10epe0,e0i t't IP. READ 4. X. 11. FRAZIER. JeDITOREc. f'.-£r LOOMIS, CORRESPONDISO EDITOR MONTEOSE.'PA. Novreusber 1867.. Says levaNtrul Chanticlrri, in she "1 with pleasure see Min strutting on two legit, and aping me." resei4thinee . holds good in times of : ittbiteesity. 1111 well as prosperity. The " hard use. taking the starch out of a great hipeds, • now.s.dsys, :nod Inuit, looking as diseonsohite and istormliatterei -as a Itog-tailed rooster -in a thunder. shower. "the imelaneholy,days hßee come, The saddest of the year," *spec' laity to' this:a on fortunate printer. 'who lutver - Inrge debts pay, about this tittle, mud 'rut other resources that) a' , great limber of small bills lignitt:t "slowi(iNich" .sitheriliers. We don't,wisli to have it tin. dtTsti.stel• that we have not a plod ninny ,prontlit-pa) lug subscribers, fir we hive ; but if all those who (ivre us would payup, We whUtild knitw what to di,' with the ttiottev. • November Court flees next. week, Ind-we would suggest ti Mime of our friends—v. we rhati leaves the pricking. if Conscience to de-iignate. instiad of sending them billittiat then Will be; it f a ce:r a t& tittle for settling their little sower; with the printer, If - pin don't. come yourself, send.. ',77lF i •sntWith,tatittigthe errtiing was eery dark, and it , rained in torrent,t,-manething over four hundred personm a-sdinhied in the 111apti.t• church in the: plaoe, i.n Thne,cd ?t y teVeniiii.lat.t: to .hear !Ivory Ward 13eecher's Lill al re ,in ' " The Christiah Cs , tn ,iwealt h." . • Tile, I. (lure WAS what ua, expected from the fame ..r the an; hs9r—a n 014.. performance.— ho that 16tencd to tlie r's glowing riods and lot'', thotight-, did not have iiivakeiteii within him napltations t:,r a Id.her. better life, and ft el a desire to: thake our ti...untry• such a coniniotiweul,h .as he por itaved ~- After heariilg Mr. Beecher—marking the &Ct. and tinttrraltiess t.f him d e livery, th e ttut' And ice of hi: imagery. the clear f&.'ss tu:d profitisity of hi l r,.thought, his earineit, bmiitut anti hatreti of nil v:rongx and sitatte......we d. not tvolide'r at hi: great -rot 1/1:0:t3... Ile, is tine the repres e nt a tiv e men ,f the age tind eout;.try ; tntd the prievi . .humanhe so. yoeate::, Ittilig the eterwd pi itA•ii.k.iiol truth and ju,tice, inuaititiutx'ite:v t_ff* olek rice that the .lboitroße Dem.! oceotstcti.atic“llytioisrepri-solt. min i t ie. the stitfiditlg . of Ilan. l'avid Wlmot .:Indge, before the.jss.ple of this-vonn!y, Wfatt the nu.tive fur such a etairoce Hutt be, we eantiot ettatilly.say. If it is inkei,ded for borne eficet, it is worse than . labor'.thrtmn awu,% ; fur our eitizena under•tand - Judge Wilmot's position here. and-know that his conduit on the has given great. mineral saii-faction. The Dem era, itt.lf not long ago acki.!owledgeil his ..itite - grity. l e as . a Jtidgt• and, as a man ; and his .ability i , t run ceded by, alb': If the` motive is to injure his reputation elsewhere, we pie-time it will fail of sueteris.' . The - Democrat editor cannot ern : acqUire t - 4itoriet).-li-which,afiet all, may be his otij.-vt--by his rvkless falsehOmla, thei hate mit sufficient - point or semblance td . mat to give them currency. ar The map Of 1111.. County is nnWbeing engraved, toed Mr. Marsh informs- us that p0,./if..." will be had in ri few wre-ks, and also thxFLe oc r eets . to have it ready for delivery the last lif his year orfthe first of next. The • , rulyt' time he" is ni .Ve able to give s put will at some tin tite period. Ile alsoli.forais Jne that there is to be 'tei engraving of Meent..i . rose, from a Dagnerre.raype, taken by Mri, Denes, the 2lst ut lai. April, just idler the , L great snow storm. an - engraving Alontnese Academy. (min n 'view taken a few days since by Mr. Deahs, whieh is very fine.. AviOst of the Feholars tee the 'having been m front at title nine. The Cis • cads and §tarrueva bridges on the N. V. and Erieltailroad,, are to be engrave 43 On the border 4.ef the map, which will evidently he • both useful and ornauiental. qiienee probably of his benevolent disposition ner.:We haw, a few days since, an 'even- whieh pr..mpts hint to bring lihese neglected him% pachitte, the -invet . 3tion 'of- n. i words ont a their necsisitirmo obscurity. and tie!, F . Brown, for husking corn. The oft. give 3 " " -Pr'" , !i"nve• ke are allowed great libertie-t, hat whether even man, who site en a 'bench solo 111 . -g ;hey notv he permitted to place the accent stasejng.horse, works the maeltine with his on " A „ ,;(„;,„/ w „ r d. a 4 • rim!. fot by means of a treadle, bringing, down a est and "oseattered,' s is dein» in the antsve sort cif knife or chisA which severs the ear lines. I leave the critical reader to deride. from the 14:em at a stroke, leaves the lint let us make haste I,) enfold new bean rties to the expectant reader. -;"The poet singa slialk end - -htt.k.: trefethei . ' t . Mr. G. Rivers, , lbw balmy of Ile,addyn, etsuoy the -ittl l 4 - 0 14 "Is.tho cooling tenth disporting' 'ad,' the us that a Mai) ems husk' about one-third faster Ferried g'43ve- toying wish Ole virtu.= " Leaves that titular et!. the res..* lawn ! The 'with -the mat-hint. titan. by band. and ?finch "Arrhinediesrens glow with tints) which rival eat.ier. The rive (4 the.:huaker is $5. A "It , Itaurtin ,l4 huff' 4 1' "Skies. With what luxurious robes of •. patent bas been applied for. "Taipleand of gold sol drapes the glowing _ . , • • "'West. as towards idsWeeen zotaeh he .whiadg Lis 't4 1 1,." The inel eased Republican majurifY ear- 'torelY bitArtortlizg 13 ) "The soul that Natures inspiratititt•&ela! - in Mom pose is owir.if to the vote,caat thou: _I . Ilere our: poet fairl • y tanfloes himself in e"ni.et."'d the •Norinal S " heb " 1 ; " # tlim. if any Zstle.. - will these lines the Montrose Democrat. W,lisit a pity we have ' aes,rding to the rules for scansion laid down not 'inure .N..rniai Svhoi.l.4 in Pettn•llyttnik. iin 'anv hook, 1 w ill agree to I jivrite - a` Pone'. itt . self. . ;! • S. W. T.," it will be poivoireti, is an. orig;nol poet,. Ills leivea amble o'er the ras..e e t, lawn !" lii rite coseW they probably Lrallop, and ..eCaeiotutlly tent ICsiltish leaver. ! S: W. T." is abo .patriotic. Ile has brArfl Of the glorious hesuty of an Italian sky, but he uszur e s us tiuttftiura 4 as fine. Ile gOes in {Or ti iiive Iskies, and evi dently thinkS they are pawl [,as And mark how gracefully its, putklllol to bed in his " ocean eotteh,".r-a dant)) lodging for the reel-freed old fellOwerrain 4 alit "Imvely scene' inifeed it w;II be noticed that the .last. line of thq Paritltral'h 1:140* abort, okay ba scanned Into'poc . lio fret, •-oaanot, be a said bed a dosen 4nee in the wbolepeeta,) Or The - la,dies of the M. E.'Clutreli in lanntri , se, 71fr tnakitig e4onlenendnMe effort* tee intpr..ve the nrpeariviee IP! thoir 11 4 1u.e iif uli.h tins rong needed itnprove• pi nt, S. their res.ivai pf.tiee. 1t,11u! ..Americao party base carried llay land .4 €.0,10 or 10.000 toitjority, .The 1114-m hers of Cottgrea4loll,. *Mk A Mille:ma . 