f. I BY S. RKOW. VOL. Z.-KO. 3. CLEARFIELD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1856. i : EIGHTY YEARS AGO. BV CHARLES 8PBAGCE. Eighty years have rolled away, Since that high, heroic day, When our fathers, in the fray. Struck the conquering blow ! Prawe to them the bold who spoke ; Praise to them the brave who broke w "Htern oppression's galling yoke, Eighty years ago! Poor the wine of sacrifice, Let the grateful anthem rise, hall wo eer resign the prize ? Never never no ! ITcarta and hands shall guard thoso rights, Bought on Freedom's battle heights, Where he fixed his signal lights, Eighry years ago ! Rwear it! by the mighty dead, Those who counselled, those who led ; Uy the blood your fathers shed, By your mother's woe ; Swear it! by the living few, - Those whose breasts were scarred for yon, When to freedom's ranks they flew, Eighty years ago! By the joys that cluster round, Uy our va'les with plenty crowned, . By our hill-tops holy ground, Itcscued from the foe. Where of old the Indian strayed, , Whore of old the pilgrim prayed, Where tbo patriot drew hid blade, Eighty years ago ! Fhould again the war-trump pen, There shall Indian firmness seal Pilgrim faith and patriot zeal, Prompt to strike the blow ; There shall valor's work bo done; Like the sire shall be tho son. Where the fight was waged and won, . Eighty years ago. INTERESTING SKETCIT. Tho Gipsies Characteristic! of the Eace- -Sad iiesuii oi a carriage. In England there are at most 1 300 gipsies ; In Franco, they are hardly to be found at all ; in Spain, the last census put them at 30,000, nearly all dwellers in cities and followers of sedentary trades. Before the end of the pres ent century, they will probably be extinct over Western Europe. The number of the Hungarian gipsies, ac cording to the census of Maria Thciesa, is 53,000; in Transylvania, they -are reckoned about 17,000 ; in Wallachia and Moldavia, ten years ago, there were 37,000 families, which, at fire to a family, would give 183,000 souls ; bo that in the Principalities every eighteenth person is a gipsy. In Southern Russia, theii number is probably nearly as great j but no ac curate computation can bo made, as they lead an entirely wandering life, in summer grazing their cattle on the plains, and in winter en camping in the depths of the forest. Of the gipsies of Hungary and the Principalities, a- bout one fourth have partially settled down in the towns and villages, and live, like their Western brethren, by telling fortunes, cheat- ing and pilfering, and ostensibly as buyers and sellers of horses and mules, menders of ket- ties, and street musicians. In tbo last capa- city alone, they touch on any of the higher attributes of humanity. Music is their gift, as with the other wandering race, tho Jews; and among the songlcss Hungarians, every musician is a gipsy. The first Eastern gipsies I met were at Brunu in Moravia. It was fair-time, and the court yard of the hotel was crowded with carts, goods, horses and cattle, while their owners were dozinz in the shade under a range of shedding that ran round three-fourths of the yard. On a heap of straw in the middle, in tho full heat of the blazing sun, lay four gip sies asleep. They were all four tall, powerful men, with coal-black hair as coarse as rope, treamin" over their dark faces ; and as they lay relaxed in sleep, their figures seemed gi- eantic. Their dress, so to call it, was a col- lection of the vilest rags, strapped round the waist with a rough Turkish shawl, and each C3 ' had a large double-edged knife at his belt Instruments lay beside them for they were musicians ; and when the cool of the evening catno on, they began to play. Two had vio lins, ono a trumpet, tho fourth a Hungarian cytnbal, which is something like a guitar, vdaved not by hand, but with two small sticks covctfcd with skin. Their music and mode of nlavini were as wild as themselves. They nlaved onlv tho old Hungarian tones, those J .. .. sinanlar melancholy airs, in which tho genius of the race and country is reflected, but with a passion and a pathos that passes into the ouls of tho listeners. Afterwards at Pesth, those bands wc found at every dance and con cert of the middle and lower classes. Their music is always tho same, and to a stranger, grows somewhat monotonous ; but the natives seemed never tired of listening to it. With them it is a point of honor to uphold the old national tunes ; and while the gipsies are gen erally looked upon as hardly possessing souls, tho gipsy musician, if possessed of talent, soon rises into consideration, andas often to be met with in respectable society, and even possessed of considerable property Rascals as the Zigcuners (Hungarian "'1- .