Isliturn disclosing by an unvarnished state ment, under oath, all the facts of which he bad any knoWledge, and that, on failing to do so, be eon:nited a grevious mistake, and exhibited'a spirit of defiance to the, judicial tribunal before which he had been summon ed to answer, that no law and order-loving.eit izen should ever exhibit, or- consistently jus ify. So far then,'We regard Williamson in ihawrong, wholly in the wrong to meddle in a . business' which it did not concern, and again equally in the wrong in not disclosing . unre servedly all the knowledge, as he was legally bound to do, he had in relation to . the tran saction. But, that all his conduct, wrong as we deem it,justifiied the arbiter) , exercise of at least a doubtful poWer which was exercis ed by Judge Kane, we do not wish to under stand to assert.. On the contrary, we look upon hiS conduct in no other light than' our cerrespondent does.. It was alike fool-hardy. and tyrannical, placing Maisel in' the . wrong . and making a martyr of one who we deem in no way worthy of such an honor. To say the least of it that i can be'said, it, much mere reserabled,the acts of a demagogue upon the bench, Who seemed bent - to pander to an im becile Administration of the Gen al Govern ment, for favors-received or yet to be confer ed, than that of a fearless, "jodependent and conscientious Magistrate - whose only 'aim was to do. justice. The whole proceedings, as disclosed in the reports published;, had an air of demagoguism and political vindictiveness and instead of having the effect of 'vindica ting the ,dignity of the Courtin the public es teem. It has brought upon it universal de risioF and cOntempt. It has,Lione even more. It Was not only' brought the Court into con tempt, and its Judge into scorn, but has brought about a wide-Spread sympathy for • the victim of its tyranny, which no act of his ever could have secured forhine making more Abolitionists in the-free States than all their lectures united could have converted to their cause in a century. Judge Kane's sycephan cy to southern ,feeling has done the slave in terest more injury in the North, than all the • Williamson's combined could have . done in a life time.—Dolly Yews.- Rlfintrose penietrat. T:IE LAI:GEST CITICULATION IN NOIITHERN PENN'A. E. B. qIIASE & J. B. McCOLjUM, Eorroßs ALV IN DAT t Publisher. 31e stirose, Th tit rsda y, Oct. 11, 1853. pentatratic Couittn Bominations TOR REPRESENTATIVES, OLIVER LATHROP,Of Springville J. V. SMITH - , of Wyoming County. • • FOR TREASFRER, F. TUIP.F.ELL, Of 3lontioo. ,FOR COMMISSIONER, NOICVAN FOOT, Of New :Wilford. VOA AVDITOU., BELIES WELLS, Of Bridgewaterio ELECTION-r-I A rESDAY, OCTOBER 9t13:: Wood : Wood ! ! Those Who wish to pay, us in wood we de 'Are should bring us some now. We are. out As you articoming into town bring us along some. DO; We Want Money Next week is the Fair, and evetybody,near in the county, we suppose will come.— Now we say to our, friends that we are great-, ly in want of MONEY. Can you not eall and help us I It is but little for you, but it will help us wonderfully. Just .remember ui now, and We will-he your • bumble servants all our lives, or till next January.. jar lion. G. A. Grow was a passenger in the Pacific that arrived at New . York yester day. Sebastopol Has Fallen ! Byithe lasfSteamer from Europe we learn that the Allies Lave taken Sebastopol.-- 7 Fmceand England" are represented as fairly drunk with enthusiasm, but the details of the affair at sailing, had only been received in tneager d telegrapb ,dispatches. Probably: by our next issuL , , we shall bare them in full.— The loss is represented at 30,000. LOOK OUT FOR FRNUDS! ! Next. Saturday there is to he another issue of the Republican. It, will be the last card designed to be issued when there is no time' to contradict its FALSEHOODS. Judging from the last issue, you can relrupotrits ex ceedir(g anything human for recklessness and Baud. Look out for them. jam' On our first page may be found an article on the . Passmore Williamson case. which expresses our notion of the matter very fully. The article we cut from; the Daily News, Philadelphia; a Whig,, anti Nebraf-ka paper. It undoubtedly reflects about' the true state of the ease ; the sentiment, of all, think is honest men frene ra 11 v R ea d th e ar ti c l e . -tt More Candidates. By reference to our aaverti.ing columns it will be seen that Elhanan Smith Ezq, of Wy oming county has been brought out as a candidate for the Legislature. Mr. Stnith,is a 'Whig, or always was *bile the Whig party was in existance. lie is a man of fair talent, a very cleFer fellow, and no doubt will, rnaliea large run in Wyoming county. How it will be in this county we cannot:tell, for we don't know- how many Whigs there are in this county who have dependence enough to resist the bargaining of the Montrose leaders. One thing, bowev - er, is very certain, this. move will result in the - total defeat of Mr. Hempstead. From all we can learn ; the Whigs and indepen- dents pf Wyoming will support Smith to a man almost, and thini _Mt. Hempstead will hareto get 1500 ior two thousand majority in this county to be elected.. This every sane man knows he cannot do. ,_lle has left the party and true friends :that made him what he is; and thrown himself into the hands of his