R' 46 bioonoot A etsitbitiew *.FAZIER, EDItOREi. MONTROSt PA, : ThTtriday s -'o6tidier IN 18E4:1, 11EPUpLICIAN TIOR'ET. - roy, rissanurr, , CIIBL.EB FREMONT. - • • rroie WILLIAM,L. DAYTON. CANAL TICKET, 708 ANAL CUMUIIIIOII24. ' THOMAS CRCJIR:4'N. t pf York-County. • You AUDITOR OPrirlistl4 , DARWIN PHELPS, Of Armstrong Comity: FOR IRAIVRYOR OZWERAL, BARTHOLO-MEW IAPOTtI'E, Of Bradford Canty. REPUBLICAN :COUNTY TICKET.' .OO2iORRSIB, G*LIIBIIA' A. GAOW, Ofi,Susqtiehannatoiiiity. • ; FM SENATOR, • 7.ItEED7IIYER, Of Braegoid County.. Tea RIWASSENTATIVICIS; - ,,,5114170Ti CHASE,Of Susquehanna Co. i'ALFRED IiINE, o(-Wyoming County. ! mg- asisocrats JUDGES, =CHARLES F. READ; of.Montrose, • URSMITE BURROWS, of Gibson. TOIL COST, comungsroms, PERRIN WELLS, of Bridgewater. FO l / 1 DISTRICT ATTORNEY, PRANKIJN ERASER, of Montrose. rOs covarrr . sonvaroa, •iOEL TURRELL, of Forest Lake. FOR 'CCUNTT AUDITOR, •D. P TIFFANY, of Raiford. • It Soil Sr SON United' ' , Elates Senator frnm Massachusetts. HON. GALUSHAA. • HON.; WILLIAM JESSUP, i and other ifistiiiguiabed spealters will be present. SIMATOB. liFusoz_ttind GOkEIt.NOR Kautrs will eery toixijbe there. . boys, I t Susquehanna! p. 1 • • 1 'NO'I'II,CE; • • . 'Ti3e!Toung Central. Fremont Club will Meet Thrt the lal - Cit House, - on Friday evening, October 10th. I 8. A i Chaise, Esq., 4 Great liend,wM address 'the Club at that time. • • - The - Ideation, Tisidsai - Octo,berl4th. Our 00l tnni are so . trowiled wi th various important documents and articles which we t desire to lay before out readers, that we-have -little spi4 fora last, appeal to Repu4li4n -voters before election. Nordo we deem any. labored isiipeal needed. Every voter feels -the importance of this election, and Ve trust 7thati mull has determieecl that nothing shall - prerent his contribute g his vote to the do leatOf the %chamber hosts. • NOVirlis the time to crush the), great con spiracy that has for its . objeet to' reduce the •whOle country into'sObjection to the Slave Power. I The; Republican - freemen of the NoTth mint dolt. *Rh the memory of the wrOngs of Nyilliamsc4k, of Reeder, of Sumner, and. of Kansas - ul ymby hearts, and with - your fathers' old battle Cry? of " Liberty" on your , 1 , • • "Soile, ter your altars and ,your fires! "•!Stiike, for the gree ti graves of your tires! , ' . : Acaea, ant!your native land!" .. Tagtz ,or "ITIE 1i...;07S .. Tr.--h is very de sirable: cur- frienf t bi in the different parts , of ;that:lt:Net, *Wulff make trilingetnents for sending in to - ]f ai soon as possible, I. on' the eight 'following the election, the result 4 i,, in; the vent:l Toma!hips, ao that the same may be telegraPhed to the cities , gements.rntee been made to send the vote of ) yotaing telhis place the same night. ; 1 t jeostions.•;-Binee'ithe notices for meetings • were publisio4itpuor last week's paper, some els,ng. l bare hem Made, for the purpose of . gettim 'up a large Mass - Meetinz at•Susqua banns Depoil:- &Dialer Hamlin will, speak there ' of at Montrose . as at first ad , viiare ; and Mr. Grow will speak at Dun. deff. lttOreday, October 9th, initead of Bata y„ ' I- - 1 Oa Monday aUernoon; Oct. 13th, Mr. Grow w ill speak at Glenwood. - . flouted Iturnin.tou Mairrasos.-i-The meeting ad giv4oo 4 _ hy:Mr. - Groir at Rash,: on Monday. list, ai spirited'. and well attended. - There , . ercire -pawn* or tame present, and the _ •enthusillun inAhe cause of Fremont ai i l d -._ -.. Was (exhibited. The Leßays. Ville : Band-wee on ilie ground,: with a large : ', .tkstftWen Bradford county.. Rush - • - is ri . , . F- t • _ -.-. • . , • , meeting,at fk`riendiville on Saturday ins iiMb.litge andtipirited, . la fact the. Re= publieus are widelatrake everrabere in thhi 00.: 41 , 9 ' B O prepared to give a good Sooool9t. Qf ~,woolves. " The`AU : C.li Woodie are on fire.. : ; , .. . i __ - ' . - : . .._ In BrOOtne County,- N. Y., the PSI, and ilechipaixere, fall creieg tier it:t- Congress, bait Awn -I!.7Akientirel, idOtiouf are the ;•, that itha *woe speakers often ad. 'thatneatinia ofietb. But sbe Repub. *sift , sn ' b ot h -43° " Ined, SOttil# o o) l ol. 4 4 4 146 .,.9.° 27 47 , - 1 04 . I_, trco of the Psionnet know it, _ • MASS METING ANI•IA DEPOT. Free Speer* Free asp LS is Mess *eetiag at L 7, October Iltb, • - at etre p'cloeit, P. M. = Goverior diet of Maine. CARZTING WATS* ON .13tilli Stontkauts.— The Border Ruffian leadits inu*either ltd fools, or suppose the people-are. In the # filbe of. theireggath, 111 10 .1 ' ; " t o*a i l# aPrejlifliee .tigaltilk tnettAn the epO y lics 'ticket e:Aire stiOne Mme i eirlivil ,- -'., - - . altne dl the MF e -, 1* 1311111 ,44 tri!0?.1 1 . leagniiihe ' design 'of •• *ll4 was to nuieress illegal` traffic in spirituous liquors, and with no design whatever to molest or disturb spy man in the exercise of his lawful rights. The Temperance issue has this year, by the al. most unanimous consent of both parties, been suspended, till the 'people shall passnpon the great queition of Flucznou es TauTsearrot RUM ; and when that shall be seitie4, other. questions can he"disposed of - tit* people shall then detartnina. For tbei pirpcstee of catching votes for Hatch, who is 'temporarily engaged in the business of tavarn'keteing, it is necessary to raise the Temperance issue, to try to divert a few straggling *otos that would otherwise bioast for _the RePubliesn ticket. Piatt, the present BuchaneerH candi date for. State Senator, was also a'eandidate in 1853 for the same office, and _k! B. Chase . for Representative. . Both, by themselves and friend's, attended the Temperance Con- . vention of this County, and defiued_ their ,po iition in view of receiving a nomination there- from. Plitt succeeded, and Chase failcil.— ' R. B. tittle, who was then a fierce Temper= ante man, was in the Convention !is Chase's ffigleman, using his utmost endeavors to.. in. duce the Convention to endorse: Chase.