ClitatTidiTlON, 2016: C. F. READ & IL' IL FRAZIER; .EDITO.RS F. E. Loo:vrs. CORRESPO-VDIXO EDITOR, MCNTROSE. MEMO. CO., PA. Th rsday, September 30, ItisS STATE ',TICKET. FOR.JCDOE Or TOE StirREME COURT, . HON_ igliN M. READ; • of Philadelphis nu. cANAL,commtssiosta, . HON. WILLIA.M..F.FIiAZER; of Fayette alunty.: COUNTY TICKET. - yOR COIk.ZGRESS, . • HON. _GAIXSIIA A. GROW, lOR•rEESIDENT JUDGE, .110 N. I)AVID WILMOT, • FOR - R.F.PRESENTATIVE. "§I.M.EON - B. CH SSE, of grim Bend. FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER, LEVI S. PAGE, of Susquebantia Depot. FOR corrrr Atiffroit. .JOIIN F. DEANS. of Bridgwater. Notice.,--Mr. E. W. FRAZIEIOS Our litMveling agent, authorized to receive . euhseriptions, advertise ments, Ac., and to collett moneys for the ..frideproff ... en! Republican. • _ - Removal.—Pe offme or the Indqvaden't Rc publioan has been removed to Hawley *. -Lathrop's nor building, on Turnpike St, near Searle's Hotel. • Mr Election, Tues.tlay, Oct.:l2th, 1858 The vote,s,are ready fur distribution. Republicans, are you assessed? Don% let any one.lose a vote - for want 9f -be ingrassesed" ten days before election.• arldr. Grow requests us to announce that he will not-be -able •to speak at' New Milford on t hursday, the 30th intit., as an nounced in this paper last week—eninge rnentS thatje has made for speaking iu lican and :Warren co'untres interfering with that appointment. Ilts, other appointtrients will befilled, as announced, IL= - t -- • We are requested to state that S. B. Chase, sq., will speak at Win. H.-Sher ,wood's, in Dial, on Thursday, October 7th, and that the meeting will be held at' two o'- clock in the afternoon, instead of in the even ing as preViously advertised; _ - .TO the' Polls ! I . • .In less than twe weeks, the electors of - Susquehanna county will be called 'upon to discharge one of the highest duties of frc men, to say by their votes who shall , fill the various - offices,.National t State, and - County, to be filled'at the , corning election. If men only were to be voted for, the , question fright .be more difficult, Should bad myft be elect ed-, when their term •of- office expired their places could be supplied by men ot different ' character ; but in the present contest men are • lost sight•of in the great question-4f the right of.the people to govern themselves,to regulate their own institutions in their oin way. The.. last Conaress spent nearly five months of the - Session and millions Of 'money' in the abort ive attempt to force a Slave Conatitution up . ory the t people of Kansas, when every man c them knew - that nine - tenths of the people 4 the territory loathed -the Constitutibn that - was attempted to be this fastened upon them, and would trampliit tinder foot in case they had ati opportunity. ' _ . When the nigger' Demaciacy found that , that gaine could not be played—that they were raising a tempest at the North that would sweep she party out of existence—the plan since idenoMinated the - 'English juggle i was pitched upon by the party I6aderas..a dire•necessity, and the alternative wa twa l . a ? dered tithe people of Kansas, either to se= cept the Lecompton Cobstitution with a land groli bribe and be admitted into 'the 'Union, with 130;000 inhabitants, br.reject it-and stay ..- out till they. had a 'population of 90,000 or 120,00 T—saying in ellect that'one " nigger" was equal to -three if nOt four white men. 4- . Nov, we RepubliCans dissent entirely frOin that kind of Democracy. We do not be, .lievethat- a nigger-driver and his nigger are (toy better thin two white_ men. In' short; we do:believe that a white man is as good as. - , a nigger, and ought to have as much 'Voice In . the-gOvernment of the country—that a State . .that is proper for iidenissionwith a- Constitu tiOn- for slaves, should be With a Constitutitin for free white men. - - . .The candidates on the Slave-drivers' ticket are, every man of them, zealotis Leoompton fie!. All gol9 the death for Old Buck and, the supremacy or the Slave-drivers. The pecipli s Of the State have arisen in their might, and resolved to overthrow a despot _ ism .more galling-that was .ever before 'sub. mittedlo bra free and intelligetit people.- - The Republican State ticket will'be elected by tens of thousands: of that there is no reis sanable. doubt. Theti let old Susquehanna . -rally once more; arfjl 'give a majority that . .. will astonish Medd and foe. Our Whole ticket, both State inelocal, is one of the best . ever before the pebple.ed Susquehanna - q2aut . - ty - ; wry tnittuOtt it is entitled - tO cordial - support. If one quarter .of the Republican -vote is not nut,:tbe Republican majority will be so much below what it ought . to be, :The -cohorts of despotismnever tire.— . "The:better citizens,' wiil - 1:4 . \ ou' tto 'a man, and go " the party," without knowing or car ing what the principles are. - Let' American- freemen imitate tit*, example in that respect at least.. Rally 'to the poils,as one man 1— Give one day to your-country, and her free Institutions, and not hale it said, while the glad shout is going•up from the, centre to th e . circtintferonce.ortliis good. Commonwealth, - over - the defeat of Old, Rock end his_ slave .drivers, that uld,Swquehanna has been net. ligent or unfaithful to the great trust com mitted to her care. - 'Friends ! speak to your neighbors-,-ask them to turn out—if-they have no mean's of eiiitvevanec sae that they tire.providea. As the patriots of the Revolution did, as a band of brothers, Jet us.give a long pull, a strong pill, and _ll pull all'togetlter, and a most _glo rious and decisive victory awaits us. .s 'Most of our readers hart probably • ' - remarked the extreme animosity, the, deadly hatred which the file leaders of ..thd modern. Iletttocracy feel against such preachers of the gospel oe as dare to say anything - against the sin of Slavery. They Consider such inter+ feretice as very unfai treatment. It Is tak ing them•at a Brea disadvantage. It