The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, September 30, 1858, Image 1

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I ' l ''')Coiereigntyl aid' ill reply" ' * ( it,:ttte'
- ,r t , -IYeamltailopthtt ,LeOomptiqt Oggme. ..:.
tilitAhi , atiWieoplehiyodiAleiir negro* hi
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t t_v3 i t ro a xr..ef toitiN irray'ecgdiseCtrigoxi#: he'
ga l
, lsDerfMaratio • party, the judgment that.,oo,oPi ell
--I , :dto' antk hill Oupp,brteis to . oheourity wee' that Tab oh
~.`"I'40:- # :,fitiViirlhii illoittokif "donle'l . Fallef, that they
' *Ole' AiMated iii purely heidelt.motliyo;,l)Mre,'
, 11 ,1 rf+O Mil iTeO 'PlAncil 4 9, /x?llth..°_,lrSAntis,Su Ahb .
_:_:,subse q uent, and. prosent,poa4m of most or pip
- • :leaders: in that 'dirrafen, oismalt dia,aanatiallaa e ,
' litui" titeii tit ',lndlyhti *al Or , ptiityr , holemaiX
,100:01' ferlifitotii 4 yelt4icalial Aiiyhiii!cito:-
' . -incited ti;,75...44.4
A,:firX4fit(itc tiri!P ~
ti fopti.AirAnk°nrAlle 'l l oslorip ieptiliptelli thOe
-ls4o o trink4 Anale-eTtB Alati P1 4 :4 1 0”;1:4k a aaga •
tZV,Is .. prOodnlod" , vrldob menders- 'a- rebuke if *eh
''" titi alutaplecadiNidelarof of ifib iniu r tveusited: p a .
:?:::*Aiki#:%Ti 9 illastilotetiviii4'3.4l , ll , Bidiaiair
eves puetiryfsfdlit,',Gliiiiininiti . 444 .. iipilist,n't..-
1. , • eye - of tko:oopiorviiiire soniliasat'ar thoTllnion4ho
". 400 •Ptert'tlie ropiaation la, ~ohe spidt in which it
- • iiwaitiuidered; and every' ammeeding aot ti p to - l!!" 0 -
' - ' , vembei aid '.DsOomber of 1851; the, tooovdeoply
c ,:torozOlitia, hltuto theP4orpiOolaid dorriaid*-
mertia s firgio platform ef:the parii,ukii tildoi(he
~,.., 5t. 99 4, .13ptilotwAstandIng thefiincliegforoo of hie
--, trim- volohicers,d ileojeratione int4hrbitialf,,ziot:
- .7.1' i lirlthetanding his .irritten, ~ p risited,, and spoken
.pledges ifi. • adhere " to and Inalutain the ' leading •
,
,7 pritiolipy:of, his' pitty, be:soOn tffiolvid to ;tern
hid hick upon thme eoveriants,:aid obiitgatioits.
, ~,,,:. .N . 0 1, , A 44ta l th A t, r hf ? he"faimed that receive, he,
,:- on ihohaktaiO, roleased every citizen troat'obeal;
.. ,
..
enoe its --the .new anddearetitil,ored `widish the
-'. itot:'ap - ite the reodel of Dotnecratto: ortbodotty,
i" It *Eat, theieforo,!pat frcins`thbagliticia impulse'"but frtnif a leliiiirate and floartSilt;noti:Tlction,
-.::that I, oonceiTtle't,to yi,,., ray,dnti to:nkaletain iho
- - attitude, inrwhiolt. he-aint, the
_Oottv,enteptl,littd
-pieced me -=an' attitude; which, withi moia Muth ii,
suliliosiitetemtioritteNorth - and- , B6ith, - Itlialy ,
ibilikikiiinnkor'thVedrinof,''4 4 2eoniolintione '
Alit Pt'at,f;rom It L innet' flow the 410# !, 'OHO= IP
:11.0.-1,1.0i Our ooraidoe ocurtg. Th'ero 'was no , a:
;,,,,,,:gtant. id of diaprtiaaitation.ygigweit:Pw that:he
~,n iittirepired- t o mould. a policy at dioe abhorrent.
'' - 'ttitistriitollnis itollreitilkstc`to oureetadotlons-'at
,4 , o;fottp,violatreif ofilil 'Dim . , POliiintilitedgeilnd
_, -0014, WO ' d iii : :iilitilililTartitillEitiki red6l4 or ho
; t 4 ,i) . 4 ri . oq r a tler party:citti 1 1 '.;ivi,th all 4010411 J °nil of
, that partilnournteoguTatrel witliall'etirpersqsal
attachments' to idyl, - t wo...4referred z rathor i to
`:i'oocupy're..positloti'of t honeld,;sediresprotittl diiie
mi.. Winde,•that„to tly into efretfnipassiOni awl indn)ge,
In a wild and unnatural 40)101401e Ilniost
1 tosi - oiliisi ei;lll , ceit;GO'yeaubint On - thabie of he'
varti, intilligentken in tlia . ;lAttad,hilqi'been ,
, toPrjeted in so sincere and milWy c ittliterinitit*li -
I; iiO4l , W; aid it - Trislin'pestliblete'rfirfebilthlust ia
I's' tili'tiountii Stich te"differeice‘iicatldlie reipit4d.
......as an act of_ tram= to the Adosinistititibi c i, inil a„
.
- `4leolaraiiii of war Party,iitiligetisinit, by pw,,,
Tory litita'Who hod himself amistid 46 erectiiiid to,
sanotifyibilillaillptatldilorWiltientinned to otter.
our davcipordt.l It was onlyewiten-itheyeality to
forteention bur Minas, diet subh i Afitagroomient
wit's, the, President and „Ids Cabinet, was te l bet
rattaailtio pretest ior, piditiCaf 013 'Villa - tali; t ad , hir;
' '
'.mane;
f' " ' ' 1 ` '43 hit( - moat off en
pretext or persona, ,pras r on of thei? en..
, . tilvaehozactor . , that - Ast indOpendeiii pidrit6rlihili'
~.. ii:ie in
_the bosom of every, free-bairn ottlien, tboit.,
_,x tireos!w l- 4 1 0,5e.14 1 T-1 3-8 4; 4 4w 4 t.ratkir , xtviiekt. ,
- AtallY protaitedoelsed theepPertnni ty: boldly; ina
'.- -Averysthere!;.<to dentmoott , the arrogatitte and the
'1 insolent* whith idtepipted_th ohtrage them before
• theirrettuntlyt • `As Skala thbie,WhOlirst sottglif to
''':ruiintain these . cOn:T io dinii as to principle. Mid; to
duty, and'who - biid felt,:*'ttie trilifffirittp, the
putdignaot intoliranip,rettell Wirieliaree4 to
4 ,oierlop,k the, slimy. ayeoptliuti aviltild*iti:
, r illlB, this, petipioneCand, pnriiiiiiied!.adhitantti of,
'the Administration, and:their eyetematic.attaokei
and to vindteaterrayself -as againat theirmaiters,
- Att u invitatl66"te , spat to'the ifrietkle:otleeN.
' ~Ifirucr B. - 11iiicts' 'of New -Yoitt,•furnished-ale a
'Onsonabla siva tdocikaide eiportinlity. 4 ' 1 - - i 1
'',` AIL Holds, like :foie% heti Vita it'Dittiograf
from his early ,years.. K. too , -had g yen 6 Mr:
2 .BNOWA:i.t6e,iiident, devotion Of 4 a geneione`tut,...
-1-A ire:,; 4 18 -ettinkiPoußie rielikof
v.„ , •the pitople to manage, their ;ORM , stairs ,in ,, their,
*._,: met wayeat Pieehmetlf atutinv.New ,,, Yotki , and
)(' witentit-iltrowd*Awleocreptai'llte' truf4 itid i re
".%keetted-tlittlieltl-"eittielreaViettr:Vrey of hie oein
;_liitiellifi!,ll.4i4 wait' lic4oll, to ft by new and
:)liaillAld:liiilt*" ' ilkitAlkitilheioae,io the T rip.
z i 944 as ,IYRkriii4lll4l - iroi.,*4 AangOiti, itiloili '
h . Atli+ rervioekto,:#l...President,ali,ltie years et: •
' e o tultgol4. l 4*.eneisteney in. tho,Demooyatio retike,,
~;bent, fen.anothing. against .the exacting.spirit; 1
whibbC songhtz-to Alegraes him,before the country
`- beniuntrolteTrould ;I°El:exigent - kr dishottorhimeelfi
- telt% frierols.•'' And ME Illskir hid appetiled:
lr,eiii pdwee le the'peoWZfietn'lliek Ititiolebbe of 1
Office .14 ' iiiliTaiiiat.b4t i x-401P.;th'earourti-U the
" , -., r . t... Ti r.. , ... t .. , . th .--,,,.- . - wiry
, 1e0f,,Ttg94. , - , qa.,,tr,aa„np,p. ,Or -ramp)? I
P‘ 4 3 o i4dfilkeak . (4r,.ta;alf ...tt 49)k.4 I . l l * , ,an.4ainid
-,4 saohluesolatfone,werrytewn was tile sognoirliere
-sue -,treason •.of , Arnold :to the -ArnericanotrmY
, bad.beeivAisolosed: and Alenounced serenty.elght
ioors borot:N in September 1700: It , :warirrit;
Itiotbet freioberi to . @OM 'Ohio
Weld '4l6'
TOS'P l if was right'
meth the
~;,01 : 4,thii.c„hillo- s rea by 4io7noblo,4lede of the ,
poor. private, soldiers, PAIIf.DJNI?, Vv Tiny, pod
.Wisaitya—ahouldjneet in tba:t. adMonish
" their' countrymen against tho now attempt to or
tablielt false dootrinea, nod to punish all *how(44, ±
not accept them. If this allusion' is not 'plan-,
•Ifinti the Washington Ireton- mast , thank itself: .
"Withinedn'amegligenta of history'and of truth, tlirt
4irr4fAt:hait I' to' Nisi the fact that 'X 'peke se
"iO - 1 11 iti'fit t ePalto'
,upon Mr.
nt r ,;sl l 4, l „.lo2',.tietuton—.nos:
: oigra,S , s l 9, l lll l alle• , 1; 1 9, lie j ; jr,Ousyn,nOtionghte
• to limas:der the,sacrod eights of , .IV4
hove not been tempted by the glare of. patron agry
•- 'mode mad. bp,* longing r, for Continued powe or,'
i leinderisalndifferont t 4 duty sod to patriotism by.
lelfir - tilet - oar ittlueoee wig boundless, ind'
" jkii'mfrleifirtiop or forth 'and' *blind" windst.
nod'unrebilke '
'l 4 4 ; l l: r it t i
-..lFrestien plows betWo e.t.
op tnralp "magiserate
is •osif after, his .-oleotlon,r-and I am 4 not here't4 lift
the -veil thathides them from steit, and'
only refer`to them in Aso far as those , who now` ro.
lento bd his Orgnos may compel me, and even thief .
-witheut VIP Violation - of abj` of thiraaribt}tiou
„ r . i PO Vs and' AO yati0;114.4.01
: 41113 g A 7 f 4 F 6 4 "S i kqe i r I T * ll l l.-14 0
4011 MON Xikrie4 . 4;:p g yr .t , t o .
.1 0 pi,ncin his i#444,.filr.jkatidllgs'444""
'la* Democratic party, att4, a ‘o v i t 44 go .th a b asil
:i4trittesille, of popular solteriiffnty, WO, /wept so
. 1
• • sleeted to maintain; to signalled du y s ebrb. yr i e ,
sd kis poliett,• and #64m,relf an ardent, elec. I
anclje say bo pew m4ttui to say dittntetetittkl
•Alikppart, , No'man better than himself knew, and
knOisa;thit ft teltd‘been the ambition of my life to
hiiiirooklisetifith skindepetident nowerper.
thifilltheoldfbiligkadirs, that
IrW'ketiriaViisitfie: 4 1 .1 in Adininis•
; dislione,Ript piiikin 0;214 b - dpy, ihoy raj, AnDres,
t 'sosioi, I iNiSeirtete'litieldi Itswo t rfit'ssid . to Penn ;
int. 6 l
‘.# elope r iipdAyrotpor,. proof otrol,poreonal devo
itTelon , ,touktis. peftitaal,fortttnes,e4 not con:
ball *at , i)vint , embillous, to Ismailia him with.