— When electeoth plat arid Qum 'were thor oughgoing Temperance !nen—both advocated and voted for the Act of 1854, the: provisions of which the Carson Leagues were: designed to enforce. The toadied i"Jug Law ". of 1855 was supported by boti Platt , and La three, who were son there by' the Democrat ic party, and are now Buchaneers Ovine first. I water.. Mr. Platt has shown himself, during his whole career in the Senate, a sOaight for ward And unflinching Temperance ',mail, and were he now for Freedominstead of Slavery, would. no doubt receive hundred's of votes that will be withheld from him bcchuse of his pro-slavery. posinon. Last year: the. same party that areno - 4 attempting to catch votes on the liquor quastion, nominated for Repre sentative one of • the most thorouizh Carson League men in the County, and then through the whole - canvass attempted to make capital. against Hempstead because he :liras a tem perance man';' butethis IoW trickery received . its just 'reward, by overreaching its object and defeating their own candidate; The questions nu* before the country, far transcend all measures of 'mere loyal policy ; and no sane man supposes for a moment that the election of one or the other of:the County lickets would influence the granting of licens es or the sale of liquors. :Either Xr. Read or Mr. Hatch, if-elected, would nO doubt be in favor of licensing all well-re,gul4ted public hodses that are needed by the community, and of refusing the application of those of a different character. Men who are in favor of the extension of Slay.ety—Who are in favor of a dissolutibn of the Union unless 'the nigger -drivers can have it all their own way-- . --who sustain the Border 'Ruffianism at Washington, and 'the murders, robberies, and arsons in' Kansas— should, and no doubt will, vote_ for both Pi att and Hatch, without regard to their .differ sot views on the temperance question; and those who are • opposed to the repeal of tbe Missouri pomproinise—opposedi'to mob law both in _Washington and Kansas-ropposed to the further. extension of ,Slavery, and to the .dissolution of our glorious Union—and in fa- _vor of Free Kansas, Fremont, and humanity --will vote the Repnbli* ticket, the whole ticket, and nothing but the ticket ;. F. nir Gen. Lane, of Kansas, has written a letter in which he asserts—what we believe is generally 'understood l by thole who have taken. any pains to inform thernselves—_that the men who are repreiented as'r," Lane's ar my" went into IKansis for the purpose of be coming bona fido settlers ? that be did . not en ter -.thy-Territory with ,them, end that the fighting afterwards carried on by him and men under his.command against the Border Ruffians was strictly, in self-defense, and to save the Free State settlers froin threatened annihilation: The Free State men did not take up arms until; as Ge.n. Pun states. 44 hordes of desperadoei from Missouri had invaded the Territory; many of them hiving inscribed on their hatii, I I DENTII *0 me Ano- LlTithilSll3, 'AND NO QeiIIITER; NlMllber and daughter, in the absence of - ,the husband and father, raviihed by nearly one bandied fiend ish men; the gifted Major Hoyt, ,Who had gallantly served his country in the Mexican war, brutally murdered while tote)! y unarmed, his body backed to pieces, and a few soda thrown over him, leaVing Ms arms and feet projecting from the earth, a prey for wolves; prisoners murdered in it mantle e l exceeding, if possible r _aven the shocking bar silty of say. age tribes, and afterwards scalod; , =-one man scalped while alive, and who het lives to ex hibit his - skinless head to - amouttned world; dwellingi burned over helpless i wamen and screaming" children." When ill outrages were constantly committed against the peace. able Free State settlers by the limiest rabble that bad been sent into tbe TeiritorY,kor no other purism than, by. murder,: ufld every outrage; to dritre out the Free Sullen ant conquer it for . Slivery, and these crimes were committed with l irnpunit4 no Territori - - a law being enfOrced ProaliverY criminala *ere, is it to be wondered at that the citizens were at .last. diivic to take up arms in selklefense If, under thr eiftum Kauai they lid' dtinie Wm, 'the i r would not have deserved the name of Ainiirieen citizens. Bat tinned State troops Were _pronvtly brought into requisition again, them-.40i it It remarkable Uri promptlithe general gOV iroment oaf; Interfere and *Siert! its, authority ..$ 11 * 4 44 1 t PQrder4r act - 0 3 0kOir.te of the Pm Eliot tuez, Adam& it hal oho pariait bat the &Aar &Sam big** m wil d career of - viOleica and blo o d ,4 l s,4l °likith i Y were a aq with *blab is dared not lakaftaa—thesaformasakyno say *tar. Prinatitli to alialaid tiialia *Ski es, and tilittit,r :4 .4 - , Ruffians abto to disband. Is it not iiittirti e that this one-sided, partial govesninikt, sets wrong- above right in Kanss4andlier the k likwe i iitienfipgi t proalaverli OAS new cetnii wtriehA 2 , liC t4:11) *nisi* was , knelt . 