. . , . „,. .T.: ~ . . ~,, ~. _ ..„ , ~ 4 . . , ' ~, • :, : .t . I " a. Iti 111 4b,..,1., ID .., 4 4„ '11711t11.40 . ~, WILLIAM BREWSTER, 1 EDITORS. SAM. G. WHITTAKER, publicanand toeei.touetimes.:eeasmlyoAierieasc,ntion:,wthepuposorrc i ' llagreed upon by them , at which the issues ir.- ring an all an • e of the two parties against a • equal number of speakers of each aliarmyleforTedwthntcolprtonting pnntt.andt r ntnchnirmnnornnriomntt l ni ioreitnernrtvhe & epninan : nma tee shall have the exclusive right of selecting mince has postponed the nomination of candi. the speakers for his party at such meeting, but dates for Electors to the latest period which in ASTOUNDING DEULOPMENTS for the meeti "' tlipt the names shall be announced in the call consistent with the authority delegated to it by the State Convention. This resolution seams to require .me expla. I therefore beg leave to urge noon you the • nation ',dine it can be finally acted upon by necessity of calling your Committee together girOSUEg of a PLOT to BETRAY FILLMORE. our Committee. A few days ago I had the ho• for the purpose and at the time and plates nor to receive from you, through the Hon. JAS. above designated. air WE t A lITZ RICAN PASTY Cooper. a very distinct intimation that the Com. If you determine to do sn, I wi'l cheerfully mitres of which yen are Chairman desire to u• forward your notice to each member of your v...:. C '---"/ .... — Th nice with the Republican State Committee in Commute° by one or more special messengers tpho'rf,":l7);6B7 g e e n n i Electoral r o o f ! if ( i . c n tt 3:l v t n o n b i t: e n tr o • v • d / o lt i t e m n. you may 'err truly worthy of your con li • are opposed to the Cincinnati Platform giii k to CHARLES GIBBONS, s 4 '' • C: ‘:‘l ;? . : ) 1 L . "--1 the election of Mr. Buchanan. On that 1111115nd Chairman Republican Eta e Ex. Committee. you requested, through Mr, Coop e r, that the Invitations to a conference were also ad ....../ Reload.. Commit ice should not form an Elec. tors! Ticket at their meeting, which had been dressed to the individual members or the turn! Ticket for yesterday, the 28th first. I Ainerican Committee, from several of it 0 47.,it lif t 0 '0 ttCHANALS. .i ..mb , waited a that State slate in I ' Which is Ike , Bogus , Electoral Ticket? SLIPPING IN AT SIDE DOORSI FAO ! REAO!! LET ARE PIC tAT JUDGE FOR TIM VISELVES. ADDRFIN OF THE REPUBLICAN STATE EXILE ETI t E (.0,1111111:TEE. T, rh- P ol.l• Pennsylvania : Fellow The Republican Suit, Executive Committee, appoin.ed by the etateConvention which assem iled in Phil tiee'phia in June last. waa.charged with the duty of nointnaiing candidates for Klee tors of President and Vice l're ident of the United States. The Committee, always desirous of se• curing a fair and honorable alliance with other parties in this State who are hostile to the forcible extension of Slavery into free territory, considered that its duties would be discharged with greater eatisfac lion to its constituency. by .a•ting no ott stocks in th , way of such an alliance. A large number of our fellow-citizoits had ex pressed their preferences for Mr. Fillmore sac candidete for the Presidency. although their opinions on the queLtiun of Slavery extension were concurrent with those en. ! tertained by the Republican party. .A [res. tly the Republicans and Americans were united in support of the PPM' candidates forcertam State (Motto. In every county of 'he Commonwealth a fraterrul f e el ng existed between the masses t f the two par ties. In every county, with but one or two exceptions, they united on the same candidates for Congress and the State I,eg• islature, and a general desire was expres sad from all quarters of the State for a u nice on ono Electoral Ticket. About the middle of August a vetbal communication was made by Mr. Sanderson. Chairman of the American State Central Committee, to the Chairman of t he Republican State Com mittee, expressive of an anxiety to unite the two parties, and requesting that the Republicans should poAtp , n . their uomi, tion ,f electors in order to secure that ob fc et. Several members of the Aire rican Committee made the same request, found leg it on the assurance that the friends of Fillmore, throughout the State generally, considered his election hopeless, and earn grisly desired to secure the defeat of Mr. Buchanan, Soon niter Mr. Sanderson's fraternal communication to the Chairman of the Re publican Committee, he visited the city of 11 ahhington, and munediately on his re turn, a letter was received from him, as follows . PIIILADELPTA : Any. 27,1856, Sta—ln obedience to the Instructions of the Fillmore and Donteisoo State Committee I tint,- tail to you, for the conouderovion and action of the Depublican State Committee. or which you see Chairman, the followito, proposition That the. Chaironno of the Democratic Iton publican, and Am lean Slat*. Committees. tto Ilea to isomitog a call for such numb or of meet ings, to be held at such times stool places as V ),U a greed upon by them, at which, the issues involved in the present Presidential canvass, shall he discussed by an equal helot.ar of spew here or each party, arid that the Chairman of ellen Committee stall have the eselusive right of selecting the speakers for his poorly, at such meetMo, lint that their names shall be mitiouno red in the o ail for the meeting. sioti will oldie, by giving an answer to this proposition, iu behalf' of your Committee, ut your earliest conveoieme. 