' 14 '44 liblinOiltrlithe 'slightest) , poulble• s degree'
"idgOehilisitt 4 jiehtni . '
but While ' , this. was; 80,
• I was desirous of protecting itigielt•egainst the
* / .s !sicilateiVitangir of chhiinglinto ?collision •with hip
moiciaeiterudielf thing seemed to
>r foamed an
i s y the ; pfei~ . totli ~ giira?a , ditairiropei
til:.(ao It Ritelgeil#,,l4kiA4 have
a. 1 4w m ho •in :Pn s L frs i l le i l 6 oft leer
pr aritefq, the
efreol4.l.ollFeat)g--"l'l`rltTit of ter
--itatenuintwo ot: meslypli i4ititoEXEß Pf tits I
13106416
,maigelf44•oo)4l))7 •,a4q4trog.fr i law the
•it .Nsiicitt;polloy ntithe Administration As to, the pion.
It /claire gabitta lrhte wag in Send 1E47,014 tbrrii
? i xt,,..,lllcoit *Atwater his inangtarition. Rho only inek
l'eneelpuTheonly.otottd upon thp
Irlunt"been ditthho
zr - ajorppl eq Al • ifit tindiAti
4 ; 7 h 't IL I' Tdel be.
put _ m ere he is. - souls gee
JrttafAdLlisPlZA Immediate sointtc!i". 'l* law
4 .4.1V / Plr I t:AILLit * Li il " T li
Eiltl i M 4/101 4 98; cfr tufrtoxiirtj
o A tb,upip.fit io' f , 4 , 0 A i d, e) o l l 4;44 o ""‘Vv• - :
-rear or continued triumph an aseendOmf : el??
kidiAdoblpppg#49 , o.7.o,Qituilo,i, were rail&
/7/111411311 101 9 4 94 Y 4441(4 1 44A)0MP111s • or:
• • •
- t- 4 .‘="-' - e t' 4 l'" 'if o,e; ' • . '
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t
t;-1
iimitititent 'and Airtuoiti bonservatistn bribe; Conn ,
lithi - Ottite'rifitlaii':: tfilugural-had fallen-upon,
11 . 1401;iii hi4o - ,Ottlie - "Ve'ople 'dike is, 'rifreshing
iktiwey,OfithoTesO4ll4th:' It
liar `to l?othOrtitio
PArtrthopeands:andAtens„y AibliSanO:Wliti,i in
- doubting,bbiehad . .troted,ngsinst, kiiia o l l ,4 1.0 I ih
-185r3vcIt may well be oonoeti-Od,,hort,,anraloUsly I
!--strove--toinaintain, a statel&of -things Whioh
- riot only - tunlst . to- push , Pennsylvania -forward, in - ,
the Sion =Of'emidrsi, - bit' wield > adeance , , allthe
tree men o 4 ttio 's tate chic had Veen' Steady-in the
faith *Midi gdie'rti'.thit` ystili,nt 4 l llo : - ,year
:What way°, could hnvii,b - nd
come -.lnto.oolllsion witkanimember lin-,
onawaiire Ad mi nistration ,the cry: of
having been a candidate for the cabinet, - that
ePandei " is kok, 'bfithiviied bf , 'the foot that my
hante-Wall neyer , piessuted with lay consent to his
.',ooiielderation;:and that' the'only part I took in the
Nisifijadustibiroily to
'laborloeslevate , lfOweil to- a seat du, that
9411111, bea r d:4l)4,4d ho'neiq, as I stipp - olfid,
unshelled the pnnc+pls ,of popular., aoDer'ec 'hty
:‘4oo._24,os:qteaftial -election ! , and also to raise my
voce; against ";Cnbinot of
hir. Jonas, of 'Barks oonnty, whose aarbisi:Olime
tiled - hex - no `fully 'fulfilled all: the apprehenelens
:tibiolf entertained' of his anbservianoy; his
iiiiihhnjY;'lntid iniapacitY. - '[ - Iler could I have
,feltanyAisappofntnent ,aftei , ; fig:lariat for the
*atit.7; now in his
,P:stsiOsicin ,a4oo,sritorn.ttie, which I' :thank -
tecniti, for the manor in N 1 401 1::
'he ,- ,-waftz:pleased , -) - ;prefev - ;zue -; among
tha , dittinguisbed ,- gentlemen, named for-:
aiighz, Pico: •Ditood• tbisi,timeJ with
nearly four loirtroflederal power within hie
`iiiftr,=ArrTnsall -itrlartytoui4 had , - reached
ihtiVtiin'e; or tire Nhien; if *nr„kullOiiion'hiliait!ed
to him, it was to faithful 10 the truth, and true
- to. those :who had , -been - tine to
with
E /,hadne
'more idea for ooming into ocrailict withim than
have t, y d ot c om in g i nto ' , eonff . t with my own
'oh : Siren. : .Bat, as I was not - Moh`enough to take
°Seed - Ida hands; - and'; as he bad deeided that I
,was pot Seuthernenough'to take pesiossida of the
-national organ -Join which;• 2 with abundant pros
'pecittl:fltiiiitg a Wealthy, utarti" I 144
,VeliinterilY
retired, in'iB66, throwing * Up. over* ..pealtible id
•iiiiitigeof, realizing a competenoy-for my faidly;
to moist hint to the - Preiddential nomination"-‘
'." mai Itiopiimrily.Lantions to take 'no step 'that
'Weilldnet leave me in:Sperfectitatineity with Ulric;
.. ,
and render Tan ,Paiss worthy of the support of
Abe, people, , After . readin g over, earefully- the
transactions which had' taken place between Ge•
.
,vernor W,atitaii - and ~ himself, 'published' at: that
lithetd.all, and: now; a part of the reoords of the
country, '.'.l concluded,` on-invitation,' to Make a
ehrespeaoh, at the tegultit: Denmeratio Oefebia.:
Lion, itt 7 ,,lmiependenCe ,Ospiare, "ofthis city, : on' l
:the arourib' of JuiY,•,, 1857; in which I teat
, •ocoasion -, !to' ,' argne "-at • length ..the question
.of lgatisai aiirettnderetind it to-day, and BM the
cAdnitiditratitin ,nnderetoild and, avowed it then.
:•'.4.,eapy . Ot thie addreiss,"(alfpiiblished in the city,
. - ptinenarforriardiaMWashlngton for the purpose
'of ascertaining. how: it '.would :be received there.,
"SOM. - eitraetstrom- this I*lietititi I now be g
:leaveßiley before the publio. ,ThelaWas 'follows - :
ll is not my:Min:43Be td enter into an argument'
to eliow•whirought to be the qualification of voters
in the 'Territory of Hanna, „whew the State Con
stitution, shortly to be formtd; shall be submitted
to them for rejoetton'or , adoption. Gov. Walker
h'as himself. declared. that the people of the'Tein:-
tory must de protected Ws- the exercise of thew'
'tight` ofsooting jar or against - that instrument,
and Amon this - basia,:however they may. have re
; fused' td,.vote ,fordelegates,to „the Convention,' or
helfererthity May, refieleto,yote,,whon. UM Coned
tufieullAbruitted,ta thoMpit - is morally certain
ihat,j„hey„daimet Stilitain _them.selves Were, the
Votsteritiert b Y lejitellitir#Over4pc liifelikiersEa4 '
raid liberal polev. - '-':- - - '''' " -'' -, :i , = -••-- ! "
•t>ratif inirPriseilrtiofteeol,"tharin some - quarters.
"the light erthopebpidlfo vote it pen this Oonstitu
,tion should-be questioned ;' but L.rejobiertolinow•
that-in, the; Souttrmany of..tbelablffit - aed purist
, pienacknowledge this,right f iind ;are r reselved-, to` •
stand_by,it. "... In, thiamniteelion the astiolei4 the'
flt rnt i gu i 2L ll 4 . -6.
_.___eVrtheAli - er - Jui.o deserves
-i i i:."-' -- --.'ily, ii,po ,• doneito ...by.....mi e x t rent ,
'Stu "Irighte,' aibi•a P, ",nit'We `l2le , ',..iwtieh'may; be,
r
itfalrod'-`a'ke of Calharni ethooli of
Plitlailibt4hit, ;that according to
'the provisionOfftturfra _Ai l , paasedPiri 1854,
thereon' be•ntbd ZAlfrrighbialsts, - and
that it oughtto - ,be.retiogaisid when_the. ocnstitu!.
• • • • ••-ae - _-reseciteetettireptioptodflrAnase 'for' '
the joAditrte):4. „It would ,be,-supercrogation to
sliPw in lsTr,,niany,eases Territerial or State Con
ptitutlinielmye been euliiiitttotto;the'people after
they' lied been formed. ' Der owls reformed Consti.
tutidif, '1'4.1938; - WO, presented 'to' the people
etid•iideptinf by' them,- and adoorditig -to - that
instrument - every 'subsequent " amendment:to it
Emnst dristais•fatided by two:thirds of-two - moles
,slvolhateLegudatures;ankthen submitted-to the
,ballot - The sameguiy be/mid:of every other
OenetHution,whioh,hae,beemliberaltsed within the
last twenty,years.lt",.would..be, teeny the least,'
I monstrous wrong ff die piliteinfe" were not car
ried out in - lransaa,..if it Should be; atilt will be,
what Statham, ,whit. Northertt man, ,will cavil at
the reitultt, ''' ~ '
11 :# 1 .0,stieliiitiaKtheii4sittVai'llittitasiteeire' a -
-triti,tittite4ey, *Jr have lE44m:fir they'dosire a
Anv.ifOti. teithe.Y. are entitled , to'it.. In tbefornier
,event f ,after :all that , has, , been, sMd and written.'
-what - beeoines , ef the'Deptibliesn 'platform of 1856 7
"What bite'
_et:deer the pledge - of the'Premontlead;
eta, that Whenever :Benne° is -Made a Tree State.
theyjillt be:willing, to endcirso ,the.po:lieY *blob
produceethatresolt? - This, imi.l their only issue
of the late canvass. ;I.loon !hie basle,tbe OpPosi ,
Lion sectionalized itseitlJpontlitsbasla they struck
out fifteen eters from thee national lag.: Upon this
bads 'that ;refused -• - to'ocPeprtfab3-silth :Southern ,
men: • Upon"thie bailie' M
theidenottneed the Demo-.
oratiapartiei Hie ;give art*, eanie they,ba.
Roved or said that Atf,Pol ; y, of - hir,liiiitharten's
'friends would he eertainte; end in making Rums
,a slavelitate. liintwhery after a fair. and legit,-
mate oanvass of votes in "the Territory ofllansat
wh en all the people of it that Tetyitery have th e pone -
throtni - enoTtirthimi ',whom org. anisationa; foreign
1 0 - thipiolferdProvenddfrobitTlistractilrig the bal-.
1004 ;.Irlientliosti wi:l . :Mit% 'removed frdm Ar•
;limits,- Attlee. ifiri, South Carolina and- Misaistdppl,_ -
- Alabama - and•Tozes, shall stand side by tide witb
.those front Marteaohasetts, Ohio, Indiana, Wisoon
siniallohigan;New York,' , Pennsylvenia, and New .
