubs nee 'contained Abe new doctrine, that there tliS "no power in Congress to legislate upo n slavery in the territories;' Mr:Benton, w . ,; to then headed :the Northern Democracy, (w o but bet) with characteristic promptness and energy, at onee denounced those resolutions*a "lire-brand." 24. Calhoun staid that he-had expected the support of Mr. Benton, as this representative Of a slave-holding State; to,Which the latter answered, that styes impossible that he could i 'have expected such a thing. , Th en said:Mr. Calhoun, 1 shall know where to find the Ji en. tleuian. Mr, Benton imin lately rejoined" ti I A211'14 "foetid lti die'? t Place, on the aide Of my country . -and , Union." Mr.. - aihoun had not the, terne ty to .press - his resClutums tea vote ;., .._ p ut . s,, was not the *rid of,thent; poi did, they peyitlioutthe condemning loand of the ,:N tk•rn Demme, iatily. The De-Ina: male Caw tick; thatiaitn. hutted Oen. 'Cawley the . P - , , eneyi'swein. bled is &Um** des *Meet . ; year,. 18418, _Vibilstbsgsavgatkowari work ea libidi Odom/ of prisqlpic".l6o,, liicy. - or Ms , hems, CalhOiel NU haat i. iof tUtViited ROSE, -.Tiltn.RSI)A.Vi.'-'o..c.TOßEß:l4l'.ss6;,:_'l: folloWer; iniiodatied this hisiislnthill; aintairi ing the whole essence of Callioiinism:, " get , olved, That the doctrine ornigintei ferenbe it it h til•Ppeitjo litany poi tion of this confederation, Ili the Statei or in the Terrirories,- by any.: 4/thee than- the Portion interested iii them. is.the tine iepiib= Bean doctrine reeogniz : cd by this body." netellation, and re tina-of the United is S ireirgetiptal of the ski ea, a desire tar the fierce vindie tatcd the !swept hich gave warrant ~.unmer, arid which sh;' i and bludgeon, dares call coward natilk tie free nen are as entirely The institution It is meet that a firebrand , should not be suffered to remain iii a phiider niagaxin'e ; and the convention did not wait to get the tongs; bit ladled On this firebrand of stuatter soirefeigh4 and threw it out igno ininiOusly defeating it. by t 46 vote 4 in the negative, tti 36 (all Southern fireeateis)lin the affirmative. And that,doctritie ohns in continently kicked out 8113alihriiire in 1848, was the ruling divinity at the Cincinnati end vention in 1856. The Democracy that.tben spurned it from them have ta ken . it to thbir embrace, and cherish it now as the Cardinal principle of their policy. - The manifest ob,- , ject of it is tiiihield and fc.ster slavery iu the territories, till it acquiies possession maturity of d!.rengt,ti, when et , ery child con versant with our histofy knOws full well that it would e impossible to upioot'and abolish it. But, though it no* , stillids against, the world, yet .in 1848 thoi•e' *ere !nine of the Northern Dernocraej , so'poor as to do it rev erence. , • - - . . . • -In the following-year, lap, the Deindernt ic party of Pennsylvania, assembled in 'con-' vention at Pjtisburg,und constructed a plat form of . principles on which they 'might- all stand together. Dragged; as they had been, through the mire and dirt, at the wheelsj of the car of slavery, the instincts. of treiiioin yet lived in their hearts ; nor, were they dis posed to repudiate the faith of JefferSon and the fathers, which had been their most veined' patrimony and their proudest " - boast.' ,The- United States had acquired new territorial possessions, *hose domestic . policy was yet to be determined. - On which side of the great que-tion did the Demociatic party, then aba there assembled, set 'their feet and urifUrl their banner to the' breeze?. Did they ming- r' wise and sanction thii aide door of non-inteN vention, by Whiebslaieryeauld steal - intothe territories, and