u an 1 "X i i f r 7i u. M f J4 1 i i. 4 ; t" pftemmt $ fmrniai S. B. ROW, Editor axd Pboprietob. CLEARFIELD, PA., MARCH 19, 13.3G. - Nominees of the Philadelphia Convention. rOR PRESIDENT, r MILLARD FILLMORE. vice presides?! Andrew jackson donnelson. t "Umojc roa the Sake or the Un-ios." The . call for the Union Convention, which is to as- oerable at JJarrisburgb. on the 26th, has met pretty general and hearty response mrongnout the State. The American. Whi . and Republican presses have favored it with , equal cordiality, and meetings have been call ed In a majority of the counties to select del egates. There is little doubt that the Conven tional be well attended, and it is to be hoped will be composed of men of prudence and a bility, who will adopt such measures as will jet reconcile difficulties and effect the con templated union. To accomplish this, a con ciliatory spirit mnst be exercised ty every one personal feelings and prejudices must be laid aside old animosities must not be permitted ; to sway the opinions of any ultraism must .be thrown away concessions must be made by all. If dissention and distraction are al lowed to exist in the anti-Administration ranks, nothing else than discomfiture and de feat need be expected. On the other hand, it is morally certain that if the different opposi tion elements can be combined and bo made to work harmoniously, they will ride trium phantly over their foes in tbo ensuing cam . paign. Earthquakes ix Japan asd Calijohxia By the arrival of the steamship Prometheus at New Orleans on tho I2th,'inteiI5gence has been received by way of San Francisco of a terrible earthquake in Japan on the 11th of November, ty which the city of Jeddo was destroyed. It is estimated that one hundred thousand houses . were demolished, burying in their ruins thirty thousand human beings. Fire broke out at th-j " same time in thirty different parts of the city, and as the consuming flames were encircling the buildings, the earth would open and then speedily close over them and their unfortunate ! inmates who knew not whither to flee. j A severe shock of an earthquake was also ! experienced in California, on the loth Febru ary. In Saa Francisco and other towns many Mildings were more or less injured, some hav ing the walls shattered and the tops thrown off, whilst others rocked to and fro like a cradle, j Hen, women and children were seen rushing through the houses in their night clothes, seed ing safety from the supposed danger. The shock was felt throughout the State, and by vessels lying in the harbor, and the waters of the bay at San Francisco were much agitated. No lives, it is thought, were lost. Many per sons, who lived ia large brick buildings, alter the shock took up temporary quarters in wood en tenements. 'Read It." Wo have received a lengthy communication, with the above heading, from a respectable citizen of Morris township, con taining the proceedings of a meeting of the School Directors of that township, at which a motion was made by one of the Board to the effect that the school houses should be open for the preaching of the gospel. Our corres pondent says the motion "was met with great vehemence and violently opposed" by three of the Directors- Of the one, he remarks, "we . should not think it strange that he would op pose the gospel, being a Roman Catholic." A motion, made by one of the Board, for tho e rection of a school house at the lower end of the township, where the greater part of, the children, according to .the writer, have been deprived, from want of a building, of the fa cilities of education for nearly eight years, met with a similar fate ; and he inquires, "where would we soon find ourselves if our common school system should be taken away and the gospel removed from our midst? Would we not be likely to sink into ignorance and superstition V We are sorry to learn that any man, or act of men, in the county, should endeavor to prevent the preaching of the Word of God, by refusing the use of build ings, under their control, for that purpose. Acditor Geseeal. The following commu nication we received at too late an hour to ap pear in last week's paper : BeooKviLLE. Pa., March 11, 1858. Mr. Editor: Permit me to present through the columns of your valuable paper, the name of tho Hon. Jared B. Evahs, of Jefferson County, as a candidate for nomination for Au- : ditor General at the approaching State Con vention. Judge Evans is fresh from the ranks ot the people, and is without question one of k best and most practical business men