I= • 5,-- ‘4.-al titheAtSt. . I . ' ~ - - ~,. ,:‘,., -; • on, - A. semis. ' This disfingtiiihed ciampion of the Repub lican cause, says an_lexchange, is. now i in IMintiesota la the St! Clopi • D emocra t—, .paper edited by Jane .., Swisshelm, one of. the Representative wo en of our age, we find the folloWing notice of Mr. Grow. - . - " We have never been so , disappointed in Key one as in Mr. Grciw: We had' - always thought of him as a good,:'earnest, honest man, whose large beneVolenee and habits of Industry made him,whist men are apt to term a wheel.horee,•in the cause ortree labor.'-. - We nese!. - thought !of him as eloquent much lesss Without.' o,n IN ednesday after. noon he called on us with Wm. H.' Shelley, of St. Paul, who is traveling with him. Our *bar was loon filled with gentlemen anxious ' fAsses hits ; and as he remained some time, we had a good opportunity to note him. it was easy to see in the eagle fiash'of his dark , eyes, and the rapid, flea; muscular motions, where the ‘-' knock down argument' Thad come 'from, which convinced Mr. Keitt of , the -supe riority of Northern _men be Southern bullies: . The breadth' between the earsrshows unfelt • ering courage while thellergely. developed so cial organs and the' timer of Lenevolence shows .•. where the Homestead Bill came from,. Still his foreleadis not massive. We have seen more intericc(ifl looking heads out of which tiothir.g 'ever came; and we were _afraid that in his speech of the evening he would not do full justice to the, occasion.—; Although some effort for ss to sit up so long; we *int to hear'him. -I Wilson's Hall was Packed as no on; ever saw it packed before ; -and for two. hours and A half he held his au. d ience P:etranced. , .. _ 1.1 ..... ts Speech was, great, grand, glorious;---- -Nothing winning: N6tla word too much. Talk about the by! wine-greatness of the American Congress. .!People are always • croaking of the "'goad old tithe ;" but - Hen s• ry Clay neirer` excelled iliatspeech • and eve think never equaled it. ITtiank Goj for tbd men He has raised up to fight out this sec 'ond American Revolution—the real inaugur . ration of the Declaratioi of Independence. The moccasins endeavored to break up the meeting, by bedding bob fires in front of the halt, beating drums and i shopting "'fire!" • Early in the address it. was announced - twice, by a prominent Repuhlicen, that there leas great danger the briuse would fall with the weight of the audienoe. „They, were en . treated to refrain from stamping; tried to do.so ; but only one lad left. All the oth .lr era concluded to run the risk for the:sake of the speech, and held their places to'the: last. The speech'ivas a 'most }masterly effort, and -has done the cause oftritth an incalculable s-erviee. ice! - Elegant Eitracti. -.: he ' Democracy' Is the same everywhere ' -- -North, South, East and West. It seeks the ascendency on the siuielprinciples, and ' - the success of thesame Measures in all sec. ' tions.— Wash. Union 1 ' , The Democrats of the ( South, in the pres ent canvass, cannot rely du the old ground of . ' • defenne ar.d.excuse for siveri, for they seek not merely to-maintain ,it where it is, but to - . extend it into regions where it is unknown.— Rich. Enquirer. 1 The "Demeracy" is national. It is the same in Maine and. Massachtisetts• that it is in Virginia and South CarOlitni.—..4l6any ..4r.. • Sus. - : 1 ' Nor will it avail us ang:t'i;l show that the negro is most_ happy and best situated 'in the condition of slavery. If; we ;stop' there we, weaken our cause by the yeri, argument in tended to advance it; for we propose to take ' . into new territories hum meings unf.t for liberty, selfgoverr.ment; and I ) qual associs. poll with 'other mor. We moat go a slop Oa, tiler: We must show thstAllele idavery is ' a moral, religious, nature , and probably.in i t • th e general, - a necessary ins, itution of society. --16c14,Eng. ' , 1 • We rejoice in our candidates as national= . • In our prinCiples as naticr.hl--jthe same eve ry where;Ssn. Brigkt. }.- 1 . ; Make the laboring man the slave ofone man instead of the slave Of societ y ,v and he would bebetter oft: ! 1 TwO hundred years of liberltyliave made white laborers, a pauper banditti. . Free society has , sailed, i - surd that which is not free - must be substatitial.=Benator, Ma i . 8011. The platform uponhich' Nve have placed our candidates is no sectional thing. It is broad : , enough to cover -and '