J^ j 'g ,11b1 B fert '!■<. 1 W k(M W‘.)Goafenjet?Wßta« torlha Clean w\ : mi i« fh’aiwjficteis* »* •»**• f % ** tha^maHUiaa 1 b^i iWTim^MSS.m ?<WOObF0 O bF «^ S£ >eQi m?]Bhmri'tyt> ,>nd i flflflf'ipdirtWfp&O^lwblp*',■'„." . J trail I 'of'™ Bort 'territorial Legislature, in gft* day* $? roads.trbm^ mdp pri hprseHack, armigd wk|i *Sy^)ke r>*'an'X Vl^esVdiV 'traveliag weelward. will be, sla, thpuSanil'iiifjfa scot frapi, Missouri to vote in *„‘Mepppenly,aay that they never expect lo reside in the Territory, but they'll “be d——d if they don't go in end vote on Ihe TertiKSfS W, tbis icieo)ion.” Eve ry revolver 'and rifle,-end everything that will shoot , has been putin requisition, Prtmiinem men say, **Wefll'bed-^ —drf We dont rtVake Kansas a slave State, by foul means, if we can’t by fair.” ■ They will nndoubtedlycarry ihe great part of the members in both’Houses, and! should not bo surprised if they did allv They have sent their men to different points. Several hundred of them nfe'encatiapfed near Lawrence. There can be no pretense that (hey intend (omakedaims there, aS the land is'Jll taken up around Lawrence. Onie man, Whb figured conspicuously in the Westport meeting about a : year ago, as the most ultra of the ulira flre-eatefs, has gone out into the Territory to rhe'election. He owns a large farm close to this placfepttnd is one' of the largest formers resident : ahfout herb- Many such arhong theMisaouriaftshavegone to the election.’ ! (bar blood twill be spilled. A large class Who have gone are armed also with pocket pistols which always about into the’mouth.' I entertain the most serious ap prehensions that next Friday is Ihe most tm pnrtanrday ihrbughwhith our Union has ever passed, I (bar- that the cloud which looks so ominously dark will’burst in such a thunder-crash as to shake our republic from center to circumference. Tho' pro-ulavery men ore bitter io-their de fiuhciation of Governor'Reeder, because they cannot make a tool of him to carry out their vws^es.,— r-Thpy. have threatened to (ar and api some, even iq. abo?l him.Vr They.say he \vill lie removed by the Pfesi. dc.itt, and some man who will carry out their vyill ha appointed. They say.Senqtor iujupiaon has sittd Reeder will be removed.— It. remains to bo seen, however, whether Pres ident Fierce will suffer himself lo be made the tool of ihe slavery propagandists—whether the qdinjmslrfilion tvilj. become a parly to the outrage wh/ch is being perpetrated. The pro* Slavery.ipen, wont the Rev. Thos. Johnson, one of the Shawnee Mission, appointed. He is one <j>f the ultra fire-eaters. Senator Aloh- Ison’s opinion, that Reeder will be removed and Johnson'appointed, is currently reported. If (he President removes Reeder, he will'mark himself with a brand as deepand damning, as that Upon Cain. The tree state men inKan paajbwvq enlisted, till victory shall crown their etmrts‘. If the Territorial Legislature legal izes slavery, we shall raise the cry of repeal. Our motlo is “Kansas must and shall be free.” Wb trust that-oor motto will find a heart y re- Bponße’Bt every fireside through the dree Slates. Let it be the. watchword of every friend of the tights of man. **■* # * * ! We have had considerable cold weather doring this;month. Some snow and other svise quile wintry. • The oldest setllers say lltar they, never knew such Mqroh weather. Even the pro-slavery men, who use every ef foii lofrighfen pfefaple' from- the free Slates (tom settling here, admit the same fact. I am fully Satisfied myself-ihntlhd weather is as extraordinary for this country as the drought' which extended So universally last adosoiK - Keep .upthd emigration -from the free Slates; pour into Kansas the men who will adhefe-to'thß cause of making it a free Slate under 011-cireumslances —men who will not Miridk undef discouragement—men who Will Adhere lb the right through darkness and Storm, looking forward with confidence lb the hfffmaU triumph of the principles of truth Oder the dark spirit of slavery—men Who will fiot"faller until Kansas is safe from the curse ofthat institution which casts its mildew, blight over