fjg..stt,sliiiijoi#.ti aa7i It AP TIIEO. MONTROSE, ' Tursday; Seitembe ANTIZEBRASKA C . - Governor, J ANEES POLLOCK, of N • • • Canal 'cOmmissi GEORGE DARSIE, u Judge of,sllprento DANIEL M. SMVSER, - , For Brpresenta Stif N §TUUDEVANT: For F. P. ;11O1.L1STEri. :lot Register and rder, j. JAMES ,CII PMAN. Ifor Prothonotory, SIDNEY' 13. 'WELLS:7N ; For ,C,onamissiquer, JOSEPH ; I • The Anti Anti•Nebraslta Candidates. • The'rnen whose names appear at the head of our paper to-day, as . clifididates, are all , , - worthy to belong.to tne r reedom party now *forming at. the..!NOrth—are all Firm anti- 1 Nebraska. men r anol - a.s such we earnestly ad-, •Voeste l , the election of all of them.l The ag-.I greasiOns of;Slars.ry• must Ibe emphatically rebuked and speedily; .arrested, • soon .we shall Ouraelves- h i e little be#er than slaves to the deSpots of-the South.- . The oniy. : eensis-• tent - ceurSe for. Fr'ee,Soil Men, in our view; is to vote for no man\ for_ any] office, iwho is not openly and decidedly opPosed to .all. the liniehmations. 14 which a I iew men, the South, seek. to, Ol)tain the Permannt -control of the government ofour4ountry-, and to de- grade: it to-the lo'a positioil of al means for propagating is vile a sysym of human op- pression - the WOrld•everl knew. Only let . the people of - :'ennsylvanil speak their real sentiments at the ballot-bev; and such; a • • . lblowT*.ill be. struek at the haughty lords of the fetter and the whip, as they will - never recover from* 'We may be in error, but it is our sincere -belief:that there never was ; a time *ben the future weifitre this :;depended more';titan at the present, upon the aetion of the voters of Peunsylvama. - • • ' The . .v.'joe of the. State Must be given - for - freedom,•-and thiS • county is called upon to do her share Of ' - the' good . work. Answer Freemen of old ".Susquehanna 1 Shall not We be found faithful to our Irust,true to the - cause of freedom and hunianity I•• • • '•• More Corrections .on the Road Question. , i We 1 .have little time to ( spend in - replying s - • to• the tissue of charaeteriSrie ! misrepresenta tions by which the last-. he . iii - 6civi : Attempts to - excuse the Act ; of ..special legislation, or, ' public : swindle,! (we - .thank them for that phrase) by which about one hundred and sow.' entyfive dollars were needlessly taken from the pockets Ofthe.peopleOl this county, for the benefit of two or three individuals.' We ,do riot object ; -to the road being yaidto Hop bottom instead of Tunkhannoek 'Station, -es .. ally if the - amount of.•damages t o lie paid b, the county •was thereby diminished -; but -4-e do object to robbing the •people by this. rawly 'Special; legislation, which the- ex,. speaker and his friend, the Governor, are alsO 'muchopposed to, -when there is nOt_the faint- . est shadoir of excuse for it ; for, as •:we said_ before, the Road, if one was needed, could .. haiiebeeri'l.aid juste, as Well:and at a trilling,• at - expenSe, under .0 or er.o n- . • ,Den?.orfa I. being learned i•in. the law, instincts us that " the Court has no nior jurisdiction over a State Boad than 'it has o -or 'the - Em-. .perOr Napoleon!" .; ' J -. ' ~ .. By the twentieth section of the - Act of As sembly of 13th Eine 1836, entitled ',An Act relating to , Boads, ,11 ighways and Bridges, • ithiensete.4 as follows : . •-- -- I'' •. 1 4 The•said.COurts (i. e. the . 'arts of-Quar , l ter Sessions) 'respectively, s 1..a150 .have-! power in ,the aforesaid, to' change or supply by a new road; the You e,of any State • road which may be laid - Out v'_ direction of anyact of asseinbly, within their respective: counties, and thereupon to vacate so much - of said state reed as ..shall be supplied;:':Pro ' •videdi that no change ' shall . be 'alldwed in -• anY'..stich road,:whieh' shall -make; the same of. a greater aseent.or, escent. than five degrees - froth a horizontal liii ."-. - 1 .• ' . :. i i Will oui'amiable neighbor, Who'iS great at Correcting errors; be kind enough to in , 'form his readers whether the aboVe cited Act = does or dop:i not give the Courts anv jurisciie tioh over State roads, and whethrl"..the road . from Dimock Corners to Hopbottom.mould or . wild not have been•laid out under an - order of Court ? ',-. • . - • • .. taKATt-m--= The eniocrat made an amusing blunder, last week,, in stating that 'this 'noun- • \ty will give tigier 300 larger majority than it did in The error , consists in haVing added where he should have subtracted—and we believe the figure might safely have been , doubled, on that side. It was probably a 'mistake made on purpose, notintended how ever for the home market ; for'every body knows betterhere,—but to give his - editorial brethren something to crow Over abroadt---: But they ;hive been too recently Chased,' as they eali it, to pay- much attention to the .I:ipnoerats siatements'; and we can assure them that,:as:far as the signs of•the time,s,and the Open deelarations of infkuptial, credible Detntsnets, can be relied on; nothing—not even the es-Speaker's asserti; : ni that Bigler is, anti-Nebraska--equi4 be fui-dier froni the ' _ . ; 'Or The iew‘bonitale crt in - speak. . , ing of Know • Nothingisio, says it was started . by 'the wings, to_ break 4:l9Am the pcOpl.e's. rights, atll adds : Let the people ilpe ni :. her who ate the authois of this hellish scheme. and' hold,the* rivpOnsible, even, at the point cl the bayonet; if nerd be to cilerazinate - theni..? • . • ' • ~. HollisteT's .Withdritsit4. - , ',- .Ohly a "few-- weeks- ago,, F.' ::P . l -Hollister waS - endorsed by - ,:DemocratieioonyentiOn bt - Susetieharinn'coUnty; ilia Man- Worthy the suffrages of. fellow-citizens fortfie;cdfuN3 - hf Regis ter and IRecorder:: Now, the Nebraskal. ices, headed .i by the- Montrose Pentnerat,de. :flounce. hirn as the vilest of the l i niman race. It will nathrt i dly t,C asked, what is his offenco: how has he,.rendered himself so l u'ild, inly 'Un worthy'? the Shaine - ,of -his tpldneers be . ,- it : spoken, .hi mily crime is his'attachmentito principle I:; From the very day of his - bond-. -nation --by, - a . no-platform-convenhe -h,io been dUggei. by . ttiese false, democritsovith, insulting de nands •ftir written fro-Nebratika • pledges,.an threats of defeat unless he gitye them. M. -i'4. l .lollistrei. was, knoWn to be. a ' I strong .Free-Soitniani but- he was expected .. • to sell his S•inciples for,the'offic of Register . and Recorder.. Having found that the course of the Conkention, in refusing Ito .pass - any resolutions,latlat the same time nominating knoivii •Free-Soil men-fora part of the ticket, e was altiek intended to get Fr .. -Soil support' fOr secretli pledged Nebraskji : candidates, Mr. - Hollister, in.withdrawing front the qt*:: et, took.. the, only cour s e -that he hopoAly - could, iihrs he was willing' to sit/quiotly ,do*n:and,.,:see-hlitiSelf defeated -by'ilieSe Who , professed -.. be hiS friends. .Fi l i r it cannot be ti aenied,:byany one - Who knowi l 'the facts and has a charLeter for truth to Maintain, that: ae tiVe exerti i , i iiis Were Making by the NebraSka.. ites to def-at liellister.. - We Say, then, e',tat i. these inen If anybody, Were , the traitors.