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" *54, 11 - 4 # 4 00.. • uS:kt 74,A, • rs,..fste,te.,4la .4• 1 . • 4 ne ' t. f 1 044# tbi>l 'l*ks - , et," "4 „At • gi , ..„050r , q' .tFAO'H - • Atirlii'yf ' a _ tom ' . ~. -•;',' -`:' ak',4iit.r", q . • • ."•• : _ , Pc4...-,. .., • ......! • .. 4 L.- .....,. -. • ..._. , ......„.... - ....1z,...,.....!--.,- =ELM SUE , 4 4.4. 1 Cie Vlittshutgt Vapt. Tl' ESDAke,tiVOIMEi.; --------- BPTE MBE R 9 , . .\\\ . s, • JAMES BUCHANAN, JOHN C. BRECRINIUDGE, Democratic Electoral Ticket of Pooh y 1 an ia, HENRY BELTZHOOVER, BALDWIN, (3 yenrn.l JOHN JOHNSTON, 1-kwitzartu.s., I Ertreets from EllChan/R.IVA Speell on the Independent Trentnry 11111. "THAT COUN•FRY IS MOST PROSPEROUS svl. I I ERE LA ELM COMMANDS THI GREATEST REWARD. "FROM MY SOUL I RESPECT THE LABORING VAN LABOR IS THE FOUNDATION OV THE WEALTH OF EVERY COUNTRY, AND THE FREE LA ROR ERS OF THE NORTH DESERVE RESEW."' FOIL THEIR PROBITY A I. INTELLIGENCE. II EA VEN FORBID TII AT I :HOCLO DO TGEM WRONG 1" GENERAL ORDERS FOR THE DEMOCR AT IC PROCESS!( N, On Wedneeday, Sept. 10th, 11150. Tbo right of pm...vs:Moll will rest on SI Clair stterr. seal move at 10 o'clock A. M. The signal—tripe, of a ,4iin from Holmes' aononsc, the leivaore BY ORDER OF THE CHI f- President, passed through our city yentora.iy He promised to get back here on Wednesday. President, and hear him speak. There will i.e a rousing crowd CIVIL WAR IN KANSAS-CONSPIRAI AND TREASON. The Black Republieaus have at lingth suc ceeded in involving Kansas in a bloody civil war again. No honest man can now doubt who the guilty parties are. Col. Sumner had succeeded in restoring peace and quiet by a judicious use of the United States troops. The Misnourinos were driven out, the disturbers of the peace were disarmed and disbanded ; and peace reiizuod throughout the territory. Alarmed at this pi as pect of an end of excitement and strife. the abolitionists met at Buffalo. am' resolved on raising one hundred thousand dollar , per month to raise and equip an army in the Northern States to march into Kansas and commence anther civil war. The villain, Lane, was appointed to the command of it; and within the last throe weeks we have heard of his arrival on the or ders of Kansas with a forte variously estimated at from five to eight hundred men. They were represented by those who saw them as a motley collection of as blackguard a set of rogues its could be gathered from the scum of northern cities; ; but were all well armed, and organited for military service. When they reached the Kansas border they wailed for a time to see if their co-laborers in treason, the Black Republi can Congressmen, could succeed In defeating, the Army Appropriation Bill. That dune, the I'M ted States troops in Kansas 'would be lisbaile.l for want of supplies and pay ; ILIA then the qui et settlers there would have ne protection this invading army of thieves and robbers. That Appropriation Bill was defeated, and emigre--; adjourned. Supposing that' a triumph of the treason at Washington, Lane's army divided into small companies and entered Kansas with the declaration that they came as peaceful settlers. slut they soon concentrated again upon two or three points, and were joined by seine of the same lawless vagabonds who were engaged in the former strife; and it is now said that Lane's army amounts to 7,500 men, divided into thrtc or four parties stationed at different points i n Kansas; and they have commenced active opera lions. They have attacked and taken the town of Franklin. Among their first acts have been the stealing of horses, guns, and, in some instances, money. They have driven farmers with their families from their homes. They have commit ted a number of murders. Whole settlements have been broken up, and large numbers of the people have been compelled to fly in a destitute cordlition to Missouri nod elsewhere. But for details we refer to is letter in this paper from a highly respectable gentleman of this State, who writes from the immediate neighborhood of the warfare. See it, beaded "Who are the ruffians in Kaunas." We take it from the Penntyittooton of Saturday last. Let all read that letter, and they will be count:led t• who are the ruffians" and traitors, too. Now, all tho facts of this case show a mass of treason and villiany utterly unheard of in this country before. There was peace in Kansas. There was no provocation for a new outbreak. No late arrests had been made. No trials and convictions had taken place, even of those most guilty. A democratic Oeuate had passed a bill „ . • 1ti..1-'kft,ig . , : , FOR PRESIDENT. OP PENNSYLVANIA. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, OP KENTUCKY ELECTORS AT LARGE CHARLES R. BUCK A LEW, Columbia. WILSON NFOANDLESS, Allegheny. Ist District: GRO. W. NRIHNOER, Philadelphia co. 2d " PIERCE BUT I.Elt, 3d " EDWARD WAICLAIAN. PliiltulolpiJia 4th " WAL H. WITTE, Philadalphia Chmnty. sth " JOIN ADNATIL Montgomery County. fith " JOHN H. BRINTON,Che4ter County. 7th " DAVID LAURI*, Lehigh County. 6th " CHARLES ENSL. 4 I.F.II, Byrks Connty. 9th " JAMES PATTERSON, Lancaeter Co. lath " ISAAC SLENREIL, Union County. 11th " ERAS. W. 11.13UHRS, Schuylkill Co. 12th " THOMAS OSTERII ALIT. W 3 on: tor Co. 13th ABILAIIAIII EDINOF.II. Monroe Co 14th " REUBEN WILIER, Bradford County. 16th " GEORGE A. CRAWFORD, Clint..o 16th " JAMES SLACK, Perry ( - minty. 17th " HENRY J. STAJILE, Adams to. 18th JORN D. RODDY. Sombrp..4l. Co 19th " JACOB TtritNEY. Wezttoareland Co " J. A. J. ntrCELA NAN, Greene Co 21 qt. " WILIJ AM ITTLIt I NF., Allegheny C. 221 " JAM ea O. eAAI P LOILL, BliU r Co. 2&I " THOMAS Otrtil% I NORA M. Realor Co. 24th " Jrllll4 KEATLRY. (Town Co. nth " 'VINCENT PHELPS, Ornul,ri o.m nI y DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET 01,NAL 00VAL,S1ott RIL GEORGE SCOTT, op (N.LUttlil A Co AT'ollOh JACOB FRI, Jr., Nlosroohato Oo ,KTOlt .7011 N ROW S,.y Flu. 61.1 C DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET OrtAURE. 4 WILSON BI'CANDLESS, eI.LUNS SF:VASI: HOPEWELL HEPBURN, (';r THOMAS 8. HART, Immese TosiNealP. A.UGIISTUS HARTJE, REssEst TOWN6FIII . SAMUEL JONES, Cm. L. B. PATTERSON, hiarws TOW 1•8111 P. SAMUEL SMITH, ALIZIIIIEhT Crrr. LS:X.CIATE JUMJE Dr. JOIIN POLLOCK ,IFlsplit TowNsHip. MATTHEW 1. STEII7.9.RT, ALLunitxr Cl: ROBERT B. GUTIIRIE, ROBINSON ToWNSIIIS, EDWARD THOMPSON, Wasms Towlcitne. COUNTY SLIM - : EDWARD M'CORKLE, INDIANA TOWN3/1 t. let-4, hint Margtial and Aida 24—Stoy's Brace Hand and Chariot. 3d—l'reaiduut aud Orators of the dal, iu carridgel 411.e--Conituitt.e of A rrnngwroPuts, in r-arrlav, 6th—Westmoreland C..uty 6th—Fayette, Gro W.thiugton Co. DoloFar iour 7th—tlyerly's Brans Band. Bth—Baaver. LIICTOUCR, kc., IN•legatiL,us. BU.—Allegbetly Couury Dnlegation. Ruth—Uarutimator I.ra. Band. 11th--41.14.1theuy City Dol.gation. TO . BE HERE. Ma. John C. fireckinridge, the next \ iop Turn can., all bands, and Fee the next V,er 4 . ~ c, , •. - ~t. .... , t ~1 : ' .1,: , t ...,.,,, ..... :' • 1 .. ..• ' .': k. . 1 t ' i . .' -t .crl e . „,, ,--' ~ , :-., • 1 ,: - ' A'T i• .-,:, 4 ~ t 1 ... r; - ' -..,' — Oil d • . :0 1- 4 1 . 6 ` ,, ,,,',.....: : . • *l ' ' v' p . ...' i. 4 7 1: , -, ; , . , , ,_ . . , rct , -'-J.: - ....- ' 4 , v-z. 4 ,'*::1 , 4.,* ;',. ._ ~,,•• : • e4 \ -, . 4 ‘ ,-.•-•,,., 4 -4. 4 . , ' i , 4: ta ,4) l ' l4lt 4 ' 44: c . : it t i A,, 4- 4 ; t,*: 4, - —' *„ ),4 *C. `N. s 't 1r; ft ' ~: ''.' -.Or ai.. 0, P .4* ' 4 t cl '4# .:'-' , : • ' .' ‘ '' ' \ **--'‘ i ds t' . ' 4. 0 .. 4 c ,..l l `Lt 4444 , - -•4_ ' ,', II - ' 4 . ~, -4 c ,' 1 , 4 ,`- , 4. 4 4 ,47, „,c' . .: 4, Al; 4-4- ~ - 4 n.: 1 ,40 1 - ‘" ,' ~ "-+,' / • .. ,t s :04; 41 ,i 7 41 4, -.1 ,,e4,k d o , r . , '.,.), V; ; ,„ .., __,„! I, ,0 , 4,, i • I s 1 .4, ~ ~....i. . . " . + ; • . 1 . .; 7- , , .4, % `4 -4-' 1 4 ' , ` 4 * L '''`, „f 4 "• .4 /"" 46 * 4 14. 4 ,6' , , * . .4,1 Yl,l i ..,• Al- - 4 / 14 4- 44,„01- k - 1 ~.. 4 , " f 4 44 4!". 4 4 4 1, 4 ' - - 4. ' ,i . ' ::‘ ~ -4; ,:. -* *4 t - P ~4 : ' ,' ;' .';' , 1 : :, , ,, ,, ,, 417 4 t , 14.1':, ' ,.1,:,',.,,,, , j•1r 4, 4 ,- 1"4", •"',..,. '. 4. ' , P . •rr: ~, , .,.$4,51k4e. fe ., ~,..,..,. 1-4 , a - • • • ' 4 '42 ' • " • • , • - • •' • - , to annul the obnoxious Kansas laws, and to paci fy and satisfy all parties in Kansas. The black republican majority in the House of Repreeenta- - tives had defeated that bill. They had thus re fused to annul the odious laws, and had resolved that there should not be peace in Kansas. They bad . refused..to pass a - bill to provide for the sup port of the army, that the people of Kansas might thus be deprived of protection. We thus see the two elements of a vast conspiracy clearly developed—the one a deliberate desgin to disarm and render powerless the government at Wash ington. The other an armed force under a no torious villain invading Kansas, and commencing the work of bloodshed, robbery and plunder. The whole plot and design stand revealed ; and it is impossible for the people of this country to shut their eyes to facts so palpable and so alarm ing. A democratic Senate passes a bill that would remove all cause of complaint, and put an end to all disturbance. A black republican House defeats it. A democratic Senate passes an appropriation bill in the usual form to give means for supporting a military force that would keep the peace. A black republican !tense struggles desperately to defeat it, until aylength two or three of the conspirators, alarmeid at the magnitude of the crime contemplated, give way. All was peace in Kansas four weeks ago. A black republican army, under a black-hearted