all around—men who will persevere with the unfaltering determination that Kan sas shall never be ' ■ ' “A land of tyrants and a den ■of slirta.” A Romanist Scrmop. On Sunday lasi, Father Walworth, Ro man Catholic priest, delivered a discourse, in tb'ft’t Church, of the Atmpndoliqncini'iew York, on Iba subject of JJelh ■ ,73ia-Jferer ' end gentleman undertook to demonstrate that Hell was situated in the intideafthiseirth, commencing about twenty-onemUs froth the surface , where granite begins to melt, I ‘He also'affirmed that Jisat /was the predominant dJrtrafetertsliei'Qf: olVihmdsmnedt rand illuatrated ibeipropdsUion by rbfereiWeiq 1 ibo uniformly high temperature ef every thing Whidhrtotd lenchedua!’ftom' thal'quartki* of the'globe,d imprQved-.thßXiccasioa io inqtiira jntd ihettefcrtevpdtf intensity o( the heat‘Mown fhere;”\which he said,, almost passed tfe fkffitfdstohhydihn conception,! As a means-of approbating'fo-aresoh, how. dVaft, W‘re*pef{i)W'mA ,< #hteh -had wall* 'rf &0o s WS&HheSj fiat «514f/iVho»e-!#i(dhttßfii ibhtsfbrtjltoaWited below- the, surface of .the; earth. t WJW«h h«*«lkHwi# nonze daodlestick having been placed igjt, was immediately melted!— Philo. Sun. 1 , ‘’ciftr'r? THE • « All Batiaen,at>d othor Comiotmicatuni urait iroßßepesF^l yimtda REDUCTION; IN^RMfr!'!!! Tnfc'PtttrtKßcwor mejtq»gV>Oß -5? a!K§s?%:;vrr«r,^!^ir ~<(HOTe%n6'IwTWWi»BASW Aw* - vAircJ^ifa-OTftißitiaMMfc ij' ■! n.'.'iiTOv trjtrgm iv:wn plying to tbe Editor »«vient-totJ Ilia iJjaipwfejfed, or BB»r dnj?j»«f»ri¥»y <CTi»W H l*%ivjil) tk T^io*mU^ : •j-tm *) ■»»-,_)! ViiJ:j BCT pet fllmaotcr ;|fW»;>'>j-.,-; ■ ; r :, i . IT Aiiolhef ciiaptet' oh *,6d feanti iatto!«tihjfUirs fceslt, ■[" ’ -' ,l! ■;• '" /,0T8t» ,Sr»y tfc.froadaVuiV.a**i *il*eiiigßaptt <*»3d.pag«i d^#r». : lytpjjlahp^**. »dfnrliK»«n* of Young fcadiea’ High; School. '.;; j j y , 0 . : V ( , ■' •, : Shall we-lia»»Caba,7 . > ■! • Tiie Adidbristraiiestd* in a. pinch, - Timer was AdminislntieDinput to ils wils’end.aa'is Ibepret. cnt. Jumpiogatlrida tteNebroskatßil), it voder, look to rtde.dpnp the little.hand (id of Northern Pfb- H9liCsi" lo find that littlq.. “h^odjEul'*.? udrionly eg.; pandodialollio entire, Nort|f>-ari army of hundreds ol thousand*, wjiiehifetßfpriiwdly took the Nebraska borne by the seddenjy, uncer emoniously pitched,t|ie Pfeudenli4l.tifler.and ostler Douglas into?-. plough, qf Infamy the ( fihh ot which will cling te j ijiip memory, whUc.lheir memory en dure?. I,‘ ;1 , I ■; ■ The Nebraska. wfti',a ijbamclul failure. It was a botched jab and in' perfect keeping eyith the acts of the Ad'ninislraliotu—its godfather! Tile dis. -grace of 1 priginatfng it wiil th tlj,excels pf J<s f originators like mafsh mjid' af ebb lilJo.' ifhoped. pic will not soon forgot a thdasdio tliat rirotued thdif displeasure wjilloit mocked' their patriotism,'' No expiatory deed ckn brer top a'ai hide 'that great, mocking Wrong. : - : Shall wo baVi Cuba t ' ’ '' ’■ ’' ‘ That i» Iti* qoedlbh with (he ndmlnwfri'ifon; The South' Idsta ■fir the ocean dew4l,and Mr.PieVfctf is vety obsequious to the South. A brdth with Spam might divert' public .opinion front the struggle in Kansas for a bticl hour, and substitute a dream of glory and gain for the waking reality that ndW of fends the sight pr freeman These two tbings are very detirsGle'ebnfawißaUotUMUWl'devoally wished' for” by Mu Pierce, befope he-tnd his Cibbiei pellre to the undisturbed seclusion of private life. To cos ciliste the Slave Power witfralbsea bfifiian territory purchaaothWith Honker teiitoodiia aifirf-.aice tiling la do—loo nice, far tbe - present. Anmimslnlioo to perform, h'can’t be doDejjnlesait cse manage to da all tbe liuHking j for. whileeqch man. thigkafor himself, there will be- o Varjply e f ppinjari» afloat, the mbst general of. which, will.alwys.he,.that Ilia Fierce Administration is.ouly remarkable for its weak and cowardly subservience to the Slqaery prop aganda. ; ; If it shalf be thought possible to mairc-fho psopte forget the Nebtaaka plot and its unlocked for conse quences in the acquisition of .Cuba, either .by con qtieat or purchase, then