Huntingdon Journal |
Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
¦WILLIAM BREWSTER, SAM, G, WHITTAKER, ; EDITORS, " Liberty and Union, now and poreveb, onb and insbparablb. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1856. VOL. xxr. NO. 40. Canijjaigii FBEMOXT AXD Vljcfoh'T. . , ; nv cu. ul.'.'i s. wuYMAx. Air—"iS'nwtti la jfomdu,"—Puuitaxi, OOV. BEEDEtl I'On PREMOXT. 1 find in the canvass now going on that' my feelings and inclinations. 'Should ^lr. i fTUIjl pPpilDTinA !\j DJ ATPnOM , Kbsolved, That we invito the nffilia-: lOFTY TUMBLING, the whole tone of thoir pnrty press is in I Buchanan be elected, and his administra-, I'lllli RHirUDLllUilli rLlflir UnM. tionnnd co-operation of the meuof nil pap. Now if Buchannn is nn old bachelor, ho the samu direction When tho lirst star-1 tion be dilTereut from ivhrl my juda;incnt The {.Ionvention of Delegales, asscin- 'u's however dilferini; .''rem us in other ' proves by his political somersaults that ho ia as tling intelligence of tho outrages in Kan- j compels mu lo believe, I shall give il my bled in pursuance of a call ^addressed to ' respects, in support of lhe principles hero- ¦¦ yovms and .-apple as any ofhis rivals in tho .sas reached the Suites, their editors du. | cordi.il approbation, and my feeble ihougb tho People of the United Stales, without '" dedTod : nnd believing that the spirit i puPtlcal gymnosiuin, Intbe yenr of grace one His Letter on the Buchanan Dem- nouncod thc foul wrong in terms of fitting i willing suiiport,^^ As I believo "uw,, 11 regard to past polilical differences nr divis-i of our inslitmioiis, as weU as the oonstiiu-I j|j,,^|,,.^,,j ^^^l^j l^^^^^j^^j^ ocracy. indignation. It was but a spasmodic effort: must regard tbe Democratic parly as fully ; juns, who are opposed to the repeal oftho i ''ou ofour counlry, guarantees libcrly of Tli(> lollowing sung has received the pri/.o of¬ fered by the Eremoiiters of N.iiv York, for the best ciimpoigii 80 however, nnd in deference to the South and the prevailing sentiment of the party, they have dropped ofli, ouu.afler the olhur, 'a nble to ns- xih year of said James's age, ho makes Men nf the Niiitli, wbo remember The iloed.s of your sirea, over glorious. Join in our paiati victorious, The paiun of Liberty ! Hnrk I on tho gules of November .Millions of voices are ringing, Glorions the songs Ihey are singing, Fremont nnd Victory I Hurrah I Join the great chorus they're ,siiigiiig, Fremont nnd Victory I Como from youi'Torest-clod nioniitains, Como from lb*fields of your tilhigc. Come forth from city and village, Juiii the grcnt bust of the froe I Ah fripn their eavcriiuus muuiUains Uilll the deep iluud-s tu the neooii, Juiii the great army in motion, Muvcliing'to victory I IlurroU I l-'elio, from ocean to ocean, Ei'cmoiit and Viclovy I Fur in llie 'Wcst rolls the th'undei, 'lhe tumult ol battle raging. Where bleeding Kansas is waging Warl'uro with Slavery 1 -Struggling with foes who surround her, Lu I sbe implores you lo stay her I Wi'l Villi to Sliivcw' betray liti '.' S'cvcr-sbe sholl lie free I Hurrah I Swunv that you'll never betniy ber; Kansas shall yet bo free I -March I wu have sworn lo suppori her ; Tho prayers oi the vigliteoiis aliiill spui .\ chief iicvev conquered shall lead u Fremont ahall lea.l iho free I Iben from ihosn fields, red wilh shingh Sloveiy's bordca shall be diivcii, Fveednm tn Kansa.s be given, Fremont shall make her fvcc ! Huviah ! 'I'u Kaiisos shall Freedom bo giveii ; Fremont shall make her free ! Men of thc Nnrlb, who remember 'lllll deeda of yuur .sires ever gluriuii Juiii in our pieuu yicturioiis, 'The lucaii ol Liberty I Hark on the gules uf Nuvoiiiber, Milliuns cf vniees are viiigiiig, Gluriuiia the .'luiig lliey uro aiiigiiig, Frenioi.t and victury '. Hiivruli'l Juiii 111,) great cbovus they've sin.,'in^ Fiemunt ami Vielnry I (LDmmumcutioiis. Nkw York City, Sept, IS, ISuC To the Eililors if the Evening Post: Gemti.kmkn : The leller o'l' your cor-1 „„,^| ,„ r" .^ , have 'b, I hove were laO coinpot-, responent H., and your editoiial couiinenis ' - I upon ilof the 10 inst., seem in commun j courtesy lo demand a reply. Your cor- j respondent docs not err in snying that I ; desire the succesa of tho Republican par- I ty anl the election of iheir candidates, and ' that 1 am read lo contributo un honorable cDurt to bring il about. 'I'his is nut the I resull of nny preference as to men, but in j spile of it. With Col. Freinonl. I am un- coinmilted to Suulhern scciiona/ism, lo-j Missouri compromise ; to the uolicv of the ' conscience and equality of lighls amon^-. ., ,, e . -- i i wards which, for some time past, it has i present Administration ; tn the extension ' citizens, wc oppose all legislation j.npiu. j o|;o__iy;'"«<''"¦"W'-f"'" ll>«I-'"^>''''n hs •'^ "ong been rapidly tending, and 1 quit it, well I of Slavery into Kansns; nnd in favor of ring their security, assured that my duty lo my country du-1 the admi.ssion of Kansas ns a Freo IStni certain, there is not a Democratic paper mands al my hands this sacrifiee of person- of restoring llio actiou ol the Federal Gov- wliicli dares boldly lo juslify and defend the freo State party, and denounce their invnders. In place cf encouragement and sympaihy for their outraged fellow citizens ofthe North, theru isjitlle else than jeers und ridicule for their oppressed and suf¬ fering condi tion—misrcpresentatiati oftheir motives nnd conduct, and a prelended iii- credulily of the slaiemenls and appea al feelin Very truly yours, A. H. IfEKDEIl. eruinent to the principles ol Wasbinglou | aud ileflerson ; and for iho purpose ofi ' '••' j preseniingcandidatcsfortheofiice.sof Pres-. Old Line Whigs. i ident and Vico President, do resolve as ' Poino of the organs of tlu; foreign can-1 folloivs: MisccllHnu. didale, J.imes Buchanan, aru c-Duslaiitly appealing lo '.he Old Liuo Whigs to coma o"erto tho support of ihoir candidate, nnd l.ESOLVKD, That the malntainanoe' of the principles promulgated in tbo Dec¬ laration of Independence, and embodied beid and defended on tbe Missouri Compromise, Ho chaiij;';3 his position as easy as tho "little joker" under tho thimWe, and we warn the friends of freedom in Pennsylvanianot to trust the safety uf their causo ia the hands of so wi' ly and unreliable a polilieion. Below wo givu a few poinls in Ina history i "licJuce our nominal to tbu standard of pri throughout Ihc world, and you i j acqu'jinted. I have never seen him, nor; „.|,i^|, ¦^^ send lo ihcir brethren of thu ' in some few instances they havo succoud- havo 1 written to him. My relations i «,.,„_ i i • n in. me- i J .iDlatos. I ed in these appeals. Hul aro Whigs aware 1 find their speakers cx'.ibiting the same ; ^p ((,,, condition upou ivhich their assist- willi ,\Ir, liuchanan, ns a tnan, aru of a friendly intimacy and reciprocal acts iif kindness, uninterrupted to this time by a singlo misiindeistaiiding or unpleasant feeling; and I would any time defend him promptly and indignantly againsl personal ntlneks upon his reputatiun. I believe him to be a man of distinguished ability, spirit—some of ihem ignoring the quustion i nlirely; oihors of ihoin treating it with i ance is asked l Do they entertain th perversions, niisrepresenla'.ions and false issues; and otheis taking openly tho side of the oppressors ; but no one ol thein nil- vocating the cause of Kansas, or favoring - . -- . her admission under free-Slate consliluliou : of high iniugrityand valuublo cxperieneo. j adopted by her people. lie IS surrounded, too in rennsylvania by I £„ i|,e public deinonstialions and pi'oces-1 ces of honor and profit ? If such be their many pohtica'. friond.i to whom lam united I 3i(,„3 o, the party, I find banners aod du. | ,dea, thoy wil bu doomed lo disappoint- hope that by joining the remnant of the Doiuocralic party, now degenerated,into a loreign faction, lliey will be incorpoiated willl said faution ; and in case of its suc¬ cess bu permiled to parlicipite in its olfi- in the Federal C'oiistitution, aro essential' Commissioner, with Cobuel Fremont, with tothe preservntioii of our republican insti-i re.2ard to supplies of Beef, which tho New lutioas; andthat iho Federal Cunsliiulion I ^ oti, Eoening I'ost oxplain.s, totbo satisfnc- tlie rights of the Slates, and tho union of tiou of thc most projected ciivilior. Those snp- ihe Slates, shall bo pruaorved, plies were to conquer tho Iiidiuiu with in Cali- UksolViid, That, ivitii our Republienn furnia, food being found 'oy the Coiumi-ssioners Fathers, we hold it lo be a selfevident hoth cheaper and belter oinmnnition fur fight- iruth Ihat all men are endowed with iual-1 i„„ „d mou than powder and ball. Frciitoiits icnable right to "life, liberty and the pur- i proposiils were lower than any others received suit of happiness, and that the 1'"'""}; ,„,„,,.„„ „,,,^j„,. n.. conld afford to offer object and ulierior designs of our Federal i .. . .1 ,,- .. , ct . " .. . 1 hotter terms than nny of Ins competitors, be Ciovernmen; were 10 secure these rfhts , , ''„ ..,/«,c...m. , .... uiduvaiico than most Col. Fremont's Beef Supplies. The Democratic pajiors avo vaporing consid orably in lehUiou to certain contracts made ; country ^nth bencdits atidb]et»iaf^.''—Jan by George W, Barbour, fniled Stntes Indian i Biirhaiian's sjiecch inthe U.S. Sciiat:, Jaii:i. ' rg, ISU), 'Harrison for Piesidenll—ajietlici.,".'