The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, September 04, 1856, Image 1

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cstellmi +S erritson, troprittorS.
6#Bict ;tottrg•
DEMOCRATIC .'4ATFORif SO G.
TIISM— s IISCLI sAM ' 3 YAM. _
`Of all theinfihty pyiry , from the east and frOm
the west,
1
Tbe Democratic party is thin greatest and the best
Every 'sate in, this great nathlh, it respect'', them
all V.i.e 'sane—
To preserve this glorious Union is it olject
• -and iks'alen. • \
' cuours T
Viciir t itithe along! come along ! make MY delay ;
( acme from every wino, come from every way';
. Our plaVorat is broad enough, don't be ',dblithed,
The planks sic all sound and the timber*.unhnr.
Oar sword is "equal rights," the Constitution
our shield; , _
And with Jus ice on our banners, we willboldly
take the field.
With Buchanan for our leader, ye will route
the Fusion hosts;
tEre the ides of next November therell-be nOth.
ing•but, their ghosts !'•. •
With Old Bock of Pennsylvania, we'll buckElltifti
off the track;
And with Neck of Old Kentuiky, break their
• Abolition back.
The 'Path Pinder" has explored the tnimintaires
top and river's retiree, . ,
Aid he'll soon explore Salt River, on his little
wooley horse. ,
Cray Stitb. 4 end Territory shall enact its local
' laws ;
Will preach non.inteirention, and we'll 6 -,, ht
•
in freedom's cease;
: We'll protect thO right of suffiaga from the "bor
der ruffian". tools, 1 '
From the Know-Nothing assassins, and from Ab.
olition fools.
Illinois and Indiana and Ptretor York will go for
, Beck,
k s edriVlVinia
Kentucit,'
the States,lrotl 1;14h and South, twenty
. nine for Back will count,
And we'll give the nigger' worshippers Massachn
lets and Vermont;-; ‘.
j; isreitatteous.
BACHELOR'S.
UT D. L. 41iA064
14.Ptrro! sieve! you i have paved the way.
rth yeittr'eafohhded fantasies
,to more
ruindraTh.ondert, by 'file Ilia:led Stray .
Your system feigns o'er the controller core
- -Of human hearts, than all ;the long array
Of poets and rrothinCers.'+Bvaos, _ ' -
j Perhaps Lord Byron lis right;. Plato and
*tyse4f in error.= Pertain , we 'have espoused
a fiatie,philosophy, and as disciples of . one
great leader, are destined soon le see it 'uni-
Venally rejected. But, as yet its fallacy has
been nowhere satisfactorily esbibited nei
ib4
etre sufficient inducements been found
itempt us to renounce ' the doctrine in
0 7
i
trbich, as it were, we have been born . and
bred. I speak in behalf ' of the entire se ct. of
A
Our philosophers throughout the world„. and
iffirm-thit-thus we choOse to hie . and spend
.
'taw days. l!rt* 'ethics l eas
i liaolinet• so inter
irdifen dit t o our habits arra manner of living,
Altat it has &teems part and parcel :of our
v, *y being, and as soon Ittrould we ''think to
relinquish life itself as ,the theories we have
thus fondly embraced . I r • ' .
.
1 Some boldly declared our .creed entirely
Ilse, and its advocates insincere; bit I know
not one who would r.otH gladly defend his
Nth,-and prove, if trcfrd and arguments can
prove, the firmness of i his belief.. Others
pronounce the whole a whim and a delusion :
',l,f a whim, how delightful ! and if a...derision
how tweet I , t
Shall 1 girt afew of the many reasons for
'Our beliec and; som e o admirable char
acteristics of our sect-t .
Olt happiness, in the (first place,_ depends
ituttieasurably on our faith, tiiid therefore we
Ore led to the practice; ;The prime elements
of earthly joy consists riot so much in the
great results,' as the little causes:: The little
things are those that mar our pleasure and
dampen all our aspirations. The little ro
putted annoyances injure the disposition and
nisi the spirits far more than the great
strokes which surround one with a thlrong of
•
s'ympathizing friends. In the loss of prop
erty others_may share our, regrets-and minis- .
ter too ante , but in borne troubles it is
, _ • -{_; •• • t
..only given to
that
vistuitpuet meemitsss,-
a meekness that ill becomes the spirit Of
Man, and testifies that Much, which is manly
use been already lest. 'I .
Poets are wont to sing of die sweets of
Of connubial bliss, and toi win us with their
gliding measures.- Misery . loves . company,,
and methinks ere this, they find au is not po
etry that rhymes.