SeiseY,"shirliAtilte, advantage ofi the ',protection of
}he` ) ,Pederat'Giveriteiit;- and the - Unrestrained
.mijoiiVof ,theirvotes shalicgiye - Aititeas a free
Condlitatsll-Whiss, - ...r o.BlB,Aten,.be,oonifib :Of ilio
Pjedge at thelnapnbliean leidereln" DOS?, The
last plank upon which they stood, will:. have been
'taken entity ;• the work could .not
'be- assoraplished fairly' will ' , heel) "been femora. .
plfshed - fairly: — ln that evenV sectionalism will
Inivp,reeetved' its 'death-blew, end 'Abolition will
ho compelled to fall heel upon those oldirritations
and derleos•whieltahamed and ifiegraeed the early
stages of its existences ;. - ~ , •
• TAW:well conceive the dilemma of mere p o 11,
:TIC4MB:wbo opposed the Democracy in 1856; in snob
an ofelit. :But what , will-those' men do who, in
that contest, rand - bytlegielatures chosen in' that
'Oldest,- iverrieleateetb the, new. Hoene of Repro
ealittitireened Seneteorthe " United States? , In'
Pentisgennia;Stineii, Oianierotiires JMosen' to the,
blentite upon,. thleplatfern4 in Netv.irokk; Pres
ton Hutu. in Illinois;lyman Trumbull ;l in Wis.
comfit i Oharles Durkee rani Iowa; -Aaron Harlan;
411:thecienten,'•prefesiring , Democirats In their day,
Arefeeltosien tree/lea Meru? others Werd , chosen.
tolkelliable eiltetireserittittred;,Upriii - the plat
10,1*Witreqatufga.:711d* long , will they re
maieldentitteLwithltits,Odpoiltien should Kansas
beare2 2 •Sh: free -State ? .7:2t r er,will' the Bon& be a
loser should a- fair trial -:bring about thie,rosult,
for the same_ men who- repeatedly pledged. there
'selves te`sublnit, , toitb3i polloy Which trade Hanna
a freiState; ;sled: deelarld'tha
t if :the: South were
litillingjes,Yielf this piciptrthei ware re ady-ti aii- '
vitesoebattieereatibil 4f: naivelave States ourof
notteni of .Tomas. laThey.iiere Willing to concede '
;Om maltase -if , 0 üba-a.ll • they asked-was that
Kansas should be secured to the free States. Such,
diallAtventil, leterrelidlut of -the events of, the
lasteattipaigt;and-titoli_j‘ it 'SIMMS TO,TIM, MAO he
the eild:'",Xl wenlil,4ndeed; heat Median teequel
, to, ille,stregglaef /856,7141,CM allibt theidente,l4
tinder's PenneylvanieTreeident; - tsPendylvenian
-11ke. , •Robert,,J,Walker f ait ' Cleyernor. of Kansas,
should be the Instrument of restoring peace, pros- ,
perlty,,and happiness. to, the fair, soilof that inte•
resting:region. '.•, * - „ ". , _ ' -
Hut vtlille it IS tunqueittenekAhist - coiery honest
'Man jn, flip :Southern Btati,olllllplentrilji be..
Here, pr_enaredte, sane Son ilie *llion oflCan A se.
Into-the Union ' as,l free State,'" oiddi•thisLhe the
result Of elate-untrammelled etc:Mon:so do t: be
lieve thetrevasVatejoity - of the Northenzneople,
... 7 itu aPPrire a -different result. should StoboneBs
'pl9BsiSiop 0041 liknllot4oi iii,lCtinilib So decide. _
• Thierepeeett Ran ; delivered On the dtli • of Julyi
1851, and on the 6th ''of Anti , following I 10011iFed:
ii lefter'liMii '''.ii, ,- illetingelih . ed `' member ' Of the
'Cabinet of Mr. ,- Btrenziren,, heartily approving the
•Senthektlif T, he,d'impitietted,l aid calling my 11 ,ti,en::
Aloe ip the Entbiained iitbile-whieh appeered intim
Ny i ya .., ingten 'quiet/ J.!, the succeeding day:' , -
7 „;•.;Prirte.thi:•,W.bsitlestee Vomit of Silly 7, 1857 ] ::
.1 wbuu there is no serious Mende upon the Con-.
'`,SiffittiorCeither in the Convention ,or among the
iieciple; the: pewees Of ,the. delesates . alone may put
.it in oprethitt,'" - Btit"stph' ti: not: - the c ase e an
,[f i nd,' , ! Tha.mest vielentatruggle,itte country
eversaw. upon. the mist important issue width the
,Constitution is to determine , has been going on'
there for several yearsrbetweenrtiee BO evenly
'balanced thatbotli olefin the major pa ity, and so hos ,
tile to one another that numerous lives have been
Itist,ittcliti,„;Conteit.' , Under" these ofrounistartees
- there ean .. hejio sushi - kink:4s allerittininedear ,
.Iy,.ane i i mitheititAtluh,t.4osill_orthe Juppitt .tst
any way: except hi: their, own ,direet szYtession of '
it at the polls. Constitution nob subjected. W I
'that testimematter what' lt :contains, , will' Doc.
liiie kektiliiilactitt ; byl ter opp o nents
~ , o heanythim,
c . .
'L
,plaiiisp?' la, cold; - tai ahe given: to this'essee- - , ,
'Lion by 'the arginient that the meinhorCef time
Convention could have np l uteritte '[orTreft,irbig te . '
ittionet their work ,to them couttttderits,, except
'd' abitiourterneos i l that lam majority. would con.,
Isbnittie.' -;TVetenfeas that we should.find Some
,4iffltittik;ithittemerinir this.- Whit other motive
Vit.l4,fbey„,hirf,e?'"'',We do ' most
"' devoutly believe
;4111,4014,78.1LeiatitiftiTittlorCofflartiat be:sub.'
rwsetteei:to,a Wefts Vote of the peePle, :the un'happr ,
roetroversv whsile has heretofore ytied iir that
Tites - Iffrv - ,%uiiit bb proltingett, fel. .an itide fi nstr
,rime teedine." ..: ~, .1, ~,•_,,. ~, -
.. ,„ ,
~' ,
'AnTaigetitimeineteitiest:entileur to OTTOOOTATA
, ,
the great betrayal'ef :principle by the present A&
1Tt, , , , ,",.,„' "..alf."4 ~, ,.- i "- : , ,, hr....T0 5,:,.. ,-,', 1. ~ -. ' . '
'minietrafion on the Kansan issue iStlie
nun 8.,.13n50rc, Attorney peneral of the 'United%
Stabir,'l4lsttleil which he :Weald 'riot &soupy to
day, and he knows it well, but *for. the very anti"
LeoentPtetzt DeMocrioy . agalnit'whoth -he Is now
constantly, coarsely,-and calumniously,
:•' leo,ll9,Aluisb gallant inewbeen willing to yield
to the demand of the extreme Senth,rthat Pennsyl
vania should allow that south to Maks; a Cabinet
Mli:hiter„ for 'al in ?the' person of Jonas, of Birks
county, the kindest-and, most valiant opponent Of
the Leconipton , polloy of the present general
ratstintlen yrculd`be the illustridui Attorney Qine-'
rat himself : Bow be remembers these men, hod he
regards these SeiVioet`oxiiYhe understood Front the
foot that, although thi,ClOoti from the Washing—
Uri-Union, shoe (fopledi`wasf doubtless from his
pen and the letter applauding- the address' whioh
I made on the 4th of—July, 1.857, was written: by
him, yet he goes baok'of his Olen reeerd to assail
those whose only offense bi that of being true to the
opinion whichhe he's dosortedf This is note private
letter, and if the Attorney bineral; overlas own
name, or in any authoritative manner will deny it,
lbw ,glire'Mo; : ireit'pliastire to 'spread thUt elo
quent epistle before the' tieoPle of Pennlylvarila.
The : next step was the preparation of the stilutatery
,Of 'TlllE'Plezie,.Witioh I will not rennet bete, with
the exoeption of the folloWing extract, to show how
earnestly I cherished the , deslreof being on the
right ildo`O! the poirers that be :' • ,
_. „ ..
P TEE , PRESS . will -speak for itself. on all the
, great,questions of the , day, • I have already an
nonneed (what, indeed, was universally and Justly
initieipated,) that • this political - department of my
iO
'prabetild MidondtiotedMpon Demeortitte Min
eiples:-", Itia.nqually ,Well known:that the matt
pares and the men of the 'present:Administration
at Washington . have myheartieet 'approbation.
-I have known the great statesman now at the head
of the Government, and acted in concert and confi—
dence:With him 'eversinoa MY first youthful 02800ilt-
Gen inpolitiosandeditorial life. The I agreea
ble seryloes"which it:lias' fallen to m to Per
form, were these. givnit to his cause . attach
ment to him grc* not more froni admiration of his
pure and upright isharaoter than Itom -a profound
regard for his Intel loot, experience, and patriotism.
It was my good , fortune; 'with many good men,
to asahlt,liot obseurely,nor ineffioiently, in crown
ing elife of
~uesfulnesi and distinotien to his doun
try. andhimself with :',,the highest honors In the
-world. " The fruits 'of that result arealready ripen
ing, for the future. The-wisdom of the popular
Choice la being daily vindieatedby the quiet and
content which have followed the stormy ' , tenet of
last year, as tha,swest. sunshine follows the destrne
'live tetinpoit Had Mr. Buchanan not been, as , he
ives,, ruy„ first choice `for President', - and .yet ap
proved AlmsOltworthy' or the high. trust confided
to his f hands, , by regarding, respecting, and Pro
teoting the rights of the;oidien and the rights of
the fitates,l I should have done every thing that
'one Maui could do touphold and to strengthen him,
and to gather around hint emitted public opinion.
The performance of that duty becomes a Tread
satisfaction, however, when the isonsistenoy, dig
nity, and ability- of. his Administration, aro so
many proofs tbathe well deserved the persevering
and enthusiastic: preference of- those: gallant men
who , have clung to 'his fortunes through, good
report "and through report, during so many
loneyeara. " . . ,
„Thisepening addrowi I also forwarded to Wish-
Ington,allowing them -to make its expression of
devotion to the _President, even stronger than I
.had originalli-Written them. Thus fortified—thus
clothed with the pantipty Of the great prinelple of
popular „severeigittY:-Is' ; any wonder that I
started %joyously -in , my onward career? Not a
dollar of the' money with which Tin Parse Was
established aerie from the-Federal Administra
tion. ' , So anxious was I to stand by it disinterest
edly, that I. preferred to enter,the arena single
handed and alone, and to command - its support,
and: the support, of the people, without being
called -the dependentof power. The Democratic
party was not indifferent to this enterprise. t
had rendered the Administration spine arrive the
year before. I had its head may Beryline
'during hiS"igrittnie-,-inrire thanhis present, pars-
Ate:rand my liatinders know, lint not more than
the President himself is aware of, when he con
tain-111i Olin heart, or.reads tbe'thiekening slan
ders that are poured upon my devoted head.
'`X,st,h,e, drama in Bansai began td unfold itself, the
'DessiOratie-papers ,regarded me as Speaking from
the attain I saw in the prinaiple in issue so mush
thet„wativiortliyef support, and so little in Con•
greasional interracal:tweet could last, so little in
*the warring factions of the day that could endure,
end se much in Mr. D U4lrdif AN, a native-born Penn
sylvanian; that was important to Pennsylvania and '
be.r, tatv...intarota, that .I. fait- that every: -
1,14 W r - -- Toi - "fitin” and the - plat; -
form he . tkeii skied' Icy', was a blow struck for
the State, - and that the nforall strengthened him
the more stttngtbenod det:rold Pennsylvania.