4 *O-* : PC KI P I O 81 .0 -1 1 1 tour years Sidi a litliver)4l4 government, undarthei Cincinnati I rlatf or shall we have it &tinge, and try toll rate a, government that wiU' Sallie lir partinny administered, and the people Territories protected in their rights liberty, and property I si The liteie Ticket& Ass party qtaietion, aside frotn-- the •re. ipietiveln \ d - einiparitiVe melits of the isev eral candidates for State offices nocr be fore the people of Pinxisylvsnia, the que4ion at .issue is • whether the Nebrailut 'bill and the administration of rranklin Pierce - shall be endorsed by thisCommtouwealth and the . weight ofite influence b e , thereby cast in the sesloin favor ; of Slavery extenaien in the Territories. That istilewaifiiirly and "gate ly made by the two Cmventions, and the success' of either ticket will of cour s e be claimed as Arl.endoriement by the people of the platform adopted by the convention that nominated it. To refrelth the memories of such as, in the excitement of the Presidential contest, may have forgotten just Where the candidates stand on the Slavery questiOn, we republish the resolutions of the conventions on that subject. Tho so called Demox'ratic State convention 'met at Harrisburg, on the 4th of March last, and unanimouity adopted the following res olutions : • Rosofeecc, That In the repeal of tho act known as °the Missouri Compromise act and the passage of the act organizing the Territories of Kansas and :Nebras ka free from unconstitutional restrictions, the last Congress PERFORMED A WORK OF PATRIOTIC. SACRIFICE in meeting the demands of sectional ez eitement by unshaken adherence to the fundamental law. a ) _ Resetved, That we endorse the Administraticat of President Pierce' as NATIONAL, FAITHFUL,' and EFFICIENT—fuIIy equal to all , the emergen cies which the..country has had to encounter,. ami that he has worthily maintained her Interests and honor at home and abroad. There is no mistaking the meani of those resolutioni. They endorse the N .braska bill.and the Pierce administration 'fairly andsquarely as they can be endo . The nominees, of the Sham Democracy don that platform, and whoever votes for them, votes to endorse the repeal of , the Missouri Compromise as well as all the wrongs com mitted by the administration. flow the 4 Slave Power would rejoice over su h an en dorsement of their policy by Pen sylvani an s. :"Tie Union State ticket was• nominated by a Convention that met at Harrisburg, March 26, 18.513, and adopted the follow re sole= - ~.,„ tipn on the Slavery question: :. ' Resolved, That we will use all heoornb e means to check the evils inflicted upon the country b the myna and sectional measures a , )ted by the pre Iratiort al-41intinistratim, brouOt about by tke exercise of its:liiltronage ; that we are utterly . • . . .d to the ad tiklo2l into the Confederacy of Slave St . sfirtnied ouirlf the territory meet consecrated to Frtedont ; and are to:ete extension of Slavery into any territories of the United States non Free. . , i .. On l ins' t platform stands Thomas E. Coch ran fur Canal. Commissioner, Dinin Phelps for Auditor General, and Barth° omew ta t porte;for Surveyor General. The issue is , therefore &lily presented—one side endors ing the 14ebraska bill and the administration, and the other side condemning bOth. - , • T&show how fully_ our- opponents recog nize tote i e Free-Soil character of our etutdid ates. we ecipy the following- from the 1 Democratic Watch man, published at Bellefonte, a paper ~. which, supports Buchanan and, Sham Demo • • " racy with great zeal : . j i • " Tilt, Sum( " Trstos" Sean, Ttct i. .—Conte up to the . balk line, yillmore men, and vote the "Un- ion" Stihte ticket. Whit. more - couldyon elk than your Frem ont ,. su e s have given yen? Y ou have ' •on your ' anion tick ,1 Thontss E. Cochr an , Black • Repub ll tan! • Darwin Phelps,-Black Republican I 1 Bartholomew Laporte, Black Repnbllean! Not a.single Fillmore man on dour 1' Union' State ticket4all, all are Ibr Fremont and disunion=but still, you helped to make and Must supit. It is so 1,011, stipulated in the bond, and, htrer much it may grieve you, there is no escape. ' Come, •gentlemen of the Fillmore party, give your' support to the Fremont Stile ticket ln Our candidates are not black Republicans, neither are they for disunion, but otherwise we - believe the Watchman's statement:is pret, ty much correct. Tbey are for freedom in the Territories, and irthat fact drives off any pro 7 sitolry to mervatires from their support, we trust it will secure them the support of every honest Free-Soifer. !gr . It is a circumstance that in ordinary (.a.sp.! could be thought a little singular that every Buchanan orator who appears in this region, has a theory and teaches doctrines pe culiar to himself. We have as yet heard no two of them who agree , u to what are the principles of the . party - on the question of Slavery in the Territories. One holds that Congresi has the piiiwer to prohibit Slavery in the Territories, but the power should not be exercised; because its exercise would, pro. duce disunion. Another_helds that such pro hibition is - uneenstitutiontil l and that the peo ple of the Territories must themselves decide whether they will have Slavery or not. Yet another teaches the ultra Calhoun doctrine, that Slaves being property, any slaveholder . may carry them into any Territory, and thel Constitution proton! them there, so that one man may establish Slavery iri any Territory, And a hundred other different theories are advanced, half a dozen perhaps by the same speaker, amording,to the latitude. We explain this apparent diversity of opin- . ion In this way : f T he reel p urpose of this party; since it haibecorne holly under' the control of the nullifiers and elevery-fropigthi diiis oldie Calhoun Sehdol, is to enforce the Calhoun doctrine indicated "above,. whereby Slavery .will be introduced into all the Ter ,ritories tut most of the ipeakerS know that it will never do to let the pepple of the North .inidensiccd that purg e s! , i ad , . therefore; out amde. about la his own moue to him the Wi °Otj , to deceive the pimple. ..1111141; 41Ir ifieWS they thliii4M4Wii s+on tradictiq imam but of themselves. , 911 the Woo hiedthou* JAW.* - rirtti‘; „... MEM 4 , -2r.; s' on es .... led s 1 - eli lormi inat*u. vislto the 1 of life, 0 'mind tonvent •• plairOble the. 