4 I I I 1 X S i a. 3 1 a- .1! t & 3" : 4 t I" si? ) ft W k a. r r , ?1i 5 J THE RAFTSMAH'S JOURNAL Clearfield, Pa?, "Walneilay. S pt. 19. 18S5. AMERICAN DOMINATIONS. roR SENATE. B. F. LUCAS, Ol Jefferson Countj. Iubj4d to the action of the other Countits. FOR ASSEMBLY. Da. C. R. ERLY, Of Elk County, fady'sc to the action of Elk and X'Kta.i. tOR SHERIFF. R. F. WARD, Of Clearfield Borough. TREASURER. PHILIP ANTES, Of Lawrence Township. COMMISSIONER. ROBERT MICHAEL, Of Burnside Township. AUDITOR. VALENTINE IIEVENER, Of Huston Township. Ths "Whig Candidate. The Whig State Convention which met in LTarrisburg last week, nominated Joseph Henderson, of Wash ington County, as the candidate for Canal Commissioner. He is a good man, and would make an honest and faithful officer. Back Again. After a much shorter absence than we expected, we have again returned to onr post, and this week take up the cndgels aj usual. We are glad to find the prospects for the success of the American party so favora ble, and feel assured, notwithstanding the gi gantic effort of Gov. Bigler last night, that our whole ticket will be triumphantly elected. Our business in Court, &c, has prevented us from giving much attention to this week's pa per, but it will be all right again by our next issue. Taa Hasvest Home. The sensibilities of ome' people seem to be keenly touched by the call for an "American Harvest Ilomc," which has been published in our paper for some weeks. This is not to bo wondered at. "Coming events cast their shadows before." The wn terrified are losing their title to the epithet, and are beginning to realize how bitter it is to see power that had almost seemed prescrip tive, passing rapidly from "their hands. Little as they like the project of an "Ainer can Harvest Home" in September, there will e one in October the returns from which they will like still less. Fatal Accident. We regret to learn that " Joseph Morrow, an old and well-known citi ren of this county, wis kickel to death by one of his own horses, in the stable of Andrew Cross, of Boggs township,on Tuesday, the 11th - inst. Deceased was passing through the stable with some deer-skins on Lis arm, and it is supposed that the horse, scenting the skins, became frightened, and struck out with both heels, striking his master in the abdomen. Mr. Morrow contrived to crawl to the house, where such relief as was accessible, was vain ly administered. He died at midnight. The unfortunate man is said to have left considerable property, and it is not known that be had a single relative in the country. His age is supposed to have been upwards of sixty. Locoroco Meeting Last Night. The an nouncement having been made sometime ago - that "his mightiness," Ex-Gov. Bigler, would address his fellow Democrats and Anti-Know nothings,' last night, we prepared ourself to hear a mighty burst of eloquence, and wendud our way to the Court House. Grea' was our astonishment to find one of the smallest politi cal meetings we have attended in that build ing, on court week, since we have been in the county. .11 least one third of those present were K. N's, and the Locofocos could scarcely muster a corporal's guard, having actually ap pointed ttcv members of the Or Jer on one of their committees! The ball was opened as usual by Judge Bar rett, whose speech being stereotyped, it would be a bore again to describe. He was followed by the immortal Bigler, in one of the most up hill, miserable, illogical, heterogtnaous, scat tering, ill-shaped, sod ill-timed political speeches we have ever heard. We wete ncv er more disappointed in our life. We expect ed to bear an able an i elo juant so ; : jh. an in genious, logical argument. But the poor fel low seemed to have got into the 'wrong box.' Ho admitted that his party, justnow, was'hard pressed,' but If they arc any 'harder pressed' than he was for an Idea, we pity them indeed. He couldn't help giving bis fel!ow 'democrats and anti-Know Nothings,' a sly shot in the commencement, very appropriately comparing himself to the man that wore the coat of many colors, who was sold by his brethren ! After a tremendous effort he succeeded in 'deliver ing himself successfully, but if the mountain in labor did not bring forth a 'mice,' then rr we're a Know Nothing, that' all. We shall have occasion to refer to this mat ter hereafter, and in the mean time those who wish to hear any thing further on the subject . caa tttasd tb American meeting this even- The Olive-Brancii. It would be amusing, : were it not rather calculated to inspire disdain, to note the change that has 'come o'er the spirit of the dream' of the locofocos, in regard to those whom they now term Old Line Whigs. Up to the period of the election in 185-1, the word whig was the locofoco