U 124 :.Se -,-....9.04:00 ARE 1. Aims?tiecFrAnollig.sonlizai E. B: CRAM IliontTlivagutay, *Arai 4.18645. ar VAN. T and bo Lanatbcro, re aditiriissacincseopiciiv*to7dv.• "Gme to my 'grime m Spine aceero_,.,:"lieturning Sprit:li' tacks poeti c' $:41:44 and is ilecicd. -•• • • , or Ile Nom Bill ropealiortha L;quo#, LaW,pflast bao Owed tha 'Sonata aroondaci b a atripiot liceope 011, and now waits emu:moo in the Roam It will potbably bi oil:to:trod in *owl. • Correction. Tn noticing the laeotioi Beidgewebn township,.two weeks ago, we put down La than2 Gardner elected Supervisor. It , should have been inage of Eliotion; and Capt. ince SiprNhau.. We'made -the note_tron2 Rion oti; heti* the emir. • .. 4 ikar. - A leek has completely disappointed the_blaokilipublicans in its derel pments of the : totnierof -the North. Withinhat ;tithe they hive,seen the nomination or Ur. Filinore made by the Know Nothing% an l, through . ..-they•prOdicted that it would fall''atill ; hom i still'ithey are now convinced that they Ira.Cre ,wofully mistaken. The main body—at' least nine tenths of !bat once constitued the.' hig - ' 1 press, raise the name of Filraore with alacri; ty 'and 1. It is now that the'Republicans can_ eeis where they stauci,—,a weaW; feble, contemptable faction, utterly incapable of exercising the least power in the governMent beyond what they have already. acquired. They-have been laboring with all ti eir -to build :up Eno . * Nothingism, the' pa i st !two years,And now Know Nothingisrn: has I.got • the ascendency ever thentrotniaated its can didate- and' leaves them a helpless factidn. tinr 'or five mcnts ago we 'predicted the nomitition of Filniore era we were laughed A 'by the *postmen tare. We :said .bere touldibe three candidates fin the Presidency Ind we were met with ridicule. Republlean. ihen was going to eat up the Know Noth- ..;nrblit it seems noir to be the other *ay. it tequireano great political sagacity to rei now where the' contest will be in thel next • Presidential camas, . The ma in. body Of the tchiig press and party 'Support Mr . I Fill more. A f4tiencalling - themselvesthemselveslirepub ~ :.cina with &small faction of lianiocrats,; will gappoit a third man. What formerly con- Aituted the old Whig party will thus be di and the Democratic notninee, Inn er any ordinary circurestances, cannot fail, of an e;ection. In zio probable event 'can this be at all doubtful. Still lir. Fillnaore may be elected. Should the Democratic con4ntion nominate some obscure man, or re-nominate President Pierce, we should regard . Fillmore's elittilee se more than eveu. The Democrat ic nominee can have no advantage oer him n stalthern popularity', while at the - ninth a bad nomination by the Democratsr would give liituore, quite likely, both +5 Y:nrk and. Pennsylvania: At all events, the Icontett will beibetween ,the Deniocrate and Fillmore, llnchanan woLld beat' him a perfect !Wa-r -too. With .almost any one else ore should 1301-01 t this contest'as doubtful. Ii lof 11.0,KssaIS OTOS. Feb. 26 tY '56 . Dear. :---Your paper of - the 21st inst.,, i% just received. It is not my purr* at this -.coe to correct the mitatements:Of fact which it . (as well as i umbeon . praviou n rs) c s tains relative to my Congressional action ; tutto.notice •• the - inference/ . based thereon impeaching my' motives and' politi4al integ rity. have no cow plaint to matzo - in any t tase. of *disapproval of any act Of mine, 'L priblic or private, If it rests fupen a, correct knowledge or _statement of tie sets -them selves. But Ido protest against the jujus - tine of,• perversion of facts; i under the garb -PrfriendAirt, in order to .jassociate names miele -odious in the public, mind , and then „ . , ~ , uponthem attempt to excite . tbe prejudices of men. Fot'the present, however, i I content myself with at:awing the ‘, frienOe who 'book me from the quiet avocations Of bumble lif mad- platted te in an . exaled • station" thilt my "'voice ind active exertions" are still to be devoted o the earnest 'defence and sup.. . , port of theltrinciPles of any; ")'euth and manhood." But if they expect me in this Catiress to endorse by any set of mine, the repeal of the Missouri. ComproMise, which opened to the introduction of Slaivery a terri ,. :ory lawr than the origival i thirteen colonies . :Ind-entailed DIM the co ntry al bitter sec di,t:Mal controversy, and upon Kansas a civil wai; or to rote foi - any one representing :bit question itsa distinctive; measure, they made a great mistake in electing a matt who had, but a few months Wore/ With all the en: • 4::rgy of an earnest purpose and sincere comic :ion,-re slated that repeal 10 a breath of good faith between the two see:ions of the 'Union, as '4,:rverterning the settled pClicY of the gov ' ernment,and as violating the Spirit , and go nites of ihe institutions of tbi. I,epablic. At APitl Court, -should it be ixissible for me to Jame here at.that, time, I Wil examine the !sucnaarsent: stone" lbt iot a propose "to rear 1:f the :aide of poli cal pathway" c and decipher 'its iyiscriptioi t such of my -tteinstiments is may desire to - ituess the rez ' - .audiatiort. 'Hoping that n the ,meantime they will bsa: in mind ,lurti - " one side of story is always good until the other is `loike you I trust the !day, it not tar distant I tittiSr . the people will break the shackles of ileeludOe---WperetheyFvill' for themselves 1 _ in whai manner desigiling:m4n are i m po s ing 19013.lbelpi is tie mear i ktine 1 atetoaterit - *leek. litiffenuy the nee t. I - 1., ~, _,- , 'Veil *espeetfhlly YOUTfi; '. " -'. .