The Susquehanna register. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1854, July 06, 1854, Image 2

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    [4O -_ **** : Ittgi*--,,
'TH 0... ,:EDlTOslif4.
,
MONTROSE, PA.'
molly :,. 4854.
WHIG fiT./kTE TICKE
I —1 • . - •
r, • )
.I.7overner
. POLL9CIi, Noithunilril - and.
(1 cartql,CQintnpsstoner, .1 •
PECIRRSI!,.of Allegheny:
• Jual7gYol,,Supritize Cont. . ,
DANIEL M. ,SMYSER,-of Montgoniery.i
,
, I ate:y. IL PALMER, the tnerican:Norspaper.
agent le the only authorized :Agent for this paper
,in
the cities of. Boston, tew York and Philadelphia.
1
i
r
' , PROSPECTUS,
--A
,• • ..‘ , 1
• • • . • 1
r : e- importance I), e the..qtre . stioris to be decided at
the :tieit elections, the doings of rongreg;. • and •Ithc . ,
idniiniitration, Wars .in Europe, Asia, and America,
indlNews.lii general front' all, quarters of the globe,
may be 'cipected to render the NeWspapers', oniusually
interesting: for some months:to come.. Every man
w` orthv the ,name ofl an American citizen I ought to
taikalitriself acquainted with the political questions .
of the day, that he may be prepared to act intelligent
!). hel p ing to shapo'the futbre destlitie„.s.of his coun
try. To bring ...theae'que.tiAns before our readers,
. bud to advocate the man on every. question that
• krises : will will be the • endeavor Of the .Editors of the
Regiqer. Tho great battle. between Freedom and
lityetv presents, :a - .question paramount ft). "all 'lath;
'ers at this time, and here we take our- position bk-tle
lcided opposition to ' all the wicked Ohm - ilea of the
„ i Eliverfetensionists.
.
•
The Register will be furnished for six mouths from
lAuly-Lst at the following rates:
One copy Ax months
• Five`copies tt
Ten copies •
( s d , 1011 - AT' LAST. 1
-
' , I
1
1 - Our neighbOr down street has at length 1
it e 4ee hie ,, postiou in",the line of lmittle, fired
1 111 S twenty-fonr pounder, and, in his ' o
w n \ int-•
lagination, oncei more ; annihilated the Whig
, party; _ For the last few weeks we had been
led to hepe better'..thipgs of the ex-Speaker,
especially since he bite been showing up the
,rastality of his own, party, and laving, bare
the.rank eorruptioni that exist in the:present
;State Admieisiration, in their rattna'eement of
'tlie.PUblic Works ;1 but the brightest • ante)-
pations are•oftent soonest blasted - ; and we
~. , , [
1 mayeitew look upon ;it as a fixed fa 4 that
G l Ov.4Bigheewill leave the support. ,of the,
I DemOcrat through thick and .thin, alWraska
, I
tor ..41i-Xcbraska.
j.,-*ice: the visit-t 6 this county of , the lion.
, I l
11Ieisrs. Wilmot 1 4.C . : Grow, the Democrat has,
-been straight forrd, Out-Pok 'oil, and deci
cit,a agaitt4l iva the Nibfaska ‘Waitty ; titati anti •
the ileciarat:l6it anal. by rite editor that.P .
Ile
,
i ler Could never h -1,1
ave his pport zn cie," he
r
. favored the relied of the MisSceitli ('-enipro
tniSe, induced u: any *to suppose ti r ki the ex
' Speaker would hold prificiple pail:amount to
part, and in Ithe great struggle now going on
between- Freedom anti Slavery.) would be
-fonnd valiantly fighting on the side of the ftr
titer. ! But it-is now very evident that thee.
gentlemen is not alt,le to sustain ilk pressure
to be brought uPOn.hint; and _ that he will
soon be in - the broad way,, and among, the
throng knt:Nenns lim6er-backs; h4nce the ne
tisity: of adopting,* course that will enable
. him to escipe from his present . pottitie_n.
I That the Democratic party are i f rally with
the Nebraska bill'ae their watehlord, no lon
ger 'admits of a doubt. In the dilemma thecx-
Speaker casts anxiously '.about ji discov
er soine;Way , ofleseape , andjthe truth of the
old adage , " whefe there is a :will there is a
way," was soon ilhistrated by tl;ei sagacious'l
editor in his disectvery that the Whig party
• were in favor of the Nebraska lei l r especiallyil
,
ih , e•kadert ; and that their hosti ity to that
, 40
M.essure was all Hypocrisy,, and p bad faith.
)iiit SoinetimeS'said that'•a poor excuse is bet. I
ter than none, yut
,we think that would hard- I
. : ly , hola true iurihe present case; the falsitY of
i the assertion issonpparent, that he Most stu
jpid reader of the Democrat Bout hardly he,
is
insisled/ - Where . is-' the evide ce that the
1' Whi
- I ' ' favor
gs are m of the Nebr ka bill ? Is
lien t the fact that; opery(Northern Whig' in
Congress oppoeil the iniquity to the extent
-of his ability ; ;and / Isnece.ssfullyi resisted - its
passage, till it Was carried over! their heads
by an Adininistration , juggle 1 Or do you
-find that rare information in the result of the
elections that leeve 'taken place ince the in
troductien of the Bill into. Con a e,5?3, 'there;
in every ease, tliey havc, made \that the issue,
and after the defeat of the Piervle \and.DOug e ,
kas Men, have,: in all eases," ugh the Leg
islatures thus elected, at the ea lest opportu.
nity,lexpressed their unqualifie abhorrence
of tile, whole • scheme I Thee d the like
fractal must have been the p emisesl Upon
%chic the , es Speaker :makes Ins' bold and
iswee ing assertion. Wri Woulid - not 'accuse
1 bine' fitnowingly-statlng_that which is felse,
for - hales no.doubt been looking through a
pair of Pierce and Douglas ef4t , octacles,' and'
hence the delusion. !
, .
...Bat :nitrate!' very grave charge is. brought I
. 1
sfyll' 'list the Whigs; 'they have rabused,.vi tz- 1
fieff; and 4tear4alized Gov, Bigler," says the
Dearrat. This iS certainly news to_ 113 ; are
„had cooked.upon the carnpaignas hardly coin-:
itseti, and
. had. heard but hull* said as to
t‘l
char ter or qualifications of either of the can
didates; inuett less did we suppose that Gov.
' Bigler had beenabesed, riqed,andscandui-'
&tell It is true that wine in i quisitive per - sons,
._haviag addressed hiin for the purpose of as
oertil:uting his views upon the great qiestioa
'th i
at, a now agitating the publie,,reind, Gov.
Bigler, for reasons ef his own. e k fe;see to an ..
ewer, and - many are thereforl.: ee uncliaritallie:
As to judge hie by the, .Fouti . ) . ..auy h e k eeps ;
4ad,awniee.tefithe of the papeis atatsupport
liira are in faVor of the NOraska hall;:.we
____t e stit,/r.0)3 7 fair - ~4 ! -- rgfeetl i Y "If° , t°
4111, 111111 wi t h, his I**),:**Att vor of the Bill.
if 90v—..,Bie* isi, - ,'"7" -- ' fr :
.y the . 'put leg
0 1 4 1 40 U-Nrii o 46A ) Atleick - isPllitY-formedi as
to hia position on this; question, let hitt...speak
?~: ~occtf~l;e~~.
- - • • • V,76
-
. 3,0 b
, .
.ut, and give the people a littowledge
whereabouts. - -:',.-.-; .: - : •`„ .. .'--;•-* - 4 -:
We`do not desire to. vilify o.abtt- )Gov.
•
Bider,and - yet4nten4.„ to veldt freel y - and
plainly of his eourse'as a piiblie Man i Withthe
reasons Why he : should not; be ',re7eleeted.'----
And first, we:look ..upcin hint, is identified
with the administration. of Pierce, Douglas,
&.*C0. ? ..,* an adininistration that. , .lit the short
yace f sixteen ntoths.hai becoMe ,se 0
odi
)1
ons .t seared , - 1 a map., in the Northern
States, of :whatei:er .partk,'iniless an . office
hOldertmder it,W4l identify himself in the
least with, it—yet re-elect. Gov. Bigler and it
will be hailed. frorri 'Maine* to Louisiana as
anAdministration triumph, mid .we shall be
told that the Nebraska 'Pill has been:endorsed
-
by the people. 014 issues have become rob
..
solele;,theyresentcontest is far from being
;Iv party one ; and thousands :iiiion tliettisands
,
lif Democrats will vote against _Bigler,. feel
ing . ..
that their country is dearer to them than ,
. . L
any mare party, 1 '
..
