i ( - . mii- "- -ILL! ' ." ' ' ' "' " ' YOL. 3.-NO. 5. :BY; S. B. EOV". CLEARFIELD, "WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1856. WHY COMEST THOU NOT ! BT JIYRSHA EGERTOS. Why comest thou not ? The flowers are springing In the mossy dells, where the Fairies sleep ; The low soft zephyr sweet music is bringing. The bright birds are roaming the "upper deep." It is joyous morn, all nature is blushing 'Neath the ardent gaze of a warm spring sun; The sombre clad earth, with beauty is flushing. As she feels his warm kiss ; my sad heart alone Pineth for joy : my lone offering, a tear, , Palls 'mid spring roses, for thou art not here. Why eon) est thou not? The light dew is falling On the wavy grass 'neath the old elm trees ; Up 'mid the scant leaves, the sad bird is calling Her absent loved one the musical breeze, Like a lute1 of the silver-lined clouds, is breathing, That floats round the throne of their shadowy king Of a southern sky, where beauty is wreathing Summer's rich brow, with the roses of spring. . 'Tis the hour of eve, the bright sun is sleeping On his gorgeous couch of snowflakes and gold ; Up mid the light clouds the pale stars are peeping, And softly the moonlight the forests enfold. All nature is blooming Hope's leaflets are sere, Life is still lifeless for thou art not here. VThy comest thou not? The midnight is bringing The storm-clouds of life, to ccrshadow my home ; The sunlight of joy from my fond heart is winging Its sad mournful exit, for thou hast not come; Thou hast not come! O, why this delaying? Am I not wholly and fondly thine own ? Do I not weep for thee am I not praying For thee.my cherished one.yctthou hast not come! Thou hast not coine ; alas for my calling. It brings not thy light step, or love's low tone ; My sun is all rayless, life's shadows are falling AroUnd my low pathway for thou hast not come. JOHN TAYLOR, The Timon of the Backwoods Ear and Pulpit. BT CHARLES 3U1IMERFIELD. I can never forget roy first vision of John Taylor. It was in the Court House at Lewis burg, Canway county, Arkansas, in the suni-mer;-of 1833. The occasion itself possessed terrible inter est. A vast concourse of spectators had as sembled to witness the trial of a young and beautiful girl, on an indictment for mnrder. The Judge waitedat the moment for the Sher iff to bring in his prisoner, and the eyes of the impatient multitude all centered on the door; when suddenly a stranger entered, whose ap pearance riveted universal attention. Here is his portrait a figure tall, lean, sin ewy and straight as an arrow ; a face sallow ; trillions, and twitching incessantly with ner vous irritability ; a brow broad, soaring, mas sive, seamed with wrinkles, but not from age for he was scarcely forty, eyes reddish yel low, like the wrathful eagle as bright and pier ang ; and finally, a month with lips of cast Iron, thin, curled, cold and sneering, the in tense, expression of which looked the living embodiment of an unbreathed curse. He was Labited in a suit of new buck-skin, ornamen ted after the fashion of Indian costume, with hues of every color of the rainbow. Elbowing his way slowly through the crowd, and apparently unconscious that he was regar ded as a phenomenon, needing explanation, this singular being advanced, and, with the haughty air of a king ascending the throne, Bcated himself within the bar, thronged as it was with the disciples of Coke and Elackstone, several of whom, it was known, esteemed themselves as far superior to those old and fa in ous masters. The contrast between the outlandish garb nnd disdainful countenance of the stranger,ex- cited, especially, the risibillity of the lawyers ; and the junior members began a suppressed tjttcr, which grew louder, and soon swept a found the circle. They doubtless supposed the intruder to be some wjld hunter of the mountains, who had never before seen the interior of a hall of jus tice. Instantly the cause and object of the laughter perceived jt, turned his head gradu ally, so as to give each laugher a look, his lips curled with a killing smile of infinite scorn ; his tongue protruding through his teeth, lite rally writhed like a serpent, and ejaculated its sap-like poison in a single word. "Savages !" No pen can describe the defiant force which be threw into that term ; no pencil can paint the infernal furore of his utterance, although it hardly exceeded a whisper. But he accent ed every letter as if it were a seperate emis sion oT fire that scorched his quivering lips; laying horrible emphasis on S both at the be ginning and end of the word. a "SavageS !" It was the growl of a red Tiger in the hiss of a Rattle-snake. . "Savages !" The general gaze, however, was immediate ly diverted by the advent of the fair prisoner who then came in surrounded by her gnara. Tho apparition was enough to