'Hence the 'di preseit—lince .not only. done who 11411100116 s the aid' to*, selves. They consider slavery an evil they do not prpose to interfere with: it in ,the States; they propose to prohibit it in thaTer ritoriesinttillhetssy:ao. 4 lge .;tle Affinbi 4 s t**rat:i4 3 ° 1 Y ' persists iri:tr:isSeOpi,ibat Ciajagrest - liai: no• power tikijiohll4-slaiery irk s 4llo,l*OcW i We ha v e - sh o wn that bongeivano the Pres idents halt° unifimmly recognized such pairer from the time of Washington dovin to 'that of Frank Pierce: It WAS recognized, in the .Tetr. ersciii ordinance of' 1787, prohibiting Slavery in' the North West Territory; in the Minot'. ri Compromise of 1820, prohibiting slavery North of 88 7 30;in the Louisiana Purchase; in. the Annexation of Texas in 1845, also pro hibiting slavery Math of 20-30; and even in the Compromiseivif 1850, which provided that notbing therein contained should be con strued to, impair or qualify anything (the re-, striction of Slavery of court* included) con tabled in the joint Resolution for annexing Teitia. We have shown that statesmen and jurists have recognized this power,froin Stork and Webster, doNi'n to Buchanan and Dickin son. ' We will now add that the highest tribunal in the land, the only legaL interpreter of the national_-constitution, has expressly decided that Congress exercises over the Territories the same power that the State governments exercise over the States, and consequently if Pennsylvania has - the power to prohibit:* Ski. very in Pennsylvatiioangresi has power to prohibit it, in the Territories. In the case of the , American Insurance Company, et. a). vs. Carter, ,Chief Justice Marshall delivered the unanimous opinion of the U. S. Supreme Court, in which he said of the people of the territory of Florida "They do not, however, psiticipate in po litical power. ; they do not share in the goy. ernment, till Florida shall become a State. In the meantime Florida continues to be a territory of the United States,; governed by s viatue of that clause.of the constitution which 'etnpower&Congress to make all needful rules and regulatiOns respecting the territory, or other property belonging to the United States." ' This demolishes squatter sovereignty. In the same decision occurs the following pas sage on the same subject " PethiPS the powei of governing a•Terri tory' belonging to the United States,. which has not by becoming a State; acquired the means of self-government, may result neces sarily from , the facts,, that it is not within the jurisdiction of any particnlar State, and: is within the power and jurisdiction of the Uni ted States. The right to govern may be the inevitable consequence of the right to acquire terntory. Whichsoever may be the source whence the power is derived, the possession of it is unquestioned." And again, he renders the power of con gress still clearer and broader: ' In legislating for themlthat is the Terr itories) Congress exercises the combined pow ers of the General and of the State govern . - merits." Before' this great (recision all the chaff about ' the alleged unconstitutionality of the Wilmot proviso and the Jeffersonian ordinance . .vanish entirely. Congress, therefore, has the power to prohibit. the extension of slavery if it sees Proper- ligirlir..Vattof the SuSquehanna Penn sylvanian, states that the resolution. of the National conrention of the Sham Democra cy endorsing Frank Pierce's administration, is not correctly qUoted by. us.. We found the resolution in two differcit forms in the newspapers, and . . Out of consideration for the feelings of our unhappy opponents, copied that which appeared least Objectionable and of &naive to -Northern men. • As the Doctor insists that We took the wrong one, and he undoubtedly speaks by.._ authority," we thank bun kir the "correction, and now pub lish the genuine article * , as follows; • . Resolved. That the ;admissietrattern of ' Franklin Pierce has been true to the great interests of the coun try. 1. In the face of the most determined opposition it ImaMmintitined the lame, enforced eemintny, fool eredprogrese, and inf need intiriry and rigor into every department of the government at home. It has signilly improved our treaty.relations, estended the field of commerical • enterprise and vindicated the lights of American citizens abroad. ft has asserted with eminent impartirdity the just claims of every section, and has at ail times been faithful , to the Von stitsitton. We therefore proclaim our unqualified op probation of its measures and its policy. • This resolution is neither more nor less than an ' unqualified' endorsemeht of, the wicked complicity of the'administration with the. Slave Power both in repealing, the Alis souComprozni;e and in forcing Slavery in to Kinsas, acts which have received the just execration of the world, 4fid• will render the Pierce administration infamous for all thee, to come. It is a Southern resolution, as the pLstform is a Southern platform; but the South rules that 'party so completely that the whole convention was obliged to swallow it 'hoWever nnpalatable-to Northern Democrats who had condemned the'administration ; and, as'Gov. Reeder states :in 'his - recent. letter showing why he cannot , support Buchanan, only one solitary individulal was found in that great National eon vention, voting against its See how Southern' doctrines are cram med down the throats of the Northern De mocracy I See how completely the party stands committed in favor of •subduing Kan sas (and, of course, the other Territories) ; for Slavery, by the shameful, wicked means used by this' ,administration l , 'And "James Buchantaan is the man nominated by this . seine Coavention to: carry out this same pro- SlaV e ery policy. And the votes of Northern men, who profess to be opposed to:. the. ex tension of slavery, who /aye condemned the Nebraska act and the outrages in Kansas,are counted - on to aid 'quaint:lag four years infintoirs polity of 'this adminis- Indio* ! Let hon6it men think Of it. lar Those amiable Bueltineer editors who are so ready to leise the' ery of trend when the Republieaes are:disappoinied of hearing