1 how alfasaut, when 'the toils of day • are
Byer, to refire to one's owri room to enjoy the
Companionship of those immortal minds
ir hi ch inlay hie walls, eaOh with its silent ti
tle beckoning him to: smirch_ its Pages fOr
rflf-Pwiedge . • lies, pure ! ! how elevating - the;
society ! With the opening doit° !wig,
of wants, ewer preface s:w
d by dear'-'4°
' tale of faithless and insulting servants, or re
proofs for unfulfilled reqUests, greet his eats
4-no half-dozen little prPgenies to mount his
knees and'Tack his weary frame; • but he
'lnds in his own domicil I aluiet and-re Pose
from, all the cares of :thiti noisy, : bustling
world:
Each 'of our sect is lord of bits own body, `
.4 . 01 , and don:tains; No other lief 'rho
holds a mortgage oa all these, inquiricli
•`Why do ye so 1' Believe me, happier
when he has his own !Ayr—whew he can
give himself to his own 'thoughts, reflections,
clivatitions. Ito :Stalinism - intender
thee disturbs his meditations, or lxisterous
children ditaiOte the haityroeght idea. - 'Of
what I have, lieFeiter,ataall it bei 1'1111'4)1d an
undisputed, suay. My books And papers,
what and how may I may please, surround
toe'. There is no one whom we fear will
molest them ; no little urehies from whose
fingers we must preserve our leaves and it:k
at:rad ; no one who, 'for looks' sake,' delights
to hide our razors, boots, and brushes ; all, as
welekare handy. WO are our own And not
another's ; we eat as we please, drin l kas we
plase, sit ns we please, smoke as we please,
read as we please; and sleet. Ana *rake as we
please. Now tell us, all ye lonls'oi
kind, is it not much itrore Agretble thus to
he lord of one's self, Untrammelled by the
apronstrings I
'Connubial sweets' is but another name for
Tantalus. Great pleasure is the tempting
draught it proffers, but as you extend the
.hand the nectarine cup recedes, and granting
- teelft„not,_words.ltell of the bitter disap
poinfirient.• Man may for ever rue the day
Ire songht. those joys, bUt in vain. Ile speaks
it'not and finds no . kindred mind to share
his afflictions, save in mit soct, to whom he
is too proud to go. Who ever heard a man
;sing 'weet, sweet home' after a marriage of
*lra dozen years I, - .
•
_ .
By the doctrines of uur suet, man, preserve*
, ,
his birth-right, freedom l and independence. •t •
I don't choose to . ay inikh upon this head ;
I'm a plain man and in ,s, single station ;
Bat 0 ye lords of 'ladies intellectual ! -
Inform us truly, hare they nut hen-peeked you
all?'
Perhaps now , tnd then one has yoked himself
to so fair Imd fascinating a damsel that 11
choce=es . ?to sacrifice tOcher,all independence
and to be reed by '66 ir'hom ho . : styles ‘th:
'best of hires,' 'Tis 'possible there- may be
one such, but it would be easier to fin
scores who could most gladly free thetn
selves from the galling yoke. - -* •
It is alarming to look about and see bow
untversally the fair sex reign. You can
hardly find one in . !' thousand srlio l's 'Wholly
exempt 'from their dominion. Me!! think,
and talk, and dreis to please them. And
what do they receive I Perchance a pretty
look, a fawning smile, a kiss, a hand, per
haps a heart, And then what has ,he got:I
a fret, a scold, a—, call her whit you will,;
she looks like—, not very ntea. 1 1".;36.1 sex
wouldpleav the other till the nuptial knot
i, k tied,' and. then they care not for their per
sons. It is pioverbiaity true that woman
seeks, by dress, far more -to tickle the fancy
and delight the - taste of . her. lover than her
husb d., now often do al see the neat . and
tidf ate
maidbecome the sloienly mother. The
theory of Plato would prevent these eiiis and
make life but a ' wooing ]coney-moon' es lo
„
vers sac. - . -
-
'the they not hen-pecked you all 1' Wo
man rub.* us now. Let .hei 'not then seek a
more-despotic sceptre, lest in taking that she
cannot hall, she drops what she already has.
How strange a cr'ea'ture it woman I how
pretty she can be if pleased ; but cross her
and she is forward, ill-natured, "'assuming
sometimes whines, at otheT rails;.now 'swoons
iiway—now comes to life; sometimes' -is
dumb, at others has a most oily tongue • and
powers cifspeech enough to drive ' one mad.
To argue' with her, all men are' like Dun Al.
tons°.
lie gained no points except some x^ll'-febukes,
Added to those his lady with such vigor
fled poured upon him for the teat half-hour,
Quick, thick, and heavy as a thitnder-shower:
Iron , oft she Makes us sin ! She asks so ma- .
ny questions—who coold help it ! 'My
dear, where shalll say your s 'e gone . r 'Well,
tell them so-and-so' He did not lie ! But
why so late to-night, my dear !':'Oh usi•
ness. detained me, love. All true (?) no
doubt. She needed not to, ask, however: •
Think of this, 0 ye bileheiors t—of giving
an account of all your deeds, your words and
ways—think of it and weep ; weep not for
yourselves, but for the thraldom of your fel
low-men ; but rejoice the more that your lot.
is a freedom from babies' and broomstick%
and your portion the joys of tsiogle blessed
,
4
ness. •
The expounders and advocates of the Pla
tonic philosophy are . wantonly *ceased of
lack of galbtntry and esteem •for the opposite
sex. We know, however, no cause for this
accusation, except it. be that they pledge
themselves to endure the' tongues..tiganY
instead of one woman, and, to be the gossip
ing theme for many rather than An that one
eventful Year; excopt it be thit they suffer
not the Inselves to be ensnared by the sly'
looks, mind anus, and plump neck of sense
giddy school girl. - They leek beyond the ex
ternal ; yet no one better date they apPreci
ate the beauty of female character, form, and
loveliness. No one experiences more plain
ure in therftiety of ladies, or esteems it more
highly than do they. Their, influences. 'are
reckoned - by them among • those accomplish.
ments, without which - one's education would
be incttHpiete l We hare seen ptrufesslUnsl
men, of good Mind and talents„ made the butt
of ridietkbeeause of tbk lack of this ,one
, . .