3; Democrats 2i: 41112krild 1. The :State will Cd 7 tow4l SviatijAineriranslo.; .Denmetats 5 ; fag .yet. 1a .)!e beard from: /Mutt, '. 4 tweri.. alai; 40; but itts 22; eleven to beilifsrd nr" Banks, Republican, is el. cted Gover nor 4.f id tomachu.et ts. The Pandida tes,wcre Nathaniel P. Banks, Republican, Henry 3. Gardner, American, and *rtotmus Beach, Dcmccrst. The loth owing ig thit'ente; Banks. 60.878 ; Gardner, 37,716 ; Beach, 30,029. The Sham Democracy stand third in the Bay State. - Anoong the members of . ;the Legbdature ere the Ilion. Marco.' hitortOn, ex Governor 441' the State; llnn. Caleb Cti.hing, 141, 3 Uni. tea States Attorney General who was in the Legi.lature 'hirty-two years sgo non. „Jul. Roodvo.il. lately in the U. S. Senate. Mr" The Shtsmoeracy haVe carried . New y,a k. by 10,000 or 12,000 Majority. Their vote 1.4 about the same asta•t r t year, but that of the R.ptiblientitt is mitcli : See ex tract from The Tiihune elseWbere; Remark ing.on the fact that so many Pwpublicatts re frained from voting, Greeley',, says that is a kind of abstinence he does nut approve of. ar To all the extreme §outhen't States. „that have lately voted. the prmSlavery De nmeraey have tritirophed. In other 14'mila, "the Dutch hlve taken Holland" again. New Jos..) . has gnae Shamocratic by a u.ut die Wile majority 'as last year. Mr" Life Illustrated, is a first clasafieto. Hai Weekly. Journal, devoted to Entertain. awn , Imprf fvettient, and Progress, designed to eneMirage a spirit of thipe, Manliness, Self Itcliahce, and Artivity ; . so illustrate life in all its phases.- It .is an elivitntApiarto of eight beautiful tuiges—a larger th . an the Illustrated London Kiwa-3 1 1 perfect. modf•l of excellence in size, shape,. and sentiment,. altogether, one of the most sfonnfl and Semi- Mr live papers. It is a high;tonedPictiirial We. kly. which ought to be rend by every Family. Published at 42 a year, fel for one half a year, and to Cliibs of Four, it will he sent three Month:: for One Dollar, by Foale r di Wells, 303 Broadway. New. York. The Rural . New-Ycirker. anti The einieriean .9gricul a-rixti the to ua r.gularly; are both exeelltio periodicals. We would recotnnatlid . our 6srniir4t friends to take these works into essn.i4ration in their neirsriaper calculations fist: die coming year. The former is a Weekly. and is 'midis:bed. at Roches...ter, by I). I).T. 11Essore. at t. 2 a year: and :he latter a ntoriti.ll;•," in New Y , .l;k city. at IW. 189 Water s.treet, 13:y t )rsott:e .load. :1141' a year. for MP itieirrtrdeitt IkepOlicats. • " Original ioetry." Ikt Essßs. EDIT' : I find in: my this week's Mut/ruse .berwiertit, 7th uriginst isietii enti tled, "ilupinen Fetters • the .I.)isinberited, a Drama :' By S. -W. T." This owns tirignal, and its stt 1e FO 11.!thitte, that I have thiniglit ef, • writing a ain't it. fur the sisiti. , ettietit anti .. di fientitin ...tam readers. It ovens Gillows; "Mail lorelyAutimm! 'Dee of reaiconi all - - that gird the year, I woki adult. At - "Thy anti •nach, P4l rouia ainilitik:cOmea "'And pours Mx iiounteour . This, it must-be ei• l ife.is t •a„. Ag fine, espec ially the secundand third link Observe the, ingenuity tit the ir - e.m•triletitin.. Thu seeinid hue lir many be triutight quite as well i*Ji hunt the filial w,irtl At, ' thus— lovely Antitmn! thee of seasoua all That the rolling fear, I most adore. slut this ingenious versifi,-r, seems deter min-d to end M$ many'lif his lines with prep and other Usittur words,. as Be-ides. he was tuttind its have, just-ten sylla bles in the. next line; whettu'r there shuuld he anyt tit thin, abuut it Or nut. It would not d.• to have the line read.— At thy approach, Tomonia Frililing comes,— fur hi•re are eleven callable-, instead of ten, the tine IlleaStire of RR Eiig!i-h hernia line. It Poumn;a had oily been Ninona.Vne des% frrits and fruit trees.)', this difficulty would tot have net:timid ; lint I mippuse Pee monist mug he sume . fur dantsel of :whom the poet 171 enarn.ired, acid %lin,. when be is thirsty, comes and pours biro a " bounteous hurn.7 Or, perhaps r.,t.ini4is the name of bitt new:mileh cow. The line, then, must. stand its it is, and,-ras I find 'Jim scanning it as iambic cer.e,-‘-tria,t be read . its follows, the invented or lung. syllahlea being distin guished by Italics: "Thy ap-proach Po;•-rao-ni-s sail--ing coulee', Skit ping one Sentence, whit:ft has no extra ordinsi y beauties to reeinntriendlt, we next have ' • " Plenty reigns not here, bat would, had " Englitnt!tnarshaled hordes for deeds of foulest "Wrong Fttrpassirg e'en the Geith and Hun of " Ol 1, ne'er vexed these sunny shoeres, neer scattered " Devaluation, woe, and death o'ci Gecirgials Fair dontain,, neer forced our gallant_ sons to " Leave the soil unfilled, their homesand friends for ! "And fight the battles of the free The word?! that precede ":,Plenty" in the fir-t line are " Ills'abut the whole Iline. o.evieled a.O Itett.re, ! " Ills toil. Plen-ty reien - s not here, but wOuld r .had," The siteceeding lines are egitally ooth AO rha think:ll. Observe hots generally this origieal geititis succeeds in yeti ing Attch words As • ' tor,' • to,' the auxiliary' hid,' &v., at the end of hie lineg, u here they, lutist