thus 'Secure for all "timee - to come . the possession • 'Of. ;then' I Did they even give the subject the go-by, 'with 'politic silence and cunning non-conitnntalisti,--L--, • These interrogatorie.s are fully answered -by the'resoluijon which they.adopted in that con vention, covering_ the, whole ground, shoWing that they occupied the very position on which , the same party in our venerated Common wealth, and in. the city OfPlilladelPhiii, proud ly stood in the memorable era of 18,19,. re. sisting the agressiOns dr §laiery - t " Res.tilted,lhat the Democratic partYad: now, -- ai it ever hallo* td the tklnsti- • Lotion of the 'country. 1t.4 letter or .spiCit.they. they trill neither *ealte:n ordestroy ;and they, re-declare that'slaverY' i . a ddidestie h=eal in stitution of theSoiith, subject to,State lation alone, and with which the„general. got ernment has nothing.to.do.,- Wherever th.e State law extends. its, jurisdiction, the itlail institution - ,continue to exist. Esteenting it a violation of State rights to _carry • it..be yond State _ we deny the power of any citizen to extend the area of bondage beyond its present doininion, nor do we consider it a part of the compromise that slavery should forever travel-with the advancing columns of our territorial progress." MIS was PennaylvaniaDentocracy in 1849. It is also the precise doctrine of the great mut, titude at the North, -*hd, in the. resent err: sis, without distinction of inty, prep.:4ol4;4 to prevent the extension of slOserY over the tree territories of the United &eta, and -es pecially tiver that portion of their whiCh was once solemnly covenanted tcifreedoikbx the _Missouri.Compromise.. ~ Not till 1 / 3 54; - wliin Stephen A, Douglas, itr an" evil hour-and tin der a malign star, introduced his infamous Nebraska :bill repealing the Missouri Coin 'promise, did the. Democratic party at the North give the least recognition" or toleranpe to the doctrine of Calhonn, that, there was "no power in Congress to legislate upon slavery in the territories." - Congress had .nsed.that power from' . the beginning, repeatedly prohib iting slavery in the. territories.- Such a bill, virtually ; framed by Jefferson, was approved by -Washington; and those men surely derstoed. the constitution, Jind were strictly faithful to its provlaiona.. James - K. Polk, so recently as 1848, approved' the organic law Whicth . Congress framed for the government of the territory of Oregon, by: which . slavery was excluded. from, that. territory ; . forever. And all the intermediate Presidents, to whom the opportunity was k - 0/oi i: h d 4 one the Seine thing; ignorant , all of tiler), al e, till Calhoun and-Douglas shed their. light on the pagesef that itistattnept, that they had been engaged In violating the constitution of their 'country, in 'legislating on the inbject of Slaiery' in the territories; and fbrbidding its - entrance upon . the free - national doitiainst What ar.perver , ' Won- of :truth. What en insult to out uodec,- standings. Men nuty4ear out-the sacred pa ges of the Bible from its binding, and' encltlie the infidel pages Of irdltaire; ifla the word of:Ood tid - long,er; though ibe gilded. lettering prcielaiins.tbat-it is.' 'Not is it any _ longer the creed of the Democratic, partY, -when • the doctrines of t' freedom are rended away. and scattered to the Winds, ant:lithe; don trines ofslavery extension sactifegiously fait= 'ed into their place.' . 1f the - Democrats who went . down- to their: graves'prior toltho yeae. -18.50 should conte bitek to these scenes, what • would Joe their surprise to learu:that tlt6tlie. ciples of CalhOun. constittited,:the Detnocracy of 1856 V . With what astonishment would they bear of the it:tit:Olathe 'Democracy bad takei iii the -ropeihif the MisiouriCom-. promise.