synonyme of every abomination in the eyes cf the patent democ racy. The proposition, "A whig cm do no right," bad attained with them a credit almost equal to that of its English converse, "The King can do no wrong" both being, in fact, founded upon the same species of facetious fiction. Locofoco organs and organ-grinders have, for years past, vilified whig statesmen with the rancor of undying hate : have decried whig measures with the blind bigotry of party fury; have denounced the rank and file of the Whig party, with all the slang of that peculiar vocabulary which seems to have been invent ed by, or for theru. Suddenly, iu the twinkling of an eye, the scene is shifted. The same actors stalk upon the boards as before, but a new prompter is furnishing the cue. The black looks,the frown ing Lrows, the scornful lips have disappeared, and smiles, as "sweL-t as summer," take their placa. In the language, too, of thsee Janus faced performers, is an operation quite as m trkel. The threat, the gibe, the insult are wanting, but instead, honeyed words, and stu died compliments. Unasked even, they swal kw their long-defended slanders, and with a better grace, too, than that of ancient Pistol, when devouring his leek. The names they have tried to cover with shame and obloqu, they cow profess to hold in reverence and in love. The men whom they so vainly strove to drive unhonored to the grave, have now be come, in their esteem, the pride and glory of our land. Had the locofoco party the fuiutest claim to consistency ; had it ever relied for success up oi the intrinsic worth of its principles, or up on she integrity of its organization, it might be difficult to comprehend this change of front. But when we remember, how in 1S41 this ve ry part- courted the Abolitionists for the pur pose of defeating Henry Clay: how in it supplicated Gen. Taylor to suffer it to fight uu der Lis ever-victorious flag; how in 1S31, it mude a 'bargain and sale' -with the Native Americans, and profited thereby; arid how, iu 18.3 I, itabaudoned the Natives, and took to the Catholics and foreign population, not profiting greatly thereby, when we recall these facts, it can scarcely be matter for wonder, to find it in 1855, imploring the Whigs to save it from im pending annihilation, to lend some aid in its floundering struggles through the slough of Despond. If the expectations of this metamorphosed parts from the solicited alliance of the Whigs, are equal to its certain necessities, we are sor ry for its fate. It must really be painful for the Whigs, to be compelled to reject over tures so affectionately and so earnestly urged. It is not a pleasant task to thrust back the hand of proTorcd friendship, even whtn we know it is tendered in a mercenary spirit. Nor is it especially grateful to our feelings to de clare, what we deem but the simple truth, that the perfidy which isan innate principle of loco fecoism. can never find a resting place in the tents of the Old Line Whigs. It may be only courteous to our locofo co friends, to hint at a very few of the motives which will at present impel the Whigs to decWne any connection with them whatso ever. These motives are numerous as tlu va rious topics of political discussion in our land, but a small portion will serve to show how widely-drawn are the lines which sever the proposed "contracting" parties. We assert, therefore, that tho Whigs will not unite with the locofocos, Because thj Whigs have a lively remem brance of the wrongs they have sustained at the hands of the locofocos: Because the Whigs hold the locofocos to be utterly perfidious, and certain to violate, the moment the occasion demanded it, ar.y com pact which their present necessitiesmight in duce them to enter into: Because the Whigs look with horror upon tho degrading attitude of the locofocos tow ards their Southren masters, and havo no wish to participate in their servitude: Became tho Whigs will never recognize as legal, or just, that monument ol locofoco perfi dy, the repeal of the Missouri Compromise : Because the Wliigs decline to avow them selves confederates, under orders from Wash ington, of Atchinsou, Stringfellow it Co.: Because the Whigs do not wish to tdiare in the glories achieved by locofoco diplomacy, at the Courtsof Ma 1 rid, Ostendand elsewhere : Because the Whigs want none of the laurels reajed by the locofocos in tlio celebrated war against Greytown : Because the Whigs cannot endorse the acts of any locofoco, with whose acts they are un acquainted : Beccuse the Whigs do not think ?hat the lo cofoco party, never worthy of respect in its hour of power, has any sort of claim to their 'aid and comfort," in the tinia of its decay and dissolution ; an I Because the Whigs can imagine no greater evil to their country, than the restoration of locofoco misrule. Mr. Fillmore at tub French Court. The ex-President was presented to the Empe ror of the French on the l;)tl of August, to gether with nineteen other Americans. Mr. Fillmore was to have been favored with -a pri vate presentation, and in consequenso went in a bl icfc coat, but by some unexplained acci dent was thrown among his cor.ntrym .'n, who were in uniform, and he" thus presented in more than ono respect the most noticeable figure in the company. Clark Mills, Esq., the sculptor, has re cently sustained tlx- loss of a beautiful elk he had procured at great trouble and expense to be us.