THE E&FTS rers. Labor became subservient to capital, and the laborer almost a slave, and the capi talist almost his master. Ireland poured out its exodus or laborers ; and now behold the la boring men of that country earning the com forts and even the luxuries or life, and you see the effects of the depletion of overburdened ranks of labor. Go to China. This system has been in operation there, and again the rruth of this position has been demonstrated. There has been no emigration ho seeking of new homes no interest of the soil ; and the people, denied emigration, have been filling up and thickening year by year, until they Jiave become, as I have already remarked, one mass of degradation, poverty, ignorance and crime ; and now depletion at length takes place, by selling them as slaves to the West Indies and this Continent. Is there any man in the North who wishes to see this state of things here ? Are we ready to dedicate all that vast territory to the negro? If it were dedicated to the profitable labor of the negro, that would be bad enough ; but it is to be giv en to the South to be wasted ; for there is not a Slave State that is half full, but the soil is wasted and abused. My time does not allow me to enter into any elaborate consideration of this question, but it is replete with inter est to every man who loves his country and lias his hopes invested in its future. Jtisa question between the laboring men of the North and the negroes of the South. The free laboring man of the North should know that the people of Kansas are fighting his battles, and fighting to settle the question whether he shall have a right to go there and build a home lor himself and children. Great applanse. It is, in fact and in truth, a question between white men and negroes, and nothing leis. Hut there are other respects in which this question is to be looked at. We look forward to a Pacific Railroad, as one of the great and cherished objects The remainder of this sen tence was lost in a spontaneous burst of ap plause. There are few men whose hairs are ko gray that they do not hope to live to see the time when tho - iron horse shall be heard thundering over the plains ol the great West, passing beyond the Rocky Mouutains, and bringing back the riches of China and the In dies, filling the Northern States with wealth, enterprise and commerce. Now tell me, if you will, if we make Slave States of our Ter ritories to the Pacific, how soon we shall see that railroad built 1 Never, never ! If you make them Free States, and till them with the lrco population, the progress and cnterprize of the North, the schools and manufactures and churches o freemen will arise on all those hills and valleys a tide of life will roll over the Rocky Mountains, and in fitteen years the Pacific Railroad will be built. Great ap plause.! But dedicate that soil to tlic negroes, and I tell yon yonr lesponse is true it never will be built. But there are considerations c iiough, in a political point of view, why these Territories should be secured. Suppose they fall into the hands of the South, and become States. Each State will send two Senators, the South will have the preponderance of pow er ; and when do you suppose we will get it back t Never! never! not while we have a doughface. You say truly. It will lie never. Nothing will get it back except bloodshed and revolution. If that power passes into their hands how will they use it 7 Will they be more scrupulous in using than acquiring it ? If they acquired it by robbery, and fraud, and murder, will they nse it more magnanimously 1 No, No. And their first measure will bo to re-open the Slave trade, filling the country with negroes stolen from their native land. Not only this, but they will give free transit to Slaveholders into the Free States with their Slaves, thus taking the first step toward carry ing into execution the threat of Senator Toombs, that he wonld call the roll of his slaves beneath the shadow of Banker Hill. Never ! never ! they cannot do that. Yes, you say never ; but the man who says never must do never. Great applause, and three en thusiastic cheers for Fremont. Faith is a ve ry good thing ; but "faith without works is dead, being alone." It is a very good thing to have faith that the slaveholder shall not call the roll of his slaves on the soil of the Free States; but the man who would prevent it must begin the work in time. It will not do for men to say "never," and sit down in tho fulness of their faith till the work is accom plished. Tho man who would prevent it must go to work in season he must discern the danger in the distance, and use prevention in stead of enre. I have seen, not long since, men whose conduct I could not explain or re concile, except on the supposition that if tho South should demand it of them, they would have Slavery among you of the North. I have seen men in Congress whose votes I could ex plain on no other principle. And I believe there are men among you now, who, were the question raised, would be ready