Mil! Si lium. BEDFORD, Fa. t'rida; Morning, Aug. 1. ISWU "Fearless and Free." NAVIU OVER, EDITOR AM' PTTOPRN."!OB FOR PRESIDENT: HILLIPJ FILLMORE. I OF NEW YORK FOR VICE PRESIDENT. ANDREW JAC KSON DONEES ON OF TENNESSEE. UNION STATE TICKET. Canal Commissioner: THOMAS E. COCHRAN, Of York County. Auditor General .- DARWIN* PHELPS, Of Armstrong County. Surveyor General BARTHOLOMEW LAPOUTE, Of Bradford County. To the American* ol' Pcnn-'a. At a meeting of the State Council of the State t' the American party of The State to 3.1- •emufe at Hurri.-dmrg. on the first TCESOAT in August next ensuing, for tbe purpose ->f plac ing- in nomination an Electoral l'ickct, and transact such other business as may be necessa ry for the prosecution of the Presidential eam daign: ami in accordance with said resolution, the friendsoi* FILLMORE AND DONELSON" ane hereby requested to meet in their respective DISTRICTS, on or before tho2i>th day of July, and elect Delegates t-o the said Convention, corres ponding to the number of members they are en titled to in the Senate an i House ot Represen tatives of the Legislature of the State. T'.ie siid Convention at Harrisburg to meet <>n TUESDAV. the fifth day of August, at 10 o'clock. A- M. J NO. K- EDIE. President. Twos. 1.. GiFroßJi, Sccrttaru. The Rev. S. S. Schmueker, D P. will preach 111 the Lwthernn church on next Sab hath morning at 10 o'clock, and the Rev. F. W. Ccnrad in the evening at early can dle light. ThfrUamp-meeting for Bedford circui' win runißic-r.ce Aug. 15th, :n Brush ( reek \ lev, on the land belonging to Mr. Perry Bar'qa, oco mile and a. half fr.>u Rhorn a Mill, Rev. .1. A Collin* and other ministers are expected to he m attendance. G W. Bouse. .!>. C. §IOOO REWARD! BUCHANAN" & LOW WAGES' We will bmd ourselves, our heirs, execu tors or assign®, in the sum ct SSOO, thai Buchanan, when in tbe Uuited Sates Sm ite, made use cf the following language, we will also bind ourselves as aforesaid, in tbesum of SSOO, that we can prove by 1.0-v-ofoco v-ofoco authority that Buchanan did make use of the following language. 11. re's the extract: •♦What is tbe reason - Ibar. with at! these ad vantages and with the protective duties w hirb enr lass afford to the dom. stic manufacture of retton, we cannot ctTa;o exclusive possession of the home market, and successfully contend for the market* of the world! It is sanpiy because we manufacture arthe nominal prices of our own inflated currency, and are compelled to sell a* the real price* of ruber nations. REDUCE OUR NOMINAL TO THE REAL STAND ARD OF FKICFS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD, aod youaover our country with'ties e.ags ur.d benefits. Now here i*a chance for gentlemen Lo cofocos to make a little money ! The ex tract clearly shows that Buchanan is in fa vor of I.ow fv agis' (Ame up to the mark, gentlemen, fodder rr Be fodder, and ac knowledge that ten cent Jimmy is not enti tled to the votes of the laboring man Come., now, we know yon l.ke money, and accept this little bribe' A careful examination of the average prices of labor througiaJ the world", shows that it only amounts to TEN CENTS A DAY ! Laboring man, will you vole for Buchanan, who is willing to give you only ten cents a day for your hard labor 3 We call the attention of cur readers to. the advertisement of P H. Shires, Esq., in another column Mr. Shires is able to ao oommolatJ farmers with tbe very beet, and latest improvod Thrr-bing Maobiaea now in use. He is amexuelleot mechanic, and all tie agricultural implements will heat in epestion. I OUT 1 CAL 'MEET IN G. We aw requested Jo say that the Amer icans of St. (lair and lie adjoining tovrn fbips, will hold a politirtl meeting at wawis Rislifig'e School House in St. Ciair tc.wu ihip on 'lkmsday she ]2lfr dV of August, insf., at 3 o'clock ia the afternoon. All of all parties are cordially invited to at- ' tend. The meeting will be cidreaped by j Francis Jordan. Esq., and perhaps by Oth- | ers I*t all torn nut who desire to hear> i fair and full dweussiou of the various polit- f ual questions now before the people Several comunicationsoa the pole rarsiog at St Clairsville have been received. If we have tbe room to spare we will insert