— If . the . ido , party, is .to be snrtained; in - all events, nr4 not the men -who:„labor to defeat , its 'nominees traitorsf Ay , rid . cloino of, , , . them doublY traitors-;. for som Of.those*ho had 'doomed Hollister to destii . etipn treOuse. - of...hiS titteliment 'to the; princiiiffs of free: dorni'have been loud - as the. ) kudest .in limo ' feSsiokis o' hostility to Slaverytaggressidn.— Yet :these : linen ; in their deSperation i c4rge hint With, 1 the perfidy 'that - justly ~ belongs to. themSeltils, and - have Ow iinpatlence, tolisug-j gent that Free-Soil Men will not support him-t- - .We shall see. So far as we ;have heard_ an k-kpression trent the Free-Soil Men, of-all parties, there is but one ivittion oh the' ::iubj4 : .- . I They - . consider that he has ;been ,through the fire of temptatien,:ttnd oirie I • out - Unscathed, and they will! unite hi! his trgi.slff. NIITIT EDITORS. 11E1 .2S, 1041 IDATEI3. rthurnberland. A.lleghen i. Court e Mizintr*ry . . live. of 11 suppOrt . i.s cordially 4 they Will in th4 at sup port l 'Of .14,tites Pollock, belieVit* . that hl' ha. now'been•praven a real; ineerruptible friend .of frecyletn.' .. ••. ! . !f : We cannot woinfer th6t the ; ritvilars' are . ex - cited—'frighteued—at ( thus i !having ;th e ir II plans for deceiving the-people brought to light, 'nor ; thattheyshould talk 'of destrOying. 1 the man they . could not bribe. i ! Mit their ch i , • r• t.ullitions l ief Wrath will only. rea*t upon thdent lves.- I.,Denouueing as man fur being 4 real, instead iof it shgnr.(ippone.nt !Of Slavery,. iS not the fray to win - Free-so it up port ..to. the -1 restl of their ticket. Let them. ,renietither ...se , • --,... -, • I that. 1: • .. - . •;. . .N. !i- It is becoming more and more evident that , 1 toe great battlet between Freedom and '.41 are- . .ry inust,e fought inekby inch, fur the min- - iona of Invery are - heie plotting secretly in . . i • our midst, seekine the inthienee the l pe tti est offii-ti on the side of the accursed institu tion •, aid 1 therefore call, ''upon all true • anti-sl+4 - men,' be they . Jeirs :Or Gentiles, Or' 'by )vhateyer naMe \ they Mai hav4 begin heretotlirelled, to. unite ii' the suip,Ort, of eandidafr,a' . 4o repent the prin eieletheyprofess. Candidate for ConlliAiwioner. JOSt * Pli Vi l ..S;111.111 Efl; ofJeSsUp haS.yield , I ed to the warm solieitations . of .hiS ,frien4 and I neiglibors,' . of all. Parties, ...cOining out this week fcir COunty Commisisionr. HO '7 IS too Well known in most 'of - the Western town, .'- shills to need am commendation, but for the, information of our *tern ,friends it should beis.sidl that in- additkon to his being . itipost eseelle t nian and eVery:wai 'ipable,jle has hadqh iniSfortune..to lOse *arm by;' being e4ightrin his Wool Paling Nfachine:ldnring the piatsutiimer,yrhich , disabls him for labor. Though elaSsed . as a Whig, sueb is hiS stand ki man' in his neighborhood, that. he a ill commnd almost a - unaninio4s. vote. Sidney B. WelltilEsq; ni Th s gentlean, who IS t he IndePendent j candidate for „Prothonotaryil though consid:l ered a good enough man tc l o be sent, to the Legislature' a Iry years agci, by thelDelno- 1 . cratie party, is assailed in the organ last week, Sinceannouncing himself as an anti-N l , cbraska, man, with a contemptible insinuation of hav-1 ing conducted IdinSelf HarrisbUrgi in such l a manner that . --he dared not -run ,a second time.' If the organ would-have the (*Wmr to inform its readers what he did to render him self objeCtionable in any rafter, they would probably .find that his •conduct was such as weld be highly approved by a large, majori tNiof his constituents. j. Itepment,ative. We are gratified in lamriiiig that. Maj. Johni Sturdev ant is - a eandidate_fior the legislatu4,l nominated by /the Anti-14ebraska men oil WYoining County. = tins upon,, that pl4t-1 . form; and we'be.s peOc for liis claims •all•thei eonsideratinn•which his shih.charter and' abilities challenge for him • We . (*pea - 14 see him elected * ,•, • • • •: • " May God the-Father, who ',curse him. Ma y :the Sun, who us, curse him. imlig, : 4he • holy iVirgiti- Mary CM* him. May ..: 'iadvoCate of holy'. Souls ' curse A , Plioninrioar LANV.—We . none .o non .o . 1 . • .1 .1 .. Au; the . chieffurq h linnerand bapt - our *readers will - forget. that the people are to I.,.. eur° • ° * . '" 3. WY - thei., holy and , .. i niviny of Martyrs, ,curse him, give iit the coming election an - esPresSioii '"), - in 3• . , e . . _ 1 . " , .r. 3 ?aid, Andre*, and all other i for or against 'a Prohibitory Liguor lamr.--i' . . ostler, together - .With the.rest ,i.lf i -The voters of-the State arethen to decide.this 'fand four gvangelists; curse hlin .question, a giimition of much impoitance to !helyjehoir of the holy . Virgins, • us all, hut W-hich,'fricim the Overwhelming .in of Christ, have despised. honor. ~ .! - e -'• r ;the World : curse ruin. May all. terest and importance, of the slavery issue, 17 ' , O ' fron fih e 1...._. 06 ,j 0u l Log o f: t i w ,.., .jß44nger of not I...teiving, "at this tinie, 'the . ;:'erlasting agei are i 'fOund to he'll] attention it deserves:. We trust that..no frier ,POd o l 'curse hini..,LMay the • hen of the cause of Temperance--no iiisri : - wl4 , •;earth: and all the luity *things the honestly desires to_reincie the fruitful sou .l.ing, curse him.., *The be en - - • . ''• - • . ihe be, whether in !the house or in ni P avert Y and crime: "' )lldlYidtials-' and d - ''' f ''in the . highway,or• in the 'bath,or taxation Upon the publio7 :will neglect to 1, -or iii the water, Orl m the churc . . cord his vote in favor of the Law.. '- • -:he • cursed in living,_ .in dying; ' drinking,. in being hungry, in aiii Tasting, in -sleeping i [ in. slumberin in working, in resting,—=—and ing. May he 'beetirsoll in all . th his body. May he!be cursed with 0ut..‘...