to introduce it into New York. No, no ! It is so! yes! no doubt of it. Yes, there are such to bo found, and their conduct can be explained no other way. That is it that's the doctrine. At one time, I should have believed this idle talk ; but that time has gone by, and the exis tence of this fact should put every man upon his guard, and make him exceedingly sensitive to public opinion upon this subject. But I am detaining you, too long. rLoud cries of "Go on." Who is responsible for the state of things 1 The Democratic party We arc. You have seen outrage after outrage perpetra ted upon the Free-State men of that Tcrrito- jy ; yon have seen the courts of justice closed against them. Every man is aware that of nil the forms of oppression judicial tyranny is the most terrible. This oppression our people up on the soil of Kansas feel in all its terrible ri gor. There is for them no redress, no legal justice. Murder stalks abroad ; a citizen finds a neighbor butchered in cold blood, with the iitecl still in his body : but he has no appeal to the courts of justice. They are closed against Ins complaints ; they aro but the instruments of oppression and the vehicles of insult and outrage. Our men are murdered at home and abroad, and the murderer goes unhuniehed. To such despotism and outrage arc our men in Kansas subjected. Even now the civil war is raging upon its soil, and men are left to welter in their blood lor the sake of their po litical opinions. There was a time when tho arm of the Executive of the United States could have been interposed to have prevented this internecine war, when all this could have been remedied if we could have had a man of nerve in the first office of the nation. Gallant men are now in prison, and guarded by the dragoons of the United States, upon a charge of treason, which came from whom ? The first intimation that treason had been commit ted came in the Message of tho'President of the United States in January ,18-36. One word, in relation to these indictments for treason. There is a strange state of things, and a re markable coincidence, that the Chief Justice of the Territory of Kansas (unconsciously, perhaps) laid down the same doctrine which made Jeffries immortally infamous. In tho reign of Charles I of England, JefTrics laid down tho doctrine that has enshrined him aa the greatest judicial villain that has ever in cumbered the earth ; but no man,pbilosophcr, poet ar statesman, has ever raised his voice to apologize for that infamous conduct He stands in unmittigated infamy, without one roan to apologize for him. His, "Bloody As size ' hves In the memory of every citizen of England. That greatest crime that man was vcr gnilly or, and by which he sacrificed so nanr -ncttm, wai t,ho doctrine of construc tive treason the doctrine that every man who resisted the process of tho law was guilty of constructive treason. That doctrine has made him immortal in infamy. Judge Lecompte, of the Territory of Kansas, lays down precisely the same doctrine, hisses and says that the Freemen who resist the laws of the U. States are guilty of constructive treason. He had some difficulty to make the arrangement be canse it was the laws of the Territory of Kan sas that were resisted. But he argues that be cause the laws of the Territory aro made by a Legislature of the United States, therefore to resist them is to resist the United States. Some of the men had never resisted at all, but were, however, doubtful of the legality of the laws ; they were therefore guilty or construc tive treason, as he deemed them guilty of con structive resistance because the laws were con structively the laws of the United States. Why, even Jeffries never preached this. J ridge Lecompte had the language of the Constitu tion to guide him, to tho effect that "treason shall only consist of waging war against the " United States Government, and extending " aid and comfort to her enemies." He had his information from high quarters, through no less a scourcc than a special message of the President of the United States, in Janua ry, 1856, in which the adoption of the Free State Constitution was held to be treason. I tell you that the Constitution of the State of Kansas has been adopted in a manner which may be justified by authority. It may seem strange to you, that alter all the elections nine of the States are ia this Union with Constitu tions adopted in no better way than that of the State of Kansas. I challenge contradic tion upon this subject, because I know what I say and I say it confidently. We have had eighteen new States, seventeen of which were made from Territories of the United States, Texas, being a foreign State. Of these sev enteen, eight were admitted upon Constitu tions f ranied by virtue or an enabling act or Congress. Nine were admitted upon Consti tutions framed by no other authority than that of the people in their primary assemblies. Is thcro any man to contradict this 1 No. If there is, I would like to meet him. Laugh ter. I tell you that the