enemies. They love the treason, but can not reward the traitor. Let his Lite be • warming to ttioso who tjaity tor liko Woodall. Witledhrawal4Wlll.llaailow The New ! P ork 7 of Saturday brings the intelligetiee - that ;Reioubßoan Conven thin convened sit.Karrisburglaitt`riday, with 7 drew the nomination of Passmore Williamson and: nominatedlir. Nicholson, chief clerk in theTressu fey', Departznen t„ - for canal ' commies . ion in his 13y what authority this. convention assem bled and removed Williamson - from the field we know ncit, having seen no call for a con vention of the kind, and no notice of the act of.removal.i What then can be the object of those who, lwere 'so anxious to rebuke the slave power in the person of Ilas their sympathy: for him all , oozed out 1"- Have they seen some uptoortunity of selling poor Passmore over to some other party I As before mentioned, we know not 'who has taken the responsibility of declaring Pas attires- nomination void. Certainly nobody could do it with political legality save the convention that put him in ,nomination, and that body ha; nor clone it,.for it has- not been re-assembled t We are therefore forced to the conclusion that it is a mere bargain and sale arrangement of some trading pond. clans, for with'the news of Passmore'a removal comes 'the news that' Martin, the Know- Nothing nominee, has declined in favor of Nicholson. Here then is the arrangment.— Nicholson is now Nothing, an office hold er in Pollock' e Know Nothing Administra tion, and the Pure and much - abused Pass- more is at lastitl4t to rot in prison; and j the Republican party, sold boily and soul to the Know Noqiing oraanizatien. So ;the Pius burg Convention was a farce. The Know- Nothings bare swallowed the . Republican party after all. . - Now, what i i vill•the mass of the people who really felt that Passmore bad been abused and that it was their duty to vindicate him— . we nsk,- What will these people any to this immolation 'of Passmore t The politicians are treating him still worse than' the Jndges,, for they are 'endeavoring to prevent the sitialle'st degree of " material," sympathy at the ballot : . box from being r ina l lifested for him They shut out the last ;as: of hope from his prison huse.and leave hirti to grope on in thlrkness and despair, uncheered the suffrivies of I • . thousands of his fellew C4tizetis assuring him that they will be with hiin in the seventh trib ulation. So itseems theyi'do not care so much for Passmore after all,. -It was supposed that a great public sympathy could be received in his behalf, that -night secure votes for a few ambitious demagogues, and so they nom inated him. • A little while and the clime men found they-could make more votes bi t , selling him out to the . Know Nothings, and forth with, their sympathy for Patismore is turned into admiration for Nieholio n's rum-blossom ed nose;—poor Passrnore is iinolated and the whole pick startiin Lot pursuit of. the whis key-barrel covered with an " owl" skin Nicholson a .RePublian ! We venture to say that he never dreamed of such•a thing.— fie had always been an old . hunker Whig, till last fall. Ve then, like thousandi. of others, joined the Know Nothings,: and became - a prominent . member of that Cremization, with which he has ever since actelle ;was re warded by Gov. PolloclesAdininistmtion with the post of chief clerk tin the Treasury, ,—tho desk formerly occupied by Col. Asa . Dimock of this county.' . • 'Will free soilers stand this bargain and pale or will they go on and rote for Passmore t If their sympathy is.real they will do the Jat ter,—if they Are dishonem, and really, -sehem ins after cote, regardleks of rii9eiple or man hood, they will vote for Nieliolson--the whis key' barrel] corered with " ow/ skin." 't A Word More. . . Our Election regards the voter as a free man,‘having reason 'and - thought. They se cure him, by the heavieSt penalties, from force, bias, - intrigue, and every influence at all calculated to change , that elevated cha-, meter, on the day of elecpon. Woulil you believe thasuch a man would so sully his, ti honor, so d grade his manhood, as voluntari ly to . come down from his `moral and ;politi cal elevation, and surrendei. - his judgement, and conscience, and vote to the will of a " Council i" and that too, by a ; wicked oath taken before that kill is definedi Yet such is the system': And the Lodgti liere, can't now vote as they ,ian't to do 4!1. Canal. Com missioner without :first obtaiirmg a formal leave from the heafl-council so ,far to !deFert the Lodge ticket. There's 41E-gover‘ went and freedom-of suffra g es for yo ti ! The whole that a plan works.so that afeiv aretspott over the many sworn slaves ! Judge 1 ) der charged 1 the jury in the elevated language of Ameri can law, when.he said such alconspiracy was indictable as a crime, lie§ideq, it is a war'itipon the commrt-rios, Which /arge/y.securesfrad,om of co n science, —and it is niston4t in ull !its ramified woik- The sentiment of. upright and!, impartial men, everywhere eipress4 is that the Lodyc discipline so demoralizes the victim, that he soon:becomes utiafe to be trusted as a Judge a juror, awituess, an officer, or any relation where confidence is reposed. A. man ; habit-. t • • wally lying and decieving upon one subject, by an easy transaction, land under lesser temptation, comes to 'lie on 4/ subjects.