•-„With. what horror wOnldtbey:read of Kansas, crimes findloittragcs ! With.what, dismay Would theyloiro flu 4 the party; In whose or in ! .w ose held: . they were - *non:proud to:serve; bad lan Its bighestsine;, • dun tn.tituse.etio rrnitiO.; and_,Oat..its-144ey,, occupying the, hiah placeoffrqsidedit ofthe : 14ilted, ilacenifige4 :tong ve=il= tire_ slaVe tiropagandhan atid border' Missoorkin dinexmii4- the Outraged. and dotkoltroddan -peophyor Kitosoi.iolo,l4ProsiW Lipg submission to tbnoriminal designs °fibs . infauated, •prpoigiadis of slavery. r With: I.what'Arnestttesa - . WOW& they.; ladtoet `die' i - frien4krith whom ittformei tiaitietber bad tbs,Dialooritinistaridssili 16 omits ht.larkAiti hao4:lV*sllirue4oreta,of their country and itelietitutiooliiiihekill.* era united in 18I0,.tosity0 the rep u blic 640 the , ignominy and ruin Ale* aiustifolt`aw the e o go i tseiCibis*-1 1- ktritir°6“o.o4,4,o4 do' ininfon of the itYsteitCorkensitimods4Ovesi the boundless West. Times. = El 2 - -,, 1 - Fiom the RiehmarlfuqUirer 137)t. 12. - : &nab Sititaleara• 1 - - . / *al+ Irs, SonTa Gum BLit= Rii hr4 / QY ..THE.-latEtip.b ilet!miloMPA* . ' The repeal .of eMheioini restriction is 46 3 t vindicated by eve y cionsidetuticie o' right and Initice. g ut there ate phfnrotia il 401 sordid' . impulses and THII+ . a vision, they. appreciates measure ,of public policy in proportion only to ' its yield. of visible, palpable and digestible product.." In. the judgnetit of such individu ,,,,iiii; ilie Ransas-Nebraske Bill is,werthlicith ing as an aet.of_athinerttit tb the - dmstitu tion 'and teparatinti to t he tioath. They r&' .. speEt it. no all all for the great principles iihich it enimeiateslind, incorporates in the policy of / the Govemment. ' Insensible to the finer moral resulti *iiich constitute the HUH Of ttili highest and truest statesifitinShlP, the gross appetites of these poll ticiansl reject. the. really precious advantages whichlthe South, realizes from the repeal of the Missouri re: str:ction. Botts ; for instance, typieciiiteelhe. true valtte of that measure bout as mold -iis ' ElAgabulus would . have, fished nectar t he di and anibrosia of the 1 yriipian repast.--. % Talk to him ot vindicating the Integrity of .the Constittition;ortestoring the Snuth to its past equality and ,digniik in the -Union, and you simply Provoke a conteitipttious Clic9e with all your fine "phrases. . - Luckily fin r the satisfaction orthe confu tion of such individuals as Mr..JOhn Miner. z ßoits, the Kansas-Nebriska . act i. apt desti- .1 bite of immediate, visible and tangible adran- rage to:Me i.o. fith. The repeat te N , inon- ri restriction, ° besi n. clei ojering aton tient and, ' / 4,e. reparation 'for a. ofrOht -upon Son*, I oPEse THE FEDERAL ,DOMAIN To THE FREE EX PANStON A.N D DH V EtciPHENT OF NE6R4 SLAVERY, It is manifest rriiiri• Are history of the eiin try, during : the lasi twenty years, that the Constitution, in its protection . or t_ he rights of . the South—indeed, . the powers of the 'com mon Government are periterted from their beneficent purpose, and Arremployed as the active Agencies of oppression anal speilation againskthe slaveholding States. The South, then, h.as.no other security- but its !own capa bilities of defense. „It is 'essential , to the , pro tection,of its rights that it should - iniintain-a power in the Government equival nt at least to a negative on oppreesive, iniquitous. and u» constitutional legislation., •,,, . 