be 100 g or 'Tee m e d to preeerlie the measare—a eonge- I mid I have therefore concluded that it is a r. vorable point for ending my quotationis Lb.' there are eight or ten mime lines in the poet% averaging about like those quoted. .I Verily, we have a poet among us. .Q rs A COAXES. P. S. with your permission, I may at some future day, extend my criticisms to th c l. poeta of the .Republeata, now and then one i f whom rides a badly limp'ng Pegasus. -For thetlndepenckta Republican. Farm Work for November. Winter is fast nearing us.. Are you ready fur its approach, Farmers ? Much buck wheat is still out; if not. raked, do it at once tying it around - the top to keep it from fall inl,•and when you • thrash it; be sure to pu the straw under. cover if you can ; if not stack so as to keep it. dry, In cold . weathe cattle will eat it very well, and as beddin fir animals it is well.wotth preserving. Secure corn, the first opportunity, puttin ri it under cover; where it can be husked stortrtyl days and evenings; but, ,be sure it is dryl when hauled, in„for, if not; both the corn and , atulks.are very much injured by heating. Potatoes should be dug at once, as the are less liable to rot, if kept dry, than if left in. the .ground until it is thoroughly soaked by the fall rains. , If you would bury them, in the . liell, select a drylace, and coveri s them with plenty of stre and not very! 6 much dirt.. Straw - is. a fit? tter substance to keep opt the cold than earth ; and when Piltutoes are as scarce as they are this fall, it; will nut do fur any man to let a peek waste, by freezing. •1 the every spare moment in fi xing upl the barns and sheds. Batten all the cracks. Depet d upon it, a few hundred feet of hehi- . lock Is aids so invested will, in .the fodder. they save and the imprevenietit Of stock they maize, pay an interest very inany never dreatited of. Make mleidations to give, eve ry animal you keep a good warm . shelter through the earning winter, and , if in the spring you think it profitable to let. your cattle ever go hack 'to the ; lee side of the fences for sheter again, then just let the read• ers of the Rept Miran know who you are. .. If you have 'never ,tried keeping manure wider shelter, try that : one load so kept is worth two left to the full alionof the weath . er: Any shelter fir the m. ore heap is bet ter than none; a good one better than.a• poor line. i sin trying mixing Muck with , my mantire. I wish a dozen more of the farmers of the county would give it . a •fur trial, and then tell Os through the Repugican if it. will ;my ; fer,tartning that does not pay we don't want. .. . • See that the cattle and stnek*Pnerallyget, enough: It is very bad Polio!" to pinch cattle now, so a: to have fodder enonah winter. Give all enciugh. and if you have cot enouLtit for all. do not fail to sell otT the surrt!o4. Arid here let, it he added that it is bai po:iey for the fritters of Su4quehantta County to sell their coarse grain to the mitten. Feed it to the cattle, sell fat beef, and have a better manure heap. The Tariff System. To Me Editor of. the N. - Y. Tribune.— Sitc:.—the tariff. law* in England are de. , signed to give absolute and entire protehtion 1 to their own pr..ductions. on all articles of: which they can prisince a sufficient supply, but whirl) are produced in oilier countries at less co-t, the rates of, duty are so arranged 1 as to amount to a pridiibition of imports.-1 On artieles that are produced cheaper in Eng. I land than elsewhere, five per cent is sufficient-I fur this purpose. . A.iattit. - thirty years ago I was connected I with a hat-manufacturing establishment, in. Paris, in.% hich certaiwitnprovements enabled us top:untrue:tire wool hat-bodies of a supe rior quality and at reduced cost. I took a) quantity of these lat-bodies to London for.] sale. On arriving at Dover, I entered them l at the Custom-House as " partly inanufac- I lured woolen flibrias," the duty on which was' fixed by law at five per cent. The collector approved of the entry and took • the five per cect duty ; but he refused to allow me to I ' take 'fete good's except on condition that 11 should g" to the Custom-House in London,, subinit the case to a !maid of Commixsionvrs, I and abide 'by their decision. This I agreed Ito do,and the n proceeded to London with my goods, %here 1 fOund a ready Market at a I ' fair profit. I submitted:thee:lse to the Board of Commissioners,•who decided that the goods must be assessed as • " manufactured woolen I fabrics," the duty on which was 20 per cent. 1 paid the additional 15 per cent, and pro. peed to continue the trade; but the Com missioners notified me, that if I brought any inore,.they would mil them " hats." the duty on which was 10 shillings sterling each ;. for, said they, " We have laborers in abundance to supply all the-hats we want, and we must support Them, labor or ho labor, so every shilling paid for fOreign labor iii- the menu tite!ure of that article is so much lost." Such was the substance of their statement, and, under exiaing eiteumstances, it, was sound 3 I carried no more of -the goods to their market.—Arnold Bujum. Fat* mes-es.---ST. Louts, Nov. 5.-- letter to the Denmerit, dated Lecomptou, !hi... 2J inst., states that Gov. WaMgr left, theta it few days. previous. His destination was thought to be ‘tiashingtom It is stated that Walker's object in station ing troops at/Lecompton, was not exactly to protect. the Convention, nor to watch its pro. et egliegs and t..; •he prepared fur an y; action his Pro-Slavery enemies might make against him; but because the Legislature having a large Free State majority, they will probably repeal obnoxious laWs and. displace office holders, in which case a repetition of the Moody wanes in the early history of the Ter ritory was apprehended • A Con-motion will be submitted to the people with a "slavery clause," Ithich will he objecimnabie to the Free State men, but too moderate fin. the Pro. Slavery ultraista. OFFICIAL DISPATCII4B F84)31 7.--.Tne War Department has just rtEt..'eired dispatches confirmatory of the 1.6;%i0us reports that the 'Mormons are bent on rest-tat:et. to the United States troops.