Tin x Jlnftsiniuis f onrnal. v.-. S. B. ROW. Editor asi Pbopiiietop.. CLEARFIELD, PA., OCT. 8, 1S56. - People's national Ticket. FOB PRESIDENT, JOIIX C. F II E M O X T, OP CALIFORNIA. TOR VICE PBESIDE5T,. W I LL I A 31 L. D A Y T O N , OP SEW JERSEY. Union State Ticket. CAXAL COMVISSTOSKR. THOMAS E. COCHRAX of York Co. AmiTOR GENERAL, llARWIN PHELPS, of Armstrong Co. SCBVEVOR KC.VERAL. BARTHOLOMEW LA PORTE, of Bradford Co. Union District Ticket. FOR COVCRF.SS, : JAMES S. MYERS, of Venango County. Asserutilv. JOHN BROOKS, of "Elk Coirnty. Union County Ticket. Prothonotary, THOMAS ROSS, of Pike Township. Associate Judses, ARTHUR BELL, of Bell Township. , Register and Recorder. JOHN ADAMS, of Boggs Township. Commissioner. WILLIAM W. CATHCART, of Pifco tp. Surveyor. . PETEPi LAMM, of riirard Township. Auditor. WILLIAM HOOVER, of Bradford Township. AWOBD IN SEASON. Freemen of Clearfield county ! This is the List piper that will reach you from this office before the October election, and we therefore admonish you to consider well the part you will act on next Tuesday. In this election arc involved Important results. The issues have been presented to yoti from time to time. On ike one-side is a party advocating a policy, or rather a series of policies, which, if carried into effect, would in our opinion prove detri mental to the great vital interests of our coun try, and the welfare and prosperity of our na tion. The extension of slavery over territory consecrated to freedom, is the most prominent of these policies the acquiring of new terri tories, peaceably if we can, but forcibly if we must, is another the reduction of the wages of laboring men to a ruinous standard of pri ces, was -a favoritn theory, of the standard -bearer of this party and a truckling sit,- Jl9faining these views and policies. Will ..you do it t On the hand, we have a'party with sound conservative principles. A firm adherence to the Constitution and the Union, opposition to the extension of the blight of human bondage over free territory, to the acquiring of more territory ly force, to the reduction of wages to a ruinous standard of prices, to the princi ple advocated by the Southern supporters of Buchanan that slavery is not confined to color, and a mair.taiuance of the principle that slave ry is sectional and freedom national, ars views that we think every lover of liberty and Amer ican institutions should entertain, and which we ask the freemen of this Commonwealth to encourage and support, by casting their votes for the Union State Ticket, and lor the Union Congressional and Representative candidates. It will devolve upon our next Legislature to pass a law districting the State and appor tioning the members of the Senate and Lower House. It will also devolve on the next Le gislature to elect a IT. S. Senator in the room of Mr. Brodhead, whose term expires on the 4th March, 1807. The importance of electing the right kind of men to the Legislature, must - therefore be apparent to every one. Freemen ot Clearfield County ! We urge yon once more to turn out next Tuesday and Vote for the Union State Ticket ! Tote for the Union District Tickets ! Vote for the Union County Ticket ! LC02 OTJT FOS LYING PAMPHLETS. There are a number of lying pamphlets in circnlation, intended to injure the prospects of Col. Fremont, and to ad vancc the cause of Buchanan. Among these i3 one entitled "Fremont's Romanism," which for -silliness and falsehood surpasses anything we have ever seen. Mr. Noble, of Wisconsin, in his speech es at Cnrwensvillc and in this place, stated that two weeks before, in answer to his interroga tory, Col. Fremont had declared to him that he was not now, nor never had been a Roman Catholic. And yet men, who pretend to be honorable and honest, persist in circulating what they know to be false. It is also raised as an objection that Cel. Fremont cat mule oup, when he and his men were in a starving condition. Should he at present relish the dish, the writer of the above named pamphlet bad better keep out of his way, for his produc tion shows that he is tho most consummate ass that ever was permitted to run at large. JTkemoxt Meeting at Cuerrttree. On Tuesday, the GOth Sept., a spirited ineetiDg of the friends of Fremont and Dayton was held at Cberrytrcc Borough, Indiana