-rr ; eics) are, and living in the greatest misery and filth in fact the dirtier their huts the better hey like them they arc still a very handsome race, the women especially. The burning sun scorches their faces more, and they arc there- fore darker in Hungary than in England ; but the free life they lead gives them an uncon- strained jind independent bearing, which tho constables, the stocks and the prison Have long taken from their island brcthern. These . ,. , , ... , . . Krvlil lirnm lui:r..1 n-nnmn nnlr make OUO astonished to thin ,ow ,h eves, teeth and fignrcscan exist in tho stifling atmosphere of their tents. But beautiful thov are. and their beauty has sometimes led to unions which have almost always resulted in misfortune. Stefan B , a young and very rich proprie tor of the Banat, having lost his way in the chase, had to pass the night in a gipsy-tent A young and beautiful girl was there, with the deep, dark eyes and seductive smilo of her race,' and her parents had the true gipsy guile to fan the glowing passions of their guest, lie was wealthy, passionate, an orphan, and uncontrolled ; and within a week the gipsy was his wife, and in a few days more installed in full possession of his beautiful chateau on the banks of the Temes. Within ten days, in fact, the gitana had reached a fabulous for tune. From the smoke-dried tent of her fath er, she was transported, as if by magic, into a noble domain, surrounded with luxuries, with trains of servants, and a husband devoted to her wishes. Notwithstanding this, she was miserable. The fixed and quiet life, the very comforts she enjoyed, seemed to press and weign tier down, n uen licr husband ques tioned her as to the cause of her wan and al tered appearance, she looked on the country and tried to smile, but the smile was full of bitterness. Her only comfort seemed to be to sit gazing for -hours upon tho distant wastes she had so often traversed, bare-footed, and rejoicing in the days of her poverty. Sho was thus seated ono day, when her ear, ever on the watch, caught the sound of a gipsy band. Through the trees, sho could see the passing forms of the men and women, the donkeys and loaded carts, and then a joyous voice struck up tho favorite gipsy-song The wind is roaring through tho wood, The moon is mounting higher, The gipsy stops to cook his food, And light his forest fire. Free is the salmon in the sea, The wild stag on the hill ; Tho eagle in the sky is free, The gipsy freer still Hurrah ! The gipsy freer still ! Young girl, wilt fn my castle rest ? I'll give thee rings of gold ; In robes of silk thou shalt be dressed, Thy hair with ducats rolled. The vultnre scarce for golden cage His nest on high will quit ; The wild horse, free from youth to age, Will spurn the golden bit. So, free to rest or free to roam, Or by the wood-fire laid, The sky her roof, the world her home, Will live the gipsy maid Hurrah ! Will live the gipsy maid ! At the last note, the listener suddenly sprang through the open casement, and vanished a- mong the trees. When her husband came in, no one had seen her, or could give any tidings of her. For two days, he songht her in.vain ; night closed upon the third, when the light of a distant fire showed a gipsy encampment, and his heart told him ho was near the object of his search. Stealing through the bushes, he approached unperceived within' a few feet of a pair seated talking by tho firc- It was the sing.:r and his own wife, who was telling the former of tho weary hours in the splendid niiscrv of her chateau. Stefan B returned broken hearted to his house, which he soon after quitted for ever. The next year the Hungarian revolution broke out, and ho found what he sought, an early death beforo Temcsvar. Chamber's Journal. L.vhge Investment. Hon. Wm. Spragua, of Ithode Island, has purchased the water privi lege on the Shetucket river, and a large tract of land in the vicinity of the Lord's Bridge, soma ten or twelve miles from Willimantie, Connecticut, and has several hundred men at work preparatory to putting up a cotton fac tory of large size, which is to be completed and put in operation as speedily as may be Tho length of this structure will be 930 feet, Virnnlfh 80 fort, four stories in height, intend- cd to run 1,200 looms, with 50,000 spindles For the accommodation oi me ope?ain es m this immense establishment, Mr. S. i building some two hundred dwelling-houses I . - . .