traitor, is thrown into that territory, and all is now commotion, bloodshed and civil war. Such is the vast conspiracy and the stupendous crime by which the black republicans dream that they can make a President. But their crime is discovered, and all its enor mities are revealed. None can be longer• de ceived by lying Republican orators and editors. The army appropriation bill passed, despite their treacherous intent. The army in Kansas can he maintained, and can put the traitor brigade of Lane to Hight: and, we hope, catch the rascal hinn , elf, and hang hint as high as Haman hung. There are some tall trees in Kansas. Let one he used. lint he is still nn more guilty of the traitor ous mid inurdei rimyn than many others. But in overt acts he is without defence. The tireeleys, Beechers, Seward., Simmers, Giddings. \Nilson, Garrison, Fremont, and all that crew, with their deluded followers, have forced the country into a civil war that may not terminate short of the ruin of the republic. But we can come nearer home and find par ties to this ramp crime. Either blinded by fa naticism, or willingly obedient to the behests of Greeley, Seward, Giddings, and their compeers, David Ritchie of Pittsburgh, John Covode of Westmoreland, Jonathan Knight of Fayette have steadily acted with those who defeated the "Pa cification Bill ;- who strove to defeat the Army Bill : who aimed to turn some thirty or forty thommiel laborers out of employment ; and who have forced upon the c - mntry the civil war that is now desolating the fair fields and recently thriving towns of Kansas. And yet they are all candidates for re-election !! ! Blinded indeed most the people be if they ever again commit to them a Dust that hw been so grossly abused. VF:II)IONT . .t "SHRIEK. Fon FREHI,OSI."—The Fremont press are exulting over the shriek for freedom given by Vermont, a State that has al ways been hopelessly opposition. The victory of the Black Republicans amounts to just this Ryland Fletcher, the flovern,r elect, is a how Nothing of the first water Jos. Nl_ Slade, Lieu tenant tlovernor, is the President of th Order in Vertn..nt, and Henry NI. Bales, State Treasurer, i- an active and prominent member. Only a little over a year ago an addres. was issued to the faithful, bearing the name of James M. Slade, the n Republican •' Lieutenant 06vernor just elected in Vermont, dictating the course to be pursaed and the measure ,, Ti be adapted for the ‘1,,-truct:on of thr " Republican " party. Those naturalized eitiz6s who talk of opposing the Democracy - will pica , e make a note of this, and 111, , erve what kind of company they will have to keep. La . wreneevllle Buck and Breck Club (to Saturday evening the citizens of Lawrence met at their head-quarters, when the Alle gheny Glee Club appeared with full ranks. Jonas It. NlVlintock itt compliance with a re solution of the Club, addressed the asseml.lage nn the great i.sne of the day. His speech was eloquent and excellent, and was listened to with g..e,d attention for nearly two boon , . Col. Felix eleoed tLe evening with a speech that did not fail t. , reach the hearts and judgments of his auditor. DE MOCHAIC mIcET i NG. The Itr!m.eracy hale a meeting i n the Fifth Ward this evening, at , o'clock, at Lang:a Ilan, corner of Liberty street and Steve:ll,4:m ali , y, Good speaker.; in English and Oerman will Le there, 3.1111 a (flee Club MEETING, IN BIRIIIIINGIIAM There will lie a meeting in Diamond square in Birmingham, this evening at seven e'‘dock A Burke. E,l , and others will address the meet ing. The Birmingham (flee Club will be there A }lee curl- in Cincinnati Met week, which th,tr...yed what was known as Skum's distillery, and burned a MI, pen containing four thousand porkers. Six hundred of them were consumed— the rest escaped. Us Fitil , lY evening last there were six Demo cratic moetingl in different parts of this county, and all well attended. Ou Saturday there were five. There are meetings every day and evening. Our prospects are most cheering. Simon Groeu watt convicted of murder in the first degree, at Harrisburg last week, in taking the life of a fellow-laborer on the Lebanon Val ley Railroad. They were both Irishmen, but be longed to different clans. We publish to-day a long and very able arti cle in relation ti the political contest, which we take from the New York Journal c+l Cuionarren, a high toned neutral paper. We commend it to till our readers foe its fairness and force. jr takes three or four years to learn to set typs, to make a good shoe-maker or blacksmith: but the Frementers say it takes only 21 days to make a Niatetiwaxi, THE Fremont rowdies are undertaking to dis turb our democratic meetings. We hope drinn crate will tied a remedy for that. TUE BLACK REPUBLICAN SPIRIT.