— Again'''fellow/Demoe'!itn, we 4k you to 'fix your eyes on these men 'and see if this is not The same_ opular judgement is that these men degrade,'and dishonor the same of Chris tianity, whenever they profess it. And that church has become a mere by-lewd, and scan, 41, that has not left in it energy enoughl of disipline to cut off such memberships. 13ut there, as in the other relations oflife t they dr P in unseen,— *tea/ in unroticed,—iind poison all the air before you know from whence ..he moral stench proceeds. Will.you riot sustain a ticket that embl4- ies hatred' to all this; rather than one that is hatched in the Lodges ! Mane than all will you not strike down the man a , hom you once fed, brought up, and sustained ; now that he betrays your con&lenoe;—smiponis out his 409 ingratitude, for therile7rie now of fered him 1 Nobody need .011 us that any priasipl• of slavery &sada tkiap-wo bars M!=nl n, and every man knows that Abe Lodge sown, alono are in issue. • Trcluagreiro Almodier Bank. We Again feel called. upon to remind the peoPle of the county . of the importance of electing Mr. Terrell to the office of. Treasur er. It will not, we presume, be pretended that in point of capability Mr.Turrell is not by far the best qui .. ilified of the two. lie has been a resident of the county all his life,— all his interests are identified - with., those of this people, while -his character for sobriety and manliness is justly the pride of the whole community where heis known. -In his hatds the people's money will be safe. Mr. Woodruff is in wrong company. He is the pet-candidate Of the'Posts. They are using every power at their disposal to elect him, and here their object is welt understood. They have put up_a building adjoining their store which is to be used as a Bankbf Deposit and .Exchange, under their control. Connec ted with them is a gentleman from New York, another St. John for what. we know. It is well understood here that should Mr. Woodruff be 'elected, the county 'funds are .to be 'deposited in this shaving shop, tone& their anxiety for his . - election. This is un doubtedly the plan on foot in the election , of Woodruff. They are 4t . work forhim . with the energy of desperdtion, for it is a question with them of dollars and Cents. Citizens of Susiitiehanna! have you. not had abOnt enough of Banking . on the credit of the county_? Have'you not been plundered. about enough by. these - political' Bankers! Go then to the polls and vote for I.l}ixav V. TURRELL, and rebuke this attempt - to make gain by-your votes. The great struggle now with these" Moitrose Whigs is to get control of the count, offices, that they may specu late froth ur hard earnings—coin gold from the swat-drops of year toil! • Shall they succeed The question'is left for your decision next:Tuesday: Stand firm and you will be victorious. Vote, too, for Iltormau Foot. For Cottimis;siober. lie is capable, faithful and honest. •Qpposed to -him is-Nlr. Case, an old Whig linOw Nothing. Can any man who ever professed to be a Democrat vote for Case againit Foot.' The Past year, I. L Post has been theCeininissioner'sotliee, hav ing a majority of the Board. One of his toad ies now goes out, and in. Case he has another ready tool. With the Commissioner's office and the Treasurer, the new Bank will have plenty of capital I. Will you have' honest and capable men, to transact the business of your county,' or will you. have I. L. Post 4k - Co., to do it for you, and to speculate on the county funds/ This is the question, and: to accomplish- _it they are doing everything in their power. Meet them with your .votes. - - Sho* them that the . time has passed when they can make the oirtces of the county the objects of bargain and sale, for a fewLmonied arristoerats to fatten upon. Turn out like freemen. OppOsed to you are the influences and power of wealth—show them "the bone and sinew I" • •-; Keep It Before the People, That all the acting,nanaging, men of the oth party; belonitp tke lodges r and their success will be the triuniph of 'Ai4tii-.2Vrothinyisriz on ly! - Fellow Democrats ! look'aiound you,in your respective districts, arid see it' this is not- So! Look at their delegaiiis—their conVent ions—l-their . speakers 7 —theitiQrgan- - -also their secret; as wcll as their more open movements, - 7 -and . “iin •will . believe us When 'we say the whole organization lies in the.lotlges ! . Their emissaries, are quietly ranging the county,-- tightening the lodge stritig,s,—mining their false, deceptive way,—and-enlisting every man, and, ineanS, their oath-fornied system so well enables theta darkly touse. Their pride is ; to spring a surprise on" the people,—to take . I the offices by (*tinning and stratagem. The •centre of the machinery is in Montrose. Here, about Six men hold the . strings, which run out into every township, and neighborhood, —they keep up a perfect system of intercourse, and the arrangement is . so cunning, that a touch at the remotest end, thrills the entire body.. Not a word is spoken outside ; no ar gument; no discussion ; no inanliness; it is all machinery This conspiracy is alarming, from ,the very perfectness of its . organization. No pains; time, or money are spared: To meet this, we have no