1 • The Abolitionists have ever hadlcontrol of a majority of the popular vote.. !They now hold indisputable ascondeney in :he House or Representatives. In the. Senate) even; the South is in a minority of . one Stat;e; -though fortunately a conservative, sentiMent is still supreme in that branchof the Federal. Leg-; islature.. The day 'is not distant however, 'when the sixteen free States will be represent ed in the Senate by the political . elates or i) Wilson and Seward ; and when Congress will Ile under the absolute sway 'of Abblitionism. The' South' may ,turn tp the Ese l cutive, but with a scarcely strongerhope of proteetioti.— Fremont May not be postponed lriunzph of his party will be postponed onl for a sin-. gle term; unless, meanwhile, the' . So uth rw.-. 1 covers itsj poter la ,the'.;eunrederaey, and es-, tablishes it 'counterpoise tci the as;candency - of Abolitionism: d A i . 4 „ This then is the on:lx salvation fp/1 thbibtiati . ... —to recavr a feY-protectiny - por in the Senate: For, if left to its own im p ulses, Ab olitionism will descend upon Slavery with in creasing force and fury of attack; And will ultimately stiltlngate the South OS!, expel i e t, from the Union. i - -• How can.. the South possess itself of thii self-protecting power ti Sow recover its as cendency' in the Senate.: Oregon; Washing ton', Minnesota and Nebraska, all Free States in embryo, *ill counterbalance the accession to the South by the division of Texas, even. though the North should obatiAlits ollliga-' tion under the Treaty of annexation. Utah and New Mekie*will in alt-probability send j four Anti-Slavery votes into . the Stiate. ‘ -- Som much on con side; • . The only present chance ofaccesiion to the strength of the'South,is the admission °titan s:as into the , Union with a Pro-Slavery Con stitution. In two yearv,..at the farthest, ,that Territory will assume the.anverOgi,V,PZ State, and in all' probability dill adOPt institutions of the Sonth. •Thenithe' So th will recover its equality in the Senate, a will nf ? be competent to the protection of its tigh-- Though incapable of direeting the policy of `the Government to the,end of Slavery propa gandism, 1 (which the South desires only for,, the purposes of self-defence,) ._ , it will be Cully equal to the defeat of ;measures or Free-Soil aggression. With' Kansas to baeh it in the Senate, the 'South ciin''ionzpei iheealltlfaint of the Texas Treaty, 4, 'resisting the admis sion of any other. Free States. With K arlin, to. it- in the Senate, the tour cats stay the; march of AbOlitiOin nis, and, ii aintain its own rights iiiid: i indepenclence for an indehnite period.-.. ' . - - 1 ' ''' BritlCansas Would hart bit* a Ave Shrte ii. if die. Missouri restriefidn had . at been re peaied; and instead or Augment' the pow er, of the South,. would have reereited the ranks of 'Abolitionisra. Besides, then, the Positive advantage' fan ilecese , ion of strength which the South es Ander' th' operation ofihe.kansaiN ' Act, we vet *Asia. er , t4,3 oviiaav*ted ' well; as . klia. wrongs I.P.' dressed, by the na ure,if we w uld:tippre 7 o elate the full'Valite 6 it s 'service . to Slavery. In . thesone canti ng ' l 'thii hope., f :the)utt- vka; arillettered . by tha prospect election. • al,equilihtium, And a ootKequent dontinuittoe ottlia, -UPion.,- 1 . 1 ,..q4a other .. 4•4 l .tic, s' It WO Succession of teartul, etrects, 'trap tne . aggren- I - diieinent Of , the"Anti:Slaiiry' `povier to time 1 ultimate subjugition'iif,tiniSciathror'disrup-: tine of the Conk,deraeyf. - - !-- - I. f -'. I- :.-Ind scarce, ly Advert 1 I,o,,that kther, vital , ug*idaratio*that waft Kcioiagit aia Spw,e, Oak Ais , , .L: of As', Saudi :ego ai, antspktelii - Corere4 from -.thaf of Mexico 6' thiffroutitret 'Rebttiediti . extt . lowa, mai ilsofilsit thfbia l litticntiiik be Isecurefrom external atiockstad intpregars *ip -." 