. h-jro by ties of long cherished political and so¬ cial intimacy, and the loss ofwhose friend- ; ship I shnuld regard as a great ealnmily,— s coiiUiiiiiiig bruial insult.s, iu response ' ,„e,„jj,. x,i^_ liuchanan has doslared that to the appeals ol ibat [leople lor protection ¦ againsl unparnlled wrongs, cnlculuted, as j will not consider hiiuself under any loall persons within ils exclusive jilris-'''*''f?''''''''"' I""''"^ S^ diclion ; that ns our Uepublicau Fathers, I ""-'"! ''" '"*'' '"*»''' c-^pi-'rtcnco in lighting ov when thoy hail abolished Slavery iuall out j'""""oU'S Indians, thvough whoso territory, n.iticnal territory, ordained that no per.son .?"'"¦''''^'nnco of some thrco bundrod milo. should be deprived of properly," wiihout 'be nnintnls bal to bo driven, nnd be ll much more ready to expose bi.s li —a fooblo old granny I"—Biichan.ii ''Ilaviiii; urged tho adoption of the MLvso..- Compromise, tlie inference is irre-isti.iiethht Congresa haa tho powor to legislate DpiKi li.. subject of slavery in tho Territories. I tllrg to the Missouri Coiiipvumiso witb greater iiin'i city than ever."—.//ut'/ianuii'ii letter to T. Sc::: j'urd, .ing. 21, 181S, i ''The reeent legislation of Congress (rope i' of Missouri Compromise) respijeliug doincsli ; slavery--derived as it has been IVuiii tho origi i nal and pure fonntaln of legitiinate politica. I power—the will of the majority—pr.juiises cro ! long to allay the dangerous exciluniout. This j legislation is ^Jiindod ujiou. priuciples ns an- , I cient ns fvcc govcvnment itsolf-"—Bachanan't s with- I letter accepiing iioiaiiialion. lu the ' "I om no longer aimply Jauies 6uch,.nan, entorprise than any one else 1?"' U'e Platform ofthe party whu.a.j nninuioel ' ' '^- " " "' '¦ Speech lo th'i K-gtbine bill,'by insisling'thnt Slavery bas a rigbl'P'''''"°'-"^"-'"'= ""'K'l. It is propel , ous und ardent supporter. On each ncea-! (g go jmo the terrilories in spile ol Cun-' ^^"^'*'"'"'''"cquil ourselves of the unjust, siun I wns in the Nulional (Convention ns (jruss or iho people ' aud tbat the inhabi- i accusations lo which such niiscunstruclion | ouo of his delegates, i,.,,,;^ „f ii,g terriloiy have no right lo pass i e-''PoseE us. He invite nu man of IFIiig ¦ These lies nro exceedinglj strong and ' territorial laws to lorbiJ il or exclude it.— i /'"""/''cs to join the ncnwcriitic parly .— \ hanl to sever, especially wilh one who is i Democratic represontatives from I'ennsyl-' ^,"'^'' un.oyerture ivould be as insulting to I naturally of a conservative cast, and slow v-„|,io even, in the Senale and the House ' him ns unjii.st lo our party. .V person I to change old babiis of thought nnd aciion ; |,oj|| j,nd iiioclaiin these opinions, whil.st' "''''' Whig convictions cannot consistently , and I have resisted for inonlhs tbe convic- ' odmr representaiives from ['onii.sylvania ''""' ''oues.ly profess to lu of the Demo- 1 lions that wcro urging mu lo my piesent ' ^j^i, Democraiic leaders li'oni other iltateV, i '^''''^''^ P"'''J'' ''il"^>''i'°>^ "¦''"!¦ "'hig r.on- ; duclaratinu. 1 have diligenily sought | j^clare ihemselves publicly to be uon com-'' ''"¦'''<"« n't'i'tol bc ailimttcd into the Dein- i reasons and orgunienls (o save myself the ' ... I pain of breaking up old associations and < alienating myself from my old Irionds, bul ! all in vain. My luve of c uintry nud lia- I trcd of oppression would not allow my ! feelings and inclinalions either to delude I mji judgment or still my conscience, nnd 1 mu eoinpelled to forfeit inyself respect . by committing what I believe to be pal- : piibly wrong, or enrol mjself in opiiosition to thn Democraiic party thoriiy of C'ongres.ii, of u Territorial Leg islature, or any individual or association of individuals as togivo legal assislancelo Slavery in any terriiory of tho Uuited perils of sueh in timt region. Uo fulfilled his contracl a ably to iu stipulations, uud wenl to Washiiig¬ toi. fur his money. The auditing department said, Mr. Comuiissionev Barbour hud no rigbl to make coutnicts, iu the iiaiuc of tho Govern¬ mont, to feed tho Indians. Ilo only liad pow- ev lo innke wnr or Tieacc with thcni. Col. Fre¬ inonl went to Congress, and ashed tbem to or- ^n."-7;« Club. Stales, while the presenl Couslitution shall 'lei' bis bills to be paid. The subjeet was ro¬ be maintained. j furred to n committee of the 3Hd Congress, In Uesoi.ved, That the Consti.ulion con-, ISJ I, compoaod oftbo following gentlemen: fers upou (Congress sovereign power over James L. Orr, of S. thu Territories ol lliu Umled Stales for \ Bcnjimia, C. l'ii.ilin'iin. of Wisconsin, Gala. sha .1. Grow, of Pi'iin.sylvania, Edivcu'd C. For the Huniingtlon Juurnal. . , . i r . i i e i.- RTPTT7MTn7P > ""'' syn'l""''y f"f '''« l"-'oplu "* Kansas in biiPliimUJia. ; tl,,, success of the Dcmoeraoy. In its Spring wilh ils bui'.sliiiglile and buoyant fiel- ,,.,„|.g^ „„j| ,^,(,1, „,^. py,^.^,^ to control its iug, bos long sinco swelled .Uld aofleiicd into I action, niu found thu border rullians of summer, nnd summer baa ripened into on lui-I Missouri and their accomplices ofthe tumn ofp'enlcons inoniise. And now the days I Soutli, who have Ir'iimpled upon iho (Con- are growing short, and the suuahiuo fitful ; the j stiiiilion aud all the essential principles of sirenms are swelling, and their silvery cuirenls I our Ciovernmeni, robbed Kansas of ils civ- are riiiining dnrk and turbid, whilo the voices ' il liberty nnd riglil of suflrnge, laid waste of winds and waters arc becoming hoar-set and ! '.'s territory with fire and sword, and repu mure luud, Thu Hush uf beauty is passing a Having originated a movement myself to aid our people by sending tliem men and uioney, nnd having prosecuted il wilh the strictest avoidance of pnrly character, and a studied neutrality as lo the puliiical canvass, and having earuostly asked the ;¦¦" — " " ' •; , e - - I CO oiieralion of men of nil parlies, I have I cau see no reasonable hope of justice i f^.|^'j ,^ ^._,,|^j ,,, j^^ ,„ „,^. |;„o„.|,jg,,, „ .lingle Democrat, In iho Convenlions of Clevehm'J u"d Bulliiuore, called witlmut distinction of patty, in furtherance of this enlerpris.", tbere was no Democrat presenl bul inyself This cinnot hive bi any want of generosity or of m only ill deference lo the prevailing lone and .'¦ciiiiment of the party, which is enlisled and lo which no Whig can honestly sub¬ scribe, becausu il is iib-olniely iri'econcila- ble with the principles ivhich hu profess. We object 10 fusion oeeause it is neither consislent Willi personal nor polilical hon¬ esty. U'c invile no Ii'ltig tu come iuto Ihc Dcinoc rulic parly unless hc chouses volitiilurifi/ and from c mvictioii to abjure his un cil nt failh and tn j,roj'css ti'legiance to ,.ur pnrlicular jilaljorm. This is n severe and insulting rebuke to such Whigs as have rushed into the 1 from j ranks of the foreign parly, in hopo that | tended legislative, judicial, and cxecutiv ns, bul; t|,^,y ,yi|i bo receivod with open arms.— i They aro contemptuously inloriueil, that I Fremont aud Buchanan ll is worthy of remar'K that all the o'lacks upon Col. Fremoul, ur nearly nil, have ovigiu- alod ia Woaliington. Even 'hoso which aro borne lo us from the far disttiii shores of thu Paoilc, aro coutaiiied in Isttsr.s fvom W,idling. ton to the Caliluriiia popci's. 'fbey nil nrisa from the same pen. Through the thin gauze of thu Bigler ngoiicy, tho hui'.J uf .Mn Buch- Carulinn, Chuicninii. I anan himself the del'amer of Uls unly funui.Ia- ble ur dreaded rival, may be plainly disceined. It is uut likely that tho republican titlu of President will ever grace Mr, Buchanan's nnolhor and a different title ho hn persistently earned; it is that of slan- was wbo fivat gave currency and of the Unilud Siaics was ordained und es-! °' ibesa geuifemon wero Democrats, except' plausibility to the "Bn!'goi.n calumny on lh« loblislied ill ordav to form n moro porfeci i -"""i U"w a Fillmore, ond Priugle, now o Fro- gallant Clay," Mean-spirited, ho begged of Mr. union, establish justice, insure domeslic [ mont mon: they wero Whigs. All aro now Clny not to expose him as tho aulhor oftho tranquility, provide for llio common de-1 Bucliiuinn UepvcsoutuliVes, except tho two I slander which cheated tho prcat Kciitnekian leniioiieil, nnd Grac and Eastman the loiter oat of llie Prcsiileiiey. Thi.ik cf tlia en.'ia ow dead, Lal.'tam is thc pie.sent Collector of coneenling through life tho poi.iencd shaft tims' an Frnneiseo, I melivea of generosity toward ths base hand Onthe Mill d,iy of July, Ihis conimillee j that apod il! Lo, from his grave a thousand luile theiv vepovt, iu whieh thoy state tli,it the j liatbed avvowa spving np. and point toward tbe unlriiet was conceived in a. wise nnd humane ,' nssnssin. Now the vcvilor lunis upon Ihe youiii' pirit; Ihal the prices wove reasonable; that and cliivulroua Fremont, ns to tho victim for i.s terms wevo fairly and fully complied with, lii.s venom. Let tbo people of ..Vincricu, whea oliicers liavo beJii sot over lliciii, by j "''"'• '''"'i'""'"'''"'''".*¦ ""-^i "P'"'<^'"'^<"^ »''^''S''| ")«>'read the base attacks upon the unsnlliod whose usurped aiuhoriiy, suttaiued by tb'e | number of beef cattle in the soulbcrn pnrt of j nnine of Fremont, reflect that James Buelian- ' the slate, and hired drivers nt n heavy cost, to an is th. declare tnemselves puuiiciy tu De uon com-1 •• ."" ' . : -.-.".....-.....-..... j this uowcr, il is boih lhe ri.'ht and du- r, n cnx- . in n u r r-i r i. -j . ii,iii.,l nnon ihl, linrnnv. ih« i„„„ii.,i,i„ ocf«/ic 0)'i/ami«fiO)i i'.'i//ioi/« i'O-somc cx- .,. „f >• ""-''"'^ ""'''V": "='"','J,"" ,"" 1 fl<i«, of Ohio, .lugu.ilus E. -Viijiire;/, of I'lor- of Piesident ^ iiiittal upon inis heresy, ine luoviiauie -< ., . , ., , ,, , ty ol Congress tu prohibit in thc lorrUor-'-j r> - i r. nr - ii cm- ' ¦ • ii.