It was with pride and with joy that I observed a
universal response coming up from the country, in
support of his evident determination to snake good
the faith he hadplightediri'lBs6. -
'I have 'carefully rend oVer that portion of Tin
yprssa,whieh was - published in the 4 wsOnths of Au
gust, September, October, and November, and in
all thoie months there is not aline or syllable that
the moat devoted adhenintof Mr. Btronersen, not
a line which he himself would not approve., It Was ,
only-when I fonndlf noisessary to piste myself in
antagonism to the new polloyfif the Administra
tion that my course began to- be objectionable at
Nashingtom , "
Irneed not dictail the desertion of Weraraa and
the removal ofl3rawrott,•and the other acts that
befel`prior to thelret annual Message, in Deoem
ber 1857, although I eainot forbear an expression,
Injustice both to Governor WALicna and to Secre
tary Breams, that no men ever started forth with
More patriotic inten'imis than they did, and yet,
es , we have seen, the one was shamefully de
-tented in. the• very. oriels of -the game, and
the - other 'as shamefully removed, and an
attempt made to, tarn - .him adrift , upon the
world a-poor man; after he had seorifloed a splen
did professional - position at Washington to accept
a snbonlinate position in order to-serve the man
with whom he had been associated from the Ad
ministration' of , Janes K; 'Pons until the final
struggle at Cincinnati in 1850, and to whose dense
he had alwaii given the warmest and most ener
getiesupport. ' -
I vrih now
&mine down "to the 'canoes which led
me to deliver the spoilt% which" has elicited such
unlicensed abate' froth thepaid organs of the Ad-
Ministration, to which Organs I will, In the proper
plaoe,'paymy respects. 7 After Mr. neon/NAN had
'dedirmlitodltinaire his Kansas policy a test with
the Democratic party; after Judge DOUGLAS had
spoken his &et 'celebrated 'speech in the Senate,
and when the fact had become notorious that the
moving cause of the surrender of the principle to
which we Mord committed in 1855 was the throat
of secession coming from certain politicians in
three or four Southern States, (not the people of
these States, but the politicians and managers,)
the most unexampled proscription was resorted to
for the porpOsep of intimidating those who agreed
with Judge Dorreese,- and 'Governor Wien, and
Governor WALkin, and to compel theta to take
sides with the Administration in its unexpected'
metamorphosis. ,
I returned, aftir my intervieir with Mr. BUCHA.
man, still anxious to maintain friendly relations
with hie , Adrisinistration ; but I. was soon con;'
rimed unless I lebasedMy manhood, and
recalled all that I had Said in favor of the Cincin
nati platform and the doctrine of popeiar sore
'reign% wouldbe t o b eat brunt
•of -a violent 'collision; And from that day, from
January, 1858,•np to September, when I spoke at
Tarr/town>. there' was no
-calumny too vile to
be coined and *circulated by the organs of the
Administration against the journal of which I am
'die' oyvnei and the editor, and the gentlemen with
whotn4 proud to o&-operate iii this great
cause. Every friend who bad been appointed
to, °Mae, and Who, ' dared to sympathise
:milli' me, in nty. Straggle for principle,
was ejected, from 'plane: I 'was denounced; not
online false to my, party, riokonly 1111 false to the
issues of 1850, but Imes deolared "to be under
the pay isf - thellittok'Thipubileasse ;" and, to cap
Cie olintax,ltse simeldininistration• organs were
kinderioriyli to allege that ; had proved myself
ungrateful, to Janne BeenAirAN by refusing to
foliojr hiliri'hts: betrayal of DemoCrittio
prigoi
pies,=i Appeal - swore Made postmasters through
-Onttitit'qo,untryito ittneekme in my business, and
-to leave ne'effort untried to cripple my enterprise.
In /I,WOrt_thllre wan an ingenuity of Troseription,
a fertility of falsehood, ,a rookiessnesi.of perm
ution,Whiah inducted tnn more than once to inquire
in the language of ClovernOV,Walker, whither in
deed " we were living in the last year of American
Independence; or the first year of the American mo
narchy l"_ , I saw, .the, basest wnstehes,Mell who
had never 'been recogubsid by. the itomootatio par
ty in this State, and who , in lasi) had scarcely an
opinion to 'avow ? ready, to go for Pantsorsr or
saw these men not only olothed with
the power of theTederal Administration, but au
thorized to speak in - denunolittion of men who had
oresitedit. , I caw the money of the Federal Go
vernment expended to break down the regular or 7
- gaisliati,bn,', ; of • the Democratic party whenever
and wher ever that organization was,-not commit
'ted-to thescandalons Kansas policy of,that Ad
• ministration. saw Senatorituined" into spicule
'tore in,order'to Ite l aoq them , to 'desert their writ
-4.4/I,apehti promises to the people ; I Semi
Rapresentativespurehased to betray their consti7
'tuarifi,lste a Sonthern , alaveholder purohases his
ifaYail' I law'neriPapers openly and natively en
,gaged-'rich itie, on the side of Coniolenoe and the
Constitution. threatened or bought-into silence or
`l4ilbseeite witnessed - an , era • of, edictal des
organszation of . algid insolence,
such as, had it taken Plain under an opposition
Administration,
and against the Demeoratio party
WouldlaVe hurlekthat Opposition Into perpetual
,
THIAtSDAS. SEPT:M3p4, 40,
obscurity. It vas in vain that patriotioNmorisata
in all parts of the Union, North , and Sortth,-gad
and West, hold rip their„hands in terror at this
abandoned speetattle. It Was in vain that Wan,
Of - Virginia, protested,' that rootraLes ; protested.,
that i'Amoin protected, that BANpaOFT pratetaadl,
that KyartsoN irOteated, that KNOX protested,
that the no:treat and dearest. friends of 'Mr.l3 tr.- ,
CIONAN protested—theorusade went on. •r,salrthe
Democratic) parts , of Illinois, standing Under ;tae
flag "whioh marshalled us in- the,greatinOry ttb,
years ago,, traduced as traitors to that, Aag ; :t•
saw gTEMIEN A. Hounnas - lisdinftha, regalir.
organisation' of 'the party to it dallyeenitiotWith ,
the atowed enemies of that:. partiOittid• lyet:
attacked front and rear by the "Adminkterakiens
I HAW HICKMAN contending against the menti-'
nary hosts .; of , office in - hie 'district, tapaitr
struggling against the outdone-house ,
Morraonitriv-with the regular. nbmineti4nt
back opposed by the °Oldish in 'hii; iti,d4Onit
'Dalits upholding. popular sovereignty. n
against. a frantic horde of mercenaries ;nd it
seethed to me that silence . on ttirpart Winildl be
griet , ous cowardido. Accordingly I spoke isktdid.
So mush for the man which India:Wm° to
pronounce my Tarrytown - speech ; and - noiqer the
aeolteations whleh haie been,eallit folti Mind
that speooh by the hirelings of:the Admintitratton.
Thefiret tOwhiehl shall' gall attention is_thatof
the Washington Chien, which, issui4Bop
tember 7th, uses the following language':
OurpurpOse, however, was not' to censure'.this
statement forthe want of honor implied in mnling
it, but to denounce it, as We now do most egifilieti,
'catty, for its unmitigdied and total destitution of
all honesty and truth: , Nolembritenversstien tools,
place, nor any oonversation at 014-betWeeIIFOOSO
parties on that Subject:. Mr. Forney, neyet bad
the courage to address Mr. Huolmnan illlhajetrain,
and he certainly hap: not 'thaitapndences,_l6 - direr ,
m
his advice to thean,of whose Terse:l4l,o44oer:
ho bad been tholabitUal traducer for.mentlrbe-'
fore LecoMpton or anti-tesompiton was theng:t
"No such. ionterstitione? Cap , the- Saitien,
took p 1 ace; nor any contersatisrit at all, a!tMeen-i
those parties on theenkjici.'
To these general words I bog to reply by 'dtites
and faots: I visited Washington -earlyinTecfM
tor of 1857, and had 'an interview of iomit 'Arco
hours with Mr. llonneetAar on the first day , if :the
'meeting of Congress at its late session.' :Oat
such an interview 4,00 h place is proved by the coin
that it was announced' in - the New' York Herald
and New York Tribune, shortly after it speeeded,.
and in Tug Proms on the 14th of Deceraberime
:
' -"It is of source not true, as everyirhere
graphed on Friday and Saturday,- that. the .edttor
of This Proms was denied admission at the Pain&
dentist mansion during his late visit, to Washing
ton. He was not only promptly; been:wet kindly
received by the President; who knowa too iiell ‘ the
proprieties of life to regard arrinmest. difference of
opinion as a pretext for personal alienatkin,,z4 The
men who were always Mr. Ductratten's .mterides
before ho becalm% President, and who now strive
to compensate 'for their bitter' amanita upon pus.
character at Cincinnati, ;by assailing Tan 'Rana
beeanse of its 'resolute and disinterested stifitert, of
gilts wont, Or Tan MA.loaMt,' may feed them Ora
malevolence by falsehoods like this, but do 'net,
make , a favorable impression upon Mr.
CIIANAN."
So that the interviewreally did Omar ! what
the object of that interview,was, may be intagited
from the fact that n lt& h o other subject-co
been discussed Idioms the •parties," for ' , ai
have'satel in these remarks, and as the coluthns
di Tug Passe 0,11 ihow, .1 had, tia &nue ofoublies
difference with Mr. IMOlteliee b'eim;l - 4h:ae; i9+
Kansas. We had long since ceased to talkatbout
private matters. Not only did the conversation ie
detailed, take place,. but,l , '
the .many 1 10:
to whom I related •it after left 'the
eidential mansion, will remeMber, many other
things were omitted in the statement which
gave, at Tarrytown. Among • others, the ;Pre
sident Said to me "If you and *mama and Thrull
-Lati will unite
in support of my , Nansaspolleithe
people of Names will vote at the' election whielris
to oome off on the .21st December;" (that election,
it will he remembered, having been milled udder
the auspieei of the,minority Legislature, for - the
pairs° of putting through the Loeompton Cons'
Wien, and was hold under eirontititancee of frjeud
and infamy which will not men be forgotten.)
said further, "l know thatyou belie the stronglddo
of this vitiation. Anne , thatyou, can `mini Off, •
the people, but I appeal to yon. to stand. with pi,.
'beeause,if I do not adhire to my new philitir-41,
hama, Georgia. and Missicsippi will prolthirdvi,
'node from the Union." It - in - protiablifilhat 'the
memory ot.hir.,BricitivrAirlyill be Stimulated when
be reads these =tepees, As for the WashingtOn
Union, whether it speaks for him or not, in the
above extract, lam unable to say. If it does;the
- memory of the President is most defectiVe.
As to my offering advice to dtr. Bennett/at, I
have only to remark: while Mr. W/INDELIip of
the Washii3gton enton, was tinknown in the
politioal world, and white the editors of that some
paper were coining 'calumnies against the Presi
dent, my advice ; and morel to him wile not only
gladly and kindly received, but earnestly solicited
,I spoke as freely to him at all times when he vas
not President, as I did after his election and his
installation.
Another fact in oonneotion with this interview
with the President I may mention, and It is this:
that one or two days after it transpired, I returned
to Philadelphia, and whilst sitting In my dace in
Chestnut street, was visited by In old friend from
Southern New York, Whem I had met in Washing•
ton, and who celled on me to say that ho bad been
desired by the President to atop over and see me,
and to assure melba he (the President) intended
to make his Kanssipolley a test upon the Demo
aratie party, and that no man would be, tolerated
by his Administration who did not approve and
support this Polley: • -
The Union goes on to say, speaking of the re
port of the Cabinet meeting :
* *
The story be tells of the Cabinet meeting is,
like the account of his own conversation, wholly
fabulous:. We venture to assert that Mr. Walker
never euthor'sed any one to say that ho, insulted
the President and Cabinet by expressing a snap!.
elm that they would behave treaoherouily.”
Thiele a somewhat unfortunate denial, appear
ing, as it does, in the Washington' Union, inas
much as the report op that conversation between
ROBERT J. Wsinun and, the Cabinet was com
municated by one of the editors of the Wash
ington Union, on more than one occasion,
when there was no confidence imposed, and
at the time that editor was the known pub
lic and ,active adversary of the ICatsras
policy of the Administration. The name of
that editor is Col. S,,egoa M. JOHNSON. I be
lieve that he is now attached to the Washington
Union. If be denies the statement here made, 1
shall be compelled to make it good by furnishing
the name or nanies of reepeatable witnesses, who
were present when. Do deseribed this celebrated
interview between, Governor WALICiIt and the
Cabinet, and T/aldent BUCHANAN; and thus,
without upon Governor *AMER, or the
President, or the Cabinet, I beg to rest this part
of my statement upon the distinguished authority •
of the editor of the Washington'Union himself,
Auiong those who have volunteered to supply
their ready abuse of the Tarrytown speech, I no-
Aim, the editorof the New York-Reread, the infa-
MOW! JAHNS GORDON BERNISTT, Addressing, as.
