attached to the ankle of ~n eh, and they are to ,Irag out their long Felinity ro• exel eking iheir fle3,7iven and constitutionally•proteet,l free. Into of speech, tonna,led to r ;o:lipr H. and Nyd:lcing in the poblie g,,,,,addvrtask.man• Lout Algorine slaveholdeis would be this is one of thn laws which the De party, by it:, p!,Il rtti, huA rosolvu , d to Ind wlll,ll tbr of the ITnited :dates ;weeds to(,rectite it 1,, With th, force of du:United Slat. , .s, 1 hest ?rot:tired a specimon of thd size of the iron hall .rhiolv is to be 11,1 in that Territory um], this enactment, and only regret that I cannot exhi bit also the iron chain, six feet in length, which I is to be dragged with it, through the hot sum• veer months, and the cold wintry snows, by the Free State "convicts" in Kansas. [Here Mr. C. exhibited a large and heavy iron ball, six inches in diameter, and eighteen inches in eh , cuinference.] r. Chairman, if the great men who have passed away to the spirit-land could stir them. ' in their graves, and, coming back to life and n.v!i on, should utter on the prairies of Kau• i ono the sentiments declared by them in the past, how would they be amazed at the penalties that I would await them on every side, for the utter once of their honest convictions on Slavery.— Said Washington to John F. Mercer, in 1781 : "I never mean, unless some particular eircum• stance should compel me to it, to possess anoth er slave by purchase, it being among my first wishes to see some plan adopted by which Sla very in this country may be abolished by law," Said Jefferson, in his Notes on Virginia : "The whole commerce between master and slave is a continual exercise of the most eare. mitting despotism on the one part, and degrad- ' ing submission on the other." 4 . 41 "With what execration should the statesman be loaded who, permitting. one-half of the citizens thus to trample on the rights of the other, transforms those into despots, and these into enemies, de• stroys the morals of the one part, and the amor patrite of the other ! Can the liberties of a on tian be thought secure, when wehave removed their only firm basis—a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties ore the gift of Hod ? That they are not violated but by his wrath ? Indeed I tremble for my country when I rlllect that God is just, and his just ices cannot steep forever." Surely such language, in the eyes of a Pro- Slavery jury, would be considered as "calculat ed" to render slaves "disorderly." And surely, in the langnage of the President and his party, "the law must be enforced." Como, the„, "She riff Jones,” Ali your chain and ball for each of these founders of the Republic, and, manacled together, let them, as they pursue their daily work, chant praises to "the great principle for which our revolutionary fathers fought,"and of which the defenders of the Nebraska bill told as that law was the great embodiment. Said Mr. Webster, in his Marshfield speech 1849: The 'Constitution speaks of the value and the necessity in well regulated militia." And the bogus Legislature have taken pains to keep the military force of the Territory in their own hands by some remarkable provisions, found on page 416, chapter one hundred nnal ten, and very truthfully entitled. "Act to organize, discipline and govern the militia of this Territory." Not one solitary jot or little of power is given to the people of the Territory to elect even a-fourth corporal of the militia. The govcreor, sir, by. this law, appoints the generals and the colonels. The colonels appoint tic captains the sergents, the musicians and the corporal's. And nll the I people ham to do is to say Amon! and train when ordered. Precisely such au experiment t as this was tsied in Indiana some years ago, and all went o ff happily and smoothly until it came to the 'people's turn to train) to train which all over the State they very unanimously declin ed to do. There Wes no Lecompte in Indiana to indict the whole matter passed off as an ex cellent joke that offended no one, officers or peo ple. But a Lecompte sits on the Kansas bench and to refuse to obey this law is treason in his eyes. And again, in 18501 But there is more in this cer!ter than moots the eye at first place, (see page 4200 that the .. .Sir, wherever there is a particular good to 'Territory shall he divided into military divisions be dere - - vherever there is a foot of land to be and that each brigade shill! consist of not less Stall back hem becoming slave territory—l am than two nor more thins five regiments. It is ready to assert the principles of the exclusion nut supposible, of course that in the early set of Slavery." dements of the Territory, them will be inure Said the noble old statesman of Kentucky, • than two regiments in each brigade, especially Henry Clay, in 1850: I es there arc two divisions of militia in the Ter i,/ have said that I never could vote for it ritory, and not less than two brigades in each myself; and I repeat, that I never can and 1 division. And now, Fir, if yon will turn to w eever w in ~e th, an d no ent .ll t l y power ever will intake me vote, to spread Slavery over territory I singly Clovis e o be , tion9, one half of the ftenple rf Aansas m•c to be under training orders of dictr where it does not exist." superior officers, bound to go wherever those officers Surely this, too, conflicts with the law of ce „,„,„„d t h,„•,..,, T . a v.., OF TOE E liar ;us. Harry them, Judge Leeumpte, to the LECTIONS t iro Territory! That clause reads: chain gang; and an they commence their years "Smite. That on the last Saturday in the of disgraceful and degrading punishment, for- month of August, in every year, the colonel or get not to read them from the Nebreska bill commanding officer of each regiment and separate that "its true intent and meaning" is "te I bettalion shall, by written or printed advertise leave the people thereof pee oily free (not on. meet, put up or distributed fifteen days before ly free, but PERFECTLY free) to form and rep, "" I t an ell . c t ta e or y e a n t ( l l Y ez n=s a tni oine fil eou l . late their domestic institutions in their own venient place ?tilled in company order by the tray, subject only to the Constitution of the I commandant, and at said rendezvous the coin- United States." - modem shall give to the officers public notice of There is another portion of this net to which the place where the regiment or battalion shall I wish to call special attention. It is the sue- meet, which place shall be within his district and ceeding section to the above, (sec. it, p 147 )1 the time as follows, viz; first regiment or one "Whenever env convict shall he employed lowest in number in each brigade shall meet at at labor for any incorporate town, or city, or I tett o'clock in Mfo c renoon, Oil the first Monday in tiny county, such town city, Dr county shallpay October." J-c. into the Territorrial treasury the stun of fifty ' It adds that the next regiment in each bra cents for each convict, for every day ouch con- gale is to meet the ensuing day. vict shall be engaged at such labor ; and when- In order that there may be no misunderstan• ever such convict shall be employed upon pei. ding or denial that this is the regular election vale hiring, at labor it shall be nt such price day, I quote from chapter 66 of the Code, page each, per day, as may be agreed upon with' age ; such keeper, or other person, having charge of nSee. 1. On the first Monday in October, in such: and the proceeds of said labor shall be the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty collected by such keeper, and put into theTer- five, and on the first Monday in October, every ritorial treasury." • I two years thereafter, an election for delegates Not content with the degradation of the to the House of Representatives of the United chaingang, a system of white slavery is to be States shall he held, at the respective places of introduced by "private hiring;' and the "ton- I holding elections, in the Territory of Kansas. victs," sentenced from the exercises of speech "Sec. 2. On the Scot Monday in October, in and of the press, are to bo hired out during the year one thousand eighth hundred stud fifty their aervittide, if their "keeper" sees fit, to the six, arid on the first Monday in October every heartless men who this day are fronting, them l year thereafter, an election for the Representa from their homes, and burning their dwellings I lives of the Legislative Assembly, and for all over their heads. But "the laws are to be ex- I other elective offices and not otherwise provided ocuted ;" and though they arc the offspring of for by law, shall be held at the respective pine the most gigantic fraud ever perpetrated upon cm; of holding elections in this Territory. a free people, if there is no change in thin poll- "Sec. 3. On the first Monday in October, in cy of the Government, and if the party which • the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty controls its action is not hurled from power, seven, and on the first Monday in October ev we shall doubtless next year see II overnor cry two years thereafter, an election shall be Robison (if not previously executed for tree: I held at the respective places of holdingolestions son) with the iron chain rand ball to his ankle, for members of the council." hired from the convict-keeper by Governor On the very day of the election, therefore— Shannon to do his menial service; or to be I which in every other State of the Union is punished, it' he disobeys his master's orders, something like a Sabbath, so far ae ordinary like a Southern slave. Anti Judge Lecompte business in concerned, and men are permitted would have the privilege, too, and would doubt- to choose their own officers and legislators as less exercise it, of having Judge Wakefield as th e y see fit, untrammelled by any power upon bin hired serf, dragging, for two or five years I ear th, and when men, in many States, aro ex to come, his chain and ball after him, as he erupt (coin arrest or all offences but felony, to enteredihis master's presence, or obeyed his aid to the furthest extent in leaving the people master's commend. And Marshal Donaldson perfectly free in the exorcise of the freeman's with "Sheriff Jones," and Stringfellow would m ost, priceless right, the elective franchise-- not certainly be behind their superiors in the these citizens of Kansas are to be summoned retinue of Free State slaves whom they could forth by their superior officers, wherever they satisfy their revenge upon by hiring as their may choose to march thous, subject to the pen menials from the keeper of the Kansas con. allies of au instant court martial, if they do not vies. I obey. For section 13 says, page 423 There ore many things in this code of whit-it "if a nee-commissioned officer, musician, or I will not have time to allude, my hour is rap- private, shall be guilty of disobedience of orders idly passing away and I must hasten on. ft 'or disrespect to en officer, during the time lie is worthy of notice, in passing, that in no place shall lie on duty, he shall he tried by a court in this code is slavery expressly established in martial, and fined, not less than five dollars, the Territory. Instead of leaving the people • nor more than Lindy dollars." of the Territory "perfectly free to form their I There's no provision in this chapter by which own institutions." Slavery is falcon to be , these officers, appointed by the Governor are to an institution already established by the supply the privates with tickets of nn orthodox Cougress of the United States, In this initial character, to be voted under their "orders legielation of the Territory, it is treated ns a but the selection of election-day for training-day heretofore recognizod and permanent "institu- I is a coincidence thst is obviously not necklet, tion." Thus, by page 60 slaves are to be up- tall. The authority given by the French gene prised like other property of a decendent ; by rids to the army to vote as they please, but if page 298, slaves are to be taken in execution they vo t t e e: i t i ln=re n te n r en Z , : e i n aa i Ve s r l i i ll e t f ts ec to rn h en e for debt: by page 932, mortgagee of slaves me ° r 0 1 .714613110, under training orders as they are, tai be recorded by page 556, slaves are to he in .,. should vote as they please, despite the reign of o tt d re b i l re th t e . I=g i ll e ' te b b Y l e P t r,,gZ,4 3 p (i a ' s l - 1 ' ) ; terror existing thine, and the angry denuncia „ Lions of their officers, they can he kept 1 y those their alum' But nowhere in the nixie he - officers, us doubtless intended they 811.10 be, found - a single line, or section, declaring that under such orders as will prevent them from "Slavery is hereby established." I have no protecting their ballot-boxes against the invasion Idea that, even if the Legislature of Kansas I which is, doubtless, this fall—as so oft. before tess to be concedcd a legal body, Slavery this I —to crowd them with fraudulent votes. I feel that there is nothing unjust, nothing of which any honest man can complain, if he is intelligent, and I feel that there is nothing of which the civilized world, if they take notice ~ t ,a humble an individual as myself, will re proach me, when I say, as I said the other day that 1 have made up my mind, for one, that under no circumstances will I consent to the ,v.tension of the area of Slavery in the TJni -I,d States, or to the further increase of slave representation in the House of Representa• slay has a legalexistence in the Territory. But to expect smelt a decision fs,nst its courts, would ho to look for mores from a Negro. As I was examining this Sahara of legislation to fin l, if possible olio oasis, my eye fell upon chapter 74 page 923 heeded with the attractive title of FREEDOM ;" and I rejoiced at the cer tainty rf finding something worthy approval in its provisions. Bat it appears that a person held In slavery" cannot sue for Id freedom till ho tirstl , olitions Court for loose to establish right to freedom. If that leave is denied whether Ito is legally ur illegally held in slavery ns, matter how clearly he mild prove Isis free dom yet, ifthe court withholds its permission, he has no altetnative but to continue in sla very till death frees him from his unjust servi tude. But if the court consent, he eon only go on by giving security for the costs, when it is a conceded fact that as a slave. ho has not a dol lar or a copper of his own in the world, and cannot even mortgage his own labor from in demnification of his security. On page 325, section 12, of this same law, there is a singular provision: If theplaintiff be it ?legro or mulatto, 110 is required to prove his right to freedom. There can be only ono fair , legitimate infer ence front this—and that it is considered quite Possible that persons not negroes or ranlvt ;es— t in other words, white parsons—may happen to be held in slavery In Kansas; bat the requirement of the consent of the court and security for costs applies to them also, and, of course, section 54 adds , "in actions prosecuted under this act the plaintiff shall not recover any damages" from the person who has been thus proven to have held him illegally, and perhaps for years in slavery. The rode also, to be complete, provides for slave flogging by law. By the one hundred and twenty second chapter, on page 454, patrols are to be appointed by the county corders, who are to visit negro quarters, and to watch unlawful assemblages of slaves. If slaves are found et the latter, if strolling from one plantation to en other without a pass, they are to surfer ten or twenty lashes. There is ono exception, and, Iv; ' I desire to do impartial justice to this code, I wish to say, to be placed to the credit of the men who enacted it, that that whipping disuse is not to be construed to prevent slaves from go ing directly to or returning from divine worship on the Sabbath. They beelieve, it seems in the "stated preaching of else Gospel," and therefore that is excepted. But sir, when visiting, on nn adjoining plantation, a woman whom her master allows him to call Isis wife, till ho ehoo•es to sell her and her children to some distant a lave-holder the lash is the penalty, unless he is provided with a ;sass. . . . . . Section thirteen of this same low brings all tho Sharpe's rifles on the ground, where the "superior officers" can take posse,siot of them under color of law, without fear of their con tents t "That it shall be the duty of every non-com missioned ollicer end private who owns a rifle musket, or lire-lock, to appear with it in good order at every parade." The whole country has heard, sir, of the se, Lion of the election law which allows "inhald- toots" to vote at the emeriti election, without requiring them to have resided in the Territory a single day ; and of the test oaths to sustain the Fugitive Slave Law and the Nebraska bill, which, flee intended to shut out all men opposed , to both from the ballot-box. And I will quote it from page 202, 11CCIll1S0 I desire to contrast its provisions with another: "'Sec. 11. Every free white male citizen of ! the United States, and every free turtle Indian who is made a citizen by treaty or otherwise, ! and over the ago of twenty-one years, who shall ! be an toluthitunt of this Territory, and of tine I county and district in which he oilers to vote, end shall have paid a Territorial tax, shall be a qualified elector for all elective officers; and all Indians who are inhabitants of this Territory, and who may have adopted -the customs of the white man, and who are Babel to nay tuxes, shall be doented citizens; Provided, That no soldier, seaman, or marine, in the regular Army or Navy of the United States shall be entitled to vote, by reason of being on service therein : And provided further, That no person who shall have been convicted of any violation of nay provision of an act of Congress ' entitled 'An act respecting fugitives from just ice, and persons escaping from the service of their masters,' tilt proved February 12, 1793, or aim net to a mend and supplementary to said act, approved 18th September, 1850 ; whether such conviction were by criminal proceeding or by civil action for the recovery of any penalty prescribed by either of said net s, in any courts of the 'United States, or ofany State or Territory, of any of fence deemed infatnons, shall be entitled to vote at any election, or to hold any ounce in this Ter ritory t And providedfurther, That if any person offering to vote Anil be challenged and required to take en oath or affirmation, to '4e administer ed by ono of the election, tit it he will sustain the provisions of the above recited acts of Coll green, and of the set entitled 'An net to organize the Territories of Nebraska and Kansas,' appro ved May 30, 1854, and shall refuse to take suck oath or affirmation, the vote of such person shall be rejected." Moiety being an "inhabitant," if the person is in favor of the Nebraska bill, nail of the Fugi tive blare Law, qualifies him as n voter in all the elections of the Territory agerting Notional or Territorial politics. The widest possible door is opened for the invaders to come over and cur ry cool suceessivo election as "inhabitants" for the time being of the Territory. But, turn to page 7.50, cud notice the following provision (section 9) defining the qualifications of voters nt the petty corporation elections of Lecompton: "Ali free of male citizens who have arri ved to the fall ago of twenty-one years and who shall be entitled to vote for Territorial oflleors and who shell have res;da/ within the city limits at least six months next preceding any election, and, moreover, who shall pay a city tax many city license according to ordinance, shall bo eli gible to vote at any .. and or city election for of:11- (yr . s of the city.' . - Being an' inhabitant a day clothes a person with the right to vole ll.fr Delegates in Congress and Representatives in the Legislature ; but to vote at au insignificant election. in comparison, six months' residence is requited I Ain I wrong in judging that this inverting the usual rule, shows that Missourians are wanted at ono elec tion, but not tho other 7 If any ono deems this opinion unjust, let him study the following sec tions of the General Election Law, page 283 "Section 19. Whenever any per;Onlhall oiler to vote, ho shall ne era:swam) to be entitled to vote." 'Sc.n 20. Whenever any person &Tors to vote his NUM May ho challenged by one of thu judges, or by nay voter, and the judges of the election may examine bins touching hie right to vote, and ifs° crumbled, NO LVIDENCE TO CONTRADICT SHALL DI ...VIM." . . . . Certainly these provisions explain themselves, without comment. I will now invite your attention to a contrast in the Tonal code of this Territory, singular in its character, to say the very Nast. Section five of the act punishing offences against slave property, page 604, enacts as follows "If any person shall aid or assist in enticing, decoying, or persuading, orharrying away, or sen ding out of this Territory, any Slave belonging to nuother, with intent to procure or effect the freedom of such slave, or with intent to deprive the owner thereof of the services of such slave, he shall be adjudged guilty of grind larceny, and on conviction thereof shall snip r death, or be im prisoned ut hard labor• for not less than tea years. A person, who, by a pro-slavery packed jury, is convicted of aiding in persuading out of die Territory a slave belonging ea another, fs to setter at Nast twins ns racers a penalty as be who is convicted at committing the vilest outrage that the mind of man can conceive of on the person of your• with, sister or daughter ! Nay, the con trast is still stronger. The jury, in the first in• stance, are authorized oven to inflict the punish ment or death—in the latter, see page 208, the penrilty Is "not less than five years." Such is the contrast in Hansa, between elm protection of a wife's or ilnughter's honor and happiness, and that which is thrown as a protecting wgis over the property of tire slave-holder! Again, on page 208, you will find that the ruf fian who commits malicious mayhem, that is, without provocation, knocks you down in the street, cuts off your nose and ears, and plucks out your eyes, Is punished "not loss than live nor more than ten years ;" the same degree of punishment that is meted out in section seven of the above act, page GO, on a person who should aid, o r assist, or Oren "harbor," an escaped slave! _ _ Th s 'n . p ng a 209, you will find that the man who sits at your bedside, when you me prostrated by disease, and taking advantage of your confidence and helplessness, administers poison to you, but wherel y death does nut happen to ensue, is to bo punished nut loss than Live nor more than ten years," though it is minder in the heart, if not the deed. And this is precisely the same penal ty as that prescribed by the eleventh section (quoted in any remarks above, on the five viola tions of the Constitution) against ono who but brings into the Territory any book, paper, or , handbill, containing any 'sentiment" "calcula ted" iu the eyes of a Pro-Slavery jury, to make slaves '-disorderly." The man who takes into the Territory Jefferson's Notes on Virginia can be, under this law, hurried away to the chain gant, and manacled, arm to arm, with the mar dens poisoner. I had hoped to find limo to cite and comment upon other sections in this code, but I will quota but one more, showing diet, while a white man is compelled to serve out the penalty of his crime, at hard labor, these slaveholding logisla lators have, iu their great regard for the value of the slave's labor to his master, enacted that a slave, lor the same edjimee, shall tie whipped, and then returned to him. INN Is the section, which I commend to the consideration of those who, while defending these laws, nickname the Re publicans "nigger worshippers." It is found on page 252: , •Stfc. 27. Ifkny slave shall commit petit lar ceny or Abell steal nny neat cattle, sheep, or hog, or be guilty of any misdemeanor, or other *Annce punishable under the provisions of this net only by Gun or imprisonment in a county jail, or by both each line and imprisonment, he shall, in stead of such punishment, be punished, if a male, by stripes on his bare back, not exceeding thir ty-nine, or if a female, by imprisonment in a county jail not exceeding twenty-ono days, at the discretion of the justice." Such, sir, is an impartial analysis of the code of Kansas, every allusion to which has been proven by extracts from the official copy now in my hand, rind in quoting from which I have re ferred in every instance, to the page, the number of the section, and its exact words; and I think that the strong language at the outset of my re marks, in which I denounce( this disgraceful and tyrannical code, has been fully juatitled by the proofs I have late below you from its pages.— Let it not be forgotten, Mr. Chairman, that it is because the people of Kaneas—an overwhelming majority of the actual settlers there—refused to obey those enactments passed by a body of men elected by armed mobs of invaders—that they have been delivered over to persecutions without parallel, and to all the horrors of civil tear. Bad I time, I would desire to refer to the his tory of events in that Territory ' • to the reckless and ruthless violation of plighted faith in the re• peal of the Hissouri Compromise, which opened the door for legislation like this ;to the ontiro absence of any protection by the President to the settlers against personal outrage; to the repeoed invasions by which the whole machinery of legis lation was usurped, hut the fruits of which the President upholds by cannon and bayonet, with proclamation and penalties ; to the causes which led to the civil war that lons existed in that Territory; to that most aggravating of all insults by which the very Jones who headed an invading patty of Missourians at one of the polls, and with his revolver at the breast of an election jitdge, gave him five minutes to resign or die, was - commissioned as a Sherill; to ride, booted and spurred over the people whose right he had thus assisted in striking down ; and many other things that make the blood of the great tones of the freemen nt the North course as it never be fore conreed, thrmigh their veins. But I must allude before concludingto the mockery of relief held out to the people by the President and his coadjutors. In his special message to Congress, on the 27th of January last, the :resident spoke thus Ou page 210, the kidnapping and cwginenant of a free white person, for any person, crop if a man, to sell him into slavery, or if a woman, for a still baser purpose, is to ho punished "not exceeding ten years." Decoying and enticing away ft child,under twelve years of age, from its parents, "not less than six months, find not ex caeding five years." lint fleroging and enticing away (mark the similarity of language !) a slave from his master, is punished by death, or confine ment not less than ten years. Here is the sec tion, page 604 : . ‘•lijetion 4. if any person shall entice, decoy, tarry away ont of this Territory, any ulave beltatging to another, with intent to deprive the owner thereof of the services of such slave, or with intent to effect or procure the freedom of such sluve,be shall he adjudged guilty of grand larceny, and, on conviction thereof, shall siurer DEATII, or be imprisoned at hard labor for not less than 011 years.” "Our system affords no justification of revolu tionary acts ; for the constitutional means of re lieving the people of unjust administrations and laws, by a change of public agents and by repeal ARE AMPLE." Anil in his speech. Ro reported in the Union, of Juno 10, made to the Buchanan ratification meeting, n•ho marched to the White Muse, he c,ielly told them : "There wit4on your part, no appeal to un worthy passio o inflammatory calls for a sec ond roolution, die those which are occasional ly reported as coming from men who have recei ved nothing at the !tunas of their Government bat protection and political blessings no dedfirt. tion of resistance to the laws of the land." But 1 will not stop to allude to the "protection and political blessings," which the people of Kansas have received from the "hands of their Government." It was bitter irony indeed. Judge Douglas, too, at the same scooting, speaking of the Kansas laws, declared as follows: "Or if they desire to have any of the laws re pealed, let them try to carry their point at the polls, and let tho majority decode the question." Never, sir, was there a more signal instance of "holding the word of promise to the cur, and break it to the hope." Where are the,,f ample" means of obtaining relief from the unedurable tyranny that grinds down the Free State men of Kansas into the dust 1 How can they carry their "point at the pulls 1" Let facts answer : 1. The Council, which passed these laws, has extended its term of service till 1858; so that, if the entire representative branch was unanimous for their repeal, the higher Lranch has the power to present the slightest change is them for two long years I 2. The Frie State men in Kansas are abso lutely shut out from the polls by test oaths, which no one with the soul of a freeman, who traces all the outrages there directly to the en , actment of the Nebraska bill can conscien tiously swear to it. it. Even if they do.go there, and swear to sustain the Nebraska bill and the Fugitive Slave Law, the election law is purposely tram. ea, as I have shown, to invite invasions of 3lis sourians, to control the. elections in favor of Slavery. 4. They are driven from the jury box, as well as disfranchised, and prohibited from act ing as attorneys in the courts, unless they take the test oath prescribed by their conquerors. 5. Free speech is not tolerated. They are left "perfectly free to form and regulate their own way," except, if they speak a word against Slavery, they are convicted of felony and hur -1 tied to the chats gang. I G. The presses in the Tt3rritory, at Leaven-. worth and Lawrence in favor of freedom, have been destroyed, and the two last by the author. ity of Judge Lecoinpte, thus 'crushing out' the freedom of the press. 7. Indictments are found by packed juries against every prominent Free State citizen; and who are not forced to flee from the Terri tory, are arrested and imprisoned, while those who have stolen from Free State men, tarred and feathered them, burned their houses, or murdered them, go nt large, unpunished. In such astute of allairs as this, to talk of going to the polls and having qe laws repeal ed, is worse than the mockery. It is an insult. It is like binding a man hand and foot, throw ing bins into the river, and then telling him to swim to shore, nod he will be saved. It is like loadening a mass with irons, and then telling bins to run for his life. The only relief possi ble, if Kansas is net promptly admitted as a State, which I hope may tie effected, is in a change of the Administration and of the party that so recklessly misrules the land; and that will furnish ass Mfeetual relief. As I look, sir, to the smiling valleys and fer tile plains of Kansas, and witness there the sorrowful scenes of civil war, in which .whoa forbearance at last ceased to he a virtue, tl,o Free State mess of the territoryfelt it necessa ry, deserted as they were by their Government, ' to defend their lives, their hearthstones, the language of one of the noblest statesmen of the age, uttered six years ago at the other end ' of this Capitol, rises before me mind I allude to the great statesman of kentucky, 'teary Clay. And while the party which, when he lived, lit the torch of slander at every avenue of Isis private life, and libelled hint before the Ainerivan people, by every epithet that renders mass infamous, no a . gambler, debauches), trai tor and enemy of h i s country, aro now cage god in shedding fictitious tears over his grave, and appealing to his old supporters to aid by their voters in shielding them front the indig• nation of an uprisen people. I ask thorn to • read this language of his, which comes to us i as from his tomb to-day. With the change ofl but a single geographical word in the place of "Mexico," hose prophetically does it apply to the very scenes and issues of this year. And who can doubt with what party he would stand in the corning campaign, if Ise was rest°. red to us from the damps of else grave, when they read the following, which fell from his i lips n 1850, and with which thanking the llouse for its attention I conclude my remarks: "But if unhappily, wo should be involved in war, in civil war, betwoon the two parties of this side should he to restrain the introduction 01 Slavery into the new Territories, and upon the other side to force its introduction there, what a spectacle should wo present to the as tonishment of mankind, in an effort, not to propagate rights but—l must say it, though I trust it will be understood to Ire said with no design to excite feeling—a- war to propagate wrongs in the Territories tus acquired from Mexico I It would be a %Will whirl, we should have no sympathies, no good wishes—i t which' all mankind leoutd be against ; for, hum the commencement of the Revolution down to the present time, wo have constantly reproach ed our British ancestors for the uttroduction, of Slavery into this country." puthnon 4,ournal. \.\l • WILLIAM EWSTER, SAM. G. WHITTAKER. EDITORS. Wednesday Morning, August 6, 1856. Forever float that standard sheet, Where breathes the foe but fallsbefore us, With Freedom's soil beneath our feet, And Freedom's banner streaming o'er usl" FOR PRESIDENT, JOHN C. FREMONT, OF CALIFOUNIA. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, WAI. L. DAYTON, FOR C.l .V.IL CO.V.IfT,S'SMNE/1. TI-101VIAS E. COCER.PIN, OF YORE COUNTY. FOR A UDITOR G EYER DARWIN PHELPS, OF MOISTILONG COUNTY. FOR SURVEYOR GENEIia 1,. BARTHOLOMEW LAP ORTE FREMONT AMERICAN REPUBLICAN COUNTY COMMITTEE. .oun, Chatrinan. Rothrack, Jams Morrow, Peter Swoopo, E. B. \YHA., Ralph C'rots ley, Robert Baird, Charles Mickley, • Levi Evans, John Grains, Jot tm McCaw. Isaac New, J. A. Hall, John import, Wm. 13re wster, David Stever, Joseph Curfsnan, Henry Hudson, Isaac Taylor, Jonathan McWilliams Samuel Thompson, John A. Doyle, S. L. Glasgow, Henry Robinson, Win. Wigton, Abraham Renner, Win. M. Lloyl, Peter Shaver, Jr. Robert R. Andrews, Benjamin F. Glasgow, Daniel Neff, Son., norenzo Tate. Rally ! Rally ! ! FREMONT & FREEDOM ass Meeting ! A Tll ceti g of the freemen of Huntingdon County, opposed to the present National Ad. ministration, nod in favor of Free Speech, Free Territory l'resn, Free andF EDIO N T, will be held in the Court House in the Borough of Huntingdon, on Tuesday the 12th of dugust, beginning at 7 o'clock, P. M. This meeting will be addressed by GOT. TOM FORD, of Ohio, Hon. ANSON BURLINGAME of Massa., and other eloquent speakers. The friends of Constitutional Liberty gener ally, are invited to attend. Precm6a Rally. Circulate the Documents. Friends, after you have read the speech in to•day'a par r, hand your Journal over to your Democrat or Know Nothing neighbor. Keep the truth before the people. The Difference, 4 .G ale, junior—night—West Hunlingdon— prnetising—Fremont speeches ; look out.— Globc. Lowis, jesuit—night—West Philadelphia— practising—skeleton keys. Look out Another Catholic Lie. "Spurned—The overtures made by a few of the Black Republicans for a fusion with the 1)e• mocracy I They were at once indignantly spurn ed."— Globe. We take the above from the last Globe, to show the utterly reckless character of Locefo. coism. Jesuit Lewis knew that was a lie, pab. Fished it as a lie, and has given another proof of his honcsty. If he can, dare ho give one man ' in the party he names black Republicans who has mode such overtures ? Just Like Rim. The Globe asserts that "Dr. Wycoff, request. ed it [the Journal] to furnish us wills a copy of his advertisement," and that we "refused." Now if Dr. Wycoff did furnish us with an advertisement, how is postmaster Lewis awaro that 1)r. Wycoff "requested" it published in his sheet, unless he tools the liberty of opening Dr. lrgeoirs letter to es f his a plain case, and "us pause for a reply." A Concession, "Nionerous—Dosertions from the Black Re publican rauks."— Globe. It will be remembered the Globe sonic three weeks ago, declared the Republican party did not number a dozen votes I Now, the deser• linn., are numerous I The American, which has also declared the Republican party weak, without knowing or de siring it, eats its own words, in its last issue, in the following style t "That Fremont is break. ing up the Democratic party in the North and Northwest is apparent." New Subscriiieri for July 1856. A. Long, Mill Creek. M. Collins, Shirlcyeb'g. ~ Dr. A. Smith, Calvin, W. Shugard, Phil. J. Cornelius, Stovers' lace. S. Stewart, do. G. Darters, do. E. Ebbs, do. J. Oliver, do. A. G. Ewing, do. D. Shinkle, do. G. Travis, do. W. McWilliam. do. 11. Bathurst, do. J. Edwards, Rough & Ready Furnace. J. Brumbaugh, James Crook. A. N. Corbin, Salina, lowa. We are indebted to 11. H. Fuller for a copy of Patent Office Report for 1855. ----- UNION ELECTORAL TICKET. We see that a number of papers in the State —Fillmore and Fremont—are agitating the question of a Union Electoral Ticket, for the purpose of defeating Buchanan and the Border Ruffian Democracy. The plans proposed arc all good, and we Would heartily endorse any of them. We have not the time nor space to speak further on this subject at present, but must notice one plan which we think would render satisfaction to all parties. It is the idea of the Hollidaysburg Register, American, and proposes to let the State Central Commit. tees of the two parties meet and turange an Electoral ticket, taking the written pledge of the Electors that if chosen, they will cast the entire vote of the State for Mr. Fillmore, if ho shall have carried n larger number of Electors in other States than Mr. Fremont shall have carried, and vice verso, that if Mr. Fremont shall have carried a larger number of Electors in other States than Mr. Fillmore shall have carried, then the entire Electoral vote of the State shall be cast for Um Fremont. Billy Bowlegs' Banter• In regard to the statement we made that the publisher of the Huntingdon Globe "owned his hresent freedom to executive clemency," no ave a word to say. Lewis has land a notice in his paper for several weeks, denying the as sertion, and offerin g to wager $lOO we cannot prove it. We cannot "bet" for several reasons —we are morally opposed to gambling; we could not take money made in the matinee the above named individual has his ; we will not stake money on a blackguard. We assert that our statements are entirely correct, and shall substantiate them by publishing a briefhistory of this immaculate Wm. Lewis—commencing in our next; from the pen of "one who knows." We shall prove every word wehave spoken, and then Lewis may hand over that $lOO, to Johnt to say mass for the delivery of his soil (if he has one) from purgatory. Wait for the wagon. Gen. S. Miles Green. When intellectual eunuchs assume control of a party organ, we make allow.co for mistakes. But we nre astonished that such farseeing men as the editors of the Huntingdon American, could be on ignorant of public opinion. as to treat the claims of a man like Gen. Green, in the manner they have, He is a mon, and wo know he would he a good officer. It must certainly be flattering lo Gen. Green and the other old Whigs of the county, who once battled under the banner ofthe Whig par. ty, to be in the hands of individuals who, four years ago, were brawling Locofocos. Unless a man will shape his ends to meet their views and their tasters in Huntingdon Borough, they cannot be announced in the columns of that paper, as candidates I Suicide. "A failure—the attempted fusion between the Black Republicans and the Americans on Friday night Inst. It was "no go." Might as well try to mix oil and water. It can't be done." We clip the above extraordinary language, from the lest Huntingdon American. It shows clearly that that sheet has either the blind stag• gers, or is bent on cutting the ham strings of the American party. We Republicans sincere• ly desire n union, to defeat the Border Ruffian Democracy ; but if we cannot have an honors• ble fusion, we must and will enter the lists and fight Locofecoism,single•lianded upon the issue of freedom or slavery. We hope, sincerely hope, the A mcrican Convention will nut endorse the suicidal policy of the American. Ambrotype Gallery. - - We have the pleasure of announcing to our readers, that Mr. G. H. Auxcr has fitted up a gallery in the Court House, and is prepared to satisfy all who may call on him. We have ex. amined some•specimens of Mr. A.'s work, and they certainly excel anything of the kind we have ever seen, much resembling wax figures. We have no hesitancy in pronouncing Mr. Aux. or the best ambrotypist ever in this place. Call and see. OUR BOOK TABLE. Peterson's Magazine, published by T. 11. Pc. Meson, Phil., at $3 per year, is already on our table, for August. This periodical is an excel• lout one—indeed our favorite magazine. It is the ladies' favorite also, and wo recommend it. The Kennedy Bro.'s' Bank Note Review for August, has been received. We recommend it as the best counterfeit Detector extant. Pub. lished in Pittsburg, at 10 cts. a copy. The School Journal for August has been re noised. It is very interesting. Address T. H. Burrows, Lancaster, Pa. $1 per year. Friends, waft a little longer. -- • . - We have received n circular from a number of the most influential men of Dublin township including prominent Americans, asking for n renewal of our call for n Republican County Convention, on the 12th inst. It is too late now friends, such a notice would not reach allpatts of the county by the 121 b. Let us wait the fic tion of the American Convention, and then if it does not give entire satisfaction, we will hold a separate Convention. Celebration. Onr "eullud" population had a celebration on the lot inat., at "Beechen Glen." Speeches were made by Prof. Levi Murrels and other prominent Dunmyerats. They clay was fine, the provisions plenty and so forth. In the evening, the "darks" had a grand hoe down, at Mr. U. Murphy's elegant mansion, on Washington street. The Blair County Court. Davis, who killed Johnston some weeks ago in Hollidaysburg, had his trial last week, and was found guilty of—manslaughter The negro who cut another with a knife, was sent fourycars to the penitentiary. Tho Williamsburg murderers aro now on tei. al, and the trial of Neff, has been postponed. We recommend the appointing of a Vigi. hence Committee in Blair county. Letter from Philadelphia. Dear Sir :—Brick walls are great retainers of heat. I send you a comical slave of poetry I picked up a day or so ago, illustrative of the weather and the town people : "Besides the weather what can poets do With the thermometer at rumtytwo. Grandeur in shirt sleeves, Grace with no cravat, Sublimity beneath a ahu•lcaf hat, Love with no dickey, Beauty in a sweat, Truth at a pump with hands and forehead wet, Fame drinking soda, Glory with a fan, Passion asleep upon a cool divan, And Faith and Hops iu slippers throwing dice, To close a quarrel o'er a chunk of ice." Since the late railroad disaster, nothing has taken plaCe in Philadelphia worthy of particu lar note, and yet the charitable aro yet busy in collecting funds for the relief of the sufferers. The following shows the receipts and expendi tures of the Committee up to this time. Received $10,297 13 Paid 2887 50 . . A largo situ has bc;l7eolleeted, I hear, in Now York and other cities which will soon, I suppose, ho sect on and acknowledged. Yours, &c„ J. T. B. For the Journal. Henry Brewster, Bag MESSIt9. EDITOILS: Allow inn the privilege through the columns of your paper to recommend the above named gentleman of Shirleysburg, to the oponente of the present national administration, as a very suitable person to receive the nomination for one of the Associate Judges of Huntingdon County. There is no question ns to his qalifications and fitness for the position. All who know hits will concede this. Henry Brewster is a mall of unimpeachable integrity and of stet , ling moral worth—just such n man ns the in. Wrests of the people require. In addition, I for on think, that Mr. Brews• ter was rather unfairly dealt with whets he was a candidate for one of the Associate Judger) five years ago. And I feel confident that 'on reflection, any candid man must so admit.— This should be another consideration why he should have the nomination this time. I trust both the American and Republican County Conventions, which are soon to meet, will du ly consider the above gentleman's claims nod qualifications and place him on their tickets. AN AMERICAN. I'm. the Jt n •t x tl. MEMRS. BREWSTER & WHITTAKER :—Your paper of July 30th contains a communication. which, from your application of it to myself and your comment on it, invites and demands n reply from me. Evidently your correspondent is mistaken in his premises or you are in your conclusion,- as no such interrogatory as lie re• fern to was ever addressed to me, and no such answer ever was or ever will be made by me to that question. Upon that question—'iree dom in linnsas'—l have long since made up my mind very decidedly and expressed it very freely and emphatically. In asconversation nt Mr. Miles' office on the 25th of July, where this was introduced in presence of Dr. Brewster Jno. G. Miles, Theo. II Cretner and others, I took occasion to state, that if nominated and elected to Congress (a post I "neither seek nor decline) every impulse of my heart and every effort of my life should be in favor of freedom and against the extension ofslavery—that no possible contingency could urine in which I should not vote against the admission of Kan sas ns a Slave State;thatl considered every foot of land north of the Missouri Compromise -line of 31° 30 5 as consecrated to freedom, and never, with my consent, to lie piloted with the curse of Southern slavery. 'These, I be;; to re peat to you, and to your correspondent, and to all others whom it may cancers, are my semi. meet. I claim for them no oriKitiality or merit. —they aro but the common sentiment of us all. Yours, truly, DAVID 81..h11i. V.iir A pair of twin bovs, born Juno 7, in La Salle county, Indiana, bare boon named Vremont and Dayton. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. LEAP PIPE.' fin sale at the Hardwroe Store of JAMES A. BROWN & CO. ATTENTION. The commissioned officers of the 4th Brigade 1•1 th Division, I'. M., are ordered to Meet in citizens' dress at Spruce Creel( on Wednesday, August 13th, at 6 o'clock, I'. M. GEORGE DARE, Major. AGRICULTURAL lIIERTING. A meeting of the Huntingdon County Agri cultural Society will he held at the Conrt House in the borough of Huntingdon, on Wed. nesday evening the 13th of August. The mem bers of the Society, and farmers and mechanics generally are invited to attend as business of great importance will be transacted. The members of the Executive Committee will meet at 3 o'clock, P. H., to muke arrange ments for the holding of a County Fair. J. S. BARR, See'y, Aug. 6, 1856. CONFECT/OICARY d• FR VIT STORE 'WILLIAM SUCCESSOR TO THOMAS FRY, WHOLESALE CONFECTIONER • FRUITERER, No, 191 North Third St., above Wood, nil. UANUFACTURER OF CONFECTION. ary, Jujube Paste, Guns Drops, Chocolate Drops, Brandy Drops, Liquor Bottles, Jelly Cakes, Clem Chocolate, trench Tcys, White Sugar Toys. &e., &e. AND DEALER IN Oranges, Lemons, Raisins, Currants, Citron, Figs, Dates, Prunes, Almonds, Walnuts, Fit. beds, Cream Nuts, Ground Nuts, Fire Crack ers, Syrups, Tamarinds, Liquorice, Rock Can dy, &e., The attention of Dealers is reqested to an examination of my stock, which will be found equal to any in Philadelphia. N. B.—Orders by mail or otherwise prompt ly attended to. A Rare Chance for Speculation. THE undersignea will scll at Public Sale, in Cassville, Pa., on Over ONE TfIOCSAND ACRES of valua ble FARM and TIMBER LAND, situate in the valley of Trough Crook, and adjoining the Broad Top Coal Field. The property is in three tracts, but will ho sold separately or to. gether. NO. 1 Contains 170 Acres, mostly good farm land, 100 acres under fence and in cultivation ; ba lance well timbered. A good log house, log barn, orchard and other improvements. NO, 2 _ . _ Contains 200 Acres,Jl . gOod meadow land, 50 acres cleared, balance heavily timbered with white pine and white oak. Large stone house, saw mill and other improvements, This is ono of the best lumbering and grazing properties in the county, being but 8 miles from the pre. sent Broad Top Railroad, and immediately on the line of the Last Broad Top Road. NO. 3 . . . Contains 700 Acres, and adjoins the above— mostly timber land. Good Iw' house, barn and orchard ; 50 acres cleared, balance white oak and rock oak timber. An excellent water po. woe suitable for a tannery surrounded by seer. ral thousand acres of Bock Oak Bark. This tract also contains fine atone coal. The above property will be sold at a great bargains and on easy terms, viz: Rom• oqual annual payments on interest. Examine the property before the day of sale. Ju1y23;56, G. W. SPIER, Maina 111 LIEVIrEITOVA At Spruce Creek, Hunt. Co., Pa. tT is designed to open this School on Monday, the 28th inst., and to continue it eight weeks. he Union Church at Spruce Creek has been procured for the use of the Institute, and ar• rangements made with private families for hoarding the student teachers. Teams—Boarding, $2 per week, Tuition, $3 per term. ALBERT OWEN, Ju1y23,'56. Co. Superintendent. JOSEPH DOUGLASS, in McConnellstown has constantly on hand , ready made rides, and:is prepared to make and repair Guns ofnll k inds at the shortest folic, rAprii 22, 1855.