Another, reason is that r .
we believe the
Governor to be, .at.heart,
i l opposed to
. the
sale t of the Public Works' he so declared
.
himsclfin his Message and We-have no' rea-,
son to suppose .that the. has. in the least cluing
ed Ills mind upon .the subject. -' It is., true
`llll4 he signed the bill for the, sale of part', of
them, but that was nt a subsequent period,
when he had learned cueugh, of public scull
,
ment. - to kr.ow that the large; mass of the rico
plc Wete- in favor.of sale, anal also after .the
original bill had been so Cut np and modified
by his party friends, thati Sale under it we'd
be impoSsilde., . As a natural re.s9lt,. the Pub
lie.W.k.-)rks
and
Unsold- n. the hands of
the State, and : will- 'so remain for .years to
dime{, • should, Bigler - he re elected, and his
:friends retained in thetr.,preSetit positions.—
Shetild,fie 'be re-elected,. the Public Works
will remain in the hands, of those who 'tie r, -A'
•
halve them incharge, and 'Jake. them
_collect
ivelY and:individuallY , theYare . a set. or as
• . .
great scoundrels as can, be fbimd, in the.l),-
itentiary„ or out of. it. - . Our ".neighbor• is
been giving - .to his readers -a :few' railtf?nt
sketches of ilie - illiin) -- of WS-party. friendsAt
'their manag . ement of the' North , Branch-Ca
nal; and the gentleinan.* having occupied- a
position . the - lastyear'•that , pinced , many
of the facts stated withiti)fis own knowledge,
we have no doubt they are true to the letter,
and that,Sliould 'the whole truth he told as to
the management "of the Public . Werki r in oth
er parts itfthe* State,. the People would' be
satisfied that the .North; Branch is about : a
fair :spLte.‘ linen of the whole.' • •••7'he Democrat
doeS not peint out the gully .ones, but only.
the -evil, leaving tine pe4le to detect the cut=
pritsand punish 'the guilty, and in our
,ittdg
ment, to use a' eimntnon-.eXpression, the plas
ter should be as:large as the sore': the evil
is wide' spread acid deep . seatcd, and nothing .
Mess than a thorough - 'cleansing of 'the Augean
stables and the removal of the whole 'crew,
from Bigler to the INlud.l3Oss will have the
area 10k.11riry the, politiettl - atmosphere -
. ' The- ex:Speaker appeArs-to •think that if
there Was but one honest man upon theJace.
of the earth, he would as soon 'point td Gov.
Bigler, as the , Man; as :to lany one lhit ever
knew. - W.e do net .feel. disposed to
° dispute
the gentleman even in thi4, thongb . W.e s hould'
,differ a's widely from hint :here as in any:6th:
er of In-. assumed positions. Were we to se
lect an honest .man;abont.,:the . .laA plAce we
should think ofs- lac-cing' for • one - would lie
among the.wire workers and politicians of
the Pierce and Douglas party. Gov. *Bigler
..th. .
. . .
ni.dy be an honest men--that_ We: neer. at
'firm. or 'deny—but if such is the fact we think
he is themoSt Unfortunate Of Mortals. 'Te
he surronnded..by.sucitalset - of harpies : ii.i
knaves as *constitute the hordes
,of - .Loco* . (
office holders, at.the . prez,erit - time, is eno gl
to throwSuspicipatipen any man ;. but c
. . . ..
these 'are - all wird:tined .tc•getber;:striving- .b
. • .
every means; both fair and foul, 'to coat nt
themselves in..po 'liver, : theconclusion is-al to
irresistible thit it is : " like
master; like in
But after 'waxing i - armerand waiiiier in 1. u
I • !.. .
I, , atieti of his, friend the ; Governor,. the
_E
r s,-,e,,ker,p,,-..ee,5., " Our ;course for the f
tore then may be understood: . : .Though --v
ry man in SuSqUeharina county - forsake t .
Bigler,,yet will, we defend hinx : against 1
merciless arid:unprincipled vilifiers'i . We wi
defend hiin as long. as.,We have a ...subse;ibe
on, -our :: -books, and then if necessary, Welwil
take Willie . highways ;and fields,' in his de
-47:
fold. Ob. Neighbor l' That-is going • itl. 'bath
, ~
en4-otoOtrOrp*. • We have no doubt you I feel
, . ~. e ,
ff
badly, lei this turning Iffi , l i tcayia an, and ro
• Ting through the streetaan over. the fields,
I . to, defend your dear friend should - not be
thought of for a moment, " Better, . men' than
'Bigler hare been defeated Ibeft.ire . now; and ,
, . „- ..•; and: .• • .
Survived -.
We have no doubt that he will
live throligh this and feel the-defeat far less
' "than many ofhis • dear.jrienifs, who'. : vier,e ex
peeling
',,
some precious tit-bit froin the point
eal larder at Tlarrislinig. But we ' are satia
ted that our neighbor, - Upon .reflection, will
'not turn highwayman. ii , 16 -settle streets
and fields; • we have - it(
. .3htest idea.
• ,that the - loss of hiS-I,a7s ,
t, t • .will drive
- 1--. , .
tin; to .that terribl .' fi, iNo ; • the
Democrat. hits. score .of asAwgo are
Nebrask a . 4 up to • t e. hnh '. and, Who ..will:
stand by..through ti iek an d thip,is, long as
2
the Democrat- .goes fOr ; Bider- and "lee goe,,ir
fur popular sorereig ttY.S 1 _ •
.
. lii the_ contest that Will ,be wagedliiiahe
present can vass,'_we do
.notilntetid _to perii,t
partisan zeal. to outrun Our judginent; Any
than running for office, within our reach, who
•is not an out . and .o'utoppoSer.ef the . 7 ..ebitts. ,
k..a in, vindle;l6ll be opp6lsed . .bi MI, .we . care
legs abtbut 'whit he ouee•Weithiui what he is
new.,. Old issues - havebeeome obsolete, and
:the man who.atteinPtitO adhere to old Par
ty.. utinaes. and dead !ssues,littthe. expense -oi
the present great fpiestionlefliAerty''Gr.sld
:very
,- is- not , only . behind the age in,, which he
lives but ii , giiiitY.ofigrclat wrong to man
/dud.' Had GOV: Bigler • Isheti . the. tilt was
brut -introdudedinto. Congress, taken ;:a• bold
and. wanly:stand against -. it, , it .never . would
have Pissed. - The Deitiopracy of P4:tinsyl:
viiii aided more in 'RS pailaigeihiuiani Oth:
..•
ear treaStite . - A. little ettergetie!effo4 from the'.464-4/narter it ' iLiktia
. State, would', . have
turnedthese:ale in favor Of:Freedor4, l ,.,.-But
Gov. Bigier refused to rai l sa a ' warning voice
•l• • .
MEI
of his
I,
g . • . ' - .
.-...-7.tbe . :hag,; ity
~Nytis, _ con sum mated itipi . 1 /! . ii-•
~quiet ,:ac : iaielife,'.,,. He Aim now' ,ezeitiim e -
s liitit Qtrdit / .ll4Tirrtlltiey..: - : I :
-• ' So - faresellitothe Pule good yriu'give Ina:.; 1
Faresiell,_ jong fa i relt , ell, to all, my greatness) - 1 .
. - This is the state- nisi he puts forth 1 -
The tattle leivei-of. hope, tomorrow blossoms,
• ' And.bears hii bluishing hononi•thie}c upon Mini: •
The third twines &frost, itikilling frost; 1 •
And, who he tilks; good caiy man, full surely .
Ills greatn as Is rtpening,—ni#s his knot,'
And then e falls as I . do.". ,-- •. , 1
~ . einoiratio Orthodoxy. - -
,'. 1
i • "
\ • The We -i r or i • Trtbu nc . and thoThiladel-r
-, prat': 11 7 61.4
... 4 1r4ricaii .i state. that, the Xtitts7
burg Dail . eltrimicie 0; a Dein6eratie paper ;
1
l i
this the M ntrO.o DernocrO, avers is a‘irois
falso6c4.' As the 'exten`siVely ;:acqtutinted
editor oft 6 De - want knOs the , editOr , of
'the Citron de;. a well as' , iO4vernor 4slocr,
6k
we ship' . the : ritune‘anii 2V0rt.4 . 47n/c . rica n .
must kno. :. under. It Is difficult. telling
which, are : the . .eal . sinion- , pure. becnO4ratie
' papers- nol•-a-dayks. - For l instance, the' ; .lar
risburg .l? math:a - tic trnioyiand the Montrose .