- May he belcUrsed in the 'head. , May be Inc Cursed in hist be cu ;he rsed iu the crown of his Gov, Biglex who has- - beett. dangerously it • for some time ,past, - at'tWnverly, N Y., now nearly recovered health; an, we she it, stated in some of the papers,. wi probably boom resume his electioneering 1 • bon. " .1 . Eh -Speaker 's Chin's Anathema . hill I _;! : , Pope's Dal .. ! liaetraving,Nrituperative and vindictiv4 athein4 of Ex-Speaker,Cliikse upon Mr, - , isterl kir declining the nominaton of the ty of 4 no;Principles for the public eye,' rathoj,Onlylthe • seven pr inciple repress by live loaves & two lislies,y and co - ntin; on the tine Democratic Platform of llndc • . , de u noiltinations„ exhibits so much ofthe it a i didi;SpOsitipli ofthe'Pope's..imathem Bali of C.liirSes on a poor - heretic, that it . • i aantlerenr:readers to -give them' a .film , • I • - i . of lxith; that they - . may compare theiti.to, • - 1 • - , • er, and see if .a . party- ecituo sed . • of men bu l d ''with such a spirit Of pet•seentjoii tom • any Otte .who presumes to)latiudiate dottiiheering , authority;; and act' likle a ntait i !,would7not be astirtUntical,ClesPotit •1 . ; vintlii ! of. R oute ' hint* they cr. hap pily for - ; 1 ho We'! ,:o 'free country,' Willi ierats -are; begith ii regaCct 0 carses.withiabc nuieli concern as thosel awful heretics • linitW.Nothings . do the. Pope's BOIL of ex intifileation. Itl seems - that Mr. I.lo ll ister 'was : as - . . iiatinxliately after the nomination, with tl ,„;,.•- :.. - • , of nem , * ..turown overboard 'unless he ' 1; 1 ''' • slot a pledge to Vote for g0v. „ ... - Pigley,: he; refused to do; and -that he luts reeeiv , nie s ius letters containingilike : threats:' i . , reqiiiring pledges he c !. .Ouldinot ,ennsciet 1• - • lyiniake, seeing as he doesi that if a. men; like those mairioina that conventi .1. ~,,, , ter declaring Ito ;principles openly them: shOtild . succeed in forcing Ihini,and oth v vote for a Oovernorbound by no pled a I:ital question it 're-elected; th i ~ mse step, would be to force! it tipon them'. a ty • . . • .- ..1 ty test to' support anitapprtiYe of the qu ls i• - 7 ka iniquity itself, as a ; nu.asure, .enden , • Pennsylvania, since he!is eittinie4 e v ery , . . else as being on that PlatfOrin'. - -Ilene ei than sulimit-like a Slave to such ex 1 • • '. - I ' he has declared his Independette., and., rennuciation.of the idOl goddess of : th . ~ detnociaey he is 'Chased in the last . 0 theifollowingcha.racteristie:style : 11- ' • i :• ' - We Are Betrays:4 . .• • AS wit weie - going _to press last ever were called on by Mi. ltrolliker with mbieli We publisl. in ~.,,annthei coliuni drawing Ns name froht the I'ticket a Inutiieing himself as a Stator candid Serif]; :, . . -.; [ ' . , • - IThis trews w ill mantle the -cheek o Detraicrat with indignittin-4-withdra , wit t° . front the ticket , when he .knew . 1 yeation 'could not beassendiled to - sill pitiee,—and leaguing in ; 'a ,cot•rupt cl mit with the Whigs [a ifilsehoodl t dn . Wn the. very ticket of Which he was Snell an ; instance of political basenes aldowwi l ight treachery to the party ftierids--+such A uplicity,• We never.bef sett—t4t leaVe't.lo2, tieketl U:y.an arras with the - Whigs - [the falsehood rev 'strike down his colieagtic'S'!on it,—tc fttl a price -`-'-to betray the dowers to hi& had nursed• him • into conseqa the consideration - Of the Whig vote ti id; is a treachery. that we ...etiuld not li,eiv'ed ,!Ir. Hollister , i - itp able of. slicy.yri; by_ this . .act, that he is, as a p rottedat heart. an d'utterly unwortl' the least confidence: Pr.- ft,..'.:3l,.ieet. It tsnoW, that neither Whigsror Dent . ) t. itch hint. . how on tire Whigs iettegade, [the . falsejtoo -refutt. ] 1 t 1 4 n t) s .h .s11:1‘ e vi i i n t ,i h ,t a ie t . l b ie ii ‘ i til i l i p'e o t_ ,, ra i y - tl s i i . n e % . •• t e t ri f t at a .t'reotnent, io i .4-hcri he sup 4an do them the iii,:st harm. ! Anyt :scold hearted traitor! • But, it is e . i nOeratie party-ty - hav4 . f6und hull ( .arly. Now, •Deioner.itsl up,and i how to the world-i that Yon are are ho ifiow how to .rebuke the vile treaFc 40ny you have warmed into life w bits - hand, and who haciirepaid yon c!paid W . ashiligton tik'givittgliiin 1 - iand ,ut West P.oiut-l' ..V.r*e say, u im.' ''' No man ..;,.e..Yer , merited hres.bing front yogi kinds"so - richly Ust, look at it, leaVing the.! ticket •ileW' that the, party could not hole .'. l onvetition, thus giving , thet fi eld to ',codidate, and reeeivir.ig-froin the 'W alsehood again repeated] as the pr Tic,srfidy l , their support'for Sheriff! Isn corrupt, marked With esery thit v ; ,ating,iiingenerouft, eidd, Sel fi sh, disl and diOonest,we - ; veOure. cannot b tie polities o r - the - pat,:t half centut NVocild think, of placing such a man Ode' office ?—after he., has, i;hciwit'et] not be:trusted for an} henorable pi] that he will betray .tile veiny best 4as.httd, and' the very ones Who I hive all he had to.Aelilzy: ~,. .sa ; . Ve yhe hassboWn himself to C : if . ' - no principle, - honOr:or political and therefore Utterly unfit to be c any office of trust or profit. • Let ~ tt,itizens Of the county ,see to this,-1 inter a rebuke that shall ben terror in fiintre.: 1. Li 1 • . Death ta_ the •Traiter. • • - ik. . • •:... t• igh ... • 4 ••••• Albagree that it ro l t the g rossest courtesy and confidence;-the- rrtei , c.if an tinScrupulpuiyantlunprinciplei ever heard_of,— and . tharhe has I Self tincleser*ing theileast konfidene• from any - honorable !man.. If he i the worst :of any' Mail that ever eotitity we Shall wonder. - . .. ~ . il . 7 -- 4 - '' The follewingis. taken fr nfexconungnicatiori denounced ag ,• , ; fender of the POpd, its given-, in a AavrtioxY7G.tvis - fottinerlY /a. Rot I • lie Priest of Sarragosa, - .Spain.] " templ6i ; im his ` fore eadi eye-brows; in his . I neks his nostrils ;: in his . ' 're* in his lips ; ,in his t . c oat his wrists ; it. his a ' .fingers ;-in his bre the interior parts, t veins; in hi ls groin. his hips; in his kne in his joints; mid i ' cursed -in the.whol From the - crown . o 1 . 04 .Nlay.tbere I May the[Son. of th glory tpf i his maje. beaten and all pow agiiiiiitliiin, tii'diin pent and make full —so; he lit." 1 ; ' We , 1 I never 1 fob, ar: (or ited Out 'pen .pir- , 'or nee th itn- irds ould sw4g l I,trned rut .vithet.l, ei ciatory ems• or iarriibur t 11)11a . ry liy titlehe-wa) even at MIMI again. ours SP TE I Pollo4 ad: anna expity, , , l'he. day . ivai3 :Septelive an J udg i Susque teats. ould vhich nu- glowin o'cloch,l weaild rileroUs addl.. : collect 1 l ed a few: w since, tiotts et of !d ar'ound !,sen Pr4idl , and Robii F. 6rundt. was :ch Decke. awl S. !• 4ves, eo.s to Cs on retail • :w , . . as!' iinpossib e; , I. ui to take full notes; ~ speech, ; at d! il Pie: t i ollosving .abstraet,l ; 1 I believed i )e substantially correct,! file ' force: and Lt_ atity:pf language of the} .1 original, and !giVeP n juSti,idea of the peen- 1 1 1 liar kyle mid !elmj lei cc o(tlui speaker.. '.l ' • Jude l'ollockt.oU iner:,:ed by saying that Lhelukl conic to Lott Set *ithl!his fellow eiti l 1 cus'ehtiesernini I cit'sUesi to ibc decided at l'the approaching c. cet on. He desired to pre; setitliis opinions. fti / y anil fitirly: : lie had Ino Opinions to coliceail-0 Private letters t 4 he Sh,Uviii.. 