Bel Ade the' ebaractetiatios of our sea
above meutiobed,- malwaomepoist of out,
antiquity. Tears .beforeChriatian Era
sale our eziateoee, arid - tte . _pr,seut heloids
us: prosperous Ll* P 0 14 .,. :400Y*2°
to 4 ay us of sirs Rem ,W4ch
holds.= -cis . ea baud to , *:l••earthli- mealy
wee. Each has a jovial acid, freeaatha
mountain-air; Ind. - eadh . c . tiisi
beats a'sketvle heart, large as';vialic,4**l
•
love to asachiad cats Gesell it.
4 6 WE ABE- AL% EQUAL fiEIiORE tiOD AN". TUE CONSTITUTIOIi.”—James
Bilittrose,. , .sll.s' . quetpittriteanoi, itenn'a, tiarskij nornits, tit,iiiillet -. 1,:,1404. -n
30.olitital articits,
From the Boston Conifer. -
HON. RUFUS CHOATE" ON THE
PRESIDENTIAL QUESTION.
.
The Whip of Maine held a ifrantl'thass
.theetilrg in the town of Waterville yesterday..
Hon Rufus Choate '1;1711'2 ih‘4l4ll tote stadta,
but being iiitihble to ii:itend, he ite,nt a lettir,
which lie deAtiixi his own position on the'
Presidential question ; and avowed inten
i •
tion to vote for Mr. Buchanan: We give it
below.
1 -
BOSTON, Aug. 9. 1856.
Guitzitztt : Upon my return last evening,
after a short absence from ' the city I' found
your letter of the d3tia inviting:me Ao
take part in the ptoceedingi of the Whigs of
Maine assembled in - mass Meeting. •
I 'kPPreciate most highly, the honor and
kindness of thiS invitation, and A16t.4 have
hat true -pleasure in accepting The
Whigs of Maine composed at all 'times so im
.pottant a division of the tre!it - national par
ty ; which Under tkatimme, With or withont
official power, as a responsible adininistia-.
tion or as only an organized opinion, has dime
so much for our - country—our Whole conn:
try—and your responsibilities at this moment
are so- vast and peculiar, that I acknowledge.
an anxiety; to'tee—not with to hear—with_
what noble" bearing you „. meet the demands
of the time. If the tried legions, to whom it
is. committed_ te, guard the hob . tiers of the
Union, filter noW, who, anywhere can be en
trusted f
engawements bowel*, and the neces
ily or exletliency of abstaining from all
P. • .11._ requiring; mach effort, will prevent
'thy being with you. And yet inyitcd to
share in yOur COUUSOS and grateful for'such
distinction,. I cannot wholly decline my own
. ,
opinion up one of the dutiesiof the Wilts in
what you Well describe as " the phlsent cri
sis, in the political affairs of the country,"
Cannot now, and „need not 'pause to elaborate
or defend them. , What I think, and what I
hare decided to do, 'permit sue in the,briefeqt
and plainest expression to tell you. •
The first duty, the'n, of Whigs, not merely
as patriot* and Citizens,—loving, with a large
and equal tore, our whole native land s —but
as Whi,gsand because we are Whigs, is to
unite with, some organization of Mar count ry
menoo defeat . and dissotre the new ;ice
graphical Party — calling - itse' I( Republican.—
This is our first duty. It iroitld
... more exact
ly express - My opinion to say; that at this Mo
ment, it ia our only ditty. tertitinly, at
least, it coinprehends or supercedes all others;
and in my* judgment, the question, for each
and - every ;one of us is, not whether this Can
didateor -that dandidate would be our first
choice; net whether thyre IS some good talk
in the worst.platform, or some bad talk in
the best platform ; - not whether this man's
ambitioa s hr that, man's Servility, or bold:
; ness, or fanaticism, or violence, is 'responsible
for putting the will. waters in this uproar ;
but just this,—by what rote can Ido most
to prevent the madness of the tit 'es from
working its maddest net,--the very ecstasy
' of its madness, : the pretuature formation and
the actual present triumph of a party which
Knows one lair of America only to hate and
i
dread it; from whose nneenseciated and rev
olutionary banner fifteen stars are erased or
have fallen ;--in_ whose national atithern the
old and endeared airy of the Eutaw Springs,
and the King's Mountain, and 'Yorktown,and
tliose;'later, cf New Orleans, and Buena-Vista
and,Chapultepee, lireathe no more. 'To this
duty, tothis question, all other sett to Ale
to stand postponed and - secondary. '
And why I' Because, according to Mir
- weed it is only
.the rnited America, which .
can peacefully, gradually, • safety, improve,
lift up avid bleSs with all social and personal
and civil blessings., Ali the races
,alid'all the
conditiOns which compose our vast and vari
ous family—it is such an America s , only,
Whose arm cart guard our flag, develop our
resources, extend our trade ;, and fill the
measure of our glory ; and because, accord
ing to our,Convictiona s the triumph of such a
party puts that Union in clidger. That is .
my reason. And for you, and fdr' me, and
for: all of us, in whose regards the Union
passers such a value, and to whose fears it
seems menaced by such a danger ; it is reas-.
on enough. ' Believing the tittle shipofstate
to be_within hills cable's length of the lee
shore . of rock, in'a gale . 'of wind, our first bus
iness is to put her about, and crowd her off, -
into-the deep, open sea. That dotie, - we can
regulate the 'stowage of her lower tier of-pow
der., and select her cruising ground, and
bring low officers to - courVmartial , a,t our
leisttrt. .'
