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About The Oregon Argus. (Oregon City [Or.]) 1855-1863 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1856)
Sljc rcgon Clrgus. sr. u. nun; idito aso fuoricTO. " " obj3Qo:j cztt : SATURDAY, NOVEMl5F.lt. 1", 1S;0. fff" Tho U. S. M. steamer Columbia reached Portland lnt Tuesday morning.--Wo nro unJur obligations to Wells, I'arjjo A' C'),, fore')tpr fitvoH, I.BttnK Hit or. The clilur of Citnj.kiiy '3 linn' organ nt S.ilwn nme ti (110 ago disgorged a loud of democratic sweetmeat, mixed with "what lo foccliuusly tai l wero "white hair pulled from lliO lii'u I of a tiorrnj by Pnrs.,11 Billy," Ac. The dish was kept b for hi r'-alcru for several week a a "licli treat of dem ocratic viand." Nobody bowcicr seemed lo relish jf, and, in orJcr to g'l it out ol sight, the young nmn lis finully swallowed it nil buck himself, ml licked the plate. JId writes a letter, which be pretend he got from a "whig attorney," denying tba (ru'li of tlii libel he published. Our advice to the young man is, Bo more prudent hereafter about publishing ; f Is on us, itt we mny not give you quite at long a tiino to swallow it back at o did this time. If it dvxio't nt well on your Horn aen, you can work it IT with a dose of C4!.kav' purgative. Bee. We hear lliut fume person brought a lot of honey bee from California by die last lestner, which ro now being o!d in port land. We think tbs experiment of raising be in Oregon has boon fully tested by r. Davenport in Marion eoun'y, and ban proved a failure. The sunsliino in winter invito them from the hive", when the rain c'.iill them before tiny are alio to get bnck. K Know Mothlng Lieutenant. Uoernor of Missouri., The official returns complete of the Mi, souri election foot up ns follows : For Gov. rrnor Polk, blnckdemocrut, 40,S9 ; F,w. in'!.' Know Nothing. 40.57 : Benton. Democrat, 2T.fi27. Lin.!. Gov.-Jackson, black-democrat, 41,017; New land, Know Nothing, 41,003; Kelly, Democrat, 23, 001. 'The Know Nothings mid black duuincraU in Missouri got so mixed up at , the poll that they Couldn't tell t'other fiom whioh. Tho Riichiiucers in the oth er Southern Rtutt; hnve been trying to gel tho Know Nolhings to liete with llu-iu, but the r'iKpect in, that if I hero i any union ellieted, it will bu by tho Hucliiineera' dropping their own caudidatn ami goiru nier tit thu Know Notiiins, a many of thorn did in Mo. Tho Know Nothing now compose ilia strong conservative Union clement in the South, and ihiy are Hot nulliieiitly lost to nil scnuo of khnmn and recreant to their duties o American ciliviM, to unite willi the 11 ti Hi tiers and so-i-cmioiiiKli who rally under thu pullotrd rag that black-democracy (ling to tho brtfrze. KUttrk L.cil. 1 Wo imderKtand that our indefatigable fellow citizen, Gen. McCarver, has bmght mi Interest in the hole nut of which was dug lhal"manioth horn," in Polk county, and that ho is now "propecting" in the "hole" ufowaid for t lie initio Iq tho Imrn tilready excavuted, preparatory to leaving with the priw'forlho Stales. .- i 1 Oiutnuu. At a Duchanan iissembhigo in I'ennpyl viinin, lately, a cannon wo brought out to bo fired once for every Statu that would vulo for Duuhamm. They began down ut Texas, nti J eaino along up till they got to IVntisylvaiiia, when the cannon burst. Tho deep mouthed ihunderer didn't wunt to commit that Stale to treason. OCT Tho Standard sayn liial it has in for million from Col. Wright's camp to the f. foot thai the Regular force are all to lie withdrawn from Middle Oregon, and the whole country cast of the CuM-tidc left to the Indiuns. OO Mr. W. Williams ha laid us under obligations for beautiful specimens of (he American l'ippin and White Winter Pear main apple. Mr. Flaherty has handed in a solid cjib huge head measuring four feet and four indies in circumference, and weighing tneii'y-seven pounds. If any body cun bent that it is time yen were shelling out. Wo will put Clackamas county against l)reg"H for raising vegetable. (fir V learn that the Washington Ter. ritory Volunteer property, lately sold at Vancouver for scrip, biought more than the Territory paid for it. fcJ"J. M. Roll latelv made amastorly tump speech at a Whig meeting in Rich, tumid, Ya., a portico of which we shall