- ... ... :n m tno adjoining town oi ranKiin, wnicn wm afford homes for all in his employ. A "Jimmv" per Quart. In the Lexington market, a few days since, a gentleman ap proached the stall of a fruit vender and asked "what's the price of your strawberries V "A Jimmv a nnart " was the response "A Jim- my a quart !" reiterated the purchaser, why J & r - I never heard of a coin by that name of what value, pray, is it?" "Why 'ten cents,' or, other words, a dime just the amount that Jimmy Buchanan wants poor men to work for ncr dav. is the price that I charge for my strawberries a quart !" Hoors for Ladies dresses, we learn from a I . . ., Baltimore exchange, Have been superseded The sk-jrt Jg now Diade to "set-out" by mean of a rrame worjj cf small stiffened hempen rorcs and is called a skeleton skirt. When jacc(i upright upon the floor, it resembles and is maflo to ftn3Wer all the purposes ot a lien coop jt j9 ais0 very convenient for a short man witu a Tery tall wife, for by its aid he can c-imD cp and kiss her, as a sailor climbs the si,roujs 0f a vessel. . m vw York 'Herald' says that half 1 HE H J million of dollars "were oflered for that paper I by the Democrats READ! READ!! Who Began the Aggressions in Kansas t To form a proper idea where the responsi bility rests for the present state of affairs in Kansas, remarks the Philadelphia Sun of tho 2Cth Aug., it is necessary to trace the origin of the disturbances. We can easily do it now, though a few months ago it was covered by such a multitude of inventions by Douglas, Stringfellow and their numerous adherents, that some good people may have had their doubts and been not a little mystified. It is on that supposition that we copy a plain state ment, which subsequent investigations, espe cially of the industrious and able Investigat ing Committee of the House of Representa tives, have enabled tho Newark Advertiser to prepare. Previons to the enactment of the law constituting Kansas a Territory, a power ful society was formed in Missouri for the ex press purpose of making Kansas a slave State. How they proceeded to carry out their plan, as soon as that act passed, was afterwards ful ly made apparent by the warlike irruption of its members and others into that Territory, taking violent possession of the ballot boxes, driving away the real inhabitants from the polls and not allowing them to vote at all. Thus were elected the members of their sham Legislature and their delegate to Congress. In consequence of these illegal and outrage ous transactions, Whitfield lias been denied admission as delegate to the House, and the acts of the Legislature have been declared to be a disgrace to any country, not only for their base origin but for their unconstitutional and tyrannical provisions. They have been denounced and repudiated on all sides, and no one, whatever his opinions on other mat ters may be. has a word to utter in their de fence. We shall not now recite them they have been published in this paper and throngh out the Union. Their object, however, was professedly to make Kansas a slave State, by first making it a slave Territory. The stave laws of Missouri, in a body, were consequent ly made at once the laws of the Territory, and the flagitious acts referred to were subsi- iary to this great design. In furtherance of the same object, the ju- iciary, under the Jennes oi Kansas, tiiici nstice Le Comptc, was set into motion. Un der his direction, some of the principal men of the Free State party, who had been already disfranchised, were indicted for treason for peaceably meeting to deliberate on their grie vances, and see what could be recommended for a remedy, as they had a right to do by the provisions of the constitution. These were arrested, thrown into prison, where their per secutors have confined them ever since. Not content with this, the Kansas Jeffries sanc tioned the indictment of some of the most aluable buildings belonging to Free State men in Lawrence, as nuisances, and had them burnt, their contents pillaged, and tho w omen found there, barbarously abused. These vil lains, at the head of whom was Atchison, now boast of their villainous exploits, and show in triumph the arms, horses, cattle, furniture, and other property, of which they robbed the lawful owners. Then they prosecuted a set tled plan to hunt Free State settlers, known to be such, and drive them from the Territory At the same time, associations were formed to operate externally, in order to prevent the ar rival of fresh emigrants from the Free States, disarming some, turning back others, while thoso from the Slave States were promptly permitted to proceed, and encouraged to come, me missouri river is a cioseu ni iu rec emigrants, and obstructions arc thrown in their way by land approach to Kansas in every possible direction. In these high-hand ed measures, troops have come in aid from South Carolina. Georcia and Alabama. Not content with these, Pierce ordered Col. Sum ner to march against the inhabitants of Kansas with a largo body of U. S. troops, of which Gen. Smith has recently been sent to take the command. The inhabitants of Kansas are, therefore, subdued, or expelled, as Douglas threatened, while tho trials for treason of the friends in whom they reposed their confidence, arc appointed to take place in September, The condition of the country is as deplorable as can be imagined, and the hopes of freedom for its people at the lowest point. W e sin ccrclv deplore their great sufferings ;hey do, indeed, deserve the sympathy of their lellow- citizens everywhere And what can justify such foul, such cnor mous oppression 1 Can such things happen in America, the land of the happy and free, we hear men exclaim ? Why, what a mockery are our constitution, our boasts of security and equality ! Worse things could not hap pen in Austria or Turkey. Is there not some ftnrlorv for these infernal outrages ? We have L O tJ " never heard but one, and that is a falsehood .,. r wvr.