a speaker they expected, will please take notice of the feet that aogresa Democratic mess meeting" win; edvertized-to be held at Seranton, a few days Ogo, at, which John Van Baren,"Ax.GOy.Alack s I wore promise# opeakeri c but when the meeting - aim dr, imtesa.Pf the big guns promeed; the - only' speaker . * Were'l.g. &WI., 'and "B. ! Want . : that' a Or Lot*Olt ee S' f rel 4 the , P 9 / 1 s ' `October 14th, " tar The Montrose Detnicrat of last .weelt says that Mr. orow could have given 'peace to Kansas." Mr. Grow did' attempt to gtve Pea 01 to Kansfts , ,introdoced a IP into Aeiliou4 foi ilintyting Kantiat,With the To- Consti*iion t - -*Nieh would' have given itoesett to Unitas en .. d made it s Frlii State ind that passelVll-louse t but the "ljem ocratie Senator rphoild to pass it, because they were oppe2,Bect to tieadmssion of Eansas as a wee Sea*: If Mr. Groir had also opposed the pin:lls, sion of Kansans. a Free State, and ;supported the "Toombi bill," which was a southern null -quire; intended to make 'Kansas a Slave State, he would no doubt have better pleased the slave-drivers and the . Northera-d6ugha: ces; but , in so doing he would ' have beer( false to his constituents, and to the principles of freedom he' has always advocated. For the Aemocrat shamelessly to charge the continuance of the troubles in iKansas on Mr. Gm* and the Republieans—when the fact is notorious that the friends of free. dont tried every means that could be devised, without surrendering entirety to.Siavery, for the relief of that unhappy Territory, and were unifortnly opposed by the sham Democ racy who Would have slavery or nothing but furnisheS another evidence of the deter. urination of the 13 uchaneers to Make this em. piratically "the lying campaign." s , . c. We assure our friends in Tioga and Bradford that the democracy of Susquelianna; will give M r l l'S.herwOod their undit4cledsuppore.'—.l.fontrose Demi orrat Oct. 2. • • It appears. from the above .that the Pro- Slavery Hankers have at last rum a ma - who is willing is run against Air. GrOw: fo• Congress i in.this District, in t 4 person elf Daniel L. Sherwood of Tiogit The Editor's i of the Demoerat, knowing it to be a desper. .ate case, and fearing that-Mr. Sherwood ma l y ' back'.6lf the track liefo . re election. thus lea ,- ing them without a candidate=—make the- i Bove promise ; to their friends in WI ' the r counties, .when they know. it : to' be utterly false and without • foundation. It Cannot be denied, and. they know it, that very piany Id - -I the stippiirters of .the Cincinnati Platform have resolved to vote for kr; Grow in -pref erence to any. other candidate. There is t i ot a doubt that Mr. Grow's . majority Will far , i, exceed that of any other . candidate on t he :Ticket.- OCR STATE . LEGIsLATURE.—'7NeXt a United States :Senator k to be elected the Pennsylvania : Legislature, in place Brodhead.. We' want agree Soil Sena eleeted,• and not a doughfitee, dike Brodhl and Bigler. - Elect E. need .Myer,, Sim B. Chase and Alfred Hine, and you:se< THREE yovv.s in the ' l egislature fora Soil Senator, and fur the side of freed whenever that question comes up--elcct att, J. V. Smith, and R. T. Stevens; and secure THREE reerza fiw another pro-Slay Senator like. Bigler, and for sustaining cause of BorderTuffaniso, generally. f l and Smith were in the last. Legislature,i helped Bigler into the position Where he the :Meanness of his .nature by bringing up false accusations in the Senate:against C. Fremont, and by uniform subserviency to the. behests of Slavery. Last. Fall Dr. Smith made Some pretensions so Free Soilistbe lore electimi, but falsified , them by. opting pro-Slavery every tithe in the tegislattire.— This 'tall be makes no such pretensiansi t .R. I'. Stevens, es is Well known, has always been one •of the hardest of Hunkers, and bit.; terly opposed to the Free Soil . tendencies for , merly exhibited by the party in this' Clnty. We say then, 'Free Soilers, ,sUpport the Free - sod candidates and don't , let the enemy delude 'any one with false issues into'giving his support to the sliverpextensionisti. • ' Eucrtox FrAUDS.--Some of the. Philade lphia papers haVe information-from Washing ton of a scheme concocted among the Ruch; sneer leaders, to carry the' Penns. Ivan's: State election by fraud. • The ,plan i\ 4) have some of the initiated Buclumeers appear at the polls in evet.y district, professin to be. opponents of the Sham Democrae,y, a d with printed tickets resembling the Repu i lican tickets, but with some of the names so ' cliancred ..; I - and ris,isspelledAs_ to vitiate them, ittl get unsuspicious voters to-use these spurious votes instead of the genuine. Anothefr - tart of the game is to . trade Votes'm this 14: a Buchaneer will offer to support our=di -7 dates for Auditor General and Survey ' r Gen eral if a Republican will support their candi date for Canal Coritmissioner—two f?r one! Then, if by this means they should 'elect the Canal Columissioner, they would claim 'that \ the fight was made on Calual s CornmiSSioneri • and so keep up the courage of their follower's in hopes that something betier Inay-iurti up before November. . . . This rascally scheme 'must be frust j rated. 7 14t,the Republicans itr over l y township be on hand: and , vigilant—see that no spurio u s votes are east,, and - that none arejed astray by of fers to bargain or. trade :vote's. .