• ' G ietiss. A. Gaow. -, TA B. Ciimkitsq., lif ,- cn/ tem. , • ,‘ . -'''- ' illarifif.l ',. ' k ..__ . , Ihnimazi limb . 1 4 ,It.e. _iiiitliii.tibir r i:' ,' . - .. "itheir Sir : ' I esteefie itiet - '. *WI . lot yearsof.the24 , lll,:rit.,'44o tgi ihijrablie .*itisiatiastauTit.: 1 , ; ---_ i NOM,* 4sinrs beiwr I osa . Ottastit-this , ;yep hay, never had *?ore constant and de votitd friend, pc litioillx and personally, than I hemline. This - ,bole community knoirs thin,- 4merybody wholhas`read the Deatacn2t since i have twee coneoted lift!' fh knows th tl. is; Why then do s;ou insihnita tkutt'.l as au " tie garb.of frt i endship,7 u t i c ter Whi c h to. keh "i,perveraion bf Arai 17 - . Barron. I have pointed out what seemed to tne as •eivors in your e r, ourt6 as a Reprer.entiiiive, but I have done it in no.l unkind Oirit.. I •have attributed to yoc n bad 'motives, bat have . thoeght_that foe erred iljudgment. -. I dup.. pose you are but Saab and blood, and there. Fore liable to err as 'iv all are. And I sup- posse that-it is elso duty u s public jour nalist., to note the notion of the 'peoples ser. yenta and, inform thns thereof. If the press haa nactlsis !idea% izu'Oss what Pecuti• ty trre pep' plo hare . Sgainst the misszonductiof their rdete.l I baraeltffered w ith you in opinion as to the canine you should have 'pursued in the organization of the present' Congress, but 1 IMII suppose we may di@eria opinion on a polit ical question .withont a personal quarrel:— Other men differ ot9l;olities and _yet lain the closest reional relations of Mend- ship. lam tot 'a*are that . I . cherish arty feelings towards You, personally, differing , from those I hai , e e4r cherished, and if you 'cor your friends, as some of them have,choose to assail me with Coarse brutality, they will have he field td themselves.' I shall not. .retort. , I may pit` their folly and, Weakness, but shall not regft, the loss' of a friendship which they thus show was founded only on considerations ofolitical 'advantage which they supposed their ,might reap by professing to be my friends. ' • • ' I may appeal th this whole peeps to bear ;no witness, that in what I have written, not on° word or line Can be found showing the least personal bitterness, or containing one ungentlemanly epithet. Nor will I be swerved , from this position... Nothing Shall provoke to into a personal difficulty, or _quarrel in any manner, fur 1. mean when you Shall re t corer your better 1 4 ensei, and - throw off the Strange political hallucination which- now seems to have taken the most complete' cone trol\f your itulgment,--,* and when, too, you shall see, as ycu twill within' the next eight teen months , to 'what a depthof political a basement the 4+l and ever constant foes of the Democracy and of yourself have brought you, by using your inigence now to weaken that party and prostrate its principlw.„---Issy when you shall see this as your real friends now see it, I mean you shall look back-upon this difference of opinion and be forced to acknowledge, least to yourself, that yoUr best friends were those who pointed= out yotir etrors. LlV,lten you wire sheltered by the panoply of tllemocraey of this county, their opl6- nents;thtlighsthey often directed their moat. , powerful effc atilt° accomplish your ponoCal prostration, cflald- never reach a hair of your Ittad— Those men, and the press that used to team with vituperation and bitterness tow ards you; are now the sole defenders of your course in this Congress Do you susliose they -love you any better than they did two or thpee years ago, when.they .were abusing and regretting their inability to defeat you I No, sir, they tiveyou . no better than they did then, for they hare not changed in In y - thing sari .thl .' if name. Then they %rem W --- higs„now, in the dens and Cares of the earth" they are Know ; Nothipiek and, as a fraud to catch' Votes in publiC, they are Re publicans; This name of Repablican is an A ' r I pi \ Th ey ' old cloak for t ese gent.e en. ey ;used to call thentsJlvesFederalito, till they shade that name so - Odioua under John Adams, by their. Alien anis. Sedition Laws—pure Know Nothing measpres—that they could no i Ion• ger deCeire the people and obtain power.— Then you .ail i recollect they chritged 'their names to - Repblican. rihr few years it was t found by the -people to be the " same cid coon," and 'they changed, to Whigs. -; This , they kept ti 1111852, when they found them selves again Tecognized, and back they. go to Republican. But all the while it is "the same old Ctien." Thereare not twenty of the old Whigs of, this county, who are ;not now in thiS Republican party. ft - has the same press, the same leaders, and the same voters that 1..- of Whig party had, and they are Operatjut for the same purpose that they operat t d t ~old Whig organization.