band- - of emissa ries going and coming, day and night,—no secret drill,—nor , systetn of means. We come openly to the popular sense of right - ; and trust alone in the justice of onr cause. We have confidence in the sober, second thotight of the.people ;"andgenerously put our trust • . - there.. The question is, •ohalli the Lodges rule in Susgu.'a County ? Of course, they dodge it ; and Strive to divert the public mind to ques tions of slavery.. But even they hav'tit the face 'to say that the election of our Anti-Sla very ticket to the 'offices of the county, is in anyway to extend.'slavery. It is a mere local, coun'ty contest wholly one side of slavery ; in which both tickets ateddedged against that evil,—ours from principle r =thtirs from poi icy. The only issue is here, Our Ticket' walks boldl, out into • the field, trumpet tohgued against all the wickedness of Knew now,and forever. Their 'Ticket is,otit of the heart of the Lodges ! They Can't force us into any foreign issues. No, it is a home question,—touching our very 'fit e nVol% ing liberty of conscience ? free- I • 4:lotn of suffrage, purity of the courts' ? and the public morals ! • SHALL TUE LODGRE RULE vs I Answer ; Democrats, answer at the Polls 1 Compared with this, all former issues sink into nothing. Then let your voice be beard, and with a great purpose, break thrOugh LbiK string-syskm,—this net-work of the lodges...tear it into ten thousand at -7—s) We hace'c l iedstem of means by which to 'each you. We can only 'warn from the Press, this last time, Before another issue, this battle will be dose,--this batik! What a spectacle ! Lodges, and the people, ---darkness and light,—an organized lie, and truth; met in mortal combat, here, in the high anon of the nineteenth century. ! It is bumiliuting, that as engine which would kw* larkaast area Ike Dark Aga, &cold have sa , a vitality and power of wicked ness in a land, and among a people, boasting of freedom and, law. ; Another Falsehood Nailed Two weeks ago we charged thatthe whole machinery of the Republican party, for this canvass was got up in the Know Nothing Council in Bloomer liall,thetirst Monday of last Court,—thatilhe township - Committees were made there, and that Doct. Dimmock wrote the article relative .to C. J. Lathrstp's withdrawal. All of this was denied by Dim cxk iu the Pepublican last week. We now lay before the people a letter from A gentleman who was a delegate itittbat Convention,whose statement carries truth on its 'face. We re serve the name and place, because [the geri= tleman dislikes to appear in a personal con troversy before the public. But if Doct. Dim ock persists in his denials we are authorized to say that he will have enough of it. * * * Oct. 2, 1855. FRIKND CHASE: Dear Sir notice in the _Republican au article over the signature of G. Z. Dimoek, which, among other miss tatements contains one, of which I happen to. have some knoWledge. have not the paper by me, but if I recollect right, he -denies in the most positive manner the truth of ,your allegation, that the Committees of theßePub- Mean party were made in ".Bloomer Now, Sir ; happen to know that Dr:Dimock lied out-right- The facts', are- these : before the resolution to adjourn was voted; upon, he arose and_ requested - that . oue or both of the Delegates-from each township, should remain after the Convention should adjourn, and give him the 'names of three suitable Men to act as township Committees, and went on to say that as far as possible he thought, it would be a good idea to•put on one Dem. K. .N.,. one Whig K. N., and one ou tsider, who was known to be opposed to Know Nothingism. One of the Delegates from Auburn, I think, here remarked that he did not know who the outsider would .be in his town, for they were all inside. The Convention then adjourned, and I 'know that quite a .number remained and gave a list of nataiis,aati if any townships were not. then supplied it mupt have been because the members got tired of staying and left before he could• take down the name 4. At any rate 1). was busy writing down the Co`tutnittees for t . of an hour. As the different men wont:. forward add : mentioned over names, they would take tccasitin to inform him that such a one was a Whig K. N., and such a Dem. K. N., and the other a Democrat or Whig Republican, When lie would. remark, " that is first rate . --that teas the right tray to shout it not aK. move; but Ile sure, says he, to have a majority - on each who be long to the Order. The Doctor tuust have a fund cheek, in deed, to deny this, when he knows that every man IA ho was prezent must consider him a deliberate falsifier. But I suppose he intends to crawl out of it by sayin:r that the rnstter was net.acted upon by die Convention, but I wouldlike any Man to tell me the difference. The was there concocted, and the com mittees made in Bloomer' Hall by these, men, and that is the substance of the charge as. made by .you. - As_ for lhe'rest of his article - it amounts to nothing, fur ho does not attempt to deny what was Charged' by you, but strives to evade it by subleifuge. lie don't deny writing the article for the Itepabliean,as alleged'relative to. the withdrawal of C. d., Lathrop, but says . it was not written until after Mr. Lathrop had Consented. to have his name withdrawn. He had