8 . 48 ** 04 ; .`Whil l ft °U 9 1 e9URITY ti 1 1, r phqUid • KAnsas 64:i Ire4iedi frcia.qiii grall....it Will - bgeOnie'the' itsitditi cif the - tilitelettenev of Five WI,- who` with: tititieek aired there tom. foAs against Missouri, With-irresistible effect, and wilts* promettr din onettikOli4ina-. *thaand ;. 0 rem', 3 !.4oe-bließe.:4 l flid9eP; ,plOgy tii4. l l.t . hin a<Verl.. 6 4 XIS . ealit... 42 en will' 'lo'coilve n 'it liVid.e)liittictut s i? thaVeit teibezattlialbatiliiii*limmbiiigel* ttr the invading for : pa :, . i+, I::4..iit:pa , i - ll,totitoillol. 6 -iitlitatublef*AitAlMlSeni *l4# o39 o l ,oo.oClPMeds l 4 &t iiiii a11ii7p14,06.- the: pfli ' 1 ~ le iiatcldr e - ar thWiiiionti Action, I st lieliir . fiite isersekei'ineetims 1 ativasteree i • -3 SikEITEL, la Rei arrerffie poWeet prOtediost fru devnedil to ornitst." A Short Politatal 4MMddi Q. Whole James.,l 3 44.= I 1 .. J., 4: 7 'A'"" singleientleinini (b , acbefor)2cif - . Wheatland; near bine:niter City, in his .Outir klawyer and politician,- and dining his 'nisi tar: s' and declining leafs eriesPiwit te A 1145, situation of President Of the United States.. Q. Whit have been his political lion% tendencies and Opinions'? '' ' ' AT 'They have been Federal and. Dent-- - erotic; protective and tree iiikiii; bank and anti-batik; for restricting slavery and then for extending it, ctd libitum ;- r opposed :to, our late war with Greatßritislii in defence or 1 our marithne.rigiiti, but in ftivor of war with b her of Cdba 'for tti futile shi si vehtilders andithe extension thegfatitliof slaveon I territory andhitltieneel„.. . --, :. - , ' Qi In what has b o ,d4l4.yed the great est degree of inconsistency 7 • ' '' '' h A. in-imurting the slaie-pewer "of:the Union into &wiring his sapirations for the Presidency. - - -, - t - %. What are hie present FeSpect4 c4,49F cess in the pursuit of that object 'I , 1 ' A.. His friends of. the` b/a& DemOerac* have placed-hini in nomination and expresi a determination to elect him—if thev can gef. votes endkult—by,,briber a l and hithnidatiori, tar by 'threats to destroy the Union, tueo-, complish the purpose. - 1 Q. Who are the -black Democraty that have noininated him? -_ ' - _ .- A. They: are those men of the North and South who deny the truth of the Declaration of Indeperidence,that liberty is,an "inalienable right," but declare 'that :f might makes right;' and who consider the market prie4.....0f bfrtek nien of greater national importance thatt the liberty of white men. -r - . • '' - -.4Q. Are the black. Democracy politically and religiously atheists? 'A. Practically they are; but abstrattedly they are professed Christian:and Democr ats after the straitest manner of the sect? ,\ „ ... Q. Do not,the blaek DeMotracy prof" great anxietyfor`the "safety of the Union," and a determination te preserve it? • ` A..- ‘They are willing to "preserve. the Union" if it can be made entirely subservi lent to the preservation, protection and ex tension of slavery, , and , can be kept entirely - under., the control of the sla.veholders and their tools; 'otherwise they assert that they will divide and destroy it ~'' Q. Are they not most devoted' support-, era of the Constitution? . , _ A. Yes, When contending for the 'repre sentation of ",property 'in slaves," and for . the privilege oftaking them into -free States or terrftortes, or if they escape, requiringall good citizens to aid in catching them, , under pain of fine and imprisonment; but they de ny iii all the slave States, the freedom of the pren=freedom of speech=fmedian 'of the post4Ece—freeddlti to meet together to petition