Constitutions or Maine, Vermont, Kentncky, Tennessee, Ar kansas, Iowa, Florida, California and Michi gan, all these had no enabling act or Congress. When they came to adopt a Constitution in Kansas, they did not act unadvisedly. We supposed this old, well known, long-trodden well-beaten track through which nine succes sive States had ' travelled, which we round associated with the names of Washington and Jackson, and of many of the statesmen of the present day, would be wide enough for us. We thought that where nine States had gone through already, there was room enough for the State or Kansas. We round that in the State or Tennessee that process was sanction ed by Washington himself. Cheers. We found that ia the State of Michigan the same course was introduced by Gen. Jackson, and we followed the lead, jogging along until Pre sident Pierce meets us in 18-36, and tells us we are committing treason. Laughter. It is exceedingly fortunate that President Pierce and Caleb Cushing did not live in the enjoy ment of power in the time of Gen. Washing ton, at the time of the question of the admis sion of the State of Tennessee ; or of General Jackson, at the time of the admission of Mi chigan. They would havo had both Washing ton and Jackson arraigned for grand traitors. Laughter. Somebody may say to me, in reply, you arc mistaken, that Constitution of Kansas did not come in by the same authori ty, some of them had an act of the Territorial Legislature. So they had. The Territorial Legislatures, though, have no right to give to or withhold from the people tho authority to form a Constitution. It has been asserted a gain, and again, that the powers of the Legis latures are limited powers. The power te or der a State Constitution is not given to them. The people derive their power from the Con stitution of the United States, which provides that the people may assemble to petition ror a redress or their grievances, and if they deem a Territorial government a grievance, they have the right to petition for admission as a State. But they could not by petition toCon gress be admitted as a State, until they were organized as a State with a Constitution. They must have officers elected and the form of a Constitution, when they apply for admis sion ; they must come ready, like a machine, with buts, bolts and wheels ready to receive the motive power from Congress. Therefore it is proper for the people of the Territory to adopt a State Constitution with an organiza tion all ready. So we ask for admission as a State. Here we arc, a State organization admit us. It could not be denied. How are people to form an organization constitutional ly right, unless they can elect Delegates, a Governor, Judges, and Delegates to Congress, so that tho organizaiion shall be complete, ready to become a State ? In 183o this ques tion arose under General Jackson's Adminis tration. The people of Arkansas desired to bo admitted into the Union. They called up on the Government to summon a special ses sion of the Legislature. Gen. Jackson refer red the matter to the Attorney-General, who at that time was Benjamin F. Butler. An o pinion was rendered, and the qbestion was ta ken on the right of a Territorial Legislature to pass any such laws. Government was in structed to call no special session, for the rea son that tho Legislature had no sort of con trol over the subject, for it was no part of their power, and that all the laws that could be pas sed upon that subject were absolutely void. They then laid, down the principle that the people have power, and that the Legislature have not, cheers, and that the people derive their power from the Constitution ; that they may form a Constitution, and that the Consti tution is just as good without an act of the Legislature as with it; in other words, that it derives all its power from the people, and not from an act of the Territorial Legislature. Cheers. Then in the case of the State of Michigan, the case was reviewed upon this same point, and Mr. Buchanan arose in his place in the Senate and said that the Territo rial Legislature had no power, but that the power was in the people, and no man ventured to state a contrary opinion. Thus, in fact, the whole of the Senate of tho United States de clared, through Mr. Buchanan, who was its mouthpiece upon this subject, that the whole power or forming a Slate Constitution in the Territories rests with the people alone, and that all the acts ot the Territorial Legislature are nugitory and void. Thus, the Free-State Constitution framed at Topcka lias all, all the authority required, as it is given by the action of the. people. Cheers. All that has ever given vitality to any State Constitution has given vitality to the Topeka Constitution ; but, fctrange to say, there arc men who call this exercise or a constitutional right treason. This thing is susceptible of still farther ex planation, but I shall be compelled to go to another branch of the subject. I now desire to call your attention to the remedy Loud