county. .Not withstanding the rain was falling in torrents, the number present amounted to about 500. Lt. Govi Roberts addressed the People in the evening. He was listened to with marked at tention, and was frequently loudly cheered Much enthusiasm was exhibited and the friends of Freedom bavo the brightest prospect of rol ling jip.a hrg vot .in thnt c!kn. "SUBBING TTT THE AHIHALS." It was certainly an interesting sight to wit ness the commotion produced among the clique of politicians, who act as special guar dians over the affairs of James Buchanan Plat form in this town, by the speeches of Lt.Gov. Roberts, Mr. Noble and others, at Curwens ville on the 27th, and in this place on the 29th Sept. During Tuesday and Wednesday, there was a constant 'ran' to the office of our down town neighbor," and it was notoriously ap parent that Roberts and Xoble would receive particular "fits" from these "mighty ones of earth." The Republican had to be kept Kick one day, in order that everything could be properly attended to. In consequence of this detention, public expectation was on tip-toe to hear what would be said, and we acknowl edge that the feeling extended to ourself. At last, Thursday came, and with it the Republi can. Bui, alas ! the mountain that was in la bor, brought forth an insignificant mouse ! instead of the powerful, logical aud erudite criticism which we anticipated the speeches would undergo by so learned, sapient and pro foundly truthful a corps of reviewers, we had to content ourselves with reading a rehash of stale phrases and an indulgence in misrepre sentation, villification and abuse, for which the Republican has become proverbial in this com munity. We do not deem it necessary to refute the many specious statements and perversions of the language of our speakers, which appear in the Republican. We will merely touch one or two. In regard to Mr. Xoble, tho Republican says "To prove that Congress had been in " tho habit of legislating on the sidz of slave " ry in the Territories, he cited an act of Con " gress of '94 or 'OS." Xow, what Mr. Xoble did really attempt to prove was, that Congress had been in the habit of legislating on the ju! jeet of slavery in the territories, and not on the side of it, as stated by the Republican. "Again says the Republican he took the " ground that property is made such by law. " Whereas the reverse is the case. In Pennsylr " vania, negroes or slaves, are not property, " because it is against law to hold slaves." Mr. Xoble held that property was such by universal law, by natural right that negroes, on the other hand, are made property by local or special enactment. Any one can discern the perversion. Such is the trickery resorted to by men who set themselves up as paragons of political honesty. . DECIDEDLY EICH! The Clearfield Republican says that James Buchanan does not 'favor the extension of slavery to Kansas, or anywhere else." Well, if that isn't rich, then we miss our guess. Our down-town "neighbor" shouldn't become facetious about his candidate on a point of this kind, for if his paper should happen to fall in to the hands of Bully Brooks or the editor of the Richmond Enquirer, jt might produce a sensation among the "chivalry" and "first fam- iUu''iiW South, more particularJvJ(il should be aprrtTaiTyti. ..-" wtmtor mgicr, who, in turn, occupies the same interesting relationship towards Mr. Bu chanan, and which might therefore give to our " neighbor's" declaration the appearance of having been made "by authority." At home the joke of the Republican is well understood, and will do no harm, for almost every child knows that the platform, into which James Bu chanan has subsided, is a slavery-extending, as well as a fillibuster-favoring, allair. There might, however, be some "method in his mad ness," and wc shouldn't be surprised if our down-town "neighbor" would next assert that Buchanan was standing on the platform of the Republican party. Out upon such arrant hy pocrisy ! say we. SHOWING THE LONG EABS. We are amused every time we behold the contortions of our down-town "neighbor" at the large number of people at our meetings, which he incessantly labors to disparage. . It is, however, an up-hill business with him, for the honest people trill turn out and hear for themselves, even