-. .I'' imp Senator Brodhead recently 4 -gad - in it speech aillonesdale that rr *AS rig vs- DERSTANDING AMONG THE LICADNRS OF RE De- MOORACY Di WASHINGTON, AT THE T NEBRASKA BIM. PAEiSER. ; ') TRAT KAI;ISASI SHOULD BF. A _SLAVE STATE. one of the' leading Buchaneers of Wayne county were " swear. tng mtui," at this confession, for they d:been laboring all through , the campaign to make the people believe that:there was ncisuch un derstanding. But the .conduct of the admin istration and of the party in Congress, with 'repsrd to ' ff Kansas a ff a i rs ' , shewa phtiraiv enough was the , , r that that ties the bargain, and it was so pro c:laitited at the time by Toombs and other of the bolder disunionists',ivho sustitined the Nebraska bill. ,When • ,When the doughface orators collie up into the Free Soil .regions:' from Washibglon 0.1" other Southern latitudes' tlo)y cotn!B! with the habit of talktng proi Slavery sentiment* sit throng upon them, that they are apt to blun act out the real position of the . ,party, before the reAcient - doughfitces who have I tithe pub lie pulse morireoankly, have tittle tip them , the wink.' Probably Brodhead took different ground in blikneakspeetb; as-liinota did i tir hi/ fikinrettlnlioitrnetts' ov. Gea4 instead Of !feting impar t ally and - resuming peace and safety to the settlers of Kan s," shows himself a more d io. c‘ f ... Orem; .beenese, more energetic enemy the ~, Free Ptatel:men,thin Shannen*A. the latest,. nett*,:w4:' have (which cons th roug h 't ' t . o.iditve.rt,s64,o3*) it appears t hat t ' '.. Bo ter - leittfian Sway of :2700 refuitit to d ' id -in pursuance of Ate Governor's proclamation nd that the Gevernor, instead of employing he U. S. troops to Put them down, met them l in their approach to Lawrence and took '5OO fof them into the U. S. service ‘!_ to assist in expelling Lane's troops, and getting as ,many of them as possible prisoners, to be tried by martial law." Finding the Governor and. F. 13. authority thus united with the Ruffians against them, the Free - State forces in Law rence fled,Aithe Border Ruffians, United States troops and Governor marched triumphantly into the deserted town.. • The Free Soiters who thus fled from Lawrence consisted of three-fourths of the able-bodied Northernpet tiers, collected throughoOt the Territory to defend Lawrence against the Ruffians,. but With no purpose of opposi‘g U. S. troor. The Governor sent a body of troops after the fugitive Free Soil&s, and succeeded. in captu. ring 95 of them, who are to be tried by Bor- der Ruffian law. The new Governor from whom so much .was hoped by some, since it vas understood that he went to Kansas as the special representative of. the views Of. Bu chanan, has united with the Border Ruffians in expelling the Free State settlers. • i One of the charges brought by that Mendacious Missionary of the new Democrat ic fiiith„,E. B. Snobble, against : Mr. Grow is that instead of passing Toothhs bill and so giving e•p.Ck to Kansas—although the object of that bill ,was to give.Stavr.av : to Kansas—. Air:•GrOw . 4"ut the bill into his pocket an ',l; keeps it there:Having heard. of this charge Mr. Grow look \.;occasion. - to•state that there .was no truth in it, bt,i,hat the very. objectionable, inasmuch as it leaves the greater part of the. Border'lluffian laws still ,in, force and,recognizes\their validity, and consequently the laWful\establisliment of Shivery there, and also pla \ c!lhe superifi teadence of the 'new election t proposes, in the hands of -Frank Pierce, and i bad in \ ma-, ny other respects—was never reac • d by the . House at all, but laS• ,upon. the Spea\er's hie when Congress adjourned, with sixty \ oth ' Cr bills bef4u it tube disposed of in theTg. War. order - of business before it could 1; reacho. Bat, although this explanation was made in Snobble's presence, that individual still'repeats the falsehood that Me. Grow has the bill in - his pocket; and finds- a few, lobe lievehim. One of theseexhibiterbis intelli : gence'the other day by asserting that he knew Giow had the bill in his pocket; for he saw trim take it out and read from. it at the Glen wood Meeting ! I tor ad IRO ;Mg El Offl Pi- 11311 • I ery the - Irgr.Daniel L. Sherwood,.Who is now pre sented to the .voters of this district as a ' , Del oocratie opponent of Mr.._GrOw for Pon-, was a member of the State Senate - in Gress, 'iatt and FM 1845, and voted - to instruct our UnitedStao Senators - to suliport the Tani of 184% and against any alteration of the same. And in 7846, he bolted,and Opposed Wilmot, the Democratic candidate for Congress, 'on Vie - , !Tariff' issue. We merely call . the, attention of those tree-Trade Democrats who claim that the old issues are, still before the eoiratry, to these facts, that they may not fowit the'ante cedentS of the pro-Slavery Buchaneer . Candid ate, but may vote understandingly, •. The Philadelphia Times states that Ten ThousanclextriaSsessment's were. made in that City in three bays el last week,thider . the Buchanan municipal , authonties, and that most. of. the, persona' So as' sessed were recent ly nattiralized, neer a residence in this 'man try- of from five weeks three ' years! SA Buchanan voters.are made: We trust that the friethisof free institutions and the'puritY of the-ballot-box, in thii county, will be, vig ilant to See that no one.claiming to be a 'nat uralized citizen is'perthitted to vote without produeintevidence diet he has been admit ted te eilizenshiz--an application be ad . - mitted-ofoiirse-does not entitle any one to vote. Loolii-.letit for frauds. and Border Ruf fianism at the polls. ' . . ~a:~jn«a~jo~~: For the Republican. Letter An a Buchanan Politician R. B. Lrrxtic ESQ : - DEAR SIR :—As on are fully out and stomp ing it on the Buchanan Platform, and have prove :so able and' successful as to be denotitinated " the Cham pion of Bemoeracy," permit me to eat your attewt tion .to a letter of yourg, which appeared in the "Christian Contributor," ofUtiei . N. Y., just before the close of the. Presidential campaign of 1848. Eight years may have obliterated its , contents sonie what from your memory ; and I therefore here copy it verbena and wish you tp read it once again, that you may the more, readily answer - a few quegioti.4 which I may ask for my own and .the public infOrm alien. From the Chrietias Contributor Vol. 5, No. 34. Pisbliehed in Utica, N. Y. , a P. Grano:or, Edr. "For the Chiistian anyriintecir,n "BRO. GRosvgNoa .