—The Anti- Slavery Standard, a Black Republican journal published in New York, discloses the true spirit of abolitionism in the following utterance : "Ural. Cass gave it as his solemn conviction the other day, in the Senate, that the days of the republic are numbered' We believe the old ditughface is right for once. Let all the people sad• amen.(" This is treason without concealment—Black Republicanism without disguise. Render you who do not hold the Union to be a refuge of lies—an agreement with hell, and a covenant with death—you who still regard the Union the best government man over enjoyed upon earth, but who are a member of the Black Republican party—will you not reflect? THE GRAPE Canl , OF THE WasT.—The grape crop this year, in southern Ohio, will be very small indeed. Many of the bads were killed by the extreme cold of last winter, and some of the fruit has been. affected with the rot : but it is generally believed that the wine made this sea son, though deficient in amount, will be of unu sually good quality. A grape grower who states that the application of sulpher to prevent mil dew, as quoted from an English paper, would be better in a liquid than in a dry form, as the English writer recommended. A solution of sul pher and lime would be much more efficient than sulpher in powder.— Cincinnati Gazette. Air Fall Style.—We will iutrodueo on Saturday, Augusta), 1866, our FALL STYLF.B OF SILK HATS. eau and eee them. A good Hat for $3.00. 4 080 MORGAN k CO, 164 Wood at. ": q ' - -"IN [lletrat Free Pre. ~:. IMENEI =Mil THE GREAT QUESTION PLAINLY -. STAVED. “Under Which king, Bezonian P' I From the Journal or4lorameree.l The Democratic party so called, is subtentially a combination between the great agricultural and laboring interests of all parts of the. Union to control its destinies. The planters of the South, and the farmers and working men of the North, re-inforced by a large body of adopted citizens, naturally inclined to the largest liberty, have always formed the bulk 13f the democratic party. The Federalists, National Republicans or Whigs, as at various times they have been called, have had their strength in the commercial, financial and manufacturing classes. These great diveion lines are of comae not perfectly accurate; they have latterly somewhat run into each othe . r, but they will be found substantially to define the chief elements of the two parties as they were marshalled from the time of Jefferson to that of Jackson. The Demoeratie.party so composed. has sub stantially controlled the government of the coun try for the last half century, and controlled it with success. It is now generally admitted to hays bden and to he more in harmony with the character of the country than its opponents. (In the subject of finance, revenue and the eulleage, its policy has been eminently that of justice, lib erty, and equality ; and those who hate hereto fore co-operated with it, may look with pride on the tranquil and prosperous operation of me is nres long resisted, and from which ellOtt one evils were threatened to flow. Twice in our time this party has been over thrown in the Presidential struggle. Twice their opponents have suoc.eeded, either by formisg, coalition of discordant materials, or by putting up a candidate of nu police! experience or mute eedents, inducing the people into a change of dynasty. In tho case of llarrison,—ii highly respectable but very feeble old gentleman, was put up, on the ground of " in utter disregard of the real leaders of the %Vhig party; and tee distracted financial conditien of the country of% focted his election. In the Case of Tay/or, ti lan( but very unfit old Sniffier was again pill evor the heads of all the truly great. Whig statesni,i, because he had no 'Millie,' antecedents; 9.l.l4 he stleceedell by the division pr o duced in the ratio; of the Democratic party upon the slavery ou s Lien. A somewhat similar operation is now alto:eel. to be performed. book at the character ..t the so called Republican party, and the nomina tion they have made. The party is formed by three principal elements—the radical, or left wing of the Whig party, led by Mr. steward and Mr. Greeley ; the seceding Democrats known es Free Sellers, represented by Mr. David Wilmot aid Mr. Preston King; and the rank and file of the anti-slavery men or Abolitionists. Not 0,, 0 _ tent with the incongruities of this combination, they have invited the co-operation of the Native Americans, a party which desires the politi,al proscription of all our emigrant population. It may safely be said that so open and palpable it coalition of elements utterly discordant in them selves, in their nature, history and character. was never yet formed to get possessien of a g.,v• ernment. What is to save it from that want ,•( character, those ignoble artifices, those