for a redress of the .grievances .iin. imposed.npon .the pixiplo by slavery ;_:they " iligiy educittldii to the poor, and (it they be white) imprison benevolent &Miles who teeth them to• read .the Bible,: md : tar- - and feather ministers of she ; , . gospel who assert that it is sinful to nisilie merchandise- of the PoorQ. Are there many of tins patty :in' the free States 7 '- • - ' - A. Yes., Among politicians and dema gogues seeking tiffer. the. spoils of„ . afice--- merchants and manufacturers seekin% after Southern trade, and ejarge number of dupes whn find it that'll - tin fbe-naine cif '.Democrat, even when used to enalave theinselVea.' ' s' Q. Wluit argumentsdo _ they generally use to sustain their-view?. -•' - :, - - A:.: • , Withlhe thdid they ihrpatea,te...dee -1.r.- iho Union and ruin the countr y`; with the ' fearless---bludg,eons, bowieAnives and 'pistols are used to, enforce submission to the peculiar insgthtion and its demands.. In licin sai, arnied‘bands of ruffiana are the suphert ers of black Denioeracy, headed by Atehi- Thomas Jefferson . Oa eiliTery k _ son; Stringfellow,"Buford and other kindred, We present is scrap : of history not. inap -P_Birits- .• le Philadelphia they ' support tee propriate•at the presen;.tintie. It -is ,knowii reharyiveniatt newspaper to advocate their that . Jefferson m anne d The Declaration In eaUSe6 - - -- ' : -' . l' . _ ' -. . I dependence, a document that-Vas received the Q. What are the means whiehthi! party highest encoiniums fro:is:Oat day to this It possesses fer brebera 1. ' -' =- ' is alio kaolin, thist,Jef eisoWheld in utterab- A. ,Thei have the Senate' and the Execu-- h n i Tence the systent.of slavery, andidenciune. tive ofthe United States in their service„and. ed i t as a g aorant, inane 4 . 44, h fiteeeit ., , consequently the immense federal patronage - an d an a b l ' a d t °64 low it' - '43 4 ihe l eFir e - a - ;‘, . of,olfice, contrtiAa.*jettiOg; kivetving the But it it not kin:mato eireryhedy that - Jaffee. expenditure of Millions .. of_, nippily, All : _Cif s on i nl tin d i e d• -in ,the:,..aiiaolat . draft --a- f. the - which afe. Bmnipotefit arguments to convince. D ec l arat i on of i n d tganv ier ice foftharii-4 re the neddy, the ambitious And the mercenary buke directed- to Oiorge 144 11talt - ot *eat 1111111 'countries, and in none more so than. Britain, for his guilty - complicity, ut, g o omng • tita: • ,-.- ' -._ ... "; ',; _ • _the curse of slavery ppitelheAW,ca l ... We :: Q. What - Means 4 iPtimidOlosk do theY ti`hient the partigraphs which iVl* l sai.iilinuti I"(t'sse`4 B -i . : I , - - . ~.. . -, , . Theta,omittsci-paragraphs -are.fountl...biaif:. - A. , The power, of Government' so tong es ferson's. Works, :: purchased ; bY'4oPgre2 l 4 - Concentnited in the Senate - or p . e.Oentc.Fid April 12 , ifm, sm.] published ketailiii'ds . all holding office' tinder' them ;.' also armed lifais4;',‘"irashington; D. - .,,,C:' They, are iiOrtbi, ruffians in the Senate and Muse of Rel:4o-. of , a caref ul 'ilenissn i -- sie they unmistakably seethtives, together 'flitk theP9Wei 9f dill - indicates, healthy: Oldie sentisiantt.amoust iniasal, from office - 9 r employ ment of aeY wh° Southern sees on the sibjeetAdatekulatite express 'sentiments" a4erse le their' creed earl i er s and hettet.: days ‘,44,veet,,,Aatiomilibill.. whilst serving the '''' '' '''' 1 iiirir:_ . ' WiCohimend theseparailmantisisk4is Q. What is expected o r , required - fr om thoughtful eensideiattott . o(Jidipt icathe, *hi; . Mr. Buchman by the black Democracy ),,n Professes-to belong tO the JetrenkkOialkobk • ease tlpi elect him?, •. . • . ,;,.: .. -;,__,. lUy are pithfi' pertinent Wnd:istualerlylad A. That . ho shill,Contiene to 'we's in . = i. em. a j eff er naell la upeahh4 ,i , t,heyoppoe.:, footsteps' 'of Franklin Pieree; and continua‘in sire, tyrannical acts *hie' - ;.iridigtmtly kin; the leading-strings-Of-the- owners- of the black n --.