-d as a model iu some of tha works upon which he is now nsra.d. Tiie animil, it ap pears, escaped from his enclosure at night, and, though wearing a broad collar, was mis taken by some sagacious sportsmen for a buck doer, and by thorn killed, quartered, and bwnjjbttb uBrirt ard s'Td vwnisrir. Passmore Willamson Case. Four out of five of the Justices of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania have decided to refuse the writ of Habeas Corpus prayed for in this case. Our readers will remember that Mr. Williamson is now lying in Moyamensing Prison, restrained of his liberty by virtue of a commitment for an alledged contempt of Court, directed by John K. Kane, the U. S. District Judge, for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The prisoner presented his petition to the Supreme Court, asking that a Habeas Corpus be awarded. The Court, in an opinion read by Fl ick, J., refused the prayer of the petitioner. We shall say nothing, save that it travels out o! the record, to insult and wound, in the most wanton manner, the feelings and motives of a man who only sought to exercise what we have until now deemed one of the most sacred rights of every freeman of Pennsylvania. Fortunately for the cause of freedom, there was read, ai the same time, an opinion of an other Judge. To our readers, the name of Judge Knox is familiar, for it is remembered, and honored in the remembrance, as that of on of the ablest jurists that ever sat upon the Bench of this judicial district; Judge Knox dissented from tho judgment of the majority of the Court, and stated his reasons for his dissent, in an opinion, lucid, masterly, and in our humble view, conclusive of the law. This document, besides, breathes a noble spirit of hum-inity, and manifests a patriotic devotion to the Constitutions, both of his native State, and of the Federal Union. We regret exceedingly that the want of space forbids our publication of thi3 most able opinion, the more, that its transparent reison ing, and irrefragable conclusions are not en cumbered with the special pleadings, nor mar red by the professional mannerism too much affected by lawyers and judges of the present day. We have not been able to refrain, how ever, from laying before our readers, some ex tracts, which will serve to show the positions taken by Judge Knox, and the mode in which lie sustains them: I have not ha 1 either time or opportunity to examine all o! the cases cited, but, as far as I have examined them, they decide this and nothing more th.it where a Court of com petent jurisdiction convicts one of a con tempt, smother Court, without appellate power, will not re-examine the c ise to determine whether a contempt was really committed or not. The history of punishments for con tempts of Court, and the legislative action thereon. both in our State and Union, in an un mistakcablc manner teaches, first, the liabili ty of this power to be abused; and second, the promptness with which its unguarded use fns Ijc-en followed by legislative restrictions. It is no longer a:i undefined, unlimited power ot a star chamber character, to be used for the op pression of the citizen at the mere caprice of the Judge, or Court, but it has its boundaries so distinctly defined that there is no mistaking the extent to which our tribunals of law may go in punishing for this ollence. In tliQ words of the act of Congress! of 3d March. 1S31, "The power of the several Court of the United States to issue attachments and indict summary punishment for contempts of Curt. shajl not be consiructed to extend to any cas-s except tfce misbehavior of any par son or persons in tha presence of vaid Courts, or so near thereto as to obstruct the adminis tration of justice, the misbehavior of any of the ollieera of the said Courts in their official trans actions, and tlte disobedience or resistance by any officer of the said Courts, party, j'-ircr, wit ness, or any other person or persons, to any lawful writ, process, order, rule decree, or comm mil of s.tii Courts." Now, Passmore Williamson was convicted of a contempt tor disobeying a writ of habeas i corpus commana.iig mm to procure oeiore me I District Court certain persons claimed by Mr. I Wheler a.