pubii'h next week. We heard a report that G. L. Cur. ry returned on the last slramer. Some ny be staid all night in town on bis way up, but we have not been alio to Uara tha particulnrt. Mom Mr. Dacou ha left the .Main Sirect House, anj Sj ri nger Si Shunk left the about the tame time. Orcoii lloui 0T Mr. II Ad advertise hi nurnery to. dr. We bear bii trees are unsurpassed is'tLis cjuntji. Rriort r Ikt VauUlll Ainr wllwral V sir. Ucl l l.U)elt Oil. ti. 15". The executive foiiiu.illee announced the several examining coiniiiitt'f, who reported certificate to be awarded fol lo, to u it ; To Dtwii I Johnson, Ut toliion over 4 Jems old. " Strihui I Iussrv. bl t:iio a ifffcoU. " John LttU'-blin, Ut bore Coll 3 yai old. " lUub-n Cant, brt liorM colt under 8 111., ii; In old. " Jului l.nii'.'li'in, bi-t brood mare. A''i"S. Watt, bt ftJIv 2 j fHrld. John Lmijrblin, b' t n aro toll under 8 ni'itillm I'l '. .M' li l.i J'dniKon, bot cirrin;;n hore. J.,iep'i Vat, bit ad'lld lnire. (rharlr, II. liiirch, be-t bull. Sledi.-ll llusey, bf.t COW Hlldcilf. " lttl alt M. Jolllll, Unl ptcilllell of ap pit. A 11:0 S, Watt, Sic'. 4'.ltfarala,Vwt. Tho tlcc'ion in California ha ouo Ok we preJieied it would. The return wen not nil in up to the O1I1 iut'., but enough to 1 ho v tbut I'.uchnnan Inn carried tlio Siate. The vote in round numbers, 10 far m heard from, ntniidn marly as follow: liuchnnan, 28,01)0, I'illinom, 10,0(10, Fre mont. 13,000, The I'.uchanan party has probably fleeted a majority to tho Ler;Ula. lure in tho State at large, although the "people' reform party" have carried San Franoisco county ugaint the "Sag nieli!" and ballot bos ttuflV ra, and omo dozen or more Republican members of tho Legisla ture nre know n to bo elected in other parts of the Siatr. . In tho lata election Ruclinnan probably received the vole of 19,000 Jew, 2,000 abolilionifts, and !3,U00 grea-ters, while the other 3,000 voters consisted of ollico seek er nnii political gamblers. Such men, of course, earn nothing about the 1'acific Railroad, and lilllu or nothing nlioiit any tiling i Uc but five whikkey, and a free fight with whoever tho filibustering policy of liio black-democracy kicks up a row with. Although Cuchanan gc-U a minoriiy of the whole, yet his having a majority over either of thu other candidate, entitles Iib faction to hang cuit from the rampart of I California's citadel the black flag of seces sion sectionalism, blackened with the in signia of a black party, the principle of which are ns hostile to tho genius of our free institutions as the slii)'' of tho Cobra Copella i fatal to animal vitality, (lod forbid that the citizens of any other State should p'ovo equally recreant to tho sa cred trust committed to thuin by our Rev. olutioiiary hires. - From thu San Francisco New Letter wo gather the following items of now : IVighoui Young has now over fifty wives. Tho Trinity Journal says that $2,500,000 in gold dust have been taken out in that county dining tho past year by about 2, 000 miners, making nn average cf neaily 81,000 to the man. A potato weighing eight pounds has been raised in Shasta county. A borax spring of great vnltio ha been discovered in Shasta county. Quicksilver in flasks is now offered for sale in San Francisco, from tho new mines near San Joso. The people of California voted on the 4th inst. on n proposition to make a change in tho Constitution of that Stato. his proposed to chnngo a section of tho Constitution prescribing tho manner of nl. tering tho Constitution hereafter. Some largo Oregon apples aro telling at tho fruit stores for five dollars each. San Fran cisco is infested w ith Italian and Chinese beggars. A magnificent suspension bridgo litis been erected over tho Stanislaus on the road leading from Stockton up country. Tho bridge is 218 feet long, 11 feet wide, 10 feet high, mid cost $'i,,0(10. A com pany ha bjen organized, with a largo cap ital, for the purpose of raising sugar beets, manufacturing sugar, and distilling alcohol. lveunonn, the American pedestrian, has accomplished his great fiat of walking 100 consecutive hours without sleep or rest. Transparent glass ballot boxes were geno. rally used at thu last election in California instend of tho old fashioned wooden ones. The copper