in Western Pennsylvania, and if nominated would carry this portion of the State by a large ma jority. Americas. Hob, n. SorTUKB, of the State Senate, will please accept our thanks for a copy of tbo Au ditor General's Iteport on Banks, as well as for numerous other favors. A mcttxr from Gonzales county, Texas, da tod the last week in February, says they were --o commence planting corn during this week. vl&H, n th i "f A-Oes A good CmmmmX.Jt JwwW V. 4- ,lno Sraetis are beginning to flourish, and i - -i.v K.tKeu. -rru. . rsnnnwA '.v-' " rauisiiee, are up and dcirg well." V ' '"' """" 1 1 JAMES EUCHAI7AW. As this gentleman seems to be the bright particular star of that faction which insults tho memory of Thomas Jefferson, by calling them selves Democrats, it may not be amiss, to show wnat Mr. Ijuchanan thought of them in 181 The people must decide whether Mr. B. was honest then, or dishonest now. Foreign influ ' " to men, aiarmed mm much, and he trembled for tho "wild and vis ionary theories" of those who courted it But that influence haviDg now become power- iui, ana a ponderous "make weight" iu polit ical contests, surely there is a greater necessi ty for "banishing this fiend from our society." lho extract is from a speech delivered by Mr Buchanan in the city of Lancaster, on the 4th of July, 1815. "We ought to use every honest exertion to mrn out 01 power thoso weak and wicked men who have abandoned the political path marked out for this country by Washington, and whose wild and visionary theories have been at length lestea by experience and found wanting jSboce all, we ought to drive from our shores for eign influence, and cherish exclusively American feeling. F oreign influence has been ' ercrv act we iuijcu; nepuuues. xierjaunaiccu eyes seo all things in false colors. The thick atinos- pnere oi prejudice, by which sho is forever surrounded, excludes from her sight the light neaven. u mist she worshins th nntinn iuriuis ery crime, sne curses the enemy of uveu ior meir virtues. In every ago she has marched before the enemies of her country, proclaiming peace when there was no peace, and lulling its defenders into fatal se curity, while the iron hand of despotism was aiming a death-blow at their lihnrtios a ?,-. ay our infant Republic has felt her witherin influence. Already has she involved us in a war, wnicn had nearly cost us our existence. Let us then learn irisdom frnm jwncr with mis jtena j rom our society." .-.... - - . - The Peogeessive Spieit. The Lesislatnre of New Mexico has passed an act to create and organize tho Atlantic and Pacific Rail Road Company, with a capital of ten millions of dol lars. The sixteenth section provides that the Eastern terminus of said road shall bo as near tho city of Memphis, in the State of Tennes see, and the Western terminus as near the city of San Francisco, in the State of California. as practicable, and the main trunk thereof shall pass through the Territory ot Xew Mex ico at the most practicable points, to be deter mined by the stockholders, between the lati tude of the northern and southern boundaries of tho Territorv. What Waste .'During the year endins January, 1855, there were distilled in the Uni ted Kingdom of England, Ireland, and Scot land, 5,254,008 quarters of malt, being au in crease over the preceding year of 12,907 quar ters. The average wheat crop of the United Kingdom is 13,500.000 quarter, showing that the quantity of barley made into malt and thereby withdrawn from the legitimate food market, is equal to one-third of tho whole wheat produce. Tba land occupied in tho growtti of barter and liops ror ITie tn error re ST) r Great Britain and Ireland is about 1,200,000 acres, which would produce more than twice as much wheat as is annually imported. War Expenses. Tho existing war has al ready cost England $250,000,000, which is six imes as much a3 the whole of tho expenditure Of the government for the same time for the purposes of peace. Add to it tho expendi tures of France, and we obtain an enormous gregato, as much lost to the nations them selves as if it were cast into the sea. Russia too must have lavished other millions, bes'ides impoverishing tho country, and decimating the people ; and in the whole we have a gigantic example of the calamity which the ambition of one man can inflict upon a suffering world. A Magazine of Death. The grounds bc- onging to the United States Arsenal, at Baton Rouge, La., embrace an area of twenty-seven miles. In the three magazines there are 39, 000 pounds of powder and 9,000 round