drive a saint piad. For hers was a style of beauty to be wilder the tamest imagination, and melt the coldest heart, leaving in both imagination and heart a gleaming picture, enamelled in fire -tw fixed in a frame of goia irom iuo au It was the spell of an enchantment to be felt . wll a. neen. You might feel it in me nasu of her countenance, clear as a sunbeem, bril--r:-. ;. rnntour of her fea- uaui as m t " . . , . mrical as if cut by the chisel of n 4i,t ? in her hair of rich auburn ringlets flowing without a braid, softer than silk, finer than eossamer : in the eyes, blue as tho lieav en of southern summer, large, liquid, beamy ; t .r.,i swimming, like the eentle waftures of a bird's wing in the sunny air; in the figure, slight, etherial, sylph's or a seraph's; and more than all, in tho everiasi ". c;ia r.f hi nutr i?n. so arched, so se lilr atai-llotit and vet DOSSeSSing mt rsrwer of magic or of magnetism to thrill the As the unfortunate girl, so tasteful dressed, so incomparable as to personal charms, calm and smiling, took her place before the bar of her J udge, a murmur of admiration arose from the multitude, which, the prompt interposi tion of the court, by a stern order of ''silence" could scarcely repress from swelling to a dea fening roar. The Judge turned to the prisoner: "Emma Miner, the court has been informed that your counsel,. Col. Linton, is sick. Have you em ployed any other V She answered in a voice as sweet as the war ble of the nightingale, and clear as the song of the skylark : "My enemies have bribed all the lawyers even my own to be sick ; but God will defend the innocent !" At this response, so touching in its simple pathos, a portion of the auditors buzzed ap plause, and the rest wept. On tho instant, however, the stranger, whose appearance had previously excited such mer riment, started to his feet, approached the pri soner, and whispered something in her ear. She bounded six inches from the floor, uttered a piercing shriek ; and then stood trembling as if in the presence of a ghost from eternity ; while the singular being, who had caused her unaccountable emotion, addressed the court, in his sharp ringing voice, sonorious as the sound of bell-metal. "May it please your honor, I will assume the task of defending the lady." "What!" exclaimed the astonished Judge, "are you a licensed attorney ?" ."Thc question is irrelevant and immateri al," replied the stranger with a venomous sneer, "as the recent statute entitles any per son to act is counsel at the request of a party." "But does the prisoner request it ?" inquir ed the Judge. "Let her speak for herself," said the stran ger. "I do," was the answer, as a long drawn sigh escaped, that seemed to rend her very heart strings. The case immediately progressed ; and as it had a tinge of romantic mystery, we will epi tomize the substance of the evidence. About twelve months before the defendant had arrived in the village, and opened an es tablishment of millinery. Residing in a room connected with her shop, and all alone, she prepared tho articles of her trade with unwea ried labor and consumate taste. Her habits were secluded, modest and retiring, and hence she might have hoped to avoid notoriety, but the perilous gift of that extraordinary beauty, which too often, and to tho poor and friendless always proves a curse. She was soon sought after by all those fire flies of fashion, the pro fession of whose life, everywhere, is seduction and ruin. But the beautiful stranger rejected them all with unutterable scorn and loathing. Among these rejected admirers was one of a character from which the fair milliner had ev- ervthin-r to fear. Hiram Shore belonged to a famiiy, at once opulent, influential nnd dissi patcd. ne was himself licentious, brave and lerociously revengeful the most lamous duel ist of the southwest. It was generally known that he had made advances to win the favor of the lovely Emma, and had shared the fate of all other wooers a disdainful repulse. At 9 o'clock on Christmas night, r37, the people of Lewisburg were startled with a loud scream, as of one in mortal terror ; while fol lowing that, with scarcely an interval, came successive reports of fire arms., one, two, three a dozen deafening roars. They flew to the shop of the milliner, whence the sound pro ceeded, pushed back the unfastened door, and a scene of horror was prcscnt3d. There she stood in the centre of the room, with a revol ver in each hand, every barrel discharged, her features pale, her eyes flashing wildly, but her lips parted with a fearful smile. And there at her feet, weltering in his warm blood, his bo som literally riddled with bullets, lay the all dreaded dualist, Hiram Shore, gasping in the last agony. Ho articulated but a single sen- . - - i j tence : "Tell my mother that 1 am aeaa anu gone to hell !" and instantly expired. "In the name of God, who did this 7" ex claimed the appalled spectators. "I did it," said tho beautiful milliner, "I did it to save my honor !" As may readily be imagined, the deed cau sed an intense sensation, ruunc opinion, however, was divided. The poorer classes, crediting the girl's version of the facts, lauded her heroism in terms of measureless eulogy But the' friends of the deceased, and of this .nii,v fnmilv. eave a different and darker color to the affiair, and denounced the lovely homicide as an atrocious criminal. Unfortu nately for her, the officers of the law, especi ally the judge and sheriff, were devoted com rades of the slain, and displayed their feelings in a revolting partiality. The judge commit ted her without the privilege of bail, and the sherifl chained her in tho felon's dungeon ! Such is a brief abstract of the circumstan ces developed in the examination of witnes ses. The testimony closed and the pleading began. First of all, three advocates spoke in sue im prosecution ; but neither their cession ivi f .,mMn(ir their arguments aro worth preser- Tln-. Orators of the blood and thunder genius ..miallr partitioned tneir nownng eloquence betwixt tne prisons u uvi robed counsel, as if in doubt who of the twain was then on trial. As for the stranger, he seemed to pay not tho slightest attention to the opponents, but remained motionless, with his forehead bowed on his hands, like one buried in deep thought or slumber. When the'proper time came, however, he suddenly sprang to his feet, crossed the bar, j and took his place almost touching the jury. ne then commenced in a whisper, but it was a whisper so mild, so clear, so unutterably ringing and distinct, as to fill the hall from door to galleries. At the outset he dealt in pure logic, separating and combining the pro ven facts, till the whole mass of confused ev idence looked transparent as a globe of glass, through which the innocence of the client shone, brilliant as a sunbeam ; and the jurors nodded to each other signs of thorough con viction; that thrilling whisper, and fixed con centration, and the - language, simple as a child's, had convinced all. He then changed his posture, so as to sweep the bar with his glance, and began to tear and rend his legal adversaries. His sallew face glowed as a heated furnace ; his eyes resem bled living coals, and his voice became the clangor of a trumpet. I have never, before or since, listened to such murderous denun ciations. It was like Jove's eagle charging a flock of crows ; it was like Jove himself hurl ing red-hot thunder-bolts among the quaking ranks of a conspiracy of inferior gods ! And yet in the highest temper of his fury, he seemed calm ; he employed no gesture save one the flash of a long, bony forefinger direct in the eyes of his foes. He painted their ve nality and unmanly meanness, in coalescing for money to hunt down a poor friendless wo man, till a shout of stifled rage arose from the multitude, and even some of the jury cried Shame !' ne changed his theme once more. His voice grew mournful as a funeral song, and his eyes filled with tears, as he traced a vivid picture of man's cruelties and woman's wrongs with particular illustrations in the case of his client, till one half of the audience wept like children. But it was in the peroration that he reached his zenith, at once, of terror and sublimity. His features were livid as those of a corpse ; his very hair seemed to stand on end; his nerves shook as with a palsy he tossed his hands wildly toward heaven, each finger stretched apart and quivering like the flame of a candle, as he closed with the last words of the deceased Hiram Shore 'Tell my mother that I am dead and gone to hell !' His emphasis on the word hell embod ied the acme and ideal of all horror ; it was that wail of immeasurable despair. No lan guage can depict tho effect on us who heard it. Men groaned, females screamed, and one poor mother fainted and was born away in convul sions. The whole speech occupied but an hour. The jury rendered a verdict of 'Not Guilty,' without leaving the box, and three cheers, like successive roars of an earthquake, shook the old coart house from dome to corner-stcne, testifying the joy of the people. After the adjournment, which occurred near sunset, the triumphant advocate arose and gave out an appointment : I will preach in this hall to-iight, at 8 o'clock.' ne then gli ded off through the crowd, speaking to no one, though many attempted to draw him into a conversation. At eight o'clock the court house was again thronged, and the stranger according to prom ise, delivered his sermon. It evinced the same attributes as his previous eloquence of the bar ; the same burning vehemence, and in creased bitterness of denunciation. Indeed, misanthropy revealed itself