is •ap c • pealing.to motisT, , sentiments, feelings, with, :which they are tot Ily•unacquainied. Ask a man to bc-governe in his political action by considerations of right - and duty, instead of partisanship and lose of the spoils! The idea seems to thempreposterous, ; But when •i hey ' s li . see some men actually so governed in their political action, they are dumfounded— they know not how to meet the emergency. They are as .utterly nonplussed at meeting this 'church influence iii the political field, ai was the Captain of. the Charleston schooner , • aVbeing run foul 6f, while at ancher• in 'New London harbor, by a Methodist 'meeting house:,. , , • " Solemn he pitced upon that schooner's,.deck, And Muttered of his hardships :-` I have been Where the wild will - of Mississippi's tide Has dashe me on the sawye.r, 1 have sailed In.the thick night ak)ng the wave-washed edge Of ice, in acres y , *the pitiless roast 1 Of Labrador; and I have scraped my keel O'er coral reeks in .Madagascar sew!), ; And olten in my cold and midnight watch, Hay heard the wen - ling voice of the lee shore Speaking in breakers! Ay! -and I-have seen . The whale and sword-fish fight beneath my bows, And, when they made the deep boil like a pot, Have swing into its vortex ; and know To cord my vessel with a sailor's .;kl3l, Aad bravo such dangers with a ilor's heart;— 'Rut never yet, upon the stormy wave, • Or where the river mixes with the main, • Or hr the chafing anchorage of the bay, . In all my rough experience of harm, Met I=.-a I.lethodist ineetinoouse i , • . - Cat-head, or beaiii, or davit lills it none, . . . Starboard nor laitoard, gunwale, sten), nor Merril It comes in such a 4 (piesticmable shape; I'clinnot even sneak it! Up jih, ~losey, And make for Bridgeport! There, where Stratford . 'Point, Long Beach, Fairweather Island, and the'buoy,... ' Are safe from such encqunters, we'll protest ! • And Yankee legends long shall tell the tale, That once a - Charleston schooner was besot, Riding eil. anchor, by a meeting-In:easel' " . So the doughface leader, with variations : Solemn he paced along the bar-room floor, And muttered of his hard'ships.:" I have met The wily tricks of piditicians Oft, That seldom floored me; I have often stood the thick night along the allels dark, , And loafers caught, and treated many sone, . -To win them to our party ; fights rye had, .My nose all bloody T M the party's eliuse; - And when I saw our side was losing ground, ' And Money must be spent to keep em straight, Pre done the State some service; I have seen Faction with faction strive,-and while' hey fought, `Oar boys slipped in and won; full well I know , To false the old cry of ' Democracy!' . • ~ ,N . n t ndi chs os er er l yv et rs o a u le b n ieti e to by kee tt p e t n h i e ee s t o in ft g o -h n o es n ' se vo ! tes . , Or shout ' Disunion' till the oraonirs quake And think unless we win the Union's doomed,And from "that glorious constellation" torn , The South, with all her niggers ; I the cue. From Washington can take as quick as any, . And swear that black is White and white is black, And that our party always so believed ;"-- But never yet, Anion the stormy ,pea " ' Of politic; where I've been tossed so long, In alemy rough experience hf harm, t -Came! in contact with—the meeting-hou se! Short-boys, dead-rabbits, bruisers keep they none, Nor staffers of the ballot-box, nor e'en . Would buy a voter with a drink of. ruin ! Bootles is.a4l my skill;-with-such a foe; Ths , language that it uses 'gainst our party, I 4nnot understand: 'tis Greek to me. tint the devihhelps us in this strait, Our cause is lost, 'as sure as eggs is eggs Then, where's.niy chance for office-? I'll protest -Against this mixing tip of Church and State; And all'our Democratic press shall bowl Against the Clergy, that they ever dared ' _ To bring their theories of right and wrong . Into the field of packs. Adieu To hopes of spoils if these things may be done. 1 And Yankee legends long shall tell the tale, How we shayp politicians were beset tar' From a few Postoffices in the 1 east ern part of -the county, we hear considerable complaint of irregularity in -the receipt of the .Republican by 'our subscribers.. We Can only say, if they fail to get their papers reg ularly, the fault is not in us. We attend per- sof:tally to the mailing of the Republican, and take great - pains to send it regularly in due seison every week to every subscriber; and there ire Postoffices in thevcounty where we believe no subseriber has missed a number of our paper for, ft year past, or - more. The irregularities at other offices. arise not from our default, but from carelessness, or from willful misconduct t ron thepart of some offi• cials.in tie Postoffiee department, who are nevertheless bound by their oaths of office to carr and deliver all mail 'Matter alike, with out tlegafd to whether it is Republican or Democratic. We, have inforniation that leads us to suppose that one of tvo Post masteis;.displeased with the large circulation of our paper, are..resorting'to very dishonor able tricks, to injure us. We Mention these things that our friends who ltave'comPlained of irregularity in the receipt of 'the Repub lican,May understand 'dint we send it rep larly y and that-tfteysmay 'be induced.to keep a sharp,loolcout for those distodiins of the mailbags whose fear of the truth is soiintense as to induce them to suppress Republican 0- papers... When a paper .is missing, please notify us,"and the omission will be supplied, Ad we may be able to: discover who is to blame.for it: . - . - gqr We understood that Dr. 0. V. Mai er, of the Binghamton' Water Cure—whose advertisement- appears 1n..-our paper=has - been doing a flourishing buiFiness, the ,present seasonisin restoring the sick to healtb‘by Hy. •dropatilic treatment. His admirably or ranged and beautifully situated establishment is much resort' to by invalids.' Kr The Prospectus of that able andwell known religioits newspaper, The Independent, will be found in our'advertising columnsthis week. 