If there are any in Maine—anti among the
Whigs of Maine I hope there ia not, one—
but if there ate arty, id whose hearts strong
passiWns, vaulting ambition, jealousy of men
or auction, unreasoning and impatient phil
anthropy, dt vihittevers• else have turned to
bate oin eeldeest -the jratereel, .1, 1 4) 04 4 and
quendeoLtite spirit of national Ale
sonftd4 *jib - whoto the union' of 4wee3taw
and free Stites timid, the, actual eonst4sution
'fa`ti hitictranee, a . reproach;' with
these_ of course our.view of our , duty arki the
root!ii it, vv. tAPositotiox block awl feel-
Musk ,Tosnehlton can - Jove nothing to
say; oi4rbiya 'twilling Co'
`'But. ktheie 'ere jiiiiSwainlik who lave
jite - trtijeiss we
Ole iti,:wheiregs4:ll- Ai Me do, NAL merely
ari4 east histsulumtelitylor :thei:pretaetintr
of out et:amerce and navigation, and for
r==Mlßl
achieving power, eminence and name iiolig
the sovereigns of the earth—but as a means
of improvitiktre material Ibt, and elevating
ale lhoral and &filial nature, and Ititiottit
the penibbiti happiness of the millions of many
distant ten4rations ; 'ii"there are those who
think thus justly of it—end yet bug the fa
tal delusion' that, beetibse it 'is kbod, it is ne
es hriiy e=
that it will thrive with
out 'Cite; that - anything created by man's
will is above or stronger than Ilia will; that
because the reason and virtue dour age of
reason and virtue uld build it, the passions
and stimulations o d of frenzy cannot
pull it down; of such t re, are among you,
to them address youriallves; with all the ear=
fleetness and all the ekikuence of men who
I the setae great ifitereit is , at stake, and
some mightier cause io hearing than ever yet
tougue had pleaded or trumpet proclaimed.
If such minds and . hearts are reached, all is
sefe. But bow specious and how - manifold
are the sophisms by which they are courted I
They hear and they, read much ridicule of,
those who ftar that a geographical 'party
does endankir the Uniun. But oau they for
get shit our greatest, wisest,' and most hope-,
ful statesmen have always felt, and have all,
in one form;, or adother,,left• un recuid their
.. •
own fear of Seth . +party I The , jutlgMents .
of Washington, Madison, Clay, Webster, on
the dangers . ief the' American Union—are
they woiti nothing to a conscientious love
of it I Whit they dreaded as a remote and
improbable 4ontingency—that against w l hich
they cautioit.id, as they thought, distant skeu
erations--tho which they - were so . happy as
to die without seeing—As, upon 'us. • And yet
Some men duultl *harp -us
, go on, laughing
and singing] like ite - traveller in the satire,
with his pockets empty, at a present peril,
the.
, mere apprehension of which, as a distant
and bare s tAiibility, would sadden ,the heart
of the Fathei of his Country, and 'dictate the.
graVe . and grand winning of his Farewell
dress.
They hear men say that such3i'party ought
not to endanger the Union ; that, although
it happened to be formed within one Leo
_graphical section, and confined - exclusively to
it ; nltho' its end and aim is to rally LP& sec
tieartgainst the otter im a question of 'mir
e's, policy and feeling, 'on Which the two
differ, eternally and nnappearbly ; although
from the natare of its Origin and objects, no
i•
man in the section. outside can , possibly join
it, or accept - riff re under it without infatiq
at home ; although therefore, it is a stqen
dons orgauiiation, Practically to 'take power
and honor, std a full share of the govern
ment, from our. whole
.familyy of States, and
bestow them, Substantially, all upon the an
tagonistfamill ; although the doctrines of
human rights,'4llich it gathers out of the
Declaration Independence-L -that panion
ate and eloquent-manifesto of a revolutiona
ry war—and ado as its fundatnantal ideas,
announce to amy Southern apprehension a
crusade of goicrnment • against slavery, far
without and beyond Kemal ; - although the
spirit and tendency of itt electioneering ap
peals, as a whole. in prose and''verse, the lead
ingurticles of its papers, and the speeches of
:its orators, are to eicite contempt and hate,
or fear of our entire geographical section, or
Late or dread,lir contempt is the natu4ll im
prekiion it all leaves, on, the :northern mind
and heart ; yet, that nobody anywhere ought
todie angry, or Ought to he, frightened ; that.