should he exert himself to keep them away. He well knows that if the questions arc presented in a fair and truthful light, and the position of "ten-cent Jimmy" properly understood, that his cause sutlers. But the most supremely ridiculous thing of all is the attempt the editor of the Republican makes to put on a bold front aud look as if all was right as if he wasn't scared and that he would frighten everybody else. Every time we sec the effort, we are reminded of the fable of the ass who put on the lion's skin and roamed about endeavoring to alarm everything with Lis appearance; but unfortunately when he attempted to roar, he only emitted a bray, and thus revealed his true character. So with our "neighbor" lie tries to look valiant and formidable ; but his constant pitiful whining about our meetings, betrays his real feelings, and shows plainly that he and his party are badly frightened. "What a Wiiopper !" Our down-town "neighbor" says the number of persons pres ent at the Curwehsville meeting did not reach 600. We heard one Loco say there were 800, and another counted 9G8, besides those eating at the different hotels. There is a "whopper" out somewhere, and wc are disposed to think the individual who counted, does not tell it. "Why our neighbor will soon be a match" for a famous and somewhat ancient personage fa miliarly known as "old Xick." - Fire. On last Thursday evening, as Mr. John Troutman was heating some Japan var nish, in his unfinished house, the material ig nited, and in a moment the whole room was in a blaze. By immediately closing the door, and then dashing water on the fire, he suc ceeded in extinguishing it without its doing any other damage than breaking the glass in the windows and charring some of the wood work. It seems almost miraculous that the house was not destroyed, and should serve as another warning to oar citiaena to procure an I fpgint. ' BEWARE OE FALSE BEP0BT3. That is a truthful, if it is a trite adage, that "It is hard to teach an old dog new tricks," and it is brought to our mind by thJnduct of the Locofoco -wire-workers, who are again busy at their old game of circulating false re ports and slanderous documents, on the eve of an important election. They are resorting to every siecies of trickery to defeat our candi dates, and wc mentioned last week that one of their leaders boasted that they had "a game" up now, by which they would win. All this, together with the unusual and straiuing efforts which they are making, by holding meetings and otherwise, indicates plainly that they are terribly frightened and we think they have good cause for being scared. - Be on your guard, therefore, Americans, Republicans, and old line Whigs, for every effort will be made by the Locofoco leaders to induce you to vote against the Union State, District and County Tickets. We have an abiding confidence in your integrit-, and we feel certain that you will treat these false reports and vile roorbacks of the Buckanicrs with that virtuous disdain which they must inspire in every honest frcc man's heart. FREMONT'S RELIGION. From the Xew York Evangelist, Sep. 18. It is not our business to enter into tho strife of politics. That is not our vocation, and we have religiously abstained from such contests. Xor shall we depart from this line of strict propriety. But we arc sometimes appealed to fcr information as to matters of fact, by readers who imagine . that we have special means of knowing the truth.. In such a case we are willing to tell what we know not for the sake of party, but of truth. This we may do without sacrificing our neutral and inde pendent character. If we can help to correct an error, or to disabuse the public mind of a false impression, we are doing a service to right-minded men of all parties. We do not urge our readers to vote one way or the other, but wc do wish them to vote intelligently. It is well known that one of the candidates for the Presidency has been charged w ith be ing a Roman Catholic. To this story we nev er give the slightest importance, considering it as one of those bald falsehoods which were fabricated for a party purpose, and which would drop into oblivion, and be despised, as soon as it had served its object. But as the originators of the story cling to it with great er pertinacity, thinking