- i -i. . i„,„l,.nev nf leli leh i I in nnn v In s-hni,- „;\i^ lent corriiiilins; ils inteerrtti/and debttitch \ ,' ,c„ 1 . ," .11- ,, 1 i Ida, Pniiie/ //. lrn;//i/, of Mississippi,-I'/mf name, lintni teiulcncy ol wluch it is ensy lo shon, will . . ' ¦ "¦ , t., "', , ics, IhiOse twin relics of barbarism, Poly-, , ,. , .,, „ .". ;, . .. ,, , be to prevent almosl entirely the (orinalion^"'" its principles. Wo havu ^ creed ^^ ^^^, g,^ ' '> ; ^1, r,m'«irr,„,i, of Arkansas, Be,,,«„i,a Y'™,- lully and persi ol any more free States, \ »'l^,";l' constilules a lest of Dciuooracy, ,i[,„,,,^„_ .j.,^^ ,,,,i,^. ^,,„ Constitution ' '•>''' =¦'"'' •"''""" '^' ''""""" "^ California. All deicn llo it fence, and secure the blessings of liberly, and contains ample provision.s for lhe pro¬ tection of "life, liberty nnd prosperity" of every citizen, the denresl cotislilulion- nl righis of thu jieople of Kansas have been fraudulently and violenlly taken from them—their terriiory has been invaded by an armed force, spuriuus nnd pru- -jui- ».ay from tbo liuie ol lhe earth, but the eliniigo is marked with o tender loiieliiies.s, mure touch¬ ing than the briglitnosi nf sniuinev, Su gviidiial has been the uppvuaeh uf aiituniii that we have scovcely yet made up uur minda to bid adieu tu warm-hearted, ell'iilgont suinnier, I To the wnr of tho Revolution, and a dclara- diated even civilixalion itself lu ils platroim I liud the enunciation principles which would put tho rope about tho nocks of men lor exercising tho con- red to cvippe nnd retard It by SUeuilliiJ Ul I .1 ; ¦¦'., ¦. ¦ . ¦ musl become nriiiiig the coininunily agaiiift i us grievances far worse than those whicii led ikc I'riends ivitb not nlways legavil ill Tlu I alu alber III uiie tion stigmatising as "armed resistance law" the iiioderale and justifiable selfdi t happens that sum nicr iiu'imd.s tbo montli of I fence of men shnmefully nnd infamously Septeiuber, and takes pop.scsaion of tho chief part of il;—-llivowing even the beams of ils vplendor upon the eonlincs uf October. Bul now we nro rcniinJeil that suninicr is really gone, nnd niitiiuin stents upon ns tvonsniutiiig shade by shndo the gorgeous auinmci'-culovc.l earth, lo ila oiva subdued nud dreamy aspect. The changing hues of the forest's I'oilage, gave ¦nolico, weeks ago, of the griidna! appvoaeii of a cooler season ; but so mild and gentle , mililary poiver of thc gnvernment ; lyran-i "i6 s'ate, and hired drivers nt n heavy cost, to j an is their antlion Justice to tbo I upon the olber side ofihe nueaion. And ] ""nl"-'si voluntarily, from conviciion, thcy j ical and uncoii>tiiuiional laws have been ' drivo ihcm to llic designaled pluco, 'The cat- lice to the dend—let jusiice bo dealt attheolee- ' j nol only havo ihuy abst.iiued from aiding ! abjure theii'nncienl faith, sind profess alle-1 unaolod and enforced; tho righta of ihe htlo were driven upwards of lltTOO hundred i tion in N.)yorabor. . I lhe movemeni, but in their presses and by I glance to our particular platform," they lu^^l'lo'o I'l-'ep nnd bear anns have been ; miles, in the heat of Summer, in the dry sea-! r*.-*"" their private influenci: they havo endeavo- | £.,,,001 be received 'uto the ranks. Thev | '"f''i"eC'-' i "'sl oaths of an exir,iurdinai'y .,on, at grcnt labor and cxpoauvc, nnd' somu \ . "^^^ Atrocities in Kansas, ¦ ¦ -• 1 I „,..i „„i..„„i;„„ „„i„,., I.n,... I,„„r, :.„„„..„.I . , . . . .... I lhe Pituburg Oaactla says, wo woro favor abjure their '' '' ~-' "- ' " ' ' ^ ' -- . - r. ::"' ¦- -c , ue ueiivcreu 10 o™iii ««,'Oo,„'. nnu tnniv „„,'=J ."^^'^''-'r'l'ty with a visit from MnJelfrie., whe pplicd, thus endeavoring tn j their forme prevenl oonlribufions even from frieuda of: will not be accepted. Who will join them | Irial, by nn impartial jury, has been de- I uied ; the righ; of llie people lo bu secured ! in their houses, papers and ell'ects agninsl I unrensonnblo sear'he.I and seizures, hns 1 - - .' - —¦ - oi, , i\t;. ,.¦ 1 i. c ,1, i a r iifcvailin'r tone of lhe i """""" "' ""'"'S" '''"io'is ' Not ono who I been violated ; thev have been deprived of ¦ lo ono hundred nnd eighty.lhreo thousand eight """'" '"'""'""an aau tuiii iioin tho head ofa party is hostile to Kan.S'as, biTtlconsident !''"^'"'™''""''''"'""''''"''"''"'"¦'''" '"^"'^''' '''^" li'""'ie anil nmneni, wiihom ilm. nrn. 1 hundred and Iwenlv-iivu dollara (Sm:i.«'i.-..1 1'^'^° ^'¦''"' '""" "'Urdered by bis hands, and stitutiunnl right of pctuioning Congress | j^^.^^^^^^.^y^^ ^^j j^^,^,^; ,,^, the monoy forahmto Government, as a redress of j ,^^^,,,n,^. ,„i,a|i^,j_ j,,,,^ endeavoring l'i) the measure. upon such conditions.' Who will unde inilos, in the heat of Sumn , at grcnt labor and expos route,- lok his I, , ll nnd ' ''-1'"*' returned from Kansas. He w.is in y live thousand five hundred puunds of i bi-ef on tbe hoof (I,'J2,i,500 lbs,,) and accept- opprcspod by ruflian violence nnd outrage, I beyond all human entlurunce. I find lhe whole party of thc nalion as¬ sembled ill National Convention, with but one individual dissent, endorsing heartily, an ndminislraiion, which has bisely lent itself as the lool and and accomplice ol all tho wrongs infiiclcd upon Kansas, and by ils venality and imbecility hrought tho counlry 10 on intestine war. Ifind all ils rcpreseulntivos in Congress, I luinistralion, even if presided over by Mr 1 might go on wilb Ihis catalogue and jchhumili'utiou tohu admitted to th euuinerato other indicalione, if neccssarv, I , , ^ • I,,,,., „f lU.. i uosoin ol loreign la I ' ." . , nnd cnlangliu.ir nnlure hnvu been imposed i r„,.,, i,|,,,,ir,j ,,.„i,„ insi nr .lied or, il,,, mi I,, ii-iiiinr-i In tlinii- iii-iiieiiih.c ' , -^. -^ - . , , , ¦ i 'U-ii niiniireii WCIC lust ur uieii on iue rol Vr'r 1, ad^ Ih, 7f i''\? ™"''"'T fil^""'^" '\ ^''pV "^ He delivered .0 agent/l«,'ioi„', and too 11 lailh—anil adopt that ol Uulfrnge, nnd holding olhce; lhe right of' |.^,^,^j ,( ^,j.,|^f^, ,,„.,:|i,',„ ,,,. 1, (j.,,. r adversaries—or their services an accused person lo a specdv and public I'"''"'"'' ,,"''V"' '""'7 "n ""'.' ''? \""' '''' twentv live thousand hve hundred puunus 01 | beef on tbe hoof (I,'.'2,i,500 lbs,,) and accept- i ™' "" , ., cl in payment drafts dniwn by ngcnl Barbour ''l-"' \'"^<'l'^^f bJ' f"! '"ffi""' "l Ihal place, on llm Seerelni'y of the Interior, amounting "' ''^''';'.'"^ "'"}'''•',"'","" """^ hloediug, which a Lenveiiworth nt the timo Phillips was murder cd, and was oa cyo-wilness of tho lerrible out- showing that lb. only necessary to add, that wbat 1 have able titlu of Whig. Suno may crawl oil said relates bui to the North. Thu South, j their hands and kiiec.i, and implore for- wheru the great mass of the parlv is 10 bo I . r 1 1 . r . 1 r , , ," . ' - , , I givoness for having heretofore voled for found, makes no prelens on, as a w 10 n, to ?.-i,; , , , " 11,1 ., ; r ,1 ¦ 1 . II "big:'; but such men will not d.'servo to the .advocacy 0 anything bul puro border- k. , , , r 1,1 IJ. . ' 1 o 1 I ""in^i be laken into favor even by the suiiporler.s ''"'"'''"'^"'' I of such men as Jaincs Buchanan, Tliey What, then, havo the free-Slate mon of | should be despised by all honorable men, Kansns to expect from a Democraiic ad- cess of law; that the freedom of speech and , These dnil'ls wcro protested on presentation, no of the press his been iibridged ; the right u[.pi'opi'iatiuii having bona mado 'jy Congress to choose their reprcsenlntives has been ' frum wbieii thoy could bo paid. Subsequent- made of no oft'cet; niurdors, robbeiies and j,., the trcniies were rejectc'd by Senate, for snus wldcli have nol yet boen inndo public, tba arsons havu beun instigated and encoura¬ ged, aud the ollend-jra have been alluw¬ ed lo go unpunished ; that all tlicse ihings have been done ivith the knowledge, saiic nnd the Indians of Calif. from their Innds nnd homes, nnd h." the sun's rays, an bland the nlinospheio, that! wilh three individual exceplions, laboring i Buchanan ? If he could be lefl to acl up- ' in oarnest zeal, by speech and vote, to cov-1 on his own impulses, unafTecled by exler- eruplhe iniquities of this administration ""I inlfuences, ond free from all obligations and the border rufiians of .Alissouri, nnd , expressed and implied, the case would bU to suppress a fair invesiigaiion of outra-1 ^i-'ry diftful- But, unfortunalely, tbis is ges which shouk bolh humanity nnd re- \ not so. His election would righlfully bo publicanisni, aud defy tho constilulion and i considered a decision ngainst us, whatever the laws, I may be his otvn private feeling.s, _ llis of- 1 find the s.'iine representatives, aflor thc j lices al Wnshingion, in Kniisa-s and else- Ir.iih ias elicited in spite ol their efi'orts, ! where would nocessarily, lo a largo extent, jiicv fresh about us, and louk winter in tbo face I still refusing to relieve the peopio from a ! bo filled with our enemies. His infornia- —ciuistitnting nn interesting period in tho voar, j code of laws imposed upon them hy a for-! lio" would come through a distorted medi nnd i.i aii.ilugoiis to somo decisive upocli iuhu-1 eign army, nud slill refusing 10 admit them '"" ' "'"' '""''" '"¦ "-"ii ••" ' "- '¦ man all'aii's, wben uu old sysleni with ils luiso- inlo the Union, ouly for reasons which, in ciuti.UIS still lingering aud striving to maintain ¦ the cnses of nine existing States, had heen declared unlenable and of no accounl- Ihe beautiful vesture oftho woods, with its ny linked colors, .aoenied rather Iho uiagntliccni drapery of mnluresuuiuier, than tha symbol of appronching I'vusl. We willingly and glndly greet thi.i, our fii- vr.. ilc nionth, Beautiftil Scptembev I A traiis- itii ll iiointat which n inavked ebango tako plncc between seasons; at which, wo stand wilh suiii- FREMONT NO CATHOLIC. UIS OH.\ »i:ni.