of car- ridges for small arms arid cannon. The store houses contain 35,000 muskets, rifles-, and car bines and pistols; 2,500 sabres, 100 cannon, 000,000 cannon balls and shells, 30,000 pounds canister, and accoutrements for 100,000 men. Tho total value of the land and buildings, with contents, is over $01,000,000. Sad ErFECTs of Reversed Expectations. We learn says the Rochester Democrat) that a farmer near Gait, Canada West, who had 800 bushels of wheat, for which he had been offer ed tho high prices of last season, but chose to keep it in the hope of getting more, hung himself last week. Another farmer near Lon don, had three years' crops on hand, which he refused to sell at the extreme rates of last fall. He is now insane, his reason giving way at the prospect of having to sell at a greatly re duced price. The Defaulter Schcyler. The N. Y. Her ald states that the report that Mr. Schuyler is living in some obscure village in Germany, is entirely without foundation. He died some months since at a small place near Nice. His family returned to this country in the steam ship Arago, and now reside in New York City, Upon the receipt of the intelligence of his death, his son-in-law went to Italy for the pur pose of bringing home the family, and they all returned. A Mosqcito Bezz ! The Washington cor respondent of the iT. Y. Commercial Jldcertiser says he has information which renders it al most certain that as toon as the late Nicara guan decree annexing the Mosquito Territory shall be attempted to be executed, the com manders of the British vessels of war of the West India station will interfere to prevent it. And then what then Mr. Marcy 7 Mr. Browne's license bill, which passed the Senate recently, was materially amended in the House, reducing the rates of license. In these amendments the Senate refused to con cur, add the X consequently goes to a joint commiU-e of conference, consisting of Messrs. Browne, Wherry and Jordan, of the Senate, and Messrs. Wright, tXuz.,) Getz and Huns ecker, of the House." lot of Hams and gtJHallSjSIrSr - W.WISft 1 Clearfield, -Jam January AK0THER SX0RT FE0H THE WAE HOUSE Rev. John Chambers, a Democrat, of Phila delphia, not long since wrote a letter to his Democratic brethren on the subject of the "Jug Law," in which he gave them particular "fits." Below will be found another, in which he walks into the untcrrified in a manner that s as amnaing as it is refreshing Philadelphia, Feb. 21, 185G noN. Harlan Ingram My dear sir : I have read your speech delivered in the Senate, on the 12th inst., on tho Restraining Liquor Law I also read the speech of tho Hon. Judge Wil kins, and other distinguished gentlemen of the Senate. As I proceeded, line by line, through the speeches, I earnestly sought to find, ia one or the other, or all together, a single argument in favor either ol the manufacture, sale or use of intoxicating liquors as a beverage, but from necessity or choice, you have not said the firs word in favor of tho business in one form or another. True, you have denounced somcofthmin isters of religion stigmatized many of the tern pcraucc men as fanatics, and all of you, as a sort of salvo I presume, denounced drunken ncss iu the most measured terms. But where let me ask, is your consistency in railing at drunkards, and yet defending the accursed iramc vy wuicn drunkards aro made? If vou condemn the effect, does not consistency re quire you to condemn the canst f What is all this but battling on the side of drunkenness for it is folly to say that is not the side you are on ; for surely a man of your intelligence will not pretend to deny that just so long as intox icating liquors aro to be had as a beverage, drunkenness and its fearful catalogue of evils will prevail. Facts on this subject are a great deal better than fine spun theories or sham logic. Prove if you can, that liquor drinking ia a benefit to tho individual, tho family, tho com munity, tne Church or, the State. Let the members of the Senate and the IltJLse, who are in favor of tho liquor business, hold meeting, make the venerable Judge Wilkins chairman, then compare notes, and see from the appalling facts connected, with the liquor business during the last ono hundred years, if the protection and perpetuation of this traffic is worthy of tho earnest efforts of grave Sena tors and wise Legislators ! Point out in how many instances the use of intoxicating liauors lms reformed the abandoned ; how many worth- ess husbands have been restored to their bro ken hearted wives and worse than