it a very effective weapon to excite odium and prejudice, some good men have thought it worth while to set the matter at once and forever at rest. Cler gymen of this city have been applied to by members of their churches, and by letters from abroad, to make personal inquiry, since the public would have entire conudence in their statement, knowing that they were not Lkely to be deceived themselves, and that they could have no motive to misstate the fact. Thus appealed to a number pf Clmnirnrn CiynuectT'hwTlh any political question, called on Col. Fremont for the purpose of a frank con versation in regard to his rcligioiis profession and belief. This they did not for their own personal satisfaction for not one of them had a doubt about the matter but simply that they might be able to satisfy others by. an assurance from his own lips. Among those who went were Rev. Dr. De Witt, of the Dutch Reformed Church ; Professor llenry B. Smith and II. D. Hitchcock, of the Union Theologic al Seminary ; Rev. David B. Coe, Secretary of the Home Missionary Society, and one of the editors of this paper. Rev. Henry M. Field. . They were received with great cor diality, and Col. Fremont responded very frankly and cheerfully to their inquiries. When it was remarked that some of our good people were disturbed about his relig ion, he replied, smiling, that he was glad that his opponents were willing to admit that he had some religious feeling that he was not wholly indifferent to Christianity. One of the ministers inquired if the account of his eat ly religious education and ol his joining the E piscopal Church, as given in Bigelow's Life of Fremont, was correct ? lie replied that he had been born and educated in the Episcopal Church; that he had been confirmed as a mem ber of that Church, and had never had a shad ow ot a thought of leaving it. When allusion was made to the persistent assertions that he was a Catholic, ho replied that he could not imagine how such a stoiy took its rise, for that in fact he had hardly been inside of a Catholic Church more than half a dozen times in his life, and then upon occasions of public interest or of curiosity. All this was said very quietly, and with no apparent desire to intrude his religion or to make capital out of it, but to state the simple fact of his religious education and belief. Xo one could listen to this frank yet modest state ment without feeling that it was perfectly in genuous ; and that, with no bigotry towards others, he was sincerely and unaffectedly at tached to the religion ia which he had been educated by his pious mother. Political Straws George W. Hoover of Lawrence township, this county, returned home last week. He brings encouraging in telligence for the "Conqueror of California." On the different trains of cars in which he was, votes were taken, which are as follows' Fremont. Buck. Fillmore. Rock Island to Chicago," 83 33 . 9 Chicago to Toledo, 128 " 78 : 0 " Toledo to ' 143 r3 19 to Pittsburg 127 129 18 Pittsburg to Tyrone, 1C0 70 13, This may be regarded as a fair index to the way things are moving. "The bravclv on." work goes The Republican don't like the doctrine of white slavery as promulgated by the Richmond Enquirer and other co-workers for Buchanan in the South. In another portion of this pa per will be found a choice collection of ex tracts from papers that advocate the doctrine, which v trust ersry laboring rcn will real, READ AXD PONDER ! THE NEW.' DEMOCRATIC" BOCTMNE. Slavery not to he Confined to the Nerro Sace, tut to be Made the Universal Condittoa of the Laboring Classes of Society. The people of the Free States have so long yiulded to the arrogant demands of tho Slave- Oligarchy in the South,that the latter has come to think it can carry any measure it sees fit, no matter how'degrading it may bo to the char acter of the free u hife men of the North. Xot many years ago, the Southern slave holders were content to have their "human chattels" protected ia the States where tbey held them. ' ' ' : - Xcxf, they demanded and secured fire Slave States from acquired territory, (Louisiaua,F!o- i ri-la, Arkansas, Missouri, and Texis.) while the Free States have only secured f;ro, low a and California. Xcxt, the Slave power demanded all the ter ritories, and broke down the Missouri