-!.ves. Was it a lawful writ.' j Clearly not, if the Court had no jurisdiction to issue it ; and that it had not, I think is jveiypliin. If it was unlawful, the person to whom it was directed was not bound to obey i it; and, in the very words of the statute, the j power to punish tor contempt "shall not be I construed to extend to it." But, s ivs the opinion of the majority, he was , convicted of a contempt of Court, and we will ! not look into the record to see bow the con j tempt was committed. I answer this by ;is- sorting that you cannot seo the conviction j without seeing the CJiise. for it Is a part of 1 toe same record whieh consists, 1st, of trie pe tition ; - t. the writ and alias writ ot habeas corpus ; Td. tht return, and lib. the judgement. "It is ordered and adjudged by the Court that the sai l Passmore Williamson be committed ; to the custody of the Marshal without bail or l m linprizi-, as lor a contempt in refusing to ! make return to the writ of" habeas corpus here- I tofore issued ajrainst him at the Instance of Mr. John II. Wheeler." As I understand the 1 opinion of a majority of mv brethren as soon I a. we get to tin; word contempt the book must j be closed, and it becomes itistantly sealed as j to the residue of the record. To sustain this I commitment we must, it seems, nrst presume, in tfie very teeh ot the admitted fact, that these were runaway slaves ; and second, we must be careful to read only portions of the record lest we should find that the prisoner w is com mitted for refusing too ev an unlawful writ I cannot forbear the expression of the opin ion tint the rule laid down in this case, by the majority, is traught with great danger to tho most cherished rights of the citizens of the State. Whilst in contests involving the right of property merely, I presume we may still treat the judgements of the United States Courts, in cases not within their jurisdiction, as nullities, yet, ira single Judge tlnnks prop er to determine that one of our citizens has lecn guilty of contempt, even if such determi- I natb-u had its foundation in a case upon which the Judge had no power to pronounce judge m:it, and was most manifestly in direct vio lation of a solemn act of the very legislative authority that created the Court over which the J ud 40 presides, it seems that such deter mination is to have all tho force and effect of a judgement pronounced by a Court ofcompe tent jurisdiction, acting within the admitted sphere of its constitutional power. Nay more. W'e confers ourselves powerless to protect our citizens from the aggressions of a Court, as foreign from mr Sta e government in matters not committed to its jurisdiction as the Court ol Queens Bench in England, and this upon the authority d decisions pronounced in cises not at all analogous to the one under consider ation. I believe this to be the first recorded case where the Supreme Court of a State has refused the prayer of a citizen for the writ of habeas corpus, to inquire into the legality of an imprisonment by a Judge of a Federal Court for contempt, in refusing obedience to a writ void for want of jurisdiction. I will conclude by recapitulating the grounds upon which I think this writ shculd be award ed 1st. At common law, and by our statute of 17S5, the writ of habeas corpus ai aubjicien (frwf lp a writ of rijfht da4bla wIjvmtpt a petition in due form asserts what, if true, would entitle the party to relief. 2d. That an allegation in a petition that the petitioner is restrained of his libefly by an or der of a Judge or court w ithout jurisdiction, shows such probable cause as to leave it no longer discretionary w ith the court or judge whom application is made, whether the w rit shall or shall not issue. 31. That w here a person is imprisoned by an order of a Judge of the District Court of the United States lor refusing to answer a writ of habeas corpus, he is entitled to be discharged from such imprisonment if the Judge of the District Court had no authority to issii the writ. ith That the power to issue writs of habeas corpus by the Judges of the Federal Courts is a mere auxiliary power, and that no such writ can be issued by such Judges w here the cause of complaint intended to be remedied by it is beyond their jurisdiction. 