applause. You know what the remedy should bo in tho political bearing of this question. I now speak of the condi tion of our people, and I scarcely know how to broach it. You have seen that civil war now exists in Kansas. For months it has been waged upon us, but it has now became recip rocal. The men of our Territory who were restrained by. prudential considerations lor months have broken all hounds. Thev had endured thia rapine and outrage beyond all human belief. During the time that the Bor der Ruffians were encamped upon the Waker usa, investing Lawrence, there was a desire on the part of the people of Lawrence to at tack their camp ; but tho leaders discouraged the attempt. But soon after tho murder of Barber, it was with the greatest difficulty that the men could be restrained ; and a secret arrangement was made on the part of some of the men, by which they determined to go out and attack tho camp on their own hook Ap plause. So exasperated, and justly exasper ated, were the men at the outrages which had been committed, that it was with tho greatest difficulty that the leaders were enabled to res train them after the discovery or the plot. Previous to tho sacking of Lawrence, when it was supposed that a contest was impending in relation to lhe arrest of prisoners, the ques tion was mooted in private counsel whether those prisoners who were sought to be arres ted should remain there and resent the attemp ted arrest, and make a fight at tlia time, or whether they should disappear. L'pon consul tation it was found that ammunition and pro visions were scarce, and that a successful re sistance to those outrages could not be made even then the people were dissatisfied. And subsequently when the sacking of Liwrence took place, and the Committee of Safety had determined not, to havo a contest, the people were again dissatisfied. They required the Committee of Safety to resign. It was only after a new Committee came to the same de termination that the people finally submitted. Since that time outrage had been piled upon outrage ; the leaders, whoso prudent counsels prevented them from coming into collision be fore, were taken from them ; the people hav ing borne till forbearance could last no longer and finally seeing the meshes closing around them, seeing fort after fort, blockhouse after blockhouse, erected in their midst, and see ing Southern troops supported in part by the border counties and in part by the Free-State inhabitants coming into their midst, and see ing the Missouri River blockaded against the entrance of Free-State emigrauts seeing all this preparation going on with a view of exter minating the Free-State men, they could bear no longer. They saw the mangled and bloody corpses strewn over the prairies they saw their houses in flames they saw idle fields, uncultivated because they had been deprived of the means of tilling them they saw Win ter clo3o upon them, threatening them with the horrors of starvation ; they became des perate, and anticipated the conflict by strik ing tho first blow Protracted cheering. Tho first blow of this occasion, but not until after they had lcen beaten to the earth by the blows ol '54, '35 and '5G. They recaptured some of the arms of which they had been despoiled in the sack ol Lawrence; they recaptured some of the arms and ammunitions they drove from their forts two parties of those Southern bravos and now the whole western border of Missouri is teeming with prcpar tion to crush out the Free-State men from the Territory of Kausas and I tell you when that shall be, when that Missouri army shall march upon the soil of Kansas, and crush out that lit tle band of sturdy and desperate patriots amid the flames of houses and the shrieks of women the last hope of Freedom will die with them t Voices Never! never! When that little and is destroyed, when again can we expect to fill that country with such another body of men so well prepared for their defense as they are now ? No body of emigrants could W sent but what would be met at the threshold. Now is the only time to save tho Territory by saving and sustaining the men who are now on its soil Protracted cheers. They must lie saved or all must be given up and lost. Sen sation. The last hope of Freedom in the far West is with them. If you will save them you will save Kansas; but if you allow them to be submerged, Kansas and all the territory behind it is lostto Freedom, and is lost to free white labor, and dedicated to the blighting in fluence of negro slavery white slavery exists there already but white slavery w "uh human freedom will both be drowned in the blood of the defenders of the latter, and its soil will le a dark and gloomy waste. Now what is the remedy 7 voice Elect Fremont. Cheers. I have made up my mind, fellow citizens, as to what the remedy is, and 1 proclaimed that opinion last Spring, as soon as I was enabled to tread the soil of a Free State, and that opin ion I give you. I say here, that unless men arc raised and put upon the soil of