wq (ball have Cuba—and a wat.Vilh,Spain in less than a for for. gelfulaess of past disUouar is what the AdminisUa. lion craves. Theca is no Texas tq be espoused, so we must have the next best field Tor our frit isstilu duns to spread themselves in under the beneficent patronage pf the iqsh and the auction .bluett ! The Genius of the ‘'institution has become enamored of tho “Queen of the. Antilles.” The Qlteen of the South, it will be remembered, once became dsztled by die splendor of Solomon'. NoW,'ths ease is .re versed—the Solomon of the Sou* is dsxtltii by Ihe beauty of its Island Queen; and presdnt go lb show U>4t tbd,mkrripgd, if It ever takes (dace 1 , will be “a jrfarridgo' of doovrttlonee.” Had Mr. Sonia been wdre' : of a ' Talleyrand and less a bully, the affair had terminated before this* With hiss knaVeryaiid mole canning in his tedmpo. sition, he would have had Spain and the United States dodfriig in this hardware lirld ero lhis. It UKt* a man of bfains to pick a’qfiantfl itrthal Utd aggVosS orthali'^lnTh*'i^BrM i paiiyif' Mr; Soule wak tqa much taken np with ’private matter*' to attend to deeper plotting. 1 .Rh’shbatfl iisvif sludiodtheeto me ter of Ch»r las, Dult«of. Stirgundyibatter/heforeeß-. lering upon So delicate iMniaioa. - • -. . / The altitude of our Government toward Spain resemblos that of a 'big. beilicote schoolboy .abakjng his'fist at a weaker opponent,- -Jit Spain dares lode, tain an, Amorioan vessel.inspected of ppiawlul in. tsntions relative fen her islsnd possession, why, Spain must be snublied—milled* little, to (each her-bolter manners. .Spjin bas nu right tq pwddia with fiipna tiering expeditions, .bqcansei; ; i . Pupa by gstpra and pojifiqn should belqngto the, United Stales. , Tfo,skoe Powr,cov4U illjheftfytti, . ‘ , It byipnga to us; and wehs*^ a right to lake onr property whoreover w?p«nimd'fi, . It U alway* jitf imaginary inaoli from a weak opppqenlt tlisna real one s' pow erful foe. Spain is a 'wejknilionV therefore, - Government csjn be particularly iiva£o on Spain while it ia England anil tVk'nee; Eiuoh is a. (wref pn'd' nnirtirtioalalcment of the cans under Cabinet coTjaidtraViod. '■ Wo bulliedMex icoi cqnnneria a imafi eUfiH and madb tiro Preri. dents , W'.'tof }he ‘*' We caniWif biflly Bpaih,'gol Cuba aKd' another batch- of Presidehla— perfaap*. ■ : fipaiojj conlenyit. Se fetter, offtrufe»\ i k|Hy tbfi liW of ija,ljoMy»» ; priw^sdOfit ett u'^i^^% i: ttetid‘ WtttSpuSV with' ‘ik greater p(^V(^ip^'i|lii^' < iijj|l' ! K : ietfennihed eßbrt ftfof. miifdtp' ifio&ti to' ti&fXibi ttom w ! UStn'of' lll'MVr (klaetf'i ■ewlaipe atft w^i^^Muia4&'/tiMul. |«biswfht;Ctoi^. ( Ctob»,4t^h« w ,,u»u|?qfeW *ji4#gtww t &Wr' Ufa ,l* jpueifl torcaßw ing, if i.Vb*,*Mp s ; Moral Buuiua u impotent at the Sooth. A fever ■rv ME* tu 1 IWfer- ra- ftr:«*wU Je»er. ulSe BotUh.*be '■s* Jtjiji ’)Mra^OT'ii^.tjf ; «tfi|t,'j»Dd UmS**» JbnptfitQ . He «nl£ fm~*fif ud a friend In % &m&vamß . x - Wexh IS* ronrb territory people, The to qnirilion of Kwft&Baipn uiAd&U&tsia will retail in adiirnpUon6nn^C, v j^^jl^Oregon, j TbetUbilUyof ■>»>* j ly of interest; *iUi!!»idElsi!ite®tM(j.jn(«e»t« we thtU doJUU^ > 1 Ranittfc-Wt mays? troub led Ewt atonal aiagdiiiirj'.dtriie. There is a cloud shitting dp#n’ki|i6ib 6hr“wciura border, dulf Kjanaaa secret destined tobathe irodmkdn which the ques tion of FtvkMk 1 Witebated. The recent irruption of'kiriid hqndrpdi of abandoned, armed Missouri rd>ydips’ipw, Silia.l, Tpfcitpry, and their eulern folk somewhat abomtopos .demonstration of flie TdpSJaif SoveiftTgßtr dortrl*. iWd and ftWt ieal aa the c^, id be by their Southern, enebfos knd Nofthwn* dbqghfacea, they fiiVeit*ver;efeo: »ppf<w<*<d «n set'#rejpMcp »pd enormity like that,/from itfljncoption, the Nebras ka bill was intended to-etand Brel in a dark scries df $U roovr* ffd B jgHWdons Mpob: free ddmaln. And thin outrage was committed nodetihe eye of —peibapi by and with the contend of the national Administration. 'The wmofitt rillaihiet eiceeda thatof olUtr.predece«mri' r o)id'wo.