— It is true that they also, by the fraud of changing nunies, and by the aid of the K. N. Lodges, Itae drawn in some Democrats, but so far as I Can observe, those Democrats are leaving them now, very last. They, have got their. eyes open And begin to see the i cheat that has been 4) upon -- raCticed them. A., Now, friend Grow,-ycin cannot pretend that you have not acted, 4nring the wit Ai of this Congress, with this 1/411 iLlan party. You voted-all their nomitre ' the organization of the lltntte,even to ' side vote for 'Cellein, ai3 old.. southern, • - Whig, Know Nothing, Slave hold r , and yet you complain because the Dent rats, alto elected you, in direct opposition to the principles of this W'big, Know Nothiug; Republican, Federalist party, remind von that you are-not dela; as - : they' expected you , Would. I tell yon ; Mr, Grow, m if the _"Den had supposed you would act.with_their opponents 'after , election,—if they bad supposed' that you woud 'stand by and side rotesfor a pro-sl avery Whig Know Nothing, agairust. even 4 pro-slavery Detnocra4 you well'knoW, or ought to know, that you'iould not now occupy a seat in Cengress.l You _never would have received the.nomination of the DereocritirC party, and without that you could ' not bate. been elect ed, for themen in the opposition, now R 4 loud iti your pr aise and defeuseoben would hare* gloried in your prostration. , And , they love Pa a° -*tar, now. They . irfril Praise . and pet and lawn, jesst, as they hive with Oa* otheee t uriams fate should lie your, warning but they ; lio it ialy :beams tboy hops to 1 wit a Algootiott it AU? Pagnoetstio . 'Patti, by which 44.147:4 0 40P,P00i lad t Cargr !pot their eid sail aliSassabilimi-4id 'ri' gl7 Ism audio* till their raises is air atnplished,then,you - n4ll lod.'yOatsett where "rely Misr' mai *tie Ail '• Salle* bete AO snare s tens found:hmatitlf,, deserted I,y his old friends and dis Carded by Wm new ones. These men dare the belt in the world Who would give yon political prominence further thin their own purposes may force them to. As soon es they have, through . your influence with the Democrats,sequired strength enough to airy elections, and mako a permanent dominant party, by which they ca be eleva ted,to power and place, the* they wilt drop ran as kuseless jaeninberaude, and perhaps . . as a dangerotts This, yon know, htis been their bistoryotthtt it is strange-Abet, so often ma you haxe exposed all these things to the people of this county, in therAnt.st,—with u many *taupe* of the kind Wore you pa yoil bare bad in tbii county during your N. liticai career, ;-»I BAY it is pass ing- strange -to your real friends that you should now enter upon the sane road, trusting yourself to the same, piratical Well dO . II remember a *nark 'puce heard yOl2, make . on the stump, in referencei•to a bun, who, inteilec- Litany, was much superior to whit you or I can ever hope/to be, wha . *as thou in. union with the Whigs of this county endeavoring to prostrate the Democratic party. - You.re , member that :in those days you! used to-be very severe on - those Demficiata who were so unprincipled as to leave their party and go Over to the Whigfr—now called Republicans. The remark Was this, " lle..willtind that it is Much easier Ito kick himself out of; the Dem ocratic-party, than to kick the Democratic party over l 7 The point and force of the remark made •a deep impression upon my mind, though I was then very young, and I fear that unless you •alter your course soon, you will realize, the truth of the semi- ment experimentaly. The man to whom yoi applied the remark realized it. For though possessed of eminent ability, great;industry in politics; , and most undoubted earage, he was onbralde to hazard the su'eeeia :of th e party fur a year or two, , as you !nay do, and then found hinrelf without Politioal standing anywhere.: Your friend* would gladly save you from-Such handliation, tali how blia)l they do it , svb.en you. persist in : giving aid. and comfort to their ell'entieN I But, friend Grow, of one • thing in, your letter I have a right to complafn.... You 'say that I haie mss-stated : factS relative to your Congressional Action, that -is,' that I have statesliali.elloods„—that you have , not done what I have alleged. 1; should have bt'ren obliged, And I think that courtesy demanded `frOrci•you, inasmuCh as you Wroteyour letter foi the PUblic, - that you should have pointed out My false stateMents. The - wholesale eltarges,,of mis4serments are very - e asily made, and someti m es serve A good purpose In pro teetion„ But in this*. case ao 'material' inia 7 !statements can have been .made, ,I for I hae taken four yotes from . the Congressional, Globe, the official organ of Pongress: .t have . ,stdieti that you 'first . v 9 ted .for . l.siieorts for Shenker; : A free-soil, Anti. Kuovi . 'Nothing . Democrat; that you afterwards changed and went - vi Banks a Know Nothing Itepubliean. I have stated also that you - voted on the side volmJftir Cullum of Tennessee, Who was a Whig all nis life, and elected to GOngress ris such, who two 'years , ago ran for Coitgre-As on the Know Nothing ticket and was defeated. That he is a pro-slavery Know Nothing. ar d was supported as such by the Southern Know NOthings for Glerk, and that he 'is . a -slave holder, holding ; not one sentiment in common with-,oorthern 'free toilers on the Slavery question. Yon voted against tailing the re , -, dation `by which he, was elected, thus aiding to bring the resolution before the. House. and then, a „few moments after, in the rote direct, you dOdged,—did not vote at stll. And these Statements are t trae,'else the - jrecords - of Congress are false. flow, was it Mr. Grow, that in your hatred for old Whig : -princi pick and for - Know :Nothing principhO, sad for pro slavery principles, ..you could, help Mr: Cullum, who embodied the whole of these - doctrines, to, get'. his Resolution i=before the Ilouse; but could not' font time to vote, against him I 'live, at least, was one in stance where you might have voted with the, 'DernoCrats and voted 4g4inst Whigisru, pro-i slaveryistn, and Know Nothingisat, and yet like l'aul.at the death of Stephen, you