better not refer people. to Mr. Lathrop, for I know that he will not be sustained by Mr. L., except so far as Prot. is concerned. Demperats, to the Polls! T. Democrats of Susquehanna! next Tuesday you are called upon to again - defend your principles 4 the ballot-box,—again to, dis charge the (l i nty. imposed upon' you by the government/0 your country. . ITo the Polls The officers to be elected you; may think of little importance, but you should rethct that on their success depends the supreniacy of principles the Most vital in the government. Never since - the government was organized has there been an election So big with mo mentous consequeticas to the country, for nev er before have the enemies of our .institutions giown so bold.and desperate in their attacks. Your Fathers fought for Liberty,—they were willing to die in the cause. Will you . not make • a little sacrifice to perpetuate thi3 - great Charter which by their sufferings and bird they have banded down to us? Would you e . .perpetult to your children, as well as preserve for your selves, the great right of Conscience 1--then rally to the snpport . Of the democratic ticket. Would you. present the right to worship God -" under your iown vim 3 _and 'fig tree with no one to moleSt or Make you afraid?" vote the Democratic' ticket ;.for. it is pledged to carry out the great democratic doctrines of equal rights and equal laws, while its op ponents, bound . together by horrid oaths, are seeking to carry out doctrines repugant to reason,- repugnant to the'gres . t principles - which" our fathers fought to maintain, and which, if carried out; would subvert the whole policy of the government and place out con sciences and rights iu the keeping •of sworn enemies to the Constitution of our: happy I • country. Freemen, Rally f Let us make at least one effort to rescue from the polluting touch •of the Vandal the precious treasure of otr rights. Do you be lieve men should be free or slaves I Are you prepared to surrender tamely the inestimable princi les secured us by the patriotism, which liframe and promulgated the Declaration of Independence, by the sufferings of Valley Forge, the carnage of Monmonth,-and the bloody victory of Yorktown I _ No, let us strike one blow for liberty and equality—for those rights with which the God of Heaven has invested us. Let us fight over again, if necessary, the battles of the Revolution; Let us at all hazards put forever under; our feet the midnight traitor; who are now seeking to despoil the fair tempts of Freedom at the polls 2 Hearten vill . finally give victory to the Bight. , Be not dialiestivred. - Do your duty like men-ribe Jove' their country, like patriiits who ire willing to be sacrificed-on her altar. Once more then, to the Polls I to the Polls I To The Public. 13y all means read the last Know Nothing paper, and see such an amount cf malice and falsehood as never before was printed in the same iwpace. Wechallenge a parallel for recklessness. They conceal entirely the' true issue before the people; which is this. Shall the:Lodges, and their secret oaths, rule this county .P This is the issue,' and the only . issue. But they first dodge it and try to get up a slavery iss'- ue. This has already been fully explained. Second, nearly the whole paper is devoted to the basest of all dodges,—a luckless effort' to get up ai" Chase issue." This is the opt breaking of 1 the private malice of the Mont rose cliqtie, ik malice that was born in "Bank times." Instead of treating the people as _ra tional beingli,- voting for the public good,they serve up to the depraved appetites of their K. N..readers:snelfan awful amount of persenal libel as could never be • invented outside of those hells,—the Lodges. .Every'line is 'alba Chase has said, and what. Chase has, dope ! What ig that to the public '1- I has© no more interest this canvass than any other private individual. - I .'am a candidate for no office and- never expect to be. I should like to know .if the- people are ,to turn aside from great:public questions and dUties; to enter into a low personal quarrel a few here have against me, or any other man. .I trust the people haire higher and no . t,,ler aims. 44 The i►louey Argument." They assert in ,their paper that money is being used as free as water to carry this elec tion; and that Chase. has disbursed -a pretty. heavy fund in 4e eastern part of the county. Of this base tidsification,—this outrageous lie, I cannot find i language 'strong, enough to expreSs_my denio. In this canvass I have not spent one shilling of money, nor have I been in the eastern part -of the county but once this fall, and that was to Meet Mr. F.. P. Grow of Carbondale, at hii brothers in Lenox, And transact with-him some purely private business. At the reque:st of -Mr. Turrell, I took the votes- of some three -or four towns ,on the way andleft them. . I transacted my business, came back- by the way of ll:irford to procure a hired girl, Which I did, and ev ery cent of money 1 spent on the route was for my dinner on the way down, and the toll on the plank road as I came borne't What .c.fo the public think- of such reckless false hoods I - • , . : This morning (Wednesday) on seeing the article in the Republican, I met Mr. Read,the senior editor of that paper, in presence of eel eral gentlemen. I