them In our next. Frank. Pierce, has removed Wilson Shan, j non as Governor of Kansas, and appointed 1 Col. John W. Geary of Pennsylvania, in tie place Another Loeofoeo Outrage! Our citizens were greatiy surprised and pained by learning a few days ago, of the removal of MR. Wili.IAH McMt'LLiN, ano the appointment of John C. Bowie®, for merly of this place, but lately of 1 biladel phia," to the Telegraph Office here. The circumstances are these : For a number of vearapast, Capt. ETTTOOD HARMER, late* I ly deceased, one of the best citizens wc had amongst us, had charge of the office. For the last two or three years Mr. Banner's heaith began to fail, and he took Mr. Mc- Mallin, one of our worthiest citizens, in with him, and taught him the telegraphing business. He would work at his trade all dav, aud at night assist the Uaptaio, and thus learned, by Lis unwearied industry, to be one of tne Lest telegraphers in the State, for whieb the whole community gave him eredit. During the last Lard winter Mr. McMuilin frequently wilked over the Al legheny mountain, in cold and snow, and kept the line -in order. Mr- Ilarmer, in consideration of Mr. McMifllm s fait bit ul ness and attention to the interests of the Company, desired before his decease, that be should bo kept in the situation. It was so understood that it would he done by all our citizens, except a lew of the most des picable and contemptible leaders of the IrO cofoco party. He has fulfilled the duties to the* satisfaction of our citizens, and the Company, up to the present time. No charge has ever been brought against him but that lie was an American, which appears to he a crime la the eyes of these gentry. — Ever since Mr. Harmer's death, these 1.0-ecfoco ecfoco leaders have been writing letters to tl.e officers ol the Company requesting his removal, and urging the appointment ot young Mr. Bowles of Philadelphia. They had the ineffable meanness to urge as a rea son lor his removal that HE 11 AS A ME CHANIC AND A MECHANIC HAD NO BUSINESS IN THE TELEGRAPH OFFICE! 1! Such are the leaders of the party who talk about proscription and t/uir love for the lal-oiing man! The best reason we know of for the removal is, that the Loeofecos arc- making the most despe rate exertions {using money an d promise of office to bribe persons to support their tick et) to carry Bedford County this fall.— They wish to have Mr. MeMullin. an Amer ican. out of the way, and to get here in Lis place, a Loeofoeo from Pliihdelphia. It will help them one vote, tut they will be badlv beaten nevertheless. Mr. Bowles had a good situation in Philadelphia, the the pav of that office bfing six hundred dollars a year, while the Bedford Office is worth only five hundred, ar.d be had only half the day to attend to the duties ot the office. Then why should the Locofoco leaders band together to get hiui here, aud take the uffiee from Mr. McMuilin, a poor, bard working, industrious mechanic* Mr. Bowles is a single man, no one to support but himself, and had an excellent situa tion, whieb, through the influence <*f Loco* focoism, be has left, and taken the otnee from Mr. McMuilin, who is a married niau, and has*family to suppoif. Their conduct in this affair is hooeathcontempt. Another feature in this matter is equal ly reprehensible, and shows the love of L>- cofoeoism for not only the mechanic but al so the widow and oiphan ! Capt. Harmor, a short time before Lis death, purchased a little property io town, which :s not yet paid for. Mr. McMuilin kept, and iutrnd od to keep, the office in Mrs. Harmer's building, for which she received fitty dol lars per annum. She was also left* horse and buggv, which Mr. MoMuliin hired, and the rent, and horse-and buggy hire, would have netted her about $150.00 per annum, and with which the widow, who i now in delicate health, expected to pay for her lit tle konu I Thus has Locofocoism taken the very bread ont of the mouths of the WIDOW and FATHERLESS! This whole community id greatly shocked iat this grose outrage, aD a 'through train,' and won't atop to I take up passengers." I Wc copy the above from a recent arti | cie in the Gazette From this, aud numer ous other urticle® we have noticed, it is manifest