Com promise, which secured a part of those terri tories to free labor. Next, they demanded the right to come into there States with their slaves whenever they choose, and stay as long as they please ; and the United States Courts seem about to yield to them, and grant this outrageous demand. But the last, the crowning, the diabolical as sumption is, that Slavery is not to be confined to the XEGRO RACE, but mr.st be made to include laboring WHITE MEX also. This doctrine, which is so monstrous and shocking as almost to seem incredible, is now openly a vowed and defended by very many of the news papers and of the public men of the South that support James Buchanan. The doctrine is also proclaimed by some Xorthern newspa pers of the so-called Democratic party, b;;t not generally with such boldness as in the South. To show the exact extent and nature of the doctrine of enslaving WHITE MEX, the following extracts from Buchanan papers, and from the speeches of Buchanan men, are given : The Richmond Examiner ono of the leading Democratic papers in Virginia, ardently suit porting Mr. Buchanan, holds the following lan guage in a late issue : "Until recently, the defence of Slavery has labored under great difficulties, because its a pologists (for they were mere apologists) took half-way grounds. They confined the defence of Slavery to mere negro Slavery i thereby giving up the Slavery principle, admitting oth er forms of Slavery to be trrca. "The line of defence,however,is now clmug-s ed. The South now maintains that Slavery is right, natural and necessary, and 'tots not de pend upon dijference of complexion ! The laws of the Slave States justify the holding of WHITE MEX in bondage.'' The Charleston3Jrcttn, the leading Buchan an paper in South Carolina, says: "Slavery is the natural and normal condi tion of the t a boring man, whether WHITE or Mark. The great evil of Xoi therucfe socie ty is, that it is burdened with a servile class of MECHANICS and LABORERS, wfit for self rent and child; and the Xorthern States niff yet have to introduce it. Their theory of free government is a delusion." There's "Democratic'-" doctrine furyou,with a vengeance ; "our theory of free government a delusion," "laboring men, whether while or black, to be slaves ?" Verily, matters are coin ing to a pretty pass with us. The Richmond (Va.) Enquirer, Mr. Buchan an's confidential organ, and considered by the "Democratic" party as its ablest paper in the South, speaks as follows in a recent number: "Repeatedly have we asked the Xorth, 'has not the experiment of universal lil.ertv FAIL ED ? Are not the evils of FREE SOCIETY INSUFFERABLE ? And do not most think ing men among you propose to subvert and re construct it ?' Still no answer. This gloomy silence is another conclusive proof, added to many other conclusive evidences wo have fur nished, that free society, in tho long run, is an impracticable form of society ; it is every where starving, demoralized, and insurrection ary. "We repeat, then, that policy and humanity alike forbid the extension of the evils cf free sociefy to new people and coming generations. "Two opposite and conflicting forms of so ciety cannot, among civilized men, co-exist and endure. The ono must give way and cease to exist. The other become universal. "If free society be unnatural, immoral, un christian, it must fall, and give way to a slave society a social system old as the world, uni versal as man." And the South Side Democr-if, another pro minent Buchanan paper, in Virginia, whose editor was supported for Clerk .of the House of Representatives, ly the Democratic num bers of the present Congress T. J. D. Fuller, of Maine, among them abuses everything FREE after this style : "We have got to hating everything with the prefix FREE, from free negroes down and up through the whole catalogue FREE farms. FREE labor, FREE society, FREE will, FREE thinking, FREE children, and FREE schools all belonging to the same brood of damna ble isms. But the worst of all these abomina tions is the modern system of FREE Schools. The New England system of fiee schools has leen the prolific cause and source of the infi delities and treasons that have turned her ci ties into Sodoms and Gomorrah, and her land into the common nestling-places of howling bedlamites. Wc