I do, a, Mixed ,fludlenee, begone°, I pregame,'
this statement will be read by men of all
parties, I am sure that I commit no offense
when I retail public attention to the manner in
which this man conducted his newspaper during
the campaign of 1856. A long lite of shame, a life
brightened by no single deed of virtue, a ilia' of
eel &hoops, of jealousy, of ostraoism, was fittingly
illustrated in the columns of Die newspaper during
that memorable struggle. Absent. in Europe
when Mr. Humans:4 returned from England,
BaNNOIT came to Ness York shortly after, and
oast about to see which of the great parties had
the best chance of amass. Finally, his years of
hatred of JAMES BUCHANAN obtained the MU
tory, and ho placed himself in the hands
of the friends of 'Fnassonr—whetlier or not
for a ooneideration am unable to prove. This
Man had grown rich in a career of villainy. His
attacks upon personal diameter, his terrorism
over motors and actresses, his reckless 'intrigues
against business men and business interests, all
combined, had filled his pockets, and he now as
pired to' a' respeotisble representative position at
some foreign court. It is stated that when ho ap
plied for such a position under the Administration
of President Psnaon, his petition was Boonted, and ho
became the assailant of that Administration. How
he toiled to defeat Mr. BUCHANAN, the columns of
his journal will show: Ile • seemed to have aban
doned all, remorse. Hie agents penetrated every
section of, the Beton ; they Vane about Lamas
ter, where Mr. Boonsweu r realded ; they ling
ered at Washington ; they wore in the South ,
and in the North, and all talked the same way
and rioted in the same common caltimnies."
"There was note fabrication, no matter how vile,
that did not find ready, eiroulatimi through the
columns of the Herald. The Most sacred seorets
were to the public eye. The early life of
Mr. BUCHANAN, his intimate confidential relations,
and espeorally that portion -which be himself has
Most sedulously hidden from notoriety, was ruth•
lesoly laid hire , to the vulgar, gam This jackal
of the press, who grinds his envenomed tooth even
into the grave itself, tore open the eerements of
- Ibis 'innocent and helpless dead, and shook into
the eyes of, the !nettled publio scores which
even Mr. ncrarran'a , labiate
,friends did
iaot dare to allude to. I have now before me a file
of the New York Herald, published during the
campaign of 1856, and I procured it for the pur
loin, of spreading before the people of the United
qtitt;gi a few of ihe:sheirieless fabrioatleni of BLS
againstthe'persori 'and this' Chareetei of !tie
President, in order to contrast them with his pro.
sent abuso of myself ;Init. forbeat.- I will not
stain the columns of Inn Panes with reproducing,
these monstrous. ealumniee. One only, and that.
the most,modeiafe of the series, I will furnish as a
speoimen :
'From the New York Herald, Friday, Aug. let,
, . •
"The Lanasterian and /nrelligenrer,'now the
• home organ of Mr:Buono:tan', deolared, 1852,
'that !for Months past it Is riotOriously known Mr.
Ignahatitin- - Converted his , residence into an ttit;
' limited tavern- stand, whore all were invited to
-Call:11nd partako.of his 'lettere the qualities bf
lv
which hees:by no meensmodesein extolling, free
from ',any.otner, charge, save the health of Bu
obantin..;ln,this _manner,' it adds, night after'
night, had ;he sought, making men drunk, to
secure from. them 'in their drunken motrienta
'pledgee to IMMO "This is positively fright.
arargities us a shuddering reocilleotion , otffort
'neY'S letter teißoberte, tenoning the .Porreat: dt
'votes 'case; hitt the same Laricaster authority fir
ther"deolares that •• these things have beep repeat=
odly.transaoted,Sabbathafter Sabbath,' and daftee
,an honest denial, :Mho .tiould have, believed it?,
and yet the tory fact that Buohananhas lived,
,t ll l , his respectable old bachelor affords at
onaa labsitwitral'gretied.ef ' • ,
, "The philosophy.ortheetle livery simp le.
old. biteheler; in'a retired country-house,-
cannot tonrish noonlooks and herrspapere,' and
three,mealti a day.. •Ife needs somethingmore;
„Ataa-4 neelaVaniMbtind'oannot exist as a +tit.'
arelety.Pat - bliii itio
&heats ks.: , the - Maker' and Mistitheqranti.tha ad;
tainiatirittilm , .orits'affairs will inevitablp run Into
disOrder,, : emdche mutt necessarily fall into ,outside,
- *Slat substitutes' tomupply„ the absence ef.Wifo'
and children. - 11(0411 gather. a circle
or jelly goodjellows,:vaga.boridizers 'wild, lolling
ellaptt,..and,free-aiid-esey, old oodgeri, ' ,or thalisrty.
'„,tolibloh IMjcingd; Who, will 'Mak' his.' wines,
natjtir iditetige hfindtik for
ixneinie,4ts Boland Perneytimiliis Sethave
erred ani aririahatigirfghtf..Biuthanan , A wife In"
the 16tigeladiniteiiNibauck familygarangements. -
But how could we a • gertial,.well-to•do old
hachislor. Dm 'twenty years, more or legs, a (Hindi.
date for the Proeidenaysta,esoanakmohaproejatione
and amusements?-, ,
it is aaidthat:Mr. in the 'flower of
his Matihood,,,was. crossed, in his Mat -16ra. and
never bed the courage to look after another." .
~ 4 ,*'
-
The remainder is,so „monstrous, and ind eoent,
and false, that I suppress it,- ,
At the time these articles appeared Mr. Dacus,
roof said to me odd day, taking up.the Neu York
Herald, Wbile vies to Wheatland,'
Why'. am I tlintiteae treduoi3kand pUrsded ' by
this • infamous ,knave Have
ni ' t no friends 'who
will visit New Yorliund ,Puniell'id as' ho de
serves? earslhordel be .taken Off in the
,
publiostreeto ',1,130P,0r MOW Mr. Bp:TAW more
excited than he was on this. and other occasion ' s,
under Bussaveig - unlicensed* and -cruel slanders,
and I believe that it is to , my prudence and dom.
paision that` Asitristr IC this , day permitted to ,
walk Broadway witlrlds long ears on hit Sdotoh -
head, I well remember how, after the' campaign,
;the first Impulse, of the, Danoorata evil. the
Union was to have a settlement: with the. Now.
York Herald. . That: paPot . bad expended all of ita
Influence and a good,deal,of FRNMOAT',E4 money in
'trying Ito defeat -Mr. BUCHANAN: • Thousands of
Demeoratio editors throughout the country felt that
'BEttitarr deeeived to har• osatigated, and at the
solicitation of a ' number of distinguished men,
thin. id 'Pbilitdelpbta,' I sat - down 'add Pre
pared a .somewhat' Mulatto article,' showing,
him up in faithful 'eaters. :Ituonsirsa
•Asteeished,ine :. hy calling .my. attention-,to this
artiole, and, complained of the , proprietor, of 'the,
.paper ,for publishing . told him that I had•
myself written it,attd„ , 'that I 'bad-written if bro !
cense it was deciandedAy common .deoener, end
.by, ordinary,respeorfal thal gallant mad who bad
been traducied in tbatodidal, and - especially, for,
the thousands Of struggling editara throughout the
'Union who bad regarded 'the Herald as his most
infainous, reientleiS, and savage enemy. "Tern,l ,
said-he, " 1 regret that .IXace WriteElt to the pro
prietor of thrpaper about this article, .but. 1 de
sire that Mr. Battrusev shall-support my, Aclotinis t
:ration." ' I can now perceive that the man who
was trill's wiping to court the most abandoned and
most infamehe editor upon the face of the earth:.:
the man who was thee willing to pfooure the sup.
- port of JANE Sondes, BENASITT after he had
peared the vials of utter and inconceivable wrath
" 1 4. 2 P-hh , headOildafier ha 1111 4 tr,tuiuced the South,
betrayed the Republicans,- and bet& ranked by the
ielult of - the elootion--was even at that day re
solved In his Own mind to turn his back upon the
gallant men in this city and State, who bad sur
rounded him as with a wall of lire, and who had
(tarried him forward into the 'Presidency after
twenty years of hard, unremitting, and chivalric
toll.,_.Por myself, I have,only to say that although
Bstrasit , has .accused me-of many things; he
has . yet to 'Moak ,of, me as shamelessly
,and se
brutally as he • has spoken of the President
of the United States I - •
The Washington "Union and other Leoompton
organs have expended great ' indignatien against
what they are pleased to, call the, publishing of
private conversations. I conferred With Mr. Ito
onettex as with a pnblio Mon on a public ques
tion. That which he has said to• me, he has,
doubtless, said in substance to hundreds of others.
He made no secret of his change of front. He
made no !Corot of his' desertion of WAtmeEtt. He
made no secret of his personal hostility to Dote-,
(mks. Senator Snows, of Mississippi, has, with
in a few weeks past, published to the world a Con
versation with the President, which, if true—and
it has neither been denied nor denounced—places
every Leoompton Representative in Congress,
running in the free States against the English
bill, in a fearful position. Tho words are signifi
cant, and I will quote them.
In referring to the conference bill, Senator
BROWN is reportid by the Vioksburg (Miss.) Whig
to hav,e said t
" That be called on the President before be •left
_Washington, and that Mr. Buchanan' assured him
to tho most poai!tri, and tmegnivooal brims that he
would appoint no man to office who - held the
Opinion that 'Kansas ought to •be admitted before
ebe has a 'population which would entitle her to a
repreeentativeln Oongrese, (aceording to the tents
of the Conference bill,) and that he would deoapi
tate every ' officeholder who expressed snob a
belief.", •- , . -
'Gov: DROWN acted rightly in defending himself
by stating those facts, after he saio it was a' fore
gone purpose of the Administration to allow its
adherents to abandon the English bill. I stated
my conversation with Mr. BUCHANAN under cir
cumstances almost precisely similar. General
Jecasom had few.or,no confidences on , groat quos.
Cone. He never allowed ono man to slander
another to him, under the veil of secret. eon
versation or anonymous correspondence, and be
would have despised himself had he' held one
language in' secret with ono man, on , a
public qUestion, which he feared to let All the
world know.- The revelation of Certain private in
terviews falsely alleged to have taken pled° pt the
•privatehouse of Judge DOUGLAS, in Washington,
greedily copied into the Washington Union,
and other - Administration organs, remain a staple
of assault upon Judge DOUGLAS, up to this day,
though branded as misrepresentations by the
Judge himoolf. " Private conversations," for
sooth! Look at the expose of the last hours of
Colonel Bestion,made slime the death of that il
lustrious man ! • There were conversations in the
seored, silent chamber of Colonel BENTON—heard,
we are told, ,by but two men ; the one the dying
patriot, the ether the living President! The
whole life of Thomas 11. BICNTON was one unceas
ing battle for principle; one bold protest against
secession;.one prayer for the preservation, of the
American Union. He was the known and notori-,
one foe of the whole Lecompton policy of 'the Ad- -
ministration. He had ,supported Mr. Buctisetan
against his own son-in-law, col. FREMONT, beam:lee
be believed that he would be a moderate and con:
servative President, and him:Muse the open enemies
of the Haien, North and South, wore the opponents
of Mr. Bucnexert'a nomination. And yet, by
means of a. ,4 private conversation," mysteriously
diVulged, and now . publiehed in the journals under
pay of the Administration; TrIONAS H. BiONTON'Er
name is made to figure as the endorser of one .of.
the most stupendous frauds that have ever boon
perpetrated upon any civilised people !