stood by consenting to them all 1 It seems that you here-were acting against the DerciocmtsWhen by acting wi th, them votsta -- ight have aided iii defeating men who profeirs the very principles you abhor. These are the statementsl 'have- made r:4 - your Con gressional action, and jf they are false, then the official records of Congress -are false for • I no* have thein befirre me.. Ypu may saythat Cullum: voted eget . * the 'sebraska Bill. So he did, but as his] speeeh shows. fur no such reason as You VOW against it. lie voted against it, ana, so de -, claMd, because he' thought the',-, principle of sqUatter-soiereignty less secure for. the .slave luterest than yougressional protection. And that Lei f:flown to be sound. for • the South is evident enough, for all, or nearly all, of the Southern : Know; - Not Iti suAsiined and voted flit;` him. it doei,seern to me thatlf you had lunch of Democracy left, you Might very Well hate shown itf by voting against this man fur Clerk-Of the House, instead Of in:effect. co- thig for him. And, it is fOr such men, pro losing sach priticiples,-, 7 4n old broken down Whig, Ennajlinthilig, proS;avery, twelfth, sectienut y 913 3re going: to ask an :en 7 deirserneut from yourDernocraiie constituents next oourt,l 0, my friend; Grow, do not attempt the - perilous task ofjustifying this . pariof Font,. congressioas I action'."— ,not,Zl„' beg of You, attempt4o male :dent- I eirersits believe Cullum , a mati . .that any dem otMt, or free ~soiler, of the least claim to prin's ctpte, should cot % , oto . ngainsti The best , way you eau get along with: this,is toown up:that 'betted of do 4 iatyoirrhould have stood 'tip :with: manliness and . cour4e and voted L ageitist . ItWeverf-tiona - - You will not even pretend that! be eau be trust*d . by the free Whilben, being .-an etoert 01*,14q, down lylll4l Noth iloo ll ioPisicetini-4 6 .140 you then • .It-104iibspoiiallilso-not .. a free . 14410, - bit, *4* whom ;Pm *am eup possd to are . - a k a otbeft.poiitioal pointy. Bow is fit cb+tt roktimsti:loonitted sit !it ihtitiedi ..of a pro-slavery Democrat beinfelecipl to pp aition in the general government, yet hare' not a word pf' remonstrance, but on the con- trary, can aid a rmalavet7 Know! Nothing to gain ono of the most important! pu:Ations in Congress You say your constituents had no right to, expect you •to endorse the repeat :ix the Mis r riConipromise.‘ Well,.nobodyi has u•dted you to du iL. When .you found that the old enemies of the Demoeruey Were 4etermini:hi to force free soil Detnocrata into 'voting fur Know-Nothinp, in order to vote free soil, elected as you were, you should, in my judg mutt have said to them, "gentlemen, this:l shill `neier do. lam a true oiler, 1 ‘1:141 elected as suck, but my constituents think. quite as much of freedota.fur tt tjta white tuu as the negro, quite as tnu eh of the grest twin- ciplei of civil and religinos freedom for tweatyfour millions Of American citizens, as for three milliou slaves. If you desire to turn the repeal of the Itlist t oini Complomise to mere'party advantage, it shows bow tittle you cure for freedom.. I "cauuot trubt you and shill not go with jt. You can - not loran the to swallow youi odious dogma's by - plastering them over' with free soil. It is a inere.cheat with whiCh 4 will have nothing to -then yen shoPhl have selectod some respectable a n ti-K . o w-I4Noth leg, anti-Nebr.:is-. Ica Denkrerat, and . voted fur him from first to last," solitary and altine;" if need. thehends'et thot.e whf) flersisted in mixing - the free soil r.entiinent with other and ohnox ious questions, fur m4e personal and party advantage, would h4ve rested the respUnsi bility of titilure to otaniztt , the notice by the etectiokof it free soil man aml not on you And itoui eunstituoits would have sustained . - . • i you triumphantly in the nosition.,Yun.:4RAl 1 . • . w remembertLat nu rung was ever righted by committing onejereater. Su you will nut 4-Tvr be apt to'domunh to !me the county by juin- ing with party that cannot point to a sin gly principle in din policy oldie:government that they have no( in its -day opposed. A .pooi guarantee in.ieed i this party give ! , you that it will ever aquotn oliA ittlVtliittg of hen- • cfit to the country' ! of to freedom.. You Imo lep t npinse:heing 11,:socittted with "nameA in:tile ll oltrioits in the public Initol." 'the tuitne,othat4 4413N:tied sou with were Giddings, Greeleyiguid Jewtti Je,sup and bia frien& in this ',Jowl will undold).tedly be . flattered withke>pitn . idiment—win be Ott- ified to know an •' ndiout" u Again Sot. present. I content myself with as: nd• who t o „k me from the quiet hulithle life :dot placed me in poAtion, that my voice and aeti \ _!ie ' atill ti.t be de voted to"the eartiest. defence And support, of . , the'prineiple: of ? 14 youth _and - manhood." If you mean thi"si in its kerat troth—that is, 1 that your active exertions henceforth as in the pat are to t,r; g iven to .the Democratic I , ~. I • ,--,• .