..POthcriltitte telio)e, both Claim to- be!Dem-1
; .i
•ociatie. et Case sayS: the editor q t the
Union. -" i t ever lwa..s- identi fi ed -with the IDera-i
• . 1
1
-ocratie - pa ty iniany firm," and calls Mtn `‘ a'
.poor, nili rah! el hired scribb l er;" :Whi,l the
Union sa y s thati l ChaSe "by his Own shOving,
cannot be consiaered, in the party,' tluit t " Lei
ints'repai: • the ludnes.s of his Washington'
frientll.b) - treayery of the. rankest kind to
wards Ali `'Na tional Adtninibtration," . F` an
that the.
Demean
democrat
as to wb
.
man, the'
the mistu
Sa F...f-a
t. - 6
itjw
work
di-e seer
Tri Lir
,1 ' . 1,,
error
.1- )11-taw. they rdihttge iiitalmq.l I .
The pla n adiipted. in;order. to givt.i . ausa.
...
to - ,slitver'-, Wit flollt a 'llFr:oNeta tire, is this:--.
t...is aseetainell,wber`e :..1 company - . 4 slave i
li c i lders (. esire to settle the Iraliattll).epart
meet at t
Was' hington then :.end Cin for 4 del. •
ftlet w
ritye oniti , the desired! lands ,
I
atic,)
r. gOes to Washimrton. rnakes 3.
• ,
ding the coveted land , ilitil )irivatv j
ion is .seni• to - .tlie slaV'ehOld . Cy'S that
i
, ,
dy, apd they take possession;befor .
.
.t. knoNt• that a treaty has been mad
olds 'Said to (lovei-niriiit at all; Thi
IV Nva.f of colonizing the'.isrliOq‘ Tt. l 7
:tii slaveholdersjwhile an antij-Slavkt
..
ry mat:l . -can find no land tobuy. -
It 'will' be seen that the aid of the li...Tnitet
State* .C r overnlnent. is required to .carry ou
this bea)ttiful phut, but that is readily fyield
ed;- Pr sident; Pierce is ;eager to join. in 'an:
.1
conspiracy . iigtt inst . :Fre edont, if by so doiti;
he aritry !possibly head Off Don - gilts' ht - tli
strife- f* 'Soot - tern fiiviirs. 14 . riot isitkli .
Goveru;nent 4 - . disgrace to 3 civilized at
• 1
Christiian nati3On.? .
qzatiori
this, dole
treaty C
inform-at: l
all-is reH
Ot* . itier
UT the In
IS 411 ca
ritory \'
• . A4ident in Montros e .
C. :Nif Montrose. *a's
.
ously. injured', on. l'nesclay last, by 'the'
charge(lif an anvil with i 'whiell:a COT4 '
boys I ‘4re., vi§iating the
brate their indepeinlene4. "laving Orel:ion:L .
i r cp-clesn..r, wttntlit trztrt, - .lfl .
II i
Gere abort to remove the, anvilwhen•
boy nanied 4.lbert Fortiliant applied , 1 matt
to it. This Was'appar'entlY immediately
-tinguiihed.bY• Mr: Gerd, and Ite•ind sarri I
Jessup had. started to !eari . y - the anvil' ,
1. 101 }ln
i when 'akinie one ea. • t?ut wa. bur -
• .in g. • l'hev dropped it .j but the poirder• • -
• •
h ploded- imthediately, fut'. in Mr, Pere's f
The bl at once flowed in large quantiti
from N (met and 'around - both eYeS; at d
• .
From a gash in•his , claeek i the latter!
St been made apparently by. the. plug ;that .w
iri'ven j i in over the charge in the anvil, d
- -1 -
d _ which - after i triking hisicheek passed throueh
the rin t t of his hit. • A slight. variation in is
.
.course would undoubiedly have pro ‘AI fat I.
0 .. ..His fa (e wastalso burned and Ailed -with pp v-
F.
dtr .'and - his eyes blinded, the. Powder havi
• • . . • • 'I
L i s been-thrownlinto,theni; and .sorne .e . ven foie.;
11 ed thr i ough the , caiter 'cOat, of one ,ibut tiet
•
r physicians tiiink - they may be saved.- , -
We, hope that hereafter the. law , - againstl l
firing .in the Borough. Will be strictly enfek-1
ed, and.i`a violaiors'brbualtt t)ljustie. 1
• '4* • . • ' 1 • ' I
•Ifebrasks an& 177thkey-Rich ppoechi i r i ,
1 -r
The; Indiaimplis Journal gives an 1 aceotint I
of a speech ntade in that city recently .. 1)2,1 a
Mr. Itobins , ,n, who was.there as ..iv ..delecrat
, . . .
to the DemOoratieConvention. Thespeal.e.!
took- hihigh
arounds'in favor of,• - the - Nebraska
- ;•
- bill,
.proving most conclusively that the - A . is
.1
1.
i•:oiiii.loinprozi - iisc - wdsi no comproini t tsc'Ut. )1
and that 'phttingslaVery there, or .g i ! t
I !- , . • • ! - !
,chanee to go there;, atter agreeing. that !ii
Shouldn't, Was no brcaelr of faith: ! ..!The Jo r
nal's a
- !
- i
Kn.
account of what the . speak.cr ilon h
whiskey question is rich, and we append II
. .
''.Now iS the time;7'..ays Mr..liOhinson,o -
the Drnociata to take ground on* ',this qt es
al
tion.' Shall we nowl help whiskey,' wl ieli
has so:long! helped uN . or - shall We li . sIY
leave
.the field, and .see our friends gutted 6.
p
fore °Or eyes 1 Shall; we not standltoget er
1--Irtast we AKit, stand together?--since • npne
of us can stand alone? . Shall ..out I . tiarty[he
- spinit;red -hi the erY .if sobriety Or,' the faltat:
'vigil. of 'decency '1 - *To?. ‘W.h.eti Inky - e es,
sball,be turned for the last tune Whehold he
1.3.
glassi in • its rounds,. May they tn?i • see y
friends distres - s0 • with differences- and r -elt
est), wasting, it may V fraterintliwhis - y..
7318$ they not look upon a county bl . ted
l
i
- witkletiltivation ; Cursed - With! industry,- ad
the Barrel ; that held! its' glory bursted "a 1
east ed in. !` Bit, on the contrary, rmayl se;
,their jbannerotot defiled - .with 'thoSe w i
of delusiortandfollV.'! ''What does - all hi
liquor do,', but blazoned on'all its airtple f Id
il
whenever it flOata in the - town - or in! . the u
'try, that:sentintent dear to &art - petal n
:. , ..NVii:isk:ev*and.Dernderaey,.now and fOre
i - P
.one gidln.4cpa:rable.ii -= .• : 1 -. I L • ...., •
- , 4-1 - ' ' • . ' ! 1 --.' '. 1
• 4 iQc'Eg f t. INQUIRY Pnoposen.- . - 1 -The eli
• ocraii,c Uiiion.' exAresses the.. op'Ulion _ 1
-wheri the October; election shall be! over, "4
. -may 'not . w,itimiut profit to institihe: th in
_ •cin* . , whO i are -entatlO to .the. condden. . 1 04
etL ...
the • enmeratie,ptrty, as public joninalia -`. .
antf . hether Buchanan *and Caniiihell- e
not . ne :more to break •-down,thatT party _lin
P . Iwo.. than all other' -oatisec that may
ely
•
he Igna,. inei4efitito . the. :arttbit!c l i of 441-
. ring demagogues r' !... .. - : . .!- .- I •-..
.411 - witk se DenzOcra instrat ; of
is is !all: Abolition- dieet.
diff4 so wideli amongtheniselve:
it eonstitates an orthodox part\
ought to makei some allo‘9 1 1. 1 !c101 1
. •es OntSiders, and not •g 4 - I quit(t.
• •
athut it,
most
rt . pe eaVt..
iti the s't 4e.lieate 111111 -1 1 1 . r
as :K r . 'that we
nothing vet to inakeas th .
• •
ml North .Ame.rican *ere at•all it
1; 1,
le inzitter.