Kansas, supported, sustained and fed there, she will bo lost. A voice "that's it" applause Men must be sent there men who are willing to defend themselves able to defend themsel ves, prepared to defend themselves, and de termined to defend themselves. Enthusias tic cheers. We want no preponderance of men, for experience has shown that when our people have met Missourians in equal numbers the contest is not doubtful. Tho Free State men ask no odds of the invaders, but a free field, if it must be settled in that way, and a fair and even fight Prolonged cheers. Long, patiently, meekly and forliearingly have they suffered these wrongs, in tile hope of avoiding this violence ; but this contest of violence has been long on one sido ; and if it must be mu tual, it should be met as men should meet it Cheers. The remedy is to put men on that -soil. They cannot be put there without be ing fed. If yon send 3,000 men there you will have to feed them. With the fields un cultivated and provisions scarce, the advent of 3,000 men into that Territory unprovided for, would be tho means of not only starving themselves but starving those already there. They must take a year's provisions with them or they must be lurnishcd with a year's pro visions. The question is now presented to the people of the North. When every Wind from the west brings news of battles, of slaugh ter and of murder when preparations most ex tensive are going on in the Border Counties of Missouri when iittlammatory appeals are distributed over the Border to secure acces sions to their numbers when the army of tho invaders is again marching against your breth ren in Kansas who are standing up for your cause as well as their own fighting the bat tles or the North and the West of the free white laborers who are periling their all upon this issue. I say the question is now presen ted t yon whether you will allow them to go down in blood, or whether you will go and save them and the cause you represent. This cannot be done without a sacrifice and a sac rifice too which you will feel, if every man in this house were to give one-tenth part of what the settlers on the soil have given, tho matter would be settled at once. n lves there have given their husbands children have given their fathers, men have given their lives men have poured out freely all their worldly substance, and are now ready to give their lives, vhat, then, will their brethern give to sustain them in this cause 7 Now is the time. It might as well not be given at all as to be given when the battle is lost. Then give freely if you would aid this cause. On last Friday, the 5th, the Mt. Vernon Ho tel at Cape Island, which is said to have been the largest house in the country, was destroy cd by fire, and sad to relate, six persons per isced in the flames, viz Mr. Cain, the lessee, his swo sons, two daughters, and the house keeper, Mrs. Albertson. A collision occurred on the N. York Central Railroad on tho 5th, by which six men were scalded to death. gaftsntatt's f flimtal ' It X S. 1i. ROW, Editor and PnorRiETort. CLEAUFIELD, PA., SEPT. 10, 1856. People's National Ticket. for rrtKSinnsT, JOHN C. F R E M ONT, OP CALIFORNIA. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, WILLIAM L. DAYTON, OK SEW JERSBV. Union State Ticket. CASAI. COMMISSIONER, THOMAS K. COCHRAN, of York Ca. AUPITOR GENERAL, DARWIN PHELPS, of Armstrong Co. M'RVEVOR GF.XKRAI., BARTHOLOMEW LAPORTE, of Bradford Co. Union District Ticket. FOR CONGRESS, JAMES S. MYERS, of Venango County. Assembly, JOHN M. CHAPE, of Woodward Township. . Subject o the decision of the Representative con ference of this district J Union County Ticket. " Prothonotary, THOMAS ROSS, of Pike Township. Asrociato Judges. BENJAMIN SPACKMAN. of Clenrfield bor. ARTHUR BELL, of Bell Township. Register and Recorder. JOHN ADAMS, of Boggs Township. Commissioner. WILLIAM W. CATHCART, of Tike tp. Surveyor. PETER LAMM, of (Jirard Township. Auditor. WILLIAM HOOVER, of Bradford Township. THE DISUNION" SHRIEKERS. The burden of nearly every speech and edi torial of the Buckaneer presses and orators is "Disunion !" the Black Republicans will sev er the Union ! the election of Fremont will be the knell of the Union ! and so on through the whole chapter one everlasting cry of dis union ! until we aro forced to believe that with them "the wish is father to the thought!" Is this saying too much t We think not, for these traitors to tho Union and violators of constitutional rights threaten to dissolve the Union if Fremont is elected. This threat is made openly at tho South, but more covertly at the North, but everywhere it is dwelt upon in a way to bring about the very object these hypocrites pretend to deprecate. Snpposc, for instance, that Fremont is elected, how will these men appear before their fellow citizens? Are they the traitors their speeches and wri ting indicate them to be 1 Do they intend to make gvd their predictions, by fighting a gainst their country ? If they do not intend to submit to Fremont's government, in the event