(iiut I <if those to oflme;after.it Goiruptioh wear*, no nuahio Wu»b ingloa, tad Iho (Umoaphoreithat erttelope* the Coin ip«t teeka-wilh ftlor. /The pf Jtw tico ih the Soulli. Jjas /illoo intothohand* of tho too)()og»-«n<i( tba.dospefstd,, •Tba 7V£6un«,lia» A detaijcd.pf jtho dys-. trued op, of preps, !M. .(Jtfe. by.,4, the. ' qiUUys, were of ( , jfree * jftit .privities,' A^^o,6pee l with til? doterfpipation tolar M^|r*. ( Pnrk &. the’ edUqrb.. -Only Palierson wss foiimJ crfl (lie pfcmisds, (he fofmprbcinjr oo s'Viait to 'Kansas. Mr. Pattcrßoa wgs spared a lyncbjng for two reasons : flip partner was absent, and hie wife qiungso doaclyto hi in that both woqM have suffer. ( *d together. It is wo;lhy of note that even this deterred itfbse 200 chiViiric Southrons, trained from itifaiiby To Wotnan-Whipping! Strings that 200 Missouri braces should isiemWetolyneh two un armed Men and permili woman to'ftustrate them ! Two hundred ogaintt ties ti-i-Fsngh !—even cowards conqncragaih.il such polity odds! The two' most important resolutions 'poised on ithst oeCsSiaal Wa.itMerr below, ■ ‘They, tdrve as an ihdei to the while; Hefo ts IhaJMi «A- ; I " Retohei, Thstwe hidet litre sgim 6n' this day three weeks,-and if.wß.findG. S.Psrkj* W*V. Pelt, letspa jir ibU lown lhep, or. at any subsequent, time, we will throw lliem into the Missouri Riser; nod if .lliey go to Kansas to reside, ve pledge our honor as ttlriri to filiow and hing'them wherever woean take them. The.crlfpn of these qien' was not that they dared to speak their sentiments, merely, for bad men may do that/'but. that they dared to exalt Liberty above Slavery. Think of iL Resolved, That wo will softer no person belong ing to Die Northern Methodist Church, to preach in Pin lie County alter this date, under penalty of tar and leathers for the first offense, and a hemp rope for the second. It any of oar Methodist friends tael detinue of martyrdom, tiny have only la migrate to Platte Co, Missouri and preach two sermons, A higher com pliment was never paid a Christian denomination than by the Missouri rowdies in (he above resolution. Rear, (opg wijjl other denominations so wink at Slavery, as tbst .the South shall not proscribe their ministers 7 , Mat Cols /—As you seem to have commenced a crusade pgsiaet wo should liko to. treyowmskq clwm work of It, It is no worse for John Duma'ux'io sell sour cider than U is for dllicrs who nndcrrtSDd ■ English better. -No partiality If ydo please. ' MANY. ’• 'No pdrtlslily is intended, gentlemen, whoever yod Mby'be. -To its, Frank- Pierce, as a vender of sour cider or bad whiskey, Is Ob rodre Ihtn the obscurest dealer of villSiodus- three-Uenteia. Wc are-nore specter df-persons -eiigsged in liquor-selling.. We Utkeduthat the ipcn<wbo: think it isright losc]) ci dtrl/adulieritdd with ibhrikavv.Bre.nqt ashamed lot hare the’ pnblurhnow-iL , Indeed, it is for. Itipir in- UreatAbst it aliarid heJtnbmm . Wewish lymndersldod )ba| we effl (Opposed to (be selling qr gividg away of intoxicating drinks by anybody; and When wo .learn that this.is practiced qt any place jin this villige, we shall say so without “fear, (aver or affection!’ of, or for anybody. (Cr Ay later'news from Bsrrisbargwe notice (hat Sa Arorof removing die seat of Govern ment lo Philadelphia, have passed (be Moose. The present locstloa is aiteged to bn vinbesliby—eomo leer >30..0f the mombers being usually.*i*k sl.a, Umd.during'tlinsesejnn, Ope member thought that poor liqitoc had more to do with (he sickness than/ the.bjealily-, Vary,-likely, ,-V The.iJoatts-has rated lofix-tho pay pf.me/nbcrt at {ssoothe, session im totitl of .thppfesent s3pe|r day,. It also voted lo incrcqso tfip appropriation for the,- supjotl-of Connpon Edioola ,from to #3oo,ooo—a cepilal idea., ' ■/ ; . """ “ J „GosEtur h(M)y(H*e «o,EufnM, and S. F, LiTHaor has gone toLsporte.”— Bradford 4r gv*- ~ , „ ... , . / • '' " ( Wliqt are you drivirig at, fudge i ' '• ! (EJ" The yofm.opUia i to j9.9r.rpw.- .■Thif ism ; Wtyftf pontinuMCoi ywangrownt, KIJP} eifpWa. WrmajiehC W> »*£ jff i 3S%» 'm «««»$ *w- I're&e* ‘" ■ - :■!