—At a time when Mazy Seem, to the hist degree, singular and hopeless to remon strate with the]. old menkberi of the Liberty party, I yet am constrained, through your columns to hazard that attempt. Since the fast, organization of, that P 4 4f th. I have steadily , adhered to it, rejoicing inits principles, and exulting in its, growing power; and now- that ita. . firmest and . beat friends,.--the very pi oneers in this reform seem to =have deserted it, I feel indeed alone. Have they done right? True the Lib ertY party opposodAtie extension of human Slavery;, and sought to resat it by law in. the Statei where it existsi.ottly through the constitutional avenues. So far it, and the party nominating , Mr. Vanßuren agreed..-, Admit, if you . please, that the principles of the Butlido platform embrace- tlie'foll extent of or political powers. ° Yet is there flora moralsentiment 'above and behind the mere mote, of which that is but the exponent and the yoke ? We looked at the deep, crushing, God-defying,,wroiygathat imbruted of our unoffending felloyt men, in the' Senthern States; and we heart!' and obeyed WO voice Of God calling .us up to high remonstrance and reproof; and 'to the 'Creation of a , public sentiment - at - the North That would so amend the constitution as le empOWer Congress to abolish al , ery theo . ll lei if moral ef fortS failed to reform tit 4.p . --tr. ,fhtr mission was not , siinply ctumervatir ) preventative, but nun cal and reformatory. Our simple, btu, element of power was taith in the right,—a faith that wait tin tempted by place, or spoil, or expediency ;Abet re jected this wdrld's . mallins, of choosing between mor al evilS,nt of doing evil good may come.' A - faith Vild*Hrir no compromise with error'' bat Shun. e.ielrfclever:itl thillu's prpaleVid OftEcretie o o l 4 - ofttriil4oo, Atio . anathemas Cif the. Odd lit the init. EgeOed• :9t tha' voice,.* o ballekb.4),r 4o - 4 1 00 Pr* 404 - the iltrfifitt thrv4h Bit THE "..11OFtriost: ra., Oct. 9. 1848. blew -Maki lorijail"Vina;',that every Molt_ and cavern of the guilty edifice rung with the. meet sound. Our strength was not in mere , nittii&int,- but in Truth. And yet for the,sake.of these, have met, on what is called the Buffalo platibris, a pitrty having no sympathy with a piaci; pie that waraWgainert alt slavery, whether it be with in or irfthotifthe state Within _or -without 'the pro- tectioW* . human law, a principle to which Lovejoy and - ,Torret-frll martyrs, and for which We hat'n 'strugglesiiikdd persecution. They brought their Caly dhiate; and we drop our own and unite with them; thereby • merging and losing, the antildavery, in a mere non-extension party, a party that looks only to. the rights of Freemen,—that from self-interest has adopted - -a part Of our policy only. ..ittd.bcktehave• are done this ? Not, I admit, by adopting a platforms containing positive error, but by ingeniously, and carefully framing a something-that expresses a part of our principles, and a part of theirs, leaving out all that might be offensive to either.. Whale such union good Am? Now-had we incorporated there the e;relqprincitatiof oPpOsitiOn toytAteglaitery, it would , have driven off Mr. .Vanßilrerrt and hiS friendi; to - -retain them; Liberty rnewelosed Ikele Eptrin Itsnent• compromise. Could vote for a slave-holder, be cause be happened to Oinxitiesthe extOnSiOti of Slaver/ to -Free Soil? Then `I could not vote for Mr:Van- Buren, who says he has not chinged, and who there.' fore - now would secure" anti -guarantee to the slays holders that Ihatitetion_w%erp it eiista. Just assaur vote for the one as the other. The differitice between bim and us is wide as the poles. And in the nattily of,things, 'we cannot wield a moral power, while our vote, no matter under what .plausibilty of excuse . for a man •who never embraced the great anti-slavery Truth that distinguishes 'us from all other parties.-- Wham makes this defection plausible is that its prin ciple is true so far. as it goes, but is not the whole ruth upon Me ambled.- By leaving out a part, we' an unite with.any body,: for any and evey purpose but we loses or own identity.. When this battleis. fought, and'o-. att donC i Liberty men will learn that they have gained nothing, and lost much by this de parture from duty. -But how will they regain thein fluence they had when men belioved they were ready to do and die in defence of a principle and were proof against every seduction? Yet shall not a few rally around. and Eft our trailing banner from the dust I—. Shall we not re-kindle and keep bright the firein Oda nation's watch-tower ? A better Clay wilt . -I rightly understand you in this letter ; yon were that time, an Abolitionist, a Liberty party millet— You were bppord to the Buffalo platfonn t ,beaniso it went no .farther than the sassvvrmastos of Slave ry ; and could' not vote for Mr. ,yanßuren, bemuse . e .",would seet,ie and guarantee to the tlave4olders that institution where it exists. I understand You to say that the " diferenee between him and up [OA. tionists, Liberty Party men, you among them] is (s : ei) wide as the : poles" " and in the notafc of things we can not wield a moral power while our vote no matter unfit% what plausibility of .effetwe is for a mai who never embraced the great etuti-SlaveryTruth, that distinguishes us [Liberty, inirty 'men] from all other parties." Am I tight? ', Further, I under - stead you to say in this letter, that you with the Liberty party held to " a principle Mangers against aif Xlatery, whether it be within or witkont the State; withi 4o7 without : the protection of - human law," that you sought "the creation of a public 4er:timeless nri Nolan! that would so amend the