the brag game is to be the game |of the campaign. Ever since Buchanan's nomination, his friends have been boasting , of his great strength, and unexampled pop ularity. They will hardly permit even - an opponent to express a doubt on the subject, and boast that he will without ef fort, carry almost, if not quite, every State in the Union. The above quotation was written in this boasting spirit, not only re iving upon their own strength, but insulting the Americans by bragging that the Bu chanan train is a "■through tram ''' and won't condescend to stop to take up pas sengers. In the same spirit, also, they re fused to invite the Americans to their meeting at Buekstown. This is of course all bluster ar.d hraggadoeia, and well they know it. They knoff as well as we do, that any enthusiasm got up for such an old Fed eralist as Buchanan is not natural, but forced, aod especially in this State. That he Las always been opposed to the great Pennsylvania doctrine of protection, and that hehas ever denied his native State,and his residence in it, for the contemptible pur pose of shirking the payment of his just and legal taxes. His friends know full well that in Ohio lie will he beaten by not less than fifty thousand majority, that in New k ork he wiil he beaten stilt worse, and that he ha® hardly a shadow of chance to carry a single Western or Northern State, and that if they carry Pennsylvania it will be by the most desperate exertions, aud be cause the opposition are divided. Know ing ail this, they occasionally let them selves down off their high horei, and look at things a little a? they are. Hence it is, that on a little reflection, they concluded to ex&crid the invitation to all their meet ings to the Americans liefer- it is. also, that that "through traia" is r.ow very wil 'ing to stop, whether at the regulai sta tions or not. rnd take on boa:J the most humble number of the American parfv, and not only taxc Mm free, but offer large pre miums for such' passengers. Wc had ho ped that when the Americans were told so cavalierly that "they r.eed not try to get on heard," and that the train was & "through train," and would not stop for them, they would have had pride enough and spunk enough to "let it slide, "and wo doubt not nearly all of them have and will. But it seems that there is here and there one, whe has no pride it these matter®, and who having more regard lor the hope of re ward thao any fear ol humiliation or pun ishment has got the great through train to stop for hhn, and not only this, but the conductors on the great Buchanan train have not only stopped the train, and spent much time and entreaty in getting them on, but are boa-Wing and rejoicing over their wonderful accessions in this way, upon the principle we presume that there is more re joicing in Pandemomium over one saint fal-, len thin over ninety and nine spirits who never were anything else hut fallen. We are glal therefore, that oar Locofoco friends have at last got down off their stilts, atod thai thoir political eyes are so far open ed that they find it neeessary to stop the great "through train," not only at every station, bat at every highway and byway, and entreat, and offer rewards for passen-. gor®, rather than the great Buchanan train should run empty. We consider this both wise aod foolish. Witt, because it shows correct views of the necessity for great ex ertion to secure passengers, and foolish, be cause any "through train" whicn is compel led to stop BO often and at such irregular places, cannot fail to be Jar behind at the end of the race. Burlin gains excepted the challenge of Bully Brook* of South Carolina. The Clifton House on the Canada side of the Falls of Niagara, was named as the place of meeting, and Brooks abowed his chivalry by backing out. The Orangeburg Southron, Newberry .Mirror, the Sumpterviile 7 \mcs, Newberry Flag, and Pee Bee Tents, all of Bemocratio South Carolina, refuse to support Mi. Bu chanan. T'oe Cincinnati Volksfrtund , (Catholic) is now th? only German Baily ia Ohio, which supports Buchanan HENRY NICODEMUS. This person has lately left the American party and gone over to the Locofoeos. We only now notice him to put our friends on ! their