•, , .
r4ei,Pe*rylv.ania l omi. on Nebraska
At in•Anti-NebriSka ineeting held - at. , ,,La.;
, ; 1 ; , ,„.
porte,r.iStai 2,3 d, a : committee - ivas SPpointed
to ,laddiess letters Oflimptitt - tO . the ; ,'SiVeral'
r . • 1 I i
rlrlplinees , of -the - iiifferent. pario_;.in ' thiii
suite,:'-a s king : t i I asYr ,on , : the ! Nebr
. r s•
l i q ueStioti: TheUt Sullivan .Coiiiiii'Dern.
[octal- contains: the --report .of -the Oominittee,
Who Stated they satire ssed letters ~Of inquiry
to Jarnei'Pollock, i\Villiam Bigro, Jeremiah
S.l.Black, Daniel ;IttsSiny4..r,. George Darsie,
and Henryi S. 31641 - and'haVe - ,"o:eeiyed . re;
'Plies from Jathei Plants:lE; Dania L Ati Suiy
ser and George Daisle; . In other words the,
.. ; ,
three W4iga answered, , and the others not.
1 --'
And, what is'more. to the purpose, t he * three
• .. - ~
that auSwer are ad ;right On the qUestiOn.--
They all ex press,:th6seives boldly; and . un- .
- oppose . d '
qualifiedly - as to the Ilje' braska - ini;
I:
- quay, and in f avor. of a restoration •of that
. , . • I • j- , ,
part ofthe Misourl COMpromise. Which - the
Slavery eonspirattir6 hive violated. .. •
.. .
I-- '
j\Ve append . the l l ' etter • of , : antes; Pollock,:
although our sWcotl•temperedneighhOr of the
koittrose Democre4 may .thiak . that . by doing
' I •
sO, tie are direetinglanotber "'partisan person
ality "against 1., Gov:Oigler.7,.
1 . .. • 11111LTON; Juntil. 19., 1854.
Ij Gen amen :— . 1174ut letter of - the -27th "
ult., '
cwith aecompariVinglinterroghtories,)ms been
I received. To ;Oilli first irs question:l reply, that.
1.. • - '
•I ‘ rcgarding• the pass ag e of the N ehraka 'Bill:
of
and ill adYiiseil = as a Wanton breach
I of national honor4and plighted titith--,and .
. and disguised , , . . ,
las an open tm attempt to exteno
,flit - institution of Slavery to-territories now
ut
free,• I am. 'in < PIN-or Of , re•leteting that
, •
portittn - of the •M r i,'s.,-ouri _Compro l inise which
• prohibits Slavery lut the territori es of
and Nebraska." 1! . . • .i .
, .
.
•} To your seeoitd question, I say that the re
enaetnu•nt of thel•oVi;iiiin . referreit to; Would
(i
m i Lais`sarily e:telu d slavery from the-e terri
tories: and the "nneondiiiinkiltnanninission." 1
of all slaves then-Ithere,foould nOt be, regard-
NI as a moral orikgal wring to -any party.:
IF , (slavery' can have no legal l'existenvo in
. tho se territories; i.i't her :by - Aet•i-)f Congress
Y
or under the false pretense of - "popular soy--
. ereignty - .7 The: poser to. eStablish slavery
.i.un only exist in eipress. grant, or 48 an inei.
(fent (4 . absolute - sn'-ervignty t and as I he. ~.,, ,o v.,
, • .
en .
emint of the U nited -States is not 'an abso
lnte; bur a limited,': constitutional „sbvereigo
ty ; and as the COristitution coniains, no ! -Trant
' o f the power c.riire* . s •or iiiiiiii(d, 'it follows
drat Congress ha. 60 poster to establish, di,
reetiv or iudireetl V. by positive act; 'or by
• ,
permission, under the•plea of "non-interven
,,: tion," slavery" in ,tiny free,lerritories 'of the.
United, States. It: theretbre, - slavery enters
these territories,fit! Wi4 be 'there,' not only
Without •au!thorit- 4 :constittitiOnal law. but
iil NiOlitt if i'l l . of al . law. • tin der! t hese ei iett in-
Stances; the t•e4c ration and preservation to
freedom. o .
f these t . erritories.'
w ould be sus
-1 .-
tained by every principle of law, and justified
by every consideration of national frith and
national honor, 1
' I 'l' - Yours,l
„ .
.
'
' JAM POLLOCK.
-
nl, Henry ,Metcalf, Julia P.
t4e. .
Thos. J. Ingba
Taggart, Coraiati
SLAVENOLthING INSOLENCE,
- 1 Asa .speciacil 41' Southern we
Pnblish the ,Higfwing l•raggnOeia
Made by Stephens; of Geor;.iia,v.lile, Ili Nc•:'
braska hill Was Un•ier disens4t , n
.
of Representatives.: turned tollw Nerth
em
oppoucat 3 Ije OK' tl/113 con
temptuousty addrsSed them :1
gt • nitlem i cti, you th.le a good deal
rf clamor .overl :Nebraska
,hchsure, but it.
''don't-alarm us tit all. W - e•have got used to
•
that kind ! You always caved in. • and
11you7will . Yoirat i e a mOuthing.
iwhile-lieered iOtcouifse von hill oppose
thetpt..-••...-• . 7+b. l olflq:t. that. but Wo - d 'o not
eares_for your, opp4sition,- rah,: nut
we are used to yoar railing. :lion. will hiss,-.
but do adders.l l We expect it of addcrs—
we expect it of Yon, You .are, like the dsvil.s
that were. pitched.. over the hattlements of
heaven into .1 - ,They set up ,a howl at 1 .1
their discOrnfeiture, - and so. yon. But
their' fate' was s, aled;and St) is yburs Thul
must stilnoit . to! .t4e
,yoke, so don't Chafe.—
Gentlemen, we lhave you in Or Owe!. You
tried to drive us to the wall in' 1850, hut.
things:have changed. Then, and: before, y oil
were imperiouS aid grasping,: and would, not
agree to run.tlie line of 3 - 0
. deg. . min., to
the Pacific, and ... Mite all the .territory. north
of that line. on were greedy and,_ wanted .
more. But now -You will ilose the 'whole.- -
YoU went a vroOling - , and .hare 'come hcime
fle'eeed.. Don't so - , impudent cis to co;n-
plain. You will only U:slapped in. the fate:
Don't resist: you; will be lashed into - obedij.
fince. The legislature of New, York; cif Rhod
Island,ofMassachusetts,:the NOrthern divines 4
the opponents of Nebraska everywhere, are
inerely adders whole voatioti it is to
They -are siniply :howlin - a: devils _halt-
sent to hell."
OItfiANIZA.TION OP :KANSAS i ''
- 1 .
Some few
,Censelebtious DemOczats, unwil l
ling to,td, leave their party, an ~,boping al;
,1 Ways fer 7 the best,. are reluctant to admit the.
i l I , proof .of a settled 1 coaSpi racy to : extend'
i i ery. -throughOtit , Kaasa.:: * These . will . 'have
6 ' their last bop , I destroyed by the publication
L i . t..,
~ i . - [ ,
1 7 1 of Pierce's appomtMents.of officers . for that
al. Territory / . Ber,, they are :i -, • .
'!• ' A. IL MD:DM,- o' Pennsylvania; Governor.
..;'- . , b , 3 t 1 / 1 /( ~...et: C! .1 , .
11 I Divar.t. Wootrati - ( t 1 rg - i ' C ' ',- - r t- rY
~ , .„ , WN-
..,,,L,totsox Btlo,,Lof .1117.4.302. 1 r,1,' Chief justice.
1
''' 1 Resu ELL‘tox; Of r ilat ( aina, Associate Ju,:tice[.
il: ' S.C&DAS -W. 401ViSTON ' of - Ohio, ASsodiate
Justice. i - , . , • : , .
le ...ksbariv . J. - i AACS, 'of Lend:shit:a , District
[ • -•
... 1 . . Attorney i . 1
,T - ,•, . •
~ • •
1 . J.:13. DONALbso.:4, of Illinois; khrshall.
.
These officers Will have the almost unlim.
ited cOntrolOf Kansas for', about eighteen
months..' The people will be ahle toil° little .
or nothing against them.
.povernorllleeder
is tioXorious fur his *devotion to the slave-soil.
interest . ; ando ari... Woodsen, Brown,
,Eil
-1
m9nAsaf.ls 44d. -) 1 4 1 0(_ 1 -tsis=..T ' We . ktirAvri
'-oili
ing of the as ce4
cuts. of Sandal W. Stilnis- .
ton, but.presiimel he is like the Others.: . Ad
ministration : and; Judiciary are lin the . hands
of slaveholders 4ilad their .parasites. - . A 'case
involving freeduM.,.vill he tried hcfere a Ntis
sQuri.,autl AltibaiNl Court, audhy a. Louisi
ana-District AtOrney.:
. In the face...of these
facts, some., i.:of i!the Adiniuistration: organs
have the coollimpudence to pretend that : there
b 1 is no.design_whatevet . to . establish.Slirrery .irt
Kunias.—Dailyißegister.!. : .. 1 • - . ,-. ..