abominate the svstom because the SCHOOLS ARE FREE." " The Washington Union, the National Organ of the "Democratic" patty, says that the hon est and heiolc FREE LABORING MEN of Kansas "Are aMISER ABLE, BLEAR-EYED RAB m.t, who nave been transferred like SO M NY CATTLE to that country." The New York Day Book, one of the wo papers in New York City that support .nws Buchanan, proposes to enslave poor ElII CANS, Germans and Irish, whomiy'a" 'nto poverty and be unable to support f'ir fami lies. Here are the Day 'BookS ex wrds n speaking of the POOR WHITE:opLE : "Sell the parents of these 1,ill,rcn ino SLAVERY. Let our Legislrre Pass a lav that whoever will take these rfv-,S alld take care of them and their OFFKIJNp 'n sic!i" ness and in health clothe"-'"1' fee1 them, and house them-. shall fleSal,y entitled to their services ; and let the ,n,e Legislature de cree that whoever rece8 eso Parents nd thei! CHILDREN, antains fheir services, shall OWN. THEM AS LONG AS THEY LIVE." - The Richniond Enquirer, of a very recent date, contains the following very 'high opin ion of the people of the North :; j "We can bring the capital employed in manufactures, and most of it employed in com merce, South, when we please. We can trans fer Manchester, and Birmingham and Lowell to the South, and thus in a single year, quad ruple the wealth of the South. Dut we would not have your rich, vulgar, liccniious bosses. and your brutal, ignorant aud insulordinafe fac tory hands in our midst, for all the wealth of "Ormtis and of Ind." Wo are as rich cs wc care to be. We would not exchange our situ ation for the vulgar sensuality and brutality of the "nouneavx. riches," the coarse parvcnties, the millionaire cotton factors and grocers of the North or of England, much less for the countless million of paupers and criminals, who lift up and sustain the c:u arlly, sctnsh, sensual, licentious, infidel, agrarian, and revolutionary edifice of f ice society." The Muscogee, Alabama, lleraiJ, an enthu siastic Buchanan paper, delivers itself as fol lows : "Free sociefy ! we sicken at the name. What is it but a conglomeration of GREASY MECHANICS, FILTHY OPERATIVES, SMALL FISTED FARMERSand moox strixk TUtoRisrs ? All the Northern and especially the New England Statcs'are devoid of society fitted for' well-bred gentlemen. The prevail ing class one facets with is that ol mechanics struggling to be centeel, and small farmers do ing their own drudgery; 3nd who are not lit for association with a Southern gentleman's (nigger) body-sorvant. This is yonr frea so ciety which the Northern hounds are endeav oring to extend into Kansas." So much for extracts f:oi:i "Democratic" newspapers. Now for a lew lio:a Democratic speeches : S. W. Downs, late Democratic Senator from Louisiana, in an elaborate and carefully pre pared speech, published in tho Washington Globe, says : "I call upon the opponents of Slavery to prove that the WHITE LABORERS ol" the North are as happy, as contented, or as com fortable, as the Stares of the South. In the South ti e slaves do not suffer one-tenth the endured lv the white laborers of the North. Poverty is unknown to the Southern j hio. from a report of which wc make 'the fy! slavc ; for as soou as the master of slaves be- j in" extract : comes too poor to provide for them, he SELLS , " ,;.;,,., ,lf ihi. tinrtr t,,., them to others, who can take care of them. lr.is, sir, is one ot t;ie excellencies ol the sys tem of slavery, and this the superior condi tion of the Southern slave over the Northern WHITE laborer." According to Mr. Downs, then, (good Dem ocratic authority.) all ti:at the Northern white laborer requires is somebody to sell him when he falls into poverty. Admirable philanthro py ! Beautiful democracy ! ! Senator Clemens, of Alabama, declared in a speech in the Lr. S. Senate, that "The operatives of New England were not as well situated nor as comfortably off as tne slaves that cultivate the rice aud cotiou fields of the Sjuth." In a recent speech by Mr. Reynolds, Pierce- Buchinau-Demoeratic candidate lor Congress from Missouri, that gentleman distinctly r.s- s.Ttcd th.U 1 j - n i ... nii'in- ment in excluding foreign-born citizens Ger man cud Irish as well as niggers. Here a Missouri Democrat classos German and Irisi indiscriminately with Xcgro