— The appoilitinents of the army and the gen : eral•preparations are *nth that no fears are entertained as to the result. The Administnttion tali received no par tieuhirl) important disPat,ehto relative to the evt.nta in Central Amernak and the Costa Ri can isiiiveriientv. No matter what other go‘. et nments may do with regard tt, these attars, ours will putsue - an indeptident American policy, without any entangling„alliances. JUDGE CATII.-A man named Foul, arrest• ed for subbing gaily, a Free State wan, at Leeolnpum, Kansas nu been allowed to es rape by Judge Cato, who refused 'to call Xt • Grand Jury, and so suffered the case to/go by !Jetfoil'. The Herald of Freedom says'- to is such an .habitual drnr.kard that lawyers of all parties, as well as the people, Tanplain loudly of him.. Ile is often too drunk a whole day to attend to business. / • A CaNDID CON7losBwa:--111‘ W es t Cbes, ter irpublietn, a radical. Lono piper,com pliments its party ou beinK so largely in as. cendent in otrice, nod _then / ingye, " the present winter, lie are led to bel ieve, will 61, .ono of friat correpties at flarsieb" urf." Not a doubt of it. , • Proceedings of the . Leetoropton Convention: . , Ocr. 30,485.7. • Prayer by the Chaplain. The . report an Slavery was called up. Mr. Chi)tis Of. John. sow moved an. additional section tiethi v report s making it obligatory -on the first Legislis ture to pass laws making thepresence of free', negroes in the s State an act of felony, punielt able by irnprisonment in the 'Penitentiary; and also, if slaves ,shall be Treed and stitill persist in remaining. in the State, that their. conduct,shall be felony, punishable by the Penitentiary. On motion of Mr. Boling; to change the power given to the Legislature to. pass a law preventing slaved -being - brneght here to sell,-Mr. Randolph got up, and said the object of the provision was to prevent nigger-traders from bringing here" the . Whole scrapings or die Southern Confederacir. It'' was not that they had any conscientious aerie plea about buying or selling niggers, but. it was to prevent every trader from 'bringing here all the old, blind, halt; and lameniggers, so that they. Would get all the mean niggers." Mr. Boling said the Object, of his amends ment was: merely to reduce it to the position in which the matter Was left by the 'Drell Scott decision.- They„ had decided that ne gmes were property, just the same ass horse or any other property. If property, the own ers.should have a pe rfect and untrammeled right to take it where - - they pleased and sell it when they pleased. It was-merely making it property. The speaker alluded ironically to the "Isothermal line." Mr. Jenkins spoke. He, too, took the ground that the-decision of the .Dred Scotts ewse settled the Slavery question. Men could take their slaves everyn here- 7 - meld sell them everywhe.e. 6 That was the true spirit and meaning of it s and it would soon receive its - .practical force. It was therefore the Black Republicans had, howled over that decision. Two members of that Coert.were Black Re publicans, end, ((course, decided against the others. But -the majority of the Court were good National Democrats, and .therefore de cided as they did. • Jenkins spoke disparagingly of Squatter Sovereignty, He had always thought'- it a 1 ha tiding.. . . Mr. Little gat up. Ile thought the Dred Scott decision' had put neuters on their true ground. Before that . decision, slaves had been regarded as property, it was true,. but lit was a Sort of preperty, only. They week's, Iles general opinion and State laws allowed Ito Nisei some sort of rights, hut that decision Ihad taken the bread 'greend that shires . Were iproperty—; neither less nor more. This was I t he righeposititni they had 'got at last, tied no , I nit heth maii shtiuld be f aind calling it in i uestien. It was enough for the Republicans 0 do that.' Ile was far the amendment. • Mr. s' anfineh rose q u estion s tne report.— . o ta m e ould call in ii the fie that Ile was one of the stronsese Pro-Slavery Men ii thet Convention. This report had been ranted from the regulations of Georgia, the I p o st ultra of the Southern States., . Mr. Boling main spoke, and urged. the uestion again on the ground that his amend-' i, pieta. was - in the best accordance with the " . i-eetilcott decision. Ile said this was the iieStien %%Web divided the parties in the country realleS. This WAS the true issue. 1 'Mr. Jenkins again rose lied Lean to eke opleo Mr.. Moore un State Rights. Mr. Jen kins wanted a preamble .put either to this elaruse or to the Constitution itself;rec • .... nizing inexplicit terms the Dred Scott de eisiori. He believed "It was-expeeted of us." 1 e thought the Dred Scott decisive was the tue Southern.ground. Even in that report, h sew something that -seemed to militate i' some sense agaitist the coitiplete property i ea et the starve. It Wee, the provisions that / te slaves must be treated in a certain man n r, and looking indirectly, to some extent, T • tseine kind of an idea of their rights. - He d i i , d not wish to impugn the twelves' of the g ntleincn on the Committee for he knew tl ey *erti the pees ultra Pi-Co-Slavery men i this Convention, and they had modeled t eit reporefrom the mosssultra Slave States iti the ContSderitcy ;.but even here it eppeltr. e 4 that it was i n soots sense betind the Dred Sit. decision. It was for • this reason that h wanted to incorporate the Drcd Scott de ci ion, into the Ciinstistition as the true puei- - /) ti . l l / 4 n f ° r. f S o te ut w h a e r rn t o l f ne Douglas n ' Made a speech, a 1• l efty a vindication of his own position.e-- e was as true to: Pro-Slavery interests all y man'. He was born in a Skies State, h, d never been more than •three days in a F ee State. • An' old Whig, he acted with t Democrac y ir f A er te t h h i e so salt n:sa e i o d f h b e ea i t .o it u iglagive down th: Republicans. Butte did not take tie ex tr me views as some of those who had W- 2 U . - • thbse who did not Want to hear him a minute toiget out. Some four or five here rose and. left. The speaker said that was right. He wented . not Mug but the clean strained rosurri. Wants to strike out the word emancipate, and the right of the Legislature to allow owners leemancipate their slaves. Niggers were se t down expressly by the Deity to -wait 1 'white meat. He denied that they were i • urinal."