the majority must govern, and that the north
is it - majority ; that it is ten to one
_nothing
will happen; that, if 11314 comes to worst,
the south knows it is wholly to blame, and
needs the Uniim more than we do, and will
be quiet accordingly. ,
But do they who hold this 6'k/eve, fa:
get that the question is not what ought to
endanger the Union, but what will do it
G ls it a man as i•e ought to be, or man as be
is, that. we must live withor live alone In
,
appreciating the influences which may disturb
a political systeini and 'especially one like
ours, do yori niaid no allowance for passions,
for pride, for infirmity, for the burning sense
of even imaginary wrong Do you mistime
that Oil ttitb, or allitasses of; men. in all sec
tions, unifortualiy obey reason, and uniterm
ly wisely see andc.alnily seek their thiti hi
wrests f • Where on earth is' such a fools
paradise as that'ie lie ( * mod Conceding to
the peipleof tie fifteen States -the ordinary
and average hantito nature, its good and its
eyil, its weakness and its strength. I for one
dare not say that the . triumph of Inch a par
ty ought not to be expected-.naturally 'and
probably to disunite the States. •
With my undoubting convictions, I know
that it would , be folly and immorality in men
tc_wish IL Certainly. thete.are in all sec
tions-and in all Slates those who love the
Union, under the actual Constittiiion, es
Washington did, as Jay, liarnilten, and
Madison did--u 'Jackson, Clay, arid. Web
ster loved it. Such even is the . hereditary
and habitual sentiment of, the general Amer
ican heart.. But he has lead life and hooka
telitths purpose *lid - his not lertaited.that
"bosom Mendable' ditty tio`,'",reieatnient
Poared,7,and that no hatred -414,0:Ietwi l /mut
and precions,as. diet.
• "And the wroth with one
tbitit liloi etidness on .the
brain."
Ili ties. read the:, Wok- of ',our • history, to
still les' pnrimse; who fifer -OLO% itartstd - that
the frietaiddi of thisii Striteisteies, but lii
fais--.-itiversigni. 6 . 433 k. iitk, - * Tratl4 lifer
44 . 4 pody of inter -4 ) 014 , ana - .lc***: honor
'WI ' shame of its. onto and iteel4.4ll'
tributed into twOlOsit - oppOninit gr 91 11 , 14
'dot' hteuilte,• #fritor teo;sn'cli
tura and -Sikh trasisorisatiott
I havanot tittle in theie hasty *his, liiia
there is no_need, to speculate on the details
the modes ih which - the triumphs of finis par
ty of evil. Its mere drag
gle to obtain the gdveriiinent, "as that strag
gle is conducted; is mischievous to an extent
incalculable. That thousands of the good
men who have joined it deplore this is cer
tain, but that does not mend the matter. I
appeal to the honor and consciousness of
my emintry, tlutt. if it were the Mtn of a
great party, by every species of IC.Cess to the
public mind, by - eloquence, by argument, by
taunt,* sarcasm, by - recrimination, by ap
peals to pride, shame, and natural riiht:—tc•
prepare the nation for a struggle with Spain .
or England, or Austria, it could Mit do tts
business more thoroughly.. Many person;
many speakeis, many, very many, set a higher
and wiser example, but the'work is doing.
If it'fiiit , triplishes its objectoind gives the
government to the North, I turn "my eyes
from the consequence 4. To the fifteen States
of the South, that Government will appear
an alien Goierement. It will . appear worse.
It will appear a hostile Governnient. It wily
represent to their eye a vast. region, of States,
organized upon Anti Slavery, flushed by tri
umph, dheered onward by, the voices of titre
pulpit,
pulpit, trilnine and press; its tnission to Lieu
gurate Freedom and' put down the , eligarchy ;
its constitution the and sounding
generalities of extant! rights which make up
the Declaration of Independence. And then
and thus is the , beginning of the end.
If a necessity could be made-out for such
a party we might submit to k as another
unavoidable evil, , anff other certain
But where do they find this t i Wheredo
they tuktZs.nil to fin 4 -It is- to 'keep tie
very out of the Territories? There 'Ts not
one but Kansas in which Slavery is possible.
No man fears, no man hopes for -Slavery in
Utah, -New Mexico, Washington or Minesota.
A national party to-give 'them . to Freedom is
about as needful end about as feasible as a
national party to keep Maine for Freedom.
And Kansas! Let that abused and profaned
soil have calm within its borders'; deliver it
over to the natural law-of peaceful and spon
taneous immigration-; take off the ruffian
hands; strike down the rifle and' the bowie
knife ; guard its strenuous infancy and youth
ttd it comes to a% age to choose foritself—
and it will choose FreedoM for itself, and it
will havalorevatliele4 . ...k_ete.......
- .When this policy , so easy, sim ple and just
is tried and fails, it will be time 'enough to
resort to revolution. It is +in part because
the duty of rrotrnetioa to the local settler
was not performed that the Dentoe'Rttic par
ty has already 4y the action , of its greae'rep
resentative convention resolved to put out of
office its ;Aim administration. • TWA lemon
will not -and trust hot be lost on anytodv.
Thd country demands that Congress, before It
adjourn; give territory peace.' If it dii,
titre will inevitably give it freedom.- -
I liAvo hastily' and imperfectly.
my opinion through the unsati.factory forms
of a letter, as to -- the immediate duty - of
' We are to do what we can to de
feat and disbana this geographiCal party.