- , - -, , party, you win ttuttlethe :smarts i)r. your oi4 friends glad—t4yWould try )hard . to, shit their eves to the igeord of the past iiiiths. But you denot tuean it so. Your old) cue niies- who have leery, sterldt;nly beeinne your friends too, if they s:hOuld believe 'that-x(76 meal this, that 'you had determined *.o , tllO- • portthemeirsuies and• men of the deinorrat ie party , rightiOg party wrongs in the party, not out ofiP 7 -1; say lf this b your , honest meaning, and they.: he made to believe it, your new tlietkis , would atm-e you worse than ever it': two weeks. lint- you do tint Mean any suchirthing', You intend to sup port- the candidate of this Know•Nothin:r. Republican, Ft ion party, whoever lie may be, against thAi l ipeerless statesman and 411- . Awerving Demi:knit, so justly the pride of your own StatO and the glorj of the . whole nation among the great powers olthe..ealth--- I mean 11010 s PudllkNA! , 4 Yes, friend Gnaw 1 1 / 4 a. aainst even lam, it is known; and:you (10 cr not deny. it,yon intend to stomp thi4 Di.s, trict for.S'orne rtilserable, mischievous, section al agitator, , a tnere disturber of public tran r. .(pitlitv,wito,e inisled rtiirld fattens and - feeds on sectional stfife,' discords, and hates'. A 1 tnan like this pie opposition will have in the I field, and youi will support him against the Democracy, it deed you could not do other wise now, si•ifil yeUr recent . curnmittals, if . eon would. tint you intend to support him, `and have donh for the last year.. You know this to be so and you kno.r . , that. I know - it. -What is the Use then in your intimating that you shall' stwp in the future - where yiiu have vil.wava:stook to wit, with the . Democratic' party? I cats see but one ohject you can have, and that is this . , to still maintain some standing in Ole Denaneratie party, so, that When the final break shall come next fall you can take a 14rge proportion of the De"motats with . you to the tamp, of.- the enemy. You will fail in this: . There are not twenty Demo : . . . . crats in this leounty- , that will go with you that would not go at any rate'. The Wino emts have fiitind out' the character of:this op-, position, and, they are not to be got into their . ranks on any eintsideration. - - Finally, (fiend Grow, have you ever set 1 down sehedy and. Censiared where this fn. siva of Whigiery, and Know-Nothingism i will lead yOu l , Let us:look 'at the subject a moment ea mly. . You callilin expect, sup-' posing ~ thi 'Kansas difficulty: -to kept, I _open, foi :he next ten Years; that 6J-oi:tiled States Senitte can be so revolutionized - as that it wouid restore the Missouri Comae , 1 t , • .. tilibe line. IWe 211-Inow that it will take at least ithat iiine, -with. continued success, to change tit* li'edy to a free soil majority.i-- . - By that time we shall not have a single fOo' t of territory on this continent that will not be admitted as Suites. Within : the next. , tWo years Kadtas wilt be admitted,, and thus the whole dia.-...111ty • will . settle itself. 1 sav the - , ! tacit two years, because it - will probably- nut be done 60 the next C?ttgrOss shall tweet Whinli wilt have a dint:fuer:4oe majority.. This Conran tl.f KnoW-Nothing:Republieats Will not admitiliansiti-u a free State, for. : that weal(' '4lt+ny. all grounds for agitation and dinitrhanne, ithing . that they .de net want . 4004yed.i . They Want it for a hobby to ex- Ai the *plitsritb il'-'...onier, that. they may litikept it(Willine. .Itiit . the ',nest .:Congtwee . - will admit K ansas ; , and then whoa - will he P*. Plbhcatt ?arty t it ‘Ol "W 43 like . • norning dew. The country setvin .dOWn into int Wontncl'Tepose,,the Democratin party dill be everywhere victorious, andj where then will be . those Denv!?cratii who, like you,. have been deluded - onm their party into this party of a day t I will tell you where they will •be. They- will be stink so low, -PolitiCal ly, that, no resumed:on will ever teach them I Till after the Presidential election tibia organ ization may be kept up ; but, in - the b nature p of thing canaot;be-lottger. .-Kansas diffi culties form the only • bond of onion in the 'shape : of principle that the - Reprblinan party has. Of court then it falls when thOse diffi ttnitiet Anil lie setiled, auct they are settling iitem .„ elves very- fast..- , • • 4. - Until lR received your letter of the 25th, I: had intended topsay no more rtheut your " Congressional action." That has ,forced me to write this. If you are coming here April Court to justify-your votwtylin wil(undonbt etily have...an audit:nee:- &Ow ofi!'yeur old friends. will be there as listeners, and crowds of your old enemies of " odionS' names" there to' shout and cheer, because they will have additional aid in their Crusade agitinst.those whom you. were once-proud to to call-.your-friends, and who Mood. around y o u.like a wall of: tire when those . who will f;;llt.)itt and cheer were attempting to prostrate your personal us well as politic4.charaeter. And as your friends they. will r.oottinecomplish what they could notllS your enemies. If any sacriiie I could make would .save,yon from tit Should most - cheerfully be *den TsUly'your friend, .E. I:3.4CuAse. Editor of Montrose; Democrat,--9 • Wilryou an old suppor ter of your paper and of the'Deiiionrotie par -- iv room. to express o few thoughts to t he De l moeraq of this equnty„ In doing' so I shall find it neeesrry to be somewhat inquisa• ive, First, what was.the condition of the Demo cratie, party in the fall of 18'541 This ques tion can, be answered without a, multiplicity 'of worth. The party, fonud themselves in this .cotitity hurled from their proud and long -ustained position of ascendency, down to a miserable minority. Why was this sol why was the Democrat ic, party in this county driven frnin 1000 ma jority down to 800 minority 1 Many reasons have been given fur this great change. Some say. Wilmot sold out the party to secure his election to the U. S. Senate. Odters . Say it was because the DetnoCratic party as an'or winized body strengthened the pro-slavery. 