* •-•;,',.. 1: , 1 46 ". s . "'-- ' ' l. • .' '..,:;/ .4 • : . --, .t . .. ;•.' (7 I : f: M / 1:. 1 ,• ,liil R . 0• /e 'l. ..- tft . , • :. 0, 1 , .• I , ~, ~ „I . , I 1,) ~ . ', , w ~ f 1,,. i . / ' ~"-....,' . ' ... 1, , , 4 .. I I i t tc. 1 i , ~ q I •E' # t • p• • .. •, ' f , :?, -,.• T.: ~, '.. t- , 4 .. f, -t - ' ~,,.,. _,, . , LIAN BREWSTER, t EDITORS. ' G. WHITTAKER, ampaign *Dm. :E SOIL AND FREEDOM. •IR-"FEW DAYS. lout is that which rends the air ? moat I Fremont I astern prairies are on fire, s. Fremont and Dayton too ; rah and East return the shout— emont ! Fremont k up, Pierce, you must step out, pr Fremont and Dayton too. acs—Then shout aloud fur freedom, Freedom, freedom Shout aloud fur freedom, Free soil and freedom too. We like the platform, lore the cause Freedom, freedom I We like the platform, love the cause Free soil and freedom, too. bee fourth is drawing near— amont 1 Fremont I cell elect them, never fear— Tmont and Dayton too. ally 'round with all our might— vniont Fremont ! 'animus we knew they're right— feniont and Dayton too. tins—Then shout aloud for freedom, ke. nth and Fithno-o "won't oubtnit"— :wont l Fremont I ei: n o d Breck both swear they'll quit, ittor,t and Dayton too. gn,,l people w ill stool b y :',t Fremont I clutti for victory, rot and Dayton too I aloud for freedom, &c. Voliticale .11 , .()RGE LA W :'IIEE PRESENT CRISIS. Now Yoint, July 2. 1856. A R SIR beg to acknowledge the of your letter of die 46th Tilt. I •e Felony re&c . ,l on its contents, In lieu to state to you flint I deeply no nore perfect union has been ef hy thou,. wlios, duty it was to have plished that object—to unite the elements of opposition to the present y. nclininrtration, wielded as it is by !mine Slave Oligarchy of the South. c !nst three years this same oligarchy =ed the entire power and patronage 0, semi Government to crush out dependent action and honest Repro ion on the part of the North ; to put.- up Northern men to misrepresent constituent, from personal motives promises of favor from the present lt I gond men who have the love of their ry at heart, both in the. North and in omit. should unite cordially in a coin effort to deitroy the viper that has I around the freedom and indepen• of the American people. Freedom ech is prohibited in the halls of Con- ; bowie-knives and revolvers are dai pendages at the capital as a means of It and defence. The Senate declares not only powerless for punishment, ven palsied for protection. Its mem look quietly on, and see a member :en down in open day in the Senate tber, without even the common effort intanity that would be exercised in a tom to save n man that was prostrated eit an opportunity of defending him- Ihus you see that those who repro their constituents honestly, and by swerable arguments, and who cannot irehased by executive favor, must be into silence by bowie knives, blud and revolvers, Such is the scheme vertiment inaugurated by the Pierce sty. and fostered by the Southern sec. 1 power that supports it, Upon this and into the arms of this power, the nee of the Cincinnati Convention sur :vs himself before the country, without lightest reservation gr individual in• elence of his own. I'Vhat has the ,ry to expect if Mr. Buchanan suc• , I Nothing better than it hits expe ed under Mr. Pierce, and perhaps thing worse. One is an old man ,ut independence of mind or energy Jammer, which the country is forc ed of by his declaration, that he is no r limos Buchanan, and has no views :onions of his own, and is therefore pliant imtrusient of the Slave Power meditated tom at Cincinnati and must ih••:r views only. It will be well American pen, le to remember this they cast their votes for Chief Ma tte iv November next. ie other cane , into office a man in the "f ifs without any submission ur ked up by almost the unani• voice cut the country in his election, et lie was not three weeks in office • ~•• curiendered himself to the same h.,' has wielded his power dur• „ ..miuistra lion, as ttbsolutely as if i•• u. wi I or mind of his own, and had , —poosittility to any section of the ii except to the ;i50,000 slave-holders South, who now control the Execu the Judiciary and the Senate. The voice the Free, States have in the Fe- Government is in the h-louse of Rep itatives. it not fair to expect that if Mr. Ouch should be elected, the evils that the Tv has experietvieri for tho lee three years will go on increasing during his ad- l that if the ship 'vas fired upon by the Cu• ministration until the Northern mind will ban authorities, and damaged or destroyed submit no longer to be cheated, bullied, de. that they would have