But bey what speciSc action we can most ef
fectually contribute to such aresolt is a ques
tion of more diflienity. It seems . not‘ , to be
settled that we present 'no candidate of our
own. If we vote at ill , then, we vote for the
nominees of the American, or the nominees
of the Republican, or the nominee of the Dem
ocratic party. As between them., !..itball not
venture to counsel the' Whigs of thine, but .I
deem it due to frankness and boner to say,
that while I entertain a high appreciatiowof
•the character and ability of Air. Filllrnore, I
do not sympathise in any degree with' the
objects and creeds .cf the particular party
that nominated hint, and do not approve of
their ofwanitatioti hiid their taCtiC.s.
„
Przialeally, too, the contest, in my judg
ment is between Mr. Buchanan and Col. Fre
mont-4a those circumstances' I vote for 111 r.
Buchanan. -lle has large experience in pub
lic attaiis; his Comnianding capacity, h uni
versally acknowledged ; his life is without a
stain. I am constrained to add -.that he
seems at this moment, by the concurrence of
circamstaneig, 'more Ulidpiete.y t han" any
other,.to represent the sentiment of national,
ity,--tolernnt, warm., and'cornprehensiie.,—
without which,: withotkt incroasti
,of
America is no !env, Arnerica,'ind
Bess the Power, and [trust, the 'llisposition to
restore and keep that peace within our her
ders and without,' for which our
.hearts fill
yearn, which all our interests dedfand, thro'
whigh and by which alone we may hope to
groti to the true greatness, or, nations„
Very respectfully, your fellow•oitfien.
Rettrs COATE:
To R; W. Farley: and other_ gentlenten. of
,tbe
Maine Whig , State Cents: Com mitteti;
FRIMONTS' PLAITOILit:- •
The subjoined list -or Black RepubliCat
tying wilt furnish ' the reidec with 'll,4oi , riet
idea. of the tifyitiliat tiblimitai 146 '044: of
be*r.
er: - Road th6m!, *Of Ka
ty in e o ng titat' ebeittitit of `demoera;
it, dement - talipro e ilia kirditip , grit!.
l er nf ri et it t s.,
sivezeit prArrst.'
- peiliiffir Ovine Mg' lilt
itid are to'die
tants are itiOilkit)lest thint:ta
igetitreo." - terifiAlicßouil" jiitplaus l e:prdx.
--."
Mittriesik—t- 4 1_'detest atkie4,‘'itikriity
itamitiginitytfint at& iir foror of Its
lition by sonie means, ifittends the party
organisations in the Union, and -the, Mien
itself to the DeviL If it = csu 'only eat by'
holding millions of butnenbeing in theiiost
abject and cruel systipn of slavery that ever
cursed the eartb,it -was* great pity ihatit
was ever forined, t ad the sooner it is diesiolv
ed the better."—H. H. Addison.
srd Plank- - -Was it not that the-"oily
hope of the - srare was weer the - ruins of Alin
goiernment, and of the Americin church: 7
the diniohrtion of the Union was the abelition
of slavery I—Stephen tv. Fosfre. _
4th Plank. µ , A great-mithy. - people t raise
a cry about the Union and the toustituthin,
as if the two were identicssl ;, but the' truth
is, it is the Constitution. Thai - lits hei3tr the
fountain and father of our troubles. Sharp'
Rifles are better than Biblea."--Rev. Henry
Ward Beteiser.
511 s !'lank.—" Remembering he
slaveholdet he c,onld spit upon .Washington 4
(hisses and applause.) The hisscWir, he said.
areslayeholders; in spirit, and every one or
them would enslave him if. they had the.
courage to do it. to near to' Faneuil Ibll
and Bunker Hill, was he not permitted, to
say that that SCOUSDRZL, George. Washing
ton, had . enslaved his fellow men
Raymond, illa4 Repnbliam Orator. at Faa
cull Hall.
oth Plcrak.—" It is the duty of the North,
in ease they fail in electing 4 Presidelit and
*a Congress that will restore freedom. to Kan
-838, to revolutionize ihe government.!--Res
dation of a Black Republican meeting in
Wisionsin.
7th Ploni.—"` I pray tally that this
ccnsed Union may be dissolved, even if blood
have to be spilt."—Bfeek Republkon' Cler-
gyman at Pough,l•eqAtii.
Bth P/ank.—We arwnothern men;and we
have a Sei.a.or.ia Congress. lam for having
everi, !sump armed, and if he
_ `is derailed,
shoot down opponeni=ifr. Bieweter's
Spetch.at Faneuil Hall..
frtri Plank. The following feit t dutioil was
adopted at'a meeting of Black RepubliCans
of Monroe, Green county, Wi.sconsin, on \the
31st tilt.
"Resolved, That it is Yri;) duty of the'
north ,in case they 'fail in electing a Presi
dent, and a Congress that will iestons - free-.
dont to Mulles, to retiolutionize the .-govein - -
meat."
10th: - P/sik.-- , “ 1 have liiid,rand' take this
occasion to repeat that. rather than consent
that thecurse of human ohattledons whoirld
be taken into Kansas and Nebraska, J would
prefer to see the !SAWA elements - crumble
iritodissolltion."- - -Cteseland Amin;
12th Pion.b.-- 4 , Wa earnestly request that
Congreii,-at its present session, do take such
initiatory.measures 'for the speedy,.peaceful;
and equitable dissolution` of the Union, is
the exigencies in the case may recptire.”4-
B leek -
• 12th Plank:—" At a recent Black' Itepnb-
Heat meeti ng Asi 44 'Fred - Douglas said,
asnongother things, that it was the duty:of
every slave to cut his master's throat."