guard against htm. This desert,oa I will not injure our party any more than the ' vote of Henry Nicodemus is concerned I We know of several persons he has beeu at ' tempting to tamper with, but lias been met I with signal rebuke. He has no influence and his being connected with the American party in this Boroogh has done it more iu -1 jury than good. It is well known that without the ability to fill them, he has bean, and is yet, one of the most inveterate office seekers so the p'ace. For a jieriod of about fifteen years he was a pest to his (the Locofoco) party, after the nomination of different County offices. After something occurring which the citizens of South \Vood berry Township will remember against him forever, he removed to this Borough. Here he still continued office-seeking as a profes sion, but was not able to receive the Sher iff's nomination. Ho was, however, through dissensions iu the Whig rauks elceted Jus tice of the Peace iu Bedford, Three years ago, by souio unaccouutahle means, he se cured the nouiinatiou of Treasurer. The election day arrived, the Locofoco ticket was successful, except 'Squire Nicodemus, who was badly beaten. He run some forty votes behind his own ticket, in Wood berry Township, when he was born and raised,and where he was known, his opponent also not j being at all acquainted or known thirre'— lie also run from thirty to forty votes be- i hind his ticket in Bedford Borough, where | he wis known and had lived for ten or \ twelve yeurs'. Such is the man the Gazette of this week will attempt to make a great ; convert of to the Locofoco party. The American party is a new paity, com posed of members ot Loth old parties. It wax natural that some corrupt aud old brokcn-Jown political hacks, like Nicode mus, should join in, and who conld not well : be kept out. These fellows so far as Bed ford County is concerned, are now nearly, ; or altogether gone—if there are any yet— j thev had better leave now, for the sooner ' we arc rid of them the better—as the party will become purer and stronger. It was the principal argument of our oppouents against as, that we had old political broken ; down hacks in it, such as Nieodeiuus. The riddeuce of theui will add to our strength. We would say to our friends throughout the Comity; stand firm. We will here and there loose a deserter like Nicoderuus, but that will not injure us for we are now sever al hundred stronger than we were last fall. The Americans, last Spring a year re-elect ed him Justice of the Peace, and tie was last winter a candidate for Clerk of the j Poor House, and felt quite disappointed, because a better man and truer American was selected. Since that time, and before, ' he gave it out to some of our party that he | was entitled and to have the couiina i tion tor Pro'hunotary next fall. He was given to understand that there were likely to be several gentlemen who were qualified iu the way, and he began to think that he had about made ail he could out of the i American party! It is well known that ! the Locofoco? have raised one hundred thou- j sand dollars for tbe purpose of carrying Pennsylvania, it is well understood that j several hundred dollars fonnd its way to : Bedford, how it has b-en applied 'Squire ' Nicodco.ua can tell! It will all fail, how. ever, and the people will decide the qnes- ! tion aright despite ibeclmost ipm efforts at ' buying and selling, a few men, like South ern Slaves, in this place! We have written a much more lengthy I article than tbe subject demanded, and will j wait to hear what Henry, who was rottea egged for attempting to establish Know- j Nothing Councils in Cumberland Valley, ' will have to say for himself, merely re- ! marking that he* tbe said Henry, and John G. Hartley hadbetter decline tbe offices they swindled not of a confiding party, and to which against the wishes of a large majori ty of the people of the Borough, and Coun ty, they continue to cling with the tenacity of a leech, and the hungry stomach of an old office-seeker, who is willing to desert Lis friends and fall into tho arms of his ene mies, and in turn desert them again, as of ten as anything is to be tuaie by it. So we go, and tba Locofocos can make all tbe capital ibey can onl of them, so long as they can keep them! FR. JORDAN, Eiq. The Bedford Gazfttt, has been almost in the -weekly habit, for several years of slstsdering and abusing this gentleman, as we chink, rod the large majority of our citizens think, without the slightest cause whatever. We csn imagine no other reason than that Mr. Jordan belongs to a different political party, and interferes, on account of bis tulenfa, and high position in the esti mation of his fellow-citiucD*, with the po litical habeas of the Locofooo leaders, and particularly of the editor of the Gazette, who, io days gone by was in the habit of blackguarding and slandering the best citi zens of oui country, and even innocent and defenceless woman. He has uot changed his conduct yet, and though he may prom ise at the paver meetings to make amende, and though he may take the Sacrament, he returns to his labors, the same vile slander er, the satie maliguer and tradocer of our best eitiwnj. We have heretofore, at the request of Mr. Jordan, refrained from no ticing these periodical ebullitions, ami we : only cow notice them to bow person* abroad who may be misled by Bowman's vituperations, Mr. Jordan'* standing and position at home. Mr. Jordan came to this town from the lower end of Bedford County,(now Fulton,) quite a lad aome twelve or fifteen years ago. He was a stranger here, and among strang ers. He commenced the study of law in the office of the late Hon. Samuel M. Bar clay, and was admitted to the bar after the regular course of his studies. He eocn af terwards entered into partnership iu the practice of law with Mr. King, one ot the ablest memberi of our bar Since that time the practice of the firm has gone on in creasing until it is among the best in this and the adjoining county of Fulton. In deed there is scarcely an important trial on which thev are cot employed. He was twice appointed deputy Attorney General,by the Attorney General of the State. Some sis years ago, Mr. Jordan was nominated for prosecuting Attorney, and so popular was he known to be, even though the Loco focos then had the County, that no Locofo co would consent to run against him, kuow ir.g defeat to be inevitable. The same case occured two years afieiwards. Two years ago, Mr. Jordan was again before the peo ple of Bedford County as the candidate for the State Senate, lie was elected, running ahead of the ticket in tne County, and re ceiving the largest majority, in his owu home, Bedford Borough, that we believe was ever before given to any candidate; and this too after the fiercest and most per sonal warfare waged by tbe Gaaette. To show still further the estimation in which ho is hoi i by his neighbors, it is only ue cessary to say, that whilst Mr. Jordau was at. Ilarrisburg, attending to Lis duties as Senator, his friends, without his knowledge or couseut, nominated and elected biui by a large majority, Chief Burgess, over lion. Win. P. Jkhell, well known and admitted to he the most popular mat. in the Locofoco party in this Borough. The same thing oc curred again last Spring iu Mt. Jordan a absence. th>e time beating Maj. L. Taliafer ro, another old and popular leader of the Locofoco party. Iu fast, knowing the posit km he helJ in the affections ot his neighbors, they took up their best men iu order to defeat him, but signaily failed.*— To show also tbe estimation in which his fellow political Senators held hiui, as a de hater, legislator, aud as a man: at the close of tbe session, as is customary each party, selects one of its best men for the nomina tion for Speaker, Mr. Jordan's friends pre sented him, and the friends of Mr. Taggart presented that gentleman. Mr. Jordan re ceived a majority of one in caucus, but both these gentlemen were strvng personal friends, and they left the matter rest there, neither claiming the nomination or any ad- ! vantage over the other. Thus does Mr. Jordan stand before his fellow-citizens. The Gazette may tail on, ami malign on. as hi? character both private nod public, cannot be injured by this vile, foul-mouthed slanderer and convicted iibel er of the dead. He may endeavor to drag Mr. Jordan down to the low levil of him self: but he has always failed heretofore and he is destined to fail again. The charges preferred are beneath notice; and the whole thing is a most excellent illustration of the old fable of tbe viper gnawing the file. There was a tame Democratic ratification meeting itx N*w Orleaus, on the Bth inst. Hon. Pierre Soule was there, and in a speech of some length fte made the follow ing extraordinary admission: 'Of John Breckcnridge, I have tfujj to say that in the short service he made lit Congress, he earned more credit and renown than is generally given to the most aspir ing to encompass in a whole life. Young in years, but of a matured judgment, he is not yet beyond the age of boldues", though ho have anticipated, already, that of wis dom. He oan accomplish much, even if he dare but little. Discreet, to a fault, he displays, in h'u conduct, the prudence of the snake, united with the sagaoity of the fox*' Mr. 8.-eckenridgc, the Democratic can didate fot the Vice Presidency, in bis eu logy on the death of Henry Clay, used thus language: 'Who does not remember the period when the American system of Government was exposed to its severest trials, and who does not know that when history shall relate the moggies which preceded, and the dangers that were averted by the Missouri Compro mise; the Tariff Comptcruise, of 1832, and the adjustment of 1850, the same pages will record the genius, the eloquence and patriotism of Henry Clay. 1 ' Scarcely was tbe patriot Clay interred at Ashland before Mr. B. voted for the repeal ef tbe Missouri Compromise. There are to be six eclipi this year— two of the tin, two of the moon, one of the Democrats, und one of tbe Black Re publicans. The last two will be total. In fact, neither body will ever make its ap pearance agan. The eclipse of the Demo crate will be visible in every part of the United States, and can be viewed with the naked eye. The eclipse of the Black Re. publicans will only bo visible in the North ern States. It can be soea without the aid of smoked Glass. x ' r. • I.i The Nashville linnri'r tays ihaf >[ r Filmore's chances are improvinr £sily in Tennessee. ! THE BORDEK RIFFI4XS, AND JAMES UCCKIAXAX. When an election tor member* of the Legislature tu about to be held in Kansas, i the citizens of the western counties of Mis souri, now commonly called Border Kuffi- I ans, marched ever by thousands into the teritory of Kansas, armed as military coiu : panies, drove the residents of Kansas away j from the poils Ly force and violence, and by ; their own fraudulent votes elected a lcgisla- J ture not to suit the citizens of Kansas, hut oue pledged to carryoul the doctrines end pleasure of the border ruffians of Missouri. The Legislature so elected assembled, and passed a code of laws which fot cruelty and tyranny have never been equalled in this : country. They punish by death for offen ces which by the laws of other States are regarded * insignificant; and effectually destroy the freedom of speech, and of the | press, by sending to the penitentiary all who dare to speak or write in any other ui tuner : than suit the border ruffians. $o uuconsti | tutional and outrageous are these pretended : laws that quite recently, lien Cess iu his place iu the Senate declared fbeui "a dis grace to the age:" aud wore recently still i the House of Representative* by a vote of |o7to 56 declared tkr.m null and void. In • addition to the above, the free state citizens ! of Kansas, have becu robbed, and wurder- I cd, their houses burned, and their property i aud money stolen by these same iuvader* from Missouri and elsewhere, so that there is no louger any security for life, liberty or . property in that teritory. Under this con j ditiou of thing* the oppressed people of j Kansas petitioned to the President and 0 n i gress for redress, aud for protections sgaiust the fraud and wrongs inflicted upon , tbeui by these lawless invaders. The-loco foco Senate of the United States refused to 1 receive the petition , and the President not ! •crily decliued to furnish the protection pray ed for, but removed all officers who had takeu aides with lite citizeus, aud against the invaders, aud appointed such others as were known to be mere tools of the luffiau* and who ever siuee have assisted them to oppress, and tyrannise over the citizens of Kansas, aud to force slavery upou them against their will, by the execution of the , infamous laws passed Ly tho pretended legislature fraudulently elected by Mis souri. The Cincinnati Convention met, and al though it did uot renominate Pierce, it ap proved his administration, and endorsed the Kansas Nebraska act in its platform.— James Buchanan accepts bis Domination and approves of that Platform fully declar ing that he vasll not take one plank from it or add one to it. Jau.es lluvhunau is there fore the Border lluffiau candidate, and standi pledged to follow in the footsteps of Pierce and under his administration to car ry on and complete the crime against Kan sas. Not only is this a matter of clear in ference from what we have stated, but is capable of '-clear and satisfactory proof." In the report of the congressional proceed ings of last Friday we find the following: "In a discussion between the friend* of Fill mure and Buchanan, Mr. Barksdale of MLssiaMippL and Mr. Houston of Alabama (both Buchanan men) affirmed that Buchan an was nominated because he stood precisely upon the same ground as Pierce, and be cause hi* Northern advocates, who control led his nomination, planted themselves dis tinctly on identical principles as to slavery and southern rights? Such are the declarations of Buchanan men, in Congress, and who. tve believe, were delegates to the Cincinnati Convention. What more could be needed upon this sub ject. If any one yet doubts however, let him rel-i the following affidavit, iu relation to hotv Judge Lecompte (the border ruffian Judge in I\fiHsa°) understands the matter. We copy from tfi* Gklesburg Free Demo crat, llliuois, the following: Mr. F. J. Bliss, who Las just returned from Kansas, made the following statement to us, which at our request, he reduced to writing and testified to under oath: STATEMENT OF J. T. BLISS. I was to Col. Rich's store at Fort Leaven worth, Kansas teriitory, cu Friday, Jnne 13, 1856, and listened to a conversation between Judge Lecompte and some other gentlemen, unknowu to inc, telative to Gov. Robiusou and the other prisoners, aud like wise the policy of President Pierce in re gard to Kansas affairs. One of the gentle men expressed fears a to the orthodoxy of Mr. Buchanan ou the Slavery qiiestiou. Lecompte replied that he bad letters from some of Buchanan's friends, and that he was all right OD the 'Goose,' aud that he would pursue the same policy that Pierce had, but that it mast be kept still in order to carry Pennsylvauia and New York, and said Lecompte, -he will fool old Rceder in to supporting him too' Old Buck is all right, boys, don't fear him.' j The above is, in substance, tko conversa tion tbat passed in my beariog, of which I made ft minute at the time. J. F. Buss. STAT* OP ILLINOIS, COUNTY OP KNOX. — GALESBCRO, Jane 25,1856.—This day I personally appeared before me J. F. Bliss, : whose name is attached to the above state ment, and testified under oath that the above is in substance, and as near as he lan re collect, in words, the conversation which he | heard between Judge Lecotnpte of Kaunas, | and others, CIIANCEf WHITE, Justice of the I'eaoe. i 1 hereby oertlfy that 1 bare known Mr. ,J. F. Bliss for aeveral years, and consider him an honorable man in every sense of tho i word. E. F. WICKER, Commission Merchant I GAL FSBTRO, June 25, 1856 —How SNV man Jo fa tor of the freedom of tl, e IVrri tories cm support BucLauap after retrdiii^ J PreS! ' "> ho eountiy gire ibW a free etnsalarwß; .J let tho he tost Buciianan fritnda are plcdgm,, bin. to .be Horde, ItdW We J m matter .gam. Mr. Blia* voted for Pierce tn I tS'Oi COROLLARY up THE TEN* CENT DOCTRINE. Mben Mr. Bachanan, in lie United States Senate advocated a policy which, ly l his own "lowing, would reduce the wages of the worknig weu of this conn try to about ten cent- a day. he blasted forever whatev er prosp< t'ts he had of reaching the Resi dential chair. llu struck a blow at the vi tal interests, the character, and the d.gfiity of labor, and for the time being, sought t< j d it by denying it a fair remuueratiie rewa. il. As a corollary of tiiis doctrine of tLo reduction of wage*, we find that Herlerl the J nurderer of the Irish waiter Keating is I<-fended at the South because, according to tfc <• Southern Democratic Code, person il servitude disgraces the white servant to the position of the black slaves. On thi, grot Hid, the Charleston Standard, the lead ing Buchanan organ in South Carolina, dc inatids that Herbert snail be exempted from pun ishment, for the murder of peer-lust iug. It uses this remarkable lang'Mge 41 Any provocation that may have been git en, or the assault upon him by the body ot waiters, wris at tue most a provocation of words, mid suck a provocation as a .ser vant should not have the right to resent; and, IF WHITE MEN ACCEPT THE OFFICES OF MENIALS, IT SHOULD B:E EXPECTED THAT THEY WILL rxj SO WITH AX APPREHENSION CVE THEIR RELATION TO SOCIETY AND THE DISPOSITION QUIETLY TV) ENCOUNTER BOTH THE RES PONSIBILITIES AND THE LIABILI TIES WHICH THE RELATION IM POSES." There i*. w*ys the Albany Evening Jour nal, uo more shameful ami sorrowful fact iu the history of our polities, than that Mr Buchanan, a aon of a free State, and a pu pil of a good sehoo' of free industry and of social equality, should be the voluntary ex ponent of a policy which requires Irish and American and German tabic waiters, to submit peareablv to insult and wrong, and to confess bT humility of manner and ex cess of endunmee that they are not MEN free meu in fbc enpito? of the Republic— but are brutes and chattels. The people will stifle this feudal teaching in November next, nd repress its aristocratic mission aries within their present field of lashing clubbing, brauding and bounding- of work- j lng me -- ! PORTRAITS OF CANDIDATES. The New York Life Illustrated, a litera ry paper, unconnected with party politics, lias some off hand sketches on the- daguer reotvpea of the candidates for PreeiAeut Vice Pre-ident, from, which we eitraet the j following. JAMES BUCHANAN. "Buchanan looks old, old—verv old. A t large boned, heavy old man, with a massive i head quite gray, a forehead all puckered Le ' tween the eyes, and ihe skin drawn tightly over a large livid face. He looks like a dead man—a dead old man. Hi* mouth : shows age in every line. It is a mouth that ' looks unused to smiling; an irregular, j.ig ! ged hole in the face. Unhappy old matt ! who threw away all good of life in scheming i for place, and now, tottering on the brink of ! the grave, $ doomed to see the priie for which be lost his soul, approach him onlv jto glide forever from his grasp. Stand be i fore that pktuie, young p>liticiun. and see what the scheming partisan Incomes ! Nor that the face is a bad face. It is an un bappy face, an uneu-y face, an un-nobl<> face, an old, old, but nor a pleasant, intelli gent, benevolent face. It Is the face of a mat! who La- in;-sod the true good and jov of life, and wl3 i> willing to sacrifice the tranquility of his last years for the sake of that which an old man has no excuse fnr valuing. It is the face of a man who is willing, at three score year* and ten. to cease to he James Buchanan, and te be come onlv the representative and tool of certain office eeckei, commonly called "the democratic party." W. L. DAYTON. Dayton is a handsome, well-knit roan, in the very prime of manhood. Hair biack and luxuriaut; a good, symmetrical mas sive forehead; an open, direct, guilcles* and fearless expression of countenance.— He is a manly looking man, one who wouM be fit. or could readily make himself fit, for any place. He would be called the handsomest man in the Presidential group. Upon a certaa occasion in the United States Senate. Mf. Buchanan, in the course of a personal explanation, stated that he had volunteered to go to Btltiiu ire in the lat war with Great Britain, when the Brit ish attacked tbat city "I think I have heard something about the gentleman's volunteering, said Mr. Clay "but I understand that when he arrived at Baltimore the British were gone." •Yes,' replied Mr. Buchanan, Mbey were. * "Well," aaid Mr. Clay," 1 merely wish to know whether Mr. Buchanan volunteered because he knew that the British were gore, ;or whether the British bearJ that the gen tleman had volunteered, and therefore evacuated r be wait *