... He denied that.it was a traffic in man flesh. They were a species of the lo pinned ape.. It was wrong to make any pr vision whatever for emancipation. The. Bi lo established Slavery ; the -speaker was far iliar with some parts of it, and. referred thee Convention to Leviticus. %He said the rain work of -the North.wae this same busi- - tiev of emancipation, and why should this Getivention u 4 this word " einaweipetion7 in an 4 ease, unless we want to help such as my fri4 and fellowaraveler to eternity. - Horace Gr eley in what they want to aol - The nig- I ge themselves were opposed • to this thing emancipation. Th ey would vote for :dri ve if they `.had the chnee. The secret wei of Submitting- the ConStitetion would be Ito the niggers of Old • Virginia. Some of the Delegates wanted to ' strike . out the word " slave" wherever it occurred and ins at the wind "property." If they would' dohis, it would gull a lot of Abolitionists. . 4.. No . those who wanted to do so must either *hill: that they were almighty smart, or that the Abelitionists were a pack of awful-fools. HeWanted it slave all th e time. - t this point in the discussion, the . •previous i l question was sprung on the 'Convention and suss ' ined. s . • • . ' e preamble and sections on Slavery thus ado' taxi are in the Mowing words I REAMBLZ. The right of property is before andlhigher than any Constitutional sanction, and!the - right of the - owner of a 'stave to such slave rind its increase is the 'same and as in• vieloble as the right of any property what- os I. The Legislature shalt have no pe ,er to pass- laws for the emancipation of slaves without the eonsentof.•theie owners,. or srithout paying their owners, previous to thei emancipation, a full equivalent in men eyir the sleets so emancipated. They shal have no power to prevent emigrants ; to thin State from bringing with them such per li son i as are p deem person d n n s f h t i h v e es sa l m iy e t n ho n l i a n w r a d of nser any ip. - of the United State, or Territories, - so as ' shall. be continued in Slavery-by the of thisStete; provided that such ave be the. _boaa fide property ol 'el s il U c e; Want; and provided also that 1614, may used to prohibit the :introdirctiou into State of slaves who bare committed high AGRICOLA. 1 one Lion law or em be "this DICBATE ox IBLAVIRT. crimes in other States or Territories. They shall have power to pass lawl to permit the owners of slaves-to emancipate then; saving the righte.or creditors, and preventing them troin becoming a public charge. They shall have cower rte prevent slaves from being brought into this State as merchandise, and also] to oblige the owners of slaves to , treat them with humanity_; to provide forjthem necessary fool and clothing, to abstain; from all injuries to them extending to life or limb; and, in , case of their neglect or refusal -to comply with the direction of such laws, to have such slave or slaves sold for the _ benefit of the owner or owners. •., Sec. 2. In the, prosecution of slaves for crimes of higher grade than petit lareenk; the Legis'attire shall hive no pow& to deprive them of an impartial trial by a petit jury. - Sac. & Any person who shall maliciously dismember or . deprive a slave of life shall suffer such , punishment as would be inflicted in case the like offense had been committed on a free white person, and on like proof, ex cept iu case of insurrection of such slave. ends was stricken but on Boling's amendment. Navy Yons.—The Democratic State Ticket is elected by a smaller majority than. we at first supposed, but we think it must exceed 10,000, and will tarobably reach 13,000. Wobelieve the "Democratic" vote is just about that of last year (195,000). ;while the "Repubrie.an" has fallen ow from 270,000 to about 182,000, and the " American" from 124,000 to not far from 00,000. Of the se ceding '" Americans," rather more joined he "Democrat" than the _" Republicans;" but the dissolving party traded with either of the survivors us it could drive the best bar gain. It is quite possible that the "Ameri can" vote of the Vlllth District, cast solid for Thayer (Dem.), has elected him to the Supreme Court over Martin Grover, Repub. lican,knough we think ithas not.: Alonzo C. Paige, Dem., is said to be re-elected in the IVth District, by the support of the Ameri- Cans, though we do not consider this certain. In the 111.1 . (Albany) District, on the other hand, as in the Ist and Ild, the AMericans coalesced .on Judicial, and in most Counties on local tickets, with the 'Republicans.— Trib. kWA:-+ Returns from all but five • small counties, give Lowe. Republican Governor, 2,338 niajority. The live counties to come in g,►ve 48 Republican majority la-1 April. The new Legislature Stands politically as fol lows.: Senate—Republicans..:: House—Republicans...ll Democrats. .-.14 Democrats ...31 Republican majority—Senate..B. . —Now that the. Electinn IS over, may we not . .eea:tonahly ask The Journal of Commerce and A/Gaisy A lias to let theii render see the true result, in lowa. If . The N. Y. - Express will do likewise, we shall to thankful, but we d'in't .expect 'much front that tinarter.—N. Y. Tri6unc. • : LOUISIANA ELEcTION.—Thc Democratic State ticket has been elected. Miles Taylor Democrat ;. has been reelected from the Second Congressional Distriet.,-- Georite Eustis, jr., American, member of the last Congress, has also been reelected from the First Dis•rict.• In the Third and. Fourth Districts tne Slidell Democrats ate probab ly elected. The Legislature. is Democratic THE OFFICIAL VoTE OF OHIO.--!-The Off vial vutc oldie State, for Governoi , , foots up as follows: • Gov. Chase, (Rep.) - - 160,568. Henry B. Payne, (Dem.) - 149,065. Peter Van Trump, (A.) - 104:27. ' The above shows that Our. Chase has been elected byi a plurality. FRALTI)ULENT VOTES IN' KANSAS.---Goll; Walker has issued a second Proclamation in relation to the Election frauds. in Kansas.