'aronnil h lionA-hii friends,. repre sentin histiOn's ditrerent frOnt that in , 0 i 1 whieh he stood'heforc-the - publie. , The view that' he publiely,.lpr*sse(l, his puti)osed to carry out. • . ,: ' •" .' ' ' ' i , - Wi'th govehta of the next a par ra.,- .ed by where , rath- thoug lacks MEM br this bhatn. ing we • Card, I ..1 1 N% ILA !ld\ an- , / sign.. . no co itroversy l .„. Sonic ptfliticianst i tonsidered 1 all •tto differ - 1 1 nil them, on poliical ques tions ts eneini • 1, brit li•e.ilid not. F . - • 1 It - teas with 're uptiinc& - that . - heieonsenld to beeome a eini lidttte.: - he . !would have re-. joice 'a if the nokti flop had fallen elsewhere. But he Was ea! didate Aiw ;office==--for. the '..higheSt office iii,the'giet ofiThe.peooo of Penn- SylVailia—and they'lad therefore a right i lto 1 kntAvl his sentinient.'s. -- `,With; a govermitthit I'like'ours; the peopiq,. in the exercise of their right of poptilitrisgvereidtq,i ought' to know the, opinions of th •-_,.; men l'ltcY klace ,in office' r "fk hid' not eoi IC ' l ll - e•re:4• O. discuSS old,',de4id 'issues.. "SuffiCient mntothe klayls the evil thereof," says that toOkt:whit4l is!above' ;all . others. lint the re Jas -4 ,-a question now ; 'at' issue, that - exceed ;all thejold 'issues of a Unit-, ed States . Bank:,- i.i); . 4c:,•iti..magnitade, as l i.,. much as a inotni aure_xceeds - a mole hill. j 1 reit years ago :it '',3-4. vvas? much - agitation; or . the slavery qUeSlUtyand wd, were told thaN there. was dog . 4 3 0 f .1.. dissolution ot. the U-niett; Ihetv l ; : flcoin Proniise . ll:leasures, 3 0 • ISSO were passt l ,- ;,alidiectleel and; quiet fiver , , restored for a ti )eVslßtt. s t scheming and!am I bitious politician. in ,tliellastiCon t •ress • again threw this apple of discord •Smong the peo- I plc. By that ;Vf. fOin and cruel insult to"th s e nse of 'i t iSifeo: i 1" -thc, tywop)a nf;. the. NOrtlt .that uithallOwed at erUpt to extend: the itisti tntion of slaver' ; • hest issue . tid been,pre - sented for the P - s ,nteafiVasft: the qre.stion now was, wheth ..i. IL,laveiy or ; freedom should ' ' b Th it '''' '•b 1 d both I trnimp_. . e, q estioti • c onge •to I National . and S to polities.- FM', himself; he I, I was .ail uncoanlireintshig enemy of shivery 1 1 eitension\anif ' I'.iuld feel, it his duty ''it.s 'a - i ; '•• , • • • f. • , ; chief inifyii4rate I t0,..ca111 upon'. the' 'poi:iple- to , '; i I resist it r)v. elk fault - 41 4eauS. What motive 1 should inaucetfe Uxovernor of Pentis , Nail t, I . - or'.,Coligress. td - do any hints to favor the etc , - - - •, i \:. •,., c . Z . r . tension of slavertr? - itt awresq the,Pres -1 ident, and; indirectly; the Governor of Penn ' sylvania, had. 'helped td :extend !it, : Is onr Icountry pro:sla Try ? .1. j . ; I.Deinoc.ritey p . slavery,3 1\o.;:. f r et: u?i gObacli to first prit cipl es • ; 'let us ;hold cOnnsel l 'with the .Men f the leevolution,, the ,kried when ,the peep 6 of this land daidi - to lie free. ''‘'e..fiii,l tliat 1 they - then adV4ted thevery peneii'les .th It ~.,. . . . , , i i, . 1 we now: do. -.'•Vs ei •e; these braVe men iii'fav I r of hunian sliiVi ri ? . : 1 bh;; *l - ! not '-'isie• of them—no intin4 reatii4d of advOeating or e..., fe;i s t i ig' it. ,of had theivisefves.' - *felt' •it Ila 0 on. ..11.tek fresk:friin the' fields of the Revoltition Tie#* Nibtkla, 'bave - Cotintenan d Sl. Very; eitensinsi '': • The,yhadPOclairned i • •' .- tly and /felt tool deeply the great t th .",t. all men •fl• , created free and etinal." . t at 1 t Was-a trite . publiette! and eternal p in bi l!,. .; Unhapifily 'there was. one blot left ..y , )u fattiers.onfth • fairlstrueture of.Libert,v —. 1 II ye a r i t ;.f . or ß ir ti . t;I o t tn e ..,.. .el i tit ie tt r e e i :yf o as f. n o o u t r hin li g ber p tie o ! ivery- in the'., Constitiftionetery line' ind e; itiment of t . - t - - . inatrti merit 'was for freed in 'as there. an' ,t 7ng . in, the; early legislat of our•countryl i ' favOr of i SlaVery 'I , li IN is not. TheiJ -ffersen Ordinance •. fore ei eluding slain fr4m -the ..Norihwest n f rrttory, anl ieh •Originated'witit a SI, Ve i b Ider, showsl,vrE l fat -- ."fis then, the sentimen e t whole•conhtrY. :Thomas Jefferson w s . ; ttitie Democrat. ; 'The?, prin Apl&; of jeffe -- • were those on .ibieh l he the-4peaker) hi dity stood, al t4re oiree y opposed. to th principles, of , modern iNebraska De' oo racy. He as . his Democratic. friend. - t eempare nobis, land,i it they: had. left th of and true D n ocrage landmark., then I ; - - -•-, • - i ll 1 N:uld ask th, to return; ' : ''• - , 1 . Men are dill optitt.fo stick to the prl .9 ..- - that is the.fx of office:seekers. 'file w a. y, stick 1 - i ~our. - , iprineiples. Politi,hu tight 'stale :. `,: litidjanS j*lito are a smir.• t ouble and •)i . l,,ichief to' the . Conntry;• hi t e people 'aro •.,. gain by; tbetrannetio • o c ul fri e rso mr,e n ansts w o l lt. , t n tte,, t v i- r la des %: co e h r o y i ic , aid tL v io r :g ei h tedy a sah . no s . til,•i td ie - uttered .11iiitgentinient; in'speaking o sil .10 cry in ; thia . luntfy . , " I. - 'tremble • for m nntry whet ;reflect that GOd is just; tie is justice eel ot sleep. forever."' ' , An 1- i looking fo .to;;Tstsible future . 'the ~ tween the .. I Ve.Mid is; master he , ,dr . The Alai* , lia* no. qtribute, .whi . en ke ,sides *, flis iii . such conflict." • • - I'6, leo,-Incpud rain! ' - : ' . : Drat% ia O. Alcile brief authority, ' ,". • . Plays seelil,4ltastiii tricki before high beif ay. ..A!!. make 41lAngOs weep." : , i ' i , . _ A time will. konie wheti . all 'will 'stand alit fore , their , otos - to anSWer for deeds.doi n the body.-:Color will make, no distil etic t ; n that Soleirht hour: In tali : the trans 4 .tint of _this life .it should keep. that great y i a:. remembianeie. i ,If ail wotiki . ConScienti usl eompare - theiprjneililes oflfrei',sioni and slav ry, 14 . /d, miry - out their' ehnvictions of rigl 'ley !euuld , 4c, F . difrereutli- fitim ;ivhat ' ! I MEI evt;ry •ing his . L no d I ply the bina- break a part. ,—such and his r h e have s itement ed] to tisetl out c party ince,. for Sher ave be Ire kis litieian, w either eerna to rats Will or.e the rho has friends world, 41o,ses he bill n 4, but - Well.: the. MEE him.- est, and i of pile .h.gener. the cum-. p and - at a sound as he.— when he another he'Whig Ihilts, (the ee of his A treason g aggra } found in - W ho . • • resix)n can!. !rpose - , friendi i nve given be a man honesty, levated to he homiest ad admin. to traitors breAch of nest game,' 1 politician W , 'hown in': I i or respot 's not tt uu— 1 m s . •se oni a; ' (f, PI o ' mA tti of ' work by plan Ca' tho- •'ted &red for nd 'eternal fiehael the May st of Christ., iionderful. May Pe rast s • Ap . i ' s , theiples, May the •ho, for the he things or, Ithe SaintP,• orld, to ev l -. beloved of r eit and the* ein reniain; • wherelvr the field, or'' i in the wood, May he r n eating, in ig thirsty, in, g, in lying;;, in Wood e poweita of lin and with; hair of his wank. head in his .