mines in Carson's valley are proving to bo exceedingly rich nnd exten sive. Quartz mining throughout tho Slate w as never mora prosperous than now. At the Pacific Company's miils, at Placerville, the proceeds for six weeks, ending Sept. 0 was $3, M0, after paying all expenses. I'laek had of great purity bus been recently discovered in California. Some of the tun nel miners in Sierra county, who have worked on for one, two, ond three years without striking the rich dirt, nnd some of whom had to beg credit for even a sack of flour, arc now working dirt that pays, and are worth from ten to fifty thousand dol lars each. At Springfield the lower jaw bone of some animal na lately taken out, measuring three feet in length, seven inch es in thickness, and weighing over eighty pounds. Several of the teeth were remain ing in apeifct condition. The Chinese on the Stanislaus aro divided into two par lie. Over twelve hundred of them lutely met, armed with guns, pistols, knives, club and axes for a big fght, but wero prevent ed from coming in collision by the interfe rence of lomo of the whiles. California manna i produced upon the leave of some of th oaks on the banks of the Sicranivnto, and is gathered by Indian. There i a ' Jcih paper published in San FranciK jcallt - J th Voice of Israel," which sy ; there are a many a thirty or forty thou-1 eVs of disturbers of the peace and decen sutid Jew in California. They.ofcourse, cie of the family. In Pennsyhania, Gov. went en masse for Buchanan. I'iour in . Culib, and Go. Johnsoa of Georgia, are 1 California dull at and $9 60 per bb!. .' Moth attention U UmjpaiJ, in lb S!.diib .!am!, to agricultural fai'. im proving itotk, and planting nurrr Th l'''iey U ba l-vn Utely introduc! loth. J.laiiJ., auJ ira jci of for eign biid., Men alio are known to have belonged to the Vicalaiic Commute am not tf alien out afirr night in San Fiaticico. Rtill'.an ly assault have lately bet a mad UJMi several of them at the a!'xn. TL All California ay they have got a clirrto on inhibition In Sin Fr-nci.co, weighing 3 lt0 pound. The me pnpr !atri tba' e ftllriit ieciinen of tobacco are now being produced in California, and no doubt ex iil but that S ate will yet prove a well 1 Inptid to producing the articlo a Vir ginia. From tUN.Y. Herald The Dirty l.la-a C dnmaalMr aail X-llaa-Uuw ( a tl Utccatly. That tiiick ightnl philosopher, Napo leon the (Ireat, on one occasion, when liar. cd beyond forbearance with the miy nubble of hi family for ploce and pow er, obervcd to them that every family had it dirty linen, but that prudent and d'OMit people washed their dirty linen on th'ir own premise, and hung it up to dry in their own garden, Instead of flaunting it before the world in the public highway. Under the veil of this homely suggestion there lie a world of wisdom to families, communities and nations; for nut only ev ery family, but every community nnd ev ery nation, havo moroor b's of dirty linen, which, from ef respect and decency, they do, or should, wash and dry ujton their own premises, and not on tho public high way. As a nation wo have our dirty linen, and a good deal of it especially our dirty nig cer linen of tho South. The father of the constitution and tho Union, impressed by the snino ideas of decency uud propri ety as Napoleon, sloped their action ac cordiii'dy; and whatever their troubles and fciiiabb!us about niggers may have been, they always modestly nnd studiously avoided the publicoflln.se of braw ling them to tho world. In tho convention which framed our organic law of union, there was a violent in-door controversy upon niggers, which threatened to destroy the great work of the Revolution, in secession, divisions, anarchy and confusion I At this crisis' the cool and reflective Franklin sug gested an adjournment over to Monday, and that tho interval be employed in sol emn prayer, to tho end that n spirit of con ciliation nnd compromiso might prevail. His advice wus followed, and it resulted in that glorious fruit of conciliation and compromisn, the Constitution of the United States. Rut in that sacred instrument of wis. loin and pa triotism, so carefully did the parties con cerned in it endeavor to conceal this duty linen of slavery from the world, that nei ther