,
,
s 'HEADING QFP DRXLIth FO '` The- Mat
or of Cemdea„ tuffs &ate out with a proclam
1. :atiOu announeing:his deterrainatioato enfoive
the law aganist liquors' on 'the
bath.Camd i en was. the last hope of the Aims.
ty, the oasis In the sandy desert, from wh t icit I
fountains of drink constantly .flowed. Crea.
lion suffered iothin,g in its , ease." as long as
this spring sparkled perennial!): amid the. Jer
sey. sands.the scene is, changed, 'the
pitcher:is breketi, thc fountain is closed, and
though a riydr slls Setween, the inhabitants
upon each , side May stand upon, its banks and
cry in.vain fOr drink. Mayor Conrad ;',and :
May9r Fi B her have parted the waters of
diunkenness, and left nothing . hut dry places
for the pervlp tai walk over.—North Ameri
can. - s
•
-lid PLOT AGAINST Vidißtftd..
aCof*Poifiltliimica of the illkrth4tileriajuak, , t,' $, a n&
z -..
• .. . :: . 'W - Aattiktito, i l ol,y•lst,il,Bsl l -
I clip idky . 0.0 Abe the: tong a . alaiii
t .
andgloom fol'eli,se,
6 41? g whieh'peritidei , the '
'minds of ' northern ni..iti both gonses of ,
- 6.ntgre. - * . -''Yesterday a ••%ti n g u l s t l 44..D e rn: '
- oc raio*Mber bf tlinThni'St -of llepresenta- 1 4 .,
Lives told'ine that, a ft er long 44..artionsttb- ''
servation and reflection upon the': ,r : Tl i s o f lA'
the .lAst ;font years, and tn - oteespeei4:lli.op on tl
those of.th;. last six months, he was satuor. e d r
that (' nothing could now avert a-. ci . vil wa - i. .
F
or a.disSolution of the Unions' . Tins gentle ,
man is a'Politibitni of-, long experience ; is . a ,
man of health and of the - ..higliesti... v ial stain-., ding ; has,:or. has had, close and emtftilential :
relations . With a 'part of the . administratieni ' I
althOugh he stands in- no need of; .its favors.
Ho is also; a brave and firm Mani Iv l tho . ia not
startled by shadows. ' He .Is a eOriSertmtito
and 'Moderate. man.; so-Much so thAt he felt
obliged to stop shert, of the - extretae :length :
orparliiimelitary oppoSitlon that ctaild alone
have -.defeated - the repeal. of A:Wel Allssouri
ConipreMise.
: It is the deliberate c'spitirion of •
atieli a man: that Southern policytintl . Southt
ern tpettsures are- drivil h g. this nation to into., ,
tine war or a separat.ota • The :iatpressiO',
that ..sAell is the tendency, of: pabliel eyenta • i.
becanina . .a...ennfirinedi .convietiOn 4 t.wi t h th!:
mostCaitservative !nett L.and ,tlie praifoutitltai , i,
thinker's from the North,. who have ! been per,
sonal oltservers and Parlieip:MtSin the scene
that. haYe* passed on this centr , al Iheatre: 4' :
'action for. the last six-moths. . 'd ie t' -non= . la,
, . • 1
lieve . te sectional quarrel cannot lie settlia:a .
I heeittista the South, with that .atnall I :4:11 . 1 ad 1 1 4 '
Of . N ort 11011
_allies whieli official ipatronagt.
andaa natural servility of sentinient stqare to
. .
S
the molt: \till .not allow ,it to 'lie . ::icitle4 - :
1
''l4q are:, determiried to*ptis r li the . 1 free i States..
„ - - . . i
-to the _wall. 11-
The l'.ebraska bill, the schemes
foe. furthe l ..
territorial . expansionaand the-Gadsdea 'treat.'
I 111 oaett avowAIS of the oli- , colinq
tellwitillhose. measures, have • - eatazied a cora
plete - ievOhltion in the nth 1
!astind trv.lii , g - -1 .y . ._
that. 1:Oil-print Class of mirth( rii eiti t ietis wit!:.
froth I tsso to 1852, exacted - frin4 the . *ftt,
Stays a most yeluvtant ..%•et al)s01114e acquie t ;:
dace and •eempliance 'with the; iei'unproatii; - 1
Measures of the: former _year. Illie ' tuit l ut
inen.'ilfe '-citstle Garden Committees," NI
.
:Clonal
.Alcii, 7 • Silver.flrays,' ,- Illnik e rs; a 4,1
nearlyzall the itten of 'wealth anal great laqi
ness connections now despair, and give.up.t*,
atroi.i to pre : sc rve the' peat-e. They% cnteryil
upoit the taak of reeonciting the. .pilbliJ mind
.01 the atirit to the riaTitive :rt :la] girt uf . t! 1
milli.ins !t.tTexas,and the Toontits - proviso ap
plied tolUtdi and New
. Nexien, tiiizon the s•ca, r ..
cilia assurance th at •tlic; . o were thei lat ex:tc
-titAl:§ tin. Smith would make Upon ;the Nortl ,
that the i.-omptimiise Measures were a..scay
niciit hi principle and- substance of .1110 slay, •
ty compromise. The South haS.l . frolani fail t i
w i t h :thaaa . and has reeautmenctid an agilia
tiait, :Width. they had made unegitilled `rte t t
thics to melt, beeanse they belicved it ti)
dirater Id 'the Unioua -They can :do -to mat .
. r, k- - -.1,
to-do `-- ,i.
Nay, they : do not 'wts:ll. litt.ire. Asil a
c aa v er o ady . e. power between the i.Nrorth. :flit I
South thin class ofanen .. is anit4iihited. 1311 t. .
if their influe,aee were undiminlizl4.d, it woillil
. tiotaitow beTexerted on the side of the Souot,
1;.,r that has pretved to them• the cause. 11(1 .
treathay., ingratittalual sectional distii .-
„ -
berate ' -- ;. ' :• i ~ ~
. There being now no
. Mt'irliltOr 1kA,W4..`,:il t.. e
-Nottlaatal South. :ma
_ant , ,So r t]]: haying *ca.
~ aa
•tcroo. tfriin a..- - -f..:,:=4,..ni ot-....azgra r sion wiy
~
''-, inn-t:is.siill lo tilt.upprt , :=sion 14' ; ille . jiiwrtk-,.,
of : tla;:orth. aid finally :to tliz.],%., ;tbsolute .I.
. 1 tiaetitai:Of their state go-at - 1./anent; the., trti'ts
~ I,
,• The lOregon Pea. .7
, tion has'altisen,• how shall the .'...!Zoi.tli` bestie- I .• A letter f ro Ma i [ b a con- l a- k iss i ! pa t .k..of
-I!' • • • t,A.:i itsor ? ' .-- I: -; .1. .1 1 . deseribittg thisl.new pea. has 1 ra4ta ;pith,
t The. Purposes nut-Anted to thelSoutli.by al in tbe,.l . iichtnond I Eintairer, front Avili!:
inajorit,t•of Northern tepresenitt;ives in C.k. 1-1 niake an extract! . • ''.• •
i rrres,;, may - - be soon med up as 'follows t ' ,The greiron Pit,a was broughteL fe - w1 years
1 •- ,
. • Ist, ..t-The' acqursit ion. of - Cub:l i • and' its an-i :tail froth OregonlTerritory. Vi'lietitt was
nexatioa tO . the Union as two Slate States. found Wild therialor y e zas obtaine'd.. 9 froin "the
2d. • :The conquest of IlispaniOls;',the..ita . Intlians,ll :on tic k tipreparad to say. lof
duetion, oCits iniihon of inhabitaats to shit'- froin'the State - tit' Atis,i , ,sippi -a- year ago,
ry, • and '.the Introduction or pqrlitulea, :atia last spring. about la teaspoonful :of seed, tram:
Hayti.intO the .1.;
j nion as two slay'e States'. I , the prociiiet oflwtli. I niised e . _]:tat season;
• 3tl.