discred itable departures from principle, which have always marked the progress of coalitions 7 Look at the nomination. It really and in truth prevents not one solitary principle of ell the principles of this great hedge-podge. It ii not Whig—it is nnt Free Seil—not Anti-Slits ery —not Native American. The Republicans hive nominated a gallant officer of the army and au accomplished gentleman, whose petition' opinieti 3 on all these disputed topics were absolutely un known to the people of the United States six months ago. Six month! , ago no mortal, except perhaps those few personally acqu:duted with him, could have told whether Chdonel Fremont were a Democrat or a Free boiler Ile is taken up as Taylor was, because he is a bravo stilt. and a hardy matt, and because he has had no well known political opinion. , ellent ited to arouse th , hostility of any portion of the Any rican peop'e Colonel Fremont is, as I have said, an tamer and a gentleman. Ills exploits belong to the history of the country. No man will undervalue them. Rut it is mere extravaglnee to say that h e Lax done anyth:ng th tt entitles him o n this to a pre-cminence ever all his luethren service. A, King ttenty buys m tho old when the news of Perey's d e ath is brought (..i• him, we may proudly say, tore five itundr..l Ki CIF 14.. " If mere courage and physiral enditranee etitutes a Vllll , l claim to the chair of state, Lieut. Strain of the Darien Expedition by halt bt: ter entitled to the nomination. Rut the nonyea thin will not he defended en this ground -- the great recommendatien of rel Fremont is said to r, that be bar no political antecedents. done into intelligible Englh-h, nivistl• that he to, on experience, and no familiarity whatever wl•li the politics or the politician, of the that he knows nothing of there preetieelly experimentally. This tecovitetetati-n c. r tainly n peculiar one for a practical people. I' elected, Colonel Fremont will have on the set'. March, under our demoralising system of rota. Lion in office, an amount of patronage to di prose, that would be a serious task for the be et infermeei, the most acute anti the most sagacieu , of all the acute and eagneiens tacit that ••p;-ii their lives in the busine, , ,, of politios. For, ter all, polities is like every t t z I . '• I. ~tretn,,,,, , tretn, , ,, , arid to suppose that a Ctd o nel of Hales „„ ern the country without any civil experienee, •- without a long and extensive experience,• -is not a whit absurd than to scud t our wateli t.. 1 e repaired hy 1 Idaf.:littUlith, er to have your shoe cobbled by a tailor. The presidential office is see of vast pewee and itillueuce. It i, in fae . made by the system of appointment to and re 'novel front etlitm, one entirely too powerful and influential. It is not in arcerflatice with Repub lican government. 'rife.; is abundantly nroviel and without any reference in the peculiar abltitj of the individual holding office. Jackson mould ed the entire mind of the people of this country. The death of Taylor and the accession of Fia more worked a revolution in the iinliey of the Government. ,Mr. Pier, 110.8 by impressed it new direction on the party of wiurh he was the leader. With all this experience, to call to the discharge of the varied duties and the exercise of the great powers of the Presidency, a gallant and well educated gentleman, of whom pretty much all that can be said is that he tirst climbed the highest peak of the Rocky Moutt tains, is really a little too much upon the reee• dente system for a rational people. The whole doctrine of " availability " is a disgusting mei disgraimfdl fraud. It has not the base recine mendation of success.. Lt has n e y e r in nnv rite solitary instance worked well. It destroyed tee Whig party, and has done infinite damage to the credit and character of the Deinceracr. The ar gument, too, is us broad as it. is long. It' rid. Frelnent knows little or nothing of the country in a political sense, iu return the country know; little or nothing of him in regard to ['meet ete tnents of his character which lit him fur frOVOrtl. ment. What does any one know, what do I know, of the man into shore heeds the ~,a t presidential powers are to he trusted" What known of his tamper"--What of his good sense' —What of his sagacity'(—What of the influence likely to bear upon him "—What of the probable operation of the great touch stone, power ; upon his mind and heart and character?