as the prominent emotion. The discourse was a tirade against infidels, in which class the preacher seemed to include everybody but himself; it was picture of hell, such as Lucifer might havo drawn, with a world in flames for his pencil. But one paragraph pointed to heaven, and that only demonstrated the utter impossibility that any human being should ever get there. "Birds of a Feather Flock Together.". The truth of the above adage has been singu lar'.y proven by the report from New Hamp shire that ex-Gov. Hubbard, the only surviving member of the famous Hartford Convention is stumping that State for James Platform Bu chanan. The Hartford Convention was a I ed cral Assembly, Gov. Hubbard a blue light Federalist, and James Buchanan an old Fed eralist also ; and of course they will support each other, if for no other reason than early associations and the glory of the days of auld lang syne." The old Federalists who opposed the war of 1812, now go for Slavery, Cuba. war, and the spoils of office. "Old Buck should surely win now, with the moral and ac tivc influence of the notorious Hartford lon j ,:, frr. TTnrra for "old blue veuiiuu i u uia v. - light Federalism '"Telegraph. Ttis related of Thomas F. Marshall, that a Judee having once fined him thirty dollars for . t r Honrt. he rose and asked the tUUlvuii ' t..j ion him the money as he hadn't it wa no friend present to whom he could so well apply as to his Honor. This was The Judge looked at Tom and a stumper. then at the clerk, and finally said, "Clerk, re s Mr. Marshall's fine; the State is better .via n lla fhirtv dollars than I am.-' aisiv v 9 TTIE BLOODY LAWS OF KANSAS. Freedom of speech and freedom of the Press are guaranteed by the Constitution. The Lo cofoco leaders claim that they wish to sustain the Constitution. Below we give one of the acts of "the bloody code of Kansas." It in fringes upon both the above constitutional rights. And yet Mr. Buchanan and the De mocracy are bound to uphold these laws, which the National Intelligencer says "are a disgrace to the country and its free institutions, and a greater invasion of public liberty than were tho acts which brought the head of Charles I. to the block." The Administration have or dered the entire disposable force of the Army there, to aid the Border Ruffians and Slavery propagandists to enforce these laws at the point of the bayonet, and never to cease until tho Free State Settlers are exterminated by the employment at once of all the power and vigor of the military and the Southern marau ders in that region. The following law was passed by the Border Ruffian Legislature, and is now being enforced upon the doomed people of Kansas at the point of flic bayonet by the United States troops. Read it thoroughly. Jin Act to punish Offences against Slate Property. bee. 1. lie it enacted by the Oovernor and Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Kan sas, That every person, bond or free, who shall be convicted of actually raising a rebellion or insurrection of slaves, free negroes ormulat toes in this Territory Shall Suffer DEATH. Sec. 2. Every free person who shall aid and assist in any rebellion or insurrection of slaves, free negroes or ruulattoes, or shall furnish arms, or do any overt, act in furtherance of such rebellion or insurrection, Shall Suffer DEATH. Sec. 3. If any free person shall, by speak- ixg, writing or prixtixg, advise, persuade or induce any slaves to rebel or conspire against any citizen of this Territory, or shall bring in to, print, write, publish or circulate, or cause to be brought into, printed, written, published or circulated, or shall knowingly aid or assist in the bringing into, printing, writing, pub lishing or circulating in this territory, any book, paper, Magazine, pamphlet or circular, for the purpose ol exciting insurrection on the part of the slaves, free negroes or mulat- toes, against the citizens of the lerritory, or any part of them, such person shall be gcilti OF FELOXT AND SUFFER DEATH. Sec. 4. If any person shall entice, decoy or carry away out of this Territory, any slaves belonging to another, with the intent to de prive the owner thereof of the services ot such slave, oi with intent to effect or procure the freedom of such slave, he shall be adjudged guilty of grand larceny, and on conviction thereof shall suffer DtAlLI, or be impris oned at hard lauor lor not less than ten years Sec. 5. If any person aids or assists in enti cing, decoying, or persuading, or carrying a way or sending out of this Territory any slave belonging to another, with intent to procure or effect the freedom of such slave, or with intent to deprive the owner thereof of the services of such slave, he shall bo adjudged guilty ol grand larceny, and on conviction thereof shall suffer DEA11I, or be imprisoned at hard la