no claim upon this fled and deprived of its just rights and fair government for remuneration. The corn. representation in the federal government? mander of the Crescent City was remo- As one of the leading features of the red by his order, he being an officer of the coming administration, Slavery is to be United States navy, and under the Presi forced into Kansas. The rivers the great dents control. Another commander was highway of the Nation through Missouri, appointed by the owners He, too, was a Slave State, are to he closed, as they are removed by Mr. Fillmore's officers. The at present, to the freemen of the North ship was fined $l,OOO for not carrying, the who desire to emigrate to that Territory.— United States mails, when the United Those great thoroughfares which have I States Government or Mr. Fillmore with hitherto been looked upon as the pride of i held them. The insurance officers in New the nation, and that strain has rendered so York were either frightened Is) the course valuable for the transportation of persons of Mr. Fillmore, or influenced by him to or property, must be closed to the freemen withhold their insurence from property of the North ;or they must be subjected shipped by the steamer that Purser Smith to examination, insult, loss of property, and was on board of. The owners of the turned back. unless they proclaim them- Crescent City had to insure the property selves in favor of the institution of Slavery of shippers. The passengers on board of in this Territory. Such means ns these her were not allowed to land in Cuba.— are made use of to force Slavery into Kan- owners persevered in what they consid• sas. When free emigrants arrive there, end their proper rights, and the rights of after all these difficulties and delays have an American citizen, and refused to dis been surmounted, they must undergo ano• miss Ferrer Smith until the Captain Gen• ther examination, and swear allegiance to oral of Cuba was obliged to rescind the the government of the Slave Power orga- mandate against Purser Smith. This is razed in Kansas by the Missouri mob, or the mode in which the rights of an Ainer be deprived of the right of franchise and icon citizen had to be vindicated while of holding office. This is the operation of I Mr. Fillmore was president. This is the squatter sovereignty, which deprives a same Mr. Fillmore that you recommend man of his citizenship unless he swears ft- me to support as an American. Now, Sir, delity to Slavery ; and ail this is to be car- I can you support him as an American ? ried out and put in execution by an armed Can the American party support him as force, furnished from Missouri—the adjoi- lan American ? Is he the proper repre fling Slave State ; and the federtagovern: I sensitive of the American people f These meat, with federal troops in the Territory, tare facts for the American party to look at will leak on calmly without interfering, so before they vote. For my part, Mr. Fill long as the Missouri mob succeeds to on• I more would be the last man I would sup force Slavery upon Kansas •, but if the men I port in the whole country as a standard from the free States, who believe in Free bearer of the greet American party. Speech, Free l'erritory, Free Labor, Free What has Mr Fillmore ever done fur Press and Free Men should be too numer- : this country or the American party ? ells for the Slave Labor, then the federal Where are his acts that are to he rement• troops organized for this special purpose heed or treasured up in the hearts of the under the command of t a Southern favorite I people? What great interests has he ev• of a Southern secessionist Secretary of ,or advanced ? Or has he been a mere War, are to interfere and decide the conn I officeholder, without merit except the test in favor of Slavery in Kansas, So , merit of doing nothing? much for the chances of the Northern You ere aware of the manner in which principles and Northern men in Kansas, i he was forced ulfun the American party and all that vast territory north of 36' 30' by the Slave oligarchy at Philadelphia, secured to Freedom by solemn compact, when he apparently received the lamina• in which the great minds of the country tion of the Convention. united to build up and preserve to Free I In the letter to me you appear to lay dm, and which the pigmies and traitors, great stress upon the course that the Re• aided by this corrupt administration, have publican party has seen fit to pursue, attempted to pull down and destroy. Ile, and that it has not met the American is where Gen. Pierce stands, and here is party half way in the great work of uni• where