..:,The admission, of: POrtd ...Rico- a.: . a thirty bu‘..liels* :: Beds. Had -it 4 aot • .b\ l een for
-1.
slave State. : . !. . 1 1 •• . • ...• • • the cut-worth, thravage:A . of which,}: Vi e- Yet
.4th. : The conqtiest or - ptirebase, of. Alva* Co ' .6- . .gient, I wonld have. raised. 'ode . linudred '
and its admission to slave States.t to the ita la I; as i ta i a l a 1 ' . : a••a*a' .. . • •
ber•of teri or•twelVe. - • 1 • L', •' • - ... ' 'The Seed of ithils plant is ,very: small,. Jess.
-
pith The re--establishment ofi the Atli an in size :than tliattsof.' The Lady, s'or ' Sugar
1, • ,
slave pude: .. -„ - •• . i _ • ,:' -, • Pea,” .rind of a pAle green color, :,-y till. a xi-hite
..*Gth; The passage of tile -sedltiOn law.: y. “liiitim,l'.or.ey l e. llt grows-on . 4,
~.btisq- f aoin •
Congress, - which - will prohibit] public diseuS the to six feet! bigla, with fi ve .:Or,._ six large
sions on the subject of slaveryl. • • -. . branchesnear , ; .thy l , - • ground ; and•-;atheyi-
• With.'
I! z .
..,' 7th: -:. The repeal . ol - all law !of the .fr ee the main stern] phteut other hr'anehe* ••until
j
/States, prohibiting: the taking 'of. slaves . in , the stalks would Ilnake a bunch as large. round
kholding them there by . ..eitiztiis pi the Stales] as a tobacco hophead* . r nearit. It I grows •1
I•This Object WOttld . he aewiriplied by. A c • . more like cottbnithan. anything else :1 know
II
reree - of the Supreme Court, in the. Lein On t
.* of . only! . it is rnpi..ll laryer,.withbranches not 1
case, affirming the claim of•Virgirzia and 0' or= co horiicintal. 1 After leaving the. 0 - ainti al
glain that ca•Se, : -, ..* ! -. • * '. . iittle -all these branelies, l with 'those •Whitli'l
j . •Sth.*: A destruction of the Pemocratie el- put out at :eyery joint , bear:item -- roar to,
I : errient -in the: government,. as! jneotOpat bhp ten pi: . ,ds* in' la bunch,' with about : fifteen]
;:with the safet o y and the interests of thb Sr,titl peas ii . ' a
.pop,lwi tich, as an artiele*.of luttnazi]
' and her institutions. This proriositii:at ittitil food, 4.t. superi.,r to any thing of tit _kind I,:
f .
I Yea. the abolition ,Of the ]louse" +f; ItePre.,- cut. ever tire,
~, : . . • : *
._ i
tatives. •• . 'l4 - • • • . Theistalks - .in leaves, whieh are vei-ylargel'
1 . . ...,
••- !
citli. An extensien of the pOwera ortha and beautiful' make, perhaps. the fiut.st :law i
• • -I. •
' Sitc.te.: and a --limitation' of th e'-'- fm'Oilier. of lin the , woritl-- 1 -F.oek .preft:trira . i' It to ' liny et ca-
~.., e t ~ . . .1 „
.., Seii:Ktors by cantina' elf the represematto 1 ci i er—and-vield. ,:t great abuntlant-e-'.
• ate haN' . '
partiof the: 'States. • . - I I - `nod pea to7ethe are it better: And 'far cheap,l
- 10th. A modifieation of orni 0r.1 . 0 : N- i • Bled t I •iti eJoi )e raise:] in, the -.l..:nitr.d States
I meat, .. - tile? a , et1 . .. •..
I cra as till assint irate it to that ; of Vet- I l'Or'horses,natle4; . eattl;a . sta'eepaiind - , hogs: - 1*
i lee, in rWhich the.: patricians, rti,resented ba` believe ~ I can, r4ise
.i . note Old filter' bcal.', al '
tlie.-`Skuite, Shall :exercise legishrive. and 4 , , my stock front an iraereaor.lart&litn • k caul
: . ,
1 ectitize power. - - - :-i :: .. .: - I from five of•tinv,Othe?'.airop: ', %XVIII rosy oil 1
l . lii- probable that feW men 4At'of WaSia-
.land so poor that it \Nona p4loi'Ve ittie or,
4 inffitin will'attach The slightest R:redibility t o o nothinn , else ;1 mid tolerably pO-04an is bet,
I'''''' ' . .
it list of aggressions ao ta , ,tound ing as the a .bit;: ter foi 7 it.- and s . ill produce_ nit4t,; . tlan .. .riclr,:
goitia . and Yet. having Ntieftilyi „-Itialitllytatal • land. This - ntay appear- . strangAo sonte,bliti.
z
i iiialai;tiallly' studied. the pol:y 'of - the gt.utia• it is nevertheless:. true.. .Irieli ;c lantlltill . pro
I iti ‘ its relations! to the gene ral;?,axiverinifient
_duce more:stalk4; but nbt:so'niany pas.. : In
I for. the past twenty yearS; I aiioimpeli dto this respect it is like 't.,Ston. ',!A4.an]imprevi
I,believe that an*attonft, will. bel made t -.e4a • er.of tbe - soil I consido it'far 'supttaier tro clef
l ry out the vast schemeof en Toachment n all.. ver„. Or Any .tiling known in Teattessk. i •le, caber
its details. The I very men who will 1 noi4t fed off on thear,h . nintl,:md thera,ploughed , in.
1 loudly:scout;the suggestion_ 01'1 nay su e dc- . If Seed.iSthe .- Object one has in view. trarais r
l i
•.• . •- • - .
si'gri as chimerical - and , vi iOnary, wi t do ing this . plant, It it be sow n .iii drills' four.,
limb to carry it into e ff ect. ltils certain[th4 and a half- . ft]etlapart, one or two sweets in A
nearly' the • entire ,Deinocra ie, [party, North
, plaee', a . foot astinder ttiong eael,atdrilli. .In `flit
and South; are prepared . idlin the aciu4:l- course of the' uttinier, weedNuitl eultiyatls
l• '
, i,,
tion'of all the-territory' ernora/tt, in the' t bove with ;the plonalt or h P.: , it'f * te- . rWViroannet Of
schedule of maa a are-a - ,
_la'xranniOn c'outhlwiN'al. raising bil.,:lijr)eans or *lndian - Corn. , For- fed
.
-is a petailittraloctrine of the d.eirmentey4T *le der or hay, Sow them -I*tifideAs,a . and . lightli .
•Solith :. .*-will"4hul be gradnalkyl clothed ] With karrOw them in, like wheat ot...+theri grain... i
po - weitO.elif*r.‘. all her demaiids• : Thit she In;shOrt, taking this plant'. altogetlieri• it, 6
will display gieater moder:it kilt in using] Om one 'of the finest'and richest, •pt - Itluetliniis • I
evia
In acquiring this power, there . 4 not the al ig'it- er SAW ; and .1 atn-aatisfledlii any-own -mind,
est reason to expect. • . .11 . ' • . that itaiSthe greatest acquisition to the fiulLl4-
I am enabled to say, from .porsO .1•
al eet i ttv - ers of the.lifilliFy of the MisallSippi :and tht7 .
__..... - . •
aov e Sh- '.-
cation with :Northern W higs i 414' the h
tiotis of the past six months have. imi+sSei
t 1,,te..
them with a conviction whili they. elm o\
shake off, 'that the policy herent sketeh4d ik
been adopted, and .has induced them o .
.cept the issue of total separittion. fro he
Southern branch of their party,: as ten oi l ed
/ 1
by Badger in announcing the Iresults f e
~sectiTonal Whig caucus on , the repeal - f lid
. comprOrnise,i.and . by Jones inLhis reeeilt e
nuneiatinn of:the:Baton petition. It.',: - n et
be d0u14( . : I that - atticof the Whi r p tr.
ty - is dissolved. The possibility awl t le, 1k3,..
sirability of its . relaiion,' are
,titestions or" 11-•
tore . aeeisioti,.. But the present . ntov m It
exists by the act of the :southt rn wing I h(i
party;ktho'did secede in a formal and sole in
miumer, on the is,lcbraska. issue. . Neka': - ras
the4lissolUtion.aioidable.... f : . 1-: -
..