\l. I'hoso who are very eager to believ resent Ad- ' "'"' eonipeiisation from llio Gnvern 0 receive! ent, save the beef furnislic J tliein In ils liioiliold, gives wny lo a now order of things. Then welcome 11 our Iiappy land this moat bcauliful and iiislvuctivo season ; nnd would Ihnt we were cnpnblo of pvaising its bejintios. We cnncludo in lhe Ungnngo of tliat gifted po¬ etess L. IL W. "I love to voaui through tbe woodland hoary. In the soft gloiv of an autumnal diiy. When Suinnier gotboi'S up ber robes of glory, .\nd like a dream of beauty, glides awoy." iSiuDi^si'i/i", Sepl. IHJii. Faxxib. A CHANciTTO WIN. I'd tha Editor ofthe New York Dailij 'Tinier : Two lualtevs have enlored largely in tho pro- I sent Presidential canvass, which I wish to dis- ' pose of by applying tho urgitmcidUin ad hoini- -Hcm. Fia.sT.—I w|ll bcl $5,000 that John C. Pro- .mout is not, nnd never wns a Uomoii Catholic. Skcuxu.-I will bet So,000lhal lio is not and never was a Slaveholder. The muiiov will bu deposited with Duiiean, Shcrmoii k Co., -yheiievor any party sigiiilies llil acceptance of either one or bi.ili uf tliosc wagers, Vours Ibr Freeilnin, W. J, A, FULLEU, P. S.—I have sontoii autograph copy ofthis Challenge lo the Nuw York Express. Nnr )-¦-;,•. Aug. 11, l^'iii. I find thein disregarding a freo consli¬ lution, ndopted in a leg.1l, constitutional and time-sanctioned inanner, (and which no man can doubt to have refiecled the will of the people,) nnd supporting a law to produce a subslilute, which il is easy to show would have perpetrated in the Stalu goveninient the usurpation which hnd by force already seized upon the gov¬ ernment of the territory. I hnd them refusing to make appropri¬ ations for lhe army unless used to enforce a code of laws violative, on their facu, of the constitution, enacted hy a legislature in violation of the Inws of the United Slates, and impused by foreign force upon conquered and subjugated Aiqencan citi¬ zens, I find thora, in a word, steadily aiding hy all their Congressional action to maka n slave Slate in northern latitudes, and that, too, against the will of iis inhabitants. 1 find that one member who moro than any other sluod oul against the cnslave- aiid bisily, hu could not uid us with¬ out having first madu up his mind to be abandoned and warred upon by bis own party. The South would charge him wiih violating his pledges, and turu upon him wilh bitter hostility, and nl least a portion of the North, would follow their exam¬ ple, Ue would thus be lefl ivithout a par¬ ty 10 support his administration, unless ho should cast himself inlo tho arms of thu Kepublicans, We cannot, it seems to me, eilher ask or expect him to do this upon a question whero party lines are so plainlv drawn before his eleciion. Like all other men in the same situation, he must obey tlio party scutinient ou which he is elected. There are Deinocrats in Pennsylvania op¬ posed to thc conduct ofthe Souih in regard to Kansas, lain well aware, and that Ihey would uno their influenco lo redreeshcr wrongs, 1 am well satisfied ; but they are too lew in proportion to the whole parly of the Union lo sustain his ndminislraiion in a war with his parly. They havo as yet been unable lomake their opinions appear and bc full in the party, and, of courge, cannot do so hereafler. 1 honor their good intentions, but 1 cannot believe in their mentol hiii while fellow-citizeiis, is refu-1 po'^C' sed a re nomination by ilio Democraiic par- i • repeat, tlmt 1 have been forced to these tv of his disincl. conclusions aflcr no slight struggle with tion and procurement of the | mislraiion, and ihat for ibis high against the Cunsliiulion, tho Union and 1 which hc now asks the Government to pay humanity, we arraingo iho Adminislration, ^ him fon 'The beef weut intu the bonds of tho the President, his advisers, agents sup- Guvoninieiit; whether il was all trulbfully dis- Col, Fremont n Komanisi, sometiuies nsk | porters apologists and accessories, either ' tribuled nuionst tbe Indians, by Um sub agents why ho docs not himself deny it, if it be j bel'ore nv after the facts, before thu counlry is not a qnestion that is to all'eel the justice not'true ? So far as a man, who believes ' »"'' ^'¦''''"'c U'e world; nnd that itis our fix- „„,! j^„;,^, ^f the claim of Col, Vukmoxt,— there should be no persecution for con- I «'! P";i'OS« lo bring the aciual pcrpetra. ,„„ ,„„;^j,^,, „,„ „„ents of the Goveniment science'<ake could he has done so . J 1°" °f '•"''"^'"''"'^'""^ ""^"S''^ ""^ """^ i wilh a largo quantity uf beef. Most, if not all science sane, could, ne nas Uono so, day .,,ccoinp ices to a sure and condign punish-' .... , - r ,• ., , ,- r. J I • - .L , 1! r. I ol It, was used in footling tho Indians; it wns afler day, over and over again, in the most I ment hercaftev. ' v '1 i .'i, ' ' , I 1 ,1 • 1 ul- 1 I 1 p ,«.^,....I. n-liot [f-inc-io ahniiM be iin | fuiiiisbeJ to comply wilb treaty siipulatioiis; ! solemn manner, and auihorized published Uesoi.ved, 1 nat iv,insas siiouin do tin-i '' ' ¦ •. - mediately ndmilled as a Slate of tho Un-1 'I stopped tho war, aud restored peace to the ion, with hor present freu conslilution, as i cuunlry. Aud will llio Govci-amont now shield I point ol a bulcher knife, displaying it ns atro¬ phy befure the eyos of the people ; and ho was witness to many other heart-ifuding scones.— He assures ns that, iustead ofthe accounts bo- , , ¦ 1 - I ing oxaggernled, the one-tenth part has not, have been driven ' . »a .,.« boeu lold; the full history would bo an aocumu- lotioii of horrors Iruui tho coutempluliun of ,, , „ , I which thc public mind would iualiuclivelv ro Col, Fnt.MoXT, nud ,,-.,, . . , ^ j .o Icon. Iho unhoppy victim from whom tho '¦ scnlp was taken, was one of thoso who testified belure the Kansas Cuuiiui^isiou ; and Mr. Jet- fries tells us that every laan who gave tealiino- I ny before that commission is hunted down !:ks I a wild beast, and kUled, if he comea witiiin ih > j reach of tho Bolder UuUiaus. Mr. Jeifcies is 1 a farmer of this county—a plain, substantial I ninn, and one whose veracity is uuimpeocho'' and tinimpenchoble. statements from himself lo the samu eud. Hero is a direct denial Irom Col. Fremonl': ut onco lhe mosl elltjclnal way of securing own lips, which aulhorizos hia friend, tho , to her ciiizens llio enjoyment ofllio righ Hon G. W. Wrighl, formerly a inember of Congress from Californ ia to make : Wasiiingto.n', D, C, Aug. 10, 'oG. I am authorized by Col, Fremont to de¬ ny, in tho most posilive language, the re¬ port now in circulation, to the ellcct that hc ia a Roman Catholic. From a long and inlimatu acquaintance wilh Col. Fremont, 1 will further add tha'. I know of my own knowludgc Ihat ho has nevur had any connection whatever with the Catholic Church or the Catholic roli¬ gion. Ci. W, WRltiHT. and privileges lo whicli they aru enlilled nnd of ending the civil strife now raging i,,i,i ,„, specific authority tu moke the conlinct'; in her Territory. ^ \\'e Imve received the ndvautogca and benefiia Kksolved, Thalthe highwayman's plea, ! of the contract, and your commitiee believo that "might makes right," us embodied t,,^, |t j^ „,3t we should puy fur it," u the Ostend Circular, was in every res-! g„th the Senaturs nnd bolh the Uepreseuta' PiiEsim.:.i'riAi. Vote ov ruE-BooK Tbade. '1'ho puulislicrs uud sliitioners, representing all portions oflhe country, at their semi-annual oivo a ruiuoiia loss upon ono of ils own citi- [ IniJe sale yesterday took a vote, and thus Jis upon the technical pretext that tho agent closed their prcforcuues on the Prosidency. itself fn I poymenl of Uiis claim, and de fiiaJ" A Froiuout Wellsbiirg, Virginin, at which tho followin^ solutiniifl were passed : Itesulved, 'I'but it is with rogreltbat wo have seen thc attempt veco<itIy mudo in lhe eiiy ol Whceliug to put dumi the freedom of gpeech, n right guorantied to us by National ond State Constitutions. And that wo will resist ony such aUompt among ua. Itesolvcd, Thul the choir appoint twenty do- legolea lo moet iu coiiyenlioii witb del pod unworthy of Amoriciii diploma¬ cy, and would bring shamo and dishonor upon nny government or people thai gave it their sanction, lUsOLvBD, That a Ruilroad lo iho Pa¬ cific Ocean, by thc most cenlral and prac¬ tical route, is imperatively demanded by thu inlerests of the country, and that tho has been held al | Federal Government oughl to render iui¬ mediale and efTicient aid in its construction nnd asan auxiliary,thereto, the immediato construction of an emigrant route on the line ol tliu railruad. Rebolveu, Thai appropriations by Con¬ gress for tho improvement of Rivers and Harbors, ol a national characler, aro do- ! manded for tho acconimotlations of our existing comnerco, und (Congress is au lives from California Messrs, iri'??er and fficiii, | and Messvs. McDougal ond Liithum, united in \ saying lliat Fiiu.MO.N'r earned h'ls money, whilo | all llic mcuibovs of Coiit>rcss from Kentucky, [ including Mr. Jjieckiiu'itltje, tho liuohan- | candidalo for Vice Preaident, uniied in Fremont, Buchanan, 1; li'lUaicwe,. 4 fwo of thosa who voled lor Buchanan wer* Canadians. Al'U:r the vole it was rosolvod to meet on Thursday, ot J2 o'clock, al tbe salea. room, curner of AVhile street unJ Broad A'a^ and to inni'ch in procession tc coiigr»tulato the Prcsidor.t of thoir choice. .1 number uf authors and liteiiiry men, oil uf whom must iia re a cer¬ tain pi'olossional sympathy with Col, Freiiont, unite wilh the booksellers in doin,' honor testifying to tlio uuexcepiiouablo ebaraelor of to the Reiiubliean candidate.—,V. 1', Post. Mr, Cummisstonor Barbour. Tbe comiuitteo ,, Ti """""..ti r ~ , J , , -,i .. 1 ^'>i'i ot TUE Pmxks,—The Cin;innat- nl»l reported unanimously a bdl for tho payment .. . ... *"= v'l.i-iunai. pi»i of the Colonel's account, and il passed the Inrm is a reinorkoblo structure, fcv it ii that which tho (icuplo ure to vole for ov ajiinst in Houso unnnimouBly, though presented on "1)0'1,, , , " i,' , , , " ¦ .. , „ ... \ , . .11. tlus coniesl. Iloro i« ouo of tho p onks jcction day, us It IS termed, when a single on- „ , , „,, , ,, " fi..u»a joclioii would have been fatal. .galea from other portions ot our State, nt llio city of - ", . i /-.¦.. j ; . .; j Wheehiig, on the Iblh duy ofSeptemter, 1850,1 ll'onzed by thc Conslilution, and ju-slihe/1 lo lorm a Uepublican eleetoral licket Ibr tho by tho obligations of government, lu pro- thai Siuic 111 lavot m !• Stale, lect 'he lives aud property of its citizens.' oud Diiyinn t^-Cxov. George Korncr, latc Vkmacratic Ll. Governor of Illinoia. an ablo s)ieakev, and a popular uid iuAajiitial lunii, is cauvaasing m and Frenioiil Resolved, That the Adminislraiion of Prank liu Pierce had heeu truo tu the Ueuiocratic principles, ond thorefore truo to the interesU of the country ; in the face of violent opposiiion bo has luaiiitaiuod the biws at horae,aad Uiaje fore woproeloim «®-ouriiii.^iia/i/i.'i/a,J,n,ra, (lllll .If All ineaturcs andpolicij.JS0/l Iinw many .Nurthern Pemoermt at, wdhsj to ondnrso tbal 7
Object Description
Title | Huntingdon Journal |
Masthead | The Huntingdon Journal |
Volume | 21 |
Issue | 40 |
Subject | Huntingdon County (Pa.); Anti-Masonic; whig; Huntingdon County genealogy; Juniata River valley; early newspapers; advertising; politics; literature; morality; arts; sciences; agriculture; amusements; Standing Stone; primary sources. |
Description | The Anti-Masonic Huntingdon Journal was first published on the 25th of September, 1835. Under the direction of several owners and editors, the paper became the Huntingdon Journal and American in 1855 and then restored to the Huntingdon Journal in 1870. |
Publisher | A.W. Benedict, T.H. Cremer, J. Clark, J.S. Stewart, S.L. Glasgow, W. Brewster, S.G. Whittaker, J.A. Nash, R. McDivitt, and J.R. Durborrow |
Date | 1856-10-01 |
Location Covered | Huntingdon County (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | To submit an inquiry about or request a viewing of Archives or Special Collections materials complete the Archives and Special Collections Request Form here: https://libguides.juniata.edu/ASC |
Contributing Institution | Juniata College |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
LCCN number | sn86071455, sn86053559, sn86071456, sn86081969 |
Month | 10 |
Day | 01 |
Year | 1856 |
Description
Title | Huntingdon Journal |
Masthead | The Huntingdon Journal |
Volume | 21 |
Issue | 40 |
Subject | Huntingdon County (Pa.); Anti-Masonic; whig; Huntingdon County genealogy; Juniata River valley; early newspapers; advertising; politics; literature; morality; arts; sciences; agriculture; amusements; Standing Stone; primary sources. |
Description | The Anti-Masonic Huntingdon Journal was first published on the 25th of September, 1835. Under the direction of several owners and editors, the paper became the Huntingdon Journal and American in 1855 and then restored to the Huntingdon Journal in 1870. |
Publisher | A.W. Benedict, T.H. Cremer, J. Clark, J.S. Stewart, S.L. Glasgow, W. Brewster, S.G. Whittaker, J.A. Nash, R. McDivitt, and J.R. Durborrow |
Date | 1856-10-01 |
Date Digitized | 2007-06-02 |
Location Covered | Huntingdon County (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Digital Specifications | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival Image is an 8-bit grayscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 26896 kilobytes. |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | To submit an inquiry about or request a viewing of Archives or Special Collections materials complete the Archives and Special Collections Request Form here: https://libguides.juniata.edu/ASC |
Contributing Institution | Juniata College |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text |
¦WILLIAM BREWSTER, SAM, G, WHITTAKER, ;
EDITORS,
" Liberty and Union, now and poreveb, onb and insbparablb.
HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1856.
VOL. xxr. NO. 40.
Canijjaigii
FBEMOXT AXD Vljcfoh'T.
. , ; nv cu. ul.'.'i s. wuYMAx. Air—"iS'nwtti la jfomdu,"—Puuitaxi,
OOV. BEEDEtl I'On PREMOXT.
1 find in the canvass now going on that' my feelings and inclinations. 'Should ^lr. i fTUIjl pPpilDTinA !\j DJ ATPnOM , Kbsolved, That we invito the nffilia-: lOFTY TUMBLING,
the whole tone of thoir pnrty press is in I Buchanan be elected, and his administra-, I'lllli RHirUDLllUilli rLlflir UnM. tionnnd co-operation of the meuof nil pap. Now if Buchannn is nn old bachelor, ho the samu direction When tho lirst star-1 tion be dilTereut from ivhrl my juda;incnt The {.Ionvention of Delegales, asscin- 'u's however dilferini; .''rem us in other ' proves by his political somersaults that ho ia as tling intelligence of tho outrages in Kan- j compels mu lo believe, I shall give il my bled in pursuance of a call ^addressed to ' respects, in support of lhe principles hero- ¦¦ yovms and .-apple as any ofhis rivals in tho .sas reached the Suites, their editors du. | cordi.il approbation, and my feeble ihougb tho People of the United Stales, without '" dedTod : nnd believing that the spirit i puPtlcal gymnosiuin, Intbe yenr of grace one His Letter on the Buchanan Dem- nouncod thc foul wrong in terms of fitting i willing suiiport,^^ As I believo "uw,, 11 regard to past polilical differences nr divis-i of our inslitmioiis, as weU as the oonstiiu-I j|j,,^|,,.^,,j ^^^l^j l^^^^^j^^j^
ocracy.
indignation. It was but a spasmodic effort: must regard tbe Democratic parly as fully ; juns, who are opposed to the repeal oftho i ''ou ofour counlry, guarantees libcrly of
Tli(> lollowing sung has received the pri/.o of¬ fered by the Eremoiiters of N.iiv York, for the best ciimpoigii 80
however, nnd in deference to the South
and the prevailing sentiment of the party,
they have dropped ofli, ouu.afler the olhur,
'a nble to ns-
xih year of said James's age, ho makes
Men nf the Niiitli, wbo remember The iloed.s of your sirea, over glorious. Join in our paiati victorious, The paiun of Liberty ! Hnrk I on tho gules of November .Millions of voices are ringing, Glorions the songs Ihey are singing, Fremont nnd Victory I Hurrah I Join the great chorus they're ,siiigiiig, Fremont nnd Victory I Como from youi'Torest-clod nioniitains, Como from lb*fields of your tilhigc. Come forth from city and village, Juiii the grcnt bust of the froe I Ah fripn their eavcriiuus muuiUains Uilll the deep iluud-s tu the neooii, Juiii the great army in motion, Muvcliing'to victory I IlurroU I l-'elio, from ocean to ocean, Ei'cmoiit and Viclovy I Fur in llie 'Wcst rolls the th'undei, 'lhe tumult ol battle raging. Where bleeding Kansas is waging Warl'uro with Slavery 1 -Struggling with foes who surround her, Lu I sbe implores you lo stay her I Wi'l Villi to Sliivcw' betray liti '.' S'cvcr-sbe sholl lie free I Hurrah I Swunv that you'll never betniy ber; Kansas shall yet bo free I -March I wu have sworn lo suppori her ; Tho prayers oi the vigliteoiis aliiill spui .\ chief iicvev conquered shall lead u Fremont ahall lea.l iho free I Iben from ihosn fields, red wilh shingh Sloveiy's bordca shall be diivcii, Fveednm tn Kansa.s be given,
Fremont shall make her fvcc ! Huviah ! 'I'u Kaiisos shall Freedom bo giveii ; Fremont shall make her free ! Men of thc Nnrlb, who remember 'lllll deeda of yuur .sires ever gluriuii Juiii in our pieuu yicturioiis, 'The lucaii ol Liberty I Hark on the gules uf Nuvoiiiber, Milliuns cf vniees are viiigiiig, Gluriuiia the .'luiig lliey uro aiiigiiig, Frenioi.t and victury '. Hiivruli'l Juiii 111,) great cbovus they've sin.,'in^ Fiemunt ami Vielnry I
(LDmmumcutioiis.
Nkw York City, Sept, IS, ISuC To the Eililors if the Evening Post: Gemti.kmkn : The leller o'l' your cor-1 „„,^| ,„ r" .^ , have 'b,
I hove were laO coinpot-, responent H., and your editoiial couiinenis ' -
I upon ilof the 10 inst., seem in commun j courtesy lo demand a reply. Your cor- j respondent docs not err in snying that I ; desire the succesa of tho Republican par- I ty anl the election of iheir candidates, and ' that 1 am read lo contributo un honorable cDurt to bring il about. 'I'his is nut the I resull of nny preference as to men, but in j spile of it. With Col. Freinonl. I am un-
coinmilted to Suulhern scciiona/ism, lo-j Missouri compromise ; to the uolicv of the ' conscience and equality of lighls amon^-. ., ,, e . -- i i
wards which, for some time past, it has i present Administration ; tn the extension ' citizens, wc oppose all legislation j.npiu. j o|;o__iy;'"«<''"¦"W'-f"'" ll>«I-'"^>''''n hs •'^ "ong been rapidly tending, and 1 quit it, well I of Slavery into Kansns; nnd in favor of ring their security, assured that my duty lo my country du-1 the admi.ssion of Kansas ns a Freo IStni
certain, there is not a Democratic paper mands al my hands this sacrifiee of person- of restoring llio actiou ol the Federal Gov-
wliicli dares boldly lo juslify and defend the freo State party, and denounce their invnders. In place cf encouragement and sympaihy for their outraged fellow citizens ofthe North, theru isjitlle else than jeers und ridicule for their oppressed and suf¬ fering condi tion—misrcpresentatiati oftheir motives nnd conduct, and a prelended iii- credulily of the slaiemenls and appea
al feelin
Very truly yours,
A. H. IfEKDEIl.
eruinent to the principles ol Wasbinglou | aud ileflerson ; and for iho purpose ofi
' '••' j preseniingcandidatcsfortheofiice.sof Pres-.
Old Line Whigs. i ident and Vico President, do resolve as '
Poino of the organs of tlu; foreign can-1 folloivs:
MisccllHnu.
didale, J.imes Buchanan, aru c-Duslaiitly appealing lo '.he Old Liuo Whigs to coma o"erto tho support of ihoir candidate, nnd
l.ESOLVKD, That the malntainanoe' of the principles promulgated in tbo Dec¬ laration of Independence, and embodied
beid and defended on tbe Missouri Compromise, Ho chaiij;';3 his position as easy as tho "little joker" under tho thimWe, and we warn the friends of freedom in Pennsylvanianot to trust the safety uf their causo ia the hands of so wi' ly and unreliable a polilieion. Below wo givu a few poinls in Ina history i
"licJuce our nominal to tbu standard of pri throughout Ihc world, and you i
j acqu'jinted. I have never seen him, nor; „.|,i^|, ¦^^ send lo ihcir brethren of thu ' in some few instances they havo succoud-
havo 1 written to him. My relations i «,.,„_ i i • n in. me-
i J .iDlatos. I ed in these appeals. Hul aro Whigs aware
1 find their speakers cx'.ibiting the same ; ^p ((,,, condition upou ivhich their assist-
willi ,\Ir, liuchanan, ns a tnan, aru of a friendly intimacy and reciprocal acts iif kindness, uninterrupted to this time by a singlo misiindeistaiiding or unpleasant feeling; and I would any time defend him promptly and indignantly againsl personal ntlneks upon his reputatiun. I believe him to be a man of distinguished ability,
spirit—some of ihem ignoring the quustion i nlirely; oihors of ihoin treating it with i
ance is asked l Do they entertain th
perversions, niisrepresenla'.ions and false issues; and otheis taking openly tho side of the oppressors ; but no one ol thein nil- vocating the cause of Kansas, or favoring - . -- . her admission under free-Slate consliluliou
: of high iniugrityand valuublo cxperieneo. j adopted by her people. lie IS surrounded, too in rennsylvania by I £„ i|,e public deinonstialions and pi'oces-1 ces of honor and profit ? If such be their many pohtica'. friond.i to whom lam united I 3i(,„3 o, the party, I find banners aod du. | ,dea, thoy wil bu doomed lo disappoint-
hope that by joining the remnant of the Doiuocralic party, now degenerated,into a loreign faction, lliey will be incorpoiated willl said faution ; and in case of its suc¬ cess bu permiled to parlicipite in its olfi-
in the Federal C'oiistitution, aro essential' Commissioner, with Cobuel Fremont, with tothe preservntioii of our republican insti-i re.2ard to supplies of Beef, which tho New lutioas; andthat iho Federal Cunsliiulion I ^ oti, Eoening I'ost oxplain.s, totbo satisfnc- tlie rights of the Slates, and tho union of tiou of thc most projected ciivilior. Those snp- ihe Slates, shall bo pruaorved, plies were to conquer tho Iiidiuiu with in Cali-
UksolViid, That, ivitii our Republienn furnia, food being found 'oy the Coiumi-ssioners Fathers, we hold it lo be a selfevident hoth cheaper and belter oinmnnition fur fight- iruth Ihat all men are endowed with iual-1 i„„ „d mou than powder and ball. Frciitoiits icnable right to "life, liberty and the pur- i proposiils were lower than any others received suit of happiness, and that the 1'"'""}; ,„,„,,.„„ „,,,^j„,. n.. conld afford to offer object and ulierior designs of our Federal i .. . .1 ,,- .. ,
ct . " .. . 1 hotter terms than nny of Ins competitors, be
Ciovernmen; were 10 secure these rfhts , , ''„ ..,/«,c...m. , ....
uiduvaiico than most
Col. Fremont's Beef Supplies.
The Democratic pajiors avo vaporing consid orably in lehUiou to certain contracts made ; country ^nth bencdits atidb]et»iaf^.''—Jan by George W, Barbour, fniled Stntes Indian i Biirhaiian's sjiecch inthe U.S. Sciiat:, Jaii:i.
' rg, ISU),
'Harrison for Piesidenll—ajietlici.,".'. h-jro
by ties of long cherished political and so¬ cial intimacy, and the loss ofwhose friend-
; ship I shnuld regard as a great ealnmily,—
s coiiUiiiiiiig bruial insult.s, iu response ' ,„e,„jj,. x,i^_ liuchanan has doslared that to the appeals ol ibat [leople lor protection ¦ againsl unparnlled wrongs, cnlculuted, as j
will not consider hiiuself under any
loall persons within ils exclusive jilris-'''*''f?''''''''"' I""''"^ S^ diclion ; that ns our Uepublicau Fathers, I ""-'"! ''" '"*'' '"*»''' c-^pi-'rtcnco in lighting ov when thoy hail abolished Slavery iuall out j'""""oU'S Indians, thvough whoso territory, n.iticnal territory, ordained that no per.son .?"'"¦''''^'nnco of some thrco bundrod milo. should be deprived of properly," wiihout 'be nnintnls bal to bo driven, nnd be
ll much more ready to expose bi.s li
—a fooblo old granny I"—Biichan.ii
''Ilaviiii; urged tho adoption of the MLvso..- Compromise, tlie inference is irre-isti.iiethht Congresa haa tho powor to legislate DpiKi li.. subject of slavery in tho Territories. I tllrg to the Missouri Coiiipvumiso witb greater iiin'i city than ever."—.//ut'/ianuii'ii letter to T. Sc::: j'urd, .ing. 21, 181S,
i ''The reeent legislation of Congress (rope i' of Missouri Compromise) respijeliug doincsli ; slavery--derived as it has been IVuiii tho origi i nal and pure fonntaln of legitiinate politica. I power—the will of the majority—pr.juiises cro ! long to allay the dangerous exciluniout. This j legislation is ^Jiindod ujiou. priuciples ns an- , I cient ns fvcc govcvnment itsolf-"—Bachanan't s with- I letter accepiing iioiaiiialion. lu the ' "I om no longer aimply Jauies 6uch,.nan, entorprise than any one else 1?"' U'e Platform ofthe party whu.a.j nninuioel ' ' '^- " " "' '¦ Speech lo th'i K-gtbine
bill,'by insisling'thnt Slavery bas a rigbl'P'''''"°'-"^"-'"'= ""'K'l. It is propel , ous und ardent supporter. On each ncea-! (g go jmo the terrilories in spile ol Cun-' ^^"^'*'"'"'''"cquil ourselves of the unjust,
siun I wns in the Nulional (Convention ns (jruss or iho people ' aud tbat the inhabi- i accusations lo which such niiscunstruclion |
ouo of his delegates, i,.,,,;^ „f ii,g terriloiy have no right lo pass i e-''PoseE us. He invite nu man of IFIiig
¦ These lies nro exceedinglj strong and ' territorial laws to lorbiJ il or exclude it.— i /'"""/''cs to join the ncnwcriitic parly .— \ hanl to sever, especially wilh one who is i Democratic represontatives from I'ennsyl-' ^,"'^'' un.oyerture ivould be as insulting to I naturally of a conservative cast, and slow v-„|,io even, in the Senale and the House ' him ns unjii.st lo our party. .V person I to change old babiis of thought nnd aciion ; |,oj|| j,nd iiioclaiin these opinions, whil.st' "''''' Whig convictions cannot consistently , and I have resisted for inonlhs tbe convic- ' odmr representaiives from ['onii.sylvania ''""' ''oues.ly profess to lu of the Demo- 1 lions that wcro urging mu lo my piesent ' ^j^i, Democraiic leaders li'oni other iltateV, i '^''''^''^ P"'''J'' ''il"^>''i'°>^ "¦''"!¦ "'hig r.on- ; duclaratinu. 1 have diligenily sought | j^clare ihemselves publicly to be uon com-'' ''"¦'''<"« n't'i'tol bc ailimttcd into the Dein-
i reasons and orgunienls (o save myself the ' ...
I pain of breaking up old associations and < alienating myself from my old Irionds, bul ! all in vain. My luve of c uintry nud lia- I trcd of oppression would not allow my ! feelings and inclinalions either to delude I mji judgment or still my conscience, nnd
1 mu eoinpelled to forfeit inyself respect . by committing what I believe to be pal- : piibly wrong, or enrol mjself in opiiosition
to thn Democraiic party
thoriiy of C'ongres.ii, of u Territorial Leg islature, or any individual or association of individuals as togivo legal assislancelo Slavery in any terriiory of tho Uuited
perils of sueh
in timt region. Uo fulfilled his contracl a ably to iu stipulations, uud wenl to Washiiig¬ toi. fur his money. The auditing department said, Mr. Comuiissionev Barbour hud no rigbl to make coutnicts, iu the iiaiuc of tho Govern¬ mont, to feed tho Indians. Ilo only liad pow- ev lo innke wnr or Tieacc with thcni. Col. Fre¬ inonl went to Congress, and ashed tbem to or-
^n."-7;« Club.
Stales, while the presenl Couslitution shall 'lei' bis bills to be paid. The subjeet was ro¬ be maintained. j furred to n committee of the 3Hd Congress, In Uesoi.ved, That the Consti.ulion con-, ISJ I, compoaod oftbo following gentlemen: fers upou (Congress sovereign power over James L. Orr, of S.
thu Territories ol lliu Umled Stales for \ Bcnjimia, C. l'ii.ilin'iin. of Wisconsin, Gala.
sha .1. Grow, of Pi'iin.sylvania, Edivcu'd C.
For the Huniingtlon Juurnal. . , . i r . i i e i.-
RTPTT7MTn7P > ""'' syn'l""''y f"f '''« l"-'oplu "* Kansas in
biiPliimUJia. ; tl,,, success of the Dcmoeraoy. In its
Spring wilh ils bui'.sliiiglile and buoyant fiel- ,,.,„|.g^ „„j| ,^,(,1, „,^. py,^.^,^ to control its iug, bos long sinco swelled .Uld aofleiicd into I action, niu found thu border rullians of summer, nnd summer baa ripened into on lui-I Missouri and their accomplices ofthe tumn ofp'enlcons inoniise. And now the days I Soutli, who have Ir'iimpled upon iho (Con- are growing short, and the suuahiuo fitful ; the j stiiiilion aud all the essential principles of sirenms are swelling, and their silvery cuirenls I our Ciovernmeni, robbed Kansas of ils civ- are riiiining dnrk and turbid, whilo the voices ' il liberty nnd riglil of suflrnge, laid waste of winds and waters arc becoming hoar-set and ! '.'s territory with fire and sword, and repu mure luud, Thu Hush uf beauty is passing a
Having originated a movement myself to aid our people by sending tliem men and uioney, nnd having prosecuted il wilh the strictest avoidance of pnrly character, and a studied neutrality as lo the puliiical canvass, and having earuostly asked the
;¦¦" — " " ' •; , e - - I CO oiieralion of men of nil parlies, I have
I cau see no reasonable hope of justice i f^.|^'j ,^ ^._,,|^j ,,, j^^ ,„ „,^. |;„o„.|,jg,,, „
.lingle Democrat, In iho Convenlions of Clevehm'J u"d Bulliiuore, called witlmut distinction of patty, in furtherance of this enlerpris.", tbere was no Democrat presenl bul inyself This cinnot hive bi any want of generosity or of m only ill deference lo the prevailing lone and .'¦ciiiiment of the party, which is enlisled
and lo which no Whig can honestly sub¬ scribe, becausu il is iib-olniely iri'econcila- ble with the principles ivhich hu profess. We object 10 fusion oeeause it is neither consislent Willi personal nor polilical hon¬ esty. U'c invile no Ii'ltig tu come iuto Ihc Dcinoc rulic parly unless hc chouses volitiilurifi/ and from c mvictioii to abjure his un cil nt failh and tn j,roj'css ti'legiance to ,.ur pnrlicular jilaljorm.
This is n severe and insulting rebuke to such Whigs as have rushed into the
1 from j ranks of the foreign parly, in hopo that | tended legislative, judicial, and cxecutiv
ns, bul; t|,^,y ,yi|i bo receivod with open arms.— i They aro contemptuously inloriueil, that I
Fremont aud Buchanan
ll is worthy of remar'K that all the o'lacks
upon Col. Fremoul, ur nearly nil, have ovigiu-
alod ia Woaliington. Even 'hoso which aro
borne lo us from the far disttiii shores of thu
Paoilc, aro coutaiiied in Isttsr.s fvom W,idling.
ton to the Caliluriiia popci's. 'fbey nil nrisa
from the same pen. Through the thin gauze
of thu Bigler ngoiicy, tho hui'.J uf .Mn Buch-
Carulinn, Chuicninii. I anan himself the del'amer of Uls unly funui.Ia-
ble ur dreaded rival, may be plainly disceined.
It is uut likely that tho republican titlu
of President will ever grace Mr, Buchanan's
nnolhor and a different title ho hn
persistently earned; it is that of slan-
was wbo fivat gave currency and
of the Unilud Siaics was ordained und es-! °' ibesa geuifemon wero Democrats, except' plausibility to the "Bn!'goi.n calumny on lh«
loblislied ill ordav to form n moro porfeci i -"""i U"w a Fillmore, ond Priugle, now o Fro- gallant Clay," Mean-spirited, ho begged of Mr.
union, establish justice, insure domeslic [ mont mon: they wero Whigs. All aro now Clny not to expose him as tho aulhor oftho
tranquility, provide for llio common de-1 Bucliiuinn UepvcsoutuliVes, except tho two I slander which cheated tho prcat Kciitnekian
leniioiieil, nnd Grac and Eastman the loiter oat of llie Prcsiileiiey. Thi.ik cf tlia en.'ia
ow dead, Lal.'tam is thc pie.sent Collector of coneenling through life tho poi.iencd shaft tims'
an Frnneiseo, I melivea of generosity toward ths base hand
Onthe Mill d,iy of July, Ihis conimillee j that apod il! Lo, from his grave a thousand
luile theiv vepovt, iu whieh thoy state tli,it the j liatbed avvowa spving np. and point toward tbe
unlriiet was conceived in a. wise nnd humane ,' nssnssin. Now the vcvilor lunis upon Ihe youiii'
pirit; Ihal the prices wove reasonable; that and cliivulroua Fremont, ns to tho victim for
i.s terms wevo fairly and fully complied with, lii.s venom. Let tbo people of ..Vincricu, whea
oliicers liavo beJii sot over lliciii, by j "''"'• '''"'i'""'"'''"'''".*¦ ""-^i "P'"'<^'"'^<"^ »''^''S''| ")«>'read the base attacks upon the unsnlliod
whose usurped aiuhoriiy, suttaiued by tb'e | number of beef cattle in the soulbcrn pnrt of j nnine of Fremont, reflect that James Buelian-
' the slate, and hired drivers nt n heavy cost, to an is th.
declare tnemselves puuiiciy tu De uon com-1 •• ."" ' . : -.-.".....-.....-..... j this uowcr, il is boih lhe ri.'ht and du- r, n cnx- . in n u r r-i r i. -j .
ii,iii.,l nnon ihl, linrnnv. ih« i„„„ii.,i,i„ ocf«/ic 0)'i/ami«fiO)i i'.'i//ioi/« i'O-somc cx- .,. „f >• ""-''"'^ ""'''V": "='"','J,"" ,"" 1 fl - i r. nr - ii cm- ' ¦ • ii.- i -i. .
i„,„l,.nev nf leli leh i I in nnn v In s-hni,- „;\i^ lent corriiiilins; ils inteerrtti/and debttitch \ ,' ,c„ 1 . ," .11- ,, 1 i Ida, Pniiie/ //. lrn;//i/, of Mississippi,-I'/mf name, lintni
teiulcncy ol wluch it is ensy lo shon, will . . ' ¦ "¦ , t., "', , ics, IhiOse twin relics of barbarism, Poly-, , ,. , .,, „ .". ;, . .. ,, ,
be to prevent almosl entirely the (orinalion^"'" its principles. Wo havu ^ creed ^^ ^^^, g,^ ' '> ; ^1, r,m'«irr,„,i, of Arkansas, Be,,,«„i,a Y'™,- lully and persi
ol any more free States, \ »'l^,";l' constilules a lest of Dciuooracy, ,i[,„,,,^„_ .j.,^^ ,,,,i,^. ^,,„ Constitution ' '•>''' =¦'"'' •"''""" '^' ''""""" "^ California. All deicn llo it
fence, and secure the blessings of liberly, and contains ample provision.s for lhe pro¬ tection of "life, liberty nnd prosperity" of every citizen, the denresl cotislilulion- nl righis of thu jieople of Kansas have been fraudulently and violenlly taken from them—their terriiory has been invaded by an armed force, spuriuus nnd pru-
-jui-
».ay from tbo liuie ol lhe earth, but the eliniigo is marked with o tender loiieliiies.s, mure touch¬ ing than the briglitnosi nf sniuinev,
Su gviidiial has been the uppvuaeh uf aiituniii that we have scovcely yet made up uur minda to bid adieu tu warm-hearted, ell'iilgont suinnier, I To the wnr of tho Revolution, and a dclara-
diated even civilixalion itself
lu ils platroim I liud the enunciation principles which would put tho rope about tho nocks of men lor exercising tho con-
red to cvippe nnd retard It by SUeuilliiJ Ul I .1
; ¦¦'., ¦. ¦ . ¦ musl become
nriiiiig the coininunily agaiiift i us
grievances far worse than those whicii led
ikc I'riends ivitb not nlways legavil ill
Tlu
I alu
alber III uiie
tion stigmatising as "armed resistance law" the iiioderale and justifiable selfdi
t happens that sum nicr iiu'imd.s tbo montli of I fence of men shnmefully nnd infamously
Septeiuber, and takes pop.scsaion of tho chief part of il;—-llivowing even the beams of ils vplendor upon the eonlincs uf October. Bul now we nro rcniinJeil that suninicr is really gone, nnd niitiiuin stents upon ns tvonsniutiiig shade by shndo the gorgeous auinmci'-culovc.l earth, lo ila oiva subdued nud dreamy aspect. The changing hues of the forest's I'oilage, gave ¦nolico, weeks ago, of the griidna! appvoaeii of a cooler season ; but so mild and gentle
, mililary poiver of thc gnvernment ; lyran-i "i6 s'ate, and hired drivers nt n heavy cost, to j an is their antlion Justice to tbo I upon the olber side ofihe nueaion. And ] ""nl"-'si voluntarily, from conviciion, thcy j ical and uncoii>tiiuiional laws have been ' drivo ihcm to llic designaled pluco, 'The cat- lice to the dend—let jusiice bo dealt attheolee- ' j nol only havo ihuy abst.iiued from aiding ! abjure theii'nncienl faith, sind profess alle-1 unaolod and enforced; tho righta of ihe htlo were driven upwards of lltTOO hundred i tion in N.)yorabor.
. I lhe movemeni, but in their presses and by I glance to our particular platform," they lu^^l'lo'o I'l-'ep nnd bear anns have been ; miles, in the heat of Summer, in the dry sea-! r*.-*""
their private influenci: they havo endeavo- | £.,,,001 be received 'uto the ranks. Thev | '"f''i"eC'-' i "'sl oaths of an exir,iurdinai'y .,on, at grcnt labor and cxpoauvc, nnd' somu \ . "^^^ Atrocities in Kansas,
¦ ¦ -• 1 I „,..i „„i..„„i;„„ „„i„,., I.n,... I,„„r, :.„„„..„.I . , . . . .... I lhe Pituburg Oaactla says, wo woro favor
abjure their '' '' ~-' "- ' " ' ' ^ ' -- . - r. ::"' ¦- -c , ue ueiivcreu 10 o™iii ««,'Oo,„'. nnu tnniv „„,'=J ."^^'^''-'r'l'ty with a visit from MnJelfrie., whe
pplicd, thus endeavoring tn j their forme prevenl oonlribufions even from frieuda of: will not be accepted. Who will join them | Irial, by nn impartial jury, has been de-
I uied ; the righ; of llie people lo bu secured ! in their houses, papers and ell'ects agninsl
I unrensonnblo sear'he.I and seizures, hns 1 - - .' - —¦ - oi, , i\t;. ,.¦ 1 i. c ,1, i a r
iifcvailin'r tone of lhe i """""" "' ""'"'S" '''"io'is ' Not ono who I been violated ; thev have been deprived of ¦ lo ono hundred nnd eighty.lhreo thousand eight """'" '"'""'""an aau tuiii iioin tho head ofa party is hostile to Kan.S'as, biTtlconsident !''"^'"'™''""''''"'""''''"''"''"'"¦'''" '"^"'^''' '''^" li'""'ie anil nmneni, wiihom ilm. nrn. 1 hundred and Iwenlv-iivu dollara (Sm:i.«'i.-..1 1'^'^° ^'¦''"' '""" "'Urdered by bis hands, and
stitutiunnl right of pctuioning Congress | j^^.^^^^^^.^y^^ ^^j j^^,^,^; ,,^, the monoy forahmto Government, as a redress of j ,^^^,,,n,^. ,„i,a|i^,j_ j,,,,^ endeavoring l'i)
the measure.
upon such conditions.' Who will unde
inilos, in the heat of Sumn , at grcnt labor and expos
route,-
lok his I, , ll nnd ' ''-1'"*' returned from Kansas. He w.is in
y live thousand five hundred puunds of i bi-ef on tbe hoof (I,'J2,i,500 lbs,,) and accept-
opprcspod by ruflian violence nnd outrage, I beyond all human entlurunce.