James Buchanan stands, while ask. Ling the whole North against the corrupt nog for the support of the freemen of the I policy of the present Administration and North. the power that controls the Cincinnati A few words about Mr Filltnore. Let nominee. We will suppose that all this is us examine with what consistency we, as true in relation to the Republican party. Amerscaus or Northern Freemen, can sup• I I myself do not think the Republican Con. port hint. What are his antecedents ? vention acted as wisely as it might have When President of the United States, was done, when the object was harmony of ac he not entirely subservient to the Slave tion to accomplish a great good for the Power ? Did lie resist the overtures of whole country ; but is this any reason the Slave oligarchy of the South, or did why I should bo diverted from the great he become a willing instrument in their purpose I have at heart, which Is to unite hands ? I ask you to look at his acts while all parties that think as Ido in relation to President, and let them be the answers to the corrupt policy of the present Adiain these questions. I will refer you to mite istration, and the continuation of that poll. Fugitive Slave Law, that makes the free_ cy if Mr. Buchanan should be eiected ? men of the ;North slave catchers—that pri- No man, or set of men, whatever their zes men of less value titan the beasts—that conduct may be, shall divert me for one refuses to them the right atrial by jury— moment from the course I have marked that centres the right of freedom of the out in the coming Presidential campaign man in one judge, and pays him a double I intend to go fur a man who most near fee if he declares him a slave, and only ly represents the A derican sentiment, and half the fee if he finds him a freeman.— the sentiment in relation to Slavery of she This is the power that the Salve oligarchy Freemen of the North, which declares of the South exercises at the North, where that Slavery is sectional and that Free we have prohibited holding property in dam is national. At the same time I des. men to our own citizens; and this act bears ire to have the best representative of the the signature of Millard Fillmore as l'resi • progress of the tyre in which we live. I dent of the United States. I ask you !tote wont a mass who has d one something for he can expect the vote of the free North ? t h e great material i nterests o f the country. Can I give him mine? Are these .the I want to see his foot prints, not promised views that you and I entertain in relation but already made in the direction that has to the rights and the duty of the North or led to the development of the resources mankind f Now, sir, upon this question of our country—who has enlarged the alone, without going into all his other acts field upon which the labor and intelligence of subserviency to the Slave power, let of our country is to be applied—one who him stand for the suffrages of the freemen ' has done something for American interests of the North. and American rights,--one who has done As to the Americanism of Mr. Fillmore something for the area of Freedom—some you and 1 have sonic knowledge of how thing for material progress and benefit to touch lie has done to sustain that party.— his fellow men. I want no politici.in, Has he ever been identified with it either his host of dependents as seedy as him principle or feeling? If sd, where are self. Let us have a man in the prime of his acts—on what occasion, heretofore, has life, full of energy, and yet sufficiently fa lie proclaimed it ? What were his ante. miliar with the vicissitudes of life to• cedents as to Americanism when President judge of men correctly—to appreciate the of the United States? Did he then pro. wants of the whole country—to avoid the teet American interests or American mon? intrigues and traps of politicians—to devote well recollect that he did not, and the himself honestly and fearlessly to the in• country will recollect it too. terests of the country—to apply the res. 