showed it to him and ask ed if he saw it •before it was published, or if. he approved, believed, or had any evidence of its truth. He stated before all . present, THAT HE NEVER BEFORE SAW IT,— THAT HE DID NOT APPROVE OR I3E-. LIEVE IT, AND THAT HE KNEW OF NO EVIDENCE :to SUSTAIN IT! I asked him to put this statement in writing. He at. first declined to do so, but afterwards said he would. • Thus is this wicked and Malicious falsehood nailed to the counter by the senior Editor of the paper that published it ! Can community see these infamous means resorted to by the Republicans, to carry this election, without alarm Where is the safety either 'to life, property, character or anything else from such men_! i EZRA B. CHASE. Oct: 3, 113;55. It is Falag: We understand that the leading liars in Moutrosd have set afloat the story that the Senior Editor of this paper.and other demo-, crats haVe got Elhanan Smith : to run as an independent, candidate. This, come from whom it may is an unmitigated falsehood ,and those who circulated it know it to be false. The public can see wbose.names are 'signed• to the card of Mr. Smith, and they. alone, so far as_we know, ire the only ones who have brotight his name before the• people. The card was brought to our office bYThos.'Nich .olson. We publish it as we always publish the cards of independent candidates—for the pa —also holding that all classes\ have . rill to be heard through .the press. Any reports to the effect that we , or prominent detnecrnts here or anybody else outside • the card, - have had anything to do with 'getting Mr. Smith into the field, are flagrant and in excusable lies:- CARD OF NR. LATHROP. READ, READ! READ!! VO Li ZI PIMIEt. • In this week's _Republican I find an address to the people of the county, beaded by Judge Jessup, and signed freely by other prominent men iu Montrose, in whicli'my name is used in the following manner. "They" (that is the - Republican nominees) " stand opposed by Messrs. 0. Latlirp . and John V. Smith, WHO CARRY TII* PRO SLAVERY BAN-• NER BROADLY UNFURLED. . • - • Itia well known to the people °tills coun ty that the Convention that put me in nom - nation, among others, passed a resolution pledging the ticket in. tho -strongest against the extension of slavery. In . my pub lished letter, accepting the nomination, the public'also know that - I committed myself fully a nd unreservedly to use all l i l my influence should Ibe elected against its xtension. I also appeal to the people (tiny whole coin inunity who have known me ever since the , agitation of this question, and challenge the produetkin of the first man who ever heard me utter the first syllable in contradiction to this position. And yet Judge Jessup asserts to the public over his own Signature, putting the weightio( his personal character at stake with all this evidence' before hits, that I `'carry the pro slavery banner." It, is an in famous falsehood, come from - whom it may, and those who signed it, who know anything about it, aud they mpg have known from published letter,Ainct my whole lifer, knew it was i falsabOc4, I anppoae if I had' pro. , tossed free soil d made a speech In the Bal timore ConveitiOn; in !avoid the _Fugitive SlAire Lato;.cits Judge Jesisup did Artily three years ago, I should now be tbe.kind of fret seller that be could support I But, 'think' God, no such record can be sliowikof nte,atal whether elected or defeated, I ithalfliave the Consolation of knowing that pay conscience hat 'not been prostituted to. such` slanders as this address, headed by JUdge Jessup, con tains. I now challenge Judge . Jessup to make good his assertions by ,pme kind- or evidence,befcire the pu.blie,, Or else-to let bis silence stand as an admission of this false hood which has gone out to the world over his signature. It is also insinuated in the same paper that I shalt vote for Simon Cameron for United States Senator, if eiCcted. This is another base and malignant falsehood. I shall not vote for him, fol . I shall' vote for no Know Nothing. am not - yet in fellovfship with - Judge Jessup's party, I know ' oil no party that has sent Cameron men to , thei House of Reprtmntatives from this District,' save this same Republican party, headed Iby Judge Jessup, who sent Sturdevant last fall. 'Judge Jessup voted for him and advocatid his elec tion, as did all the rest of his party here, and lIE VOTED FOIL CAMERON' EVERY TIME! For whom I shall vote for Senator, if elect ed, I cannot tell, for I know not v‘iho will be candidates. The public ;know infprineipleS, and they may s be assured that I , shall not compromit them by vcite.or,aet. I now appeal to a fene‘roils and truthful a public, tnat have know me from my youth. up, and ask if they wil permit, even an buin ble individual, like me. ! to be lied down,tratia pled under foot,' and disgraced, by the influ ence .of Mee, who . seem to imagine that their assumed greatness shields them . from the suspicion of wrong 1 1 If so : . L bow- to your verdict, but I have a, eha'racter to sustain, and I, demand of Judge Jessupito make good his fal;e accusations before this community. • '-. OLIVER LATHROP . . 