-ir.ipnce Tt u Raid liv wav of excuse for all this vioienco that Massachusetts had incorporated an Emi grant Aid Society, for the purpose of convert- State, by force and moner. This is now proved to be a shame f:,l.hood. without the least foundation That State did incorporate an Emigrant Aid rLVanv in February, 1835, long after the passaco of tho Kansas Territorial act, with a nominal capital of one million, not ten, as as serted ; but which capital never, in fact, cx The ob cccdcd a hundred thousand dollars jtct stated was "for tho purpose of directing emigration westward, and aiding in providing accommodations for the emigrants after arriv ing at their places of destination." . ", This was the object of the Society, and the sole one, and no other assistance wasevcr ren dered them, as sworn by tho officers, except in cheapening their tickets in consequence of the discount procured of the transportation companies. These officers also swore, that no emigrant was asked his opinion respecting sla very before he started, and that no abolitionist, to their knowledge, was a member of the So ciety. The president was a retired citizen. Tho Society expected to make their profit in land purchases, no doubt, and in raising up a population to consume their manufactures. Those who represented the design or the acts of the Society as any way contrary to this statement were base and malicious slanderers, and this has at length been fixed upon them by public opinion. Senator' Douglas was one of the first to aid the Missouri rnflians in the cir culation of the calumny from his place at Washington, which he has more than onco prostituted to ignominious uses. How little reason was given for Missouri violence by any thing the Massachusetts Emigrant Society had done, is conclusively shown by the official census ot the territory taken a month previ ous to the invasion, whereby it appears, that of all the adult freemen then in the territory, amounting to near 8000, only 100 were lrom the New England States ! Are have now given in few words the gist. we believe, oi tno Kansas war. trom mis truthful and plain statement, the answer can readily bo given, to the question, with which wa commenced, "Who began the aggressions in Kansas ?" Atchison and the Missouri Ruf fians began it for the slaveholders in tho field; but he, Dixon, of Kentucky, and -others, made use of Douglas to begin it previously in the Senate Councils. , With these conspirators Pierce was an accessory before the fad, and Buchanan is on accessory after the fact. THE SPANISH DIFFICULTIES. The cause of the frequent recurring difficul ties in Spain is mainly to be attributed to the family quarrel which has so long divided the reigning family. The Herald says, the present Queen holds her sceptre illegally in the opin ion of the Spanish absolutists. Until 1714 the Spaish crown descended to the next inher itor, male or female, but the Salic law was in troduced in the reign of Philip V., who was of French descent, and the States of the king dom settled the succession in his male descen dants, in preference to the females, though they might be nearer in blood. And this con tinued to be the case until the reign of Ferdi nand VIL, the father of the present Queen. This monarch had four wives, the last being Christina daughter of Francis I., King of Na ples. By her, he had a daughter born in 18G0, who received the name of Maria Isabella. The same year he abolished the Salic law, and in order to ensure the succession of his young wife, ho named her as his successor in his will, and appointed her mother as the regent in case of her death, until Isabella arrived at the age of 18 years. In 1833, however, when the King was supposed to be at the point of death, his Ministers, to gain tho favor of the heir- presumptive, tho King's brother, Charles Ma ria Isadore, better known as Don Carlos, ob tained from the sick man, in a moment of un consciousness, a restoration of tho Salic law. Unfortunately for them he recovered, dismis sed his ministry, and repudiated their mea sures. He died in 1833. The Queen Dowa ger assumed the regency, the Cortes unani mously sided with her,and passed a bill exclu ding Don Carlos from the throne. From that moment a fierce civil war broke out, known as the war of the Christinos and Carlists, ono of the bloodiest and most cruel ever known in Spain. It lasted many years, and so sadly bea ten were the Queen's troops for a time, that a legionary force of 8,000 men was raised in England for her assistancc,and sent over under the command of Gen. De Lacy Evans. It was not