—All I know in these respects is, that he has involved himself in a controversy with his superiors which oldili t :d him to leave the service, and that he has h knee engaged in the development of a vast land speculation. • These Gouge are tin nec.eeeary dis paragement to him, but they are slender grounds on which to ask my vote or that of any rational citizen who has lived long enough to see what in finite delusions are practised upon the •• dear people " ; and who only wishes to have the gov ernment conducted by men of character, experi enco and sagacity. Colonel Fremont has not hail one iota of expo rirnce in the civil service, nor in the legislative service, (for a twenty one days' term in the Sen ate is not worth talking about), nor in the diplo matic service of the country ; and it is proposed to put him at the head of the civil, diplomatic and legislative service. I say It is preposterous. You may elect him on a wild hurre for tt Johtt and Jessie." It may, under a beneficent Provi dence, be overruled for good, ;but it is contrary to every dictate of reason, wisdom and experi ence. Now look again at the character of the party which raises the name of Colonel Fremont. It is, 1 have said, a great coalition of utterly dis cordant materials. But it is at-the same time plain that the only vital element in it is the anti slavery feeling. All the enthusiasm lies there. Its leaders are old, wary politicians, who have perhaps no enthusiasm at all ; but they are all Pledged by their pest career to the anti-slavery creed to its fullest extent. The Philadelphia Platform is nothing but anti-slavery, with a thrust at polygamy and filibustering. Gel. Fre_ mont's letter of acceptance is iu truth antisla very and nothing else. There is no other idea any where among the prominent men of the party, or in its articles of faith but anti-slavery. It is all over, from head to heel, hostility to sla very, and nothing else. , Now I ask, wleit kind of government is Colonel Fremont, if eteoted on this platforin, to oigartizet idw - ..... „, _ rm5. ... , 4, - .; , ;1 , •. ,, t,,,..:4'....;70.,...., ~ i•-•.,..j.?rig t .y . , 1-4""`"•... . 4 .36 , 4 4- W. 4 .;i7.1- , :•1'.•...tin..V.,•11,• - ... - , ) ..,ts.•4 -.. • „...- ' , ~... • - . „ ...- .-: - , + -......,!‘ .... ,6 . ,6 . - ‘ 4, ,,,..*,• 4 „ . , ‘ „ t •. '•• •i ..,:s ..: , • , ' ''4..scz 7 . - L 1 t e.V.4r , Z-41'-! - -•" "• - ' -* ' '' - ' ~:.' - - , . ~,,, •., ~ 17. -- > i• ~:: _, , . t . . t .„ , 4•,...,- ,k• • • • ' • '"' ' '," * r , '*" ' - ...•-•••,-', t• t ,' - ' - 7 ' - 4' . • 4 ' • • • 4: • „ , • In the first pkee, what hie I of taco S. he to call about him; and in the seeond, what measure , . . whate-polisyis- hoeo-adopt , l —Can any btwly doubt that the leading spirits in Cehmel Fremont'; ad ministration - would be the men who hove here tofore been prominent in the anti-slavery move ment ! Can any one doubt that his prominent aelvifferS and confidential councillors must be the Sowards and Greeleys of Newyork—the Chases and Giddings of Ohio—the Hales of New Ramp shire—ethe Simmers of Mastachusetts ° Colonel Fremont cannot fail to stin how and by whom lie is elected, and it is very certain that the patron age of the Government will be controlled, and its office° filled by the men whom I have sug gested. They are all gentlemen of ability and accomplishments, but the people of this country have never yet been willing to trust them with the management it its allteirs, and for nee, I ant not a whit less unwilling, than I have ever been. Another result might follow, if the gentleman whom I have mimed ale to be Colonel Fr emet e, , e confidential friends and adviser=. I take it to he very clear that his administration will be ulteeiy without Southern support of any kind,--AdlHrl istrative or legislative In the present temper of the country it is idle to suppose that any Southern men of independence or cheracter will join an adlniniStlnaiOn of which the leading enti elavery men of the North are the prominent mouth-pieces and advisers, and COlOn e l Fremont will thus find himself at the head of a party which outlaws about hall the country. • :Again—what will be the policy of the Pee ml,. mt. government :' We are told that it is to he hostility t o the ex tension of slavery. But the R. mots question will lie practically settled befo re the humming President is inaugurated, by the election of a Congress pINIge , I to admit tier under the Topeka Constitution'--and what then ? The ,ante election that returns electors for Colonel Fremont, will return a Congress lull of extreme anti• slavery men. In nein . ' r: a ting representative to Congress from the northern Stetee, there is rie neetteeity to consult these enneitleratiOnB oaf prudence, discretion and running, that induced the Philadelphia CUaver.tioo to put up a titan of heretofore unknown, or p, rimps moderate opin ionA. On the contrite), in Congressional die tricts, where the Republicans have, or hope to have majorities, no men will lie pot up l i nt s u c h an are pledged to hostility te, slavery. Now, I 1 -k, to hat will be the n• aural cettree of 'mol e in administration backed by such it