-.: - -4-- -- •! -- - . his ,in his ears • m e itt;itisr ims . •in • th . lu Is grinders;. in s shoulders ;in Whiff hands On -hip c NS 14244. ; and in all irery;:toinaelf; in, hie ; his tliig. 144 ;-.-7 . ----i4, hisieg4 I, - in hiS feet •.` nails)" May . -he be, ture bf his members:, end th the sole: of his sOundnifss in him . . ft ! -- abd with all th e. b urS4irn ;apd , may t More therein, rise _ ;'sinless he shill re -1 cticiti; - Ameli;arnen • - t at a the Ex-Speaker :so: piotts a 111i)r• ofdenun :er 1 t rar6itl Acad. ;'Sra 11'4" •I-Aw Office, or hel iglit 1 - 41i)rove upon . e4ing fro the Pope, 'at , ,i4o :be " uP and at hini MONTROSE; ssed tl li people of Montrtise, on the 23d I leantiiii 1- 1 -" a glorious, ray" after two somewhat. more ,ttrseltimatoi, than that ago by Gov. Bigler, stand. lAbel :Cassedy of the Peter . rill's N i iee-Presidents, •IL Frazier See- 13!gliA\peritonally he hail no v do.; .• Where are our Democtitic friends? r,l t , th4l4oble band who dare act theirl.&m -v*, ionti„; in defiance f the behests, .ofplitty- 7 ,= r i an suck there are ; SusqUehaittui•County...-., b t the' p :mot:retie ,ceders at the North who ir stand:side by side Withtlie South in -tbe ,at.., . 1 the 'world' 1 ' And • tempt to wrong the : i colintr:y ; ,by stayer extension? In . con s ti lm ,,ha had ',seen North ern niemerS . ' tamperix l . with - .for , their vi_ttel, in favor ; of ' slavery—he Qt, h u ..': I initiated fly ..the 'acts i . of North ern RePfresea. I I - iiitiVe+ - --tiets . to please those who lovTl rte; ttreason, tont, despised the traitor. I - •• . • i I • .-,-- Ilew. ; ,,slfould he charaeterize • 'slaverY 6 . Sla very erns l es theitnage of the Creator4-chat. talizes;hunninity. ; Pow harshly . Denfecnicy afil, slavery l slave - uttered together._ tiii•eatinnt OnsiStently - iitiyos.cat` . .botlil - The N i ebraskai outrage and ; slavery extension fin trio - fOrml do ''l rtross'Wrong to the motility of i,e - rie• --I t T iati No true! Democrat eari-IStistain the repeal of , the . Missouri . CoMproti4Se,..or I . . approve Pic Fugitive Slave law: r and it s shin- Aired liniquities...- Washington, lalso, 1 . Was • a Slaveliolder ' but 'opposed to. • siaveryl ; 'His latelylpublished . letter shows this, - Slavery •f t s aggresitive. It never, since it became tr. oweri.itti the land. ,has planted its. foot on :My ,SOill .alid 'receded. r T he; Moveinent. of ii'Over, isionward. ~ Slavery never retraces its teps4' When . MissOut i _applied: for Indpils tin,l,l*wih. 'slavery, great . 41. , ,itation• 'arose hrotighout the country; the Vnion'tOttered. ut aeoinpromise. ;Vas effected, a 'Compro tiiseliirtneh h.-as - heel ratified by .an •acqui e . c. 4 1 0 lOf In t ore thin , thirty . years;• anal-which t the,ltithe, was regarded' by; the.. North as a fßariunipbtof shivery.l The -North was - indig et tat that ;CotnprOmise, and.Condonned it. In Aaanis county, in, thi.i. State, a• Represen tativeatho voted for it, was burnt; in'efligy„ By tha t eoinproinisel in the residue of the Lon isia. lat . pisrehase, lying north of thirty six de -1 • • ~ . grees air thirty int 'nes, satiety and invol-• tintarY servitude, of terwise than in It'lie pun-, islimottlof crimes, vhereof the parties have been ;;tinly eonvietet, was forever itoi4hibitd. Atk4rdiltg .•to .out old . fashioned•; ideas the weral,fblever means—a great witlke, at , any 1 rate; lout ,the, slayeholders', Idietionary 'ap pears iti,give a new meaning' tn the I word-'=- ,by their definition it . 'means about thirty .ye 1441. I ' •. i; • I I - • ' . • The ntanner in which . a ll ; t h ings; even the • - .. r 3 ta nner most: si - kr , ed, are made to bout and leonforia to the `lpeenliar institution,'. Was i,f-I exen.- -plifieti 4i an- aneetlote of a ;Northern clergy . man:who was.on a -Nit. to a friend in Arkan sas. I - Ttvo slaves onl his friend'splinitation be r desirous a inr , des ' forming a inatriiminfitl con; : 1 . , .1. neetten; the clergymana.i. w• cals i ea• A upon. to tie' the knot., having *first, beendulyinstrueted in slim 4 slight. Vlkria ions fran the tiStUil forin . tila,i which the pi reit nstaitets of . the' ease ren dero qxpedient.; / - The question waS acef,rd ingly put, " Doyou Sambo, take this ;' . wo-; 'man' tot be your Wet. 'deal Iwife,•to love. eherish, andi Prteet, tke.,, ti I death! do yon. Pa' ri, or so lona , a t cirratn.vtaaces ~flaill'pernli??". This, altfitOti4hrtiot - exactly - what Samb o: oi desired, • watt the best that he caild',•expeet tinder,,the • eirciirriftances; and he gave - an aflirrnativegan- • 1 ri '.i t -, • •• • _. i i ,,,,, swer. Then Pinah was .I questioned, —"'Lyo • , J . you.taxe this - man tit be ; _iyour wedded ,hus: 'band, 4e,: till death do you part,! or. so- long .as eireliry.itaneSshall perinit ?" 'Dinah, being' • in, the -same - fix as 'lmam), ; also 14i veered, in 1 the' affirmative. I- " - Then, ' said thp i elergynian 1 Aelintlly, " I pro (*me' you - man -and I.rife, j aeOor4lng to the! 1a es of 'ad 'andi' tis State of I l i Arkansas." And :o it.i . continually,. _The' la Ws Of God and r an eon - lino- in • Conflict, at the, Soptli, inan's is' . Uts-i. ' red the I‘ higherlaw.! le 1• . - , Ile anal in a: news Piper - published here, l' called the .3fontroBi,e ,Deireicrat,aii article cop • - . ied fr m' the Harristirt'i Platform, 'charging. hint with having vOted,liti Co ;;tess, for the antipiatien of TeX. ..as. 1 He ill ' onouneed that statement deliberately'' false.. He - voted - a- I gaits i it, and Would. do :So again. He both voted and spoktp againSt it, anti his - speech is I lin; ; ;reoorii._ . • I .. ; - I; ~ '. • I . , . . Wcl have no holtility ;to our l -brethren at the ; South, but:imyselaing, undy ing hostility to!!tu...! o g gro4:--i4u.i.--lor 4avery.•• he spirit, of nth:', pt l ople of tl e North lis aronsed, and not witholit eause. The 'Missouri ICompteinise had elected a bartterliaoinst • the -encreach ments, of,slavo-ly ; that'harrier stood. firin, the dal* tide of slaiteriNtit'slied - against it in wain. But, 4las 1-,in the N'Mthl were fOund traitor's to, lil4rt v. In the S t ,Ltiate a: T.iptiglas'ecauld, be 'found, to pet-TO:Olie - removal:of that bar -- rier, and others joined ' withhint in ,his = peril . - d;y•'•. •rl'he , ' South spoke, and it was done. "St t ioti. e to o.:. iiolllo - 101;the -.North, the 3tis sinsritecarititet is liroken--repro l .frd withaat. a. •bI - W I f I t it! . ,petell St. ' e dentate, ;that- be restored.. What say you f ~iliait.i quit • territory be re- - 'gained, and. dedicated anew to freedom? Let the, Missouri. rtst ti l icil ion; ;be re-enacted. He . belief - ea that i 'the North didnot. now stand up f+,their ri!..dit.H. the!