'party of time country in the great contest be - tweett slavery atul freedom. I am one who,betievi...s in Alto two lastrrea sons given t;t• this great, -this' .unheard of re versal Of eublie action. What other causes co: rbteed to produce the result. . Ido not knew but tho-e two catisro. of themselves were in my: mind stifficient,to do it.' i After the de , ' feat of the party the activefriends of the' par ty here set thetn-elves at. the wOrk 'of aseer= mining the cause . of their. : defeat, they did' not believe die party was in faVor of the Ne braska and KILISAS Bill.. They - did not be lieve the party held to pro-slaverydoctrines and they.teNoived to test this Matter the first \ opportunity. In august, 1855, one of theH large;it conven• ions ever held assentbled at Montrose. There war life and activity in every individual Of Abet large and int e lligent:assemblage of the Demo - cEacy.-- Every . Delegate and every Dentoefat .was' free in expressing his, sentiments. No _ten' men could be fetind who did not htirn with indig-i nation at The thought. of being charged with adherence to those repugnant pro-slavery doe,- trines. The Convention organized and Fro-: creded to business. The first thing brought before the convention was the appoiutment" i,fa cotinnitfee to draft Re , olutions, express-, ive of the pollt*cal doctrines' held by the De 7 ' mocracy of Sosq'a county. It vas alleged that our political enemies . had deceived the people by false charges upon- u 3 as a„party, accusing us of being a pro-Mayer) , party,-. that we endorsed the Nebraska we justified 'Pierce and his; 'Cabinet in their participation in - this. iniquity. The Coturni , tee was appointed.and retired , . in due time, Alley reported a set of Resolutions empliatic-; ally denying that the party approved of those doctrinei imputed to them 'hy . •:.their ettemie. , l• in short the Viesolutions were strong free son, • . they were presented to the . ' Convention, an s passed by universal:consent as the:Platform of the party in this county. Upon this plaiforni a set Of candidates were presented to the people for election, and' what was the result I 'They were beaten hy .. suialt majorities; it is true, say from 11; to 200. But the friends regarded' this a great triumph.. It proved - .conclusively that:the free - soil platform . was highly ':'satisfactory! to the people. One yegr before we were beaten, au avarage majority against its of 900. j If the democratic party, reaffirm their adher ance to the doctrines they have enllorseti in those resolutions ,and act up to the senti Meat as well as profess it, iu one Short year,hey' i will gain the trtumphant aseendetrey again . l in this eountY. But if they 'falter or attempt to ignore the - question, their doom. is sealed. The idea of ceasing . agitation, Cr in Other words ceasing, to a - dvocate . the - cause of - free+ dem against the storm and siirges.of the Slav,i. power at this titne is suicide it is like laving dOwn your arms while you lire engaged 4. close and deadly combat with an enemy fa/In' ; ed with all the weapons of : warfareTitit contest between Slavery 'and freedom,.; out of the reaiili of pacific' operations. .(1 '.4oact mean that war i* inevitable.) But: t'reiloU As and-slavery havegrapPled, and one Malt fait and the Other triumph: - 3iat for - the neat President, he_tianniit ititip this • • :f. contest. It 10a war of principle , - agamstra great and dangerous evil.- a -guesiton 'that takes hoi4 .of-the ; very te,pul of the citriat- ;_he will not easSe to. condemn it though.! all the futictiousties is the' world forhaliiiii. • , Its a question that i st i rs„ the heart :et.tiery .; mother t ia the free state" (that fit Ai? he Call ed ,u;Other) ...She, pray, ens agaituit the slavery 'end -digriOatioa of her own' sex, thOugh.yOu shut her.lo:.ttliin--: est agailig' sueh Commuications. Co. Feb. 48; 1856. geon. The 'Pre:titlent - via say the,' ebbing . • anti flowing : of the tide just a. ea sy as b ecalm pr e vent the Well:lugs of the. Anti-slavery sen timenta nf the people °film . free Statim. One thing and one only' can - stop, the-strife..--tlet the south catati,their efforts to extend the in-, jell of Slavery hoycind its - present.limits,- then, the Strife will cease, then. the Country will have repose - , and not till them tt!iderstand front .reading . the Montrose Demperat that t. intend:i to Ceas e advocatin g the catiSeof the-frie sett sentiment.. -That it_ goes in for 'Butihanan as - a conservative inan and is confident 1 0. his eleCtion &c. Novi friend Qhase have you evei thought of the try- , ing situation anch . a positida of 'Demo cratiC party will place, all Democrats Who are - free Sailers . in; yOu ',e4tect., thtfipte of any honest free7Soil man ior a conservative ~candidatet there is no - such thing, As finding a Conservative pelititiOn-' tit this . • time in. the -..ctinfittrV,-;--he that not for is against us. ' , -EVery. statesman in the Union is either fortheNorth or the Stitatit in this con test-now - going on The cry Nerth; no South, no EaSt, no West;{' is . Cotatettiptahle . hypeeracy, and Made - to deceive,: . come from whom It Ml 4 If the deinettratie party are going to take conservative grounds in Allis' count v. andShaek tlieinselves-off the-platform theYidattedtlhcinselve.s en In - .1847 and r"af-: firmed it',in ilB3B and -141ged . their truth - thatltheir sentiments weie.'honestly put forth in their gesOlutions, 1-say . y this is what the y . are going t4clo they vrip try a. dangerous experiment; One that they; will ritpent of in sack. cloth and ashes., I have written 'ahnve in,,no factions -spirit, have made no pr dit.tions hitt what thelpast hi4o ry • fully jitetifies. - 1 desire' this NyithOtit. t‘bridging, it, I I ext:ept, of course, correcti on of grain:Weal of other eriorot, which I'llope you will do. . . IlesPectfully, . . • B. G. To the iPoblie. H A report having been ; circulated in, this cummuntt.3. 