until 1S39, by the wise and moderate poli cy of Espartcro, as well as his good general ship, that quiet was restored and the Queen's authority established. Don Carlos retired to France, subsequently to England, and is since dead. As soon as the Queen Regent felt her self secure, she began to discover her dislike of liberalism, and having an accidental major ity in the Cortes, she destroyed at a blow some of the dearest and most ancient rights of the municipal corporations. This led to revolt, a declaration against the law by Espar tcro, the dismissal of her ministry, and the dissolution of the Cortes. She soon afterwards resigned her authority and retired to MarseiL les. In 1841 sho attempted to regain her po sition, and the notorious O'Donnell seized on rampcluna in her name. The insurrection was put down, and the payment of her peusion i - . suspended. Sho is now in Paris, and is said to bo constantly intriguing to bring about her return to Madrid. The Queen, a gay and dis sipated woman, is led by her favorites of the hour into all kinds of misconduct, and is once more in tho midst of a revolution, and nnhap- ry Spain, the victim of family quarrels, is a gain in the hands of political matadois. . . At latest accounts, Gov. Robinson, Brown - I and other prisoners were still in custody of jjho United States troops in Kansas. Tho Persecution of Colonel Fremont. SEN ATOlt WILSON'S SPEECH. In the Senate, on the 11th, when the resolu tion introduced by Mr. Biclkr, of Pennsylva nia, calling upon the Treasury Department for copies of the papers concerning the accounts of John C.Fremont with the Government camo up for consideration. Hon. Henry Wilson, of Massachusetts, rose and said : Mr. President The days of this session are rapidly passing. Business of the highest im portance presses upon our consideration. Chairman of leading Committees, charged with measures of great public concern, crowd for ward to obtain the ear of the Senate. While the Senate is thus engaged in the per formancc of its high duties to the counrry,the Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr. Biglcr) thrusts before us this little, petty proposition a prop osition unworthy a moment's attention of hon orable men, in or out of the Senate. The Sen ator from Pennsylvania, not content with laun ching into the Senate this scheme which must have originated with some mousing poli tician, engaged in the pursuit of petty ends by petty means but ho presses its considera tion now, in spite of the earnest remonstran ces of the Chairman of the Committee on Fi nance (Mr. Hunter,) who is charged with the care of the Civil and Diplomatic bill, and the Chairman of the Committee on the Pacific Railroad (Mr. Weller.) who wishes to call the Senate to the consideration of that great mea sure, to unite the Atlantic aud Pacific shores of the Republic. But the Civil and Diploma tic bill, and the Pacific Railroad bill, must be thrust af ide, other measures must be thrust a- idc. bv the Senator lrom Pennsylvania, mat the Senate ruav consider this proposition by which certain political schemers hope to elicit something out of which they can manufacture slanders against abiave man, who has served is country with eminent ability in peace and n war. XIic Senator trora Pennsylvania can not suppose that this proposition w ill pass this body without at least a passing notice. He takes the responsibility, lie cnooses to press it, and I shall take at least a lew momenws oi the time of the Senate to characterize the pro position as I think it deserves. Does the Senator from rennsyivania expoct to win laurels by thrusting this proposition in to the Senate ? Docs ho think the generous people of this country will applaud this at- empt to wound the sensibilities and delaine the character of one who has won a brilliant name in tho history of the Republic one whoso explorations and scientific lubois has conferred npon our country honor and renown among all civilized nations J Does be expect to win support for his favorite candidate for the Presidency by thrusting into the Senate this wretched proposition J This is small game. If that Senator hopes to win popular confi dence and applause, if he hopes to turn back the tide of popular favor that is bearing John C. Fremont to the Executive Chair, by this resolution,which I here prononncc,whic!i hon orable men in and out of the Senate will pro nounce,and which the country will pronounce, small and mean, he will find himself sadly mis taken. Wherever this proposition poos, high- minded men will treat it with derision, scorn and contempt ; and no little of derision, scorn and contempt, will be visited upon inc me n who resort to such devices to effect political results. I would not stoop to snch a warfare as this. If it was aimed at James Buchanan I would spurn it from me. This is not the first time, Mr.President, that the shafts of political malignity have been hurled at