> 'lsWtfcd 4i arts' xtf jin' fikle*’ dj&WSa «tibmer. ! '-’ .i..i V iL -ii> ; ;., ~j. .;_. law beei boMinj tn'lnjl ««ap«l£; iMPlisws^ d«p&feBf«»pp(»d ■& MgtiMv'twbituiatm edisMg«lidh WfMmitW, andlwwlbeiao 11* td nfo^rtlSotaibffSiiinwyi^^ BfUerLiMHiboti cbmpiHyJ r- ,»vrub :iA'hill. detiwrlstogihr’Sdo'tjflbor fyWasWflfUt h<» passed difHalhffj-Senatft prob K-t biUGxeff AftniiUDiUDl ptiflsid SJmill, in» oCdoikra.: ; Tho;s»**; &WfyhWkigimin* be much exefcised thereon* iWhatythp, matter/: rend -;,;• - L ! ;:/ .W;./’. ; '.n CT A* per sgreemeVrf.Srt 18 ttlljliWif 6Uriwfthbo/bDtmdi(«ir fpoidlrtlalittglobfc: fovor He <•«-’ -b«< •< «•* «: ' tftt>dia?«k{erii|iiMi : «IMlvtf*Plkii 1M dW]«W port Mfesii'«;' , Pirt4r<fksB SmyitiVlDsaimicb tnrthoy wOrt'bn-tfch tiehetvwd.pwpoffl toigirsihun'Uwben' efit of having it his owniiwajfr fijn lha.ptesEßt, just fir IbefMUe'of jndginghini'hy biff ’otw-fnte.j'fle willuemdmbd-iliatMisMoWV name-Waji:p»raded,-ai the Democratic liflketal Hi# heffd of bis paper last fait ‘ Of douwd he.ffiippojted: Sir. Molt wjth ajl biff, might ih ,th«c po(W. apd.ppOn Blopliop day, voted; lor him. - well kpqtf.n before elcclieni.lbat, tyr.MoU thp Knpwr.Nmh ing candidate (or Canal Commiwionpr. , Ibingiun Waa’sßal;l» obnoyioi)ff^o ; difft as it la noW. . i yfft, pdt manj Afcek* (jttst;preyjou» to the receiptor that he was peculiarly aayng£pq/116 “midnight conclave" Aful twt nnfteqpently of„hi». read ing, cdlmnps, to the of.lhe “bloody Cay cnnc«."!Sllillhe aoppprtcdohe ofAbetpoaipropiin. ent„ Know-Nothing candidates for a high offibe to the (*s. of'jiis ability. bdt neighbor eipliiin t The CUM of PibrOe’l FilUHfc, THE ORE AT POIITICAA TRUTH —-Tile HAN ■' ■-•' ; n '-e.-op 1858- . • Frankßh Pierceisa failure. Every man from Maine to California, knows that (hot. He W the Worst failure -of the age. Carried ' into power by a wave-of popular enthusiasm —swept in’as if there was a hurricane at the back of the ha wasunableto top it; and neoesstiriTy was' - hurried' to- the- broad ocean of deid 'reputiiion. 1 ■ _ Ho has been the noir faineant of Presi dents. Ho hah done-hoihinff—not even a very wrbrig'tbin'g,.. If he had bdqri guilty of ,a single act even though it struck public opin ion “belowlhe belt n ßbd doubled it up, he ’ wdij Idha 1 d'preservhd ’a narnej But politics ,do not periiiifa dd-nothlnglo hfaveany iorigev ily. ■ The indiviaunl who “coibes before the -people 1 ’ —who takes a-prominent and-notable position—who' accepts onerous responsibili ties, %W> asabnio (he dignity (as the iFrench says) of “a man of aflame,” must do or go. Pierce is—‘gone ! • The cause of his failure-is obvious; it is the cause ol the failure of all moderate poli ticians— He possessed no faith. He did not believe,in himself or in his destiny. He felt, even in power, that he • Was a commonplace man, dcdidemly elevated, and was afraid of bis duty. In ibis bo was unlike any Duly gredt man, who must always have the uncon sbibusnes* Attributed io Nelson, when be was a Child. ''Were yoq not afraid to be alone in (Ha WOod’?' 1 skid the mother to the .boy (hero/ ,n hsai the answer, t‘l never saw -Fearf’-'Tltedo'dividual ‘Who presumes to lend theDemooracy of this country, with its great, bounding beneficent heart* its terrific impulses, ifs great: hopes; (U silent presentments, trium ;be a Nelson in ihb Wood—that is td say, he : raiist not see Fear; > Franktin -Pieroe saw Fear from lhe first,— Hehoped wdonalinepuilies, Ootid potmttand i them? 'Elected oh iha'rcpihßemative of- pro -1 gfataionj d hh l bedanie dhe - resurfectiotust >of dead difficulties; ihcreconstfhciiomat of supers laauatod He.’evidently labored under. tt)o mistake that a baucus was Congres»,-and t/mt Congress was a caucus. We will-not apologise for speaking of him in the past tense; fiuit ilHum.; he has de parted to the. timbo of forgotten names, never to return, - He had the opportunity, (the only thing.a rhsn of talent Wants*) and he had not presence of mind enough to use it; he had a , splendid fotbte; (if the present were well cul tivated) and-he -sowed no seed for thus harvest jof fam#; he had an eager audience prejudiced in his favor; odd he—tbrgjoi his part ! 