fatherless children, by their use .' How manv widowed mothers inPensylvania have hadcauso, morn ing and evening, to thank God for the practical influence of the bar-room upon their prodigal sons! Set forth the beneficent effects of tip pling houses and dram drinking, upon which you and many of our Democratic friends aro throwing yotir legislative smiles ! Tell us how- much our prisons have been depopulated and hua man v iuluua hw. 1 - i " ' ' ter by our delectable dram shops! Come, my brother Democrats of tho Senate and the House, give us some cheering statis tics in regard to the delicious fruits of the rum traffic. Has tho sale of intoxicating liquors reduced taxation ono mill, or decreased the number of paupers, except by consigning to an early and dishonored grave the bloated car cases of tho miserable victims of rum 7 My Dear Sir, I deeply lament that you and the great body of the Democratic members in the Senate and House should have espoused the cause of the Liquor League, a combination as infamous as the object they seek to accom plish is wicked. What an opportunity you have to prove that Democracy is tho sum of equal rights, the cause of the widow and the orphan, the cause ofvirtuo and good morals, and is not affiliated, as its enemies have often represented, with riot, rowdyism,and rum Attempt to palliate liquor selling and dram drinking! It is the source of all villainies : "tho winding sheet of souls;" the frightful vortex where young men and old men where husbands, lathers and sons are eventually swal lowed up. Look at your associate in the Sen ate, N. B. Browne, Esq., what a noble example has he furnished of intelligence, independence patriotism and moral courage ! Ho stands on a pinnacle, so high above the whiskey advoca ting Democrats, that they would havo to look sharp through Sir Isaac Newton's great teles cope to see his fair proportions and manly stat ure. He has reared for himself an enduring monument, upon which will bo inscribed: The lricnd of tbo people, the true patriot, the enlightened Statesmen, the honest Senator. You might havo done the same; nay, you can hold a place of equal honor, influence and res pectability, if you will break loose the iron fet ters of the Liquor League. Do it, my dear sir, at any cost ; do it if you have to pluck out a right eye, or cut off" a right hand ; do it for the honor of Democracy ; above all, do it for the sake of bleeding virtue and suffering hu manity, and the thousands who are tempted and destroyed by the worm of the still. Yours truly, John Chambers Central America General Walker has seized all the boats belonging to the Transit Company, aud after annulling the charter, has granted a new charter to another Company. It is said that Costa Rica has not received Col. Schlessinger, and there is strong opposi tion there to the foreign party in Nicaragua. Col. Kinney has published a letter in sub stantiation of his claim in Central America. From Mexico. Tho New Orleans papers have news from Vera Cruz to the 8th instant. Affairs at Puebla had changed but little. Ta ruarez was still there, and 8,000 government troops were soon expected to carry on tho seige. The revolution had been crushed in other parts. The Constituent Congress has elected Comonfort President for one year. The horses in New York have suffered be yond parallel and beyond endurance, in conse quence of tho Impediments occasioned by snow. The "Spirit of the Times" says no less than 900 have been killed or have died in this city during the late snow season, 2313 -h i GLEANINGS. - A Rcsso-Ciiisese hog, weighing 1400 lbs., is on exhibition in Cincinnati, lie grew in Clin ton county, Ohio. , ; Dr. Snow, of Providence, R. I., estimates the annual Value of tho products of the indus try of that city at $14,513,152. Tub Hebrews late in session at Cleveland have resolved to found a University at Cincin nati, for the education of their people. Ovee twelve thousand barrels of whiskey, it is stated, has been shipped for the South from Cincinnati during the Erst week of navigation. I.v Nassau Hall, Princeton, there are 337 students of whom 07 are professors of religion, 50 candidates for the ministry, and 28 sons of ministers. Col. Garland, Treasurer of New Orleans, has become a defaulter and has been held to bail in the sum of $500,000 in default of which ho was sent to prison. Mosquitoes grow so large In Texas that they hunt them with rifles. After they are slain, their suckers are cut off aud used by house carpenters for augers. An editor, in Iowa has become so