'The Independent is one of the most highly prized of our ezehames. - per For Frani= List Ace., of Susque• banns County Faii, see 'fOirtli page, tgr The Sham De ocracy showed their Sense of " the eternal Ifitnetarot things" when they nominated Dr. Vail *Congress.- Not only it doughface Congressman, but a dough face candidate, even, , withdat - tIOS itr,)otest , • I , prospect of eVet• tAttg a Congressman,ought to be et • .3tnalt pattet of a man i and the boetor eminently , anwers the , requiXition.— is the extreme di - lir utive of li(tle4=--little, i He . less, least; Dr. Vail ! 'Look at the facts.— The editor of the rthern Pennsylvanian --a paper that claim to be independent,and impartial between p Mica; parties—is sick, unahle.to attend toils editorial duties. A man professing to be{ his friend steps forwat't and offers to edit hisl paper For him—appar ently a very Iriendlyi offer; but, instead of stittaining the paperjs character as. non-parti san, the volunteer - Ftdifor tills its columns with comments on lie nominees of the two parties," damning with faint prai s e stall) of the Republicean eartato, and in ambiguous langu,vp r_oV'ettly "iking at others, while on the 'nominees of al Shamocracy he bestows unstinted laudationl. Dr. Vail,. especially,- is puffed as " a genleman and sehallar,' ." a 'young Man of great energy," and as etnittenh ly qualified to represent this Diatriet In Con ' press, But who is it that thus takes advan tage or an editor's I,itness; to convert his pa , per into a partisaq sheet ? t' one other-- as we are credibly) informed—than Dr."' V it himself! . i ' The Doctor ought to be allowed l it° b ow his own little horn.] to his heart's content ; but he has no busi4ess to injure the character of the .11'artliern. Pennsylvanian by tilling its editorial columnstith his 'ridiculous quack: advertisements, wi t hout th'e editor's knowl edge: and consent. I . o ,rlr . Gov. A. (+. Brown, U. S. Senator from Mississippi, itated in a recent speech that'State, that hej called rvesidetit .Bu. ebanan before he 0 Washington, and that 1 " !%fr. Buchanan 4sured him in the most pos lsitiVe and unequivocal terms 'that he would: appoint no man, toffice who held ttie opin• ion,that Kansas 4ght to be admitted before she has a population that would , entitle her to a Representatie in Congress, '(areording to the terms of t))e English bill,) and that he would decapit,ite every office-holder who expressed such a elief." _ , , . The Repiiblicans of the Luzernc countiO of Luierne, Wyoming, Montour, arid Ccumbitt—on the 21st inst. nominated Col. qeo. W. Scranton, of Seran ton. for Congress: He is a strong man,-and staiids a very fair chance of being elected. ,P , , -- The sham-Democracy of the Luzerne District succeedtid, September 26th, on the i . one hundred and fiftieth , ballot, in nominat ing a candidate or Congress r --John M. Rey nolds, of Columbia county. , i . . The libitated.slaves of the Echo' are on their way briVt to Africa. They Are bound for Liberia „. Whgre they will be put in charge Of agentSAllid i Colonization Society'. Is it-no(wrollg for the U. S. Government to take slaVes opt of their natural condition in a Slave State (South Carolina .) and set them at liberty/1 Ur Williath C. Clark was exPeuted at Danville, Pa., .4,eptembor 24th, for the mur, der of his "wif' l .l by poison. He made a speech of ueargv an hour'a length, firmly as serting his inmicence, and endeavoring to I - plicate other parties,. while avowing his-read iness to die. I ' rff"'We lr am by -telegraph that the steamer seen op fire at...sea a short time since was the....4ustric, from Southampton for New York-, with76'2.9 persons on board, and that only sixty.sev'en lives were saved. We shall probablyi be able to give further partic ulars next ~For the Independent RepuWean. • litembera of 'Congress. The importnce of having a majority in the popular branc of our next National Legisla ture, does notlappear to be felt as it ought by the freemen of the North. The great question is there to be decided, whether Kan sa%;Liall remain a Slave territory, made so bv tliTiNFe.4 3 .eral Constitution under the -con struction giv4n it- by James Buchanan, or whether it - shall be admitted a free and sov ereign Stat6 ,- tinder the protecting arm of the Republic. County and State affairs deserve our highest cOnsideratil a ; but what are they in comparison with the great 'interests at stake betwece'Slave and Free labor I Kari sas at presen is the battle ground of these mighty elements of political power. For years her hardy pioneers have nobly strug gled for Free institafrons, against thousands of armed ruffians frprn the Missouri border, and the bay 'abets of the Federal Soldiery:— In tact, she hits been the "Thermopylae of Freedom throughout. - And wheW.z.he infamous English bill—the pet favorite Ora corrupt,Adtninistration, con ceived by fraud and brought forth in villainy, the only begOtten heir of the Bachelor incum bent of the White 11outr, was sent td-Kansas to receive the homage of an injured people, they arose in. their might; on the memorablk 2d of AuguSt, 1558, and buried the heir ofS Buchanan and the .Lemimpton Constitution beyond all lopes of a future resurrection.— The wrongsiof such a people demand redresi. -The Slave interest, baffled when they least expected it, seek to keep her a Slave territo ry as a punishment for spurning the English bribe. • In the face of such facts, the freemen of the North should', aside all minardiffer ences, and unite. their strength for the over throw of one of the most despotic Adminis trations that ever disgraced the Republic.— Men are wanted - for the next Congress of iron ,nerve--!