— Ile rejects -twelve hundred more .votes, re. turned. froth - three precincts of the Itl'Gee county ; the number of legal votes in which is less than one hundred:. The official returns. of the election, 4edi;eting the 1,200-fraudu lent %votes from M'Gee, rejected- by Guy. Walker, give Parrot . (tree-state) a majority . of nearly 4,000 over Ransom, with Leaven worth. county to bear from. The Adnainis: tration at Washington have already quarreled with Walker' fur rejeetirg the vote of the Ox. ford precinct, on the ground of its illegality, although it was cast for him and his aide.— What will they.now do when they hear. that he, although AL,Democrat, has actually ac: knowledged the fraudulent character. of 1,200 •mere Deniocratit Notes? It is auite likely that his "reprimand" trill -be changed to a " recall." ARRIVALS OF SPEClE.—During the month 'of OctOber, there arrived at New York and New Orleans, from England, Cuba, and Cal ifornia, six and three-fourths millions of dol lars in gild and silver, This, :with the dis gorgement from the United States Treasury, made an addition to : the currency of more than ten . . millions. An equal addition will be made during the ;current month. The exports of, specie are trifling—not, equal, in fact, to the sums brought in by immigrants. The. balance of trade is now in our favor, and must so continue for a considerable period. Our ,markets do. nut invite importations, while our crops•are in good demand abroad. A :short time will bring about a great im pravement in afrairs. Washington... Repu blic. tgr The locofoco, presses have steadily denied that frauds. were perpetrated by the border-ruffians in Kansas at the recent elec tion. Nor have they stopped there. • They have gone on to charge, without a:shadow of pro of,except the unsupported libels of bor der-ruffian letter writers; that ' the free state men enacted,fmuds on the Nebraska border, by the importation of votes... This ehaige was paraded in advance by the loeofocos, so that they 'might offset it against the proof which thsy knew was sure to come of frauds along the Missouri line, and which they were resolved to sustainin ease the authoritiot at. Washington should give the nod us they ex pected.' • 'Gov. Walker .has set aside the returns. from seine of the precincts bordering on Mis. suuri. He says the frauds were so enor mous and - -glaring that the , free-state men would not submit to have , them allowed, but would resist by _force it - . need be. He says this;_ but he does not lisp on accusation of fraud by the free-state Oka' anywhere.— Honisitrie Deriwerat. " SOIIE" BOCSWIIEAT.-A friend sent us word a week or two ago that a friend of his in Susquehanna county pulled a stalk of Buck wheat from his geld that contained, by actual count, over , three 'thousand grains. We thought thia was something worth bragging of, and, we 'had concluded to blow a- little about the big crops of Buckwheat and free. soil votes raised in that countit,liit after reading the followinw we concluded' to my as little as possible about 'the Buckwheat and merely. speak of a big crop in connection with the votes. Jesse Pearson and John Ketchel. ege (so says the Easton Argent) of Lower Bediel,Nurthamptoa county, recently threat. ad a quantity of Buckwheat grown on Mr. Ketchelege's farm, among which tis a stalk grown from a single grain that contained, on oireful count,. five tiaousandAie hundred rind ' silty flee liepublicatc: - lar"The Republica n Party in this State is just now 63iced to 'hear the hypocritical , condolertienteof the. "Straight Ainericans" wart the Coalocos, on account of the)ate-de kit of 11 'Wilmot. Republicans may -lis ten to thes,reeuthing apett of party with: an indifference as stolid as the ox In the fable, to the, droning of the blue-tailed fly. in point of fact, the. Republican is the only party hi the State that has held its own since 18516..- - 'While -the Logifocos have lost 41,610 votes as compared with what Buchanan received in 1856, and the " American&' 54,069, as coin pared with the vote of Fillmore last fall, the 1 Republican vote is only 1800 behind that' of Mr- Fremont, after one - of the most exciting campaigns on reek , d. Nevertheless, as poi- . iticians reckon, we are beaten.' The fiw pies who stan d a howling waste of dead trees and shriek the same doleful-tune, and fling their withered arms about in every breeze or storm--thit few Ingle:. named in their last will andlestament "Straight Amer icans," in conjunction with the party: of plun der and , of power whigh paved its way to fat places in the temples of misrule at Washing ton from the some material as we are told another place is paved with, viz; avowals 'of good intentions—these two have proved too much for the bold, brave, intelligent, worthy voters of Pennsylvania. - kis something to have deserved victory; which we did, at least. if we consider the purity of our principles and the justice of our'cause. Our standard bearer doterved the position in which we sought to place him, if devotion to the great ideas of the founders of the Republic, ardu jous labors - in the cause,years of fierce denun ciation, political detraction, and bitter and malignant locuroco haired and persecution mild lender him worthy. Ile cast aside the mantle of office with which the, slam -power would have endued him, flung far from him the "honors " and emoluments with which the base servitors of that slave-power 'sit clothed like Damocles beneath the hair-sus- Tended sword—in riches and glory, but .in an agony of dread, and with honest conviction and the best powers of his mind and heart, has latiired to carry forward the great cause of freedom end ofjustice :until now. Though. defeated, his deserts are still fresh in the Memory of every tree Pepubliein. and the• cause itself will survive all the shocks of the enemy, while friends like-David Wilmot live to sustain it. • - • The maxim in the :Mouth of the, world is, that "nothing succeed like succestV but we believe there is thatittimortal vitality. in truth that can and .win live through* thou- „sand .vieissitudea and changes ; that. may ;he hidden, forgotten, nay, even. scatired at and tramped upon bv the crowd, hut, will sur. • viva sod., jihrm'and jeers, and at bast rise , triumphant frormthe dust to rule the ascend. ant. A might; tituth,.ll great principle needs the. lapse of time to develop. it in all itssym !nary and beauty. A mushroom grows and *dies in a night, while the oak gathers in the moisture and- the' strength of . a thousand years from air and earth, to mock the storm that wrestles with, it. 