hollow from depending upon the printing business a lone for bread, that he proposes to sell him self for a stove pipe. A keeper of a saloon in Gcelong, advertis ing his establishment, thus concludes "those of my patrons who may require it, shall bo sent home on a wheelbarrow gratis." For everything you buy, or sell, let or hire, make an exact bargain at first, and be not pnt off to a hereafter by one that says to you, "we shall not disagree about trifles." The fire and explosion of gunpowder at St. Martinsville, La., a few days since, destroyed property to tho amount of $200,000, and kil led twenty-three persons. Most of them were slaves. On Saturday night, the 15th, ono of tho Camden and Philadelphia ferry boats took flie- and burned up. There were upwards of 70 persons on board, of whom some 25 or 20 are missing and dead. An editor down east said that he hoped to bo able to present a marriage and a death as origi nal matter in his columns, but unfortunately a thaw broke tip the wedding, and the doctor got sick, and the patient recovered. The Crystal Palace, the only Repubiican palace, has recently been purchased by the A- merican Institute for the permanent exhibition of art and industry, for the sum of $125,000, ess than one-quarter what It cost. Great activity in business transactions is noticed at all the large Western cities, conse quent upon the re-opening of the rriircir!! ivers. From Cincinnati South, the ice lias en tirely disappeared. The prospects ol tne W- son.are regarded. as very hopeful. The noii?o ot Hpaxuuivm of Georgia, on the 23d of February, passed by a largo ma jority, a bill setting opart tne proceeds oi tne tax upon frco negroes as a fund to be applied to their removal to Liberia, or other places te- ond the limits of the United States. The Nebraska City News says that a land fever is raging there. Claims of one hundred and sixty acrewithin two and a half miles of that citv, are selling at from $500 to $S00. For ono farm joining the city on the west the owner has been offered $0,000 in gold, which was refused. Pcncii furnishes the last argument yet dis covered against moustaches. lie paints two rough Crimean soldiers, with pipes in their mouths, and a thicket of hair all over their fa ces, meeting, and one complains to the other : "I tell ycr what, I don't half like these mous taches. They do mop op such a lot of prog" An exciting and ludicrous chasa after a thieving pedlar, who got away from tho Sher iff at Thorudike, in tho western part of Massa chusetts, took place one night, recently. The sheriff" pursued iu a sleigh, got overturned in snow bank, and finally found tho pedlar in a hog pen hid behind a largo specimen ol live pork. The Hon. Roger Sherman died at New Ha ven ou the 4th inst, in his 88th year. He was son of Hon. Roger Sherman, ono of tho signers of tho Declaration of Independence, one of the leading men in framing the Consti tution of tho United States, and one of the soundest statesmen that our country ever pos sessed. The Massachusetts House of Representa tives, on the 5th inst., by a vote of 103 to 140, refused to repeal the act which confers upon jurors tho right of judging or deciding the question cf the constitutionality of any law. This is important to the people of the State, especially so far as it bears upon the enforce ment or non-enforcement of the Maine Liquor Law. The express train from Norfolk (Va.) to Weldon (N. C.) on Monday, went through a curve in the bridge near Marriottsville, killing Messrs. Adams & Co's express messenger, Mr. Daugherty, mail agent, and Charles Neal, a boy. The engineer and several of the passen gers were severely injured. The train, after the accident, took fire and was entirely des troyed. A petition has been presented to the New York Legislature, asking that a law be passed making every alternate year a "leap year." The petition sets forth that tho past few weeks of the new year, many more marriages Jiavo taken place than in ordinary seasons ; and they believe that leap year is a useful and benefi cial institution, calculated to do much for woman's rights." A vessel lately left San Francisco for Chi na, having as a part of her cargo one hundred and seven coffins containing the bodies of dead Chinese. This is explained in this way ; Chi nese speculators hire large bodes of men in China to work In the mines in California. The bodies of those who die there are taken back to prove to those from whom they were hired that their services were M an nd. THE PRESENT KANSAS QTJESTIOJT. Hot ace Grecly, writing