slaves. Mr. L. II. Goode, another Atchison Demo crat of Missouri, ia a recent speech ag iinst the Free Slate men of Kansas, denounced the la boring men as "WHITE SLAVES !" Senator Butler, (the uncle of "Assassin" Brooks,) a shining light in the Democratic ga laxy, declared in a speech in the UnitedStates Senate this session "That men have NO RIGHT TO VOTE un less they are possessed of properly, as required by the Constitution of South Cuiolina. There no man can VOTE unless he owns TEX NE GROES, or real estate to the value of Ten Thousand Dollars. And this is the doctrine "Democracy," so caile 1, would introduce into Pennsylvania. JAMES BUCHANAN, the Presidential can- didate of the men and of the party who hold these odious views, advocated the doctrine of reducing the WAGES of AMERICAN OPE RATIVES and LABORERS to the Euiopean standard, which is known to be about TEN CENTS A DAY. AVhut a lit candidate Mr. Bu chanan is fur those who would make WHITE MEN slaves! JOHN C. FREMONT, the true RcpHcaa and true Democrat, who has worked ''is own way from poverty to greatness, i-'s a very high tribute to the dignity of FJ-'E LABOR, and j-el his enemies have thcoeanness to as sert that ho is aslave-hoW-'- 'l- Fremont never owned a dollar in yuan flesh. MechanicSjLaborerSjrkiiigmenof allclas scs, read the follow! ug ox tract from Col. Fre mout's letter of JcCptance, and then say whether you will le ailave or a FREEMAN "FREE LAB0Rt"c natural capital which constitutes the re wealth of this great coun try, and creates iat intelligent power in the masses, alone to relied on as the bulwark of FREE lNSTlTI'JNS." JOHN C.,EjIONT is the Representative and Advocc lf t!e extension of FREE LA BOR. JAMP BUCHANAN is the Representa tive ai Advocate of the extension of SLAVE LAP,- ytEEJUEX OF PEXXSYLflXI.1 ! For wch will you cast your votes 1 -:- :. We perceive by the Boston Fost of the 20th that the Buchanan Club, of East Cambridge, have at length trotted out a parson as a speaker in their political meetings. He is the Rever end J. C. Lovcjoy, of Cambridge. After de nouncing the clergy for taking sides in tho contest, the Bucks now contest the field with a black coat and white cravat of their own Some of his points are amnsing enough. 1I0 compared the Fremont party "with the Cru sades of olden time, the object of which was to wrest the Holy Land from the lawful pro pnetors!" A most unlucky simile for the speker, since that wws a war of Christians a gainst Turks! Does the parson mean to say thatMr. Buchanan is in feeling a Turk? If so, we shall claim that Fremont is in coble nes$ a Cwur de Lion. Phil'e Timet; EXTRACTS from tho EICHK0ND ENQTIIEI.E. This Virginia Buchanan organ, speaking of the friends of Mr. Fillmore at the SoiHj, says : "The people of the South sre not prepare-l for all litis. The best among them are aL " ready taking their places anion;- thoss who advocate the election of James Buchanan, " leaving to vote for Millard Fillmore, th traitors who deserve the halter, the tdfish whi ll seek the spoils, the stupid who cannot ecmpn " head the calls cf duly, and the prejudiced u ho ' wuul I ru:n the South, sooner than aid the Dt " vwcrctic party in the achicvcir.tnl of a Jfca- did victory over the Black Republicans. .J " precious crew they are at the South who folium the fortunes cf Nitlard 1'illmart.'".- ; , In another article, in its issue cf the san.e date, after enumerating the persons who hav been expelled from the South upon the suspi cion of abolitionism, it proceeds to advocate the expulsion from Virginia of all those who are suspected of heterodox opinions upon tLat question. But hear it speak of rights in that land or liberty : "With these evidences oi practical interft;. " rence with slavery, wc are told by scmi-abo-" litionists in this State that there is no dan " ger that slavery ia the States will be inoles " ted, and our intimations that this is possible " are rated as humbug and charlatanry. The " f.:ct is we ccunat hope for better things while " t.f a are tolerated in a Southern community, " who occupy Ihe same petition of hostility to " the South xchich is muiiitaiued by every Bluck " Ripf blicT.i at the Xorth. Yet such are staik- ing abroad in the community, who cWm ex " t-uiption from the punishment inflicted ou " incendiaries, because they leside in Virgi "rda. Such men are more to be bated and " f.