Congress: Some ol Col. Frement's friends hold out the idea that this is to be it truly nazi-trial ndtnioistratie.t: that slavery will neither be extended or attack ed : end that the wl - tle snbje , et will he settled and silenced. The suggestion seems to be made it, utter 411-regarLl I4* tin' i•hir.!,eter of partite-, in general and this party in pat heeler. It weuid on the contrary appear that the result of Col. Fremont's success can be nothing else but a vio lently increased agitation of the anti-slavery question. There are abundant subjects for this eg-itation. The Illgit;Ve -lore law—the internal slave trade—slavery in the District—removal of the seat of gnverument from Washington. Will the Fremont men be neutral and peseive ou these topics' They have been agitating them more or less all their lives. What is there now to inspire them with a dillerent policy ? It is no sort of answer to say that these things are not in the Philadelphia platform. Very little of the future is in the platform of either party. It is very evident that the Philadelphie platform does not re-present the policy of the party. It is a mere string of negations. It won't extend slavery. It won't have polygamy. It won't have filibus tering. This i, ;ill very well---but what tthil it have What I'll it do . ,' What is to he its life— ! its progress- -its mtion—in what direction is it to move? No party can stand still. If C , 1. Fremont IF to eu..,eed, I fbr one hope his adwini,tration may proNe wockrate 5-133 eon .ervnti,e:--Itut if. eentrary to every , 011. 6 11abie pruh nhility, it Fl..uld not RO prove, f ., ,h,nel Fremont Iva' Crud himself deserted by the very .en ckho are 8401Itillg loude-t for him. But such a thing eataut be. ft is , as eerfain nE anytliirg in the hereafter. that a..visi,n of (',l net Yrein,int will give a rapi,l tliu .inipulsa the 3110•einvery one can rationally evrect Cr lirpe nything rli:e. The r,loil; mutt i.e, in the lan,uucin of Mr. Sulu hur,r Fourth of July cube •rution, " to l ir ! t7,4 i1l till it. I rmir,l,, , .pcoiy, rr !itl noolly, on the old, ,tt f, Now I deny that any eueh state of thinge it in harmony with the Conetitittien, cr compatible with say bell dere:ten of the l'nlen. ih.rth the great pert-es ikeretefere have always their doctrine that neutrality and tioh ieterfeeenee on the etitdeet of slavery which the Oen teaches. neither perty hits fully :na ttered to 119 own programme. flat what is to li e the influence Bed effect of a party which evors is its principle, as iter only vital principle, active ho tility to the institetione of the Sonthe'n etntee. I on no alarmist about the Union. I believe toe witch in the seen:city of our people. 1 attaoh importance to the rlindomentatie of excited pehti. eiene in either =motion at die country but after all, n are not multiplieetien tablet, nor logurithime M hen ewe , excited, they are governed i f uite as mu h by their meseione and prejudices as by their reason. or oven their ititereet ; and I do not helieve it to he eidepittible with the long existenee of the Enieu to :tray wire tmetion of the country in open, crowed beet/lily to the Inthiainental institutions of the other half. I know very well that other presidential ti-kets have been fanned ee.elnsively from the fYee Metes, but this la the first Limo Coat it hes been at tempted to fere, the election of the President by the mere preponderance of the free States on a eeetionel itene utterly null tie to the rest of the confederacy. The experiment. of itself, IF not it prom IFS rig Then omit to this. a congressional tnaeiriey pledged le the o„ley liege:mite of their osietteee neetutten the dowry itueetien, and be who runs may rend that die strongeh of the government will be severely te led by Use Emcees: , of the Itepnlsteein pons. Whet is the ground fee confidenee thnt Colonel Fre mout will prove able to teintrel the storm th e ; is britwitig Where to the guarantee that he pewees, the wisdeni. the sagacity. the feet - 111mnd of oder,- awl devoted patriotism tot fir sash an eteereere: . Is it ;ley enswer to tell um that lei:flest climbed the Rooky Mouetains- eon ride a hundred ollice n 110. y, has limit en dog's moat, and owns the Madre., grant? I mean no sneer at Colonel Fremont's qualities. Pet. I want proof that he hair the e ualitie_ which lit !din for the Providential chair et n time like the pres rot. Tide is no moment for n great gime nit inan't Buff. Leek et the present temper of the rutin try. Look at the more violent presses of the Repub. lwen party. They manifest et this moment more liittertmee and heetility thwerii the elouth than ton 'English - F rees bite exhibited towards Russia dur'n{ the whole of the war, while they were euttieg °eel, ether's threats at the rate of a thousand n day. Thin vitilenee arid Melee it reewbeed et the other end .