men who have served the Republic, and it is not the first time that the Senate has been called upon to grope among the archives of the Government to discover some accounts, or tho records of some account, between the Government and men who have lcen lntrus.ed with public funds, out of which something would be distorted for partisan ends. In 1828. Andrew Jackson was assailed lor his military deeds. .The people, unmindful of these assaults, bore nim proudly to tiie l resi dential Chair over ono of the purest, ablest and most incorruptible patriots that ever grac ed the councils of the Republic. In 1840, Gen. Harrison was assniled by tiie envenomed tongue of slander'brandcd a cow ard and denounced as a bad man, and tiie peo ple took him in their arms and bore him to the Executive Chair over his experienced and accompli shed competitor.' In 1818, Zachiy-y Taylor, was denounced in the same manner his accounts with the Gov ernment through long years of public service, overhauled and audited over again by the po litical accountants and auditors. In 1832, General Scott a soldier who has. served the Republic for more than forty years in peace and war, with unsurpassed anility, was arraigned in the same manner and for a similar object. What was gained by those as saults upon Jackson, Harrison, Taylor, Scott ? 1 venture to say here to-day, that an mese as saults npon these distinguished men, concern ins their monctarv transactions with the gov ernment, never lost them tho confidence or support of any portion oi me American peo ple. Let the American people believe these assaults to be unjust, mean, contemptible. Pass this resolution, draff out ot the depart ments the bills, vouchers, letters and papers betwccnCol.Frcmont and theGovernment, gar ble them, scatter them over the land, blast their contents into the unwilling car of the country, and the people, with that sense of justice, that the practical judgment which dis tinguishes them, will pronounce it alt politi cal persecution. . Yes, sir, this partisan scheme will bring up on its authors upon the men engaged in its execution no public confidence or regard, but public censure and contempt, and it will bring to Col. Fremont the sympathy which honest men ever give to the persecuted. . Col. Fremont was entrusted by his govern ment with high and responsible duties. . These duties were tar distant from the scat of gov ernment beyond the borders of the States in the Territory beyond tho Father of Waters in tho Rocky Mountains in California. Those high and responsible duties were per formed in a manner that won the commenda tion of the government, the approval of hon orable Senators . upon this floor aud tho ap plause and admiration of a grateful people. His name is forever associated with the path ways to the golden shores or the Pacific, thro' the gorges of the Rocky Mountains with tho conquest and acquisition of California. Money was entrusted in his hands. In the performance of duties assigned him, men, pro perty, money, wero an tor months years en trusted to his keeping. The pcoplo will t mand whv John C. Fremont is arraigned nov eight or ten years after his duties to his gov ernment were performed. If his accounfe were unsettled if he had failed to acconit for money placed in his hands, if he was il any sense a defaulter, why, the people will dei mand, was he not reported as tho laws require by the projior officers t Why was his nam left out of the list of public officers whose ac counts were reported as unsettled I On the 10th of January, 1834, Hon. Elishs Whittlesey, Controller of tho Treasury, made a report to the House of Representatives, in which he savs: "In conformity with the pro visions of the act of Congress, approved March 8, 1800, entitled an act further to amend tho several acts fr tho establishment and regula tion of the Treasury, War, and Navy Depart- . . . r 1 a lot ments, and of me act passed iarcu o, ion, entitled 'an act to provide for the prompt set tlement of tl-.o public accounts,' 1 transmit 'herewith, statements of the accounts which re mained due more than three years prior to the 1st day of July. 1833, on the books of the Re gister" of the Trcasnrv, and on the books of the 21, 3d and 4th Anditors of the Treasury." This report, Mr. President, contains ninety six (M) pages of names, reported in obedience to the requirements ol the laws, by Mr. Big pcr, Register of the Treasury ; Mr. Clayton, Second Auditor ; Mr. Bnrt.Third Auditor, and Mr. Dayton. Fourth Auditor. These reports of tho "Auditors of the Treasury Department, contain the names of persons whose "accounts have remained unsettled, or on which balances appear to have been due more than tbrc.e years prior to July 1, 1833, furnished in pursuance, of the 2d section of the act of Congress ap proved March 8, 1800, entitled An act to a tuond the seven 1 acts for tho establishment and regulation of the Treasury, War, and Na vy