from Washington under date of March 6th, gives tho following view or tne Kansas Question, which will per haps give the reader a pretty correct compre- The Kansas question is up, and, while Mem bcrs are debating it in lone and loirical es, full of devotion to Liberty and devotion to iuu onion, a propose to state the case not ono side ot it, but the whole case as briefly uiiu cieany as I can. With this view, I will throw tho antagonist assertions and positions into the form of a dialoirun bet ween Whifflpl.! Keeder and the House as follows : Whitfield, t I present my credentials as a liccaer, ) Uelegate elect from Kansas. The House Stand back, gentlemen ! Which of you has tho certificate of tho legal return ing officer ? Whitfield I have, nere it is t lite House Very good. You are thereby entitled to take the oath and the seat until an investigation can be. had. Mr. Reeder ! You must contest and send in your memorial. It snail be duly considered. Mr. Whitfield's cer tificate is prima facie evidence of his right, UUI more, uring on your proof that aa not iairiy elected and that you were, ..iu j u oiiiiu ue admitted m Ins stead. n j t it . aeeaer , en, gentlemen ! 1 am here as a contestant, then, if you will have it so. I challenge the right of John W. Whitfield as Delegate for Kansas, and claim to be myself the true and fairly chosen representative of tno actual settlers or that Territory. The House How do you propose to prove 11113 I Reeder By showing thtt the alledged Legis lature, which passed the election law s nnder which and prescribed the day on which Whit field claims to have been elected, was no Le gislature of Kansas that it was chosen by the votes of residents of Missouri mainly or whol ly that those residents wera enrolled,-organized, and officered in Missouri through secret societies operating for weeks before the elec tion that they came over in large armed bands on the day before and day of election that steamboats black with them landed them in Kansas on the day of election, and took them away alter 'voting, before night that caval cades f them went over on horseback and in wagons, took possession of nearly all tho polls, as had been preconcerted that, when the judges ot elections hesitated or refused to al low them to vote, they expelled those officers by violence and terror and appointed their own creatures in their stead that by this astound ing conspiracy and outrage the voice of Kan sas was stmea and a Pro-slavery Legislature imposed on her by residents of Missouri a Legislature which in no mrnner represented Kansas, and could not bind her a'Legislature whose existence she ignored and whose acts she has always repudiated. WiiijieldO this won't do ! This same Ree der, who now contests, was Territorial Gover nor, through the firt half of the last year and himself commissioned tho Members of this samo Legislature. He is thus estopped from uenying tue validity ot its acts Reeder No, sir! I expressly rejected the claims of about one third of the Members, who oat in mai legislature. I'roots were submit. ted to me that they were returned by conspir acy, corruption, violence and frmrt ir? miLu tlTcHies and "ordered how' elections to ffil their places. In one case, a fresh irruption from Missouri secured a return ol the samealemoers by a repetition of these outrages, but no legal evidence of such repetition of abuse was sea sonably submitted to me, and I commissioned the members returned. In every other case of a second election, new members were cho sen all Free Strte men. Yet, when the pre tended Legislature assembled, all these Free State Members the onlv members honestly e- lected by residents of Kansas were trpelled from their seats and the elect of the Border Ruf fians at the regular eltciion tcere pitched into th-ir placet, and helped make tlio lawa under which Y hitMi'ld claims a seat k-sr-i. Whitf.eliWrU. Biij.posj this third of 1. Members were bogr.s the other two thirds were all right or at least you are estopped from questioning their right, for you commis sioned them. Reeder True, Sir, 1 gave ceriincaits to i.i those returned to mo as duly elected except thoso with regard to whom evidence was sub mitted to mo that they had been rClurued by fraud. I had no discretion in the premises. But does it follow that, because I was not le gally informed ot specific frauds and usurpa tions within a few days after a certain election, that I should be estopped from proving such frauds and usurpations several month's after ward, when I had been apprised of then: 