1 am, sir, very tespectfally. yours, J. P. SANUERSO'S, Chairman American State Committee, This proposition, submitted by %tr. Fan• derson seemed to contemplate enmity in• stand of peace—open war instead of fra ternity with the friends of Fremont aid Dio toil, It was so inconsistent with hia verbal communication, made but a short time before to the Chairman of the Repub lican Committee, as to require some ex pla-cation, which was sought by the follow. ing letter PIMA DR' PIMA, August 29, 1856. SIR-1 received your letter of the 27th lust. by which you submit fur the consideration and action of the Republican State Committee the Ibllo r, wi v ilg trot rog i t 1,1011 tltw Db.mhormia Several members of your Committee subse• quently waited upon toe, and stated as their o• plat n that our fellow•citiaens in the interior of the State who preferred Mr. Fill tante so a con• didate for the Presidency, were very generally in favor of such a course. I expressed to them an well as to Mr. Cooper, my cordial scgies• cence in the suggestion. and I am now inatruc• tel by tne Republican State Committee to say that the 'lmposition for a onion Electoral Tick et meets with their hearty and unaohnous ap• proval. According to yonr request, ant for the purpose indicated by you, they hove defer. red the formation of an Electoral Ticket, and hove named the 15th proximo as a suitiOle tittle for final action in the matter. If the proposition embraced in Tour letterbe int, tiled to take effect after s Union ticket shall have been formed, and Americans and publicans are to meet as A WES to resist the extension of slavery to territory which waasul• • n n'y dsd;catad to freedom, we emmot lir:Mate t.) +tempt it. On that issue, which manila par. amount in the taititect, we are ready to give von h .n.l and heart in an earnest atruggle with that co neon fiat which seeks. in the disguise of Do. mecreey, to &wade the white laboring tnan to the level of a negro slave. • An we; en I receive your reply, I will fora• init you will a inure definite newer to the pro• pri : fititin contained iti .. y9 . ur letter. I mu, vory respectriilly,ymirA : &v. Cif. GIBBONS, Chairman Republie.m State Corn, The explanation thus sought was never given, Mr. Sanderahn refwied to d fine h • pcsition. but prsosially , olici•ect the C .nirntan ujth, Repub.i.n4 Cetnnsd.e,to w thelraw his letter, on the ground that he ( •i r. Sanderson) had expected a COMMUIII- C.lioll from Col. Forney, the Chairman of the Democratic State Committee, but hod received none, and it was therefore unne cessary to p,.eserve the correspondence regliest was not complied with. On 12th of ziepteinlirr, he renewrd it in per. I .n. and pressed it with much earnestness, but without success. On the 9allit/ day, be snught a third and secret interview with the Chairman of the Republioan Commit tee to whom he had addressed the follow ing note : FRIDAY AFTERNOON. DRAR have Furney's answer, and would like to gee you before 4 o'clock. Can y.ci not slip in at the side door, and see me at my otlieu ? Ido not like to call twice the some day at your otlico. Truly, J. 1' S. To this note the following answer was im mediately given : FRIDAY, P. Y., Sept. 12. Dana S a:—l cannot call on you this after noon, as you request. Perna's it is unoeces. nary, us I can see no reason fir withdrawing my reply to your letter of the 27th ult.. and do nut feel myself at liberty to comply with your request in that particular. Mr. Forney's an swer could have no influence on my courso, der any circumstances. If you are really in favor of uniting the op. position on one Electoral Ticket, why need there he any mystery about it? I have no concealments to make in the matter, and if anything is to be done, we must act ProllaPtiy and frankly. Very respectfully, yours, CII. G 11111055. In the evening of the same day, (Sept 12.,) the American State Committee met in Philadelphia, but it is understood that Mr. Sandervon withheld from his colleagues the foregoing correspondence. Ills cont. miner. at that meeting, passed a resolution that they were in favor of any honnra• file arrang,nont wi h the friends of Ike snow and Dayton, to e/eat 111 r. Buchan. an," which Mr Sanderson was requested to communicate to the Republican Coin. raider, which was to meet on the 18th of the same month 11 , suppressed the reso• /idiots, and the Committee, although in session within two hundred yards of the ".ride door" of his office, received no infor :nation front hint on the subject It was still deemed en, edient that the Republican Committee sh old take no ac tion in the lormation of an Electoral 'Pick• et. without A fair and open conference with the American Committee. The subject wits accordingly postponed to the 7th of October. and the follawiog letter was rul dr.:ssed to Mr. Sanderson : PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 29, 1856. DEAR SiR I -I am instructed by the Repub lican State Executive Committee to invite a conference with the American State Committee at Harrisburg, on the 7th prox., for the purpose of forming an Electoral Ticket,to be supported by the citizens of Pennsylvania, who are op poled to the extension of Slavery and to the election of Mr. Buchanan to the Presidency. At the meeting of the Committee which I have the honor to represent, held on the 18th instant, of which you had notice, some comma• ideation ou this subject frout the American Committee was fully expected; but none was received, and I have out bad the pleaaure of bearing from you since. Wk. hits* tion led tti enpr.tatiw ? +.l* Mee . 1 LIBERTY AND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE. " HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1856. whom written answers were received, ur ging a postponement of action until after the October election—pledging thetnselves in favor of a Union ticket—and communi• eating. for the first time, the resolution pas. se.l by their Ct nunittee on the I•2th of S-ptember. witch had been suppressed by their Chairman One member of the Com inittee, referring to some of his colleagues in connection with the proposition for a Union Ticicet, s tys : "They may not join us for powerful reasons ; but, be this as it may, we can carry the State without them. An appeal to the great hotly of the Amer icon party, in the last resort is the true policy. I give you again the most on. go 'Hied assurauctt that I will feed thi, movenu•nt. (f ,r a Union ticket,) and it will succeed." As the writer of the letter in dicates his su.l•icton of the corruptability of statue members of the American Commit- tee, it is obviou,ly improper ti mention his name without his ainhority. On the sth of October, the following re ply wits received from Mr. Sartderson thro' the Poet Office : PIIILADELIIIIA, Oct. 3, 1856. Hese. Sint—Being absent from the city when your letter wan had on my dedr, it reach inc until my return hump, which will 1.1, pluni the .11180 ut the delay in acknowledging Its receipt. The Fillmore and Donelson State Commit tee will have a meeting in title city on the t 0...- fling of the 16th instant, when 1 will present your communication for the considerution and eetion ut the said Committees. Knowing the views of the members U the Committee as 1 on the subject to which your letter related, 1 am satisfied that a meeting al the time and place stated by you, would end in accomplish ing nothing, told he entirely useless. Hence de nut feel myself warranted in complying with your request; and, therefore, respeedelly de• cline to convene them ut Harrisburg no the 7th inst. I am, very truly, yours.. SANDERSON. The Republican Committee tel at Har risburg, on the 7th instant, end adjourned to inert in Philadelphia, on the It'th for the purpose of fortning the Electoral Ticket in conjunction w'th the American Commit tee. the minutes of the proceedings of the last named body, at its meeting on the 16th, have been published, and it appears that It r, Sanderson suppressed the fore going communication addressed to hint on the 29th of Sept ember, which in his an ewer, he promised to lay before his Com mittee. The Republican Committee, at ita meet ing, held on the sante day, sent a deput.t• lion to the American Committee with the following in,t ructions : Resolved, That the Committee appointed to cotter with the FiHiner° and Honelson State Committee, be instructed to invite them to meet and unite with the Republican State Executive Committee for the purpose or [brining. Elec. tuntl Ticket, opposed to the election of Jetties Suchanan, upon the basis proposed by the Union State Central Committee, as published in the call for a Union State Convention, to meet at Harrisburg on the 2let inst. And if this invitation be not accepted, then, Redo/red, That the said Committee be in structed to. invite the Fillmore and Woolson State Committee to meet with us for the par. pose of funning an hl'ectural Ticket on some other bait's, which will he likely to receive the support of the people of this State opposed to the Cincinnati Platform and the election of James Buchanan. The Americun Committee reftispd tone cept either invitation, and rejected the ((A lotting resolution, ()tiered by 31r. F.a,icis Jordan, of Bedford : Resolved, That it the friends of Fremont and Dayton accept and support the American Elec. tuna Ticket, at the ensuing election, we are willing that the said ticket may east the electo ral vote of the State for Fremont and Dayton, in case it will defeat Mr. Buchanan, and will not elect Fillmore and Dutielson if given to them They also struck from their Electoral Ticket two gentlemen, who had been pla ced on it by the American State Conven tion, who had declared that they preferred Mr. Fremont to Mr. Buchanan for the ['residency, substituted others who prefer the latter to the former candidate, and final ly adjimurned. A minority of the Committee (seven in number,) dissatisfied with the conduct of their colleagues, then united with the Re publican and North American Committees, and formed a Union Electoral Ticket, which is fully explained in the official sn ai., nesimmit Already wiadv.. All that could be done by the Chairinan of the American State Committee and his! coadjutors in the Democratic ranks, to give the electoral vote of Pennsylvania to Mr. Buchanan, by a secret "side-door" combination with the friends of that gen tleman, to divide the t .ength of the Oppo sition. has been accomplished. The prop osition of the 27th August, was evidently t's igned to embroil the American and Republican parties in every county where they had united on Assembly and Congres sional candidates, and thus aid the Dem ocracy to an overwliehning victory. For what other object did the Chairman of the American State Committee place himself in commuaication with Mr. Forney ? Whether that gentleman accepted an invi tation to ''slip in at the aide-door" of Mr. Sanderson, or whether Mr. Sanderson "slipped in at the side door" of Mr. For ney, is not certainly known. Why Mr. Sanderson should invite a secret "side door" interview, and shrink back from a fair open and honorub'e conference, can only be surmised. Although Chairman of the American State Cotutnittee, it is well understood that he was never connected with the American organization, and tin der other circumstances. a "side-door" ef fort on his part to annihilate it, would per haps subject him to no reproach. Bu t why he should participate in the concoc tint' co' schen es to frUttrate and defent the well known wishes and purposes of that party. after it had so far 'tenured him with its conlid once as to place him at the head of its State Committe is a qtm-tioti which must be settled ry those who have been betrayed . fire Democratic State ticket has been el , vied by a small majority. It teceived the votes of thousands of Fillinore's friends in Philad. Iphia and elsewhere, who cannot support James Buchanan for the Presi dency. It "dipped in at the bark door," while the true friends of the Union ticket were slumbering at their poste. hey have not been vigilant. They have not put forth their strength. 'l•lre official re• turns of the recr nt ele^tion shovel in neatly counties their votes Wave ndit been polled. In Cumberland, the entire vote is nearly six hundred less than in 1852. In Berks, it is truly five hundred leas than in 1855. In Franklin, it is nearly six hun dred less than in 18.12. In Dauphin there in, an increase of seventy votes only, sine, 1852. Similar deficiencies will be found in the official returns from other counties, The Democratic party, with a perfect or. ganization in every election district in the State, polled every vote which could be se cured by the uunost vigilance, and at any cost. Never before were such efforts made by that party to carry an election—and ne• vor was an opposition more sanguine of its own success and more neglectful of the proper means to secure it. Friends of liberty I We invoke you to arouse from that supiness which must prove fatal to every cause, howevt-r just and ho ly it may he, With you a gracious Prov induce has deposited the power of arrest ing the eve ision of human slavery to the free Territories of the country 'Phi, is the single object of the Republican party, It proposes no interference with the con stitutional claims of any State. It does not concern itself with slavery in the South—it see ks no quarrel with any sec tion of the Union. list it demands fidel• ity to that solenin compact which admit ted Nlirsouri, pledged freedom to Kansas, peace to a c:istracted country. It declares that those who de-troyed it, shall derive no advantage from their own wrongful act, and this is a principle daily administered in every court of justice throughout the civilized world. It promulgates no poll:. ical doctrines of recent origin, but founds itself upon those embraced and maintain ed by ll'ash.ngton, Jefferson, Franklin, and other Fathers of the Republic. The Electoral Ticket nominated by the joint action of the state Committee, rep ' vsents fairly the principle for which we contend. Every vote cast for that which contains the Penne of Alin C. Frenio is a “ot. , for there principles and the aggregate will exhibit their strength with the peo ple of Pennsylvania. In proportion to the number of votes east for that ticket, in tt.e event of the election of the twen ty six electors, the vote of Pennsylvania will be cast in the Electoral College— And so in proportion to the number of votes cast for Millard Fillmore and the rante twenty•six Electors, r ill be the num ber of votes which he will receive in the Electoral College. Messrs. Fremod and Fillmore are therefore rival cat didates, and the contest for popular supremacy may be conducted by their respective frieude with all the earnestness in their power, each contending fur their princi. hont compromise irr contoelineet, and asking no favors of the other. This plan of union, exacting no morel sacrifice, must commend itself to the friends of both candidates, ■nd its acceptance by them must result in the de feat of life. Buchan. Republicans ! Let us prepare for the final struggle. Our cause is just—our candidate is worthy ! In the prime and vigor of a life which has been devoted to honorable, laborious and useful services to the country, the acknowledged founder of the Fre" State of California, the first who opened a path for the emigrant across the Rocky Mountains to the shores of the Pa cific, facing death, and overcoming dan gers in the enterprise which no man before him had dared to encounter, he has been presented to the people nut as a calcula ting and successful politician, but as one from their own ranks, whose career is the evidence of merit, capacity and patriot ism. if you would check the extension of Slavery, assert the worth and dignity of free labor; if you would preserve the constitutional rights of every section of our beloved country; if you would "ensure domestic tranquility, establish justice, pro mote the ph wral welfare and secure the blessings of liberty to yourselves and your posteihy," the titan to do it is NOSY I Fur these very objects. the lives and fortunes of men, in the earls history of our coun try. were pledge.] and lost. No such sac. rilices are den aided of you. We ask only that every citizen who values such blessings, and desires to make them per manent, arty for that purpose nevem a few days of peaceful labor to the cause.— I A full vote in Pennsylvania. on the 4th of November, will Fettle forever the sec- tional controversy into which the country, Leon plunged by the scandalous mensures of an administration which Mr. Buchan an has publicly approved and is pledged to maintain. CHARLES GIBLONS. Ch , innan of R.p. &ale Ex. Committee. VII ILAE DLPIII OM O. 1856. READ ! REBID TO THE AMERICAIS OF PENN% There can be no denial that we the un dersigned, have been, and are, both Amer icans and Fillmore men. We have watched the progress of the canvass with a profound attention, worthy of the cause aed times. From ctrouinstances but recently brought to light, we are sati fi LI that plane S have been maturing to hand over the entire American party to the Democratic plat form In the address of Chas. liibtrons, Esq., Chairman of the Republic:in Execu tive Committee, he states, that on the lsrh of September a resolution was passed by the American State Committee in favor of any honorable arrangement with the friends of Fremont and, Dayton, to defeat Mr. Buchanan. toe have investigated this fact, and find that such a resolution was missed This fact has been studious ly concealed from the American party of this city and State. It is now time to speak plainly. 'l'he chairman of our Fillmore State Committee is not now, nor was he ever connected with our Americsn party, nor do we think that we should allow even the entire Executive Committee to stultify our cause and to con,ign us to inure defeat by their cry of straight line American tick et. Mr. Sanders in does nut believe (for he says so) that the Fil'inore Electoral ticket can be elected. It is a mere ques tion of how many voter; can we pull as a forlorn hope. The're can no evil result to us by uniting upon a Union Electoral Ticket upon National grounds, The pro post: n is to forum one ticket headed with Ftlinicre's name, and another ticket head ed with Fremont's name, and the vote in the College to be east for each candidate according to the number of votes roll, d by each ticket. Con anything be fairer than this ? e are ever Fillmore men, and can so express ourselves by our votes ; and our common political enemy, who stands on a platform entirely inimirnt to Anericin prin •iples, may be defeated. We are, by this means, seeming votes in the Electoral College for Fillmore, where we would not have one without it, It resolves itself into a question of utter defeat, by advocating our candidate in One mode, or of obtaining fur our candidate, by another nude, a fair proportion of the electoral vote of Penn sylvania. For ourselves, we know the respousibil ities we assume, and we believe that our American friends throughout the Union will thank us after the canvass is over.— Yesterday we should not hrve made inch a proposition. 'I o•day we do, because we are sure that treachery is being attempted, and we are nit willing that our American Party, which we love as we love our polit ical existenie, shall Le ha atleta aver as a body for the use of that misnamed Demo cratic Party, against which we have been battling since the organization of the Ame rican Party. G. WASHINGTON REED, WILLIAM MILLWARD, JOHN S. PAINTER, JOSEPH SHOUTZ, GEORGE T. THORN, G. RUSH SMITH, JACOB A. JONES. ALFRED COOPER, JAMES S. CHAMBERS, CHARLES READ, SAMUEL S. WARNER, and mans others. PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 21, 1856, ñginn.C. For the Jovrnat. I LOVE NATURE'S BEAUTIES. -0- DT W. COLHOZTO IL-, —o— The mountains, lofty mountains low high they seem to rise I Their distant summits almost seem To penetrate the els ie. ; I lure to view their boaoma, Enrubed in evergreen ; Smrti winter's snowy mantle spread, Embellishes the beetle. The valley., lovely valleys I That lie between their Lreasts, In h ,rvest season richly decked With yellow, golden yea% And t.h ! the growing pastures— The blooming cover lops, That myriad insects range among, And sip the nectar drops I The streamlet:, itretunlete I That g I d. so sa Lily by ; A plaintive dirge they seem to breathe, As onward past they hie. Yet often is their music Sweet aoluee to the ear ; The brooklet's noisy girgling, oft Enlivens us with cheer. I love to watch bright Phoebus!, Descending in the west ; Through misty redness, passing on, And sinking down to rest. I This great and glorious prospeot, Amazing to the eye, Reminds the of the christians' end, When peacefully they die. I love to hear the roaring Of distant waterfalls ; I love to see the bailing foam That plays beneath their walls. I love to wander, lonely, In blooming forests green, And pluck the hull•secrated flowers, Arranged in Nature's sheen I When Winter's dreary aspect ln gloom the earth enshrouds, I love to see the silent snow Descending from the clouds. And in the early morning, 'Tie charming fuss to trace The l'rosts nocturnal pencelingr, Wrought on the window's face I But Spring, by far moat lovely, linbusoms every grace ; Resuscitating every charm That Winter's winds deface. Springs forth then every flower, With art exquisite wrought ; Descends each vernal shower, With fragrance richly fraught. The little sparkling dewdrop-- The eters that shine on high, The bursting of volcanic tires, The runlet's seeming sigh ; All these aro beauties bearing, To minds of lofty thought, A fondness, breathed by cherubim ; How wonderfully wrought I The great Creator uttered A word—'twos hiscommand ; Each beauty sprang in trembling haste From his all bounteous hand. Then raise the eye in wonder, And bow the knee in praise, And lift the voice in gratitude, To GOD, in beattfelt lays. Forge Hell, Perry Co.. 1836. `~ SCCI~Ui~r. IK:r.% tall, slab sided Yankee, who made his appearance at Cape May, last summer, strolled down to the beach dating bathing time. On seeing the bevy of beauties sporting in the waves, he burst into • fit of enthusiasm': "Je reu sa-lem ! if that don't remind me of something good we have at home," "What i 3 id" inquired a friend standing near him. "%VIE is it !" said Jonathan, smacking his lips, ..why it's lasses and water." strA jolly old darkoy down South bo't himself a new shinny ha+, and when it commenced raining he put it under hie coat. When asked why he did not keep his hat on his head, he replied— , De hat's mine; bought him wid my own money ; head 'longs to Massa, let he take Leer he own property." our A woman in attempting to conju• gste a verb :—I will marry, thou wilt mar ry, he will marry, you will marry, they will marry, anti we'll all fertl the bahiea to• VOL. XXI. NO. 44. How to be Miserable, Sit at the window and look over the way to your neighbor's excellent mansion whioh he has recently built and paid for, and sigh out, "0 that I was a rich man rt Get angry with your neighbor, and think you have not a friend in the world. Shed a tear or, two, take a walk in the burial ground, continually saying to yourself, "When shall Ibe buried here ?" Sloe it note for your friend, and never forget your kindness; and every hour in the day whisper to youtself "I wonder if he will pay that note." Think everybody means to cheat you. Closely examine every bill you take, and doubt its being genuine, till you have put the owner toe groat deal of trouble. Believe every shilling passed to yol is but a six pence crossed. and express yore doubts about getting rid of it, if you should take it. Put confidence in nobody, and believe every man you trade with to be a rogue. Never accommodate, if you can possibly help it. Never visit the sick or afflicted, and never give a farthing to the poor. Buy as cheap as you can, and screw down to the lowest mill. Grind the faces and, the hearts of the unfortunate. Brood over your misfortune, your lack of tal. sots, and believe at no distant day you will come to want. Let the workhouse be ever in your mind, with all the horrors of d stress and poverty. Then you will be miserable to your heart's content. (if we may so apt alt,) sick at heart, and at variance with all the world. Noth‘n wll cheer or encourage you; nothing will throw a gleam of sunshine or a ray of witvin..b into your heart. All will be as idark and cheerless as the grove. The Tables Turned. Some time since, on one of the North River Boots a lady rho had attracted much attention for the masculine turn of her tnan. ners and conversation, was seated at the table opposite a gentleman, who in taking some butter, in the absence of the butter. knife used his own, which the lady obser• ving. called aloud to the waiter : ..Wai.ta ! bring another plate of butter, that man, (pointing to the gentleman) had his knife in it !" The unfortunate sight almost sunk un- der the curious gaze of all the company. but said nothing, determined to watch his o, portunity to return, for the cruel morti fication, change in her own coin. He %Tai lod but a 'lament, ere a plate of dried beef was handed to the lady, who, unceremoni• ously took some in her fingers, and placed it upon her plate. ..Wai La !" exclaimed the gentleman in turn, ..bring another plate of beet, this tra. nian has ha I her fingers in this !" A most ungallant roar from all the corn. pony fairly turned the table against the la. dy, and she had the gond sense to acknnwl. edge its desert, and joined heartily In th• mirth created. FREMONT'S RELIGION CARD FROM ARCHBISHOP BLUES, Among the many blistering folsehooda which tl.ii campaign has given birth to, none stand out more malignantly false t;:an the charge of Ca.holicism, which the ,y• ing journals and politicians have endeavor ed to fasten upon Fremont. The Daily News and other Know Noth ing Journals have spread the lie that Bleb. op Hughes had himself declared that Fre mont was a Catholic. 'the following let ter from Bishop Hughes, we trust will tramp that slander into the dust. From the N. F. Courier and Enquirer. We have received the following Card from Archbishop Hughes, with a request to publish The Archbishop of New York thinks it due, both to the private feelings of Cul. Fremont and hie family, as well so reasonable sell.respect to state, that he has had malting to do, directly or indirectly, with a private letter which is now being circulated through the newspapers, put• permit , to have been written by J. A. !Uclfas• ter, Editor and Proprietor of the Freeman'. doureal. Several of acme papers connect the Arehbishop'e name directly with that letter, and some of them go so far as to designate it as the test mony of Archbishop Hughes. Now the Archbishop is bound to say that, whether as regards the matter reepe• Vilify al. laded to in this letter, or in regard to any other topic involving, even by implication, his name' with any charges which could fix a stain or. the private and portions' character of Col. Fremont, he (the Archbishop) knows nothing of hie own knowledge, and therefore his out made, nor authorized any one to make an accusation a. gainst Mr. Fremont. This is, of course, nogg. bye testimony, but a sense of justice so far se the Archbishop is coucerned, will not permit hits to withhold it. Caber 7, 1856. ser When Seth got home from maekereling he immediately sought his Sarah Ann, and found that eke, the heartless one, had found another man. And then, roost awful tight lus gut, and so he went away, and hound himself to cut live oak in Florida. He pined away on live oak lands, he murmured in the glad., bin axe grew heavy iu his hands all in the wild. wood shadts. Musquitoes bit him everywhere no conduct did he get ; and oh l how terribly he'd swear whenever he'd get bit. At last, den pairing of relief, and wishing himself dead, he went into the wools apiaeo. and chopped 4 • hi. two hatd.