13th- Pfasst.—la J almost- hope to bear that
some isf their lires (emigsants Kansa%)
have.ieen . saerillasd, for it seems as' if'Nnoth
ing but that would rouse the Eastern Slates
h t o act."— car; of Neat Pori rrainste.-
I tilt Plank.—‘q sincerely hope civil
War may soon burst upon the enemy?: I
want to see Atnetican slivery abolished in
my day; it is alegacy have no, to
leave to My chihtten ; -then my most ;fervent
prayer is that tnglend, Francis:vend Spain
may speedily take this slavery-accursed ., n . a
'lion into their special considenkt,ion and
;when the tit% arrives for the atOetis of.the
cities of this' land of the free - aid home of
the brave" to ,run with blood`to the berms'
bridles."--4P: 0 Duvall. 1.
15th Plusk.--" I look forward 10 the :day
when there shall be a - Servile trisilf.reetkii in
the &nib, sviiCil the black iifin anned `ith
British liayonets, and led on by Britiih.ojf
tiers, shall ',mot his freedetn, and wage a War
of extermination against his master ; Whin
the torch of the incendiary shall light up tie ,
towns and Cities Of the Seta, andAdot-eut
the last vestige of slavery theugh I
fluty Not mock at their e.alansity, nor laugh
when their fear notneth, yet I will hail it as
the desert of a political
R. diddling,: • - •
18eskPlnak.-- 4 ' No man has a right to be
surprised at thii state Of'langs.', is'juXt
what Wir (Abolitionists and • Diennionists)
have attempted to bring -about.' - Theie is
merit in thi Republican party. ' !tie** flint
sitetibnAL party eve" inganized in:thior WOW.
op: It does not know Its owtt face, aid
calls itself national tut it is not netimnil,
it is artionisl. The RePubliean-party a
party` of North pledged *obit! Abe
%IMO= Weecait -
, ~Tile sixteen plebs represent the ,sixteen
Statee ',prolonged itt the Black ~ Itoplohlimul
Convention, at Philadelphia. • Having
all theploniks, 'me will nowsire .4 , 141,74'th°
Wee.* that &vend this tliaedl =iioui
einibbigeklf Ulna. that IWO' Issetver,,;verwill
ditgraids theohilkinetme by aeleotinspit as a
=phase Of inenting. •
4 . 4 11.111170.1411* •
fat sPitffig4o • **iris° :4644 that
,"t• 44
the five s .s O ught -: to:: be leptars.
.00. * 1 • 44..ge.
•
8/1 /1:6444-k21.0% "Mai.
1 10 44 1 *Nitk zog sl oitiy,r4 7
o * -9- iiii'O r *l 4l * -41 1 4 ;, : ' 4
481• 3 41404 416:: ikfit 4 7 2 loo4th
Oracetakirigafo#o***
'pretteated - srof. tbe . ' etattintuuta of
latvinz or a tUnialttgokiif;lll4
for dissolation, a411. - entewititt, on it
•
eth St.i474,—T" Oa the action of this
vention depends the fate,of the : "ionntrir
the Republicans fail 'it the ballot box, we
will be forced to drive back the alaseoeraor
fire . and liiiire—j7 e m i es- whew. webs.
Shingle.--" I hold it -to:be an ever
lasting disgrace - to thooi at a man and sot
hit hint:l Rev. fiireary t ' fi?oecf 'Puffier.
BtA:Sha in tavor of..going Pik
'Kansas, and using firearms to kill-the ras
cals. - - --Rev. Air. Bnroer.- . -
gethliking/e.;—l UM to - go ifs
Xansas, either as a captain or private. /
would use Sbarpe's riftisrand tire-with gdod
aim.--Rev. Aft-Lovijoy. •
100: Shiagk.—" bun' in favor cif letting
the Union P.; Banks, Blac k` Bs-
publican Speaker of Povress.
. 11th Shindle.- - ---'! American Wort
a lie. Tho Caistitntioti of the United Suites
is a covenant. vtdeatiii_and an agreement
with Hell P'— WilliamsWiarrrispri.
.
.
1 2 1 / I ,s'h frigk.- --" Before i.would see pop- .
ular sovereignty wrested- bi force frota the
Nopla of the Territories, (referring to the de:
termination of the - authorities ; to enfoice
obediencis of tito .. I ,i'l", , _,," - I'' ' '"i 4 Ila t.., 've M
pains silent with Mnitier-"liv diaillp -i-umuire
would have the lips of our Senators and Rep
t
reseutatives• ed is craven silence by the
hand of Sou ern violence, ( referring to the
etiolation towed : upon' Sumner. 'by
Bra) 'A for pd r sonal, noi, political reastkii,) I
would see the 'halls of Congres ankle deep is
Mood C'--'-Black Republican print at Dekoit;
- 13th Shingle.---" We have no faith r ist the
resolutions pasied by largenmetings, and be
lieve that paper iessolutions would do no good
unless rammed down the . barrel of il,iits with
powder and bail."-Emigrant Aid Sodsty.