There is an exquisite sense of propriety in the
complaint of the revelation, of private conversa
tions on the pari. of those who,applaud such an ex
ample es- this ! ' - •
The notice which has been bestowed upon the'
Tarrytown speech has been marked. Itis difficult
to say whether it has boon moat censured or com
mended. So rare a bonne bottehe has not befal
len the oonntisseurs in a long time, especially
those anxious to set up a claim to Administra
tion„favor; To this class I make my special ob
ligations. They have exhausted the vocabulary
for epithets of abuse. They have sounded through
the whole gamut of inventive. The higher the
salary, the more extravagant the expeotation, the
more explicit the calamity. - Some of the aeon
sations have been ridiculous enough. Of course
lam consigned , to the Bleak Republicans;"
of source I am supported by Opposition , money,
and, of course, I am actuated by golflsh motives
in opposing the Kansas policy of the •Adminis
ltationt ,Ileading.over these dlatribee, which I
do With - the utmost philosophy, I am reminded
how 'difficult it is for any man to take and hold
an independent position in polities. If he allows
his honest: convictions to control him—if, unavved
by power and uninflueaced by patronage;' he
boldly take's his stand by .the -right—he is sure
to be made an object of contumely. His motives
are suspected, his eloserlky'douhted, and his ao-
tiona s taisrepraseitted: Hera, now,is. as grave a
4easoa, to priapilile, as admittod, bettaya; of
a solemn i trnet. as ever watt perpetrated; and
ftet.it is toe graiely and as solemnly 'defended as
it. Were an :act of superior patriotleM. Those
who tape issieWith it, and speak out, are railed at
and, soandatieed, by every paid penny. a-Ifier in
the land. Por„ myself, - having expected all this
trhen I first took position; I am not surprised.
. Some:of the , aconeations Spinet Inc; 'on account
of this speech are worthy of a passing notion. The
Washingten'Ernioi4 the7itsehingt,en ,S'ictr; 'and the
WOO:tend Neut4,liaitt!heen riiestfertile in their
compliMents. biyitietettnioi*,timee eiveraljOurnals
may he found such charges Si' these : alto is un
grateful 'te:the President: " - The 'Presideit'gaie
him all theconitequeneetilierer had tedlehlin by,
thertated ind_adianceOlci, Unstated lite (entity,
expended money for him; and oven ediented .
Pornier'a greet: featiii'en
Pin:rest bitt e r, 'enght to:tilegiquil,hini fie
every-man's eyen: - Such' in the subit4eto of 'the
„personal part of Elie indictment under'whieh I have
I„heentried,, rind
,by thetas' newenaper lawYere. ";,,
Ae tar, on - ansn is in theliahtt 'readirigi tat.
Ithese Journals; he'clute leen elf timed. charges! .1%
wonder low he .felt ,on reading theM,"'l'thilik;
tknew, and le fie- had been conned 'foiWaiii; an
ueoureof justice tia'answer; raider oath; he - Would
have paid, and I, think he will yet any , Vetere lie"
is
,antxtrooperi r tfiliAiiial account
" All these .oilkeeA;liestelYliliei . i tOgreil.i'
undo. no Attentions to ;14==-21.0 _,.T.I L L a b,t
ligation. is :all - on the' other side. — I „never
helped hiejepropenitinili; 'once iii My'iliO;' and
that debt lie has repaid 'inelWith 'cinniettzttl.
-inte rest t . „Naha! epent and sali;ifieelf - Wie Men ey
mettian,;ain;yrorth had' a
"hided reiatiVe bar VailitilfiLldev4tid"M'ine, ad
,Eoaxisy r Ipeyer Atolls* . li B enn , tea •
hin:firott paPerillarDaneaseer,,tiiiiinego,Wieboutit,'
(Kipper
,ftembought,thePehn.sylvanlan
with, bits oil , hard-earned paeine,'"Whe'n I,was 'the
Most nnpopular public ninimPhiletitolPhia; *hen
both peppie and polittelans Were against me; When
myosin friendi there Oeuld'have been put into an
omnibus; and he pereevered'in working for me till
he was a ruined mati,,and went to Washington to
it:lll6o'We fortunes, - which he would have 'done
had be not foolishly. given, up everything in the
world hut his wife's property , to' support me, re
ther than have it said that heleft General Prager,
with pieskets full. Bedsides, I 'never was of any as:
eistance to 'Fortuni.in Washington.' The Virginia
delegation in Congress were. always against .me
and I Wag, elsewhere, poweilese to MAP him. He
Wan, sleeted to the alerksidp toilettes he had
twin a hard-working editor and an honest man ; and
when he,geetiterla he thought of nobody but me,
and:filled his'oftioe Wiebniy friends—thinking of
me Ark and always: , Re was my true, constant,
unselfish, romantio friend. It won't do for you,
Danuirr,, Partin, Want,,tou,' gad :WENDELL, to
taik'about the, Perrone letter, elia such nonsense.
Iknow FORNEY better than all of you; and even
if I were disposed to have you abuse him, I have
too often defended him, and know his heirt too
wall, to , be made a , patty to your abuse" p 1 him
now. Yea, not . only ,upon the - Forrest leiter, but
.upon every act of his life Cant ootwerne the public;
there :islnot neousation now made 'against him
that dims not" 'recoil with ten-fold' Dime, uponits
authors, and waist inste,ad'of hurting him." a
Se I may rest this part of the mile with the Pre
aident, Gentlemen; you mind' hegin yOnrindict-
Merit from towel:0119f of DK. Ten cannot go haok of
that period without 'shooting your arrows oier - yonr,
loins*, and Striking your-=master !' '
The Washington Unions claims to be, and doubV
ietuils, the organ of the National AdMinistration:"
The day .has gene by for repudiating the I/num.
It jot se much a part of 'the Adminiatiation Bathe
Cabinet itself; and ; yet throughout: the entire
.South, arming the most earnest friends of 'the,
'general policy:of the'AdministratiOn', among the
meat ardent advocates ' of..Lecerepionism in all its
chameleon shapes,, there. is' but' one sentiment of
contempt and corideinnation of flit, cottrie"Of the
Wishington Tinien.lregitrd ,raggo Dorrenas:
Even those who arts Indebted, to the 'Administra-•
Sort for '
patronage in the South are oompilted to
denoince the war ripen the gallant Senator in Illi
nois. In Indiani, where the animosities to Judge
DOUGLAS aro so notorious, the Leoomptonitee are
forced by,publio opinion to repudiate'the policy of
the Adminlatiatiree ,•end",:fe lertoVnei tkielfrit
Nearly all of the Administration paPere in the West
and In the Northwest, excepting only theme sustain
ed by the money of the people in Illinois, trample
Under foot alike tie English bill and the Washing
ton Union. Now, then, if the Union Is the organ
of the Administration; if it is the recognised
reflex of the opinions of the President and Sabi
net, what is the irreafatible dednotion front this
extruordinary and extended rePudiation of, the'
- Union?' Clearly' an'd unequivocally that this
Administration, as` sand at Tarrytown, is on
the eve . of being Tammuz, 1 The pieteriptien of
'Donates, and the test of the English bill,'are all
that the Administration recognise ae remaining of
the Immortal 'greed of the Demooratio paity ; and
these the whole Democracy indignantly reject!
The UM,072, speaking , for the Adadidetration,
stands by and sees a seeret'erianiietion - in, the
South, prepared, under the lead of 'distinguialted
agitators, to undermine the foundation's et the
fairest fabric' of free , government eve rerected
by the, htindS of men : The 'pritiou; speak
ing for the Administration, beholds' ate
flagrant attempts to revive 'the aloes trait!
in skyey, and to set at defiance solemn. treaties
with foreign Powers: The Union liars calttmnt.
wow Southern assaults upon the Pre sident' and the
Cabinet : And yet has the Union no word to speak
in complaint or condemnation of the one or the
other of these exhibitions ! All its faculties are.
employed, in the ostracism of gallant men in the
froo States who follow. the renowned flag of the
Demoeratio party. and stand upon the accepted
platform of the Democratic ,party, and refuse to
yield up the principles to which, as honest Demo
crats, they wore pledged. This ii the work etthe
organ of Janus. Boaters:v. ,
But I ought to eongritulatetho Administration 1
on those who do eappert their, peculiar policy.
It is but right that, , when the "Union cloaca its
eyes upon the 'excesses of the secessionists and
other 'enemies of the, Republic in the South,
they, in their turn, should give to the Union and
its especial cause their best aid ; and thus it is
that the only thorough supporters of the pro
=intim of private opinion and the run-mad
Kansas policy of the Administration are to bo
found in that concentration of enmity to the Ame
rican Union, the Charleston iltereury, and those
of that ilk, who regard the Constitution as sla
very, and who would break lows and treaties
whenever occasion demands, and only insist upon
them when they are necessary to protect them
selves. In a word, the defenders of the last Ad
ministration programme are to be found amongst
the disunionist,' of the South, who are a mi
nority an their own region, and powerless and
sitspeitcd at their own firesides!
In the course of the misrepresented speech at
Tarrytown, I referred incidentally to the vast
power conferred upon the President of the United
States. What a refleotion this is! Although no
gaudy tinsel, no empty pageantry, no hollow pomp
and parade, gild with material splendor those who
wield the central power of the Government, and
though that power is held by no life•long title of
hereditary dement, but is merely the gift, for a
brief period, of the American people—the author
ity reposed by the Constitution in a President who
presides over the Government of thirty millions of
the Most intelligent and enterprising people of the
earth ; who exercises a supervision over the distri
bution of an annual expenditure of $90,000,000 to
$100,000,000; who can command or subdue even
refractory Congresses into submission to his will ;
who can determine by a nod the official tenure of
armies of officeholders; who can make or unmake
the fortunes of hosts of men whose careers are
dependent upon the distribution of Government
patronage; who commands the army, the.navy, and,
to "e.great extent, the Treasury of the United - Mateo,
—necessarily renders the occupant of the White
House the depository of much more real power than
many of the mightiest monarchs of the earth.
This power, energetically wielded, is necessarily a.
mighty engine for good or for evil. It can be
used for the advancement of great statesmanlike
projeota, which will redound to the honor, the pros
perity, and the glory of the country. In the
hands of a man who loved America Bathe eulogists
of Neronuon affirm he loved France, or as Gen,
J . ...me10n really did love the United States,what
wonders might , not be aohleved in this great Nin- .
teenth Century ! When Mr. Euenatiatc, wee tie-,
vated to the Presidency I_ had hoped, from his
pure diameter and great, statesmanship, that his
four years Presidential term,would form one of
the proudest eras of American history and , glitter
with bright deeds of National advancement. I
have been disappointed. It is true that the Presi
dent has turned his attention in promising direc
tion's. We have hoard of schemes for the acquiei
tion of Cuba; we have had the campaign against
the Mormons in Utah ; we have aeon the arrest of
the filibuster WALKER. by ComModore PAVED
itea ; we have had a diplomatic tilt with
England, which has resulted, to some ex
tent, in an abatement of her pretensions to the .
exorcise of the right of search; and it is not nu-.,
likely that 'the Administration may
,have even
now laid the foundation for some great' results
which may, in duo course of time, comnitind the
gratitude of the' country. Bekaa snuck. attention
has been bestowed upon objects whioli all Mein
!crested men condemn as utiwoitiv, that little
TWO cENTS.i,
time lies fftienleft forihb odisidefittiotrot platters
which had.ta ,better clefts:6oqt, thi:Atrention : cf
the Administration .. .- I The . Karnsal , qttestion hee.
proved a stumbling bitick" in'the.liath of :00,
rulers. .Conviction of Justice and.rightlieTe
sacrificed—l' pill', not say;neffenit 'li tor Hkilvttn,se
done, from metivieof feaf,,hrit, to aethi Mildest
phscute-from - considerations of exPedielleYi The
renMxtlisition of small meilisAiiti#Serir the _de=
capitation of Democrats who •mliC,n6Clailtient t!!!
desorepriceipleeer denounce Douttua.B l „atzd
and WALniti; the dismission ii)poftitnialtte EU
office-:-theseare the high objects of the Adtniiiiiti"
tration;, and to effeet thole. nailltoruf - ire; eq9141._:
dered, great In terests eitorificed, great 'mewing
postponed; atol a great partyWOrivuuseCwith Undo
. the moat revelling-chores ter !
I have a 'Word ail* the So.ealled i ( E i litiliky," ',the
,new coinage which has replaCed the rajoittid‘ciun
terfoita.a4Bigitslybill: The trim Finality isms
rineheil fnlBs7,lteffire 'aid after the eleollett
Governor Pacifica's - , I , ICaTIDIS was a settled queslien,
in fielitefaber.antl 00 tabor of that year. Gover,ner ,
3941otpp ; had,-AStfed. ; it.,_ Secretary Sramo;l had
settled Ar Ai llpta4i t ut, bad, settled, it. The
;droplein gensar, and in al l the port t h and
Soap," - Latthaii," out for
Y~eacenew; f teit'ps '',Ohli z gnisii/wrii?'".tif those
'oliargli :that ire ire 'keeping `ail tirlesilon,
I open, tell us who reopened slot, he
rFt 6 Pre"lt Waa . nOt:theDiltaboratiti'pety. l A Xew
"iiSsrtliiieligid,4l4-atttfoxii mbn4flthes Sone; 'sieger" ,
Ras 140 fluncidemeudett,thalHovernor,N,Ltioni
should be sacrificed beelittsj_hu_s_... for !the
righledroepro-o,4iid:;the will ,of thttmajo
They.liaa"pl eo e it sied t ithe444;We to Mike ids course
Ursa
ti'ettnee jileit frOin'tlie'Upien a4er
''netliiiiitkiilPetiiifee tat Itirblkh'in - tc•Wytead
WAt - andifMtacoii 'Waded ffifiltetuies; Hari no
iiiNtitir areal iiiiiifOliratiltdcdtigrtheliddth
.billifieeeifigieertatallieglilaturtin int.the4ollo
- celled tcarether-hf,cousidef74fis:PraPrfetneiff.ki,av
ing the.Um gl9l
icallen th,v B lP.Allo.PVf ?P.A,P.-99 ° ll ,
hero was an. opportunity_that a Jacxsoir wou ld
have seisedwithspatrioticpromptikule. Had Mr.
Buolip ,: stt told these _wen - that bewas solemnly
hound, bypnbild'and private 'assitrances, tO stand
'by his ropriteentatives in Benito; arid, above all„
to 'see that no ' harin same to the people. there,
, these violent men Mould have , Iren compelled to
carry out their threats. Would Alabama, and
Georgia, and-Mississippi „have -responded tolhese
appeals?, Thennswer , to this in: the r.eoent
,past, upon a Winch mote' exalting. issac, :when , gi-
Saki! led the erttiadele:againtit 114 'Very , principle
nowinvoived,,and,When Was _taken to
the ballot-4,m%, and: the great , doctrine et poptt
bir sovereignty and the'great Union-idea-pre
vailed, over, their advertiiiites. =ld - 1850- 1 51,
Georgia and Mississippi would tat_ ohm' ieerk;nd to'
the call of her-.moat o:knout and beloVed send;'
when these sons attempted to mislead her. In ;the
one State, HowniriCoop; this'present Seeretary of
the Treasury, reallitleft the Deratiotatio Party!for
a time when thh...organizaticin of, that party had
alien into the hands ortha,disinsiOniate,!ind was
chosen Governor as: therepresentative- of the
groat truths for 'whieltirei tiro' ntrwoontending ;
and in Mississippi ariahit do hoWeignifieatif took'
place about the nine pail* I r * never
admit that, In orderto sustain 'manse so unjust
as-that of "Leciimpton; their; gierious•States would
ever have - esertid,Mi.: Bironariiniiti Standing by
Weracsis !pit: 5TA.14021,•% trif: -. tir:ll3xitia, the
masses would have vindieated hiefirtepetta, t .They
would have rejected•their false leaderscand thus
Would have perpetuated the pewei.of the !Demo."
ersit(CPF:ify for years to come`. thie goldon•opl
portunity was suffered to pasi;: thefountain of
bitter waters was reopened ;=and the only *anti
that could endure wee' broken -- up...:amld !In
numerable; calamities to. the pility and ' toi the
country. . _
In •stilkingproof of..these assertions I be `to
:present th'i following extracts- from Tan Pones
of Ootober;lBs7, before and:after the election of ,
Governor TAMER, 'proving, as they do,_the haPpyi.
'tranquility which 'pervaded the :oountry at, that
period of time,: = _
amps Nhe_Prees 0f7.00t0ber.10, , 1861
" The. improved, condition of Iranstuti.ond -the
policy, of Governor Talker, greatly diminisited:
the anxiety felt'ir(relation to that - Territory; and
in the' Midst of the 'existing finanbialliffteulties"
even this - - election like Kansas election] soargelf
excites momentary interest.. It really locks is if
vessollvisich has on_board " Bleeding Kaoline'wie Plng,"o,4°ArileOls'arinefleeillfiY thatanOi
a ripple leftitpon , Sho political wave to
mark tbit'spot of its disappearance." .
' Prom The Press of October 17.1857.1
We are a good deal surprised that the penal!!!
progress of the settlement of the .diffigultiee an
Kansas has not extorted it more, general. andirank
'admission of the - fact frotrithose•of 'the opposition
Journals which lay claim to candor, and whiah'are
;apt,.in the alasenoehf candor in their adversaries,
to become-so indignant. , Tkesejottrnals commit a
grand mistake in,withholding,thecnseed 'Of:Pasties
to the Administration for course itltas
sued - in defiance Of the , denumetationo of extra-'
mists', North- and South on this vowel gliqqan ,
They may rest assured that their. Goatee does not
meet the approval of the, people et large. ,Thlthe
healing nP, of adverse' 64anisitioinin VMS bier!.
throw of the Republicans moit , of-the,,States
which thorhai.o 'heretaforti,.controlled; honest'
men every where must admit that the course of
the .Administratum .in.Kansao leasiePe — le d pro
found impression, and that henceforth iE will be
impossible to rally even e respectable number of
votes upon-the 'exploded; Oriee of 4858.9 , . ,
•.[Prom TheTeets of Oetober 22;1867.]-•.:
• " Binoe• Bleeding 'Caves has eneppudedite-rogn
tar instalments:of, manarsotared sympathy, and
gone into bankrupt ei over the, fact' theit the ma
jority of the people htinilitleoi. trilhat•Territery,
!here has been a etetnip'eninniyede into the Demo;
cratie party. , - • ^ • --.••• •
The ohauge which has come overlie ;aims of the
nation within the last three or fonr,monibi pan be.
attributed to nothing,so fairly u to the ,irredst--
ible and convincing : power „ef the prinelple, of
Popular Sovereignty., Doubtless, the,measztrelese
madness of the Administration, in proscribing men
for opinion's sake, has-bad a good shaie in pro
ducing bis,state of,thpigs; for, as if struck by.
eeme Mysterietts hallaeindtien, the men is te4po. t
rary possession of the Government, while claiming
that the English fdealityt" draw their,
swords upon all who have. opposed,thatuietunarei_
thus, keeping alive the,very animosities for' the
extinetion of wkloh, they implore !:
COst your. eyes, over the wide' expanse' of the
country, and obierve the ',Change which heti taken
place in a short time ! Let us begin at ItiarYland,,
and there we shall find that, at a beinooratio Con
vention lately held in the city of Baltimore; reap-,
batons in favor of the Rause policy , of 'the Ad
ministration were tabled bye decided vote.' From
the same State.was 'puhlished the eloquent letter
of the lion...linvertor joixion - Mose riwertal
speech in Philadelphia, 'ln 1856; will long - be re
membered) against the odious tpst,of the Adiilnis
tration and the insane,prosoription Of%Tadge Bon
°LAS. -
In Virginia, Governor Was, the repritentative
plan of the State, whose brilliant and unequalled
career against religious proscription will be remem
bered as long as the name of the. Old - Dominion
itself, and who has always emerged the victor from .
his contests with
„factions—this remarkable inert'
stands in the for efront of the scene; bravely de •
nounoing the Kansas policy of the Adrelnintration
in all the phases, and especially that portion of it
which seeks to force upon Democracy a dishonor,
lag and repulsive test. The old organ of TuostAs
RITCHIE, the, Biehmond kninirer, which daily,
earns new laurels by, Its intrepid resistance to se
cession, in all its horrid guises, - stands fOriviird
now, as of old, in defence of Jeffersonian
pies, and responds to the 'appeals 'of:Om true De . -
mocraey of the North. Even in South fiendlike;
we find Mr. Speaker Ons lifting his yoke, _it not
against the Kansas blender:Of the Adminiitration,
atleast in favor of Judge Bouoisk: In'Oeorgia,
the leading active men Of Oie,liemooratio commu
nity, idessre. TOOHNI and brirnatts, backed by
the larger number of the Democratic papers, have
clearly and unequivocally signified their hostility
to the proscriptive. policy of the Administration ;
In touisiana a mach more striking state of pub
lic opinion is apparent. The public press of - New
Orleans, sustained by a majority Of the newspapers
of the State, repudiate the rank intolerance of the
Administration, and retaliate the nialedietiona of
the Washington "Mien. tilitislisippi aninen
nesse° the manifestations are numerous in ; the
me:4 direction-,not the . least of which, the.
speech of Bert. It e r ivir Fools , Well know n se ope
of the moat stalwart advocates of the compromise
.retetteares of 1855, ;who, at Bolivar, Miss., Vick up
the gauntlet, for DOUGLAS before an intelligent
audience, and advocated almost the entire theory
of, the anti-peciimptaa Democracy of the North.
But,, perhaps, the two most' striking instances are
,those of Kentucky and Missouri. In the first, the,
DemeoratiolireSS defiantly array themselves upon
the aide of. DotioLea in hie straggle in' I1l1nois;
while in the second, both the, Beintiors, in
Congress, (one of whom, it' will :be remembered,
Mr. J. S. Orinart, led the debate;la adittestoynf
the Lecompton and the English bilk in the United
,States sonato, end. With 'nnatatliaistal, itbil t ty and,
power contended againei l Tudge lionoLis,) and all
the Repreientatives, in 'congress, With all 'the na
tional papers papere _ t 9 aupport hint, ha's% not_ rinly.Pro
elitimed: their, earnest isympithi With' the great
leader of 1111nola, but haste - terms denounced
the vituperative and 'scandalous' course of,. the
:Wallington Trillion. lie xenoti for the ispec't of
affairs in the ' Sorithekn States. -Turn we
now to the great' Nerthivist. There 'the ,pro=
grens of the prinelple - hes been "still more
triumphant. There its footsteps have left behind
the. lagging, limping, halting policy of Leoomp-:
tonism: • In Minnesota, the ntibile sentiment 111 SO
strong in support of judge Dotrinal, and' also - in
support of the principles he advocates, and these
NOTICE TO Coirumaie
.7,l:Agos
fo a dllMWa x !- I , PT I r
mindlhe llowing =leer - - - -
,
„ETV oojmsulloattoxi;inbat be alloApanrillby
FiN/36e Wrger. 14X1.Citdef ,
of
& l e tnio graphy:but=c4 Alde irthqi aunt attOsti be
r$- weAtatlifi itelLthr t o Ar e nFMniu!P? . ? ' 34 "
...vezdaand.otherikakil for 40#4butioloi Stung the our'
sea l ' z ! ° i ll .o*ifiii*" lol4 7-4 11 4 1r 4g / OmUtfoo , the
ralouioes of theltirroSuiiiiis emit*, the !Berme of
poiOdirtifiztj °F ay Infornialloia ilia will be &boosting
t1 e14 1 4 1 .? , !- 1 - ar 7,-;oi.e • -
is p 4
. • I
which are dell; lipheld in 'flu Bliss, that no
man can be 041'14143 fitile position who grovels
'Upon; the Lertiiiipten fplatforni:: 'sllshigark the
.PeniSeritlif dtiterthithiention have biren r dempolled
to plane in irofidnitfei - ron,;(fir t tar.Sa:ll. dm
anv,...that pairlOtfSfiesatei iii Corig`rois; who, with,
4Doros4st.and AriOna?misr,*sted , the ~retaohina/-
/ _dons of; the Federal power, and contended to the
last-against Ito Lecompton ealamity..Every. Demo
lirathfroandldate .for; Congress 'Michigan takes
41i, , Solidi ;ground. kln -lows 'and Wiroondn, not.