-of moral strength—men whose votes are ever to ibe found upon the record, for Freedom and for Right. Such a Mari is presented in the person of Mr. Grow to the voters of the 14th Congres. sional District. Able, and fearless in his devo tion-to hutrian rights,he has ever stood upon the rongrssional record the eloquent advo ote of justice and humanity. Freemen of Sus quehanna, Of Bradford,and Tio g a, are you ful ly awakened to your • respolsibility 1 Your standard bearer has beep victorious in every contest. At your bands for four terms in the National-Legislature, he his received the wel come plaudit of 0 Well done;good and faithful servant." I Remember the majority yougave him-in 18,50, by - which you earned for •your District th'e encomium of the "Gibralter oft. Free Soil i r `Do not rest in apathy upon your pasid eds or past. - victories, but come i i, forth in -y r•might , orauesday the • 12th of Oct., and I hen, the sun goes down upon the 'scene of y o ur, labors, may .we 'have -the I pleasure or announcing the -result—the tri- I tunphant ulection of Gales)* A., Grow ~ by a majority- f thouguuls. '.1 1 :': E.-L. . 'Plotting of the Democratic Disunionist'. Some two moiths since, a let@ found. it's way into the„ftv..vspNierk, 4.A.-it t at to a Mr. SttyMite`r, I.Ar. Win. L. Yancey, of Alanatna, ohe ot'tint.tle'moeratie lenders of that State, in which was developed - i scheme of uniting the ” cotton State:" together to form a' sepa rate confederacy. The following expressions occurred in the letter: " Let us form these leagues nil over the cotton States, as it igohly in them .wtt can hope Sur any effective movement. At the proper moment, by one organ:zed., concerted action, we can precipitate the cotton States into revolution.' Mr. Yatirey noW. writes a itong letter tug publication, in which he says 'of his letter to Slaughter : • "Written in the confidence of privacy, mat designed to promulgate a theory, and writ ten in 'baste,' its langup4ie *gas not gleVol, but WIN carelePly tAecl. It vets - not gbartked sgalust ltottiM triticishi o lillScinkeptitak.— Howe it lts hot toil enough to convey my meaning in full, and it is susceptible, if look ed to alone, and not in connection 4with my public speeches in explanation of the leagues, of n meaning I did net eutpftain, for .1 Writ Seeessionizt i -Ite . VollitioAs‘c s would not; I precipitate; blit.t.:ryAtily pre pat-e Cet lireVitahle dissolntion." 'cancel _Nes . rioLseem . i . ti recoiled that it is precisely in letters "iiiittrn 11 1 .1: Alegre of priv,l:4,"ruttier than in letters pre pared n r Pie public eye," that the real views and purposes of men are most likely to be found. Mr: Yancey's chief regret seems to be, that he has s said something in his Slaughter letter, indicating a want of confidence in the' northern slascholding States. Yet he does not mucli mend the matter in his present let ter, in which he says t -. "To be candid, I phtee but little trust in such States as belaware, Maryland, 'Felines. see, Kentucky,, and -Missouri, In the first, Slavery is but a nominal institution, and An- , ti-Slavery ideas prevail to a lave eteilt, In Maryland a Frfte-Soile' . ; is an honored Rep resentati*..e in Congress, and in the great is sue ca' ISSG that State separated herself from 'her sisters, and voted for Fillmore. Tennes see has kiig maintained a Free'Soil Senator in Congress, and a large majority now sustain him there. In the:Methodist Conference, her delegates voted against striking out the Anti- Slavery - clause in its discipline, .while she maintains on her fittphmir,t, Court Bench, aid in the -Altair of Law Proti.tssorshin in her Ciii, versity, one who openly declares tilavery to be a moral, social, and politkeal .evil.' - -I- I "In Missouri, Benton was upheld Nilun un sound on this issue; way sent to the House ' Of Representatives when 'ousted from the Senate because of his Anti-Slavery ideas; and new the St. Louisdistrict is represented hv a Free-Soiler, who is it candidate fir re. election upon the' etnancipation platairm.— Surrounded as she almost is by free-soil ter-, ritory, her Slit% e-owners are emigrating in large. numbers to Texas, ant will soon leave her a prey to Seward's a lition system of legislation. _ "" In Kentucky, Mr. Clay's ,, emancipation and colOnization ideas are bearing legitimate fruit, and Mr. Crittenden holds powerful sway over the affections of its people ; and it is hardly. En be doubted but that Mr. Crittety dt=n, conjoined with the Anti-Slavery Ameri can party of the North,would carry Kentucky. • I may well be excused, then, it' I said in- pri vate correspondence (what I frankly confes I . would have hesitated to Make a matter of public discussion) that I only hoped for an effective movement in the cotton States...-. Therels:much itt tile way in which an idea is put. .1 said this muth and no more." , What he now chooses to say that he ex pects-of Virginia, will appear from the fol lowing extract; "-I do not expect Virginia to take any ini tiative steps towards a dissolution of the Un ion, when that exigency shall be foiced upon the South. Her position as a border State„ and a well-considered Southern policy, (a pot- I icy which has-been digested and understood and approved by the ablest men in Virginia, as ).on yourself must be aware,) would seem to demand that, when such movement takes place by any :considerable number of :South ern States, Virginia and the other. border, States should. remain in the union, where, by - their position and- -their counsels, they could prove more effective friends than by moving out of the Union. and , thus giving to the Southern Confederacy a long abolition, hostile border to watch. In the event of the ement being successful, in time, Virginia and the other border States that desired it could join the Southern confederacy, and - be protected by the pow`er-of its arms and its diplomacy." . Nile curiosity is felt, in this quarter, to learn the names of these tt ablest men in Vir ginia,", who have concerted - a "wel;•-consider ed Southern policy," in respect to'" a dissolu tion.of the Ikty. Francis P: Blair stated the exact truth in this matter n few weeks ago, that the der. °erotic party is "u,nder The control" of a file tion ihostile to the Union. The . country is somewhat incredulous about it, as yet, but 'currint.developements will, before long, re mr?Nle all doubts of the fact.