'The failure of<such a man always leaves a Uiorah- We anticipated it when he mentioned : his. want f of. faith; - No statesman ..can suc cedd withom that Attribute with h any one oan' lbecome a' ruler,, 1 Why did Cromwell <{in pis stay Jo.B|ipreine power;} The answer hsbada'creed io which he believed, oot conventianaJly, but really.-r Why did Robespierre becoma<an irresponai blepower! Mirabbau gavie’.iliareason when he sbidj “ilira oroit;" he ,will go far—he believes. ‘. i d / 1 . ’•Tbirgrehd.elsmenti 6ft he true politician WMaiiogotterwanlingki thaotganizalionqf Piercqi -tfe was n '.'mere 1 skeptic., Ho said himsoff.llitt he aoariely .belinedbQ had bee* • dboaefa .focyhaPreaiderrcjr ;.itt would bo. well ;ifAiigdoi)htliad been'fdadded. on 1 feeta* : Ho. iknow a abort time ailer that he hadi.been. eh (acted. bearer of American, prog. i<Bjff? bbl'berdeserled his'jjoerjion/retrealed to ; cb’mroisaaVjttt depSTtimerit ,‘ arid inavead of toraed his ejea backward, (0 - jltebiiMo'TtiWjahljnbllow a r tnidt(6H ; pdIUU jeal movement) thought of his dni> ’forth; ' Tbftmglihis Tadlt|'liM(2>,which promised :to. W;«nfer«i<rf parked mpe, hopanw ttn |of;,m^6c<meb^;.^ ;^lon*«*blpttBbtaB^p)^rann^l^^p^ora ! on}:lhp■ stagehand disgusted iba galleries;wftnom, catchihg iberapplauso of tbWboxes, He did iodarneat. Ho jl%ed *of’them'; byhimself. Bui a .democracy is always earnest, and woe to the ''i fl tfffM <yßi ksm tl: prf: ft by shame 1 f‘‘MKBob,yob know not tie world isigov to imply (jiatiiw ibelrjEmlowmeittras life The a pbi his pubii'c bel ween Ibiir iwhter— from head tqfoot pmore he'csq estimate its .n&Tejit'or imperturtiabfe^tqi k 1 l*r'tmt"in’dfe « s *•; the he dpespot f\hvo, fot thdaay 6f caucusing is past, 1856 to bo a cauchs.'qnd ihiiisf be a' ’We mate’ hoWly that n& one, tftoiign W ,m'ay M gifted with the gfadeldigenldud of Washimpentrying—the pjstqrjc acuipen el,Prescott—-the pdpulpr.eli bf jf4h^er- chi'alroog charac ter dikl^tticdlpower of : CaJhdkp-^arf'enter the White; Boose it) 1636, if fie ,haB'nQ{ a (hll, firtriinddmimble ftiilhi It tpaltejs fret what his peculiar idea may|Tie-iwhethcr,hj? is” a DkmofcrAt, Show Nothing, Hard, Stsfi/Poughface/Free Soiter, AnnexatioHisl. CommerciaJist, Caucuser, Mot ihbn, Millet! te, Gentile or Jew, ho most 6e- Hete-'iti tiittl idea and carry it out. He'must not only tWlt'it J speak it, parade it, rhetor ically. Ornament it, make newspaper properly of it, nail it oD'ibe front of the Wbitejjouse must dct it !' Faith is the parent,' o( aU actibn/'we know,; so',he must have faith'. ; '.Look at burgreklmen. Jackson had. faith. Pis ideas were his divinities/ pe worshipped; them, ai)d necessarily they became facts/ Polk had faith; he*kdew that hewks'thetes timeninry. pxecytor of Jacksonism, .and he fulfilled ms missiijin. Taylor, Fillmore and Pferte lacked this quality, (which is, after all, nothing more 6r less than genius) oftd we know theit fates. Thk maa of 1658 must shun the fock on which their reputations wete shivered. In one .word, he must be himself. Who dares to run. —New Oflearit t)eUa. isn- Wonderful Escape. The Haycock Powder-Mills Blown Sky- High. On Wednesday morning' last, ‘ about 8 o’clock, the chimney of the drying house at-* tatehed'to the exierfsive powder-mills of Slbn ebsk & Deiweiler, in Haycock Township, took fire, and burned out furiously at the lop.- Only two or three 1 persons Were In the mill at rite time; they heard the rear of the fire, arid fan omt of the building, intendingtopro* cure buckets, and ascend to the roof With water'to‘prevent the "shingles (Vom taking fire. After a moment's reflection, they thought (he undertaking a hazardous one, and very prudently abandoned it.