5th. That the Courts of the Federal govern ment are Courts of liiuited jurisdiction, deri ved from the Constitution of the United States and the Acts of Congress under the Constitu tion, and that where the jurisdiction is not given by the Constitution, or by Congress in pursuance of the Constitution, it does uot exist. Oth. That when it does not appear by the record that the Court had jurisdiction in a pro ceeding under our habeas corpus act to relieve from an illegal imprisonment, want of juris diction may be shown by proving the facts of the case. 7th. That where the inquiry as to the juris diction of a Court arises upon a rule for a ha beas corpus, all the facts set forth in the peti tion tending to show want of jurisdiction are to be considered as true, uuless they contra dict the record. fcth. That when the owner of a slave volun tarily brings his slave from a slave to a free State, without any intention of remaining therein, the right of thd slave to his freedom depends upon the law of the State into whica he is htus brought. 9:h. That if a slave so brought into a free State escapes from the custody of his master w hile in said State, the right of the master to reclaim him is not a question arising under the Constitution of the United States or the laws thereof , and therefore a Judge of the Uuited States cannot issue a writ ol habeas corpus di rected to one who, it is alleged, withholds the possession of the slave froni the master, com manding Lim to produce the body of the slave before, the said Judge. I"th. That the District Court of the United States for theEestern District of Pennsylvania lias no jurisdiction, ecausa a controversy is between citizens of different States, and that a proceeding by habeas corpus is. in no legal sense, a controversy between private parties. 11th. That the power of the several Courts of the United States to inflict summary pun ishment for contempt ol Court i.i disobeying a writ of the Court is expressly confined to cases of disobedience to lawful w rits. 12th. That where it appears from the record that the conviction was for disobeying a writ of habeas corpus, w hich writ the Court had no jurisdiction to issue, the conviction is -coiam iionjudicc, and void. For these reasons I do most respectfully but most earnestly dissent from the judgement of the majority of my brethren, refusing the writ applied for. In the meantime, Passmore Williamson lies in prison, at the mercy of that tyrannical and notorious. Judge, John K. Kane. According to tho intimation of Kane from the bench which he disgraces, Williamson must be there until he dies, or until his spirit shall be so bro ken, that he will condescend to lie perhaps to swear to a lie, for the gratification of the of the me:m and paltry official, who has biien his accuser, judge, and jury. There is one hope, yet, for Williamson, and for th:se who care for their liberties. This hope rests in the Legislature of Pennsylvania. Oath-Bovnd Traitors. For the last year every locofoco orator, and every locofoco sheet in the 1 md, hive been rabidly denoun cing, with all the eloquence ol their billings gate, the American party. Traitors, conspi rators, dirk-lantern plotters, underground un dermlners of the constitution, and words like these, feebly express the virulence, which a defeated oligarchy, iu the last convulsive throes of despair and men iced oblivion, ex hibited towards its victorious foe. So far as its interdict had virtue, Americans were ban ned. So far as i" s pretences bad scope, in it alone existed political virtue and honor. What was the gulf which thus parted patri otism from treason ' Simply, wholly, exclu sively i oalh ! Because the American aircre he would keep inviolate the secrets of his or der, he was a traitor. Because the American sirore to maintain his political creed, he w as a conspirator. Because the American swore to prevent, so far as his voice anil influence could go, the peril at foreign ban Is he dread ed for bis country, he was an infidel to the constitution. An oath the taking or an oath, comprised the sole distinction 'twixt honesty and treachery. This has been for a year or more, locofoco preaching. The proceedings of the Democra tic (.') Convention of the Delegates of old Berks, the G:bral!er of Democracy, which w ill be found in another chimin, show what is lo cofoco practice. We commend the extract' to our readers. Deluded locofocos ! they sawjust far enough into a mill-stone to catch the idea that in the onlh lay the secret of the American triumphs. Visions of fat offices, happy dreams of sine cures, laurels, honors and profits, glancing be fore their eyes, they forgot their Spartan firmness, lapsed from their Roman virtue. They have become oath-bound democrats, and qualified patriots. How are the mighty fallen ! SrnocTED Wheat. The New York Tribune, thus discourses of sprouted Wheat. 