4- • MOntrose,-Oct., 3 1855. L , - CARD OF 1)R. SMMI. VcD VGA Y.IMILITS. I have seen in the last week's ' Republican two false charges against me. First that- I am a Cameron man, and seconds that I have in my paper for months been .publishinged itoriag inJdefense of the Nebraska Bill. :The paper which I edit was started for the express purpose of ofopposing the Wyoming Dernbcrat which . was a Cameron paper. I have always opposed Cameron -and shall if elected to the Legislature. I can'assure these Know Nothings that I shall not join their . party yet, and therefore shall have nothing.to . do with Cameron. They elected a man last - year who voted for him, anal for what I know their men this year will do the same, for the obligations of Know Nothing oaths are .very . strong.. . That I have by any editorials defended the Nebraska Bill is also and equally false. I have edited that paper_ so lely only about a year, and I chalenge the production of any such editorial. I am, as I have already said,- once, strongly opposed to the extension . , of slavery and shall resist i t to the best of. my abilties elected or not. JOIIN SMITH. Montrose, Oct.- , 3 1855. . , (f.,ette - ow Europp:) • 1 ARIS, Aug, 23,''1855 My Dear Friends : •! . , I wrote you by the last steamer, from this point.- Yesterday I rec'd a letter from Fred erick dated . Glen Wood the sth inst., from which I learn that you are all well, and the haying and harvesting nearly finished. From SWitzbrland here every body. was gathering their Whe,at, so it seems that harvesting is just as early with you, as here.- Think 1 . -: wrota' you 4.tt little about our route from Zurich, except, the places westopped . at. At 'Baden —Baden a watering place onthe Rhine, we saw something of the peculiaritieS of the coun try. ' And that was well dressed ''la dies at the gambling table betting largely from morning to night and asilate at night as we stayed:= The gambling house 's otie of the finest. buil dings in the plac l e, fit ed up in_ good. style With a large*all-roo saloon, and is open at all hours. The prop ,etors - pay the , govern- Went a large sum yearly for the privilege of keeping the house or rather for the monopo ly of punfiling in the place. 1 It is open Sim days the same as any, iday: Xn fact there are no Sundays or rattler Sabbaths on the conti• neat and scarcely in England. :It is a , day devoted to pleasure and animsement. There are but few if any more pe4ple to be seen hi the churches on Sunday than any other' day. There are religiOns,Services in the churches every day . especially the Catholic. • State re ligions haven class set apart to attend to re ligious affairs, as thereis a class to govern, and the people seem to think as it is their bus _iness, let. them attend to it, for. they arc paid for it. The men seem to leave religion to the women and • children. In travelling any Where on the continent the first thing that attracts the attention of an American is the worst of courtesy and r4ect . towards ladies. No one Minks of offering his seat to a -lady or of moving in the least to give her room to pass, any more than so she was a Man. The condition of woman in America is far supe rior to her condition in any- other part, of the world, and she is treated there. with far great er defferenco and ; respect. You will see , every where here, but especially in Italy,ladia carrying their. carpetbags with shawls, 'per haps umbrella and one or two children to see to, elbowing-their way through the crowd, while their husband or - tbe gentlemen ac companying them, leisurely Ticks his way along where it' is most conv.eniont'; fur him, without offering to.relieve the woman of her. baggage or the care of 'the Children. And among the laboring • classes . the women are the merest drudges.: While there is much in the.conditiots of the'sromen of America that should be improved, herposition is infinite ly superior to that of hef sisters on this side of the Atlantic. 7 In intelligence our people. are far superior to , those of like condition 'on, this ride or tbsocesa, aid Ott enterprise.- thei 1 is no comparison. TheAnorn an America n if i sees of Europe unless wedded to antiquity or ;' i dazzled with theiglitter and map of royalty the more , strongly does 1,!0' Vie- attached i: "too the institution of his co u ntry. 'There is no spot that I have seen since leaving New York, , that .any consideration would induce sue to make rah permanent borne. - Theinstitutiobs • and character of the American people are, peginnig to be- understood: in :Europe. Our steamers make thequickest trips - across the. . ocean, our yachts leave- the .fastest of the En- -' -- ~..,. •. ' glis clubs out of sight in a lew- hours tail, our • .., .. l agrieulture and labor sai l ing Machinevi take the first premiums in the worlds . 414ition, and, one commerce - is little less than•tiust of ',. England, and rapidly. increasing. :tilt tlicay `,:-. things lead reflecting men tolinqUire bit aft • lof this has been aceomplished - in half ii 'centui , - ity, and what we shall be at the - rate e' 4 are' going in the next fifty; years.) It woimded - , • the national pride of these - olddynastil that we should accomplish, iiit,h. Japan. wha they - had failed in centuries in aecomplishink. No . Matter how little foreigners - may inistr - of our eetiiiiiry,there.isnot a spot upon iie face of the Earth now thiit the name of Wending. ton is unknown. 