- -4,: - `g- , -- , - , ,,- , :--3.it4 - ) ; , ,...‘a-z•_-; Npulation,nf ,eueiountry. - That shall , „ j olt * has waged cr us Lir ar . kittla mogr i . misery!) , tbe_Union7 by, driving out alt' nature i taa m v io at i ag Juktuala T ieereit,riest4 "Free State" men fr OM -UMW, Ana' giV•kag of life'and libeos.il,W„the, ,i,4k,01 # 19t that 'aid 'all oilier; Tritited . States. territory: .. , : p e ep t e -, cw h e . - a e ee t; :- - - ic - *lturiiiii • a i d 'over' to the tender:min-cies - of slave - iv arnera. earri f t ‘ **we,. i d i re o l i itaothe n et aia. f. Mat none tut tile black DerseieracyshallSio - 1,-ho re ;„r n ...„ mot iii w ear abl e dena t Ire thek! ea dialler or employment under, his, ..tranwen t istio rk tifi t h im , ,Tbia , Tplinitiod Aro; aolmialstratig_as awl t he lowa Of 14,494! fa - r - 0 .71 - 4, koppr o t :a nto ri n E44 . of Misseerl t 4 A. 1 4,, 'IA 4 .u.'•idavq StiitOt may warfare of theChrlstian lung 0 ~, , lit b'e filice4 upon aP7 46 * / * lt ir 04' 46 0 g: ain. Determined to keep om 7 - ~ f etal" Ittr i iiiiiiiigli to erifreet4 the inviidek-niethat 41kiiir ineienisy be bought antA ii 'law thiwe litie-thuefouu*bt intadireihall be ~.it tet alga negative I* iiveli itaifintei by.the power of the+resideit and, _ .l) .- ettaalatemps tort igki t *f orawitra i . the iwiny.! , . ~ I. ..t '.O 1 :' , .." , r* ' '' , 4t *'l . ' = 1 , ... - ,‘01 . .!* : oh ezeerehie_epelloarea t ..joatflaiktbia' sir Q. la it-mistoed P. 44-.4..,Y4....4°-..e, - ,,,:.vr. agmblage or liorr9Fs -9 1 .*,**At i rt #0, 41 these v luirereetfte , l ', , 4 . r . ~,,,'' . -, ,-. t tlfsihlguiduid, dye, - "he'istOiti - e#ll4-1' --' A. EiTtif al dOna - skirietsi* iery people t i t r i,, te i n arm 4. 004 m t kild , Store. 'lie hie In'ofoed ter ietSiaxihitit to"Oorchase that 1 : 1 = 41 4; 1 4 M e: literY oteimanOlitblibm"rear"P" , plYea 11aw04: . . ,13 # ._ - - ,'. : ... ;fi re . la, order *stilly area + u d : pewee .. of sisvery. .hon:4o:4Bo* . r,44:*iikiti,Lvt„.... - -"' lw may bk4ieremilijk*,.4k , Perrectl.:4 l °B* 'cirt.o*.**esflioiiivitiekjor*,. en 6 lit'e•oi te'oonitilY Woe avisty — foqatiaititiot of - r i iAn ho v i t hl etit i6 Al ibu i l imito po w i tte _. 41tiiksekqkti t lidlohevaiioirilinot ..;:iiiIW I somot:ii;iiti,...-iir itietheiAti't!fi , ': -,4 , imitheenCotikiiiiwthik ba"lPreati"ai --'1441,-11-4*ll/."14r7 :,.4.:. - Csa7shaAboti , -16•438100100 irld-, as,apaqatawiroliii eritAitkiklikinilkof tho-U9*. 1 ./.**."f. 4 - 1; , - .tree, `,.t.400 0. 0 1 1. '. ht. ', 514)041-14-Ik e trtitlL.,D. 4 ifiktbialo*P — ` 4 ' '4,,,. „ --, ri Wes 4l 4 i k . of 'Win . !IV - • 1 - ':- t ,I , : w e tly rue 111114414 ~,,•-•' ; :..";: • , t; 4 , ,k.4 • alkali -wit ' l ' 3 Worth oaks almost an . . . . EMI - Pron!, tAt Now liirk - Eraveli!tt, - •_ 'Erel4olire : - .7 , . ' Itisil orsai;i• - bulizi t esi .tvi' iiti teitnio' iiii!iiiiriii ': ' of politics, Thatlinrit tiiii...Tratition l and we have relifficiilrdiAlinitaleird*iisiniseolitests. Nor shall we depart-from this fineet strict •propriety. But liiiltrir ithnithinesi appealed to for • informagon .411 to matters fact, by rereleta-4frheimagine -that we may havejape 7 ad means orlitiowing.the.trath. Intueh a case we are willingle tell Whitt we know— not for the alliir.oloo - partyqiirent trntli,- 7 This wo Int dci:yrithout - -saetfleavglinr neu tral and independent, chargeter. AI we can • help to correct an error, of to diaabuie the public mind Zirafido4iimprerrikar;swente do. ing - a service toiightlnin` dad theirorall Par- . ties. ,We donot • urge our readers to vote one way or the other; but we'dO Wish them to voteinteßileritly.l:i,„i': ...