'When the captain General of Cuba is- ources of the government to the accent sued his decree prohibiting the steamship plishment of such improvements as are na- Crescent City from touching at Havanna tional in their character and that will res. so long us Mr. Smith, an American citizen suit in the greatest benefit to the whole was ou board of her as Purser, because country—one who has no cld political as they alleged the Herald and other pa- friends to reward, and no old politie.l ene pers in New York had published some in- miss to punish—one who will feel that he formation from Havana that was distaste- is elevated by the people and not by in int to the Cuban Government, and which ' trigue. Now, Sir, of the candidates who they charged to have been furnished by are before the people for the exalted pnsi- Purser Smith, and, therefore, neither the tion of Chief Me.gistrate, I prefer John C. Crescent City nor any other American ship ' Fremont. I prefer him because ho is not should be allowed to touch at Havanna an old hackneyhd politician, and all sold having Mr. Smith on board, or any other out. He is in the prime of life—forty person who would dare to furnish to the three years old. He has been brought American Press information disagreeable into notice by the energy and exertion to the Captain General of Cuba, Mr. Fill- that he has evinced as a great explorer of mere was apprised of this order by the the route to the Pacific Ocean. Ile first owners of the Crescent City, arid he was opened up the pathway through the wil desired to take some action in relation to derness that others had followed to the it for the protection of American property golden fields of California, and gave the and American citizens ; he miserably skul- , most accurate and extended view to the ked the responsibility of his position, and American people of all that vast region of used his interest with the owners to have country between the borders of civilize- Mr. Smith dismissed as Purser, and to be tion on the Atlantic slope and the Palifie replaced by some onewho was satisfactory Ocean. Ho took an active part and was to the Captain General of Cuba. This foremost in raising and sustaining the A the owners refused to do., and sent Mr. , merican flag in California. He common- Smith back in the ship. Mr. Fillmore ced first and went all through that cain ordered the United States mail to be taken r paign with signal success, that ended in fermi the vessel, and notified the owners • the acquisition of all that vast territory " LIBERTY AND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE. " HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1856. and wealth—that opened up to American energy such a field us has no parallel in history—which has advanced this country 25 years at a single bound. It gale as the facilities for increasing our comm-rce. It enabled us to extend largely our rail ways and other internal improvem nas and thus has greatly increased our m.ton• facturing and agricultural interests by en• tinging the fields of produce and consuntp• Lion. It has added hundreds of millions to the capital of the nation. By hi, ex planations he has opened up the most ccn• tral and convenient railroad to California. Ile aided in Old organization of Calirornia as a State. and devoted her institatio,, to Freedom, and she acknowledged her in• debtedness to Fremont by sending hits as her. first Senator to Congress. lie pintec ted .‘ modem! interests in California. Ile protected and advocated American inter eats in the Senate of the United Stat.• His antecedents are American. Ile rose by his own energy, his own industry and his own merit. These are anteee,lems that will be appreciated by the American people. They are not promises of to day of American principles under the exp,•eta tion of the suffrages of the American par ty, but they are a history of his life from his youth upward, when actuated by no other motives than a true American Lean, thoroughly devoted to the interests of his country. . . _ . With this view of the subject, who are we to support ? I have fairly canvassed the different candidates. So far as Amer icanism is concerned, we may as well sup port Mr. Buchanan as Mr. Fillmore. lie has u fairer American record than Mr Fillmore; and as for the promises of old politicians, we all know what they are worth on the eve of an election. Ido riot mean to be cheated by them. nor do I wish to see the American people, by pre tensions that have no value, but that are entirely worthless. In relation to the subject of the exten sion of Slrvery, we may as well support Buchanan who reclines that he will be go verned by the S aithern slaveholders, and Mr. Fillmore we know has already heen governed by them. As to advancing the interests of the country, we may as well support Mr. Buchanan as Mr. Fillmore. Neither of .them has ever advanced, by any net of his own the great industrial interests of ,the country. They have bout been duows, living on office. The only difference that I see is that Mr. Fillmore is about five years younger than Mr Buchanan, and hog that many chances leas to the. You would laugh and ridicule the idea if I were to tisk you to vote for Buch anan's ',arty; it SeeeTS to me equally ridic ohms that you should ask me to vote for Mr Fillmore its the American candidate I shall give my support to Jc he C. Fre mom. as the host representative, in my es• thuation, of the Attie ricau party. I nut, with much respect, yours truly, GEouom Low. To G. A SCROGU3, Badalo, N. Y., FREMONT'S BELIEF. The following from Lieutenant Govern or flayniond of New York, on the subject of Col. Fremont's religion, appears in the Cincinnati Gazette : NEW YORK, Tuesday, duly •_'9, '56 • My D,ur .Sir: Your favor of the Ist inst.. ought to have been an3wered long ago, but absence mid business must plead tny excuse. . 1 am not surprised to hear that the rum• or so widely circulated concerning Col. Fremont's r ligion should have the effect of culling some, who sympathize thorough ly with his sentiments in regard to the ex tension of slavery, to hositat, about pledg ing themselves to his support. But so air as these rumors assert, or imply, that be is u Homan Catholic, they are without slight. est foundation in fact. I presume that, front proper motives of delicacy und self respect Col Fremont will nut publish anything himself on the nub• ject, or take any part I.ersonn ly in the canvass. But he converses with the ut most freedom upon these topics, ns upon all others ; lie has no desire or disposition to practice any concealment of his relig ions opinions ; and L have no reason to be. neve that he would desire others to do so in his behalf. Col Fremont is not now, nor has he ev. er been a Roman Catholic. Ins father dy ing when he was five years old, he was educated exclusively in Protestant schools and at the age of sixteen was confirmed, of his own motion, and from sincere con v;cti 0 in the Protestant Episcopal Church of which he has continued ever since to be a member. Not one of his own children has ever been sent to a Roman Catholic school, though I believe an adopted daugh• ter attended for a short time the seminary at Georgetown, of which the pupils gene rally are largely Protestant. That this ought not to be construed to his prejudice even by the most zealous Protestants, is sufficiently shown by the fact that Mr. Fillmore sent his own daughter to a Ro man Catholic seminary at Buffalo for pur poses of special instruction ; yet no one inferred from this circumstance that he himself was not a Protestant. Colonel Fremont's marriage was Mehra ted by a Catholic priest ; but this was in consequence of the difficulty, if not im possibility, of procuring any other clergy man to perform it. The ceremony was in a private room, was very short and simple and did not imply any assent, on his part or that of his wife, to the doctrines of the Roman Catholic Church ; nor was either of them required or requested on that oc- casion to give any pledges that their chil dren shnultl he hrought up in that faith.— They hue all been baptized and educated in the Protestant Episcopal Church. The statements which Alderman Ful. mer, of this city, is said to have authorized to the effect that in March, 1852, he saw Colonel Fremont joining in the religious services of n Ronan Catholic Ohara at MLA Moon. and that in a imhsegnent con rer-•ation with hint at dinner at Brown's Hotel, Colonel Fremont declared himself a and a believer in the peculiar do. trilva of that church, are entirely tin. Colonel Fremont was not in the city of Washitanl at all during. the year 1852. lle left New York for California in March, 1851). He returned in the steamer Georve Law, which reached New York on the Gilt of March, 1852 ; and, remaining in that city four days, he left on the 10th, in' thr• steamer Africa for Europe, and did not return until Jude 185:1 I understand that , Al:km.ll Fulmer exhibits a receipt from Brotvo',i lintel, dated March 7, 1852, for one day's board. 'Ms makes it certain that the Alderman's stay the-e terminated on the 7th, and that the alleged converse-1 tion must have taken place preriotply to . that date. But as Colonel Fremont did not reach New York fern California until the Gilt, it is impossible that he should bevel been coi4cf.esl with them, especially as he remainedie New York until his depar ture for Europe, and did not visit Wash-, ington at all. Ile has no recollection of having ever dined at Brown'i Hotel, until this last win ter, since 1.!;11, or of having ever seen Al &ratan Fulmer, there or elsewhere. The Alderman, I am informed. is a man who I would not be likely to make such state ments unless he believed them to be true. Rut it is very certain that he has fallen in- to a very gross error somehow, probably by mistaking some other person with whom he may have held the conversation in question, for Col. Fremont. He owes it to his own character, as well as to jus tier, to take steps to confirm or corset the accuracy of his recollections in this matter. YOU may rely upon the entire authenti city of the statements I have thus wade in reply to your inquiry for the "facts ': In the present state of the public mind, and in view of the earnest and persevering misrepresentations of the truth, you may think it desirable that they should be gen erally known. If so, y o u are quite at lib erty to wake them public, and to add that they are given as the result of conversa tions with Col. Fremont himself. I am, very truly, yours, HENRY J. Ravmm.m. E. D. Mansfield, Esq . Cincinnati. The Sunday Dispatch of yesterday says) , •fs Fremont a Catholic ?" is now the absorbilez quebtinn that puzzles the edi tors of the partisan press. The most con clusive proof is brought forward on both sides. Alter a careful examination of the evidence, we confess our inability to de cide the vexed question. El he is so deci ded a Protestant as his friends claim, however it is a little remarkable that the Carholics are so wamla advocating* Ins clectioo. Now this is either true nr false—which? There are three or four Raman Catholic journals in this city, with thirty or forty in the Union, and if any n, r of limn is "warmly advocating Fiemont's election," we should be glad to know it. So far as we know, not one Catholic. journal is for 'Fremont, and not one in twenty of the Catholic voters, There certainly is no other denomination half so generally ad verse to him as the Roman - Catholic. And yet lies are piled upon lies day aft-'r day to induce Protestants to oppose hint under the presumption that he is the candidate of the Pope,Archbishop Hughes, the Jan• Yet the Lade,' the new Romanist daily at St Louis, says : The recent fusion, to a great extent, of Sleek RiTublatiotisin IllifiNorthern Know Nothingism, and their union upon the same candidate, were not necessary to im prove us their identity; or to point out to us that the only diffitrence between them is, that one is our avowed enemy, and the other our enemy in disguise." So the Itidi Ain , icon culls on all Cath lies to oppose hint because the North A merieans support him, and it adds "''These very men would forsake hint, as rats TIM away from the fulling how, or a sinking ship, it he was at any lime if his life a Roman Cath,lic." We publish this to show how utterly false is the assertion of the Dispatch; and we beg the people to notice that all the ado about Col Fremont's religion is made by his most bitter adversaries. No friend has advocated his election either as Protestant or a Catholic candidate, for he is neither. As a man he is a Protestant E piscopalian, as he has a perfect right to be; but no one is expected to vote for him as President on that ground. Be is openly in favor of impartial Freedom in the Fed eral Territories, of the immediate admis sion of Kansas as a Free State, and of good faith against the Buchaneer policy in our Foreign Relations; and on these grounds his election is advocated. To support or oppse a candidate fur President because he belongs to this church or don't belong to that, we would be at war with the spirit of Republican Freedom and the Federal Constitution. If tinything was needed to convince any one thnt Cot. Fremont is a Protestant, the following must be conclusive : NEW YORK, Thursday, July 16, 1850. To the Editors of the Evening Post: DEAR Sin— An undue importance seems to be attached to Mr. Fremont's religious position by some portion of our citizens, and as there are a few persons whose minds are exercised, permit me to say that sonic time since, receiving: letters from Ohio, saying that it was being industriously cir culated that Mr, Fremont was a Catholic. I went to him and asked him the question: ' , Are you a Roman Catholic?" He re plied, “I AM NOT; I was bred in the Protestant Episcopal Church, where I still belong. My children have been bap tized there, and my wifo goes witb me as a good wife should." Respectfully yours. C. W. ELLIOTT ; No 126 East Eighteenth St. t)opttlar i r CIDER I love the white gals and the black, And I love all the rest, I love the gals for loving me, Dot I love myself the hest. Oh, dear I am so thirsty, I've just hems down to supper, I ftrani: three pails of apple jack, And a tub of apple butter. Cuours—And a little tnore eider too, A little more eider too, A little more cider for Mist Dim A little more eider too. When first I saw Miss Snow Flake, 'Twas on Broadway I ',pied her, I'd give my hat and boots I would, If I could have walked beside her. She looked at toe, I looked at her, And then I crossed the street, And then she smiling said to me, A little more cider sweet. And a little more eider, ae. Oh I wish I was an apple, And Snow Flake was another, Oh 1 what a pretty pair we'd make, Upon the tree together ; Haw bad the darkies all would feel, When en the tree they 'spied her, To think how we would feel, When made up into eider. And rt little more eider, C~~ututunr~itiana. A FEW FACTS For the Whig Voters of Huntingdon C 3'. 1 We nre now upon the eve of another Presidential contest—a contest involving interests of the highest importance. We look over the political field, we se•e our venerated standard bearers •gone, those in ' tellect, that swayed, those voices that elec. tr:tiej the heart of the nation, are silent in the g-rave, their memory survives in the hearts of the American people. %I a look around for the standard under which we fought in '44, '4B, '52 we see other stan dards in the field, but we see none with the Whig name inscribed on them. I see one standard is culled the Democratic, ann ther the American, another the Repnbli• can We all want to enlist under one of these standards. I look at the first stand ard. I see the term Democracy inscribed ion it ; that spacious word. I reflect ; that ward awakens hitter memories of the past, it calls to mind bitter associations. I see : embodied in that term my old enemy, a-'' gainst which I have fought ever since I had a political existence. I see arrayed around that banner the defamers, the vili fiers, the moral murderers of Clay, of Web ster, of Scott. Yes, their hands yet reek ing with tha blood of murdered reputation. - Those same hands they stretch forth to you and me, and invite us to enlist with them. Yes, with a smile upon their lips, and a laugh in their sleeves and hypocrisy and self-interest in their hearts, they invite us to come over and help them. I remember Clay whose name is yet mimic in my ears. I remember Webster nt the shrine of. whose mighty intellect I respectfully bowed. I remember Scott, whose national services and deeds of high and noble during evoked the warmest gra titutle of my heart. I remember more. I remember that this same Democratic party, notwithstanding their fond protesta tions of friendship, are the base caluninia tors and slanderers of my noble leaders, ' ■nd I turn (rein them with mingled feel— trigs of scorn and disgust. . . 1 next turn to the American standard. The banner is a fine one, • the name a good one, but I find the organization ineffectivi, in our State and other.issues of greater too ment claim my attention and demand my services. I turn as my last hope to the Republican standard. Again I reflect. That name strikes me as a familiar one, Aleatory recalls the fact that Clay ran for President as the Republican candidate in 1532, and that the Whig party was once called the Republican party. I become favorably impressed with, the name and that leads we to further examination, to an examination of the platforms. I first ex amine the Democratic platform I find it to be a accosts! edition of Pierce's adminis tuition. I find that Buchanan has endor sed the administration and swallowed every plank of the platform. As a Al big I can not endorse Pierce's administration (nnd it would keep mu busy if I were a Dainty crat.) I cannot endorse the truckling to Southern domination. I cannot endorse the fillibustering spirit. acquiring new Territory by fair or foul means in order to strengthen the power of the south, invol ring our country in a war with England and Franco. 1 cannot endorse the repeal of a time honored compact. I cannot en dorse the fraud and violence in Kansa s , '. VOL. XXI. NO. 35. carried on under the eye, and under the broad shield of administrative protection. I cannot endorse the platform that endor ses these things. I cannot endorse the man that swallows the endorsement of such an administration and such a platform. sent turn to the American platform. From the looks of its timber, I judge it grew in a sunny clime, and the men that hewed the planks grew among the timber. It is not sound on the great issue before the people, and as the South made it, let the South support it. It is ineffective in the present contest. As my last hope, I again return to the Republican platform. Around it I behold a mighty mess of freeman and I enquire what is the cause of this mighty outbursting of popular feeling. The an swer is ''Territory now free, let it be free forever." I enquire into the reason of this answer and I learn that there is on our north western borders territory large .e -nough for an empire, and that there is room for a home for our children to the third and fourth generation. I learn that it be longs to freedom. I learn that God made it free, that free winds blow over it, that free sunshine visits it I learn that our forefathers built a hedge around it, and that the unanimous voice of a nation's ac quiescenc, consecrated it to freedom ; they pledged that Slavery should never set its foot on the virgin soil of that country, and that no being bearing the upright form of a man and the image of his God, should bleed beneath the tyrant's lash. I learn, moreover, that traitor hands have torn down that hedge and desecrated that soil, and that the south demands the territory that belongs to us and our children in vir tue of the plighted faith of our forefathers. I learn that the Republican party has risen up in the majesty of their outraged feel ings ; iu the inajes.y of downtrodden right and justice. they tell the south, thus far but no farther, here let the •black waves and fou I curse of slaves be stayed. I learn in a word, that the great principle of the Nepal helm party is, opposition to the ex tension of Slavery in Free Territory. I remember this as a cherished princi ple of the Whig party I examine other prt nci ples, and I find them identified with Whig principles and lOR once rally to their support. The 'home sounds familiar as the old name of the Whig party. The principles I recognize as old Whig princi . pb•s and I will support them, heart and hand. I next look at the standard•bearer I first cast my eye at James Buchanan. His name is familiar, I think I know him. I remember him as a Federalist, 1 after %Ards knew hint as an uncompromring Democrat. I generally saw him at the public feed-trough and he generally had a big spoon. He rendered some services, but. limy memory serves me right, he was always well paid by Uncle Sam. He is a man of considerable discrimination, as is evident from the fact that he has held office the greater part of his political life. He is a political hack, well greased for running, but so greasy is he that he is regarded by some of his own party as decidedly slip pery. But one thing Ido remember and do not know what is the reason [ cannot forget it, and that is the charge of bribery and corrnption against Henry Clay. I re. member that thing contributed largely to Clay's defeat in '44, and I will remember James Buchanan for that very thing when I come to the ballot box, and, fellow Whigs I think you will remember it likewise. The - next standard-bearer is Nlillard Filitnore, a good man but he has a hold of the wrong flag and stands on the wrong platform, We will pass him by with a re spectful bow, and wish him well. The man that bears aloft the proud pen nant of Freedom is FuotoNr. He is no old brolren•down politician. He has shown us by his past life that he has brains and and indomitable will and perseverance. A man of fine acquirements and world wide reputation, a man of modesty, of unblem ished reputation, a man that has the capa city to govern as conquer. Now,fellow-Whigs will you come to the rescue ? Will you throw your mite in Freedom's cause ? Will you support a man that is pledged to Freedom ? Will you support your old cherished prinoiples? or will you support your old enemy ? will you give them aid in this the hour of their extreme peril? Will you help to extend the area of human bondage ? Will you help to elevate to the highest office in the tuition the defamer of your own loved Clay. Or will you say with me, if my tongue directly or indirectly advocates the extension of slavery, let it cleave to the roof of my mouth, and sooner let my right hand forget her cunning than to vote for James Buchanan. Yours truly, . _ AN OLD LINE ' THAT STICKS TO THE LINE. Cn, Tp., Aug. '2O, 1850. To Boil Potatoes. In Ireland potatoes are boiled to perfec tion ; the humblest peasant places his po toes on his table better cooked than could half the cooks in London, trying their best. Potatoes should always be boiled in their ...jackets ;" peeling a potato before boiling is offering a premium for water to run thro' it, and making them waxy and unpalata ble ; they should be thoroughly washed and put into cold water. In Ireland they always nick a piece of the skin off before they place them in a pot; the water is gra dually heated, but allowed to boil ; cold water should be added as soon us the water commences boiling and it should thus be checked until the potatoes are done ; the skins will not then be broken or cracked until the potato is thoroughly done; pour the water oft completely, and let the skins be thoroughly dry before peeling.