bor for not less than ten years. Sec. 6. If any person shall entice, decoy, or carry away out of any State or Territory of the L nitcd Stotcs, any slave belonging to an other, with intent to procure or effect the freedom of such slate, or to deprive the owner tlicreol of the services of such slave, in this Territo ry, he shall be adjudged guilty of grand lar ceny, in the same manner as if such slave had been enticed, decoyed or carried away out of the Territory, and m such case the larceny may be charged to have been committed in any county of this Territory, into or through which such slave shall havo been brought by such person, and on conviction thereof, the person offending shall suffer DEATH, or be imprisoned at hard labor for not less than ten years. Sec. 7. If anv person shall entice, persuade or Induce any slave to escape from the ser vice of his master or owner in this Territory, or shall aid or assist any slave escaping from the service of his master or owner, or shall as sist, harbor or conceal any slave who may have escaped lrom the service of his master or own er. he shall be deemed guilty of felony, and punished by imprisonment at hard labor for not less than fite yeats. Sec. 8. If any person in this Territory shall aid or assist, harbor or conceal any slave who has escaped from the service of his master or owner in another State or Territory, such per son shall be punished in like manner as if such slave had escaped from the service oi ms mas ter or owner in this Territory. Sec. 9. If any person shall resist any officer whilst attempting to arrest any slave that may have escaped from the service of his master or owner, or shall rescue such slave when in custody of such officer or other person who may have such Slave in custody, whether such Slave has escaped from the service of his mas ter or owner in this territory or in any other State or Territory, the person so offending shall be guilty of felony and punished by impris onment at hard labor for a term not less than two vears. Sec. 10. If anv marshal, sheriff, or consta ble, or the deputy of any such officer, shall, when required by any person, refuse to aW or assist in the arrest and capture of any stare that may have escaped from the service of his mas ter or owner, whether such Slave shall have escaped from his master or owner in this Ter ritory or any other State or Territory, such of ficer shall bo fined in a sum of not less than one hundred nor more than five hundred dol lars. Sec. 11. If any person print, write, introduce into, publish or circulate, or cause to bt brought into, printed, written, published or circulated, or snail Knowingly aid or assist tn cringing into printing, publishing or circulating within this Territory, any book, paper, pamphlet, maga zinc, handbill or circular, containing any statement, argument, opinion, sentiment doctrine, advice or inuendo, calculated to produce a dissatisfaction among the slates in this Territory, or to induce such Slaves to escape from the service of their masters, or resist their authority, he shall be guilty of iev osr, and be punished by imprisonment at bard labor for a term not less than pre years, - See. 12. If ant frex person, bt spkakino OR WRJTIJjO, AiJIKT OK MAIKTA1S THAT PMSONS HAVE NOT THE RIGnT TO HOLD territory, ot shall intioduce into this Terri tory, PRINT, PUBLISH, WRITE, CIRCULATE, OR CAUSE TO BE WRITTEN, TRIATtu, riw.-. cracuLATBu in tdis territort, any book, pa per, magazine, pamphlet, or circular, contain- so ANT DENIAL OF THE RIGHT OF PERSONS 1U HOLD SLAVES IN THIS TERRITORY, oin.it i'0""0 shall be deemed guilty of felony, andpunished by imprisonment at hard labor for a term not less than two years. Sec. 13. o person who is conscientious.) opposed to holding of Slave, or vho does not admit-the right to hold Slants in litis territory, shall sit as a Juror on the trial of any prosecu tion for the violation of any of the sections of this act. This act to take effect and be in force from and after the 18th day of Sept. A. D. 18. Signed J. U. Stringfellow, Speaker of the House. Attest, J. M. Lyle, Clerk. Thomas Johnson. President of the Council. Attest, J. A. Halderman, Clerk. IIOURIRLE AFFAIR. McRrERixa and Scalping. Dr. Root, who went out to Kansas with the New Haven com pany, has just returned, via Iowa, having reached New York on the 7th Sept. in com pany with Mrs. Hops, widow of Mr. Hops, who was recently murdered and scalped near Leav enworth Cily. The facts in regard to . that savage murder, as related by Dr. Root, are as follows : Mr. Hops had been in the Territory but a few days. He had hired a Louse in Leavenworth City, with the intention of mak ing that place his home, and was on his return from Lawrence, whither he had taken his wife (who was out of health,) to remain a few days with her brother, the