,The _ then pending aggression, . and - .o,e.)t
great Syst.em or aggression $lll behind, are
1 j .eCtiotlal ;
_the resistance to . them - mu t le
ressarilybe- sectional' . Messrs:, Clay _ n ,nd
lV
Pearce, and thebige of Delaware a .111 a,
- ecupy n . - ; • ..,. . „....
y d,oettiral i posibonn, as they. \id
ni the repeal nt-the MSssot i compromise:J-Ir_
3t t the great- t t' fact,.•ominetia, and meitiCnto
it is, - stand natitinalitk'
)f the Vhig. i pittt) , is
.one: it is kit in.
-Terrible. as •th&.consequences)3nnie :
ankt adtnit. the event. portosis . tholiireat,
in amities, WC 'ninth recognize: the fact. -that.
ii W
Northernhig,s . stand ale e, and 'are :fi'ec
to act as in their judgment the future g of
th 'Whole et:wntry: l anti of .their-section o it
re tifCr • - I 4 -- ' l ' • •
We are net;dealloinlone with our, .own i
y and its' po o
sitiiinil but take its tours in
finctitni :that! of the PetridenicyJ—
upOn:thc point .of division.).
~ e.tional"Aft e o. Th L atifiartY at the North
fi St. to crusli f t-fittits internal 'enemies.. wi
t ley are about is d e ,l a nd ' t hey will then
aimc sectillal irc - 4stafieeto sectional
c Pachtnentrrn -01. Thera I.- but one seutim
a ong Northeen ,tert-;...n0t in - the -1
• loyment of the !•ESeeutive., it is this!
is North if; thrown.upon her Off e nce,
( illy the libertici f her..citizens,hut'.. cr
. olitieal. existence is at stake . ;_ and a%
n(1 all hazards she must be defended... '
'! • ' Atl}:xt
OURGIIBTANATORIAt CANDIDA.
In all . ouripoliticali experience we hare ,
t r known a WhialGqbernatorialnominatk!
give such,generalliartsfae ion to'all pailie;
•
that of .Jams Picpllock,his 'pri va te -and riti
bite has 't?e_eti,i so ePtl i tely unexceptionable
iveit hi.s . ind i st bitter; political oppotientS;
had nothing ro say lagainiA hira-- - -thehfl
-;re hertnetitcall,y] f3,eatexi. Indeed • welt
. l i enge. diet - 1 - i to pointjto 21 . jingle net. • vote
.4neeey of . jitdge. : I. , otloe!c's . --Ntliieh the Tii.
•annot hear i tily endi6e. I root las .firlt- f
i().11 to COlrgretz:.y ulii to. the present time,,
• Aetling has taiorned every station Whith lit
rocs ealledi upon to fill. A t repres.enta
a Congres•f, althinigh one of the youni , v,
tot the )Icittngestf m(niber, - be won ibr hir
't
proud. position an - I ong the _highest. inte
mil ablest ;debaters!, in that bodV,• by the! .
tbility inid eloiltienl•e with whielt•he adi
ed and derended the.. hitere,ts - 01,..his 11;•
'fate. Suibsequenely, when .elected tof
leni:h, he , t won ! additional, laurels,to til
vliieh already enckreled his .brow. oi
' piestions <lf publiei policy Mr. Pollock i.
lot hesitate to !make ati open, hon'e'stl
I . ;alpha avolN'‘ -- al Of; his sentincents, anil;'l'
Tenerally t i ninittopo . on the right siil(ti.
err questin. , in tlllis respect he
- _Aifiers
tctiall , ... fr,ion GOv. 'Bigler, who is tinilil,l
'luting, and so ekeiiedinglyZnon commit
co rcnder Ills . po4,io.in'on all questions d
•
ful. 'Mr. ll'olloJk,l instead 4d •beill. it f 4
tool in flat handS of a few: -desiirnie - ii. --4--itqli'fi
-li, i I :-., :-_,
( , trileq WO:lif i, i)ei gt,)VCl . llllr I linliklEarid V,i'v inn
, -i••• , • . i...
',Manly independ i rn+ , '," linnueSs; - and
. ili . iyision.
, of character, countlaud .I.lv -confide:tie: ?-,lf iti
.• ~.
Mends:am4 the l 'lrei•pt.ct l. of lii enemies]. In,
'
brake he Woula kejust such a Chief - iMag.„
WI-ate as; the people 'of. the ..01t1 . - Keyqpne
could loolc up td, aild honor Without.. conpro..
i r tnising tlieii ilig fr
ni(y as ee-m(ll.i. :nil' froi*
' prosont iAilicati , ]aiii he. will- be. - elec:ted • 1
i y• an-
L overwhel 'itin c ,W4najrity. ThehOnest ILsse r S,'
I are dlsgtsted .With Bigler's : itabeciliti..• and
,L base sub'' , rv . , ne .' &the South -. nd :le .t n ii" '
i..- It. ,3lt . .A . ." r!. ~.
.1.0
i I see a fill grown . man: .in the Ghbernatiirial
, 'chair oft
i le Old -,llri.ly,:tone- . —a !rm of stitioient
intellectual eapaeitry• to man Age the atilnrs , ..:of
State ereditabW aid sueeesstltily . , : .and with
- fitmness an & independence - enough to 4 icarr.3 .,
" out WiTat! he liitnel3tly .belieKes ft 6. bf' l ,-ririht.
''. Such a nianis ..latnes Polloc,:k...atifkliWill he:
. •
'. I- : t 11- tieNt.l Gov.:yr:ll4' of Pen
risylvatiiie...-k'eu a
•siilvanialTeleg)?.a.p rir., -. - -.•' '
I• . (
.
state &bucket' that bas beetst in tredneeti b
. ta,this eoentry +—guano /lot eteipted—for tin
It last thirty •years. Very. respeetfu IY, yont
s obedient servant, 1 .,1_ ,
• - Citatras' Masoth Co ;# ' linter.
i' l•
—lt is a re arktslile.fact;tbit o i the eigk
teen States ad fitted into the 1114Ontsinee the
formation of t e Uststitutpn' lailly' eight of
them Piave hatllpermissiOn to erect 4 i tate goy. ;
ernments. In the other, nine,l (4ei usive cif
Texas,)the -people have aesureo sw,yereignti.r,
eut ; themselve4loolb from eolmr4gonal liif ;
tation,formed at once independent, . tate gov
ernments, and have been admitted intc# - the
Union.--2Varzrich (Cann)' A4rora.
• t a r-Ant r i-Nebnisins Resobitions have Oss , -
ed the NeW.Hampshire-Logislatitr i e,,by pa
jotities avers.gitir, about thirtl.- . . The Adtnirt
istration has given up all hopes of leleetit a
U. S. SentOor. - Pierce hag. thus - re&ived a
Oriere and s eking blOO frOm lilaown'
&MC, De Ul i atio New Hatiipshiie, '
be i gg
i 1 . 1
option for Opinionllkati.' •
The eentemptifge manner 1 a thegen
eral lidlninintration at Washington - is n
o r
managed, is exhibiting itself in every dew*
meat of therinrernment. A strikinginsten ee
of the petty _tactics; with which they attempt
to drill-.the freemen of our- conitry, ryas ex
hibifed in Pike tounty, in this State, recent:
ly. -A correspondent writing ifrout Milford
to the Amer:ion:Banner,Says •
4
A Democrat, residing a short distance
from this t. Plnee, applied for thel o ffi ce of Pest.
m aster in. the small village wheri3'he resided,
He had been the warm and firth supporter of
Bigler. and Pierce ; a .c..onSistent limn in his
Party Prod4ections, and thought that he might ,
justly :apply for the office.- . His application
and' recornmeiidationswete tent to Washing.
ton, and in
.: "'a few days, be& came a letter
from an official, - asking, the extraordinary
question, Whithir he voted: for comp6e//
when lie . pas' a cantlidateJk. the Supreme
Bench r 'Like a true 'Ameriedpn, he anslver.
"ed ! And that Ae :would lot vett. f or
Jautes 6'ampbell under unit, 4rcu!ustanee - sr
Of course he did not get. the offiee4 This is
one more - instance ,
riotit-rn and enlarged liberality of J 7 e-eni4x
taimpbell, Postrna.lter Genert4 of the United
rag.l
ith
ro-
pot
fiery
pny.
1 'Latest firam Euroin).
. ,
1 ),) i,... • The stedrasitil; Witiihinglatiiitd at : New
i.-Ine,he-a• at I hi- upng un.
'Oat . , Yurk,•andl the X .' • - '.4...... ' t. -- ~• -.
1. c w- i . port ant - news , froni the 1- ‘231 of war: . The
llii,s I - sity, , .. of Sl4.:stria baS . been raii.d.. After. Ser. .