the term free whito, nor negro, nor mulatto, nor slave, nor servant, occurs in tho constitution, from tho beginning to the end. With no other light before him than the constitution, the reader would most nat urally conclude that there w'erc no niggers in tho country ; and his illumination upon the subject of slavery would be limited to such expressions as these "free persons," "three fifths of nil other persons," "no per son held to servico or labor in ono Stute," "the migration or importation of euch per sons as any of thcS'atcs now existing shall think proper to admit," Ac. These clauses, however, rcft-r to slavery, slaves, niggers, slave representation, fugitive slaves and iho African slave trtule; but mark how slmli. nusly tho washing and drying of this dirty linen is concealed from the public eye. So l"fty, sensitive and sublime w as the senso of liberty with our revolutionary fathers in their construction of a constitution for a free people, that they would not permit the word slavery, nor elavo or slaves, to bo used even in their concessions to slavery. Now, maik tho contract between tho gi ants who framed the constitution and out shameless secession pigmy politicians of the present day. A few miseiablo fanatics of the North first undertook the indecent ex posure of this domestic and dirty linen of Southern slavery to tho world. The South became indignant; but the South became imprudent. Not satisfied with decently re sisting the indecent interference of North ern fanatics in iheir domestic affairs, reck less Southern demagogue and fire-eaters forthwith began to hang out their dirty lin en on every public highway, nnd to bring up their heavy washings t Washington. l!ut now they hnve gone beyond all bounds of moderation and decency, an. I our North ern Slates are filled with Southern mision aries, in the character of big he nigger wash erwomen, shaking and flaunting their dir ty linen in our faces from Maiiio to Cali fornia. Mr. Cobb and Mr. Benjamin tried it in Maine on a large scale ; but the disgust of that people at such conduct wa very strongly expressed in their late election. And yet, as if this warning anJ the inde cent exhibition of their dirty nigger linen don South, by uch fierce washerwomen as Gov. Wise, Mr. Ke itt. nnd Bully Brooks were not enough we have New York and Pennsylvania full of the came general prominent among these nipger linen ih- er 'mien ; mi J in Nw Yoik, Gov. FioyJ anJ Sm.itrr llunirr are ju.t a busy m ll.rr.lUM.inj ilisiiuiull unlet we help lo Irct U'ichanan, and thu iccure, by fair iik n or by foul, new slave Statu, new territories for nig.'er, now markets for nigger, and higher price for iiigyen, up to an increase from one lo five thousand dol lar a hl for good hml.by fo ld nigg'-ri, In fact, this general exhibition of tli4 n'g '."r 1 Its 11 of the S-iutb by Southern d. mo- ciatic Wiiihtrwoiiien, big and little, up hr0 lu the North, shock every 'nso of pieipiirtf and decency, and hu Income little better than a public uuinc-. Meantime this I'h-rce admimtrntio!i, gui il.d lr the ferot-iout and brutal disunion cmin.el of mtli publiu disturber a At chi.on and Jell'. Davi. ha been washing their dirty nL"'er linen in tho blooJ of free white men, women and children in Ivan.a. and thu 'eeped and dyed in hu man gore, La been exposing it to the four w ind of heaven. From Kansas, the some revolting terroiim ha spread itc-lf like a frightful epidemic all over the South, until, fierce ond bloody a the brutal itreet wo men of Paris in the first Frcta.il revolution these ui2cr linen washerwomen of the South tramj la all law and nil sucinl do cenc-ie under foot. And what aro the result I We have had a foretaste of them fiom the Iowa, Vermont, and Maine elections ; and on the 14'h of thi month, October, tho accu mulated pressure cf thi popular reaction will give, in Fremont majorities of from twenty to fifty thousand, tho solution for Pennsylvania, Ohio ond Indiana, The re sult in November will boa revolution of un paralleled majesty and power, ond it will inaugurate a new epoch of pence, law, or der nnd constitutional and fraternal reci prccitic between all section of the Union. Wo hliull then see what fools nnd ninnies, what senseless tleclaiinersnnd ranters these