4 . as coming from..me, highly pre judicial to the eh sracter - ejf JOlin F. Dunmore; coil doing Ihim great injustice,. to the etreet that he was ften takingHf wood from a pile drawni to him by Jug 1 ,I §lterer, and. which • had net been measured rind paid for, for the parpos cif deftatuling 'Sherer, I feel bound; ini jasice to • Mr. Dunmore, to de Clare that there is no foundation fur such a report ; and furthermore that I have never intentionally or. knowittly asserted that- . it Was true; but• believe the charge to have *holly originated from it he mistake or ma! ice or &tier -persons. CLESIONS. Moutrcise, March 541400. • ' . - . • vap • • . 1 1 F ftr.the Deinocrat. f . iiAßFoup, "wen $l, loop. Messrs For the I purpi•Ae of cjrrecting the mi-state-. • Went:4 oir a communi , cat; o in in toe Republ icon wtek, relative to our township election, I send yOu the following facts. For Jildge of electiOns, Truman Tingley, re ,, trai Dentocratie nominee was elected over Stephen S weet ,K. N. ; For A , 4sessor, John,.l-Leslie, regular demo trat; and adopted cit4eni was elected over 11)..P. Tiffany, K. N. . . . constable i E - ... 7 . Green an independant an ti K. T Whfg, .n-Oinin!aieil and .run - br the. Dethoerati, was elected over J:D.ltichardson ilotninsied.by the K. N. • . Superci: , or, Sherlie,:t? Carpenter t an indepon , darit anti K. N. Whig, nominated by the Denibcrats had 68 v4e,i, and Tyler Brewster, the itepublicani candidate bad 26 votes. J. Harding, xK. Whig, ran as received 89 votes on account ofhli . localitY . • - • . - Auditor, Simeon Tucker, regular : Democrat was elected over • \Vilmarth, K. N. :Zera Very - and S. Fillet, both, Demo-- crats,_Were eleCied $...di00l Directors over P.. and Gr r Everett,' . Whig .- The Directors were run en the question of a . high or luvk tat for building school houses. - ToWn L. Tiffany was elected o'er 'Monto - Abel, n iralell)endant anti K.N. Whig, run by the‘Dotnoerats:. Tteasurer, .Dexter Sibly, K. N., was, dee .l • ted z#er P. Carpenter; an independant anti K. Whig, rue by the Donut' rats. - This,cousideringi how Harford• has gone in the. iksz, we call si I)ernucrati&iictory. ,The Repeibleean sayithfat the oppasitiOn-inade no etfori. on the day of election,. Now h • • is known here thatithey met 14 t their Lodge in, buci. A. M. I . :itran i y's building ten days be: ; fore election and fOrmod their ticket. Thee tnet !there dogs a 4 all. and proceeded tuba- idueS.s by electing iOI':XTER, • OBLY'S - DOG; ,ESQ„ door-keep 4.: luis worthy officer wal.• di4c r .r•mied at 1614 . . poS( •early, and remain- Oteir ' faithfully , supposed with • itheir new adds, te.dogS, ~the K. N., Would leurry ther ticket tatunpisantly. But we gave them g Od s ha tie and yuuliave the re- W. • .. lisnistes Maiciansa.—We have received I. fro l li W. P ATTO ', llobokett,lsl. J., the March number of this well conducted periodical,. which, after al c,areful perusai, we pronoun Ce. 1 • Beeond to none on our list. It will bet,seen by Mr. pATrO.OB wivektisemint, in our paper, that he being an extensive 7 lfook dealer; will furnish persons of various tastes, with books to suit, on as reasonable terms as could be - , e4pecied. The. Pii4sidesit's,fteception. A distitigt4hed la.ly writing from Wash . tOgfon fur teed New York Tribune; gives a (;11.eription Otione..Of h u reeeetions of . l + 're intent Piert.e fruin which we tuake the fultow ing. ext rant . j . 'Pe- Nest ef hats, through: the an te chamber a!l:litiing dining room, into the Tinting-room ttself—ier the tamtatnt a retreat for shawls-aunt overphoos. Plawing the hail wit ett.eifil the reeelAien-rtiont. where Nmall man izing 'us, we Were presented Ai) President fierce. This was ray lint look At fa gentlemen. whosie name tilts so large a space : pia the politieal vacillations (4 .the dap— Now 1 inn Woall4ol sad or coarse liaow eery little abgat itadi ml 7 add, that,.is getting to be eo km A, parant‘ that titre 00 1 tiiriritail,,yto may take my op !deism for ,whtit • it_ le worth. In General 'Fist 44l ""1N0 400 ..b1Y 440 4Idtita. TUr lt a gentleman, and unless I misread - appeanni ces, lettgerhearte4; generous man. Now 1 um well aware this will create .quite an up: roar in our little houseluild'; and father Who would not let poor James,complete his insi gne portrait gallery of the Presidents ,by brinciug that of General Pierce into'the home and threw out diverse and sundry hint* the made, ux think forlthe moment he would„ for get his staid habits and punch Some - thin or somebody, will, Chuve no doubt, disown me. Well, V alAde by, my assertion, and whirr 'history comes to clear away the - rubbish of daily papers and windy speeches, this hump back tyrant who _murdered those babes she woods, KBn4as and ,Nebrwsks, will he found a fair-proportioned gentleman. I. say so, and retying upon my woman's instinct; egardless of cuntradiction,thatth:enerni Piero is a kind imarted, generous . impuisivairatihor man.. N'otliing could ort i a ' sal -the easa;sted dignity _with' which he . .roceival Ontylomit, crowd. • I ' . Another gentleman idezed ns—not a sista one this time4and