'Milton, olden(' blisd, dragging out .the weary latter years of gloom and decrepitude in a hovel, did' not succeed in the eyes 'of the ,world;.lbut_ all after ages. shall mark Mist labors and:loce him well.— Let us striVe hy..our devotion to the truths which are the viislizing spirit of Republican ptinciples—the great truths . Which God has I written everywhere on His works and in-His words, enfitreing it- upon us to do justly by all men whom the Creator has made, com manding us to Sustain that which savors of justice and not fly to sustain that, but to tight, lustily agaitiitt outrage,plunder,and gross. wrong wherever they may show their heads, to continue to deserve success, and though we may not live to- see it, in the good time . coming the right shall prevail triumphantly, and timing, even though legalized and canon ized, shall go finally to the wall.—Pitistourgh. Gazelle. SERMON BY A MISSIONARY FROM The Rev. H. ii. Jessup, a . missionary of the Ameriam Board, at Tripoli, Syria, and son of Judge Jessup of Minimise, was in this city on Sunday, and preached in the morning at the Green Bill Presbyterian Church, and in the evening at Calvary Church, in Locust street. Mr. Jessup's Morning discourse:- was ex ceedingly interesting. It was founded on the text from Jeremiah: "They have forsaken the fountain ot living waters, and hewn out for themselves cisterns, broken cisterns thak can.hold no water.' The,. subject was :the' state of moral degradation which 'the entire Eait has fallen into in consequence of their desertion of true Christianity.- The Mahom-' medan religion was taken as a fair specinien of the, religioni of the East, and the speaker told just what he himself had seen and heard,' of that religion at the. scene of his labors, where there were from ten tr fifteen then sand followers ot the , Lisa prophet. The sketch was a striking and,ithpressiVe.one,and was, followed 'liy . a practical application of nreat force. A chapter of the New Testament was read previous to the diSamrse,-and the landmarks and Eastern customs., referred to in it were explained, with . a forcawhieh such expositions do not generally, possess, except them the lips of those who have actually-Nsaed through the sacred scenes which they. describe. • • We understand that Mr. and Mrs.-JesSup set out for the scene of their labors in Syria in the coin se of a fear weeks.—Philadelphia • • , 14 The Rev. Mr. Scudder, of India, in a letter to the Christian lutelligeneer, giVes the following' instances of heroism, called forth by . the Indian mutinies : " Let- Americans never be ashamed that EngliAimen . are their forefathers. England iri a Oble country. Her sops are heroes, and her daughters are heroines. This fe betlion has brought out deeds that deserve to he associated with tie Se valorous deeds which we, with throbbing pulses,. read in' history.— in one place a lady and her :husband fled in their carriage. • Ile stood upright. She took . the reins. She, lashed the horses through a band of • mutineers, while , he,. with, cool aim;- slot dead , one who seized. the. horses' heads, and another who climbed upon the carriage behind to cut him down. On they fled, till again they found themselves among foes,,and a rope stretched across the road made further progress appear impossible. True to herself, she dashed the horses at full speed against the rope, and as they, bearing it down, !tum bled, she, by rein and .whip,- raised them, while bee husband's weapons Again freed them. front those who sucaeeded in - leaping Nino . them... He :was wounded, hnt both escaped with their Hies.' In another.pluee.. a young lady, the daughter of .anoffiur, shot -seven mutineers before they killed her. A captain; ! pressed by his Sepoys,, with a good sword I slew - t,wetity.six of them before he fell !", "Mr Col. Forney's .Philadelphia Pres*, (Nov. 1.) says of Governor Walker's reject ion of the Oxford preciabt vote: - - ":We have only to repeat our entire ap proval of this action expressed in _` the Pies* of Friday, and to , declare our opinion that he will be sustained by every foe to fraud in elections, and every friend of the principle that 'the majority shall rule.' ". Governor Walker sustained by. every honest man in the country, but he lanai aie! keised br tda Admitsistradou.-IVachiusrims Republic. - - _ Horrible oeolllTelloo Lusenle Comity— Wife Xilled by kg Bueband—Nyeteri mut pisewery of azimut Remains. We condense the - A/Bowing from the Pitti ton ( Luiente county, Pa.,) Gazette of Oct. 28th: Otio of the most appalling tragedies Which • his fallen. to our lot to record; occurred in this. place last week. Early on- Friday Meth ing it was rumored that a woman:living in White Oak Hollow, about two • Miles from this borough, bad been brutally - mtirdeted by . - her hueband, a..man mimed Francis Burns ; im the employ of the Penn'a Coal . Co. • The con. stables were immediately on the alert, and having ascertained - the t the report waa Well • founded, a search was made lit:the .suppOsed murderer. He . was soon - dtseevered conceal . • ed in chat bed or cave, pearlthe town. tllis - face, bands andielOthes were r lieSineared with blood, and binbehavior - at onee4ntisfied thet bystanders of his guilt. The excited crowd . *- which met the,. prisoetr on' his way ,to Justice's office, took - possession et him, and demended lie should be lynehedl,eind it was with the utmost difficulty the - ,deWitahle man aged to-rescue 1 hint froin *their : grasp:. Du- - ring. the, hearing before Esquire Reddin, the - scene was : one . - of great excitement ; :nothing: , would satisfy the Indigeantj.populacebut the immediate application of Jynch lair. The' prisoner, however,, was