— TVashington, "Repinblic. 4 Land-Mark not to. be - Overlooked. FrO;t Buchanan's Litter to Professor Si August 15th, 1857. "SLAVERY existed at that period (1854) and still exists IN KANSAS UN - DER THE CONSTITUTION OFTIIE UNITED 4 4TATES. This point has at last been HATALLY DECIDED by the highest tri bunal (Judge Taney) known to our laws.— How . IT COULD BVER UAW. BEEN DOUBTED IS A MYS TER Y." From Bucha7an's Message.' "It has been solemnly adjOg ed by the igbest Judicial iribunal, that T"'" SLAV ERY EXISTS-IN KANSAS by VIRTUE OF THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNI TED STATES. " Kansas is, therefore, as snitch A SLAVE STATE as GEORGIA car SOUTH CAROLINA." • A part of the misuion of the Republican party is to combat the heresy .embodied in the foregoing extracts. If it shall ever shirk that duty that moment it will 'be, shornof 'its vitality, and sink into deserved obscurity and contempt. There are,-nevertheless, those outside of the RepublicAn party who counsel silence in regard to, this abominable doctrine. They counsel, this to enable them to cooperate With the Republican party. When their counsels shall be regarded, they will find no Republican party with which to cooperate.' The Republicans, either as individuals . or as a party. can never sanction the doctrine that slavery can exist in any Territory or in any State vithout the sanction of positive law. The susplcion that they did sanction such a toctrine would terminate in the speedy dissolution of the organization. ,The Repub lican party is only strong in its principles. Abandon or dilute' them, and it willnot have vitality enough to tarry it to its grave;-4AI - Evening Journal. . - ~ffrThe Democratic Conferees of the h Congressional District of Ps.;—Com berland, Perry, and. York—after balloting 225 times, bad failed to .nominate a (Wadi date, at the lateit accounts._ ."Etrile iloitn the, All' . t'il•ends, we are now to meet fur .parade Ad drill preparatory to the great fight of 1860._ These local campaigns are, itcPolities, what' skirmishes are in war—diseiplinery, and not seldom the events which 'Shape the results of the pitched battles You contiot drop a vote in the ballot box, no Matter what may be the occasion, hill that thht bit or pa.. per shall tell for or ag ainst the great central lower, of which Atr. r. Saines Bach - Mien is the ostensible head: We ask .your attention to those counties where ,the Buchanan Dempe, racy,4as sufficient h it l ticket" in the field ; what'ilo•you see? r 'Yt.fit see theM rallying around a standard on which is inscribed the -,,ledge of fidelity to the dem oseratic party. Arid you hear them etolors ing „, the Administrntion, tts . KanSaS policy' and the. bred neott liegiston' and Vem. hear the leftder;; tile. 44: iil(`.uie to tr; ',he,- support of the." regular dem ocratic ticket," and thus. prove their .allegi ance to the Administration. This is what you may see and hear in those counties,— The evidence stares nt uil;front td-'c'tll - to -our tale e. n'o* vtrot (toes this mean? • It nieans jai •t this : It Means that the leaders or the Illelat , to-d9niperaci tinderetitol I brat every void to be cat !Ot. coubiy cncers, this .•111 tell directly for, or against the power that rules and ruins at Washington:— lt means that they do not intend to permit dissensions to impair the integrity of their organization and thus cripple their strength for thegreat fight or IEO, It meahs that that pa y rentelnber the tactics wich gave then - I'o - 1.6 strength. they ever ha A as a kr ty, to Witprogrripii9nsto every man who Cifd nolUkthnne,e to ?he clentocratiC Arjoh.— bid theY pre a ch up to the rank and file that " politics shonid not influence men, in voting for cOlft* officers," when they had . aratijor) : ty in Tioaa:courityl, You ktr.v,)tetter thark that. You know that the . 7 Lu 1 the wall of P'arty,, ; that they 'drew the reins of Party tight. You have not forgotten how,, that party ruled your Boards. of Supervisors and School 'Directory ; nor how they elected your .0-m - stables and Justices of the Peace! no man has forgotten these things—all re- inclober that that party. when in power, car-, ried their piirtisun rancor into township elet lions,,etten, for such woo their policy et:ery where:. then, and is tuzd . aY Where they have the Tiower, . And this is necessary to the preservation of the integrity of party organization. See how Mr. Buchanan keeps the Sham-democrat--; is party together by a system of rewards and punishments. Do you, see how even the . backwood# Postmasters must be all right on, the goose, pr trot'? Ve grant there may be some ,exeep ions la , , in Tioga; but those exceptions ist only yin the neighborhoods where no eon )ctent pro-slavery man can be ! found. - The rule is as stated. . Now _what] does that fact show?. It shows that Mr. Buz I ehanan is determined to preserve the organi. I zation of his patty at all hazard. 4. Rept)Li cans. we must "fight the Devil with fire I" ' W ilmot gave us a grand watch-word In 1854. Ssid he--" If you *Mild overthrow the Slave power yol must STRIKE DOWN VIE ALLIES !" There is a golden 'truth for you. Who are the allies of Slavery 7 Foremost, the Mulatto-democracy, and next, they who stiffer themselves to be made use of by that party under, nq pretext whatever. The man who loves himself 'more than he loves the cause of human Freedom, or who would peril that cause to gratify private pique orpersonal ambition—that man is an ABLY of the Slave Power, whether he aims fo be such or not, and should •be counted- an enemy and dealt with as en enemy ' by all true Republicans. Strike down the AL LIES !