presented us to Mll4 Pierce. She, too, hada auliittfUr us, but it was so mixed with weariness and sorrow that I turned away painedv, Power had come 1111- most unsought to those inmateeof the %ai d, ntisi ursasionl i i but 'affliction Cam. - And to them' thew; haila are . dos:44.A* dreary,, and by 'their *Moan the while., Wal4. a shadow. whichsays, VanitY., irtnities....: . ail is vanity. tihrietelter: its Wribluirtaiti. • A Washington letter writer ...tells Abs.:lel lowincr, in 'speitkin,crof the presencti'of Rbilos ophitai reeley tit the Federal A trio of lriSh xervantswerebusily,taliting politiesin the eorner of. the .readitivroots, (Irish servant, axe,. great : p«Jitieiao . het ,when one of thew suddenly exehtlnied'it„- ." lie j:ibers;;hoys, and there% '..Ottld i. 411910 0. lev l" • •" Where r esciairnod his'aom~isniocs with muuh inter e st, in . their cooks as they tiould, naturally exhibit-on being. told tbsi:SCPittel rink or Bit•Lhtli:4llls4lls befoTethetuili. Standin' hp the .tahle-„talkitel7mi4 'the-tall letnan." • The llibertiiarts gazed cnonsly,..erej tent l} at Horamifor an -instant,. }youngest of them,. apparently a late ta3mta4 tiott, with wonder in his voice, ob ed,t ..-! " Sure an' ha's a white inen!!* ! coorzi,be's a white maa,".:said, ibe .srit..aker,in a patroninzittg - tone,se . oogh ;tnd t,te were the greatest of"ettatei, Well, 14:.tilv su,vl, I've been - delayed in.. the ouhl fellow, entirely,'" continued .the'oth' ! . - er, "I Thought he Wasa nager." . A 'Sit ARP,I DODO E*--`' Sheepface," in the farce. Vil!aze Lawyer,. hs found, " match. The man,- Eyler; who tnurder.ed lie • will, some tinny since, near Syptense,,.*: Yf,, ---- ----- i 7 , playing•a;sharn game, upen . „the ,counsail who defended .. biin. • .It appears • agreement hetween them - was..m . ciae - was• Saved, froth hanging, his .counsel, *ere 6+1314000: Of this'aniount 'lOOO 'was paid in cash,. and the remainder "secured blr . a . ." mortgag'e en his fans. .The counsel isnktrs.. • .ptea 6f-insanity, and Fyler was , . Bent,:io' i tbe Limit it: A , lntri. TIM mortgage is now ii.bcmi - due, and the holders, on proposing ; to foie=- •ciuse it, were Met wiih the defence that if 'the maker of it way insarte,when the murder-wad - committed; could. he have be - sane •at the time of "thin 7 the mortgaget , lookaJaa though . the law:tiers - were caught this time. • The Virgiuia ,Demneratie Colveit. tiou.. Baltimore. Idondav March 3 ; 18541. The Dethocratic Convention held 'at Web-- mond, Va.. adjourned on Saturday last. after adopting: a Piatforii.'. 'The Platform reaillittus State Rights ; dereerites the granting et,ibe publi , z, lands for intern - al impro'vemente;„. Tose an increase of duty, on, imports; endor ses the Baltimore Platform; ret - ommitair Cintionati Convention to nominate the Cage , dilate mast likely to he elected:. denounce& :he American party, and indorse; the reseal. Administration. The .Itoll. of_ ,flogor.. 1- • List of a6nnee subseriptions received at thiS Offte'e, for the Month. of February, 1856. J. ROsenerants, sl,ooChase , . OAP S. V. -Barnes, 1,50R. Wellsi- . 1,50 Mrs. N. Love, 1,5011. Otis, '• T. P.l'liil3 do. M.-S. Tylse; • 440 A. Piekering, do. V. Green. CS. i,oo*; Lindsey, . L. 1 100.. llnas SMithi 1-40 A.Stonti. 1401:1. - • avid ThOixias, do. I. :N. Bullard,: •:ill,oof- Amos heath, dpi. G. D. jeffers, R. Very, 0,7 - SS. Brundage; 0. Tiowbridge, 0,75 G. 13a11; . 11. McCollum, 1,50 M., L. Ball, - do. - Geo. Brown, do. L. C. Day; do. - Norntaii Tingley; 0,40 wm. Reardon, 1,25 I. Reoklioiv, • 1,50.1.,J. Turner, , 1,50 S. U. bainon, 1 - 470 11. Perry,. 1,50 L. S. 4nieint, • .1,50 C.J. Lathrop , "do T. Baldwin. I,OOT. Bovan,• ' 4i75 ISaite•Greggi, Williams, \ 1,50 . S. Ttae-v, 1,121: BrOwn, - do. Thos. Keating, • 1.25 M. Johnson,. ~..do„ M. 13r,:iwn, . 1,50 R. Warner; . do. IJ. E. &reeler, • I,OOC. Cazinic do: ,D. R-Thaptier, `:0,375. , 13. Stark,. J. -N. Reynolds, Tattle, 1,00 Dr. FL•Stnith, 1,50 L. . 0,50 W. G. I.liiiidrick,„ 1,000. Burr, • 1 ,10 E. Ballard, • -I,soG,Thabeock, 63 J..lonesoo, Sherman - ,L ;4,00 31: J. llarritiolon,:l4ollL C. Tyler,' 1,75 Usi Di..tirtfoti,'- 1,500:13. Tyler, '• 1,54 G. Pattke 1.50Ja5.• Stephens; do W. P. Kenniird, do. D. Matliews . dik, J. T. Griifin, do. D. Watson, Martin do: Jones Titylor t . - tAto F. Pea, do. W.' S. Wilinarth, 23 imstixtk, - 1,50 W. Elwell, • 1,30 J: •Cliiiiker,, 1;50E. W. 'Baird; do. do. 'W. M. Titglisy, \V. flaily, .do: A Carpenter,' : "`.'do, P.. Airdoinna, do. W: B. AdtinoC- : r 65 S • • .do. J. G. Pat4iti; 1,54 IT. K» app, . & Attila; Ira Comstock, • I,OOV, E. Piolet, dcpc C. Sr tnford, -do. Adam: t ir,Oeerton,ilai E. 0. . 14011. C. Porter, •-• do A. W. Ruwlev, - 50.1. F. Mean*, do - J. Shull, • '11;50.1. Britd!dtor, do , J. 100Witi. GtiOtkevi 'do J: Pe4 , lc, •-• do . E Adims, - S. do.. L'ißaker, • - .dO. - - , 10. • do; J. Younir; - J. - Sutton, do. Q. L. Carpenter dik•' "WHEN' I f rri a shoppin." mid sni fi dv, " I alliqs mks for what I *1111,411;iinil fitty Lave it Anti saimble, aid?! Aiello. ARM to hay it, and it's itheaN got`nt any islace. for los, I most' alters. tikii without ehappering aboitt it 014ii t ittonciiii persons does. - jar -When Roger .Bhinuan ur,u ttsd Against one Nigel% 10 -* 1 1 4ws*Jv 11 ' found, his match. ,Tiaggart *as Ann .I over a_book for. authority qt.* r0i4144 ligunwnik: -- sTifeint.7Bo r iiPl 4l o ,4 4 4 4 .: Won't you have ' sy, , brat* •Psnift 1* laid Rogir-4`--:1i; '" Ner• • woo th e r• 10 - _ NEW 111 10101 ., triatctfi be discovers) , tbremitvibereifi,-; -, •