Southern and Northern secession traitor are. Tho question now is, not shall the nigger be liberated, but shall white men be mado slaves I To submit to thi Southern democratic terrorism i to submit to the condition of slaves and nig?ers. Wc must olect Fremont uphold the sovereignty of tho people make good the rights of white men under the constitution, not only in the United States Senate, not only in Kansas, but throughout the South, including the Congressional district of Mr. Brooks, oT South Carolina, nnd tho city of Richmond, under '.he very noso of Governor Wise. Finally, with the new e poch of the con stitution, nnd of whilo men's rights, a new era of good feeling w ill come to lis, in which all sorts of our dirty Northern linen, as well ns tho dirty niggi.r linen rf the South, will be washed uinhjlried at borne. Iho day break nnd the are Lr'ght. SlKH-rli of Gov. Hamlin. At a Republican meeting in Lancaster, Penn., Oct. 1, the new Governor of Maine addressed fifteen or twenty thousand of Buchanan's neighbors. Hero follows his spcccli : The President after a few remarks, intro duced Gov. Hamlin, of Maine, who was re ceived with all kind of cries nnd demon stration. Tho lioiso having somewhat subsided, ho su id I have come- to hold converse with you in the heart, the center of tho line. Looking nn this immeiiso con course ol'citizens and moved by tho enthu siasm moving you, I shall bo ablo to return 10 my own Slate, und say lo my friends in the East, the glorious old Keysiotio Stute is right. Thu citizens of thisold dominion aro not unmindful of tho obligations rest; ing upon them. Yo'ir soil is fruitful with the blood of freemen, nnd if the liberties of thi country w ere secured at tha price of so much toil and blood, it belongs lo us to so. cure this conquest gained for us by the saerilicoof the lives and fortunes of our fathers, and hand them down intact to our children. The skillful mariner on the trackless ocean watches the changes in iho sky, notes tho accumulating clouds, and should iho winds oflleaven drive him from his track, he knows the piinciples by which ho may riilo through tho tempest nnd eventually regain tin course. Wo mny learn lessons of wisdom from tlm mariner J we may sea where the ship of State is tend ing ; nolo who mans her, and divina where sho is going. There is but one question for us to determine ; old axioms are dead, and now have no practical bearing. You mijrht as well dii; up tho remains of an an-tc-diluvinn era, unroll the mummy from its snrncophagus, as to talk of tariffs, banks, or the distribution of money from the pub lic lands. These issues aro nil passed away, and another and more vital one lias placed them forever among the things that were. ' Tho question of freedom otisht never to have been discussed, and would not have been, but that a party falsely called demo crat, has sold lo slavery the free labor of tho North, and we have no other alternative than either to meet the issue or become slaves ourselves. Tho South learned thai there was a party of men in the North who could bo made subservient to its purposes, and if that Northern subserviency had not existed we should not now have been en gaged in the present struggle. It has now become tho one absorbing issue w hether the institutions of our country, based alone on liberty, shall be subverted and hence forward and forever based ouly on slavery. Tho Declaration of Independence was founded on freedom, and the constitution wa based on it ; no other cevernmcnt ev er secured the right of the people and the abortng man. Kepubhc existed in Greece and Rome, but the masses were ignored, and their liberties tiver were se. cored. The founders of our constitu'ion took the experience of former republics, and on such precedents framed the onltr con stitution which has conlsiiitd the elements of republican ;,rng!h it was b:wed not on wealth, but on labor. In what consisted the capital of the Revolution I Not in wealth, nor commerce, nor manufactures. nor banks, dm store for them we Lad not but tho stalwart fain and hard arm and I and of the sou of labor gin a I It stieiiglh. Our father believed in the ,-ahli of a iimn'a 0 n muscle and labor ; and upou kiieh a capital they fa mod the m.b'esi llie fri"t eovanmcnl