-:--Tioga Agitator. _ Row4he Republicans Carried Maine We ticlvented last week to the noble result achieved by the - Re - publicans. of Maine, and. commentled it as.an example for imitation. iro attain the same ends, it needs only organ- How the Maine Republicans pre pared air the battle and won the victory, the following from the Evening Post will show. The Post says : Maine-has a very -large extent of sea coast, and a more formidable army of cus tom-house officers in the service;-of-the Ad.; ministration, in proportion to her population, if we are not mistaken, than any other State._ The victory over this well-trained,,unscrupu lops horde, equipped with unlimited supplies of federal money and other electioneering ammunition, must be attributed in, a large measure to the active and thorough canvass ing cartied on by the Republican party:— Emulating the tactics o \ f the adversary, they have kept. at their Central headquarters a register - of the number of voters in' every town of the State, carefully classified accord ing to the shades of their politics., From many-towns they had a list of the names, a statement of the political antecedents, • of every elector, and no honorable -means were left untried to supply the desired in formation- and obtain the fullest possible vote. - Every chairman of a town or district committee was notified of, the exact, quota 'of votes which was ?netted from the region under his supervision. In short, in no other State has there been anything like the per 'feet system of organization' so memorably -exemplified during three successive cam: paigns and against so fearful odds; and•notiv nig would more insure a Republican triumph in New York than a aireful study of its de: tails, to which an additional interest is parted from the fact that the plan was orig. inaly borrowed from New' York, and • that its paternity' is. ascribed to Mr. Van Buren." HE DON ' T DENY does not deny that he wrote the letter to Mr. Stantonfront which we publishell an. extract a week or so ego, and the Washington Union explains it by complaining of a breach of confidence in publishing a-private letter.: Here is,the ex tract: "Make my special 'regards to Governor Walker, and say to him that lie has thi pop- War heart with him throughout - the country_ except only the extreme Son& Should his programme 'succeed, he wilLhave the most en viable prominence of any mezn•in the notion. The Administration ie a little weak the knees, and winces under the Southern thun der, lad they must stand up to the work." Since the author of this choice morsel wrote this to Stanton, he has, become as weak at the knees" as the Administration, and he " winces under the Southern thunder" as much as Buchanan. klie. will hear some Northern thunder this fall that will huike him .wince still inori.--garrisburg Tel. DROPPED THE Num—We. understand that.our Democratic cotemporaries, in view of the tact that they have heretofore bitterly opposed' the participation of clergymen in po litical matters, concluded to drop the " Rev." in, their notices of the nomination of PAR. SON Shindet for the State Senate, and when required to speak of. him will either dub him "Hon." in advance, or call ,him plain Jerry-. The PARSON is a very estintable, man, we believe t and is none.the lit'orso -for being a P-ARSON, but the gentlemen editors of the Sentinel and Argus committed themselves so, strongly against POLITICAL PARSONS a short time , ago, that they-are forced nOw to back water repudiate the:norninee , or drop the." PARSON'? speaking, ' N", in- of Jeremiah, in order toOppear consistent.—..ecralenTinice„, Flopd in Mifflin County. We mentioned that on Wednesday' night the rain came down in ,torrents, Ilia that a young man: narpekAdmrlMcCurd:y, had_lost his life on ass t.i fish es attendinglfisdeeth 4teitt . of the . m ast fair. held oft -tb die badtet • fof t*o lobg 10,46 - years 601 m oti the brink' of etelraity-,duting all Yvhiclirtine the:titrbtd water Aieregradu ally iising'ilighei and higher, until' at. last,( conacibu,s tlint,his Mortal cateek• on ettillt closing, hasaid,,!' ticod bye—i can hold on-! ho and ,vas swept into eternity.- 7 -'i The young man who had - been with him sue ceeded in teaching the shore when the water,' ikst rose,- and gave the . alarm. Seyeral neighbors were iooti gilthbred ini . thb istiote, mpg k-nrioiksineiteetuts! eftorta . Atitillb.to esCu theM an attempt to swiin horse, throwing k ropes, dm., but the - only Method that could have -Saved him was un- ' happily,nOt:thought of, namely; carrying - a rope Fro* the brpge l and; Ktth Vers - bht b each sideV'tlit buivjn,g'upiYards un- • it Vsil s uld have conic in 'contact Kith his body. The creek and dams were searched in all:directions for_ is bodg7 durimi itn.i - Bttn'dit.y; nut w.th the 'eht.ithi„;oioOf ms overcoat, which was hooked tfi)' - on Sunday, nts trace of him was, discovered until Tuesday morning, when Jon than figtfroll i a colored man, residing at the head, Of.the Narrows, saw a bodY . floating in - the river below the mouth of Jack's creek, which proved tti . be tha of ybung _McCurdy. It was btought to town, and interred by liis frihnds. f' Itis *as about cightech • yeits - of age, h iniet, Itliu,liy-disposed ii"Fs 11ate2te, &ep't: 23. 01:‹GLLAR EFFECTS Tourty.a . storms appear t.o b 8 ail CT.Cc~le rern m edY f(ir atrimottuil dlititttes—at least tyre neighborhood Of 'Y'.:ctot. A man and his wife, who had:beeti separated for about a" year, , had ligreed three days ago to meet, in that town in order to settle some money - matters in presence of a notary.. They hap. perred to meet On the road which led from their village to Yvetot, and commenced es changing sundry compliment's, which prom, ised to take a more practical who, V,hco fremendotta peel or thUntler dlie,e_hetl the 'ek, Lit ? eraiiee theii:s'ehtimehtS.. Fear iicceed cd to anger—the - woolen's' tongue wagged fainter, while the husband's fist gradually opened. A second thunder•clap reduced both parties to utter - pasSiveness ;. but when an awful,flash of lightning illuminated: the sky, the woman lost !di self cornmand,..and threw herself on the neck of her husband, who, apsiarently equally susceptible to cid' , trice' influence, elasped her in his arms, and vowed that nothing should separate them for , the future. The reconciled couple turned their backs on. the town ; and returned to the . hushand's house in a pacific. stateof mind, Iv,liich will, it is to be htiped, resist the coun- I ter influence-of sunshine.