'llse 3epanees officials. in- -- formed, Consodorif - ilarry after the - Conchision . of the negotiations, that it bad been' their tie- sire that their first tr t naty oftornmercial inter- -, course with any nation should be with the . people of Washington. They knew his whole .. ',. history and were well infonned - iiboiit'aftnost - ;' every thing relating to /America. ':' And , thay . ':. was ' ' the secret of our success where other,nal . , dorm bad always failed. .This' has 'been a loitiweekfor Paris, and one' of not a ' little im 4rtance in thefuture history of Engla - nd 'f, '.. '-' an yranc,e. It is the firat time for almost ..' 50 'years that a reigning Sovereign of Eng-• land has visited France as ~st guest. ; The 4neen arrived here about .7 o'clock SatUrday, - • accompinied by Prince-Albert, the:Princess . _ Reyal her oldest daughter and the Prinee of Wales, heir apparent to the throne. Great preparations were made for their reception . and it 4 was a grand display. . The street from -- the R. - R. station to St. Clouds a distance of . 1 7 miles) was lined on each side with soldiers i in fulr ttiliforrn both boric and.on foot num- - 1 .boring about 80 or 100,000.- The wholedis„ -.' l , . _ • tance flags and other decorations - were tuspen- • ped along the streets, 'while the side l walks ; windows, doors,-and in some places the roofs. - of the houses were filled with--people, Pirjs . poured out its- inhabitants into the streets ~ b furnishino. to an Americas,Americas, a navel sight, for N. 0 , rt - was literally a sea ,of faces. I had a win. 1 dow fronting the depot so as to-see the cor- . ' tege start: There were six carriages four hor, - ses'each with two postillions andtwofootmen. • and two out riders. The cfueta,Prince Al ' bert, Princess Royal and ,the EMpe . ror rode. in one,,fullowed by the imperial guards, a ~ fine company of horse, and, after the d the rest of the carriages with the'guests. From. 'the carraige up the-strips of the, Deixit - and - through the Depot to the cars Was spread, a ~ flue, carpet for their t iloyal:' lir ighnemes fo walk on. It was one Of the grandest of the grand displays Of Paris, and we were just lin time to see it. - Next Saturday the F.rispeor , gists a grand ball to the Queen, to which we have an invitation. There are but 10 Amiir jeans invited. here to go in Court dress, iis a military coat with gold lace around collar and slefves, with guilt buttons, . black '.'or white pants with yellow lace down the sides' ; _ white vest . and cravat, sword and chapaul---' ' Have engaged my suit, and-I reckon if some of my bark peelers should see me with it on, they would wonder who it could be, tor I ' Hardly lculaw myself when I have it all on,-- ' But there is no admittance without " wed ding garment" and I am bound to go - for it, is the only royal ball'that I ever expect to' attend. . • A bachelor , must have . 4 , cold heart in deed,to decline an invitation to attend a ball graced , hy th/ present Queen of - England arid Empress cf France. If the Empress appears as well inthel ball roona-as, in private con versation, she will be the center ,of attraction. There can, be no more - facinating person 41 conversation, than Eugenia. I Lao bought' a lithoraph portrait of ter to take home, and , 1 only wish t bad her daugareotype, solyou see that I have fallen in love with French royalty.' There arc only 300 invitations to the ball. lam indebted to the voters of the 14th Cong'l district for mine, and it is a fa- Vor that I highly appreciate for it is one .of these things that occur but .once in a lite _ time. °We have beeri remarkably fortunate every where in our travels in those kind . of sights. - ' ' L Ihaveitaken'passage Gil. N. Y. in the ra cific from Liverpool the 22d of September and expect to reach home about the middle of October, spending a few days in - Connee!tiL cut on tny way. Ree'd to day the: Repub lican" directed by Cordova. I sins glad to get it for I know nothing of what is geing 00 . in the county except. what I get in- - letters' from home. - I' read the account of the Phil'a , Convention of Knout Nothinms..,- , and . was re joiced that there was at least one national. Convention, in which the North was ''‘lrepre sented. Have read the .1. .Y. - Opers ptetty regularly, vltenever I con 1 find them. Aus-• tria don't permit them to circulate 'Much in her dOminions, but every where else we loyal them at our Pankers. Expect to-remain here , till about the 10th of Sept. and then ,go to England to visit Scotland, Ireland, Whhis,so as to reach Liverpool the 22d. - 11arring,fm stays here with me,and Idr.Pringle Indlil ot-' gan will sail the lith of Sept. I find no tiMe to write letters except to keep you informed of my health and where abouts. .For,. :. sight seeing ' , alike work and the\ intervals . ate , needed for rest and with monot a little, for sleep. lam in good spirits and _my Health never was 'Setter. - Travelling ryas alway i s my great desire, and nothing is more' congenial to my nature, Some' s:' or - 0 of our ships pamengers over, art to return the 22d of Sept, My tour has been a very pleasant and benefi cial one, and 7 only wish I had about two o* three months more, that I could devate to it, But I tun pret y well satisfied for this. time. : 1 - . YOurs,G. A. pRoI sir Demoirets tali; care of the votes, aze4 *at they ge.noi4e,ole4;