Departments,' and 'the names of officers whose accounts for advances made, or balan ces unaccounted lor, one year prior to July 1, 1833, have not been settled within the year; prepared in pursuance of tho 13th section of the act of March 3, 1817.' " ' In this long list of names I find the names of some of the noblest sons of the Republic. The names of Genera's Gaines, Worth, and Harney are in this list, but the name of John C. Fre'mont is not among them. If his ac counts were unsettled if a balance were a gainst lain why was not his name reported ? This name is not in the list of persons wheso accounts were unsettled, during the years pro ceeding that date. On the first day of July, ISO'S, no moneys were in his hands unaccount ed lor. He owed the Government nothing. At that very time he had a claim for supplies furnished the Government as early as July, 1831. That claim was examined and reported uxn by a committee of the House of Repre sentatives, at the head of which was Colonel Orr, ono of the leaders of the Administration in the Honse. That committee reported a hill allowing Col. Fremont 183,823, and that bill received tho unanimous vote of the House and Senate, and the approval ot President Pierce, on the 20th of July, 1834. If his accounts were unsettled, if money was in his hands unaccounted for if the Government had any balance against him, why, Sir, why did not your Administra tion coinpcl 3 settlement and secure any claims of the Government when it held $ 183,823 of John C. Fremont's in its coffers ? Will the Senator from Pennsylvania, w ili any Senator answer this question j Some mousing politician in the departments, or one who has access to the departments,soroe little, soulless craaturc, ever ready to blast the reputation of honorable men, has doubtless found tapers bearing upon Col.Fremont's con nections with the Government out of which ho thinks extracts can le quoted, if pnblished.by which veual politicians can blacken the repu tation of one they fear aud hate, and the Sen ator from Pennsylvania comes into this Cham ber, with this resolution, to carry out this small game.ol political malignity. I shall vote, Sir, for this inquiry, but I wash mv hands ot its meanness it abject bitterness. If" it applied to anybody's candidate but tho one which I support, I would vote against it. I would never consent to resort to such petty warfare. The Senator from Pennsylvania as sumes to be Mr. Buchanan's fugleman here. I have sometimes thought the Senator, in bis deep anxiety, felt that he carried Mr. Buchan an on hl shoulders. I hold James Buchanan responsible for an attempted blow at his rival struck by the. hand of theSonator fromPenn- svlvania who professes to be his particular friend, who is ever watchful of his interest and fame. So prompt is the Senator from Penn sylvania to rush to the defence of Mr. Buchan an, that I have come to regard him as that gen tleman's pTemonitary symptom" here. No thing but that Senator's extreme desire to bet ter the watiing fortunes of his chief,could havo induced him to engage in this political device. Mr. President The people will regard this as persecution. It will bring odium not up on Col. Fremont, but upon the men who orig hited it and move in it. It will rather re dound, as ail such attacks against candidates for thePresidency have donc,to his advantage. The issues are made up. They are the gravest and most transcendent issues ever presented to the people of the United States. All that the Senator from Pennsylvania and his candi date can trrnko out of this inquiry will not weigh a feathcu- the coming contest, which is to decide wheths- Freedom or Slavery shall sway the policy ot the Republic. Iowa vounjr Iowa has uttered her voice for John C- Fremont by a majority of thousands. ' Maine will respond to Jowa lor tne tast in a few weeks in a voice not to lc mistaken. Tho Senator cannot break the mighty current that is bearing the friends of free Kansas on to as sured triumph by this petty political man.tar vre which gentlemen should not stoop to en gage in. Pennsylvania, on the 14th of Octo ber may teach her Senator that she is not to be won by any attempt to defame the Chief tain, around whose banner the liberal, progres sive, Democratic masses of the country are rallying for the coming fight. I have not spoken, Mr. President, of the mo tives that have actuated theSenator fromPenn sylvania in introducing this inquiry. I havo nothing to do with raotives. I have spoken of the act, and I have spoken of it as I think it deserves. Perchance tho Seuator feels that he has the good name and fame of Col. Fre mont, as well as Mr. Buchanan, in his keeping. Perhaps wc ought to feel grateful to hin for his zeal for the regulation of our candidate, but I cannot but feel that whatever tho effect of this inquiry may be npon Col. Fremont.the Senator will win no laurels by it, that any ono will desire to pluck from his brow. i