'When wheat is .sprouted a good winnowing machine will remove most of the injured ker nals which m ike excellent feed for animals. If there be a predoininence of sprouted grain in the grist that goes to the mill, it is only spoiled for light bread. The dough, instead of rising by the ordinary process, has a ten dency to liquify and spread out and form a sticking mass that will not be kneaded into loaves. It niae.es good nuleavened bread, and is quite nutritious, with a sweetish taste. By many persons bread made of sprouted w heat is preferred, but in market the least appearance- of grown kern. ils will injure the sale. Some millers even contend th.it ouo per cent, of such kcrnals will injure the quality on the whole. It is therefofe important to the farmer that he should keep the sprouted sheaves from the sound, and should seperate the sound from the unsound grain in winnowing, as far .ait possible.' The Facts! The "Orgin," in noticing the nomination of Passmore Williamson for Ca nal Commissioner, by the Republican State Convention, says : "Williamson, we believe, was never heard of before he assisted some dozen or twenty negroes to steal away the servants of Col. Wheeler, &c." It is usually deemed the part of generosity not to strike a fallen foe, but the political ethics of our neighbors know no such weak ness. We suppose, however, that Mr. Wil liamsou will be able to endure even this taunt, in addition to the injuries he has sustained at the hands of a judge, w ho must be in the eyes of our neighbor, a very Solon. The facts of .the case are so well known by this time, as to leave no doubt that such ig norance of them as the sentence we have quo ted infers, is wilful. The ."aert-an of Col. Wheeler," were free. Judge Kelly charged the jury who tried the fiiioze or twenty ne groes," prcisely six, as the record shows "that when Wheeler brought Jane Johnson and her two children into the state they be came as free as he was." Moreover, when some of the jackals of the Distrct Court of the United States had concccfed a charge of fti'i way robbery against these "doze t or tiroiy," for "stealing the servants of Wheeder," the District Attorney of Philadcphi.x publicly abandoned the charge, and pronounced it simply absurd. These dozen or twenty, (in t'.e 1 nguage of un adulterated truth, these six negroes ) were in dicted for riot, and assault and battery. All of them were acquitted on the charge of riot ; two of them were found guilty on the charge of assault and battery upon the person of Wheeler. This is a statement of the facts of the caje, so far as they are pertinent to the matter in hand. And the simple statement of them is all that is needed to disarm the sneer which our neighbor thinks fit to fling at Mr. William son, because a convention of the freemen of Pennsylvania, had dared to nominate him for an oflice, which he neither solicited nor desired. Senator Bkomejid on a kkw Hobby. Hon. Richard Brodhead made a speech at Easton on Monday, having gone there to pre vent an explosion agtinst the administration in lavor of Gov. lieeder. He spoke of everything but the great question of the day, and was careful to assert the most ultra proslavery doctrines ; and. indeed, went a little further than any other doughface yet in his servility. One part of his speech deserves particular no tice, and is thus reported in the Tribune ; "Now you will all agree to one proposition ; Are not all the States of this Union coequal, and are they not equal partners I Undoubted ly. Then conies the great question of power in the Territories. The Northern people claim the right to go into the Territories with their property. jhe Southern people claim the same right. Now will you accord it to them I s iy the Constitution gires those who on-n pr. ji erty in the Southern Slates the same poire r we have. I would not deny a man the sanu right tu.it I ask for m3sclf. I claim the right to go into the Territories with my property, and I accord to any man from any other State tho same right.'' Thus we sse how the South takes advantage of the treachery of Northern men to the cause of freedom, to proceed, step by step, to con vert this Republic from the borne of liberty to the basest purposes of slavery extension. The position of Mr. Brodhead, as shown in his speech, is thus defined by the Tribune : Here the whole doctrine of "Squatter Sov ereignty" is pitched over board. That doc trine as origanally promulgated by Gen. Cass, affirms the right of each Territory, as an in ternallv independent politicrl community, to establish or exclude Shivery, as a majority of the peop'e m y prefer. It is m vain that we have repeatedly pressed upon the advocates of this doctrine tho questions "Who are the people of Kansas or Nebraska, who hvu the right to determine that certain of their feKow inhabitants shall be doom ed to eternal bondage .' Are they the trftoe people or only the white Are they the citizens of the Uuit'-d Stat.:3 or are the resident emigrants from Europe also entitled to a voice in deciding this