Rev. Mr. Nutc, the Uni tarian clergyman. When he had returued to within about two miles of -Leavenworth City, aud within sight of the residence of Mr. Wal lace, a Free State man, he was met by a Ru ffian on horseback, who inquired where he was from ; and being informed that he was last from Lawrence, the stranger drew a revol ver and shot him through the head. Mr. Hops was in a buggy, and the horse starting along, the murdered man fell to the ground. The Ruffian tprang from his horse, took out bis knife and scalped his victim, when he remoun ted, and putting spurs to his horse, rode rap idly off in the direction of Leavenworth City. This fiendish outrage was witnessed by Mrs. Wallace and her daughter. A teamster in the service of tho United States, drove up and saw the bodv before the pulse had ceased to beat. The name of the savage who perpetra ted this horrid deed, is Fugert, and he is well known in Leavenworth, and belongs to the Ruffian party encamped at that city, under command of Atchison. He had made a bet of ?6 against a pair of boot?, that he would go out and return with an Abolitionist's scalp within two hours. On his return to camp, he obtained his boots, and, then placing the scalp of his victim on the end of a pole, paraded the streets with it, boasting of his prowess; and all this almost within hail of Fort Leavenworth where the United States forces are stationed, under command of Gen. Persifer F. Smith. A German named Eimber, who expressed him self rather freely in regard to this horrible barbarity, was shot dead on the spot, and a nother man, who also reprobated the act, saved his life only by precipitate flight, with pistol-balls whistling freely about his head. On hearing the fate of her husband, Mrs. Hops, in company with her brother, Mr. Nute and about a dozen other citizens of Lawrence, started for Leavenworth to obtain the body of Mr. H., and give it Christian burial. When j near Lawrence the party were captured, and held as prisoners, by a band of ruffians under Capt. Emory, the man of whom nopshad hir ed the horse and buggy. The body of the murdered man had been buried, and the ruffi ans refused the widow the consolation of look ing upon her husband's grave. Seventy dol lars were found in the pockets of the murder ed man, all of which went as funeral expen ses, leaving the disconsolate widow in the hands of the ruffians, without a dollar. She desired to leave the scene of her terrible sor rows. The ruffians at first refused to let her depart, knowing that she would be a swift witness against their savagery ; but she finally succeeded in getting on board a boat bound down the Missouri, the captain of which, out of compassion, protected her, and gave her a free passage to St. Louis. On the boat she related her story, and was tauntingly told by the heartless and ruffianly passengers that she was uttering another "Abolition lie." Among the party who accompanied Mrs. nops from Lawrence to Leavenworth, and who were taken prisoners, was Dr. Avery, an esti mable Quaker gentleman from Richmond, In diana, who went out to Kansas to obtain facts in regard to the actual state of things there, intending to return in a short time. Soliloquy. While walking in the Mall tho other evening we overheard the following so liloquy by an individual who was reclining at his ease on one of the granite ottomans "I wish I was a ghost, blam'd if I don't. They goes wherever they please toll free they don't owe nobody nothing and that's a comfort. Who ever heard tell of a man who had a bill against a ghost T Nobody. They never Tuy hats and wittles, nor licker, nor has to saw wood, and run arrents as 1 do. Their shirts never have to bo washed, nor their trowsers don't get out at the knees as I ever hearn tell on. . Ghosts is the only independent people I knows on I really wish I wai one. Hast If I don't!" - PATBIOTIC. Gen. Houston, in a very eloquent speech, made in the Senate, just before the close of the last session, gave utterance to this truly patriotic sentiment : "They tell me if Fremont Is elected, forty thousand bayonets will bristle about the Capi tol that tli" Soath, in fact, will secede. Mr. President, I scorn the suggestion ! There will be neither bristling bavonets nor secession. If Col. Fremont shall be elected by a majority of the people, though I am not his supporter, I shall respect the majority of the people; and to Col. Fremont, as the Chief Magistrate of their choice, 1 shall pay my respectful homage. It is downright treason for any class of men, North or South, to intimate that in the event of the election of a candidate tcHwhom they are politically opposed,' they'" will take the groundof hostile resistance.