I find lhe whole party of thc nalion as¬ sembled ill National Convention, with but one individual dissent, endorsing heartily, an ndminislraiion, which has bisely lent itself as the lool and and accomplice ol all tho wrongs infiiclcd upon Kansas, and by ils venality and imbecility hrought tho counlry 10 on intestine war.
Ifind all ils rcpreseulntivos in Congress, I luinistralion, even if presided over by Mr
1 might go on wilb Ihis catalogue and jchhumili'utiou tohu admitted to th euuinerato other indicalione, if neccssarv, I , , ^ •
I,,,,., „f lU.. i uosoin ol loreign la
I ' ." . , nnd cnlangliu.ir nnlure hnvu been imposed i r„,.,, i,|,,,,ir,j ,,.„i,„ insi nr .lied or, il,,, mi
I,, ii-iiiinr-i In tlinii- iii-iiieiiih.c ' , -^. -^ - . , , , ¦ i 'U-ii niiniireii WCIC lust ur uieii on iue rol
Vr'r 1, ad^ Ih, 7f i''\? ™"''"'T fil^""'^" '\ ^''pV "^ He delivered .0 agent/l«,'ioi„', and too 11 lailh—anil adopt that ol Uulfrnge, nnd holding olhce; lhe right of' |.^,^,^j ,( ^,j.,|^f^, ,,„.,:|i,',„ ,,,. 1, (j.,,.
r adversaries—or their services an accused person lo a specdv and public I'"''"'"'' ,,"''V"' '""'7 "n ""'.' ''? \""' ''''
twentv live thousand hve hundred puunus 01 |
beef on tbe hoof (I,'.'2,i,500 lbs,,) and accept- i ™' "" , .,
cl in payment drafts dniwn by ngcnl Barbour ''l-"' \'"^<'l'^^f bJ' f"! '"ffi""' "l Ihal place,
on llm Seerelni'y of the Interior, amounting "' ''^''';'.'"^ "'"}'''•',"'","" """^ hloediug, which a
Lenveiiworth nt the timo Phillips was murder cd, and was oa cyo-wilness of tho lerrible out-
showing that lb.
only necessary to add, that wbat 1 have able titlu of Whig. Suno may crawl oil said relates bui to the North. Thu South, j their hands and kiiec.i, and implore for- wheru the great mass of the parlv is 10 bo I . r 1 1 . r . 1 r
, , ," . ' - , , I givoness for having heretofore voled for
found, makes no prelens on, as a w 10 n, to ?.-i,; , , , " 11,1
., ; r ,1 ¦ 1 . II "big:'; but such men will not d.'servo to
the .advocacy 0 anything bul puro border- k. , , , r 1,1
IJ. . ' 1 o 1 I ""in^i be laken into favor even by the suiiporler.s
''"'"'''"'^"'' I of such men as Jaincs Buchanan, Tliey
What, then, havo the free-Slate mon of | should be despised by all honorable men,
Kansns to expect from a Democraiic ad-
cess of law; that the freedom of speech and , These dnil'ls wcro protested on presentation, no of the press his been iibridged ; the right u[.pi'opi'iatiuii having bona mado 'jy Congress to choose their reprcsenlntives has been ' frum wbieii thoy could bo paid. Subsequent- made of no oft'cet; niurdors, robbeiies and j,., the trcniies were rejectc'd by Senate, for
snus wldcli have nol yet boen inndo public,
tba
arsons havu beun instigated and encoura¬ ged, aud the ollend-jra have been alluw¬ ed lo go unpunished ; that all tlicse ihings have been done ivith the knowledge, saiic
nnd the Indians of Calif.
from their Innds nnd homes, nnd h."
the sun's rays, an bland the nlinospheio, that! wilh three individual exceplions, laboring i Buchanan ? If he could be lefl to acl up- ' in oarnest zeal, by speech and vote, to cov-1 on his own impulses, unafTecled by exler- eruplhe iniquities of this administration ""I inlfuences, ond free from all obligations and the border rufiians of .Alissouri, nnd , expressed and implied, the case would bU to suppress a fair invesiigaiion of outra-1 ^i-'ry diftful- But, unfortunalely, tbis is ges which shouk bolh humanity nnd re- \ not so. His election would righlfully bo publicanisni, aud defy tho constilulion and i considered a decision ngainst us, whatever the laws, I may be his otvn private feeling.s, _ llis of-
1 find the s.'iine representatives, aflor thc j lices al Wnshingion, in Kniisa-s and else- Ir.iih ias elicited in spite ol their efi'orts, ! where would nocessarily, lo a largo extent, jiicv fresh about us, and louk winter in tbo face I still refusing to relieve the peopio from a ! bo filled with our enemies. His infornia- —ciuistitnting nn interesting period in tho voar, j code of laws imposed upon them hy a for-! lio" would come through a distorted medi
nnd i.i aii.ilugoiis to somo decisive upocli iuhu-1 eign army, nud slill refusing 10 admit them '"" ' "'"' '""''" '"¦ "-"ii ••" ' "- '¦
man all'aii's, wben uu old sysleni with ils luiso- inlo the Union, ouly for reasons which, in ciuti.UIS still lingering aud striving to maintain ¦ the cnses of nine existing States, had
heen declared unlenable and of no accounl-
Ihe beautiful vesture oftho woods, with its ny linked colors, .aoenied rather Iho uiagntliccni drapery of mnluresuuiuier, than tha symbol of appronching I'vusl.
We willingly and glndly greet thi.i, our fii- vr.. ilc nionth, Beautiftil Scptembev I A traiis- itii ll iiointat which n inavked ebango tako plncc between seasons; at which, wo stand wilh suiii-
FREMONT NO CATHOLIC.
UIS OH.\ »i:ni.\l.
I'hoso who are very eager to believ
resent Ad- ' "'"' eonipeiisation from llio Gnvern
0 receive! ent, save
the beef furnislic J tliein In
ils liioiliold, gives wny lo a now order of things.
Then welcome 11 our Iiappy land this moat bcauliful and iiislvuctivo season ; nnd would Ihnt we were cnpnblo of pvaising its bejintios. We cnncludo in lhe Ungnngo of tliat gifted po¬ etess L. IL W. "I love to voaui through tbe woodland hoary.
In the soft gloiv of an autumnal diiy. When Suinnier gotboi'S up ber robes of glory,
.\nd like a dream of beauty, glides awoy."
iSiuDi^si'i/i", Sepl. IHJii. Faxxib.
A CHANciTTO WIN.
I'd tha Editor ofthe New York Dailij 'Tinier : Two lualtevs have enlored largely in tho pro- I sent Presidential canvass, which I wish to dis- ' pose of by applying tho urgitmcidUin ad hoini- -Hcm.
Fia.sT.—I w|ll bcl $5,000 that John C. Pro- .mout is not, nnd never wns a Uomoii Catholic. Skcuxu.-I will bet So,000lhal lio is not and never was a Slaveholder.
The muiiov will bu deposited with Duiiean, Shcrmoii k Co., -yheiievor any party sigiiilies llil acceptance of either one or bi.ili uf tliosc wagers, Vours Ibr Freeilnin,
W. J, A, FULLEU, P. S.—I have sontoii autograph copy ofthis Challenge lo the Nuw York Express. Nnr )-¦-;,•. Aug. 11, l^'iii.
I find thein disregarding a freo consli¬ lution, ndopted in a leg.1l, constitutional and time-sanctioned inanner, (and which no man can doubt to have refiecled the will of the people,) nnd supporting a law to produce a subslilute, which il is easy to show would have perpetrated in the Stalu goveninient the usurpation which hnd by force already seized upon the gov¬ ernment of the territory.
I hnd them refusing to make appropri¬ ations for lhe army unless used to enforce a code of laws violative, on their facu, of the constitution, enacted hy a legislature in violation of the Inws of the United Slates, and impused by foreign force upon conquered and subjugated Aiqencan citi¬ zens,
I find thora, in a word, steadily aiding hy all their Congressional action to maka n slave Slate in northern latitudes, and that, too, against the will of iis inhabitants.
1 find that one member who moro than any other sluod oul against the cnslave-
aiid bisily, hu could not uid us with¬ out having first madu up his mind to be abandoned and warred upon by bis own party. The South would charge him wiih violating his pledges, and turu upon him wilh bitter hostility, and nl least a portion of the North, would follow their exam¬ ple, Ue would thus be lefl ivithout a par¬ ty 10 support his administration, unless ho should cast himself inlo tho arms of thu Kepublicans, We cannot, it seems to me, eilher ask or expect him to do this upon a question whero party lines are so plainlv drawn before his eleciion. Like all other men in the same situation, he must obey tlio party scutinient ou which he is elected. There are Deinocrats in Pennsylvania op¬ posed to thc conduct ofthe Souih in regard to Kansas, lain well aware, and that Ihey would uno their influenco lo redreeshcr wrongs, 1 am well satisfied ; but they are too lew in proportion to the whole parly of the Union lo sustain his ndminislraiion in a war with his parly. They havo as yet been unable lomake their opinions appear and bc full in the party, and, of courge, cannot do so hereafler. 1 honor their good intentions, but 1 cannot believe in their
mentol hiii while fellow-citizeiis, is refu-1 po'^C'
sed a re nomination by ilio Democraiic par- i • repeat, tlmt 1 have been forced to these
tv of his disincl.
conclusions aflcr no slight struggle with
tion and procurement of the | mislraiion, and ihat for ibis high
against the Cunsliiulion, tho Union and 1 which hc now asks the Government to pay humanity, we arraingo iho Adminislration, ^ him fon 'The beef weut intu the bonds of tho the President, his advisers, agents sup- Guvoninieiit; whether il was all trulbfully dis- Col, Fremont n Komanisi, sometiuies nsk | porters apologists and accessories, either ' tribuled nuionst tbe Indians, by Um sub agents why ho docs not himself deny it, if it be j bel'ore nv after the facts, before thu counlry is not a qnestion that is to all'eel the justice not'true ? So far as a man, who believes ' »"'' ^'¦''''"'c U'e world; nnd that itis our fix- „„,! j^„;,^, ^f the claim of Col, Vukmoxt,— there should be no persecution for con- I «'! P";i'OS« lo bring the aciual pcrpetra. ,„„ ,„„;^j,^,, „,„ „„ents of the Goveniment
science' |
LCCN number | sn86071455, sn86053559, sn86071456, sn86081969 |
FileName | 18561001_001.tif |
Month | 10 |
Day | 01 |
Year | 1856 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for Huntingdon Journal