-arod, aud deserve severer punishment than " the vilest Abolitionist ot the- North. They " are hypocritical pretenders, wolvesin sheep" " ciothin?,- venomous vipers, aud should bo " crashed without pity." This is the kind ol talk the organs of Bu chanan at the South indulge in. rrccmcn of the North ! what do vou think of it J0H3 C. BRECXINSIEGE 01? THE fiECLA EATI0N OF INDEPENDENCE. Ou the second of September, Hon. John C . I Breckinridge made a sqeech at Hamilton, O - , ,..,-:, , t nA r.i' ing which thev coi:u:re to hurl on your sister States. We are toid the Declaration of Inde pendence is embodied in the Constitution of the United Slates. The Declaration, is an ob struction. Put it in the Constitution and what would follow I It would follow that the Con stitution must protect every man in hii right to 'life, libel ty and the p-rsnit of happiness:' . . You would find it interferifg with tho institutions ol the States, and it would lead our country rapidly to destruction. But why do I speculate upon what it would do 1 Long before this our Union would be obliterated forever. It would become as INTOLERABLE and HATEFCL, as its past has been beniticent and glorious." Mr. Breckinridge manifestly- prefers DVi r.ion to even a pracf ical recognition of thcDoc latatioti of Independence ! Let the people ob serve whence come the threats of Disunion ; -f-frwtr'H.tio-ns tn tfuty. iicTeVery " man in the crisis which unscrupulous demagogues have forced upon ns, vote and act as Lis conscienco dictates, though the heavens fall. 5:0,000 FOB, PENNSYLVANIA. There was a "solemn convocation of Buchan an leaders at the New York Hotel, on Thurs day night last, at which Mr. Slidell, the disu nion Senator from Louisiana, was the princi pal actor and orator. Tiic great question of the evening was, how can Pennsylvania be saved to the Democracy. Mr. Slidell said that it could be so saved by raising $30,000 in New York. Without this sum, the State won Id inevitably go for Fremont. This is put ting the old Keystone Sate, with her twenty seven electoral votes, nt a very cheap rate. It is stated that the Buchanan Democracy spent l million of dollars in Maine, prior to the Life aLlollI. ni ki" "7 , " o - liiu Hill tilli V one-twentieth part of that sum. The South ern money and the Southern speeches had a very extraordinary effect in Maine, and Penn sylvaiiia has a right to look, for an equally lib eral outlay of both. We have plenty of South ern orators enlightening us in regard to our duties. Cannot the State be supplied with more than fifty thousand democratic dollars t PiiiFa Bulletin. AuotiTrov versvs RtrrnncAN-. The Octo ber number of the Radical Jlbolilionisl is en tirely dexoted to an earnest appeal to the en emies of slavery not to vote for Fremont, on the ground that the Republican party is not in any sense, or to any extent, committed to the doctrines of abolition, and that it cannot be relied on to do anything whatever to pro mote the overthrow of tlarery. It stys : "The Republican party is not a party for the uelivcrence of the enslaved, but only for the security of the free. It is not a party for the black man, but only for the white man. It ts not a party for the rescue of the w hole coun try frym the despotism of the slave power, but only (or the rescue of Kansas." IL.llowars Pills, a Cure for Sick Headache and Bile William Kancrs, cf Dover. Maine, was perhaps, one or the greatest sufferers from sick headache and bile, scarcely a day passed without his feeling the dreadful effects of theso fonoidable evils, he put himself in the hands of the doctors, but they did him no good, in fact, he became worse, until his sufferings wete niore-than human nature could bear, and he almost tunk under them ; fortunately for him he commenced using Holloway's" Pills, which acted upon the system, cleansed tho bowels; cleared the head, and by persevering 4 with them f jr eight weeks, thoroughly restor ed him to health. He has ever pince been en tirely free from these dreadful attacks. Kilbourn City, Wisconsin, a placo contain ing one hundred inhabitants, does not contain, a single Buchanan man. . . .. ARBisos.the Cincinnati Torpedo scoundreL JcaiE?6" eDtce? t0.the Penitentiary lor tea , ' oar " .-a chUersftt nrr