7 Shall my ignorance ol most important facts in April or May of last year deprive the People of Kansas of tba power and right now to urge those facts in bar of a perpetuation and aggra vation of the flagrant wrongs to which they had been subjected ? Whiijleld This Legislature, after being or ganized, was recognized and addressed by you us a legal body, and ycu must cow abide by that recogtiition. V Reeder No, Sir ! not the Legislature under whose acts you claim a seat here. When the alleged Lcgislaturo first met at Pawnee City, I did recognize it ; but when it proceeded forthwith to adjonrn to Shawnee Mission, I im mediately notified tho members that I would not recognize th em as a Legislature after such removal. The organic Kansas-Nebraska act gave to the Governor of Kansas the power to "fix" tho place of meeting of the Territorial Legislature ; I fijeed it accordingly at Pawnee ; I vetoed the act by which the Legislature sought to remove to "the neighborhood of their Missouri homes; and, as they persisted, I nev er afterward recognized them as a Legislature, All the laws in question, including that under which you claim to be elected. M ere passed af ter that removal passed at a place whero no Legislature wasever legally convened. If you mean to be technical, therefore, and stand on your legal advantage, I tell you that you have none to stand on. Whitfield But if that Legislature is not a legal body, there is no lawful authority in Kansas, and chaos is come again. Reeder Oh no ! there aro the Constitution of the United States, the laws of the United States, including the organic law of Kansas, and the officers of the United States Gover nor, Secretary, Marshall, Judges, and others. All these are authoritative in Kansas, and the People cheerfully obey them. It is your fraud ulent bogus Missourians' Legislature that they repudiate. Whitfield But there was no day of election, no election laws, except thoso prescribed by the Legislature at Shawnee Mission. Reeder Precisely so and by whose fault? Your backers vitiated the election ordered by me in pursuance of law they debauched the Legislature they substituted Missouriliuffian- ism for tho rule of tho People ot Kansas which the act of Congress contemplated. The Le gislature being thus corrupted like a barrel of cider into which a hogshead of filthy water nas Been poured tne People very pronerlv re pndiato its doings, Election Laws included. iney naa then no alternative but to chooso their own day and thereon elect a Delegate or go unrepresented here. They elected the for mer course so I am here. Commute of Elections But whv. Mr. Ree. der, did they not. to preclude all cavil, waive the question of authority, and rot on the day prescribed by this questionable Legislators t We understand you to ssy that the peopla ci Kansas are 6trorgly to your iidc ? Reeder Simply because they were xnorrally certain that the gigantic frauds of the Legis. lative Election in March would be lepea'ed and probably aggravated at the Delegate Election in October. They knew right well that tbej. stood no chance, few and unarmed as tbt then were, in attempting to contest an !e. tion against the organised Ruffianism of y;a entire Missouri Border. And beside, the? could not have voted at the Election present, ed by that Legislature without acknowledging its authority and agreeing to be bound bv its enactments, i et these enactments allow eve ry inhabitant of the Territory no matter vhctber he has been such over a year or lou than a day-to vote at each election, unless U is opposed to the Fugitive Slave Law or the Kansas-Nebraska act, in which case, if chal. lenged, he cannot vote at all. no matter km long he has been a resident. Of course, nn der such laws, exprcsslv calculated and inten ded to let Missourians vote and shut out Freo State citizens of Kansas, our side bad no chance. Our only hope lay in the repudiation of that bogus Legislature and all Its works. H kiffield Do you deny that the Vote lr which I was chosen was a legal one ? . Reeder les, sir, I do. I am credibly tn formed that a large portion of it was polled by Missourians who came over on purpose. Whitfield But suppose I were not leeUv lected, how does that hlp your caso T feeler Just thus: The Legislature havinr been corrupted and destroyed bv Pro-Sl frauds, the People were thrown "back on their primary rights rights such as Michigan. Cal- lorina and other States asserted when t h formed their first Constitutions respective!. iucT jjt-iu uuceuugs resoivea to nave an elec tion for