- They made their escape as fast as possible. In a tew moments the roof was on fire in several places, and it is said to have been about three minutes before a spark felt through the shin gles ipto the main part of (he btiifdihg, where there was about four tuns of powder, which of course was instantly Ignited, and the whole mill wos blown sky-high, a part of which has not since been seen. The explosion was terrible, and shook the country for mites around. It wns distinctly heard, the jar felt, and a cloud of smoke observed, at Plumstead vide, Price’s Tavern, and Doylestown. Mr, Gbarles Roudenbbsb,' a farmer of Haycock, was plowing in-bis field at the time of the explosion. "He informs Us that the effect on him-was of n stuhnibg nature, and the earth trembled undOr his feet The most fortunate circumstancA connected with the terrible cat astrophe is that no one wa* killed. John Stoneback, Sen., saved himself by getting behind 0 large tree, lesstharva hundred yards from the fated spot. One or two other per sons,-who were about Iho milt at the time; mad# their'ttampers give “a long pull, a sitting “pirih ahd a pull altogether,"' and suc ceeded in making ihoir : e* rape-from' the irt fernal rnac’hihe. : Thtf powder-mill belonged to John T. Stoneback and Samuel Deiweiler, and is nfcnr the oil-mill of John Stoneback, Sen. They are all situated on (ha Tohicon Creek, and near the toad leading from Doy lestown to Richiandtown. The loss is vari ously estimated by different persons. TbO lowest estimate we have beard is 8500, and the highest 85,000. -r* Doylestown (Da,,) Democrats April 24, . Cwht otf Uofcoß.—A bill Io establish Courts of Mediation, has been introduced in the Massachusetts Legislature. A certain number‘of persons are to be elected iq each town to act as -.mediators. The officers to be of honor and not of profit—ino fee -, to, be received.except for personal,-expensesor dis bursements,. The causes ofaction of , which this Mediation Court is to .tabe cogoizance, are libel, s|ander, malicious persecution, breach of promise of marriage, asspU and battery, false, imprisonment, and action on contract or .Claims not exceeding 81 Pu. ties may voluniarily appear before'hq court (yitfiotunotice. ; , A reconciliation cfjmwl be. fflre this-Courts to.be a. final deierjnjqation pf-jhe .malter in -Rfu simferf. . 1 Three fugitives slaves, who hada long and perilpua journey 1 and wero( once retaken by their piasters,. arrived at t||i» (fon» a- few days ilnce on tHfeir way to'tfie larid of free* - doth—Canada 1‘ Barber Jim * l gufi ’enf’ a dollar a piece and sent them qn their way re joicing. He is evidpqllf tppo&d io “Union savipg.” A 1 benevolent njnnnt FrttaWiriVille gave them 85, Ere Him they 5 are 'beyond the reach of the slave.humer, fa any body Jdttrnbf. 1 - ■ . Gtoon Move.—Mr Swsiq, the agent ,of the. line- ofsteamers. owned by. tbe Michigan Central Railroad Compahly, iho» entirely ex dudijd theiale of prat dn. board the boats, Loversof Tettiperancts dad qrder. wilt make ■a-Betetog’lMn •»• ■ * j-_- ;• ■ ■ ■ ■ The weather is improving. . ,-W or things. as ablo altewaneeTor buma»fr*ihywinaniCBt ed m undelibehfe f AbteMr»Hy,’6bar. uy, so nbrtWrf,i# a; i\«nse:for-»tt< robnaacof oppressiofftbrgb'dD(^6b%^;'Mn^ftVfcd, unobsbteted,' p n ’ <ACMrlty J cWwerV* fcidtfide of s'fl*l >f rs* 9 -. sppie RepE^hope. . Mt gm f^mm^Gvm^swsa madehimselfexccedinglypopular as a mod tm.v ATi&rtho rymmiaa flapped pysi, wj’' of xufriA opposedi loi law.ju%sioa, GooSo,j<?rease ? ;(<i)l-a. little.,opt pf bis popularity wooed i~Still„te preactednfost udcioouaswrnitona- <lO . & holy -terror of calling .things by,thejej;ight Dao)e»,; and .seems to .(hjok, language), was msdb to.paliiate .wick?dßej»p. ; ,, J can jet along Wtih te Wlpeiiops, opt,!. Goose: Gfoase, l-Migb : l I .qan’t jWajKj him. nor I won’t. He is, getting rgady fot a campaign against theft mi slfiyory mpyepiepl. His text b still “diatity’’—lojerppce .of rum sod slavery, the .commentary,. ' God forbid that we grow more tolerant pf either. Strong language—harditrue wprds,—.“ Un . ohnritqhle words, have measurably restored the popular judgement concerning the merits of d(pok(ird-r»>aking; and ,now, the rum. seller Teels it like a “hoj jight,”. into his (hick; warty skip.; jQultiaring his basi lisk eyes,,blistering bis,conscience(?)—(self, esteem-) He is done, for.. .Goose Grease can’t.save him. Even so must the ragged truth deal with Slrivery, , . v ,j BDTIAKn. Not (be township, but the. Spi—pshaw! Talking of spiders has bewitched me.