of his election, they are in so many words declaring that tho majority shall not rule, and they aro as vile traitors to the Union and the country as ever saw the sun. If they do intend to submit, then they are arrant hyp ocrites who are willing to weaken the ties which hold us together, for the purpose of car rying a political object. In any view of the case, they are enemies to the welfare of tho country, and deserve the detestation of all true patriots. If Fremont is elected President, he will take his scat and administer the govern ment, and no set of men, or party, will dare resist tho constituted authorities. - A few weeks since we published extracts from speeches or a number of prominent Lo cofocos, expressing strong Disunion sentU ments. We can now add the views of another distinguished Democrat on the same subject. Tho arc those of the brave and intrepid Pres ton S. Brooks, as expressed recently at Colum bia, South Carolina, on the occasion of a pub lic reception and the presentation of a pitcher, goblet and cane to him for his "chivalrous de votion" to tho South. He referred to his as sault upon Mr. Sumner, which he considered "the result or a high sense or duty," and said "it was strange that the castigation or a black guard has raised such wide-spread excitement from Maine to Texas" just such languago as one could expect to come from a ruffian like Brooks. After indulging in abuse of this character, Brooks uses the following language, which is copied from the Columbia South Car olinian, a paper whose orthodoxy dare not be disputed by any of its Locofoco brethren : "As to his own position, he was now as he was in 1851, a co-operation disunionist. He thought it best to dissolve the government un der which we now live. But in doing this. there was a difference of opinion as to the means to be employed. He believed that something was duo to our sister Southern States, who had the same interests at stake as we that we should be prepared to act with them and to wait on them. When, in his speech of resignation, he said that it was in bis power to begin revolution, he made no idle boast. He was not egotistical enough to ucneve mat no wiciaca intellectual power cnougn lor tne task; but what he meant was, that had he, during the debate on his expul sion, walked up and slapped the faco or the prominent man or the Black Republican par ty, a storm wouia nave Deen raised which would have ended only in the hall of the House being drenched in blood. (!) "In coming next to the subject of the Pres idency, he felt, in view or the politics or some of his hearers that he was touching upon a aeucate question, iie wouia not, however, hesitate to declare his opinion plainly and frankly. That had ever been his habit and so long as he had intelligence enough to con ceive opinions, he would have the manhood to declare them. He was Tor Mr. Buchanan, and ho thought it the duty of tho people of this State to aid in the election or that c-pnt Io nian. . . . Mr. Buchanan, although not unex ceptionablc, was an able, dignified and conser vativ statesman, and he entertained not a doubt but that if elected ho would be faithful to the Constitution and the South. . Moreover, w should sunDort bim. because he stands pledged to .a platform of principles which, if carried out in the proper spirit, must com mand our approbation. 'Soon, said he, the great question of the Presidency would be settled, and if on the second Mondav of November next it shall be found that Fremont is elected, he thought our course was plain. It was his deliberate opin ion that we should then, on the 4th March nexi, march Jo IVashineton, seize the archives and the treasury of the Government, and leave the conse quences to God." Everybody knows who Preston S. Brooks is, that he is a Locofoco and in ravor or Buchan an, and the above is the plain and unmistakc able manner in which he avows himself a dis- unionist. Can any doubt exist as to what par ty the disunionists belong to 1 Brooks is an other witness on this point. But we arc willing to leave every candid and reasonable man draw his own conclusions after reading the forego ing extracts. If such sentiments were uttered by any member of our party, the most pierc ing shrieks of "disunion" would be heard from every Locofoco orator in Pennsylvania, and not a journal belongs to that party that would not herald the cry from one end of our State to the other. INTENSE EXCITEMENT! On last Saturday evening, the loungers on the street-corners or our usually quiet town wcro thrown into a state of fermentation by the appearance of a number of glaring hand bills. At once concluding that an animal or some other kind of 'show" was about visiting our borough, we approached one of these "posters," when we read the following start ling announcement. We give it literally. "THE TWO BIGLERS ARE HERE! The friends of Buchanan and Breckexridge, the Constitution and the Union, are requested to meet at the Court House on Monday eve ning, Sept. 8th. Ex-Gov. Eiler, of California, AND