momentous question; so vitally affecting them as well as others And however these questions may lie answered, what is the state of the law re specting Slavery prior to any decisive action of the people on the subject Let these ques tions be frankly answered, and then we shall know what is ment by "Popular Sovereignty" in the Territories. But Mr. Broadhead adopting the ultra posi tions of Calhoun, Soule. and Jefferson Davis, ignores "Popular Sovereignty' in the premi ses altogether. He hol-is that any single em igrant into Kansas from a Slave State, may take his slaves with him and hold them in the Territory as slaves, in defiance of any act or inhibition which the residue of the settlers may have adopted. All other settlers may be conscientiously and determinedly hostile to Slavery ; but this one slaveholder steps in with bis black servitors and over rules them. "Pop ular Sovereignty" condemns Slavery .but one slaveholder weighs down thousands of freeinen and decidesth it Kansas shal beaslave territory. For the slaveholder, says Brodhead, has an indefeasible constitutional right to migrate to Kansas, to take his slaves with him, and hold them there in bondage interminably because they are his property, and have it respected and secured to him as property, in any terri. tory of the Union. We propose at this time merely to state this doctrine not to refute it. The rum-seller, the faro-dealer, the counterfeiter, will find it as convenient and serviceable as the slavehol der for all these have 'property' which the laws of some States protect, while others sub ject it to confiscation. If Mr. Brodhead is right, then all the remaining territory of the Union is destined to form new Slave States, and nothing can prevent that consummation. Kansas Legislature. The Kansas corre spondent of the St. Louis Democrat says: "The latest unconstitutional enactment passed by this body is contained in the Election Bill. It decrees that aliens, desirous of becoming citizens, shall take an oath to support the con stitution, Organic Act, and Fugitive Slave Law. Congress alone has the right to prescribe the conditions of naturalization, and it does not enact that an alien shall support the Fugitive Slave Law. C"The Kansas correspondent of the St. Louis Democrat says: , "I warn all capitalists and intending emi grants to Kansas to be suispicious of newspa per descritions of cities and counties in this Territory. A few days .ago, I was offered a lot, which three disinterested judges should estimate as worth $100 at least if I would give the city of Lccouipion favorable Mcticws la tba Hiaftouri DomasM'st. I tor the Kafumio'i Journ.-ii. ' LINES TO . Fair are the dreams of otbr year. But ah ! as fleet as fair; A meteor's transitory gleam Not sooner melts in air . And its, when the brief ?p;iik is qnencheJ, Deeper the darkness falls. So. from those dreams, the wakening, Saddens, if not appals. While yet tho tpring of buoyant life Sparkles within the breast. And faith, and hope, too credulous,- In their wild dreams are blest, A magic spell, a wizard charm Seem o'er all nature cast ; Only the brighter, that they are Too beautiful to last. Tbey rie. they shine, they fade, they die Leave they no traes behind f Is there no power to seize the joy. And fix it in the mind ? The flowret droops the sweet socge-dj The sunshine leaves the lea Their present charm is gone but still It lives in memory. O'er pleasant fields thro' proud, old woods, Our earliest footsteps stray . Perchance the path we tread but leads To deeper shades, the way J Forward we gaze the scarchiLg eye No gleam of light can find Happy 'tis then, to pause and turn, A lingering look behind. So with thedrenms of other dsys They never all depart; Unsullied, pure, and bright is left Their imago in the heart; And olteu when the lurid kkv Portends but woe auA wrath. . These unregarded, shrink before The power dear memory haih. Well have I known her witching power To soothe, when hope is gone. Some solace, from my darkest hoar. Hath her enchantment drawn ; Me hath she ofleu helped, dar girl. From grief and p.