eventually; ,tiken to the lock-up, and ; a Coroner's jury summoned: to bold an inquest . ,..on the body. On arriving: et: the prisoner's. residence,. - • which is - situatedin one of the-Wiideat spots of this. section of Country, the body' of the' murdered woman was lying , on a tnis , , • erable apology for n bed,io a _wretched which, with husband and two children, - silo .had inhabited for ,some - . months. Drs. No - -; gent and -Durkin inad,e the' necessary. exam- • ination .of _the bendy , and i . testifled that the cause of death was - see - Cessron of the brain." produced_ by violenee. One two flesh.' wounds and - severrit.severe bruises were dis covered on the body, but there was no frac ture: It man named Copper,.being duly sworn . , .said--4.ast night:At hea:- some one - hallooing,. and blows beidglstruck; have-fee- •., quently known Burns to - in - -use his wife. , Other witnesses. were examined, - . whin testi- . fied to, the brutality Of Burns, afieh which a verdict Was rendcrc to the effeet..that At: *as murdered by, him. Burns lwas . then . committed to.Wilkesbarre jail. .• The same ,'day (Friday) reports . reached Pittston that the remains - of a huMan - being - had beer.. discovered on Eeerhartiti near the Lnekawsnna, so the decomposed that, afeintific.ation was impossible,- The Coroner, therefore, at the close -or the inquest upon the body of thetinfortunate wo man, .whose murder. we .have already men tioned, hastened with his jury to the spot, ac compapied by many others,- whom sympathy or. curiosity urged to follow. There, hidden in a little nook, worn by-water. lay . ail that • was v i sible of a human hod}; •it was: lying on the back, the legs drawn under, - the. body, but the ~h4d; strange to . . tell, turned* . com pletely round and the thee buried downwards.. the . earth.i The search instrtitly eoinmeeeed. The bones of the unkno -11 were in a good state of preservation, but much .disturbe& from their natural arrangement, while the flesh had entirely disappeared. The skull bere no marks of injury; except indeed the absence of o ne tooth from the ripper - and two . from the lower jaw-;--and the only -signof violence discerned was a fracture of he right kg, just above the ankle joint.. • -- Ali inquest Was- held tit which it was de: termined that' the..body was that of,Aciani Michael,. a. Germare who worked in the ' Up per. Mines. - The manner of his 'death .was not - stated, and' the Gazette says: . " We are infbrmed that . there was a 'tool 7 deal of mystery attached to Michael's disap . -1 pcaeance. lie was very trustworthy and - economical in his habits. -It .is said ,he bad no .relatives in•this part i.ef the country', and most ' had Joshed of money to his friends." Sae or Losl)o3:.—The Builder • endeavors to give its readers some idea of ate growth of London in three hundred years, and of its - - present size. It says : " When the-stone in Panyer's alley was: placed on its site, three centuries since, the , circumference was about five miles. At. present, however, fo make a. pedestrian ex pedition . around the metropolis would"to most. persona, beat} undertaking of some impor tance, is ,may be seen by referring to . the following particnlars,.whith have been with- . ercd from a recently published map : From . Chiswick to Kentishtown, twelve miles;' from - ~ Kentishtown to Millwall, seventeen and a half toiles ; from 31 . illwill to ; Chiswick, _ twen ty-eight -mtlea; total, fifty-seven and a half miles, very near three . days' journey at the a rate of twenty miles day ; and it will be observed thai, in the line drai-n„ . Batter s- ea, Clapbam, - Canningtown, and many other Pla-- cep, which even .at prge . hcan be scarcely said to be separated fi-oale,,Uub.n, have' been. left out.. `- As the crow would fl? across t s „streets and , houses from the point whence o started at dbiswiek to the furtheit-east, t e distance :is :nearly eleven. miles, and - the greatest width from north tosouth,opward ,. . of seven miles." ' - paity paper, of our city,. printed on . . Saturday last, various extracts from the annual met-sages of •non-:Willintn Bigler..*hen he .wax Governor, to show how terribly ho .was oppOsed to the present bank ing system ; but it failed to add,. asi'a post script to theae extracts, that, notwithstanding his nicely reunited theory, the said Governor, before he trent 'but of office, Signed'a number '- or bills creating the very, kind of banks he ao-incontinentlY condemned . --and among the hatch, were the Erie Cita"Rfink,.the 21,j'eto. Castle Brink,.ana the 'Warren . County . 4ank all of %%hick have gone. to the dogs, or as good as gene . there—doing the very mischief which the Governor predicod!-.-Gerintratatevit . Tel. egraph. . . . N E W USE ion &ant County (iris) herald of the 11th - inst., says that Seth linker; a 'curious .naturalist, resid ing.tleariketown; has a spot 0n..bi14 fur* sett 'apart - f a. melons, and;near it. there is a well knOwn den #;& - rattlesnaks..-.11e has tamed the snakes, and; by some mysterious powers in the' spiritual department of-seience; is able to - conjure them at wilt into hiB l melon patch' to guard the sameagainst uninvited intruders.. The snakes --have been in his -service all the -Fall, and 4184:barged their du tieS mirably. •Wiseonsin is going .to be a gr4.at - country. ' c ?Otter Comity, pa., seven - yeari Sign, had nut ito officer, hikh• . br low. bat ."fielaaged to the - Demoeritev. Now, all -the offas_trs, high and low, are Iteciablleans. The ilitir*at says that rici twin shall have un - offiee; there, who does not' believe In the Declaration of independence : the people hare talked it over, and ;heir deliberate, solemn conclusion is to give •the (glees arid honors at their disposal to outspoken, Straight„ furivard . •frieeds of Vieedoni, • . PitoPxo. Durrnsormsr.,-:.An Ohio patron in renswing his subseriptiow fur • the Chronic/4y sends a gold piece Idle)) he says is." a yellow boy hut not a- mulatto"—good Republic= eoin,.but notDemocifutici•-Lrwisburg Ciro& Gen. Wm. T. Haskell, of ,Tean... lately a gitted:Whig orator,-has hewtne an Inmate of a lunatic asylum, C'suse, intemperance,