OUR OWN BIGLER, Will address the people of Clearfield county on that occasion, on the important topics of the approaching election." There it is ! the whole bill. Alter reading it, no one will be snrprised that an excitement should be produced. We heard it remarked, that the announcement of Barnum, in the days of his humbugging glory, that "the Scotch Brothers are in Town," to which the whole of the present affair bears a striking resemblance, could not have possibly produced a more pro found sensation ! And in order that "the whole world and the rest or mankind" should be frilly made acquainted with the highly im portant intelligence that "The two Biglers are Here !" the precaution was taken to stick up, on Sunday, one or more of tho above interest ing notices on the ground where the camp meeting was in progress, as well as an occa sional one along the road. We think that all that was wanting to make the effect of the an nouncement magnificently impressive was the following spirited appeal of a Southern editor : Blow the fuzzy guzzy, Sound the hewgag, Let the loud bosannah ring; Smite the tomjohn. AVhack the duicfuzzy. And permit niircelluuious things to rip generally." We think the editor of the Republican should thank us ror the suggestion, as such a bril liant "appeal" would doubtless have produced an effect that could only !iavc been eclipsed by such a one as was made by "our own Big ler," a rew years since, to certain individual families in this county. At the time indicated by the notices, we wended our way to the Court House. The President or the Club, who, by the by, is our esteemed down-town "neighbor," remarked that this was a regular meeting or the "Buck" club, but as it was expected that Ex-Gov. Big ler, of South Carolina, the president was con siderably flustered, but succeeded in correct ing himself, and said f California, and "our own Bigler," would address the people then and there convened, it might be well enough to ap point some rdditional officers, which was done. A committee was then selected to wait upon the distinguished gentlemen, who were soon brought in and exhibited. Tho California Ex Gov. was first paraded. He was strongly im pressed with the importance ot the present contest, and was wonderfully exercised for the integrity of tho Union, which he thought was in danger, and over which he had cogitated in the silent watches of the night. lie then struck up that "same old tune" ol Fremont being a sectional candidate, alter which he showed just "as clear as mud" that it was not designed by tho fathers of the Republic that slavery should be abolished, and that whilst at that time the South wag favoring the abolition of the slave trade, Northern men were oppo sing it. He then gave a very learned disqui sition on the inferiority of the negro, and the superiority of the Saxon and Celtic races that the law degraded no man, but natural pre judice would not permit us to associate with them ; and was fearful that slavery would be abolished, and that 3 millions of northern freemen would have to give up their homes for so many liberated slaves ! Wc don't know of any class of men that wishes to mix up the ra ces, unless it is the Locofoco politicians who are desirous of bringing the negroes into our Northern territories in the capacity of slaves One thing is certain, the Republican party is opposed to interfering with slavery they wish to leave it undisturbed where it exists and the only men that we know who want to abolish it, are such as Lloyd Garrison, who now favors the election of Buchanan, because in it he' sees a chance of having the Union dissolved. The speaker next touched on the Kansas question, and the Toombs' Pacification hll. Though he admitted that Southern slavery -extension organizations, a3 well as Northern Aid Socie ties, were to some extent chargeable with the difficulties in Kansas, ho afterwards tried to make it appear that Massachusetts speculators were responsible for the whole of them. This is about in keeping with his story that Fre mont had been "born twice." He referred to a hair-brained youth committing "a gross out rage," "a grievous wrong" upon Mr. Sumner, language that he dare not use in Brooks' State, notwithstanding he endeavored to create fte impression that freedom of speech, or the free expression of opinion, was not restricted He said Brooks and Keits were not re-nomma. ted, but be omitted to state that they had been re-elected since their resignation. He alluded to the difficulty in the U. S. Senate between Fremont and Foote, charging the former with being tho aggressor. Now, if any one will re fer to the public prints at the time of the oc currence, we care not if they are Democratic papers, he will find that Mr. Foote struck Mr. Fremont, and drew blood, and that the inter ference of friends arrested matters at that point,without there being any aggression from Mr. Fremont. But we have neither time nor space to follow him in all his tortuosities. Ho finished by saying that what he bad spoken