-du to flee To dream again long vanished dreams Of hope, of love, of thee. r. r. Clearfield, Sept 19, 1865. Proscription is defined by Webster to be first, "dooming to death;" second, "putting out of the protection of the law," or 'con demning to exile and third, as "censure and condemnation. To persecute is to '-alllict, harass, or destroy." In what sense can these terms be applied to the act of declining to place in office mtu whose opinions you believe to be such as render their elevation to public station injuri ous to the community Have not demo crats and whigs voted against their political opponents for many years and does not each new administration, on its accession to power, remove from oilice those who disagree wish it in opinion ? May the Postmaster Gener.ti dismiss a Protestant Democrat and appoint Catholic Whig, or a Whig who bitterly de nounces Knownothingism, witl out rem rk from these "proscri pti on" hraal.ug p.dri -ts and yet men who honestly Injlive a BrovMison should not hold power to betray us, be accu sed of "Proscription" and "Persecution " These are questions to be pondered by those likely to be misled by the clap-trap of latter day politicians. We bold that a man'sacts and a man's opin iont are proper subjects for consideation by voter"!, w hen h5 is a candidate for public M tion, no fr.r as those ac- and t!-ose opinions arc likely to influence his official conduct. . Since wehavw had no opinion on the subject, we have held thut the natives of a civilized coniitry should rule it that a minority ij.id natural rights that no. majority, .should tr.im- 1? ot, and that no one who acknowledged the right of another to control his opinions i;x a safe depositoiy of political power ;u a re public. Honestly holding these opinions, since we have had a vote wo have pu'.d.c'y proclaimed them and for them we have tho sense those words are used by a portion 1" the press,) been 'proscribed' and 'persecuted' by those who held the contrary opinion :,r oa those points. We hav neTer held an othoe of profit in our native state, and, with the con sent of those who disagree with us, we prooi bly never shall. Of this wo do not a;:d we have no right to complain. They doubtless consider us a dangerous man, holding opin ions at war with their interests and adverse to their views and however incorrect wv may consider their judgment in these respects, we must, as a republican and a domocr.it, bow to the decision of the people. Having always acted with political organi zations largely in the minority, oar fat; when placed on a part' ticket has ever been that of those who 'don't get votes cnouph' Jo s'.-.fler defeat. Yet we never felt that we had lioen 'proscribed' or 'persecuted' and, hiving lv.eu horn in this neighborhood, never believed that we had a Tight' to some good fat ofiice. What folly it is for men who go to the polls and vote for those who agree w ith them in sen timent, to raise the cry of 'proscription' and 'persecution,' when others are merely doing the same thing. Pittsburg Diipa'ch. KivTALi vriox Threatened. The Richmond Wiiiz is furious because our laws would not condemn the men charged with assault upon Col. Wheeler, without sufficient proof, and fets off its steam after this fashion, tho italics belonging to the irracible Whig. Citizens of Pennsylvania no doubt have a 1 irge amount of property goods, wares, and Meichandis; and perhaps some heavy debts within tho limits of Virginia. Let the law lay hands iipon every particle that can be found in the Commonwealth, and let express provi sion be made that no officer shall be sworn to support the Federal Constitution, wheru those states are concerned who disregard that instrument. We are against disunion. Wt much prefer carrying on this sort of system or reprisals with our Yankee brethren. There i plenty of Yankee property in the South at thix time to reimburse us for all the negroes they have stolen from us. One general, comprehensive sweeping statute in every Southern State will reach the whole of it. The Silver Lake Ssake. It seems to bo an absolute certainty, that a monster of some kind exists in this famous lake. The Perry (N. Y.) Times states that a company has been formed for the purpose of capturing it, with a capital of twelve hundred dollars. They have constructed large hooks, attached to ca bles, which they intend to bait with live birds, and in that way put a hook In the jaws of th? leviathan. An observatory is to be constructs ed on the shore, and constant watch kept. Other parties are in pursuit of the nondescript with intent to capturo and exhibit him. Sev eral shots have been already fired at the snako by persons watching for it. It is to be hoped the parties will be success ful, in order that both the snake and the community at large may be put ont of their misery. HF-The "Whipping Post," it appears, has been revived in Virginia. A white man, con victed at Parkersburg of stealing several ar ticles of clothins. was sentenced a few days a- goby the county court to receive 'twenty lash es on bis back, well laid on,' ana me senienco was accordingly executed, we are told, with a good hickory switch.' 1 ne uuiormnate man, is said to have been an old offender, not long out of the penitentiary. We copy the above from the Philadelphia Sun. The'whip'ping post has not been TcviT ved' in Virginia. It was never abolished. It is one of tha old 'institutions' afthat higalf progrMH re state.