-`tylUtt *lis lost. One 'I prnaliple 07•7 I . e of her 'Must • eventually - tri- I umph. Light And darknesS,' tire an :Water; ' freOlom and slayer taiiot be, unite .-: • 1 E low was that fepeal effeeted-1 We did , net eiand'it..... IIi! . believed ,when the his- „tory of•that transarti is written, it will ar,- 3 pearl (Nat .the Adis 11;i ii 7 1 nitioll . ,:fel l l well ' ,mein- 1 hers;,. Mark if those ' ;_ who voted ;for it ; a- )'. gai;Ltthe.will. of their constituents, do-not i .soo oceupy ;places Under the Ailministiation. _ pig i that act will rtUt go unrebnked... A deep,. I . poWerful - feeling exists,:that will speak,at the &dint-hex: -He ilvliuld say . to his hearers,-as Y _ dta i the day.be fi lre.' at - To. - i d e lmot sa •id • - Wadda..." Act liovieStlV 'end dOnot; vote down ~. lot r pqneipics.," . .l 1 ~ .. . ; . , :. .- d ;I• he Nebrasluir,l DenioeratS . - say that the 1 .. Al isairi Compr4thise was .unconstitutional. li -Th Smith . it scents, :can Change the • Conso le . tut oil:ati;leastire.l. When did the. Compro n•- nit. e b ecome ' tuti uneOnstienal f... M ' Monroe and . ii his Cabinet, of whin n a ajority ;Were Soutle; , eti erg iihoun , includinn - IC the-greit cliainpi.: 1 e- .., t • '1 - . • , r 3 I • .• the:: great ~. , . • i e :on fof slavery, decided that it was constitu- ' C . k ~• tional - and ; their! op inions F are Worth' More - thinthose ' fthe their? `little ' 'of , , n - . •gtatits these days. is :. But it-is said thatlthe principles - of justice, equality retin u e that We should not • ex-' to - 'ana l ,c,.. :an al the property 'Of our southern ft:lends. .- 1 ; • N,N,e do not rtvognize Slaves as property, nor to • Id jarp they so reotgatized by the -Co ' nstitutien, he i o n by; eonitnon in ,W. I To . permit' shivery 'to , LI/ introduced jute Kansas, Would not produce ty I equality, but inequality and ',injustice. Tor i' d .ini4tanee-st northe r n - f fiord a southern man go ns : iliere,- and the for mer . takes with him $•1,0,00,9 o f Wnrth of cattle /hom es and other property, ,n t while the . latter- takes five slaves.: What is the result 'f Aslli..bliSis of representation, the -, , -. - •Southerner and ti n s five shiv,es count four, five re- -; , _ h e -Slaves being reckeneal as three freemen, and J., ynit with _your OrOi'ooo. worth ,Of property i l i cptitit one. Thi,e, is no equality in thlit.'4.- . 0. , There are twentil- fine representatives of slaves I A tit Contriesth, t gives the South its;; ; ;power, - in alid that l makes:them so eager to extend the : • • -1 ; . 1 . tis - inst itution: , ~., I\• ; I • .1 . 1 " Popular Soff.ereignty" ; ,is-urged upon the _ tai .Northern peoplel aslitte excuse for _repealing the Missouri', CoMpromise,--tan excuSts Most , ;fiiitisy and unreal.' f If the people of -A-Terri .: •, - 1 try are sovereig, )t hey can act,•as- race; anti ,_ I' no one haS the-rght to dictate tothole: ' ;let • , ; tlis.see how the case.lstands.t i ; wises 411 been in: '4rganized into at:Territory. • .id .the people tie" , - lit convention frame . a. government fi n' thein on 'Delves?' .No. . 1• 1 thatlwas done 14 CollireS*-- tisl . They have aGOitertior. 'Was ho chosen by inl .the peoflt>, in the I exercise of' ; this - Iboasted sly ./ popular sovete;igritY 'I" .11e Was nlit', even ve-I tin inhabitant of th a . Territory, butresident ;lit - ;,'f Pennsylvania--runt here indeed, I in,. our iey; .' fl ood old ComMonwealth, the people are pop -' - —lii I • ' ~ ~ , C oose ear. Own- Gov-, TO bite ular sovereigns and h th ' -' '4. Indepen dent Voters' of Sits ernors, and that is . the business we arc upon ,COunty. ' q tteh aana to.day. But go Ito Washington enter . - the- Feeticiw-Crnsears---The 'following justifies.' White HouSe; and there you will ' find a lade tion of mieeiers-`e, liinierlielp.lyt-htee Democrat; r:o u c t rat t:an from New' Ha 41 • - nip_ IWO, called Frank, attack made upon r 1 rageem Kansas.ie and he ' ll the 'popular soverdgn' Week, was handed,by a m p M r . Ch ase , l ast should publirit te i r t, He snakes the* Go_vernor i , •- the o ir t `their . _ It is day, l with a request that he Judges, and other territorial officers peretpptorily rethsed to dn. Co n a wonder he doeS not wear a crown, at least which he e only i ceurse,'" to Obtain of oak leaves, for he, the;' popular sovoreig ' Seflllelltly no • eto myself, to catinteraet AI •Ch ' .justice - of Kansas, is also the hero of Grey town. VI and r 1r' 4 ...44. Pr 111 „1, A soft, ......4,...,,5.06..fiS to pool...aro—not a fortified 1 i • aqe s eels town---but some twenty- fi ve shanties, and the °li a$ ihr IA .1 • ._ lias.,l frit*, IS tolptil l'' 1 lily - deal was done. If the Legislature of sans • in the column; "' ' defens e of the R eg ister , and ask s • should enact laws that do not please Congress' a'' to sestain tne, at the baltot box. 44 . IIoLLISIII Congress power to repeal them. Con- Sept. 26.155 . F. 1. gTera•cesuld even annihilate Kansas. Could For , the 3tontro3 Demo crat : 1 1. they annihilate ;- , old -Pennsylvania 3 No : - i ; re the Keystone (4. ' ll l'. • arch can. never be die-? - ce B.' Cfr-iss, >:"o . —': : ear Sir: 1 find pieced, for our people are . . L ~ self very securely de . noinieea r b %7 ; y 1 „ 11 2 , " ° - . impu •tr , sovere- i I course I have e deemed itlativial 1 - c'u t ` i •r r- - lens' and can defend 1 ,t leir ar e as Gov. Bigler had aeserted e tt • lin the.i , at ~ eto pursue nit the local a p i t*e'lt• limpal"" 1 Y d l'be ' . ,a. me with treachery cur • ti on, i rately legislature had the right to estaslish or ex- ~ 7 option, a n d elude slavery in Kansas. ThiS' be (te e si a i treason. From these 1 cuera , ~ e -, 0o e charges I wish to s-in er) denied. Neither had Coneress any such Cl f i ieate ,nevself. You have fiercely a e i my- elninteter • 1 my I itiotist. l i res n e e t right. The. Autocratt of Russia might a . 1 , , would def Ail. 'l n 't, do SO, 1 nlust ask the lie haps make a man a chattel in his dotniiit 'l.- i' )l ' .Itligeneeef y our • 1 I . 1 but the constitution eives no such power to •., . mullets, Loa tarough than •:, our government - . or any branch of it. While ' n1 ""'. I 9 111 reach the - ersial. ' 'I ' .1), . a in w Q s ? m e l d s the. Nebraska Bill. Was before Cone a resa, I . l ° Y - i. A "Ir 4 4, ter le injutee ey your ungenereae' .i itinendinents were offered' te give the 10c..el t el A ' u Z I : - / t i t y,i unc o 'e llii anow the to suggest, that - Legislature power to admit or exclude .slave• 1 the AntitNei b ' - a ' ry, hut they were voted down. But we are ?"es - a sentiments which have /ave. placed ITle in th e 1 aa a • told that the law of God will shut out s ry frotn the Territoriea. If tlds is true, why stand , were a l llvis'afk. ) .ltil l the i ,lll:l l :t i r e o h st.,!D il"w If ;slave oerat, the organ of .the a • ern l 'henocratte party in not make our laws conform to his ? - . e un y, amtathey serve greatly strength ened and encouraged li • )4.: i ry dies n9t go there, it certainly will ia.:t be this ° t ' . riel articlee. , ted badi prime ; the fault of ths3 t s: n s ,i v h i t f e w i te;a l l ) e e d n ' e t s h e e d i\ i l l is a s t oi t i t ri ‘ Compromises; lf r i liae ) e l i itruntlug your edit°- 1 ` ones—principkia which . - ire " ;:ntagonistie to th law of nature would' exclude it, then wit , y Te party-. as- . 