Delegate, appointed a day, gave pub lic notice, chose judges, held an election and mad me their Delegate by a nearly unani mous vote. In other words. I stand beran. actly as did the first Delegate from Nebraska chosen by a spontaneous movement of h People. You, Sir, stand here the representa- ivo of that Pro-Slaverv faction which ted our ba!3ot-boxe3 and vitiated our LezisU urc, anu wuic.i cannoi ie permitted to plead ts own willful and gigantic wronzs as a bar ta other men's assertiou cf their most sacred rights. In short, I claim the ?eat because I wa3 voted for and f tirly chosen at the only e lection which the People of Kansas have been permitted to hold; while you are here the rep resentative and attorney of their invaders, op pressors, persecutors, despoilers, and murder ers. Whitfield. That la all Buncombe. It doea not make out even a prima facie case. Though all yon assert were proved, it would not support your claim to the seat. I move a non suit. The Committee Yon arc not entitled to a non-suit, Mr. Whitfltld ! The case turns on facts ; and if Gov. Reeder can establish what he asserts, it will go hard with vour seat. We must advise the House to proffer Gov. R. th fullest opportunity to msku good Lis allega tions. We must not grudee expense and trou ble when the rights and libarties of a whcl people are involved. The Minority We object to sending for per sons and papers. We concur with WMtflM The People Let the whole truth come ont, and let the scat be accorded to whomsoever shall be proved the true representative of tia c:t;2ens of Kansas. Amen : Tee Way Sam isDviso. As some peop' would have it appear that "Sam" is almost defunct, we give the following results of mc- iiicipal and township elections which hava cas ually fallen under our notice. TLat text lii Job for his "funeral eormos" will hsxe tc ha believer for a little while ytt. Troy, N. Y., Miycr aid Ccancii, iy CIO tiisjc-rlty. Lust year, tho same candidate u urfcatel ty Hi. Bath, U&ias, William Efce. American, elected Hayor. Auiierai, Kas3., the entire American ticket tUcttd, witi the exception of three minor ofaoers, elected by the Republicans. E afield Mass., a clean swep for the Americans, with the exception cf on School Trustee. Taunton, ilass., a clean sweep very little opposition. New Castle, N. II., tho whole American ticket elected by a decisive majority. Green Island, N. J., whole ticket 35 majority. Grcenbush, X. Y., 50 majority for the ticket. 2Corth Greenbush, N. Y., 58 majority for tho ticket. Auburn, N. Y., tbo home of Seward, a glorious victory. Liitla Falls, N. Y., 50 majority for tho Amer icans. Oswego, N. Y., the Americans swept tha city by about S00 majority. Blackstone, Mass., American ticket, 169. All others fit. Oxbridge, Mass., "all's well" for the Ameri cans. South Reading, Mass., a glorions victo ry for the American party. Saranac, N. Y., "we have met tho enemy and they, are ours." Danemora, N. Y., the Americans victorious. Peru, N. Y., a clean sweep. Chenanjo, N. Y., the enemy were routed and riddled most effectually. Middleborougb, Mass., the whola American ticket elected with the exception of two Selectmen. Davidson county, Tenn., th Americans elected all but Sheriff, by a lorg majority. Gates, N. Y., entire American ticket elected by over 50 majority. Hendon, N. Y., American ticket elected by about lh same majority. Ogden, N. Y., a clean sweep for the American ticket, by a handsome major ity. Palmyra, N. Y., American ticket elected by an increased majority over that of last year. Arcadia, N. Y., the whole American ticket j lected by a large majority over all combina tions. ' Latz Faou California. The steamship Prometheus arrived at New Orleans, Mareh 12., with San Francisco dates to the 20th Feb. She left San Juan on the 5th inst. . The steam ship Northern Light left on the same day for New York, with 300,000 in gold. The Markets have slightly improved j and the mines are yielding largely. A shqck of an earthquake occurred at San Francisco on the l-5th February, and caused some slight damage,. It was felt throughout the State. The appointment of Mr. McDuffio, as TJ. S. Marshal of the Northern District, lias caused much indignation. He is charged wita being a professional gambler, and strong petitions have been signed for his removal. It is sup posed that President Pierce has been imposed upon or made the appointment by accident. The Indians are still committing outrages In, Oregon and Washington Territories. Numer ous volunteer companies are mustering to act against the marauders.