lliat any i.e"i! ever had. But now tho question is 1 1 1 1 .1 ' llnust uti"ll us, slum ca iiim own inn iru- Uborof the North, n it now own the lave laborj.f lh Soil ill I (Crie of "No. no. ) When I look tt'OiiiU 011 nn vasi assemblage, und see thu flashing i-ye, llie determined h)k, the evidence of labor; wlu-n I survey thi beautiful country through which I h ive juived the fruitful well cultivated fields, the calll't and the fl.it !;, tho many miling farms, the home of a contented and linpcy pcpbi scutlcrei ami 1st thi lull nnd lilii'le I feel warini'i by jour prosperity, and ny to my friend 111 the col'l ami rocky r.ust, I'ciinnuauia it siifo for freedom and labor, I wa onco a deniccrai when there was a democratic party; but now when it bow it head to slavery, I will none of it. Tho party has no ri"hl to loneer u-o ilia 11 a mo ; but my friends, when nothing remain of it but the name, let us bu n liltle generous, and not take away that also. I rejoice to find that the crrat body of Henry Clnr whig nie with us hero. Somo of the leaders have proved filso to hi memory, mid are now leagued with hie political enemies, and do- cl.irin'' for the mun who maligned him fo hi death.' My persohul recollection of I I'-nry Clay do not extend fur back. When I first saw It 1111 it was in the N-nato at Washington. I lo w-as not the I lenry Clay he once had been ; hi strength was im paired, hi tones had lost much of their for lor; but when ho rose in hi scat und de clared ihut never would h-j consent In tho extension of slavery over 0110 foot of terri tory now free, tho great orator warmed up, Ins lirii'lit eye lluslieil, and ho wn again the man formed to lead so great a Senate and so noble n people. But now some of In old political frieii'l nre proving lu!e to l.i great principles, and are joining them s!ves with lis worst enemies. A Voire Give 11s a liitle'if Maine. Why you had a little bit of Maine on tho 6lh of September. (Laughter.) Ournppo-iii-iits swear that the election was not a lo gal one, foronly one parly voted. (Cheers.) I gues they ure about riht, for there was scarcely anything of them left. How did we doit ? I'll el you how we did it. We beat them by Maine hard work. We or ganized, we had coimuiltee in every dis trictCongressional, Legislative, all thu way down lo school districts; uud wo or ganized every voter, and wo knew just how tho folks w ere going. That's bow wu did it; uud if you will h-arethis meeting, mid all of you become missionaries, and get to work in right earnest as wu did, IVun-yl-vania will bejusit like Maine. To protect freemen, not to make slaves, was the object of our fathers in estabiishinx this imvcrn- ment. "The protection, not of life, nor of liberty, but the pursuit oj nigirer, is hovv tho ilemocralic doctrine. If Washington nnd Jefferson wero to rise from theirgraves and appear again amongst us, they would not find the government us ihey established it. Did you ever hear of that man w ho got usleep in his wagon along tho public r :ul 1 ell, Ins liorso was stopped uud taken out of i!ie shafis, nnd the man was le.fl sleeping on in the vva;on ; but at last ho woku it), and ho couldn't make out whether h had lost a bora or found 11 wagon. If Washington and Thns. Jeffer son were to see thu present democratic party they would havo to own they had ei iher lost themselves or found it new parly.' iow wo propose not to meddle with tho in- slilutioti of slavery whera it exists, but we want to bring bacK this government to us first principles. If Washington or Jefi'er. son were now. to appear and enunciate such principles ns thev gloried in (lurina lite ihey would bo branded ns "uboliiiomsls," and I tell you ihut neither of them could possibly obtain the smallest, leust impor tant I'cst-oltice 111 the whole Slate of Ponn sylvnnia. See the effects of liberty in the great West, her teeming cities, her marts ot commerce, her well cultivated field her never ending bands of railroads, her lakes crowded with sails, htr immense prosperity ;' look and admire all this nnd tell 1110 w hether you do not desire such a result for your Territories'. Tho udminis trillion goes lo woik to repeal tha Missou ri Compromise. YVhv To extend sla very. But wo are told slavery cannot go into these