lEi 113 8 El inik. .9 ate n faction, and ,imist be de. Ptroyell." When we are destroyed they will stick their daggers through and through the Constitution of the country. (Immense cheering.) The names of Clay, Webster and others, have been invoked to sustain this doctrine of the Territorial_ yerwer to ex elude slave property. The Missouri Com promise of 1850 has been invoked for the same 1111911VCO. t assert, that from 1Q t 9 down to the perhxl when this false doe• Wise, repugnant alike to the Constitution and reason, was thrust upon the country, no respectable political party held the opinion that a territorial legislature had the right to exclude slave property pend ing its territorial condition. When did Clay ever hold such doctrines? When were such doctrines ever embodied in the Compromise measures of IMO. They all looked to the period when this aliould come tato the Union as tt State s the time when the Territorial authorities might act on the subject of property, and held or exclude the slave property o' the south (Applause.) Time will not al -1,3w me to do much more than state these propoaitions,but I will read short abatraets from the celebrated report made by the Committee of Thirteen, of which Mr. Clay was Chairman, which resulted in the corn- prom' to measures of 1860. It is calm and lucid —has no clap trap phrases, and puts me in mind of the language used by the Supreme Court. (Mr. Breckenridge here quoted from vol. 21 of she Globe, part let, page 945.) lie continued—That was the doctrine of nonintervention in 1 tiso. It was no in. terference to exclude by Congress or the Territorial Legislature, but to leave the, question to be decided by the people when they came to form their State Constitution. [Mr. B. here read from a speech of Dan iel Webster, in which the position is tak en that territorial governments are in a state of pupilage, under the protection of the general government ; that they have no power, not given to them by Congress ; that it is our duty to provide for the peo• ple of the territorial government ; to se• cure their property; to see that the pro. taction of their persons and the security of their property are all regularly provided for; to maintain them in that state until they grow into sufficient importance in point of population to be admitted into the Union as a State upon the same footing with the original States.] Mr. Breckinrid . ge continued—Do you suppose that Daniel Webster, after the opinion of the Supreme Court which have read to you, would have considered it becoming to him to point at some con trivance or device by which the Territori al Legislature could violate the rights of the Southern States ? Not he ' • nor would Clay, nor any of the great and good men who figured in the earlier days of your history. [Cheers.] The Judges and Governors of these Territorial Governments are appointed by the President of the United States, and paid out of the public treasury, so that the very Legislature which they invoke to ex elude your property from the Territories, is one whose daily expenses are paid out of the Treasury—out of the money to which that very property contributes by taxation. [Applause.] The practice of Government has been always different. Mr. B. here entered into an argument to show that Congress has power to pro• Sect property in the Territories, and in refutation of the position recently taken by the Senator from Illinois,tbat Congress had never exercised this power. The prin ciples I have tried feebly to here he continued, are theprinciples upon which the Constitutional Democracy stands to day. If they are the principles of the Constitution and the Union, then we are Constitution- • alists and Unionists. And yet for two or three months you have heard loud and in cessant clamor that I and those Demoerato with whom I am connected are disunion. fists, supporting a disuaionids, supportii4; a disunion organization ,—that we seek to i break up this confederacy of States I hard ly know, so far as it is a personal charge against myself, how to answer it. The whole stock in trade of these 111/OR. ymous writers and wandering orators over not minute nor unimportant—that