41ttreikilintette - patroiloge that flaaa been openly
Ailletrieritilep . iijkooratle'optitoriaand the Demo-
Oltailisif4lo4 9 ll - 94 1, 9 91 ' 1,. 9 the ghost
oriacaneeinhV.lii,ipll:ls•,hriainable,Reprooratio
vote, if the DeiniOra4,did pioolihrilheir anal
terable determination to:ea:Aar fall upon thorin
oiplki aciiiiiiceizOithiAti;trinfthiptehoo of
1858. I leave illiodbie flihrola to speak fovlierself.
Upon her the eiiiiirthi Witole . l7nloirlreihri i rked
with intensi Aran Is reading aid
Ilitaktig &boil ftiti Stitritetriew lgotnrog'*thin
liVr 'borders.' isrit,lekok'sit' Oh% ' Sad - -10 - Indiana, '
Whit lo:yit
_olr:there'? 'Prieleelyyto7iiiire . State
9f 0 19 0, o V3 l .i.ncre AfiVeleitsdlhap that
have attempled to - digit iii,,tho; SAlS;t3tates of
the free Nerthwoist,,EPtsron and ai; aid Orions
,nsars
~and
,PszusfratvOrt; who Started .oat
W4b e ,hgal9itlitgsdlifini; arid' eariein7sred'apon
11.glfeV,b3P4 ireat.tiaaiiiiril peace,
, il4.4.4fliitAthto44#4 -.611V944tai1l ;shallow
their a ffAttl4,44 l 4 - 071fif.,;714 1 . Itad "that
safe 4 tlt amebas twillegths...the. draught
frourthewand in donannoingimbholyruld before
IllidiatialialwatilliwwwwwwirWe. • ' tratlo •
„,.
to whioh theY 'retand TO lees - orimmitied,
beoanse of its warmouthei very man whom flay
..desested4a thelioaz ojiJe itinkoiitLftl4 odious
have the finality and tho,oriifin - fifilgtnio tolhotto
men, to the Poniitl,,mk to. th e Demo:natio papers of
Ohio, that if eithir of the' ',
Leoompteer Ropy/manta
irviaWditirrifei lie res
cued from defeat, leViiit - otifi bib/Utile An hal
trandinteach v iisltiiifillicin iiititer oppo
siiteihTtuio yabdritidfirAi r
_zpiitwit
national Athninistralien--theEnalairbfll and
-
LiatingthiVisit; tie turn orir. geed upon " the
Eitni'of the East;" 'end !hat awe - ?
A Demoeratiti 'gain` onioitie'thithi''lluituiiiid votes
at the late eleoilinioi 'which uncommon
aid 56401 . 4'0 dispdayod.' Bit whfth a gain?
Because the Leicrpton polioi of ',the, Adminie
tratfon wan tiooepted! •Oh no! ' Ritt:ZOsansa it
was rejected, and because ovorvljoinoOrtitio can
didate in Mitt - Mato laled hint
self Optknitostio2l4npOn tlu eternal Orin:tip&
of Pop lot-.3~veretgntp,'aa adeociaad,ity,pto
nainuc, and Douunas, and SrirArti4t4 gat-
Inntinme-wbo stood .firro, first and 'feet dating the
late.mmitingstruggle in conga:sal The Washing
ton Union boasts of this gain t-imtoraftUY cioitinuds
the reason..•Thenther Stateliof,Notr England Sian
liaVeho future - as Demoeratio 'Statist; :itilealthiy
follow the - 4336'141e of Maine, - intr . :alit away the
miserable hooks who have' OOrispireetii 'keep the
party tliereliciiii - ininoriti,ln order that compe
tition mitt& bidiminishetin tha`iihttribition of
theTedered ofiidee 4The Demberacy of-Ifetlfork
are Itiokiinifornard to vi.nietory only through the
divisions of the Opposition: Obeli even in thelition.
vention Leoompton -hardly recognised, and
'the Administrationliativindioed is a sort of
:41 trnit:
.
-As-Nsw aney v elte_ialmtr enougkto to be
&familiar storyc AmtukatUtdoubtigeOeizetßrned
to ,Cpngrese , brtho,people.of filet.dlattleht. 'Jowl
Hurataiwilt be lethrlehind, ; te rispestathlalettare
the, folly of bit LeoomptonAote.': Wesummmrs,
so; doubt, wisely atitioipatealthe . quiet comfort of -
Ms eWri'4lreitide!las rat - preferable blahs marble
atMaablugtss.,la.tbe westerns part of the
Stets; tbcDtaSooratle pert se sither , boldly so
oePte_o AO Ponies: plaltorse or ookllyieroed over
the , AdmjnigWation 2 policy, Oo :for New
.4 . oree3u - ;
And what_of Patifornia--,the- Arethorn of • pope
‘artall'arahltarr.-thad State in which the battle of
1858, as well-for ithe, nomination_of the present
Presideutlal, teen - admit; as .for his election, was
fought with euoh indomitable courage and, nanity
by Ramie:Ruin and, hist roops of blonde:. : What
does- California °say !-The anaweechi; -That
despite, the) -patronage -:of the Administration,
conferred sensual; upon the mgdent -foes of the
rteeldeat,.. and throve with terrific three against
his trustiest frieadsdhstnutsiempf ,thosi, and
his colleague - in - ftielionsio;ple:°l4 , 7l- -- "j"
enthusiastically eustatned when they time' np to'
be judged' in their -own persons, by the, people.
And- here mesayuf ray friend Moffrasui t that
he has stood firm fn the midst of the most trying
circumstances. Those -.who Should• have stood
forth taiga support tried to weaken and to discou
rage him. Assailed. front„' feltisin%and
coaxeds.threatened, tlenappoodt,enit iteportuned,
beintaintained tonall traillnotringly to Abe end,
: andiefiAten. s.tiveZtatewithont.a Mali upon his
neme.a., Whatever halide him in afterlifsi_ he can
took back to his °sneer in-thelast widen of Con.
itretta - Withont blnah.3 ;,°':-
laset, sex
to, -Pennsylvania. In this State the
Administration hest sueeseded in nominating ten
of the, twelve:Lwow/Ace Representatives, Neves
had the people lesate de with the nebieue._ n can.
dilates: -This • result was aooomplialted at a time
• when lbe peculiar virtues of the „Ifnglish bill bad
not made themselves ow apparent as ,tke3t are-now.
Meagre. Aut-..andiaszny have the popular permie
sion,Mrellroomd,,to wet, ,of. the remaining ten
will tic! douht enjoy, the !erne fel kittens, fats when
the retutv ererolledlipfroixi the people le:October
next.'°` - ° - -
' TheliLiltingtnn 'Union claims 'it gain of'some
3,000-Voter in Milne, bit reftises td give - oredit to
tho'nesitloit bf the.Deriodwatry of that State against
thwLeoonipton polioy of the Administration.: How
many will the _Democratic party, lows In Pennsyl
vania, inasmaoh as the ten gentlemen referred to
have bean forced ,upon the Adatbrietration plat.
form;and are compelled, to, run, notwithstanding
their. tardy - obioessiOn: against the Bliglish bill,
With ""the'Whola weight of the'Administra
untitilltefr 'etiuldere ? ' How-many , votes
dowthe - rWashingtory , .think wilt
make for these •Lecomptonites,.and. fOrtho other
•Demeeratk, who are running In Pennsylvania, by
its-continued attacks upon 81%P1C11 . 11 A. Don
uts and the regular Demmatlo,,organbiation in
Illinois ?, How numb Will it, help thicAdistinistra
tion by Making 1,6%41181i bill an liana, and by
ioatiniting ttilitonice all who Vrillitoi consent to
do the Camel '4Vehniierienst - Warluid .4 trial of
Lecomptonism in Pennsylvania. Oar last elec
tion—that Which took" place in thstober of 1857
resulted Ju l the triumph of. Wm. P. Emma. wha
stood,broadly and squarely and pnirliolynpon the
principle of Popular Sovereignty,- Which ,prinoiple
he afterward Manfully reiterated in his inaugural
address. Bat this is the first election' in which
the distinetive policy of the Administration hea
oome in issue in our State; Mit:only Ilia 'peculiar
policy of the Adiainiatration iri tlderisfeot will be
involved In She result,.but the new idea, lately
anunolatqd,that the Preiddentie the principle and
that the Administration - irwthe- perky ; that all
tweeds and all platforms-Imo passed away, and
that the Oabinet and the powers that be shall
make our creeds and reconstruct our platforms.
All thj, will be in ialtfe,' ta:thisdayir of General
great motto which kiMortalised his
Administration'"The Union; it Must and
shall lid *Served." "This - niotto has now been
changed into " The President: he must and shall
be sustained." Pennsylvania in October neat will
be Called upon to decide , whether she will prefer
to impart the doctrines whio kl have made the
country prosperous, or. to desert 0411,096:1nes Ibr
the purpose of sustaining the President.
A BREAK DISCOVERED IN THE ATLANTIC
Oasmf.—The workmen employed idoutting up the
cable babe maehineathop at, the -Brooklyn navy
yard, found a break a short time einoe in the oom
mitnicating copper wire, about three-eighths of an
snob long,-' through which the saw passed in the
eolid gata-peroha, showing that the discanneotion
mnet, have occurred during the process of manu
facture; and, therefore, leading to the very great
probability that other similar lesion may have
marred in other parts of the cable. What have
the electriolans to say In regard to this fact, which.
ii reliably authenticated?
" 81190111411 PRENOKERON.-011 Tuesday heat,
says the Wilmington, (N. 0.) Journal, the people
about our wharves witnessed a peculiar tidal phe
nomenon. The' tide,' - vrldiSli had been running down
for some time, iniddefily turned 'and 'run back for
something like three quarters of an hour; then re
sumed itedownWard direction, wide?' it kept with
out interruption until low water. This strange
litothationui taipposed , to have been occasioned by
, the - heavy egninoalal blow of the night before. At
Smithiille'on the' 'Same day the tido ebbed and
''flowed screerialimes.
Ditavn.—ln - Georgetown, D. C., very end
&MY, Bunday,,Mrs. , Bliss Henderson. It ap
pears that she had been out daring the day in the
enjoyment of her usual health. Just before the
time mentioned she became soddenly shocked by
the tmexpeoted Marriage of a daughter, which su
perinduced a rapture of some of the blood vessels
about-the heart; violent hemorrhages immedi
ately ensued, from which she died in a few hours.
Vlossepso.—Te True &Caron of the 18th
reports some new oases of yellow fever, among
them Itev. Mr. O'Conner,'of the Catholic church..
- wheel) attendance on: the nick his been constant
from the AM case.. The'Bous of Malta are hard
at work relieving the sick and distressed.
A WILL TO an CONTHEITED , -A number of
persons are goingto contest the will of Junius W.
Ora*, of, Arklols3/4 who died in Louisville early
this month, and left an estate of 4850,000, with
debts agairiskit of 8250.0002
, SIMHZUS- - A gambler in Cincinnati, known
as s, Bain Petah," but Whose" real name was
"Eta eitel Hill, committed' Melde on the 26th ult.,
br - shooting - lambi(' • through the brain with a