--.- ';' , 7•__•;',';-..4 - , It is well.knorittt thritoiniX,the carididates for the .Pgesidency blur beenchartedf„ajth be iri A ltoratul Catholic. , Tg thisAtory.wo nev er gave the aliihteAt importance, Considering it, rks one of those bald falschrinds which were fabricated for'; `a party - prirpese,' iial which - would drop into oblivion, and, be despised as soon as it had served.its objeati !Pekes the_ ; originators of the story Cling to ite witb peat ~.. pertinacity, thinking it every eite4tire weep onto excite °aim and prejudice, some good men have thought-it Wortli4bild to set the matter at once and'forever:it imitt,„‘.....-.Clergy- men - of this City have been applied to_bv• Mein- .. bars of 'their , churl:bea t and hy letterslrom a broad fclcoatiu -perm:mit inquiry; ' - since-the . public would have entire , conhderice . m their statement, . knowing that th - c.rriverbriit -likely to be deceived; than:ladies;sAl i that they could have no-404re to nalotatedtbe , ,.fact. That sip Pealed to. ti number of Clergy men, though very leluctact"to do an4thing which could bring heir names= - before the publicin ccnneettOn• with any political:qUeatloe, called . •on Col. Freinont ter the purpoa4; _a frank cotiversationin regard`to idareligichisivrofes sion and belief. This did-,--not for. their own ‘ iersclilit. sitisfaCtiOn - MISIT : not, one. of them had a doubt ahout themaiterzinit sim ply that they alight benble-to.aatbify :others by an assurance from his own Bpi:F.-I:Among th6se who went, were Rev„ Dri';DaWitt, of . the Datch, `ReforMacir-Chnich i .l7Profrstirs henry B. &War . add it 15,'Entellinek; of the Union Theological Seminary . ; Rev. Divid B. Coe, Secretary of tfintkitne - -11iiiiiiiiiiryto;, ciety, and one of the editors of this paper.: 7 - They were received Oithgreatcoidiatityiend Col.. Fremont Insponded very cheirtully and= frankly to their inquiries.k,..,l=.• .. , When it,was ~ftmarkedlthetr' me of Our geod• people' were;disturhed a uk his "relig ion, he replied smiling; that' he : -- ithat that ' . b z •his opponents were willing, teedinitoderist, ._ that he had some religious feelingthit he was not wholly indifterent•to Christianity.— - One of the ministeriihquired iflthe. adcount of his eark . religioniatlikittienAnd of hisjoin: ing the Episcopal ChUrell; aillen in I3ige low s Life of Fremont, was correct r „lie re plied that-it _was; and added hi - ri;,kaiiiiordr,„ that he had been born and eaufated in the Episcopal Church; -that he 1144134tellootrktur ed as a member of that_Chunit,-.40 ha,d, _gay er had a shadow of a tltougbtof_.lea t vlitc,,,it:,„ 3V heft rilltiskii ilia mad 04. ppr A titent ..-.1 assertions that he wai - e C:abate, , "he - rlaplied .-;.7 that he could not imagine howiltrelri'atoiy took its rise, for that in fact belled; hardly - been inside of- alCatholia choreli,wkoris,thaa 44 a 40= 9 . tivues-.. im #is life, arld . *.thee, - !Tee occasions ot pu bl ic Interest or orCunissity. • Alf-this was said very qnietty,lazutivith no aPprifent desire O . ) phttede lila taligidif - ti - tri make capital .out of-it, but !pitate:Am Simple fact of religiousedutatkin acid beliekl.34o one soitid Otell. to Our..fiank, ye t - modest. Inatome*, without feelifigthaf it was,per`feci lyitigeniroui; . and the% with ndbigotrY to wards - others, he was sinterekr-int-wisire-if etiti, attached to'the religion in:which hi ltdct been, educated by, a inonemother.- - •:. - --- -_- NINI El
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers