SINGLE COPIES, y VOLUME Z.--NUMBER 36. THE POTTER JOURNAL, ri'iumtu KTKKV TJUKSUAY MOitli Dili, ST TbON. H. ItlUHf, Tw w !iio all LvtltlS ami Communication: •bvuld Is* 4 nidrt**rd. to secure atu-uliou. Term —liirarlabljr | n Advance : Hl.'iA pel* Annum. UltMilMlMlt.liotlinUiWi' OiIHIJItIMOIIIIIIHIIIIMMtUHIHMIK Term* oi' Advertising. bquart flu hue j j i itiacrticu, - - - £>l 3 " - - - $1 fit 9 : ..u b !>ubief>i<*Qi in.crti#g less 13, 'I ~ i s*|tiare tlircv tnuuths, - -- -- -- su " - - 4 o'. & 44 ante 44 ------- Sic u 44 oas year, ------- €o'j (H*rfUie-columu, tiijipj ived. per annum 413 O*J six luuutlis, 3 00 44 " tbrca 44 10 Ou 44 u nmath, f> 00 44 per square of 0 tiaes, eitcfa insrtiou uader 4. 1 00 I'art- aales. per tract, ------ Ijo Marriage Naiieee. U' h. ------- 100 pieorcs Notices, e.i"U, 1 ft# \.J waist rater's .A.tics, per square for 4 insertions, 1 in Isisinr,s ar Professional t'anis, each, ue; exctding a lines, per year, - - AOO and Editorial N.j;ic?s, per lin?. 1 * 6ctT All transient a*lvcitiseinents mmt be paid in advance, and no notice will be taken of advertisement* from a distance, unless ibey wrc n> '-•mpaiiied by tl; money or sutisfaetor; refarenee. ■J.JWSII U— moB H'n;J.I.WXJ-L-a^ v Busiufss Carts. O HA "\N\ ATTORNEY' AND CUI'N.SEbLOR AT LAW. Couderiport, I'a.. will attend the several t ourts in i'otter and M K.eau Counties. All Uikin rw7K\UX ATTORNKV AT HAW, Couderspert, Pa., will regularly attend the ( ourts in I'atter and the adjoining Counties. 10:1 AlirilLK fF OLMBTKD, ATTOUNEV A COI'XSKLL*)R AT LAW, • audersjiort. Pa., will attend to ail busine?? enirnited to bis care, with proinptnes and fidelity. Office in Tcoiperauee Block, see •ad ieo . \laia St. 10:1 ISAAC BENSON. ATTORNEY AT LAW. t'ouder*po.-t. Pa., wid attend to ati business entrusted to him, with care an l promptness. Office corner of West aad Tuird sis, 1u: 1 I*. r. A TToiiN f, • A: vi\. Weij .boro', Tioga Co.. Pa , will attend me Courts ,n fuuer and M'E- an t.'o JBtieg. <:l3 il W. BENTON, dI'SVKYtIK AN'l> CUNVEYANCLIi. Ilay doa-1 !* 0., ( All 'gany Tp.,) Putter l o„ Pa., wii! attend to all ousiucss 1:1 bis line, with f*; and dispatch, P;3.J W, K KINO, SURVEYOR. DHAETSMAN AND CU.NYF.Y lNCi.it. Suiethport. <"o., Pu , will atteau to ijuaifi'iJ tur non-res.deut lajtd bol 1.-rs. upon ecu ouu>.le terms. Roteren given if required, i*. h. —Maps OI an\ part ot the L'ouiU.V made to order. D; 13 *T. ELLISON, PRACTICING PHi SICI.i.N. < oudersport, Pa., resjiect'ully iuioriu.- tjie ciiixi ps of ihe vil lage and vicinity that bo will protuply re kpoad to all calls for professional services'. Ottiee im Main t., .n building lortnerly oc cupied by C. W, LUis, Esq. y;'j'J eot.ti.xs sairtt. a. x. jo.xt*. 6MITfI Jt JONES, f'KAl.tfi.s IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, Oil* Kiney Articles. 3iatiQnorv, Dry Goods, (i.aceriei. *c., M.ia *t., t ondersport. Pa. 144:1 D. E OLMSTED, DK.fI.KR IN DRY GOODS, READY-MADE Clotmng Crockery, Groceries, 4cc., Main St.. Caudertport. Pa. lo:l M W. MANN, PKALLR IN BOOKS A STATIONERY. MAG k/JNKft .vJ Muaie, N W. cgrpcr of Main aad l airl its., Couderapgrt, Pa. 1U;I E. K HARRINGTON, >EWLLKR. Cder#port, Pa., having ettfAg .ad a window in Scboomaker X H ara will cajry on th* Watch and Jewelry •!.• there, A tina assortment of Jew- Cry constantly on haul. Watches and Jewelry carefully repaired, it; the best style, • n tha .kartell notice—-ail wora warranted. HENRY J. OLMSTED, (lI'CCMVOU To JIM as W. aMITK.) DEALER IN SToYKS, UN k SHEET IRON Af'.K. Ma;n Give tne a friend, Who, lo the end > Of life, no Ills can from rne sever, — On my fond breast 1 Her head should rest. ' j While I *ang my soug of—Friendship over Amioo. ' i ■.■mijii-i-ij.!!. 1 . 1 jxrstre.usaggree UE FO KT <) F !Tiie SupeiTiiiendeu* ofConicnun aicbnuls in Poller County, lor INSI. My commission which dates from the | IBlh of October last, was received about , the I2lh of November. Mr. Pradt liav . ing rcsignud iu June previous, the office of County Superintendent was vacant dur ; ing five months of the year for which this , report is to be made. .: A large number of the teachers for (he I summer schools were not examined ; none of the schools visited ; consequently then am no records frotu wiiiuh to make a deti •'nito report of that portion of tho school i ; 7™r> That [ might be able to ascertain, as nearly as possible, by inquiry while visit- ( nig tne several school districts, ih ( >se sta ustteal items requested iu the instructions ' .a the Department, I have delayed this report longer tuau it t i lerwise would havi been. ' STATISTICS. School }loune. —First ela s, none; s*e• i.nd class, forty-three; third class, thirty-i tiine. Few new school houses have been ; erected iti the county during the year, the; best of which, in ail respects, is in the; Homer district; but this is defective in! i one or two particulars, in the arrangement ot the school room. The hi ;ok-board is too small for convene i.e *, and no provis-' 1 ion made for a recitation strut iu front o! ! it. , . . . . A convenient recitation scat is an item ' quite generally overlooked by directors in! school bouse arrangement, unless one oi j tiieir tiu nber Happens to bean experienc ed teacher, and wide awake to tho im provements oi tho day iu common school '! education. . | There are school houses in this county, i . | recently built, furnisimd with seats ami - desks tor two pupils each, soim what ai'ier the modern style ; but not a place w.k .v .i class of eight or ton scholars oan be ;e --eoiiniio'lated convenient t • > tiie Llack-i'o.iru t ! *r otherwi-e. This dchcieucy i> i.-> a great ' influence in preventing the sueer.vo'ul classi.,cation ot pupils, am] is t' os mice of uiuch eoiiiusiop in the eohooi room and perplexity to the teacher. . j Shoo/ Architecture. —No Suhoo! houses have vet been built, or thoroughly re*m d olkd, from pluus coiitained in tne fVnu ( sylvuuia School Architecture. A few of ' the directors have given attention to this ', subject, and contemplate erecting houses 1 1 worthy of the object for which they arc j designed. I Material of School Houses. —Rriek. . noue; stout 4 , none; lug, twelve; frame, > seventy ; total, eighty-two. School Furniture. —First clays eharuc j tor, in none of the school houses; second class, iu twenty-unc; third class, in sixty .; one. S hoots. —First class, (graded,) tiiine ; secjnd class, (classified,) eighty; third ; class, noue. Though all our teachers pur sue a system of classification to some cx -1 tent, yet with a number it is not as etfi | cient as we hope to see carried out i" the j; future. Many of our most skillful teach ers also are embarrassed in their efforts to classify their pupils, in consequence ofir tregular attendance and multiplicity of f text-books. ' j Age* of Teachers. —ltems under this and three or four following ii< 4 ads are estimated for tho first half of the school , year, and are as correct as I have been . able to ascertain from observation and iu quiry. Under seventeen years of (XiMUS U \t)i friiKipus of Jruo iLnnvriKd, tint 1 in: l&ttthpijtiiioi) of 7i)ori)iiu, jCfcrqtqlrc :inO ftctes. COUI)3RSPORT, PGTTE3. COUNTS, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1838. age, nine; between seventeen and twenty joue, inclusive, forty-eight; between twen ty-one and twenty-five, nineteen ; be veen twenty-five and thirty, twenty-three; be ; tweeu thirty and forty, fourteen; be tween foity and fifty, one; over fifty, two ; one of whom was over seventy. Total, one hundred and sixteen. Jiuth-plarCy {E-ti mated.) —Rom in i Pennsylvania, fifty-niue; b irnuutoi Peun • sylvania, fifty- even. Experience in Teaching.—[Ascertain ed with sufficient exactness from iuquirv •t those acquainted with the teachers where I have not had the opportunity of •ceiog them.J Those who have taught •::-s than oue year, twenty-one; between one and three years, fbrtv-one ; fro nt r'e ! to six years, twenty-seven ; from six to ten years, thirteen; from ten to twenty • years, two; over twenty years, one. j * t J J lWm.iturnf Teachers. —Titere are none who intend to teach permanently. As the scho,,!s are usually kept open only four months in the summ *r ami three in the winter, of those wuo are eng g d in teaching, tueir tine is divided between that and some other employment. When ever they find an opportunity to eng-gr in a permanent business they usually ex pect to do so. In order, therefore, to se cure permanent teachers, the employment must be more constant, with a compensa tion sufficient for a good support I*> ;/'*.< ion a I Reading. —Those who have read educational works, thirty seven ; tuose who have not, seventy-nine. It will be seen from this, compared with the re i port, of the previous year, that a larger | proportion of onr teachers are making j themselves familiar with the modern im provements in the mode of teaching. Manner of Teaching, and igewraf abil jUy to Teach ami Cover n. —Number of I teachers who give full satisfaction, tiiiriy |four; medium teachers, sixty-five; tuose | whose services had better be dispensed with, seventeen. Ex a m inations and Certificate*. —Fr.en the receipt of my commission (November 12) to the first of June, number of candi dates examined, one hundred and one, provisional certificatesgrauted, ninety-live; permanent, one; rejected, five. Two of those who received provisional certificates at tjfe time ol examination, received per manent certificates on visiting their schools. Institute*. —-During the three years ot I the County Superintendency, two county institutes have been heid. ike numb r I ff'teachers who attended these institutes I have not toe means of ascertaining ; not ! being a resident of tiie county when en he; were in ses.-ion, ami no records being left from the former Superim*- ndeut. There have been no district uisti ittes, or association*. organized in the county to !.tv knowledge. A teaiher.,' class, how ever, has been organized and weii sustain ed in connection with the 44 t'oauorspo.'t Aeademv. ' This in-titution is supported by tne liberality and enterprise of citizens in the county, and it- students are made up almost witoliy of y utig ladies and gen tlemen from the different townships ur<>unu who are pr. paring themselves* for tc.c- icrs. Resides the r* guiar drilling of reoitmion, {ally instruction has be it given in tiie art .if teaching. The cia-s has also iieid weekly meetings for t'ne purpose of hear ing lectures, reading reports and essays, and holding discussions on subj* cts eo.i uected witn the interests of common schools. \\ it a but few exceptions, the entire body of teachers in tiie c .uury have been, at some time, connected w ta this school, and from it t'ley have usaalls gone to tiieir respective iielus oflabor. During the pa-t year eighty-three (over one half) 'of th • teachers ot the crnutv have been members of this institution, it i.-, there fore. iuti uately eoum'cied w;ih the e mi moa schoal system, and has exerted a de cided influence in elevating the stand..rd u. p •pu'ut education. MISC K f.L A X KOU S. School 1 isitatnnis. —Toe p ltronsof the scliouls have accompanied mo, i:i several instances, in my official visits, and t.ii some have done at tne saeni'.ce of their own business for tiie time being. More would liave been pleased to nave attended and witness**! the examinations if the, I classes, could they have been notified of the time when the Superintendent, was to be present; but to give a previous notice of the time ot visiting schools would, gen erally, be impracticable from the distance they are apart, and the frequently bid state of the roads. In very few instances | patrons have visited tiieir schools inde pendent of Superintendent's or Directors' visits, hut none perhaps worthy of distinct notice. Such visits are usually the result iof effort on the part of the teachers, anu are an indication of the interest they are endeavoring to create in the minds m b.t!i parents and scholars, on the subject oi education. Director* visits, in their regularity and frequency, by no means come up to the requirements of the school law, nor can it really be expeeted that they wili so long as they receive no compensation for their services, l'ct ts*j much negligence io - manir'est. An hour or two might be im - prove*! by direct irs iu vi-ttiug tiie schools i oi tiieir *nvu immediate neighborhood oc 4 - -' casio! ally, without interfering materially - with any other duties. A large propor ; tion, however, of direcG r- n. ve visit tiieir , schools during the e itirc s :s.-i m. ilon orabe exceptions may be m.'Ut.oned, p r i ticuiany o Abbott, Hebron and It-uhtte. • The secretaries of these districts 1 have found able to give a very correct stnte ■ niciit of tiie condition o. tiieir schuoi*. of the skill of tiie teacher in classifying pu ■ piD and faculty of government. Ru>" one '.district t iny kuo'uleilge has decided to ; act upon the recommendation oi tiie-State; i Superintendent, by employing tlie secre ■ tarv to make a moiittrly v siit of tiie schools, and till up the blank repots fur-; nisiied for that purpose by toe Sclioul i)e --1 part'iieut. Ot.ier districts are thinking , favorable of the movement, bat have yet 1 taken no action. Lead in;/ Characteristics. —The entire !county is comparatively new. Many o. the districts are settled only along the principal strea-us, and tiie inhabitants! . are engaged in the united occupation o. , agriculture and lumbering. O.h r dis-' tritcs are very sparsely settled, and to ap .ipoarauee present almost an unbroken for-' jest. In these districts lumbering is the; chief occupation, but within the past year the interest of the people tin the subj-'ci of education ha-* iu creased considerably, i which fact is evinced by the offer of more j liberal co.upeii-aiioii tor the sake of ob j ! taitiiug go >d teachers. Tiie middle and ; . northern portions of the e maty are quite . extensiv ly settled, and agriculture being j ! the principal euip'oyment, the people are: fast collecting around them the comforts ; and conveniences of life. Still a large majority of the inhabitants throughout the county have not yet paid fur their 'lauds. Wealth, therefore, is not abun dant, an 1 tlie mean-; are not at command I for doing :.!! that is desirable in the con ! jstructioii of school houses, and supplying them with furniture and apparatus The j face of tin Country is hilly and portion-j ; of it somewhat umuntaui >us ; soil ric. and j very fertile; ami having an intelligent,; . iudustrious and enterprising people to! improve it ti t.e is ouly wanting to make' it one of tiie best sections of the Com monwealth. I'ub'ic S> ntimcnt General intelli gence i- a pro nineut characteristic of the inhabitants of t:; i-* county. They are! uio.-tly settlers from New York and the New England States, and have brought j with them, and still retain, a love of knowledge and improvement. They are ail iu favor, therefore, of a "common school swcui." Some may retain their predil-eti-ns for the system under which j they have formerly worked; but the ma jority arc. convinced, and the rot arc wil- j ling to be. tiiat the common school sys tem of Pennsylvania is equal to that ol | any of the sister Suites. When its oper-i alums are U"d rstoud the system is gen eniiy l.kcd. 1 tie met that nearly all the j districts in t!i- 4 county arc willing to pay a tax of thirteen nulls on a dollar for st h -ol purriosi s alone, affords a strong ev-i lu.'iice of t ie interest the people take iu the cause ot education, anu that they are' wortiiy ot credit for doing all thev can. No opposition need to be looked for in l nis sect ion. leach. rs. —lt takes tine for great and general improvements in public matters ot any kind. Progress, however, has been made in the following particulars : East. Teachers have felt more sensibly the responsibility of their calling, unt on ly as i i-ir tutors ill the science-, but also a- exemplars of sound, moral and relig ious principles This is an important item to bo gained; as with it there will he an effort, iu a corresponding degree, faithfully to discharge the duties- devolv-i ing upon them. Second. In previously maturing plan shy w.iich to regulate their cla sos and Conduct tiie exercises and re citations of tiie school loom. Many have entered upon the business of teaching without any definite idea *.; what they wa .ted to accomplish, or how thev were; to do it: consequently, a iarge portion ol tue term is spent before anything is real ty done, il at all. A poor plan is better; , than none ; because t*> secure it, thinkingi is necessary; the attention must be ea lied | to the subject, and action prompted bv those thoughts will follow; though tlie plan may b ; erroneous in some particu lars, yet it will probably be corrected bv experience and comparison with that of: oti ers. The impiovements made iu this respect, are the result of more extensive reading of educational works, together witn lectures, as opportunity has present ed. Third. Or.il instruction and illus-j trations are used more extensively than heretofore, by which the exercises of the sciiool room are much enlivened and tlie ; I interest increased. I have observed with; satisfaction, even in the retired districts! ot tae county, that the want of suitable: school books I as b jen in a measure sup plied by the use of oral instruction, par tieular.y in English Grammar ami Men-! tu! Arithmetic. 1 LrjccU to C: Remedied-—Teachers.— Though we have been able to speak of ■ progress in the character and oinlilica iions of teachers, vet the tmuihet of good teachers is not sufficient to meet the wants or' the schools ; and for tlie present, • some have been licensed that wou'ii not be. were there others to take their places. Some, also, who have established a good reputation as teachers, are leaving the business lor other emj loymcnts, for the I reason that they cannot obtain sufficient compensation, and one which is available A large number of the districts are sadly in debt. The teachers, aft rteyii vc earned their money and obtained their 'orders, are frequently obliged to hold ■ them from six to eighteen mont s before they en* obtain their value, or sell them at a discount. They usually need their money as soon as it is earned, and the fact that they cannot obtain it when due. lis driving many of our best teachers from ,the profession. An improvement in the financial d-partmeut of a number of the listrict.s would be very beneiici.il. Greater facilities are also necessary for ! improving the qualifications of t*ac:iers. One of the agencies to which we look af present for accomplishing this, i< teaeh jer's institutes. They will be held here -1 alter, whatever it may cost; but could the j Legislature of our State think proper to encourage us, by a saia'l appropriation to leach county for this purpose, it would be i very gr itifying to the friends of edueati >n. The want of a uniform school tax ithroughout the State, stud compensation to directors, are rtgarded as among the defects of the present system. Could they be remedied, still greater life and effectiveness would be given to the cause of education. Hut these defects have ; been urged upon the attention of the School Department and the Legislature, by a large number of the County Super intemhmts, in former reports; there fore i leave them with this passing no rice, hoping the tiuie is not far distant when that attention will bo given to them which the Cause demands. While these defects are referred to. with others that might be mentioned, out 'Confidence is not at all weakened in tin main features of the system. Though j not perfect, its utility and practicability will compare favorably with those which have been much longer in use, and w< believe that efficient directors and super intendents, thoroughly to carry out it> provisions, will secure to the people ol this Commonwealth, all that its most ar dent friends have anticipated. J. HEN" D RICK, Count]/ Super in tendon t CoifDKßspoMT, September !5 1857. f mm. SomminiintHons. A DEiffOCAAT SPEAaS OJT. For liie I'o'ter J mrual. "Close Your Mouths." lias the time come when one political party of this Democratic country shail cuohy say to thy other party, "Close your mounts? ' those wmi supported ! Mr. Huehanari for the Presidency m good , i O laith—not only voted for him bu; labored fur him, spending their time and money tor the purpose oi securing his election, and thereby secure tnc success of that gr;at principle wnicli they so much lov ed and cherished. to icit: State and Ter litorial liiglit, Popular sovereignty, and that tiie voice of toe majority shall ue tlie constitution of tlie land—shall they be told to "forever shut their mouths' —became they have been deceived? So toe 7th resolution of the Democratic Couvolition, on the 4lh iust., Uoidiy as serts. t 1 voted for Mr. Buchanan in good I faith. lie has uot carried out the prin ciples upon which he was elected; but acts the Tyrant; he duties the will ut tiie majuiity; ne upholds with ail ttic power ot nia high position, toe plan widen dis lrauchised mueteen counties out ot thirty tour tu Kansas. Tuc 7th resolution is a : iihei upon common sense. It the Con stitution of Kansas is not acceptable to j tree state men, "close your mouths, — ;your own conduct has produced the re sult.'' Shame!—VYheu it is well known that pro slavery officers illegally and uu justiy refused, under the plea of want ot lunds, to give the people ol nineteen coun ties a legal right to vote under the terri torial law. A majority of tiie counties was not represented at all. Boar iu mind, reader, it was not the fault of tne people ot these counties—it was a deep laul pian to fasten upon tlic.u tiie Institution ol Domestic Slavery. Was mere a Democrat in all Pennsyl vania in IBdd that would have dared to assert, as a principle in the democratic !creed, that Kansas should be admitted into the I'niou—no, uot admitted, but : tureed in—with a Constitution forced up on her by a pro-slavery minority, baked |up by President Buchanan t Not oue.— ii this had been Democracy, then Mr. Buchanan would never have b en Presi dent. The doctrine w.is in I>s>: hi very £>ute and Territory sha.l make us uwu <( FOLK CENTS TERMS. -$1.25 FEE AKNI/jEK f local laws. Congress shall not force (by - the passage of its laws,) Slavery into nor I out of an)' State or Territory; but leave i* the people thereof perfectly free to form . their own institutions subject only to the : Constitution of the United States. Mr. . !>uehanan pledged himself to the country, 1 b tore and alter election, that ail the power the Constitution conferred upon j'li.e Executive, should be brought to bear L 'in a tirm and conciliatory manner to re store the same harmony among the sister ; States, that existed before the apple of • discord was east into their midst. He • now sets at defiance the will of a large I majority in Kansas Pennsylvania De- C tuoenicy says " Clone your mouth— i Thank God there is a power bemud the r throne greater than the throne iseif. Lit hiiu that sits thereon bawaic. If the principles of the Kansas N bra.-- ka bill, as enunciated by the Cincinnaii Platform, had been carried out with a fair and honest hand, Kansas would have b "on a Free State. The right of the peo ple- to vote on their Constitution, was and is inherent—it wa- not a rignt to ben, but a right that could not be taken away without a violation of the hrst tuu jdauieiital principles of self-government. In small communities all the people may assemble and enact their laws, and ap point officers t carry them into effect.— i he majority ruling it, would be a pure ■ democrat ic government. Kut, suppose this little community has grown so large i that ail cannot assemble together to make ';ts constitution and laws, and it must be I done by delegates elected by the people, i Now, it becomes necessary tor the Legis lature of this community to pass a law •| tuthorizing the people to elect delegates to a convention to form a constitution, in I ' . i order that they may be admitted into the United Suites of America. Among the ;rhe details of this law, we find a clause j requiring certain officers to take the ceu -us of t itc people, and register ai! the ■ | bona fid■ citizens of the community, at a I given or specified time, in order to know . 1 m eicctiou day who are the legal voters. | Now, these officers are of one political j party, and the people in uiueteea counties ijou'of thirty-four are of another party. Said officers perform their duty in tiftecn • counties, which are of their own party, : thereby making theui legal voters; but efu-e to register the nineteen counties, I thereby disfranchising the majority, and ' giving tha minority power to carry out their favorite scheme. This is the kind of representative pov | eminent under which the Leeomptou Con stitution was formed, —one of the most ; glaring frauds since the Tea an Stamp j Act of George 111 of England. And I Pennsylvania Democracy says " cio.-ie.your month*. Hush, be still—don't talk—you ' will raise the count!) I" Gentlemen, all can't be gagged. I have worked as hard jas any ut you in the good old cause of ; equal rights, but whenyout.dk of closing ' my mouth, or that of my br thers, it does ■ seem as though it was high time we had another Declaration of Independence, ilead the "d resolution of the 4th of March Convention —" in the admission of new States, with or without slavery, as they may cl -i t, the equal rights of all the States will be preserved," Ac. u As thy May tfect!" Now, it is a well-known tact, that the people of Kansas have de cided, by a large majority, against the Co coa.ptuu Constitution ; yet the democracy of Pennsylvania urges the admis-iori of Kansas uuder that most damnable act of viiiiany, and then cries out "close your mouths." What was the principle ob jection made by the democracy against the Topeka Constitution .' We demanded ■ | that it should be made by the people. We jNcbiaska men claimed that it was the offspring of a political party—that if it had beeu voted upon by all the loiw /ufe citizens of Kansas there would have been a large majority against it. Just so wo Democ ats and Nebraska men of 1858 do claim for the Eccompton frauds. In 1856 our watch w..rd in Potter County, and the whole iio'tiiern ti r, was, "Buchanan, Kreckenridgo and Free Kansas." Our 1 : opponents pretended that we meant that j ßuchanan would make Kansas a free state at ail hazards. We meant uo such 1 thing. Hut this tee did mean : That Kan sas would be FREK. How free? Why, free to make her own constitution and io i eal laws—free to establish her own do mestic institutions, free from ai! outside inter.crence, and especially from the Pres ident and the Democratic party. We hive been deceived. For this same President 1 and his party are now forcing Kansas in to the Union at the cannons mouth—( Had .not that mouth better be closed ?—with a constitution as repugnant to the people of Kansas as was the Declaration of In dependence to the British crown in 1776. In 188(3, Mr. Buchanan stood bv the side of Thomas H. Benton in the V. S. Senate —and there, too, wap Silas Wright and Y\ m. 11. King, and all that phalanx of talent and patriotism which was then the pride and glory of the democratic party— declaring that the people are sovereign,— jthat tho majority must decide, and that they could not be divested uf that ]>oiccr.