could be relied on that it was all true as gos pel, and no mistake. That is, howevei, a mat ter that people will form their own opinions about, and if any should scu fit to differ from the speaker on this point, we trust he will not think hard or it we feel sure he won't whon he ascertains that the honest and respectable citizens of this county consider it an insult to their intelligcnco to intimato that they aro verdant enough to be gulled by the fictions and absurd stories of an unscrupulous politi cian ! The California Bigler's speech was long ; but notwithstanding the lateness of the hour, "our oxn Btgler" was called out. After set tling to his own entire satisfaction a contested point between his brother and himself about Dunn's Kansas bill, he remarked that the for mer had left him nothing to work upon tluit he had gone over tho whole question. He could not understand how a politician liko hi. brother should refer to but two or the candi dates that he had not named "Sam," an in dividual, ho jocularly remarked, from whom they had both heard so effectually, lie then drifted out and wandered over the agitated waves of the slavery question, taking about the same track that the former speaker did contending thai there was no danger that Kan sas would be a Slave State, and became quite eloquent over his own adherence to tho L'nion. He did not believe Fillmore would get a sin gle electoral vote that it was expected to elect Fremont by a plurality vote and then made some calculations that sounded very nice. Iudeed, we at one time thought ho would make out the returns, and thus save tho nation the trouble of holding an election at all. We were near forgetting to mention that at an early hour ot the exhibition a delegation from Curwcnsville was announced, and was very ceremoniously received. They carried a transparency which, besides tho raottos, had a picture which puzzled every one who at tempted to guess what it was. One wag tho't it was a type of some nondescript species that wonld mystify any naturalist. It was ascer tained finally, however, that it was intended for an eagle. The delegation, we believe, was under the command of our friend, "Corporal Rote," who boro a queer-looking flag, such an one as would havo been denounced by the Locofocos as an evidence that they wished to dissolve tho Union, if it had been carried by tho Opposition. The meeting was kept up till "the witching hour of night," when it ad journed, aud now is numbered among the "wonderful" things that were. The last Clearfield Republican uses the fol lowing language in speaking of the Union can didate for Surveyor General : Laporte is a pet of Dave Wilmot, and Is as full of niggerism as his master." Any one would snppose from this languago that the Democratic leaders had always enter tained a strong aversion to "Dave Wilmot" and his "niggerism." A reference to the rec ord may, therefore, be refreshing, and will serve to brighten up "our neighbor's" memo ry. By turning to the public journals, it will be seen that on the 13th day of January, 1847, resolutions were introduced into our State Legislature, instructing the U. S. Senator from Pennsylvania to rote in favor of the Wil ttot Proviso, the author of which is tho same "Dave Wilmot" to whom the Republican re fers, and among those who supported the reso lutions will be found tho names of Senator Bigler, Timothy Ives, and other prominent Locofocos! And yet this same "proviso" is about the amount of tho "niggerism," of Mr. Wilmot, of whom the editor of the Republican now speaks so contemptuously, and at whom he turns up his nose so snecringly ! Isn't it queer that "men change, principles never V West Ovek. On Sunday, Mr. Jas. Wat son, of Grahamton, returning from Camp meeting in a buggy with Miss M. J. Irwin, of Lawrence township, and whilst descending tho hill on this side ol GoodfeHow's bridge, was precipitated down tho embankment, it being very dark at the time. The buggy fell on both the occupants, and it was w ith much difficulty that Miss Irwin was extricated. She was brought to town, and a physician immediately called in. On examination it was found that no bones were broken, though she had receiv ed some severe bruises. Mr. Watson, we be lieve, was but slightly bruised. The borso was not injured, though the embankment over which they went was at least 10 or 12 feet,and altogether perpendicular. Kansas. St. Louis, Sept. 5. Advices from Kansas, believed here to be reliable, state that a battle was fought at Ossawatomie on tho morning of the 30th ult., between a party of 800 Pro-slavery men under Capt. Reed, and about the same number of Frec-soilers under Capt. Brown. The fight continued for an hour, when the Free-soilets were routed with a loss of twenty killed and several wounded. Capt. Brown and his son are both reported among the killed. Five Pro-slavery men were also wounded. All the provisions and ammunition wcro carried away and tho town burned. Gov ernor Geary has arrived here and proceeds im mediately to Kansas. TTTT