Territories. Then whv say it (Cheers.) Tho South has tho reputaiion of being given to tlio study of politics, they aro viewed as a species of impractical theorists, ns political abstractionists : but I will tell you, I never knew the South to go in lor a practical question without obtain ing a practical result in fuvor of ihem- sclves. INorthern men told us nt the tiino of the repeal of the Compromise that it would not affect freedom ; but they said lliis merely to screen themselves. Gov ernments wero instituted to protrct the laborer, but tho South claims labor as property. TT;e South has a right to carry inlo the Territories all its property that is such by tho law of nations, but not that which is property only by local law ; for when that property gets beyond the juris diction of local law, it is no longer prop erty. , Let us once succeed in that for which w e are striving, and we shall have four times as many sympathisers with us South, as there will bo sympathisers with them in fho North. Tlie idea in the slave Slates now is, that any man who can't (wallow a nigger whole is nn abolitionist, and I tell you there are a good many such in the South. The New York Day Book lately advised the slaveholders no longer to read the New York Herald, for it had become hostile to them and turned abolitionist ! But the South Carolina Time replies that the South will continue to take the Her ald, for that there are many in heir midst w ho are so false to Southern principles that they are glad to read tucb opinion as ihey find there. I tell you there are six mill-i-n of non-slaveho: Jing white men in the South, and thev are all sympathizers with us. The chief objection "ihey have down there to Col. Fremont is becnuse they know he will do exactly the same with the nulli fies as Old Hickory promised lo do, and present democracy is nolhin" but the old nullification story. If the'y desire to try this question after Fremont' election I tell you and them, we will iry thi question constitutionally, we'll see who are the dis- tinionist, and whether th minority is to rule the majority. We will peril our lives to protect the government. (Immense applause.) I u imiihing yeuer lay in Phil,id,.. phi paper which i novel in thi campaign. An advertisement announced that K,.iintnr' Bigler would addres the friend of "Huc hoi.in, Breckinridge und free Kansas." r llioiilil if I could only meet my friend Bij-liir I would nk him to talk to me of ' viituou prostitution, or any other uCa likely subject. Free Kan nnd Huchaa.' an! (Laughter.) When Mavery got jn. to any Tcrri ory, w hite labor must go out for the two cannot exist together, unles while lubor consents lo be degraded, The lion. Anson Burlingame arrived at lh' moment, and the meeting 'wu for utn lime 100 excited for Gov. Hamlin to comin. ' up. Sih tice being nt length restored, he aid : Col. Fremont is one of yoursclvc he has woiked himself up by hi own ex! ertioii', he ha labored with hi own hands he is worthy of Iho upport of tho laboring man. (Chu-rs.) ho your elutjr hi lliincnm. puign, nnd may God nnd the right assist you in tho preservation of liberty and in. dependence, nnd may PeiiiiHylvunla join with 11 in the far Fist in declaring that Jessie's choice is our choice. Governor Hamlin retired amidst long, continued cheer for Maine nnd Fremont. Tho lion. Thaddou Stephens stepped for ward lo apologise for Mr. Wihnot'i ah. sence, and the audience would not bo satis fied unl. -ss ho addressed them. Mr. Sic. pheiis said : When olJ men altempt to address you it must bo in quiet tones. I rely upon the yeomanry of this Stute to ensure a tri umph in thi contest. Many times have I met you, fellow citizen, but the present crisis i more terrible than any since the Revolution. The very existence of your' republic i nt atake. Many regard this contest a one of several merely, bat it it the ono final ; nnd if the oountics turn not nut en masse, we shall be beaten by the cit ies. The cry of "The Union is iu danger" is the argument of fools to an audience of idiots. Douglas, that Northern truitor, was born on free soil, but he married tit daughter of a slave dealer, and iiiheriieef, hi father-in-law's principles and nigger.. Mr. Stephens then reviewed the late pro., ceedings in