Aar. rerat desi)Orate assault:4,- in .which, they*ere - -.
1 , . or I repuiscd With . severe fuss, th e e. Russians, on
-,,) I the' •apprt ;act); of a h& j ] e ofAO 000 . Turkish
o, e-. ~.1 . • .. . . ,
e l ! i . e . rtl'Onlis, wlp). had been Aleqptlehed; to the as-.
hi s 1 si4teeee- di ; the beskged,-preliipitately ;raised
,L, h tts : [ the Siege : and reti, - ;Utell aerogs the Danube,—
L fi ve ; The , Torli's- then - crossed the ricer;above.. l 9i.
,1 . , t , ii:1 1 lei f itria, aftacko ai)d - defeateti ..the . .Ru silting,
1 ,,,. 1 .4iii athi w.;apttireil
.the. izland: wh'eli--ttiO Russians
„ ots ' I had fortieail, with - their. guns
. antunitiOn, &o.
2. ,,, a ) I The - - Victory of the -Turks:. as-eo - •mplete."—=;
~..,;, ..: illas e \vs' . lia ring hertr. r ived through
'- i . - t t ..,, Vlie.nua;.-11 I il)". lie. 4.elied• on. •-• yrit'e Russian
f: ._ i l le -1 t..etint says that: thesit...ge prilest*)a - las bees
e l t
; H •
i4l v 4:c7e.c i. . •:, .. -
- . . " - i i .
J-, a u. i ;.(in'the. 12th of June, the date - 12 .ourlatest
d oe „,l uews - ; the'Baltic fleet, cOnsisting 43. e. 29 :English
:. .i. !:( 1 - i and, 16 French .ships,in. 4111 1 •47. Sail, had. v .
Lfleared betb),-,e Cyonstadt - with'the' intention of
attacking: it. - -Si:iota...lbis -• itnportant and
stroi, , ,- . 1 . y.i fortified `placebe Opt - tired; St. Vee
ter-iburf% which is only,•tp.,rniles distant, win
he in grcl!.t.- 'o:Luger.- , it. - . --. • ,
1 1,1 1174
it.:lid - ent at Sitsqnehanna, Depot.
. .
.
The 11ev. J: IL Cargill,..a young_ Methodist
clergypian - who lias.‘.just come upon thii,eir:
• emt..and who _preached. in Montrose, for 'the
' fir.-4 time, N . ve heliev. ; last SUnday,'w. as killed
liy the ciiseliarge:of a cannon, at Srisquelaniaa
Depict, On the' Fourth.: As Ave learn the kir.
11 11, , ,taint.e,,s,- two cannon': were 'being fired in
111 e street; and .as Car gill came ip front of one.
1 ',)l' thcon, -sCane 'Tie called cult - that they•tere
•
I About :.- 6.ti re It.j when he sprang uway, from
hefifte it. just. in:tinie to:Teceive the fire from ; .
the Other, the wiidding of :which rinfliete4 . s. -
. ihdeki ng:..woi mil 1 in the allornen; , cansinglis
ficati • •in •ai . jout; three hours: . -• We .lieliere'lie
,Was ,:a 'native ,t 7 Jacks-on- township, in • this
Conntv.. where' his_father'S family - how reside,
1- . ,
{tine} WaS a Youlig Man of . Much•pr9mis.e..-- -
1 . 11.ii5 .. i - tnotlio.. - alu4l - 4 life luis,been sacrificed
. . , .
, • . . . • • • •
o the 9urivot - recklessness and lawless . the
1 Circler with..-liirli Independe:nce day is 'sca
i (,f, en di ~ .,r a, -. EeOl- , - -•• ! ;'.• . - • ,
1' Tu PEN:iZz3VLITANIA.N continues LO CURIO
Nebra , :ka Bill, the . af_ritation about Which,
it a;z.4nres dy;ng a . y>tay, A. compat4§ori .
s tempte;4l.l,etween 'the present excitement
amithei,one against. the Tariff of: 1840. and
;Democrats are warned not to leave the par,
Ity.now,with the hope-of haying the Nebraska
;Whigs are -not -sinew.
land Will . deceive,* them again. Besides; the
• •
Deleocrais have such an ascendancy that there
lean*be no repeal until after-:the
.next Presi•
eleetion; and .then; Kansas, and No.
2tint• - •
hslitd
we
br,asha . .will. ..1)'.1 ready. to , come
.iji as free-
Str.tes. ', This
on
and th - eOfli'whieh - hase
piyeeded it on The same. subject, - prove the,
extretae- trfpidation-of the: Pemotratie lead.
ers.ir4- . .this State: - - : GoVernor - Bigier.iiiigiirF..
ed to
~lje: bmtpit by a-largemajority, and they
ha
bnitc.- to: Kaspeet . it. The :try . t - liar :+_
nit certainly lie ti•fr;leState is t i O :palpable
1 . 1
A.llralFug to be lelleved-in. ' .A a-Southera •
..
..
'lsfiliticians fool o sl For 'what lav; .- they heea
eorrt. .tiding, if riot to olake . itriv'e s it of. an: - .
sas and . ..lSebrasl: - 4..7. Slavery already am
ded
fucto 'in K-aasai,.and .slaveholder are, or
.g. amzing in "Missoirri and .. els.dwbere.. to take
posseSSion of the Territories; and exclude free
,etpigrailisby 'for , cei of. arrri.s.+Doity .Regit
, t.ei: "-.. •' ' - - ..- • - .' ~"..-,
••: - .iw`" .The.dnty-On Auierieati Tobacco,
ported into - is' only
.:about twelie
hundred per cent ! • So .iv'e.l.e:rin from - the
Ilritiskaancellor of thp - ExChequer,'whooti •
loqki •,about,to
. find articles; which will bear.
the' increased rate of. duty'. during 'the -war
with IttrA• f da, thirsts that tobacco -- duty' id
do as it is, particularly - 0 hits that'. this
reveime is improviUg from .**tn
VC, (vete:— .; . ‘-- 11.
That a wonderful state,lof :things, and
'think it one of tilos l e . 'eases. to. Apply
the doctrine of let•wel I alone;.. {Hear, hear.)
:Were we to tamper with, it, I do .'dot thia
we should get:ay - cry:large six.m. • We might
-1-)reak.down the revenue alte#,ether*-and env - .
.ble the cunuggier to have theluppe;hand.: ,
This duty Of 1200 per, cent yields a reve• •
nue .of about' $25,000,C,100 ! and° all derived
from' one* article- 'Aniericau production:•;-
'fliat Will do for free trade
. country,: and .
for -3 goVernMent , ai fend offrec trade trea•
ties as. Great Britain . , :.• •
AZ:SUS 11 - 0, P bas jur
_
been completed by person employed by the
proirietors of 'the 'Harrishurg ,democratic=
and the reSult shoW that the ton-11W
a po,n ( s it 11. 4 217 * 5 -
, m pus acnsa mu. . •
mlored, - or an aggregate.of I 12,022.. Aeon , .
ding to-the tinitcd States etnsusof 1850; tIH
population ot the town wa l then 6924 bit
persons tual 91.0iolored, or a;total . of 784
The actual increase the Bole pop . '
has fiats hten 4188 i hutit - 4ears.thaf,while
the whites hilkie - increased '4293, the colors!
people' have
. dimihished in!' . number 105:
This is cleuhtless qtributahtei to' the , ors . --
tion of the stringent, fugitive slave law pa
in- 1850. - .
Tam op 1 , Fuerrtvs Shill sa IST JURY. -- •
We:cordially second the suggestions that
Legislature of this State, itt..ihs next seisil;
.pass. .a law birwhich the extradition- of Fug'
tire Slavea shall he prohited' arid prpTin t ".
od, until theiquestiort of Freedom- has be
fairly tested befOre`a3irryl'. - Th4FreeSta w
owe it to the:twelves - to:adopt some Ow 1 1
which the nquirernents of the ConstitutO,
ean cornplindarith waited - loth 00 0
and outrages and e4pendtturett as now-+`
tend the execution, of the Fugitive Slave
And let-the ,violation• otstoti a law of
don' tnd jtistice be attended with sere -
pains and petite :les' as - aril - - attached
iSlavery-Statutes.;-:—Stsgivais Ikta.
. ,
rAnQI le,
~.6 ot
.being.,at* ling for* pinaupllioN - mu° t H;il
ko .
an onion. the : 'following roomi
_ng
fonn4 that all Owneidlis !tad tearein tbei