the uro the country seems to be the cry of (Howl. ion of the States rests upon the equality' ion. "This wan and his party," they say of rights among them—that neither Con. "attempt to break up this union of States." grees nor the Territorial Legislature has a We reply, how can principles be sectional right to infringe the constitutional rights or tend to disunion , which are based upon of! any citizen, and that if any right be as. the Constitution! And yet the large sailed by the Territorial Legislature, it be number of young gentlemen Kato are en• ',ewes necessary for Congress to interfere gaged in ringing be still, with tongues to protect that right—preeisely the prie st; long and heads es empty as the tens cdples upon whirls we etaud today. (Cheers] which they ring, cry "disunion My distinguished friend folowed these res. [Prolonged laughter and cheersj elutions by a speech, which I find in the From sources yet more emineut contest early ukim the itiformaion that I, and the political i It is true he expressed a hope that the organization with which I am connected, i time might never come when it would be are laboring for the disruption of the Cou• i necessary for Congress to Intervene to pro tedereey. Ido not reply now to what Mr. ,tect those rights. I trust that the time Douglas says all over new England, in , will never come when any territorial an. Virginia and wherever ho goes, because it thority will be so reckless of its Coostitn• is quite natural for a gentleman, as much tional obligations as to make it necessary Interested as be is, to think that any wan lisr Congress to dicier° its acts void.— who approves of my principles must Le a [Cheers . r But in his speech, ho sustains disunionist. (Cheers and laughter.) b.' , the position on which we stand in Congress d ee d, by hi e d ec l ara ti on , we must be a ll which compares well with the decision of dieuniouiete in Kentucky, for he declares the Supremo Court. Ile says : The es• that those who assert that the Territorial tears read Irma Mr. ;Crittendeti*s speech Legislature has no _power to exclude slave declares that a territorial government is a property,and that Congress should litter• creature of Congress, endowed only with fere for its protection are disunionists ; the powers conferred upon it by its creator and that is what the whole Legislature of and with no particle of sovereignty.) Kentucky said last year. (Applause.) Mr. Crittenden goes on to say "that as In our own State, where certainly I the Territorial Government has no sorer -oi:ight my character and antecedent.; eign or independent right: to act on this were known, ono of the oldest and most subject, the Supreme Court of the United eminent of public men has not said that I States Ins, having determined that every was a disunionist, but intimated that I am citizen of the United States may go into connected with an organization whose hone that Territory, carrying his slaves with sod body is disunion. .1 refer to Mr. him, and holding them there. My opinion Critteuden, in a speech made M. Louisville. is, that the Constitution is to protect that I have knowu and admired him, and he property which it has authorized to go gives tae the benefit o dirobt, and for turn 'may Maim. ho Supreme curt !country is in a 4a. way i IW t nu this I thank him. (Renewed cheers) As says the Territorial Legislature cannot !the charge is a reckless one. How is it to my connection with a party whose prin.' exclude it, and Mr. C. says : Nothing: with the State of Kentucky, which is go. eiples tend that way I may speak of that; eau strike him as snore unconstitutional ing to vote in accordance with that prinei presently My object is to relieve myself and contradictory than to say that while' ale T la the State of Kentucky a dis from the imputation of being a disunionist' you May go there, there is somebody union State ? The delegations froin Cal and on this I would prefer to receive a di• stronger or mightier than the Ceristitu • I ifornia and Oregon Were in the Convent. reet blow than to have it sound like the re- (ion that can take away that which the I thin. They reside thousands of miles luctant confession of a sorroful friend.— Constitution says you may hold and en• ' away from our private strifes. What (Applause and laughter.) joy. Just what 111 r. If/engin asserts, and I have they said that would lead any man Air. IL, in passing, paid an eloquent which, if not recognized, he will rend and ,to suppose that they would break up the ' tribute to Gen. Lane, and continued to destroy as lie goes. (Applause.) I de- lUnion of the States ? They are imparti ' speak of the charge against himself of be . rive some satisfaction from the fact that al arbitrators of this dispute, and they tell in a disunionist. ' the Hon. John J. Crittenden, whose name' our Northern brethren they must do jute Born within sight of this toilet, 'known to' and authority will go far in this Union, i ties and give equality in the Union. and you for near forty years, your represents.' has declared in the Senate and recogni• 'that on such . principles they can maintain live in the Legislators, in congress, and zed by his vote as Senator the principles the Constitution and the Union. That is having held other situations of trues, I in• upon which we stand, as the principles of; what Oregon and California say—as well trite any one to point to anything in my the Constitution. (Cheers.) ias large majorities of the deleAations from character or anteeedents which would sane. i I cannot enlarge-1 appeal to you if I other States of the Union. Senators and Lion such a charge or such an imputation. , have not with reasonable certainty—l :members of the House, Representatives (Cheers.) I will not degrade the dignity may say conclusively—repelled the aces. front both sections of the Union, men who oilgll6. of my deelsration by epithets; but I proud. Iychallenge my bitterest enemy to point to an act, to disclose an utterance or to ro• veal a thought of mine hostile to the Con stitution or the union of the States. (Loud cheers.) Thu man does not livo who has the pow• er to couple my name sueeessffilly with the slightest taint of disloyality to the Constitution and the Union. (Applause.) But if there be nothing in my character to justify this accusation. what is there in the platform and principles upon which I stand ? As it must, if anywhere, be in the resolutions as to property in the Territo ries, I will read them, and you can judge• whether they accord with the position of the Supreme Court and the governtnent,as I have shown it to.day. After reading the resolutions, he contin ued—That is the platform and these are the principles avowed. If they aro con stitutional they are not sectional, for the Constitution is broad enough to cover the whole Union. (Cheers.) Ile who stands upon the Constitution can neither be we. tioual nor a disunionist. Those principles are taken almost verluitim from the opinio of the Supreme Court. They are support. ed by the precedents and practice of the Ooverument. They are the principles up. on which we may well live and by whirl, we may well be willing to die. (Cheers.) They are vital, important, and concern the rights of persons and property. They cannot be abstract and unimportant for they concern the honor and equality of. the States. What has been the position of Kentucky upon that platform ? The candidates for tiovernor of this State lan year, both held that territorial legislatures' hare no power to exclude our property,: and each contended that every department of the government must protect it when It becomes necessary. Mr. Joshua Bell, I believe, went a step further by expressing • the opinion that the time had now arrived when the government slia;l interfere.— tour Conventions endorsed there princi ples, and the Senate and Assembly of the Commonwealth of Koutucky,by the unan imous vote of both parties, endorsed them as being constitutional and true. by the following resolution. which I must read, it is so apt, so pertinent,so conclusive. (The resolution of the last Legialature of Ken tueky were here read.) That is word for word, the opinion of the Supreme Court, and the platform of National Democratic Convention on which I stand to day.— Both parties in Kentuekhat the polls and by the unanimous votes of their represen tatives in the Legislature, have declared dist these principles are those of the Con ! stitution. I might pause here, but in i port of these principles I want the author• ity of Mr. Crittenden himself. (Applause.) Whatever doubts he may hare as to my ; fidelity to the Constitution and the Union I I do not hesitate to say that eminent; gentleman is devoted to the Union. Ido not believe he would advocate principles which he believed were unconstitutional or calculated to destroy the union of Wei country, and if I can have his sanction ! and endorsement for the principles I ad. I vecate, it will go a great way in proving, that they are constitutional, and not tend. ing to disunion. (Mr. 11., here read the 3d, 4th and sth of Senator Davis' resolutions, and referred us Mr. Crittenden's vote for them.] There I have the vote of my distinguish- ed friend, declaring that these question are . wino!' tne—if I have not shown flint it is neither 1, nor the party which nominated me, but Mr. Douglas, who leas broken Nith ; that by agreement at the time of the passage of the Kansas-Nebras. !ha bill, the eonatitutional point was to be 1 left to the Supreme Condi Have I not shown that the Supreme Court sustained our construction of the Constitution? Have 1 not shown that the agreement thus made, has been violated by the (lectern . lion that a subordidoto authority mny de ny the constitutional right to admits slave property, when the Court says it has not !that power. Who has abandoned the ground or violated the agreement ! I have shown that the principles upon which we stand have been endorsed and sanctioned by the practice of the Govern !ment. affirmed by the highest judicial !tribunal in the world, voted to be true by the two political parties in Kentucky iu 1559, unanimously asserted by both branches of the Legislature, and by an overwhelming majority of the whole Dew ocratie party of Kentucky, and declared 'by Mr. Crittenden to be sound and true. (Cheers.) I think I have piled up a !pyramid of fact and argument in support of our principles which ought to commend itself to the grave consideration of every intelligent man. I have tried to do it by legitimate facts and argument. lam not conscious of having appealed to any prd udice. Fellow citizens, can you bear with me a little longer ! A Voice—" Yes, for a week ; go on :" I know of but one political organisa tion now before the United States which ' asserts the principles I have undertaken to expound. The Republican organiza— tion has taken precisely the saute ground from an opposite point of view. They say we have no rights in the Territories with our property. They say Congress has a right to exclude it, and it is its duty to do so, and they are willing to see the Territorial Legislature do it if Congress does not. In regard to the platform adopted by the Convention which nominated Mr. Bch.. of Teunessee, and Mr. Everett, of Massa-, chusetts, I have only to say that certainly it announces no principle at all upon this subject,—none whatever. Gentlemen tell us that they are advocating the olaints of these distinguished gentlemen upon the principles of " the Constitution, the Union and the enforcement of the laws." I presume that there is scarcely a man in this assembly—perhaps no one North or south, who wall admit that he is against the Union, the Constitution and the en- forcement of the laws. But yet they en- , tertain the most diverse and opposite opinions as to the best mode of sustaining the Constitution and the character of the laws to be enforced. Mr. Seward, Mr. . Burlingame and Mr. Giddings will tell you they are for the Union; but it is their , own sort of Union theyi want. They say they are for the Coulnitution, but they construe the Constitution so as to take away all our rights. They tell -you they I are for the enforcement of the laws, but they are for laws which would take away d our property. (Cheers.) " For the Union, the Constitution and the Laws." They shake hands with you on that—anything under heaven after. ward. (Laughter and cheers.] This platform. gentlemen, declares i practically nothing awl I have nothing further to say abo - ut it. But thu platform 1 have read to you does contain a distinct enunciation of certain principles which treat of the rights of property and person in the Territories, and what we regard to be the equal rights of the States. And we want to know if the people of Kentucky are ready to meet the issue. We appeal to you.—not in behalf of any individual, —but to stand by our own principles, founded on the Constitution of the Coon• try. Now irk be true that I am not a die- unionist, awl if it be true that the politi cal principles I advocate are not disunion' principles, but are the principles of the Constitution, is it not right hard to charge disunion on sound men moth constitutional principles ? [Cries of That's so."] That, gentlemen, would seem to exhaust the subject—" sound men with eon.titu iional principles"—which principles I have announced in the form recognized by American politics, to be asserted by means of the ballot box. But a word on another subject. It is said that although I am not a disunionist and the principles I assert are not, yet the object of the organization by which have been nominated is to break up this confederacy, awl I suppose they have selected me as the tool with which to ox• cent,: that scheme. A Voice— -" [Cheers,' I have no doubt that a great many gentlemen in the Southern States of the Utrou think thattheir Constitutional rights wilt never be recognised. A few are, perhaps, pet se disunionist;, though I doubt if there are fan such in the re: " A bad instrument."..- have filled tho highest stations in the pub. lie councils, but have now withdrawn from public life,—all comer in declaring that these are the principles of the Caustitu• tioa, and they are not afraid to execute them. [Cheers.] Gentlemen, the charge of dkunion is baseless. Advantage has beet/ taken of !the cordial loyalty of the people of Ken tacky, To the surprise and delight of the I gentlemen who engaged in it, the scheme took better than they expected; but I ant satisfied that the sober second thought of the people will recall them to the asser tion of their principles. Kentucky Will never abandon a principle which sho teas declared to be the principle of the Consti ution and the Union. [Loud applause.) I will not answer the newspaper nem , tuitions that this gentleman and the other Igentlennin who have held extreme °pin { ions, support me—gentlemen of far more extreme opinions support both the other candidates. What it B. C. and D., whose opinions you do not like, think better of a certain set of principles than they do of a certain other set of principles, or, if you please, no principles at all, chose to vote for us, are you going to put the stigma of disunion upon one half the empire. There ;are disuniunists allover the country work• ing to overthrow the Union. There arc those who deny Constitutions! rights,— who are engaged toolay in traznpling un der foot the plainest rights guaranteed to us by the Constitution. The Ooveritor of Ohio refuses to restore a man indicted for felony because he says it is no crime under the laws of Ohio to steal a negro. In the State of Wisconsin, a man who was indicted for rescuing a party forcibly front the Lands of the Marshal, is protected by an armed mob. Whore in the North can the Fugitive Slave law be executed' !tow many States at the North have passed laws making it au offence, to be punished by fine cud imprisonment, to aid the offi cers of the United Status iu executing the law' In regard to the return of It fugitive slave, look at the concentration of public opinion, look at the cauroachniews year utter year, look how you are environed and closed in upon, State after State n,a king it rnal in the people to help the officers of the United States, the anti silvery spirit spreading and making in roads in every direction, at Harper's Per ry, in Texas, the South environed and be set, the Constitution thrown into our face, ! the purpose avowed to exclude the South front all the vast common domain of the Union, and thus to begin the " irrepressi ,ble conflict." I Yet when a political organization ven tures to ask for constitutional rights, you I turn with clamorous cries of disunion upon 'your own fellow-citizens, who work for your own rights. • Mr. B. reviewed the course of Mr. Doug , las to show that his design was to disor ganize the Democratic party in the South as well as at the Notth, and stated that If the effort to defeat Lincoln in New York, Pennsylvania and Now Jersey, should prove unsuccessful, it was to be charged to the rule or ruin policy pursued by the Senator front Illinois. HO concluded by a fervid appeal to the Democracy of Kentucky not to forsake the constitutional principles on which they stood. He retired in a state of great physical exhaustion, havin'i to omit several topics on which he inton ed to speak. ADDRESS • OF TOE ( DEMOCRATIC STATE EXECUTIVE COMMUITEE OF I'ENN'A. 2b the Democracy of Pcnmv.yivattilt 1 In a few weeks you will be called upon to terform the most important duty mat ever devolved upon you as American eiti : sew.. At uo time iu the history of our ' country was your action invested will* deeper interest nor fraught with greater cousequenee4. Pennsylvsnia is again the ' battle ground of the Union ; and upon her decisiou in October next, will depend, in a ' great measure, the triumph • or defeat of the Republican party in the November contest. Doeply impressed with this truth, • the Democratic State Executive Commit. tee desires briefly to address you. It needs no lengthy argunicut at this time to call you to a bellStS of duty. Its the crisis now impending, every true patriot can see ut a single glance the pathway he should tread i witu unfaltering tootstcps. Ever since the separation of the Nation. al Democracy at Baltimore, the State Committee has earnestly labored to pro i mote the union of the Democratic party in Pennsylvania. It has sought no other ob. jeot, it has struggled to produce no other i result. When the chasm yawned that I threatened the powerful organization which in times past, has been able to contend isuecesefully pith the tow of the Comeau. lam and the contemners of the equality of i the States, the great heart of the A meri ;Mau people was tilled wish dread, ;ad the Democratic masses were overwheltued with ! consternation. Thu Re übliean . ! rt 'vim w. Ants.ndoi,,, by feelings oT 4 ~ 'diem!, an 4,44 led only by a with to secure the trisi tifitph of the "good old. cause," endeavored ip lisr, oh * (*ow of tationliqdpould • 1 pa le JO I,ltetncerittiO Masada tOttflikta up len nen knectotat tieite4 ainf" *U permit +them to make a common effort against, the icandidates of the Republican Wt.". Afs 1 iter -ninth deliberation, a plan of union teas , agreed upon, which, if faithfully executed, wilt enuestionablyLpriduee this patriotic rattilt. ID such d end% it requires no words' I to prove the 'Mouton+ of any effort that will l , firt consolidate the • opposition to our 111‘ , ° lit I issimply I conThloll po_ica. enemy. It ll ,titetit:OU betWOCU republicanism and De. mocracy ; and, as such, it is committed `with confidence to the calm, good sense of , the people of Pennsylvania. I 1 d enied t hat [ It cannot h e e tnat the union of, the Democratic party will result in a , 'brilliantb triumph in October. On that initial battle all our energies must now be 'concentrated. We have a leader worthy • ;of our cause. With an enthusiasm never before equalled in any political assents I blage, Henry D. Foster, of Wcatmores , land, was selected as our standard bearer 'lin that important contest. He did not seek the nomination. He repeatedly de- ! clitted being a candidate for the (Alec.— I When struggling partizans met at Reads ' , [ing to advanoo the interests of their peen [ liar favorites, he remained in the quie t [ retirement of his own home, with no [ thought of personal advancement, and anxious only for the success of Democratic !principles. The presentation of his name Ito the Convention was met by a prompt ' withdrawal ' at his urgent solicitation. But when Ica whenthe voice o f the people tumid- Imonsly proclaimed him the leader of the [ party in his native Commonwealth, he did not Yortl s . , to obey the call to duty. yet seeking no preferment by any word or act of his own. The record of his life is the record of a Pennsylvania patriot. In every position b e h a s occupied, he has obeyed the instinets of his nature in le -1 boring for the good of those who gave him I place and power. 't he purity of his pri sate character • the a 'ot which marks !every net of his public lin , ; the devotion i [ he leas sh ,wn to the industrial interests of Pentesylvania in the halls of our National ' Congrsss and State I, , oislat ace ; the zeal , ho has ever brought to bear upon all qness ' time; involving Go' true policy of our State Government ; and tti,, co n „,,, ra tism which 11v , always vharacteri/mi his views mem ,tip n u I National issues, make him eminently worthy of the support and confidante of , all eh) have at heart the abiding welfare S of Pennsylvania freemen. In asking you ' Ito do battle for such a champion, the State Committ 'e feels that it is only c thing , upaa you to guard and pr edeet your vital !in:crests. 'l'm will not I thus appealed to in vain. Thu people a r e with tin II tem party, oeratic and will fallow its 11:1„.t.. i, tt 1 , oca,e it is the patty of the vui.in 8,,,i. t t the o,,ixtitutis)“. it has mado this imam try great and powerful. It has never 0,.1,e1 to struggle for the elevation of the :113'..-w,, and for the establishment of the ~ true palmy of government. Its power ii exhibited in the rapid growth of our ex— ' t en d e d boundaries, in the gi.twmal prosper I lity and happiness of our prople, and in the [free and liberal character that has been green to our political institutions. In ' • I • t ho roug hl l ltiVo .tti,.:v ate. i'mnp.ete organis • 1 zation throt,diout the State in behalf of !this party, a simple duty is required of the [lt ti rate 1t1a, , t:,. The Mute Commit ; tee is now actively engaged in endea vor— 'l iitg to Si, ure this sort , and certain prm•nr ' ,o r of victory, We must lie united in the !contest, or our cause is utterly hopeless ' Parties, as well as nations, perish 'before !the evil genius of dissension. Although ; c l ou d s and darkness may surround us, •the union of the Democracy will avert ;calamity by witch we may he threatened, and will carry our banner in triumph through the storm of battle. WILLIAM II WELSH, Chairman. PHILAMPIII.I., Sept. 8, I -Oh Gem Foster--Duty of Democrats \Viten Gen. Foster was solicited by his personal friends and admirers - to become a candidate for Governor, he frankly replied that he Ira'S not rich enough to afford it, and therefore declined to comply with their %hams. When the Reading Convention assembled an excited conteet arose between the friends of the candidates before it. It was feared that the party could not har monise upon either. Knowing the high qualifications of lien. Foster—bis stern patriotism and integrity—and the desire of so large a portion of the Democracy to nominate him in spite of his protestation to the contrary, On motion of A. J. Dietriek, Esq., formerly of this county, he was nominated unanimously amidst a degree of enthusinstie ferv , :r rarely if ever IA it In ad hPrON. 'llll4 literally forced let) the titidd a win and azattiti hk inttat yioldiug his personal , 10-ot,, i!,!• doniantb, of the party, we thleoit to , very ledte:tt luau with r it it not a g-idt n duty for every .11,11,:-.rat to 11, 11':n• it effect., to thel hitn•-• miner (.90blitcr., ior?!.'t till extrancout, or national anti make a grand and ticirrtnitt,ol rally 1-r TT. ttry Foater. ..„;„~~:,.., u ihettocrizt. T.::• th oupr , rt I'r.,t ,, :t;x:. .trift nool on tho tl,y arc in favor of th;• rriloopi, of pr t• V:: I.: I t 1 :‘, -1.. ..t 1n0t.14 •• Aui,o;, , an Indu,trv." 1:.•w -- - 93[00tmi4urg:- 140 A, :IVI--Ogi-NT-;111, - SE:r - T;21 , 211L - 11. IPIM. DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. ron rnr, qDrur John C. reoki nt idge, or EExrucr.r. rolt VICE vircsmErrr• Gen. Joseph Line, or onrmos VREftitriNT STEPHEN A. POITGLAg, ILIJNots OM V teN Pft CAI HERSCHEL , V. 34)1INSON, op ttEntut t A DEMOCRATIC STATE NomiNiTioNs rOR Govr.nrion HENRY D. FOST.EII, Op WE` TMORELANIfr DISTRICT TICKET ton comint.is: ICON. C 1;0 R U]; SCOTT. w tke t 40, 1 , 1 ,011. of en, }',)lt ATOII E ACEsON, ESQ., FUR A.4hEmni,Y COI,, HI lt, A 31 R. K LIN 1.1 , COINT 1,."r ICEET ron ruoTriosoTAny : JAColl EVERLI' Eft \I. ItEof , :41 , 111. DANIEL LEE. pith etoolt,:4lwiEn : WILLIAM'LAMUN Itt .1 OS. B. KNIT 'l' 1, r. 111 floe eX , III-:1 , 1) 11-1131 canny, , we give this Week en ire. tie groat speech of our gallant, candidate fur the pr t ,ideney ; and to white!' we air , tit ;hi , attention of all our r,atior4 It is the aliietit effort of tl . . Mid etri.etually lrt olialn a all lip J-ition. ll.Nututt.tpTopitmENT.----Colonol A. F 0.,. oA 11pp...two! Seporinten dent of the IVillilinAport sl lamina road, in the rlaeo of J. .1. Et:\ rim,n. Esq., who, we lTio•o, takee the po,itioll of Vice Pro:ktleat. or General Agent of the came company. Court Procoodin (, u.l.cr•.i).) eenn'th vs. :' , .;inry. rr-- Iti-t. Arty. rw n 'th—AVirt l'rfs,4o f,o• 1t •11. Var , lwt ;: t lay - Fifty Dollara fiuc , aryl six n t]t- I,'oni ea. es, Adam I,nbort—ir:lin,f li quor on Sawlay—Dist. AtCy. for I th. —Wirt awl Freeze for 1441. Cerdiyt guilty-6untenv O fira:, ten day im pri,mment and rusts. Benj. A. Cole vs. Win. Simons--Action in trover—Freczo and Wirt for Piff.-- Clark for Deft udatit. Verdict to Plain tiff for $1.1 , ,, , 3, J. P. Jackson vs. Enoch Nowell—Ac• tiou on n note. Defendant claimed be had given a different not. from that hu on. Stewart for Pilf.—Hurley for DAL Ver dict for Plff. for i. 32.04. Enos Adams vx. 8. B. Seybort—Actiou on guaranty of a note. Eittio tar Jaelison for MA. Vurtbet. for PM, for $15*.0.1. A Challenge to the World, In Ids spooch at, As;Aland, Mr. 'Week inridge said : I have been charged with a premature atubitiou. I have loam charged with in. triguiug for the tioutivatiou. I have lwei) charged with leapiug before the wiAleis the people and desiring to thrust ni elf: before them fur the highest ollice in their gilt To that I auawer, it is wholly 1111- true. I have written to l - imly, tolleddig support. I hav e conversed with nobody , sotaiting ! ,, cpuort. I. havo intri..r t l ttith td i ly, 1 nave • .1 ly, tie i•tat• tn.. t l 'l. !di eg• ode., from any lionimi lealbib" It is i•eboi andelme eau r rt challen,:o hie• the. to the weld e tea, ii tilt I; iv l:1101.171(;•!,;;.:111:, •••;. •I p.; 111. '•t - 1 ••. •••i rk nominat. tlir-u, It the unsolicited and bott,,:bit of hi 4 Democratic filkiw.• • it:;:• n... d, hes any man t±t prove th-tt r Mr a nomination. It •u:•i 1%,•11 far the country if every caw. di Mtt. r Pr.r.dlanr could truthfully make Will )Ir, hand up-ti he. heart and that I, dieded support' Will he • b y tb •t L.` I, I, Iv, Cabinet., Me it set of corrupt blaoksheart e d trilliato~r-- hoping np the vote* of Memb er , of Congress with the funds of the Govsrm went. To show our rotifers how mu c h roll.nee they ran pile... upon anything that appears in that paper, we publish the fol lowing questions and answers, taken frow the t e stimony of that sante witness, dell, before the Fame committee, and lis ported in that same ' ' great book," on the tv'eMillaoll bill Page 140 —Question by 'Arr. Window, What Mr. Robison wants to know i OMMt,- or it AV:01 gOVerninent Money furnis h ed yn b y government cheers to orruptly ear, that bill, or Watt it your own funds ! Ans.—There never WIN a dollar farm rslrrd tee by any gotormtemt oficer Mot or nog other 2,urpast. diretly or ititlir,xtly Sir. chp!A, By the Chairman--Were you no: induced to believe that by mine:your moo. ey freely in that way, you would have &. tronage to reimburse you &l ; (Mr. Winslow to the Cheirman) 'twined by whom The Chairman—tly officers of Cie cius. ernment. Ans --X6 Sir, 1 ntv.r tuns, On pugo 196—Queis, by Mr Winlerr :Sow tht , that you speak of, money or your own, or utott , .y of ;be e rum, ut An It was itiy own ::Alt you it this money tr 34 paid at tilt; of the ti.vuallltiht stay of it A113. --NQ f:ir as you know, tLey tot.,;ly ignorato of that fact, h eq. . . „ 215 at, 21 , 1,- 4 411 , 41:un ley Mr ‘Viii.,:ioitet.—"Witc, there ail tits lee-rititiolin; directly or itsdirardlly sceriet or otheritr yieir rind the .I..rittiirtiltratiou. yoxr ,li ,. .111(1 Ire ro%)itriod iu 1 , 11 , , or folic, fir you were doing for t—r Leccooiliton bill'. .N.,,ii-., ..IY:..otor, if you want uny 1.,:::::.,r tt-,110 b,! WI)) tlio Disorgartli,;-2 Ifinko-hd wt.) tilt of Yc?