— Galitinani'e senger. - Coltt . T.—Theillustrious str anger , so a lon expected has-at length made its appear ance in the northwest part of the' heavens, where it is visible at,present between ttie hours of seven and eight P. M.; or four in the morning, in itie northeast. It is conjec tured to he the great comet of 1264 and . 1656, whose tail was - said to have been tnnre than. one hundred degrees in length, or one half or tio visible heav-ens.* It was said to hhve dis appeared October 3d,.0f the same year, on the night of the death cif Pope Urbytn IV, and was, of course, thought a special gforerurner of that event. In 9:75 this .cornet saw the _ earth .in the midst of the dark ages. • Basil and Constan• tine VIII reigned over the Eastern Empire. In 1264, on its next visit, it . witnessed• the first regular Parliament in England: In 1556, it . fonnd America discovered, and the -world!s greatest genius, Shakespeare; just lent fling VS walk. It has the appearance now of if flint star with a nebulous train of lieht, about two de grees in length, but it is, calculate] that by the 'first week in October this comet will at , tain an unusual. splendor. • CITARLES. SUMNEK.—The ,Daely Advertiser has a complete reply to some very false and unjust strictures upon Charles Sumnees gill fless recently published • in the Charleston Courier., It furnishes.the following informa tion respecting%the morbinents of the absent Senator : " Mr. Sumner, at the, last accounts,: was on his way to Aix in Savoy, Whpre douches and ice were to be applied to thespine. Af ter a few weeks of this treatment he was to return to Paris, when the fire was again to be applied. It is too early as , yet to say what may be the result. If pain . and suflbring, borne with heroie endurance, could insure health; he certainly would have it. - Mean.. while`we are to learn that one result of the active surgical treatthent_ he has un dergone has been the development, of neu ralgic pains in the chest, whkh have added , to the discomforts of his long Martyrdom."' PEPSONAL.—For several days preceding the 9th of September, inst:,, being untie to rise from bed in 'consequence of illness, the • rpaper.of that week was put in. charge ;of an. other. Thus incapacitated-to examine the matter that appeared as editorial, incongru. . ous articles found a place in our column's, of a different coloring from v.4lt. ,wotild have been the ease - had we been able pe'rsonally• to attend to the editorial labors. The articles relative to. the nominees of the two political parties, we did riot. shall not attempt . to defend, and .do not intiore, though they had the appearance of our siinc tioß at the time. Having been a resident of the County but a short time, and' knoWing _hut little of.the nominees, we prefer to say `nothing of ellher until we can_ do' so under standingly.—NOrthera Pennsylcanial.. , • NEW Iltrik C. 51N014.--Tlifl ".Onvernmept have been trying the rifle cannon of Mr. Saw yer, of Fitchburg, .Mass; It is said that, at one mile, the body of an ordinary sized tree would not be missed 'once in fifty times, so exact are its line shots. Mr.. Sawyer, super. intends - the firing in' person, arid In - seven shots, at a distance of one mile, the _ farthest was not over.three feet from the cnitre.— This -- is. the closest . shooting t' canno known..:The - cannon is grooved like a rifle. The ball is shaped• like theltinnie . rifie ball, and is filled . with powder, which explixles of - tcr striking and entering art object. • L4Olll LITERATURE.—The catalogue *of the New Vlrir publisheri' Association ,contains . a list of twepty.tnur•Aifferent biographiei .of notorious high*Symen, pickpockets; and bur- . gists, and fourteen stories of New YOrk Pre, such as is usuallk seen at the Fire Points and other similar and delectable moral local ities.. These are called " the most. saleable hooks in theinericet," and that fact Appears to be - the only thing . that the conicientious publisheri - regard . as.worthy their — considers; tion. 'The profit s toile business . - froni the sales ofiuch books iMposes a proportionate eta Upon the State for'the :maintenance' of penitentiaries nricf . other'public Institutionsr•of a penal . character ' ' The , trial of ,Towasend the 'll "Captain of 0 1 6 slavei.Rcho .P . a eged is no i n pt G. gross lir - Boston' - -A Compendium of News. • , .::Died Scott died iu St. Louis on Fri. clay night; ;17th inst . The IZepublic of San Marino has 3'r~iPßed it rtiedgl to, Miss Maria Miti.lhell 4 titr, ttstroririef: . .. :- The Chicago Peniocratszys: "We • have to- day lit store, in this city, a minima bUshels of iiheat i and this, trio, right in the • {his Of au.' incoming crap.''- .... A knitting Just machine has been iii. vented by a genius iii Seneca,County; and it is.claitiled that it will Wt. a-perfect Stockii,, in less.than'five minutes: .... It ia r said- that Pouglas intends nil. it'rtithiA to•Milin'nota, th try hiSeirinrielit:.eFc i ter thilted States Senator, in case he is de. feated iii Illinois. • . . ... . A' fellow named Tuner° was exhibit. ing rattlesnakes at .Oswego the iithei day, wheitim was bitten Ky one of thetin Ile ~-,• as sired by getting thoroughly drunk on whia. - key immediately. • ...... Kansas papers i publish lougnce,ouAts ef the gold diseoveries to that territory.' 1 . 1 - it: I.:Savert;:iiirtli ..t :..Periiny journal expresses the opinion that "there.are in Kansas placers of gold equally as rich - as those of California. ....it is computed' that there are twenty thousand perions out of employment in th e iron distriets of this State. 