•: the ilnion, and it is from these organs of opt it it that the people of the two sections of the country are to touch till that they can know of their fellow eiti zone. Where is the aliment for patrietietn— where thefoeti for &eternal feeling? New give to them pessions thus roused at the North, the v:ruarge peeled of ttdminddration and Congress, and where is it to 'end? The inevitable result will ho such a state of feeling ati to render union ingie e efi re eh e If th e af_ f0 , Q009 of the people in the two sections beeimie therougly erheueten, rotor causes to he teweilde. Collisions of a fatal character will inevitably bike place. You can not keep people together who hate and despise each other. ;j il.e above paragraphs are correct, it in ennes•es. snry to ran more. If (lot. Fremont Is not proved t.. Go llt for the office; if tho party which he represent , is cx Ira agent. sectional, hostile in its spirit to the Filion, it is not necessary to go farther. A party that ender vorA to upset a government, to destroy alt mist ant to turn 01 th e I,,oupanw of „ii khc etitlees in the country, ought certainly, as the lawyers soy, t- be required to succeed on the strength o f Its own title. It is enough, on the other to perceive that the Democratic party is tially what it hes always been, in jt.ti competien i , eie seems, and in the principles which ieprofesse s trot that it has selected for its standard hearer a man of marked ability, of long and varied experience, of tried fidelity,—one who has sustained himself with honor iu every branch of the public service to which he has been called. To prefer to him a gal lant .. , "tsionol of Bitles, booted, spurred and mounted on an unknown monster at novel shape and variscis colors, more fabulous in its form and iigure than griffin or dragon of old, would indicate on the part ,11 . the American people the presume° of one of those fever lit: , to 'which the strongest constitutions are sometimes subject, and what strong constitutions rapidly throw oft In answer to what has been hero said, lunch may be urged in regard to the question of slavery, end the general conduct of Mr. Pierce 's ailminintrntion. But the real question seems to be this: cad the evils which threaten us, whatever they are, be conjured by the success of a party sectional in its character, violent in its temper, and which ran only maintain its ascendancy by waging a constant warfare upon the inetittrOons of one-half of the eon: federacy? 1 think uut.... Ism no blind adherent of any man or any: party. History tells us of no lead ers and no combination of- men, free from great de fects. But I believe the Democratic party, put on it,. defence; canon the whole, triumphantly smartie itself. I can point to a long and uninterrupted course of wise and beneficent, just and impartial To undertake to 'break up and destroy this national organisation, unhappily the only one itew existing, because defects can be pointed out in the conduct of its officers, or errors in some one branch of its policy. seems to too very unwise and very reckless. t'ollties are non a matter of mere hOrre end excitement, of sentiment and sympathy. They are food for grave and mature deliberation. All go.varnmenis coyer great evils. This is as true of cots 48 of ally that have preceded it. It is wise, hoWever, while sec4ing to imnrove our condition, not to push into greater mischiefs than those we wish to avoid. Dean understand how a radical Whig can join the Republican coalition, how a stranded Free Seiler can,,grasp at this chance of political safety. I can readily-understand with what triumphant emotions the anti-slavery man witnesses its formation, but I confess I cannot eomprehend 'Jew a Democrat funnier With' thti liiitorrof ' the - „. . Om examernatrAntevizn ar en" titan me latmativailm oh-art/mad Capital, 111500i000: ' • NARIN - 8.4.10 INLAND 171..iiMp9#7.1170.154 , . AARON B. LIPPINCOTr___ ,Presldent. ORRIN ROGER/4 &military. .: GEOPOWTOI7aII f ir. . • Aaron & Lippip 944 • ' Wit ha aB.Thomm/, , • Malden OIRMO•am, n Neal, • Nicholas &Taylor; • -Alfred Weeks; - Orrin CharleoN? ifletjt, John =tit, Jamei - p. Smyth:" Cum up has bizaa 91_ , .4,'Idaed with a Ile.sh Cal*: tat, and - ths klaveßßenMi . totidayt the boalneni to its aynilabia'reskiiiier„ , To &serge prculenne contlo - 1.: Ing ata adhirs, with. sitostment or lessee. Pittsbaret OM* o. 76 Water street, tiOnOti gplaikAgelit. • Agyintocztt, • Tliegalosiug pa known and reeponsible firm; in .P l / 2 34' burgh love authorized reference totbean, withregard to the inability and sonintaces of the- Manufacturers' Insurance. Company. Kramer d italLl4 Wilson, Child.! George. 13nilth & Co., Plampten &Campbell, . nor? Jonea, Tiernan & Co., IL. 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