—That .thing which has been blowing hs venom from the spiders oea- there again! I name new calling your “neighbor” a spider’s nestl— blowing its venom at Judge Wilntot; r.Well, what’s the use of being, mealy mouthed! David Wilmot—God bless him—baa helped to tear up 'the old spider net—and the.spiders are down upon him’’—pity they have no wings ? This might be a gossamer spider. You can find teuch an one many a sun shiny morning on the top of a fence:post, with his unseemly part elevated towards-the sun, and projecting, frond his bowels, one or more in. definite “yarns,” the levity Whereof, carries the spider out of sight, and that’s the last you sdo of him. "The Yam.” ' David Wil mot wrote a letter to Simon Cam eron—which letter was too polite to suit the' fades; as the spiders try to believe, but not quite polite enough (O' suit the Spiders. So (he spiders alter the letter, making it still more polite, and fn that important (farm pub lish it. This forgery don’t seem to make the spiders bhish—why should it? Spiders don't blush. They can’t blush. They don’t know what n blush is, only by the color. It wss so natural for them to commit a forgery and to betray private confidence, that they did not think of denying it, nor did any one think of putting them on trial. But; they wanted something of David Wilmot more dallering than genteel treatment, and that they could not get: Therefore they roust kill h ; m—a thing easy to accomplish when spiderdom was strong and-prosperous; but, difficult now. Spiders saw (bey had not power to hurt him “with'their own weapons,” and they appeal to the bees to lake up the quarrel. “Only see how complaisant he is to spiders!”— “Bo t, in what character do you speak—Mr. Spider ?■ ‘ Are you- trying io be a bee! ‘ Or is if spiders work you are coaxing us to do 1” Dropping metaphor. There was nothing in the position of David Wilmot or of Simon Cameron When the letter was written, to stamp ady part of the letter with impropriety, . much less treachery or infidelity, to any par ty, ~A«d (his (uss about (the ■ letter is alls spider business—disgraceful even to spiders. SCIRE FACIAS. iiu Impoitor— Hi* Career Sadden- ly Brought to a Close, A ronn the name of Charles A. Bowen, alias Charles Sage, claimfpg to be a Baptist Missionary (1) from New-York, was arrested af'VV'esl Union Chapel, about four miles from (his city, last Friday, and taken to New-York in custody o( an officer from that State,— The facts in the case, so , far os we were able to (darn, are these : This-Bowen (which is his real name) came to this city, last fall, in the capacity of a pjeacher r 'book-pedlar, . and schoolteacher. He is a’ resident of Liv ingstoo Coubty,New-York, where he stand* indicted fqr perjury, and wos put- udder bonds, in theisam of §2,300, fochis appear ance at Court —a man named Darlift Havens, going his security. No sooner" was ho out pf the “clutches ‘tba" Idw”- then he took “French leave!’ rff' hia friehrjs in that State, and triade (of the ‘ Wfisu On wiving at Cutriber|apd, in tKiip State, he concluded to sjopl had.'wem to Work assi ;! Sfrssionary of ihe-pjpti« ? tho:hpller lo con icehl his guilt, afld tolmposS the Wore read tty. upon the good, people in. lha), vicinity ■— : His firsi pbject 1 was to endeavor to build an Xtfiidoihy hV subsc^ptiw—ftfWenl (o-work ,SQUfeitmjglho SlnJ'succeeded , w .raising! hithsejf'((iking a share. VVTt.bn tJ{e day came’ first ' n ' slalincn), bh was unablotbrhvsd, and not being able (o give security forks payment, ns wjis desired he loft Hint region' and came ; tb"lhis city, Where' he flai ; ‘‘been ever since, . practicing his blrf gameff of deieeirand 'ftp pocrisy., In the meantime he became •ac quainted'. With'a voting lady, near West Union Chapel, and on Saturday, iMinst., he left the; csy% gel married, ■ and returned agaip bafly Monday rooming ,lait. Thd offide'r frpWNeW-Yort, being w tfbq 1 by f wbflhy ib making his sr- Wsti/antf tbbfc mro oh h) ‘NeW-Ydrk, leaving hts Soahg Wifi behind ro weep over his ’ i,, < intfd.liei sad’aftd Bolfwwrul misplaced love." 'Jitfidttafofit Sehtintl, 28,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers