A Family Paper, devoted to Scale Intelligence, the News of the World, Political Information, Southern Rights, Agriculture, Literature, and Miscellany. JOHrf J. PAi MEiUM CHARLOTTE, MECKLENBURG COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA. i $2 PEK ANNUM In Advance. EOITOR AND PROPRIETOR. VOLUME 5. NUMBER 4. Office on Main Street ONE DOOR SOUTH OF SA)LR'S HOTEL. TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1856. OF THE 5 f c r n (D o m octat TER '.-da OF THU P AP-bR : (Tiuo Dollars a pear, in Stobanre. ---'V I I . S " i vine recently visited New York, and se lected mm the oH mm elegant Fo jndrv of Geo. Bruce, Esq., A QUAirnTT OF im anil asljionirblf GJqpr, ; We are now prepared to Execute .lx. tlio Scisi Stylo, A I. KlNiiS OF 35) m tmJMmtHp'W .Tireins, untl you mitllipttj I he MZesults,,f I one of the established maxims of business- OBDEUS FOR i'AMPHLETS, HANDBILLS, u:s, i RCUUUKS, CLERKS' BLANKS SI IE KIEFS do. CONSTABLES' do. MAG ISTRATES'do. ATTORNEYS' do. cm fob .1:7 1 Dvaam3st3) &v tresis KcQoired by tho business Community, WILL UE F.Xi: CTO) WITH tt:e3 rj? rsr jeli s t 1 i .s r t c ii ANI 1 "! r vi -v n "i ? i I JT i V , i Various IxLiiids of 3 ALWAYS ON HAND. (Dr tartrate! to rtor.GJD 1IRS. T2. .F. Af, ' i - e d'o:i below Trotter Carriage Manufactory 22, IS.V.J. fy MRS. IIHEALA Dross MaKer, A I L DRE JSi;s cut n:.d v the c t 'orali-a ni ihod, .ud war t:t. ro&u-d to BOiVXETS Ti n d in tun latest style, at h,..i .t ne.t'ce. 1 irl. f, b ), 1856. tf FlSBiaXABLE TAILORING. THE sulicribi:r aniHiQncer to tfce puMie renerally, tli.il le mnw rer.-iving a large aasort men' of new Cloths. Cassioieres . fr Gout ieinen's wear, and wil' he Bold iwi Cash .il a IM ill proht,'r maoS toor iei icon. ii ir to 1 1 hitist styles. Shop Mil or t- F.iin 'Grocery St re. pt. tO, I S5 I 0- f n. r,. rea. fry .i ji n ri i.x n AND JEWELUY. fWI HOM AS TROTTER A S V h . just re- (10 J s QBG c-h-ed .and wii! ' . a- larlj r.-c iviugjaaViiH nj ibeteto) a abnice stock of haadiwine auJ bsbMuabhi WATCHES froai thMij')St el brated uiak- rs. Also, a rich assort-nx-Qt of iiNhinabfe Jewelry, Chains, &c. All of which will b- sold low for cash, or oa short -iin- to puuctiial i ah r. THOMAS TEOTTF.B t SON. Caarlotte, June 10, ldoo tf T' BRlS leav to inform his iriend and the public geneially, that h is sti I carrying on the ' a ' r i a k e M iUIh,' II i' nets in a'l i's various braiiehea wi h all the increased facilities af lonl d by mo4lern improvement, "e oa- now on and a lars niimhr of BQGGI V. t i 'A -K1AUES, ROCK A AYS, fcc, ma.le on "tbe most approved stya out of th bt material, to which he asks the inspection of purchaser. His establishments is ot: College and Dej ' t trects, where ls will be glad to ee his friends. JOHN m RT1T Charlotte, Joly 28, 1835. AS f I Si.DDXjj and IIX2L013S i 3 DOORS SOUTH OF THE MANSION HOUSE, Charlotte. S. M, HOWELL HAVING made more extensive preparations for the Manufacture of SADDLES and HARNESS, He would respectfully inform the citizens of North Carolina, that he is now prepared to fur fhrnish 4 ft l I14RiS of superior quality, of his own manufacture, at the Very Lowest Possible Prices. "W vrxtlxxs Saddles By leaving- their orders, can be furnished as low I as they can procure the same at the North. . April J.'j, 1856 tf S. H, HOWELL. EKCOUBAGE TBIS KN0i ItlXG. rjJllIE undersigned heps have fiL to return his thanks to those : who f.ivored hii'i with a call dur j iu the last year ; and h.; would rssp -ct uily inform the public tha I he has it-moved to the Machine I Simp formerly occupied by Messrs. George & h'snant, adjoining Mr. J. tEOUtsiil s Strain Planing Mills, where he is prepan d to execute all woik in his line as cheap and as good as can b done in the Btn . Turning. ItUting; Screws, Uepair i:u Boilers and Engines of ail descriptions, Making and Ke nairinii; Mill Spindles, Wood Plainer, Making Ploughs, lion- ,,r i ll o i ing W aons; and in I lorse-bhoe- itn- Rr.o wo will violil tn no nn ' ' tor neatness, wear, ami Ulftpaun. Jiuep- feriirg Shors $1 J.", common ditto $1 , cast-; t 1 1 T ste,- toes, or steel plate, I have also erected an Air Eumnce for mend ing Brass, which answvti finely. The public can now get brrs and composition eastings by call ng at the above establishment, and furnishing patterns. Old I trass melted overa! a reduced price, with DeatB ss and d upatch. Oid Copper and Brass wanted. S J. PERKY. nfc4H. Jan. 1. 186?. tf ROREKT MIAW rWl AKES this opportunity of informing the j JL public generally, and all who intend going j to Kansas m particular, that he mt nds to con tinue the Saddle and Harness Buiiuss, At his old stand, in Springs' Corner Building, where he iut -uds to keep constantly on hand a supply of Saddles, Bridles, ISames, )" Every Description. His friends are respectfully invited to call and supply th mselves. as every article in his line will be afforded on the most reasonable terms. EtC I V I It I Ci done at the shortest notice and with neatness and dispatch. Charlotte, Feb. Uii, ls&b tf TO THE PI BL.IC. HAVE JUST RECEIVED and opened the largest anl ml v;iri d Mock ot Drugs, Medicines, tin lu teals, Paints, Oils, Wil de Glass, Putty, Dyc " tuffs, Perluniery, Toilet I -tides, &c. AcatEVEit offer- i ED IN THIS MARKET. All of whicli will be sM at extremely short ! profits, for cash. I drftj c MPEriTiox .'mil if you want articles in my line, call, yu shall be satisfied, both with rcg;iri o price an1 quality. i;es,, et(nllv, tc. n. w. ri; i rni ni), m. ,d. If'holtsale Sf Retail Drusgist, (Granite How, No 3. Charlotte, May ti, 1854V tf BOOKS For Salo AT TIIR CHARLOTTE BOOK STORE. fPHE NEW rCRCIIASE.or Early Ylars J- is THE Far West By Robert Carlton. THE ADVENTURES OF IIAJ.II BABA in Turkey, Persia, and Russia Edited by James .lf.'.-icr. STANHOPE BURLEIGH, The Jesuitrs in our HsMca, One of the mast interesting Novels that has been written in inanv years by Dhu. THE MUSEUM of E mmkable and Interest ing Events, containing Historical Adventures aud lucid -nts. BLANCHE DEAKWOODa Tale of Modern Li. EVENING TALES being a selection of i wond -rful and sun --rnatural Stories, translated troin the Clntifse. I urkish. and tiennan, ano eompiied by Umry St. Clair LEXICON OF FREE MASONRY. Containincr a definition of all its communicable terms. The True Masonic Chart, bv J. L. Cross. G. L The Free-Mason's Manual, "by Rev'nd K. J. Stewart. Mack-'y's Ahinan R-zon of South Carolina. The N w Mwn?c Tntsrl Board THE ODD FELLOWS' MANUAL, by the Bev. A. B. Grash. LOWRIE i ENNTSS, Charlotte, March 4, 1856 Book-Sellers. THE VOICE OF IttfllSAS. TUP finiTTFT RPQPnvn IjIUA xfiL fcUU 1J1 KLfefUiViU. Appeal of the Law and Order Party of rr . , . - . j . , Kansas territory, to their friends in the South, and to the Law-Abiding People of the Union. , Col. Biford, one of the Committee, furnish- ed the Editor of D. Bow's Review, the following document containing an interesting review of Kansas Affair, and an Anneal to the South in favor of that abolition-ridden country. , r k The undersigned, at a recent meeting of the party, were constituted a committee, charged, among other things, with the pub lication of this address. That a state of insurrection and civil war exifts among us is abundantly evident: the "law and order puny" on the one side, op posed on the other by the abolitionists, pent ut and sustained by the Emigrant Aid S e'eiies of the North. A Inief review of the points at issue, and their controlling circumstances, may be useful to justify this our appeal for aid. In territorial politics, the question of free or slave State has swallowed up every other. The abolitionists on the other hand, in ac cordence with their early teaching, regard slavery as the greatest po-sible evils; they deem it a monstrous national crime, which their false theories of government impute equally to every portion of the confederacy, and thus believing themselves individually responsible for its existence, they feel bound each to struggle for its overthrow ; to such extremes have wicked demagogues stimula ted tl eir fanaticism, thattheir prevertcd consciences justify any mode of warfare a g in-t slaveholders, however much in vio lation of law, however destructive of pro perty or human life, and however atrocious ly w;cked it may seem toothers; nay, many of them already go so far as to oppose all law, religion, property, order, andubor dination among men, as subversive of what they nre pleased to call man's natural and inherent equality. And with them it is no mere local question of whether slavery shall I fxi in Kansas or not, but one offer wider s trnificanee a question of whether it shall nft anywl !(.rr t,,e Union. Kansas they instlv regard as the mere outpost in the k t . A . war now being waged between the antago nistic civilizations of the North and ine South ; and winning this great outpost and stand-point, they riehtlv think their march will be open to anv easy conquest of the whole field. Hence the extraordinary means the abolition party has adopted to flood Kansas with tho most fanatical and lawless portion of Northern society ; and hence the larcre sum of mnnv tlu v have expended to s r ound t' eir brother Missonrians with ob noxious and dangerous noghbors. On the other hand, the pro slavery ele ment of the "law and order party" in Kan-pa-:, looking to the Bible, find slavery or dained of God; tlipy find thorp, as by our j law. a'averv made -an inheritance to thorn ! and their children forever." Looking to I our national census, and to all statistics j connected with rho African race, and eon I ri Vring. ton, their physical, intellectual, and moral natures, we see that slavery is tho African's normal and proper state; ! since, in that state, that race multiplies fn-ter. has more physical comfort. Ipss vice, and mere moral and intellectual progress j than in anv other. Wo believe slavery the only school in which the debased son of Ham. by attrition with a higher race, can bo refined and ele vated : we beliovp it a trust and guardian ship given us of God for the good of both races. Without susrar. cotton and cheap clothing, can civilization maintain its pro gress? Can these be supplied without slave ry ? Nav, in the absence of slavery insti tutions, mnt not social distinctions snper rene among the free to the detriment of re publican equality ? This is no' more pro pertv question, hut a groat social and polit ical question of races : it i not a question of whether A. or B. shall be owner, but of whether the slave, still having a master, shall still bp a working boo. and not an idle dronp in the l ive ; n qtipstion of whether the South shall still ho a land flowing with milk and honey, or a land of mendicants and vag abonds: a great question of races: a qne- tion whether we shall sink to the level ot I the freed African, and take him to the em- brace of social and political equality and j fraternity for such is the natural end of abolition progress. Fanaticism musf do j fend its beneficiaries first, by sending the y by federal armv to protect them, and nltimnte- givingthem tho ri;ht to hear arms. vote, testify, make and administer laws in short, the right to oat out our substance, to pull us down to their level, to taint our Idood. and bring us to a degradation from which no time can redeem us. Thus radi cal and marked the difference in theory be tween the two parties, and not loss so their difference in prncttce ; while tn good faith, sustain and uphold tho laws, the aboli tionists on the qther hand, in effect, repu diate and set them at defiance ; with dislovnltv they assert tho invalidity of the territorial laws, while they render our na tional insignia only the mockery of a hol low respect ; indeed, more than once, they have openly resisted the marshal in the ser vice of process, and. in some places, their organised armed resistance to the territorial laws is sr. overwhelming that ministers of the law there never atttenipr, the discharge of their official duties; they have repudiat ed payment of taxes, and have held and pub lished the proceedings of large public meet ings in which they resolved to resist, even to blood, the territorial laws ; and expecial v the laws for the collection of the public revenue. According to testimony under oath late ly given before the Congressional Commit tee, they have secret military organizations for resisting the laws aud for carrying out their abolition designs upon Kansas orga nizations. n which the members are bound by the most solemn oaths to obey their lead ers, in all cases, not excepting evn murder and treason. It is abundantly proved by cye-witnevscs of unquestionable veracitv, that at this present time, they have at dif-. ferent points in the territories banded to gether in actual encampment lnrge num bers of armed men, subsisted and kept to gether by their aid societies for no other object than to make foray upon the coun try and drive onr friends fiom their homes. By such banditti the murders near Ossa wattamie, on Pottawattamie creek, were committed, declarations by the perpetra tors contemporaneous with- their foul deeds (indubitably show the parentage of these 'crimes; six victims, whose bodies have been found, fell in that massacre, besides fur others missing from the neighborhood and not-vet heard from. Of the six, one wu AUen Wilkinon. E,q., a member of the Territorial Legislature and postmaster at Shcrmauville ; sick with the measles, for no other offence save that of being a law mid ordt.r man hp wns dragged at midnight frm his bed. and from the side of a sick and imploring wife, by a band -f abolition ns- sassins, actinir, as they said, in the name - . of the preat Northern armv ; within hear- ing of the terror stricken wife, with fiendish barbarity, he was flayed alive, his nose and ears were cut off, his sealf torn from his head, and then he was stabbed through the bfjirf- Sn'li in tha iivnm iriaiBM his wi- dow lately tendered in Westport before the Congressional Investigating Committee. It revealed m the part of their friends such a picture v( savage ferocity that that Com mittee r once blushed, and even stultified themselves, rather than receive the testi mony as competent. They had already re ceived and recorded the evidence of Par dee Butler, testifying that since their ap pointment as Commissioners he had been tarred and feathered for negro stealing but this decision they unblushingly revers ed, and erased the evidence rather than be forced to put against their friends this hor rible tale of the Ossawattamie murder up on the record. Besides Wilkinson, Win. Sherman and brother, and Mr. Doyle and two sons, were proved to have been mur dered at their respective homes on the same night and by the same hand ; one of the Doyles' had also his fingers and arms chop ped off before he was finally dispatched. Incredible us these things may seem, they unquestionably happened in Kansas Terri tory in the latter part of last month ; yet what is more incredible, but not less true, is the undeniable fact that these outrages are not. as some pretend, the mere extra vagances of a few irresponsible individuals, but on the contrary arc justly chargeable to the abolition party, as the legitimate fruit of their party measures and party dis cipline, and as naturally resulting from the public teachings, advice and counsel of their chief men and most distinguished leaders. The outrages above specified were pre ceded, and up to the present time, have been followed by others of a like character and j dictated by a like settled policy on the part ot our enemies to bttrrass and frighten, by their deeds of horror, our friends from their homes in the Territory. Undoubtedly this policy (a well settled party system) has die tated the notices lately given in all the dis turbed districts by armed marauding hands of abolitionists, to the law and order men of their respective neighborhoods, immedi ately to leave the country on peril of death. Under such notices our friends about Hick ory Point, and on Pottawattamie and Rock creeks have all been driven out of the terri tory, their stores have been robbed, their cattle driven off, their bouses burned, their horses stolen, and in some cases they have been assassinated for daring to return ; some too of these outrages have been per petrated under the very nose of the United States Troops, who all the while assert that all is pettce and quietness, and that they will afford ample protection, without the necessity of our banding together in armed bodies for mutual defVnce. Among many others of our friends thus driven away, we might specify the cases of Messrs. llar gous, Jones and Owens, of Hickory Point, whom two hundred United States troops sta tioned within two miles of their homes have been unable to inspire with a sense of secu rity. Morton Bourne, a most exemplary, quiet and unoffending man of our party, liv ing within eight miles of Leoompton, the capital of the territory, where quite a num ber of troops are stationed, was lately driv en from his home by a band of twenty-five armed men, who robbed him of all his guns, five saddles, three horses, the blankets from his bed, and over fifty dollars in money. The thieves gave him twenty-four hours to leave with his family, and threatened to kill him if he ever returned, saying, they intend ed to serve all the pro slavery men in the neighborhood in the same way. Mr. Bourne is still out of the territory, and though anxi ous about his property and desirous to re turn, yet he dares not do so, though as of ten as he applies, the troops and the gover nor assure hiin that all is quiet, and that he shall have ample protection ; but he knows that unless they remain constantly about bis house they cannot keep marauders and murderers away. This case is specified not for its peculiar enormity or hardships, but because it is a fair type of a large class of such cases, and because the undersigned have all the details from Mr. Bourne him self, and know them to be strictly true, in deed one of u- assisted his family in their flight the day after the robbery. It is but too evident the troops cannot en able our friends to maintain their ground in any part of the territory where the abolition elenitnt is in the ascendant; notwithstand ing, we as.-ure our friends that, after the mot diligent inquiry and attention to that point, we firmly believe that our party has a well established, decided and increasing majority of actu-d settlers in the territory. This majority, however, we do not believe can be maintaired unless something be done to give confidence to our friends, where they are few and weak in number. This can only be done by colonizing large settle ments together, under one common head with absolute control : let, say from one to three hundred agriculturalists, mechanics and laborers settle together in some sui table point, to be indicated by the under signed, or some other committee charged with the general interests of the party. This can be lawfully, safely and efficiently done, and by this means law and order can be maintained iu tiie territory ; and we say this, too. notwithstanding we are in posses sion of very convincing evidence to the fact, that the abolitionists of the North in tend during the coming month, t" introduce j large numbers of their hired bands to put their treasonable pretended government in to operation by force. These measures of j mutual defence and future progress, howe- , ver, require means and demand aid from our friends abroad. The colonists should be subsisted a reasonable time, and each in dividual furnished with adequate agricultu ral mechanical outfit, so there can be no ' want of settlers coming and remaining at j the points where tney are moat needed. Funds are required, and for these we call upon our Southern friends upon all having a common iatoresty nay, we call upon ail loving justice and wishing equal rights to each State and section of the Union we call on the honest free State man, who, sick of the agitation and strife brewed by the abolitionists, desires the restoration of peace and quiet to the country. These can be restored only by supplying the weaker and attacked section the means of future defence, in sectional equilibrium, or some equivalent measure. Fanatical aggression cannot be quieted by giving, but it may be by taking away the power to effect its ends. All fair minds who have looked this ques tion full in. the face, know and admit that it is not merely a question of whether Kan sas shall have become a slave State or not. but a question whether tbe South shall not become the victim of misguided philanthro py. That man or State is deceived that fondly trusts that these fanatics may stop at Kansas. To use that territory as the mere ' key to the future" the mere means of ulterior operations against the whole South is unquestionably the settled policy of the ultra abolitionists, the head and soul of the aggression, and whose opinions, in the end, mstu leaven and control the whole body the whole mass that acts with them. The most convincing proof (if proofs were needed) of this was recently given before the Congressional Investigating Committee. Judge Matb"w Walker, a -Wyandott, an unimpeachable witness, and most reliable man, testified before the committee, that before the abolitionists selected Lawrence j as their centre of operations, their leader, Gov. Kobinson, attempted to get a foothold for them in the Wyandott reserve, near the junction of the Kansas and Missouri rivers; that in his negotiations for that purpose, Robinson finding it necessary to communi cate their dans and objects, divulged to Walker (whom he then supposed a sympa thiser) that the abolitionists were determin ed on winning Kansas at any cost; that then having Missouri surrounded on three sides, they would begin their assaults on her; and as fast as one State gave way, attack another, till the whole South was abolitionised. That this revelation was ac tually made, the undersigned have not the slightest doubt; and we are equally confi dent that in that matter the abolition party was truly represented by Robinson, who has always been their chief mau and ac knowledged leader in Kansas. It is wididy reported, and generally be lieved, that the northern abolitionists are now raising large bodies of armed men, under military organization and discipline, to be surreptitiously introduced ito the territo ry for the objects of driving out the peace able inhabitants, setting the laws at defi ance, aud overwhelming the law and order party at the decisive election for a Territo riel Legislature to crane off on the first Monday in October next. It is not impos sible they may partially succeed in their aims; their labors to inflame the northern mind are so incessant, their faculty of mis representation is so extraordinary so fatal ly bent on mischief. Their papers, for in stance, show up the Ossawattamie massacre as an outrage of our own ; according to their account, "five pro-slavery men were hanging an abolitionist, when his five friends providentially came up and shot them in the act." All have heard, through the papers, of the killing of Stewart by Cosgrove. The facts were these: Stewart being in Law rence, when news reached there of an abo litionist having been just killed at Blanton's bridge, in the vicinity, started off with four others towards the California road, all swear ing they would kill the'first pro-slavery man they met. Lieutenant Cosgrove and Dr. Bratton, two quiet and worthy men of our partv, happened to be passing just as Stew art and his men reached the road. The five halted the two at the distance of only five or six paces, and to the astonishment and horror tf' the weaker party, immediately after halting them began snapping and fir ing at them. Cosgrove seeing Uratton shot through the arm. fired' and filled Stewart, and then with his wounded companion es caped under a shower of bullets. The next day a Lawrence man being taken as a spy and searched, a letter was found on his per s n to a friend iu the North, detailing Stewart's death, iu which he says, Stewart was met alone, unarmed, and without cause or excuse shot down by five border ruffians. Indeed it was proved before the Investi gating Committee that the abolition party hud travelling agents in the territory whose duty it was to gather up, exaggerate, and report for publication, rumors to the preju dice of the lnw and order party, aud with the view to excito abolitionists to come to the territory ; and the witness, Parrot, ad mitted in his examination that he. as agent, had prepared such a report, and placed it in the hands of Sherman, one of the coin mittee, since his arrival in Kansas. Sher man was then on the committee, and did not deny it. How can there be other than the most exasperated state of feeling between the two sections .' How can cival war be avoided, when honorable coi imitteemen countenance such reckless mischief! Look the future in the face like men: if standing up to our rights, to our responsibilities, and to our trust, brings peace and security, so much the better; no other course can effect it. Send us emigrants and send us means. We must have your help. Appoint agents, res ponsible, trusty sreliable men, for every State, district and neighborhood, whose sole business shall be to canvass for aid. Did we know suitable persons who would act, we would not hesitate to appoint them all over the country. Let our friends send their names, with details as to character and qualification, and we will duly accredit them. One gentleman, an Alabarnian, Al pheus Baker, Jr., Esq.. of Eufaula, Ala bama, whom we all know, who has been here, and has distinguished himself by the zeal, success, aud singular ability with which for a while he canvassed the border counties tn Missouri for aid, we take the liberty of nominating, without as-urance that he will accept. We trust that he may. Friends of the cause uiut contribute ac cording to their several gifts we must not meanly abandon our birthright, and, with out a struggle, yield to grasping monoply this fairest Eden of our common domain this land of flowing brook and fertile plain. Kansas is iudeed the garden spot of Amer ica, and in every way adapted to Southern institutions; in no other part of the Union is slave labor more productive; aud in the present imperilled state of our civilization, if we do not maintain this outpost we can not long defend the citadel. Then rally to the rescue. 1 Any communications our friends in the j South may be pleased to favor the under signed with, will reach us meet safely and certainly, if directed to us, at Westport, Missouri, funds contributed may be sent to our treasurer, A. G. Boone, Esq., direct ed to him at the same place. DAVID K. ATCHISON, WM. H. EUSSELL, JOS. C. ANDERSON, A. G. BOONE. B. F. STRING FELLOW. J. BUFORD. June 21st, ISoti. Westport, June 24, 1S56. Col. Jefferson Buford : Dear Sir : Your colleagues of the Com mittee appointed by the ' law and order" party in Kansas to direct and control their action, have unanimously resolved to re- ?piire you to proceed at once to the South or the purpose of presenting to the people of the South the vital importance of their earnest, early and efficient action to defeat the lawless purposes of the abolitionists. You can be of infinite service to our cause by laying before the people a correct exposition of the condition of the territory. With sentiments of siucere regard, we are your friends, D. R. ATCHISON, A. G. BOONE, WM. H. RUSSELL, JOS. C. ANDERSON. B. F. STRINGFELLOW. Mr. Buford is now on a tour thnaygh the Southern States, engaged in the duties as signed him by the foregoing letter. TO THE PEOPI-E OF THE SOUTH. Herewith you will find the appeal of your friends in Kansas, together with a letter ac crediting me as their agent to solicit your aid in maintaining that indispensable break water to the angry tide of Abolition. Want of time forbids my calling on many of you personally. Read that address thoughtfully ; consider that if Kansas, our natural boundary to the North-West, is lost, that then Missouri and all West of the Mississippi nay, too, all East of it, must soon follow, while, if we maint ain it, the ter ritories West of Arkansas and Texas are safe to us nay, the future is safe. Ask yourselves whether you are prepared to surrender white supremacy in the South, to debase your blood, to degrade your social and political status to the level of an infe rior race, by submitting to Abolition's man date to fraternize with it. Remember, that all who know the country know that slaves thrive and do well in Kansas, and that there and in Western Missouri their labor pays better than in any cotton State in the Union. Reflect that we have every thing to encou- ra? us in ibo ntrulcj .wo . till efwtflrui the Goverment of the Territory, our immi gration is daily increasing, while that from the North has greatly diminished. In Illi nois, as if in disgust, they have lately ap plied to electioneering purposes, tho funds they had raised for emigrants. Remember that, instead of endangering the Union, our winning Kansas makes it permanent, by enabling us to defend our rights iu it, aud by discomfiting and breaking down the agi tators. Think of the magnitude of tho questions at issue ; think or the imminence of our peril, and you will not need person al solicitation, but each one of his own vo lition will send his Contribution according to his means. Those wio cannot alone send their fifties, hundreds or thousands, can unite with fifty or an hundred others and do so. Whore there's a will, there's a way. Remit in drafts on New York, payable or end r-ed to our chairman, the Hon. D. R. Atchison rif convenient, get duplicate draft-. enclose the original or the duplicate to our treasurer, A. G. Boone, Esq., at We-tport, Missouri, and the other to our chairman at Atchison, Kansas Territory. Take the Postmaster's receipt and then you have three guaranties that your contri bution will not miscarry. Be assured it will not be misapplied; our treasurer and chaiiinarn are both gentlemen of wealth, as well as of the highest character. And it is better to send in this way than by the hands of a collecting agent, for then both his authority and his responsibility become questions of indifference. If the contributions justify it, I propose to take out one hundred emigrants to form the central colony alluded to in the address. I want only men who. as long as required, will abstaiu from liquor aud will implicitly obey orders. To such a company, if the funds are raised. I will give oue town site of three hundred acres, with the privilege of getting pre-emptions, aud I will trans port them to Kansas aud find them provis ions until the middle of April next. The town site is central to one of the best coun ties iu the territory, and will most probably become its couuty seat. J. BUFORD. Richmovd, (Va.) July 24. 156. SENATOR PRATT. Tbe Hon. Thomas G. Pratt has issued, through tho columns of the National Intel ligencer, aa able and eloquent address to the Whigs of Maryland, urging them to cast their suffrages for Buchanan and Breckinridge. It is a powerful appeal, and coming as it d es from the most distinguish ed Wuig of Maryland, must exercise im mense influence in determining the posi tion of his political friends in that State. We have room only for the concluding part of the address : ' It is clear, then, that to tbe South alone can the. friends of Messrs. Fillmore and Donelson look for the probable chance of an electoral vote ; and it is to the States of Maryland, Tennessee, Kentucky and Mis souri that they profess to look with tbe greatest hope of success. It is manifest that if this hope were realized, it might in deed prevent the election of Buchanan aud Breckinridge by the people, but it would only throw the eieotiou of President into tbe present House of ilpresentat 'txe. com posed as that House now is. Does not tbe election of this same House, after a contest of two month of a Black Republican Speaker, admonish us of the danger of och an experiment ? Who can doubt that our political fabric would bo shaken to its very foundations by this election of President being thrown into the present House of Re presentatives ? Ou the other hand, is it not certain, beyond the contingency of a doubt, that the vote of the States indicated for Mr. Buchanan, when added to that of the other Southern States, would secure his election and the consequent safety of tho Uuion ? It is obvious that iu this condition of the canvaas the only serious contest is that be tween Fremont and Buchanan ; that the ouly possible result that the most sanguine of the friends of Fillmore and Donelson can hope to obtain is to carry the contest into the House of Representatives. Who can conceive any thing more fatal to the peace of the country, more insane in political ac tion, than such a course of conduct lead ing to such a result! Suppose Mr. Fill more to reach the House of Representatives with tho votes of four or five States, (his utmost possible strength) no man can seri ously contend that he wo, ill b dected President, and assuredly few will we bold enough to assert that, under such circum stances, he ought to be. The only effect, then, of giving the electoral vote of any portion of the South to Mr. Fillmore would be to transfer the contest between Mr. Bu chanan and Fremont from the hunting- to the Boose f Representatives ; and the dan ger to our country, now sufficiently mena cing, would, iu that event, be appalling in deed. Who can contemplate the occur rence of such a contingency without feeling that he would be a traitor to his country if he failed to exert every possible effort to avert so awful a calamity ? I deem it, then, to be my duty, as well as that of all who believe with me, that the election of Fremont would bo the death knell of the Union, to unite in tho support of Messrs. Buchanan and Breckinridge ; and I will sustuin their election to the best of my ability. Whilst I concede that thero are certain principles hitherto professed by the party which nominated them that can not receive our support, yet to the great is sues of the constitutional rights of the South the platform on which they stund meets my cordial approval, aud is in accordance with that of the party which I now address, and io i.o.-o kind favor I owe the honor of holding the seat I now occupjv and which I shall cease to hold on the 4th of March next by the fiat of that party to whicli Mr. Fillmore has attached himself, and which is now dominant in the Legislature of my native State. " Let Maryland Whigs remember that the political battle now being fought is one of the deepest interest to them ; that the maintenance of the constitutional rights of the South is the issue tendered to the A merican people by the Democratic pur y, and (as the Whigs have no candidate) by that party alono ; that upon the issue the Republican party have staked the Union ; and iu such a battle, upon such an issue they must be true to those who aro doing buttle in our behalf. It would be indeed sad if, in such a contest, the conservative strength of tho country should not bo united ; it would bo as strange as sad if. in such n tjon test, Southern men should not be found bat tling shoulder to shoulder for the mainten ance of their own constitutional rights. " In thus accomplishing what I bedeve to be my duty, I shall be inexpressibly grati fied if I shall find myself sustained by the approval of my fellow-Whigs, who have re fused to abandon either the party or the principles in support of which we have so long and so faithfully united, and which we shall remain at perfect liberty to recognize as soon as our common efforts shall have succeeded in averting tho perils that now threaten our beloved country." THOMAS G. PRATT. LETTER OF SENATOR PEARCE. The Hon. James A. Pearce, a Senator of Maryland, has published a letter address ed to the Hon. J. R. Franklin, ofS.iow Hill, Maryland, iu response to ail inquiry from that gentleman as to what part he ineuns to take in the Doming Presidential election, and what should b done by old W.iig who have never been attached to any other par ty, and who do not desire to enter into new political connections. Mr. Pearce refers to the origin and ca reer of the American party, and while he does not object to some of their designs, he disapproves of its peculiar characteristics. He thinks, further, that tbe northern wing of the party came into it with purposes very different from the rent, adopted it as a cloak fur their schemes, and aro now mainly affil iated with the Republican party. He says : "The contest, it seems to me, lies be tween Mr. Buchanan and Mr. Fremont. Mr. Fillmore's friends indeed cluim a great reaction in his favor; but I have taken much pains to ascertain what his strength is in the free States, and so far I have uoi been able ct satisfy myself that he can car ry a single one of them. Hi wise and pa triotic c ndact while President, which re commended him so strongly to tho Whig of the South, is regarded by the majority at the North as a fatal objection to him. It is not moderation and conciliation they desire, they think, as one of their leaders said, that the time for compromise hag passed. Tbcy want, in thv President, ta