- lITFAMOUS:
There is a paper puV4hed under the'au.-
spices of the Atnertekh. Temperance Union,
called the " Youth's Temperance Advocate,"-
which is circulated in Sabbath Schools and
by thou - sands in lei . ways twitig children;
In -a late :lambi), It contained, in s.ieadicg
articleo.h4 following monstrous lie :
• " Tug Piicarostrre.—All the talk . now is
about the iietlr President ; and wa much feat'
that Minds cf itre - engrossed
by this, we shall , he able to.get but , few‘ , Moet.
ns
i for temperance. But we must rank'. hi
discouraged, or have the subject forgotten.—
We kucw now how iiiiportaitt to have
men of good principles and right, practice sip
pointed.to office The Ili° leeet Prout'
ineni candidates for President, it* .
• JOHN C. titnioNy;
• , JAMES BUCHANAN. -
, _ _
- ' Mr.-Buchananis theCandideteet thode . m.-
°credo party„eucciviii- !go 'Ai. ilie , ,,eatensiens
of slavery. Mr. Fremont ;is the Candidate cif
the Republican part, and will °nose the ez
icnsion of slavery. - These are thcv two great
.whits before the.people and they. create
a miiiity, Struggle next !NOVoiritier,„ . It is. to
he hoped the right will.prevail,; arid thaTte4- ,
try sivedfor,hoior and 'glory:7 !, ----.-,,....,,,,
What a-deliberate, wilful, monstrous false;
hood.is here presented te deceive and mislead
the unsuspecting children' of the huidl z Here
axisfiiiifftuallehristian ministers deliberately
uttering the infamous lie that James Buchan
an " win go for the extension.. e 'fial:MY..i n
Ilere, by men of irEoin !truth itt least is e!i
pected, the sons and daughters it.136:;011*
who AM vent to the - Sabbath School-to le
.-ceive religions instruction, are 4 taught that
the Democratic candidate for the Presidency,
aho never owned a slave, or liveiLin a
,slave
State, or uttered a word!in defence of slavery,
or whispered a sentence.in favor of-Rae:ten
shot, or. atit A ijitb ! whit:li, arty honest than
could construe into a- wish to snipe* tits
institution, is meanly deriouneed itika.41117 . 1191
propagandist! Truly tbisis adepth of mean
ness and mendacity 144 moral, dept:liiiity
which was never reached even in politics un
til these 4 poli deal .. priests' entepialliiifield,.*--,-
Erery intelligent mtur . ,iknows .'tlnA Intithlr
James Buchanan nor the, Demairatic wily
facers the extension of slivery. ; . :As As the Bel
. .
,
'fast Journal says, "both idle historyati4.prin
ci pies of the Demociatici party affet• r d, a:yi...
- umphantrefutatipn, of . tyis,Rgliti 4 ?9 ; o4VS
None know this!lietter than thole ;7120 wake
it. Thii,iecluss - who thinks it, thinkS,i. iie.
Tll6.ii!iiitp orat or wheXpet t licli it 9514 i. rte.
The editor who /4144 4‘,:i' iiiiaistotl a iii.
Tne.olo:B7lA4u-rilto preaches it KW.I '!'.
lie, stud the deacon who !pals it Pins : * '
ti.
A ., such tufty well clalfal,diregt,liziagefiti
a noted character oft e n alluded 14 in -
cred scripture 4, iiiid . properly 040
the father of Itars.-4...ff.Potrii,
Tux RAWM A- Gastwatiii.--goientifie
.
writers assert that the aumberapenoits wbd
existed '6 a:4 , fixt4inimproti#9-ariioinittio
38,827,843;175 ; 075,843. These ivies; *NW
divided brap9s,ooo, (theWuntber etitititt4 -
leastosti !sad on the ghibei) ,leeve
.89,732 , square miles of leiiden the llobe;
Whieb being diiide as bef6ti,:glyeel34,ll22,lo.
persona to each square'utile. Let 4 164 Mut*
1 ! )004- to 'TM) "FA.* ',4 0 0,r.1 1 1 1 b• •
1t8 5 34 14 1 600 19(1 0 114.-
,
beforot.,wilk, give 1284
,i4o o l•ltantak*:,4o,
b,e l tll-liduo(44q feklx;*.it;
til7e akout gie persona AP 0 40 : 1 4, 411 !".# 1 .4 4
jetiktirusa.•Xhiks-14 1 4i1l bepnropookio*
9.*8 *lot - athe01v,..4243.1*#*:,
ins* Ire *44 on olkalknußft r 0 46 1 1 */
Mik. l 94Rl:for tea va y elL 7 4gekprP. o 4osmn =
7 44 .4 , 44401.tw0mitAit-
Ate_4olo . 111049 e of Ate 144) 14 eallett:'4 0 11
foier. l s l l tmeee - •
41" nog& .no 4 to; - *Ott 7 : *Wiwi
iteat ri elihentiblei sa44o`hai later when"
hie !Mee is burled in beini aid whisker./
=MEI
PffiM
*plat Ruhr 3".
'?';: tg' '„:1,47:.
.3:: 4. ; 22, - ti '',... ,t,
MMI
PP7 Ga
lant% as