Constitution as to empower Congress to abolish Slavery there" [at the South] ' l ' by law, if: moral efforts failed to reform the oppressor,". Am I not right ? Still farther, I understand you to charge those Ab olitionists whei concluded to agree to and stendepot the Buffalo "Slavery-non-extension" platform, and: Mote fol. Mr: Van Buren, .with " defection," with de , ft... ion however "plausible," that constituted :loss of " • entity," ,as anti-slivery :men ;. that they !'de pane tom duty," and that fry, so doing they placed ,t \ thernsel ‘s in a positron that men would hot bare them to be " ready to do and to die in defense *fa principle' ," or that they were "now ' aoarist V.VERT SMUG'S N." AM I not right ? .:pow I 'tisk yo 4 to read-the; following extracts frbta the Bu'ehanari, the Cincinnati &dello of 1856, :al then answer Me afe more questions. - • ' " Resolved, That vc reiterate with renewed ear ky ,of purpose the Well- onsidered declarations of former conventions npbri t e sectional iesties of Eto .Mestie ' Slar'ery , and cone • g the reserved rights of the- States,— 1. That Congress has no po r under the Consti tution, to interfere with or colt r.he ditnneatie insti tutions of the several Slates and th such States an the sole 'and proper Judges of every ing appertaia ing to their own affairs, not prohibited `by the Consi tution ; that all efforts of the Abofitionlitkt or others, made to induce Congress Co interfere wit) nestiors of Slavery, or-to take incipient steps in • to, are calculated to lead to the most a dangerous consequences; and that all such have an inevitable tendency to - diminish the ha ness of, the people and endanger the stability an. manancy of the'Unien, and ought not to be comae• minced by any friends of bor. political institutions., - - 2. That the foregoing proposition covers, and was intended to embrace, the whole subject of slavery ag itation in Congress; and therhfore the Demociatie party of the Union, statuling on; this national platform, will abide by and adheretto it dui dd ezeeution of the acts known - aitfie compromise measures, "settled by the Congress. of UM ; " the act reehnittingtogi tive-i from service or, labor," included . ; which act being ,designed to carry out an express provisionti the Constitution can not with fidelity thereto,. ben , pealed, or so changed as to destroy or impair its et ficiencr. .. , 8. That the Democratic party will atesioe all ite tempts at renewing, in Congas or out atitithe itation of the ,Slavery question under,whatever shape or color the rittempOnly be made." "And that- we mar, the more distinetly meet the lisne on which a sectierd piat3r enMastingexchisiw• IT on Slavery. agitation. pow relics to test the fidelity of the people North and South .to the Vonesiitutier and the Union," 1 , "1.. Rtsoked, Thakiaiming felloriship with ana "desiring the cooperation of all who regard the prey ervation cf the Union ;under the Constitution es paramount issue, and, rePudiatingill sectional parties and platforms concerning domestic slaverv" ke„,— the American Demograey recognize and adopt the principle+ contained in the Organic lain,testabliehing• the Territories of Kansas and Nebraska m•emboily ing the only sound and safe solution of the "slavery question" upon which the "great national idea of the people of this eountry, can repose in itS determined' conservatism..oE the Vniou—Non interferenee,• 6 ! ! C9 7l .9res!, wih Slavery in any. Territory or is tie 1 .District of Columbia, With the above portion eribißuchaturn Ostrom before you, let me ask `hi relation to its contents— Does it not Mime, that Csegress has no peva over Slivery in the States ; that "all efortsof tie Abolitionists or•othera, made to induce",Conte to interfere with ()nations of Slater? (such as to sholelt "Slavery in the District of Colombia or the Twit - ries," or in case of a failure °Um - oval suaeden, to ie duet a pubae sentiment at the Nor:Ainamend& (Constitution so as io empower Congress to abolish -Slavery" hi the States)" or take ineVerit steptis rr &non _thereto; "ought' not to be eatititenanced /7 any friend of our political institutions?"_ I take it 'for granted.you answer, ,ves I Doe's hot the platform' declare that the party •a "abide by and adhere to a fiiithEut exeeritiodef • acts; known • as the Compromise measures settled b 1 the Congress of 1850, the act fop reek:law" AT" ;Ives Iron , Service or lab r tsctuistre, ii .„ *Mai d makes every Northern freeman a siamkatcher, wide the "penalty of fine'ind imprisonment! • I take it you must answer, yes! • • ,Again ask; does not the platform "indorse these which opens Zarisas and NebnialtWonce cotwera a to Tivetious to the introdnetiest ie shivery, as ove- Mining or' "•entbditinithevonAesoutiet atidterfes 4- 'eta,* of the Slavery ruenittosii, 4h!s =a On nothing either Id • Congress wont, Whist:Sian:in but letting it go; Where it will, is Boned Deusiiersey Once a g ai n I take for granted - tint. you, 0 , 1 honest man, miniver, yes, ' • • * Now, ins conclusion kw tke•mala 4mentka.,, How k it that like' yoursCif, an Ahaithinist, /Liberty' 'Party Mau " who ban not changed" , d ' not in 14 -Ibust' °I .ysiChout d v eetion, w i t houtexposure, c seductioss," step - down no hew, as to eland 1 31 01 - platform thit said to Slavelin:hey9edyour Foe° limits you shalt not go, !Weedier Words; a noss-Alhol I! ;extensiv . is platforris ; nor vote for a man Rho 1044 "secureand Yuarentie tn . thi'SlaVe-Holders a 1 , ititution others it esists;" Without'," lei 14 441°P power," can; in 18156 itholP"MilllOWer • take hitefitited upon n platfOrnithatiays 'lst 14 '1. entirety eitieWs; - "to go atikiiie - tia only for a man who has surrendered his " idditur to thet platform, • lint also for Ifisinisociate * l b°, • Vilkirm laitsiOni: i - lni el4 . °l fkr , ?•• T° i ! "tioisiipa;: .poitegellitagt, .1.1!f: R. B. Lm4Lr.." IRE