Kansas, and stated that the great danger to the liberties of this country seemed lu arise from the Judiciary, and thut in Pennsylvania wo have already seen it sold to the shivo power. We have three candidates and three platforms in the field. . One platform I would, liko much butter if llm twelfth plank had not been brought from South Carolina and put into it. There is a wrong impression about ono of the catididales. . There is uo such person run tiiii!! us James Buchanan. He is dead of lockjaw. Nothing remains but n platform and a bloated muss of political putridity. But we have n candidate who depend for success upon you and this State ; and out of the various principles now at slake, yon have to choose under which banner you will light. The ..Dubious, Hllppvry, Trimming Do- mocrucy.n The Tribune quotes from the Carolina. Times, showing that the Gre eaters in South Carolina are mightily out of humor with their Northern tools for doing no bcAter at the Maine e loction. The Times savs ; 'The contcft was chiefly between tha Pdaek Republic-mis, and what little regard there may bo lor the Constitution, nnd tho rights of tho South in the dubious, slippery Irimmii)!!, squatter -sovereignly, Kansas. Nebraska Democracy of the North." Northern doughface democrats will . plc-oso to lake off their hats, make a low bow, lift up one foot and say, "Thank 'so Massa." - "- . rmldcullal Election. For tho benefit of thoso who nro of ther opinion that the Presidential election still comes ofToti the first Monday of Novem. bcr, wo havo thought it best to slate that the act of Congress, of January 23, 1S45, provides that The electors of President nr.d Vic President shall be appointed in each State on the Tuesday ne.xta.1er the first Monday in the month of Novem ber in llie year ill which Ihey re to be nppointed : Provided that each State may by Inw provide for tho filling of any v.-icuiicy or vueaneies which may occur inits coilejo of ek-etora when inch col leje meets lo give iln electoral vote : And provi ded also, when any Stute shall have held an election fur the purpose of chousing elector and shall fail lo mi'kc a choice on llie day aforesaid, then the elec tors may be appointed on a subsequent day iu such manner us the State s'ja'l by law provide. An Appropriate Vole. On the trn'n of cars which conveyed Senator Douglas to Galena a vote, as usual iiow-a-days, was tiiken. The canvassers did not know Duugl.i, and when they came to him, while going through the cars, the following conversation took place: Casvafses Who do you voto for, sir Biichn- . an or Fremont ? Dicgla (angrily looking up from the perusal of the Chicago Times) Voto for lh Devil ! ' The result of the cunvus was as follow : Fremont, 117 liuchnnan, . 15 Fillmore, 17 ' The Devil, 1 Douglas it seems yet "honors his father," although we doubt not the "old gentleman" would have felt himself as highly compli mented if Douglas had voted for Jeems Buchanan. i STRuchanan wrote a strong letter to the Californians in favor of the Pacific ' Railroud, which we shall publish aext week. '''. t" Th Hon. Mr. Foster, M. C.from Georgi. closed one of hi latest p-.'eche in Congress by the following !ap at the conduct of the Southern democracy, of which he is member : The tune has changrd. We hear n mere of old federal, blue licht. abolition whiffs." And, in fact, I liava nut heard much laU-lv of "dark lantern." But now it ta " gallant old whig party." " glorioutold whig party,"" pitriolio Americans." and the cry has become almost Macedonian, Come over and help us !" - Help ! help ! every body run here !" Why, what on earth i the mutter? Is there any f.reiiin nerov o oof hares? Hare Indian brute outf "No. no, worse than that ; ihere is mutiny in the Demo cratic camp. Com and help us manage ear Ir.eods. or the country ia lost.'' C5T The New Orlean Delta learn that Red K.u r bis dimmed op lie own mouth, and make its way the (julf ihronirh Atc.sfalra Bjvon. Tiere a no doubt that lim wa the former eoureo of the ttn am, and at one lime h ns-ver toocoed lu i.'Ss-eeppi, bot porsoed lore mn which H no now mimed, emptying into the Gulf far t the west of the M.sr;j.pi. Tb Red Itir n l-w. nd it remain la be seen wht rhr wkn fail, it ill oat reop. tiie twilet t the ilmarpr.