1 it now statals- all I have to say -41 peal the compr,omise? The obteet was to i have slaves taken - there under the flilse ilibtthe';`l,l4l tit tn"elf, l''' that they l i n ries s ......_ , NOeittco by; the org.m of ;the (party. ;:I ‘ l4 e i re eo a u ll c .'"•v pen nuts .taught ;Ile to believe that tla "' plea that the Constitution car 1 _ t.y were 1 into the Tertitorica, and then permit th em -a,„ principle.; la Is liich the party yeas tubs, to say whether they will come in 11 1 4 si • -- ; ; 1,5 0 or 1 g 00.... , 1 , ; Delliotaati. p;rtv in this eon free Suites. This is a mere excueefar open- ' ~4 1 ' 1 e ' Re b e' 9 ' 61 " 111 ' hl I'm to be lies e tnat the ing the Territories to slayety. When Cia snstaiu Anti -Nebraska ineu and 1 7 ;iiiciple ° s u d fornin applied to be admitted as a free , State tY was stroteels Anti-Nebritska end s 1 the South objected because. she Was fret~ - i t }roe' you'l I' . N 1t II - . , , 1 et ei_ L, owaig opinion For a period of nine mouths the I eee ' et 1 t he ••• • • • tie 1 I. •end NI 1 pted 't • way- qualified, she - asked for admission in 4 ;`,;(-1°10‘,%,,,i: 1- i.i. a ‘, s e o ti rl a 't 4i t t ;t, i . t . , it t i l t , l at l ti i i i i e e li f e r s it e li i ii t , t ; vain. At last she got in by :mother ce , nip! u- - • the (Nebraska) Bill in all quarters i • trust, which, like all other.;, g ave all to 'slave- ,• aoe now come td the conclueion, that all attempts ry, and lost all , to freedom. The considera- to wring from the isentimeet of the north an , . ti vu was the Fugitive, Slave Law, )14 hick de- endorsement a the measure, will newt' e. - elts prises men of the right of trial by jur y , — in diatstee and ruin. Certainly , wee,. tota l 4 These egnipiontisee with Slavers''' . rite like. - `the to 1.. v cute aud th a eir nises, elerls meethee a higliwayman, and eiyin; hen half the . i,ndg cat, no man can now belies e that , in your purse, to' sate the rest. - The ° real • i the north. or any State of the north, mill a _ cemtest is between frt.e and slash IZtbor ---- er susta i n' that Bill is it pitesed Coli 'r... an d TheV C* *mot coexist. A Southern meintao• lee atilt a law.", Belies ing this t7,i it :i s itill;:r eif Cepigress said to him. 4 ltis 3 (.11,41 of life yOIIN u.kte 4 orrel.A, I did not suPpost the and 'death with it - -free litbor or Slavery must fall—and Slavery shall at tilt be conquered. wou l dwou l d a d ;', of th'' - -;\''br:zeka h.. 11 1. in this count s ttempt to etteree the parts or ans of This, then, .is the issue. But . (:love Birder says thia is a Nati l o s na p t e q u u n e:;i i o v i a e lli i a n %,,v,i,liweltisialkn: i t t l; (i t;i l ;i i i ii tts " l li t it o vt i ; l :t i d il ;t e ed th i e n l i i •e il g ea a s r u tl rie t . o the f has no conte.re. disastrous results whitheaust come upon the that she, has no influence _ ? flocs her Gt's•- enter stand so low. that, his volce cluniot )e. P art y 1 ‘ " It nt i tem P t sl to e n tl ( "''''' the' 7 Nelires heard at Waellington ? Gov, Bigler " mieht ", , l 'i l i nit • In . i.r . roiteons, then. sir, I must Item yen respensieteftir, Illual. Yon mot's have Spoken with effect , if he had .}old 'the - ea t c olt to powetr, at Witshingtonthi l it Penieseiolinia tii ,.. initl etielished thena :mud I n.ust I • .1 %indicate thee ,• approved that ate, itneser .would_ his Pas- le i sed. lle is responsible for that act. Bad, ~, It l's eneugh for me to Nilltlie.lte 111 T course. the COTIVCIItiOII that nominated hi m I .., . in re g ard to Go tailor leak e . ea' d o r ''' e , poevit ad.,.„,e,„ 1 . , against that at•t, it nes er NVOII'M have ! pissed. ir i ",' ' N ' Ili "' "g' i "" ( I` ii ' lt. fr"l'a N "W . e'lltBlol - (the speaker) knew Pc.llll';‘ Ivania's l ,real r ' l " .l. 'l°ll ' ' ll) ** ''The ori.ttents of the Bill have it -right tu ask that the m oral hea ueue , ) influence at Wltshintann - 11. i ' I •• 1 a . , at our ...eves a of tlie electio n atryied • by thetr votee, : atilt tune passed the reeolution i i' offered, egainstalie not he lietailelcil as ' .;t tiiiimpti of the repeal of Nebraska bill, it never' 'would h.tVC passed.-- t. the ..Ntieeouri Cointil o mese, and' the ()penil* Their.silence passed the bill. Governor Bee. let is responsible for it ; and his electitr, agaie of the slayer% tale -thin. aga i m ,,e\ a ee l , the Democraey of" the e hide country hate would be hailed as nn endorsement of it.— paw(' pledged . ie the stn.:levet and oet sel In leaving this subject he wopld say, cute - 'rho - State ( 'eat ral ' min a; your sentimenta, Note freely. and lie shotil4 ( * .mu , n - ialliier ' tee claim tic Net, raeka, fell 111 1 11 Pitooenaii cheerful. - acquiesee. HC declartel hirnself in favor of the 'iii. lif 1,111e'1.111.e. alit! IlYn i 'llid its Cim‘l'ir-'1.1111.111t k lII ' the Public Worke, a hich hav u e l - I, so al l ,ii ne ti, : s e t ' o ' ~ ‘,. „, ,4, ileetailt in . ‘3o%trllOr l l3;s2ittl”. Ii di ate the vete et of the Committ. a fruitful source of peenlati t. ~,,,, esery leenes-rat try. i _go end In ee. the Commoawealtle The Seite 'sustains a ernor) tor himatlf, thenifelie Governor -1,a:1 loss of many thous:end dollars annually - by , re terve him to endor e elNehtlielet by votitie fi r tabling them, and their only benefit s 'mice' to Intri, he can make up. hie lined end sote consist in furnishing the means tu build pal - cortlitigly. 13s y tier adviet. ,very-'Diaii. epee for some of the officers, and fill their r crat Sive to decide lly the Governor - -; s i i i id, purses. lie had known some o 1 these men a lietlier ise seoula or would not vote fiir hair to tate office at, $3 a day, and, in a few year t .... at the coming elect 4. "mil you ease te r the retire eiyh e to expinin whith e ceetled hie full( .Waig ride liy a Ifich we 14 Mid ticeidi..f...r arithmetic. Tile ex - poises fur repail - • .of the !fain • Line, alone, had involved us in doht __ourselves ehetl - Pe Ilk' Ma-, o r s ., a , not rush: $452,000, over and almve the revenge from,' "Pc," l .; h 's, :\ :`- b r`v . " ( l ue ,' li°n * ..-_IV,e runt rice " that rite aro •ernor, to ae,consisient wun h i , that source. No wonder faxes "here leavv. If iloteintersention, lim a This unprofitable property eleaila tin sa w , ;,,, Iliceelte do -trips i th ' illlAlllL'l ' loll Alla i.e.:age of that semen as possible. The hietory of i t n li t e m N N ‘e t: t r it t i l il i ( i ( . .- N mi e l t i:,!::,l, ll ) 01 0 . I ' t l i e (1 ,, e , niit, ,the, ,„iii. Battu+ celled, shoe e 11 0 0 th eteeen peewee ss ' ,il of course fellow hitit—ti n t us.' has been plundered. It may be a Yen- good The Goyeri or ainte and nettle his -Teeth Goa canal, but unfortimately its bottom has lift I did not "condemn the introdiartion and pits •\ len out The Bill which was passed fin. sel ling the Main Line for - tiff m 00,006, 0 ni t ain. mve (t .th `" - v e' ; ' 14* "• Bill: . On the, et "' ir ' '• ry he dist inetly (let:tared heaves in fiete of ed so many limitations and . restrictii tits that Pornlirr try -civilly: - or in other veils et: nobody :would' buy. One objected dint 4t I " , letting . slay .ry la. varried into the territories i sl le tle wa ss s -okil l d s,ii k n i;k : o l v i e e r the and then !citing the peoi)le 'sok it out-if ti l l i r itiotfr(e),lnals-whltiittll: ; the, can. , N. f 'ow, sir, i ii accordance with the over the bowl, hut take :twat' the spoon. Ile principles you atbetaetted and in aceorilenee wits ]iii retrenehnient and reform, in ev dry with the rule you leii 1 ;dull- 1 1 • - ar •'1 I k 1 , e• iiiA,litt department of the GOVel'lllllolll. llot tO Ntite ir fot am,. kegler. If there a any He w a s in favor of general education, a in that decision, I must lay it -at silbjecii %%hick he knew the peo k .l of 5 1t .,1- m e r thing N l Vl'lni I yttar euor. I alit ` gq..)Vellied by pritieipla henna laminty a •t 1 . ppreeet et . st lIIIN 0 1 :iced .l l l ' Il ' party ' I 11 le organ ter al : . _Mutt i ply and in 'pro% 13 colTlllloll schools, •. )" adopt um ei d • dir e ( Lion of, the I)emterant. and teach therein the print iples. of truth , ana s eters of tl ~ mina) . la may be that -tiler. justice. Preserve and inere.tse the comme u ..i Beek r s (nil 1 has 1' Ort1"41 the Bill ( - littera a. school had, but do not divide it, or appropri- Bt. theta:is t lilac " !lit now stands fully tea • ate it to sectariii-purposes: Ile referred to article in the Montrose Democrat, whims- mit" to 1 awl Il Y iftx • it P asled Ctul 'g rfri * en and becomck , low.' :111.1 il elected. his elect-pn sed to the 44 Freeman of Penneylvania, • all.- -Of bal l . 1 1.1 •• •• itl N 1 t H t iel at! as a tilliniqai ofthy. rep 31 .-. them mg to "hear in mind, that every vete of ,the 31i4ouri 0.;n4a..)1,i1 , -.0, ', &e. Inn east for , jaines P-olioek is a blow neetinst tile wash Lt - ty h eels cle:in of the Disaster al! constitutien, Which guarantees to ail men the Ruin, :-son Ittive taught me to believe, va I right to worship Almighty God according'to co me upon, the Party for "attempting to • the dictates of conscience'!" James Pollo c k, Saring trout the sentienefie of the north eu %u -tile speaker said, was hisname ; and he would dorsement of the iheastiVe by the iv-elect / to simply say °a that article thatit was false,- f G". 4W17 if )-13n p ieise ' call Bigjer. I i _, - and the man Who penned it knew into be false. `') T Will 114 your :Wen Il e would' defend the constitution with • his . min to alo facts w i llich induced me to With heart's best blood, Worehip your God actor- . drtINV iris } i wale - & l oin the regular ticket a ding to the dictates of your own conecience ; candidate. Or . the Office of Register and lie rear your temples to the Almighty - , and g o cord ner. the, dye nine of iny nominatite. and worship freely there. No; he had no a Nelwaska Dern aria railed upon me xhi power to proscribe his brother for exereizineurged nit to sign a pledge to vote for GO : the. rights of conscience, and 'hie trusted, nu ßigler. his Id' dined to du. I eis'a bigotry to make hint desire it. formed b3i *evert' Democrats that all tha i He was m favor of freedom 'to worship other W illtillek'S of the couveution had kere" God, by every, one now and forever. But he to ;support Gov. Bigler arid I :must agree ia would say to the churches, co - me net into pul- do so in writing:er forfeit: their support. T' itias as orgitnizations—stand back from the this I replied, thet a majority of my delegate political areno. If that is biteary, mak . the . o \N e opposed to jaw Nebraska Ilill, that I most of it supposed m y self fn as an a nti•Se On the Temperance question Ile would• braska eaadi'llitie, and that since the 'coiner that he beleieed the principle of prohibition a r tam did i' ti, else' a r p. r re. olutione endorsine , was constitutional and if a law should be ontrie Idi feel wall r- pallet! involving that principle, he would Nebraska '' , d not bound to auto fo aGov. Bigler. 1, heeeser. et, sanction it. He bedewed the veto power to eb- sea t myself satisfied with his forall I be a high eonservativeimwer, that should be ex P r in adm'str ttion itod agreed, for tide salo, el, ' c r'' used only on rare oceasions and with great harrnonY, not to 'oppose his re-Cleetloll. IS ° .1 1 circumspection. On the Temperance ques the understaadilthat this seas satislacti t ) tion, and every a o th er- tetistion of moral re to all, lf went i ome without sienang ilei form, he trusted was with the ;people.' le PP ' pledee. You can judge of my s urprise sll'i n .„C! , e Ibe an eee i lve latters from proutinee 1 Dennocra sin 1-prim's parts of the etelnili a agairdetnittuline'r a pledge that ItJwtit ild 0 , :i for Gov. Bigler,lotherwise they shophr %Oh . hold from me itieir support. One elle Idi ll a a prominent abets in the edft, of the p.ollle' l -----, this county, waS•so coniPlecent as. te %Ir, me that it " sho 4101 hiepride to,oppose'" '1 (.1 tanles I (26-161 . his t st I learned froLl . 1 . p, _ erma ee a reliabl sour e, that the independent ( A , • d Veal didate fo Register and Recorder ha 1 ed oilers fit support from several room ° "'` i , Democrat+, and large majorities Were 411 1 i 0 . .il -a' ed for "Imo it Democratic township!, !,_ Den - toerts, li tact it was perfectly telll' a ' e that ther exii ed a determination ea . 1 ,"-- part of Ile NOaraska 'Denim:rats to thl''' , wrathd ,• 1 my elect on a if 'possible, unle se.se 1,,, lice nay 1 rinelileb. DenatggatS Wilo Were' C. . - - i. c_r,g . , JUDGE POLLOCK, '" Titpaeruin.7,=-Sbiue geit tletiien frimi Schuylkill County filling upon Judge'reolle&ti few days ago,, wsere invited to take a drink. with':bint. ,- 'They stepped to big back parlor, Wheretaka side table Were sei . out smic extel;ent cake an 'a pitcher. of— coldlwater, and pure s They .' all .arMind but nobody got. boozY. - N8..b0, thoUght the polities of Pennayly,4lta wo idd come to. that- 7 -e lectioncering Witbreeld water: Oar The regular DeMociatie Convention of Tioga county, in this State; passed strong Anti• Slavery and'•• rohibitoFyr -Liquor Law rcsolu dons, . but took no "notice; Whatever 'at the National . or State' Administrations. :., • • Friends of Freedom ! let us go united to tins rolls, and victory . is ours. • Bi Hof th II: , 0 tli