- TheA'oice of tho. people deliberately expressed through the bal--lot box, must and will be respected by good,, law-abiding citizens, whatever part of the country they inhabit. If Mr. Buchanan shall be called to the Presidential chair, it will be by the voice of the people. That voice, by tha citizens of the freo States, will be respected; If Col. Fremont is called to this high office, it will also be by the voice of the people, and that voice will be respected by the citizens of the slave States, with the exception of a small, insignificant band of conspirators and diau nionists. PhiVa Sun. AMZHICAN POLITICS. An English paper speaks thus facetiously of Presidential affairs in the United States: "There aro three political parties in the U- nited States the Wooly Heads, and Hard shell Abolitionists, and the Silver Gray Soft Shells. The candidates of these respective parties for the Presidency are Fillmont, Fre chanan, and Buckmore. The Yice-Presiden-cial nominations are Doncnridge, Daytelson, and Breckton. The Fillmont and Doncnridge party arc opposed to the extension of slavery South of Dason & Mixon's line, and are like wise ardent champions of the Tariff principles ofjllarry Webster and Daniel Clay, statesmen still held in grateful remembrance in tbcStates. " The Frcchanan and Daytelson men wish to have the seat of government removed to Kan sas where Horace Greely resides, while tho Buckmore and Breckton party advocate the election of foreigners to office. (This is sup posed to be because offices have been lately so much disgraced by the conduct of those occu pying them, that they wish to keep natives out.) There is a fourth party whote nominee appears to be one Mr. Jessie, but our advices from America do not give us a clear idea of the principles which he represents. To jndgo from the little that we have gleaned we should judge he was a Southern Rights Barnburner. However, no matter what turn affairs may take, the Americans will be sure to have a Presi dent!" London Paper. , An Astonishino Man, Famed throughout the World. New York and London are now the great manufuctuting depots 1 or Holloway'a Pills and Ointment. From number 80 Maiden Lane, this city, and number 244 Strand, Lon don, are sent forth, daily, millions of boxes and pots of these inestimable medicines. The heavy duty imposed by our government upon patent medicines, and the large and constantly increasing sale of Holloway's Pills and Oint ment in this country, determined their propri etor to make this city his residence. Our re publican system of government is also in har mony with the predilections of Professor Hol loway ; and though Kings and Emporcrs have conferred upon him honors and especial favors, these will never be so gratifying to him as the grateful hearts of millions of free citizens, who without any endorsement of sovereign au thority, freely patronize his celebrated rerno dics for the prevention and removal of disease. As a member of the medical faculty, having long witnessed the inefficiency of the profes sion in curing disease, and being familiar with the errors and follies of the profession, we leel it an imperative duty to acquaint the Ameri can public with the arrival of this distinguish ed physician in our city. His fame, in a mea sure, preceded him to our shores, but the ex tent of the good he has done in the world has never yet been proclaimed to an American, public-- Great as his reputation is, it is des tined to increase far beyond that which ever adorned the character of any roan whose pro fession was that of healing the sick. We shall embrace other occasions to explain to the A mcrican people the system, the theory and mode of cure adopted by Professor Holloway. . His Pills and Ointment, the one taken internally, and tho other applied externally, act in har monious conjunction, and if his directions are followed, will eradicate every disease incident to man in all climes. They purify and cleans the body, and restore healthy action to every organ. Our space will not permit ns to eav more at this time respecting this distinguished man and bis celebrated remedies. He has one ambition, and it is an honorable one. He wish es to have the world for a patient ; and he will succeed in his desire. It is our object to ad dress the American public in a series of arti cles, showing conclusively that, in the whole history of medical science, no medicines hava ever been offered for their use which are so ef ficacious in restoring health and preventing disease as those of Professor Holloway. In this series of articles we shall necessarily ex plain much ot the. human system, and thos physiological laws of life controlling our bo dies, both in health and disease.-' The Ameri can public are sufficiently intelligent to judge of their own interests, and it Is no longer in. the power of those styling themselves regular physicians to conceal from them Important trutba concerning thslr health. N.Y.Citi' behOJder's Heart. -