'Yet we. are iin. porting railroad iron at fill points, which our farmers have to pay forois well_as our ine tilaiitst3.. - , 3 .. - f - • . : : The Carbon 6 . ctirette is very sangnine of t tee election of Dr. Sliectitaleer .bVer the So - olefit candidate of theternocrecy; Wni, H. imprick. The Gazelle - sat s =-" he, will ; • wry Carbon county by - deci4d;majorit:..." r - .....;. The AMcrican Consul at Malfa; Mr.. Marsh, declares. that not five pipes (,(' -wine are now made in a year,* all the 1,1: and of Madeirii; -Yet there is never a la c k of Madeira in the United. States. 'Where is it. Manufactured, and what are its ingredi ents? . • By the recent convention of railr6ad officers at Philadelphia it has been agreed to ofr Au. free pases, without diitino c tion, editors,legiAetors, •g , o tip*. 4o.rullic..- ion,ersi arid ail soils Or " dead-heads . le4:e to pay cash, or stay at home. • The AttariticTilegraph Company are classifying the words most used in communi• cations on different subjects, and constructing what may. be called a stenographic alp - label of them, for the purpose of expediting trans toissions.'• .... Another great submarine and over , land telegraph is talited about: , It is said that the Emperor of Rus.sia.. has ••determined to lay dawn a line which- shall connect St. Petersburgh with his North American r oi• sessions, China, and California. .. Senator Bigler is tnakinis speeches in. Pennsylvania. •ile is a vet'y poor speaker. It 18 pUblic 'sr akerseiOlteti in Want of ail idea, laStinetivel§ scratch the. 10. e4 . lity of the brain. Bigler, upon such occa sions, never scratches "his head.—Lonisrilfe Jotirnal. .... A gentleman just Ird, G rii western Tex as says that the citizens in uili:l were bring inr, the horse thieves in that county -by the wholesale. [-La .Says that he, saw -several hanging, to trees, and that the citizens -and outlatt , s were fighting In the toWn Of 7 ivlti,le he was passing through:• - The educational statistics of the Unit edlStates show that there are four Millions of the youth of this country connected with the various educational institutions in the dit ferent States of the Union. Their teachers number more tban•one hundred ,and 'fifteen thousand. The annual expensesare estitnut ed at about $14,000,000. ' .... The Washington SW says . :"The Postmaster General has ordered that all "supplements". or "extras" folded within regular issues of daily or weekly journals— not actual and bona fide editions of such - railk lications, conveying intelligence, of passing events and general intelligence—subject the whole package to letter postage. Five hundred and' seven Austrian Catholic Priests have addressed a memorial to the cardinal prince, archbishop of Vienna, rtaltieg for certain - reforms, the most import. ant of which ar•e increased pay and the right to marry-. For want of 'means ,to sustain themselves they' have to•be a tare upon their congregations, andforead'celibacy, they say, brings their parity into suspicion with their people. The most truly interesting item ilia: we (vole by our foreign' mails,.'comes from ,Russia. It gives us the intelligence that the Emperor has, by one grand act; emancipated all of serfs attached to the imperial do. mains: The number of White men thus set free from degrading bepdage was 20,000.- 7 Vod save the Emperor! tev .... Of Senator. Bigler, Forney's Para says : "This unfortunate Man has been in Pennsylvania' in the complacent supposition that he was Helping the Administration, Lei wherever he appeared the recollection of kr forlorn encounters with'Douir,lasiand his ter . ''l versations on the questions at, issue between the two great, parties, made him an objectof mingled pity and contempt. That he should" insist on speaking in the First district is =- other bad omen tut. W. Florence. .. The resignation of Governor Denver takes place on, the Ist of October. Ile vvi then resume the ,position oftemmissioner of Indian Affairs,. it havihg been understoo4 at the time of his a`ppointment to the Governer• ship of Kansas, that he should, if he desired it, return to the India' Bureau. For tad, reason no Chief Clerk was appointed on the, promotion of Mr. .Mix, and that gentleman will resume his former duties on the arrisa! of Governor Denver in Wastrington.-:—.9ates. .... The latosnews about the Paris " fzei% ions" is somewhat startling. Fat is the rage. Ladies .cultivate it. They ''are devouring large quantities of butter, mashed rose leave , and such like. The Enipress is quite corr.. lent, which-accounts for the-style.. The fish• inn will be here lido& a great. while. I.Ve hail it with joy. A new era isdawning._ Oor girls 'will stop eatiagsinte.pimeils and Oak and commtimee partaking .liberallyof mail beef and linked beans. They will -rise with the lark. They will exercise. They will try on the wash.tub; perhaps: ` ... That pow e - rful-Corporaticin, 'the Es' India Company; Which, for a century mil a half ocenpied such a - prominent position P the hiStory ofthe Dist, and which . added mighty empire to the British Crown, cen?'ed s to exist on the first of the .present month.— Time alone can settle:the' question, whether or not England and` India have gained - ta . 1 . :' 31 by the change, or whether the firrniergoorn ment will be able, successfully and-profitably , to maintain its ascendency in the seven) to• dirin'Presidencies, admirret-every one of whic ll OS as "large and populous as the kingdom at home. -.. ' - r . ' , . th;;lireThineolpieerracbtiZ.lol7l,flAuo-irnneilessa3'o.'sf ttehltit-: .. - graphiblines, of which Anierica ' has neatly its much as the rest of the whole world coal: ined, - .b - : 'Viz: - 45,000 miles. It is e st:Man: l- . I •that4 i,060;000 11essag6g pass over the Atner: 1 ices Linea annually.„Nsield'ing;_pfobabiy, s . net . I revenue of 50,000,00. - • There are 930 old, l;of - submarine telegtriph cable now in use, a eitttiii of :dui Mantic Ole.. -• , - - -, El El i la 1104! ta our n ve rse ibt; that' ty lag oa ol or 14 etecA who their dist 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers