eoNCjOBi) ji congoiid nr. c. SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 43 1856. Alexander Fhtotiv EpqJ, is our authorized; irelit for the Western States, liis .address ,is I lillsboro' Montgomery co.i Illiaoie. iritililCAH TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT; M ILL&Itl) ElLTiMORE, . V'()fnivv york: For Vioc-Presideiif, J ANDREW J. DOXELSON, t ' 'OFTKNNJSSEE. ; lor the State uO Large. V jonsw CAMttEROi? of. Cumberland. , I. B. CA tMiniAEL, of Wilkes- . istDist. 2. : M. 'f th Sth " 6f.li " ticM TnoMrsox, of Bertie. li'w'Aiu .'. Wabben f Itynufort, P. ilE.tns of, New Uahovpif Mtls T. I.rrrLKJfnx of Granville. J.- .StkaVmav of Chatham. fJjK.v.J. M. Leach of Davidson. 7th 8 th ' .1 Datig ax of Amon. jJiin "1. UrMAx'of Duncom-b'e. MILLILLP.O. 'We' haW heretofore been remarkably, for?, tuuatc. in oar intercourse with 'Post Mas ters find "w(! Hope ever toretain their favor, generally.,- kit when a breach of duty is 'brought to our. notice, we feel 'bound in justice to ourself and subscribers, to expose it. We di ect the attention of our subscrr kts -vuo-Oj'('ht to. get theirpapers'at Mill Hill, to the manner in which business is fuhdtiC'tud nHWis u7o(i'f "office We do, uot kuow""ibo Lyp'ost master there, neither vlo -we- care ; it is, eifuiigh for us to kuow 'lhat bis'Lisiness grossly neglected. AVe "frequently hear complaints from-our 'sub scribers in that region About the irregular ity'of the Tiails ! Humbug!. The-mails are regula-"; but when a P. M.. throws pa pers in a promiscuous heap upon a flour Barrel in a milland ajlows -every scamp r(w ho subscribes for no paper because be .gels to rend all hja neighbors' papers free) .to carry sofF asjany as be chooses, is it any wonder pajpers arc not received regit kilyj - Such s the case at 'MiH Hill, we ,are crcdibliufbrmed ; if we are in errpr, we are really to make the amende liouora- .Cble. ; Has this official ever taken the post 'master's. o?lh ! .;' -TEN CENT ' JIMMEY- . The last, Raleigh Standard presents fits readers with a picture of this personage, and as it is entirely different both in x ,'ptession and feature, from tboi?c paraded at UiO lieads of : Northern abolition loco prints we are led to iuferjhis is the old gent's Southern likeness, gotten up on the ' same -ptiniiiple ns the Pacific Railroad . .pat t of the Ciucinnati Convention. Well, . it is a biking "pictur." and its jpost re- . narkable feature is.tlie largely developed bmnp of iPlunderaliveness in fact, this bump hai entirely outgrowu that of Secfc- 'tirnc&i, which our readers will remember j!po.puoptea so icanuuy some years ago, wUon thd evidence touchins: the inteffritr o f the Sn e of Ashland was so studiously withheld Upon tho whole we thinkbe'll i to pro side for tjie Tiext four years over live; "ancient nncoatral halls" of Wheat- liiud.. w e are requested to announ.ee that the r Splat ttrdock EusiHiers? a fan tastical military, corps, will parade in.'the town of Salisbury, on Saturday the 1 1th of October next, witb an -entire "cbaoge of progt-nn bills;' .n c. " For particulars see small. The Ei enthusiastically of .the anticipated success , of tlie, -Ameiican cause in that State. The Wetunipka Sjectator says ; : A, gentleman, a, restdent of Coosa county -.who hasj been traveling in Talledega couu iy on business in formes us that he fo'und Old! Li ne Democrats who were going to vote for FHImpre. ' MifSbathusetts -The Fillmore American have nominated for the office of Governor George. W.Gordon Esq. .lr. Cordon was f .rriierH Postmaster at Boston and m,d, r tbe adm nisttation ot (Jenaaylor, held the poi j ousiu ai iiio. ne is a man of fine titants aud iudomitable energy of cbaiacte Mr.Xawi enco, who baa at first consent ed to run had boed compelled to decline pn considetatiens of a private natuie. !" '. . k- ' : - ' l"-Adjournment of Congress. Both Houses oP Congress adjourned on' Saturday . the 30th mstl, sine die; the Miflifarj Approipr 1- ntiOn,bill having beconie" Jaw.' .':TX " j Governor Aiken of! Soath Cardriaa do" c'ines a rc-Uomination to-Corgasv TRUTH PR0It A STRANGE ! . . QUARTER Tfts Richmond Enquirer, one of tbe most uncompromising and unscrupulous of tbe "sag nicht" journajs in the South, in a late article (wliicb by the by contains much good sense,) on tbe "Effects of bunion on the.uth ? makes use ot uie ioiiowiy marks : The first Yind obvious -effect of disunion will be to diminish, almost to 'extinguish our ttade and intercourse wr.h Ihe'North and with all Western Euroj)e ;for Black republicanism and qbolitioniw art as pre valent, as rampant and 'revolutionary, in Europe as in America? f Just exactly 'wbsrwe have always con tended, andwhatHbe American Tarty has beeV-tryig to impress upon tlie people of the South. 'Cut our voice has been un heeded ; the democratic papers have, de nounced us as traitors and conspirators as persecutors an J 'as prosci ibers of good men on account of the accident of birth. They have7 defended ani honey fogfed for- j eigners, and endeavoredto prove trom KevN blutiobaty history, tbeyare as-good patri ots and as -true to the' Sou th j (if trot truer,) as natives, Mr. Clingman, in Iris-second letter, even went so far as to venture the .bald'statenient that St is fare to-.find an' m Ijishmaa whois an.- abbJilionist.'1- The Enquirer baa'-tnanaged, somehow, or Other, accidentally ox othenvise, 'CbMiit the'trutii bis time. -Wc are-glad to find 'this uoieBUjourtialopen4frg its eyes to the trut h, at Iffai. It is truly refreshing aud we trust it fa "an leatriest of hopeful reformAs tion.in Its erratic CQurse. : Jut the Enquivfr. fehtarlcsVfurtker r "We iiiust'cease td b&'cosrtioifftni'i'nii-' tative and KiepetfdeMj iifd,,becomie tiathn- ai, vriyinpt-anu tnarpcnaeni: 'lrHe, U-! Ki ng. -That isgood : American dectri ne. Whether rn ; the 'Union xr as a separate IlepabHcj-let' us cultivate "seti tinrenta 'of i n-tense;,nation-ality.4' Truly, the work goes "bravely on" when such journals' as the Enquirer gi ye in ta American tlo'ctnnes. ;" Now .if the argument of the Euquii er" is good (and ifthe doctrines are true as to a Southern Republic, they are equally true as tt the Uniou)-wlat is the- most rational' course1 for the South' to pursue ? To-vote for'jBuchanan the advocate of for eigners for-him, upon hora those arch frcesoilerstthose intense haters of the South, Martin and JhnWan Buren, Benton, Cam- brelingj Cochrane, Rynders and Prestdn King bave united ? AVe think not.' Such a course would be iuconsistent with "the Enquirer's argument contrary to. com- mou sense and suicid.al to the interests tf the-South. " ..4 . '' Will not the South awake to her inters eSts evenvhen tbe alarm is sounded by so practiced a trumpeter as the Richmond Enquirer Will not the South uniteiiip- " on Mr. Fillmore who is iu favor of making Ihe government "national, original and in- dependebt ;n and opposed, to this' Western European biack republicanism and -abc-. litionism. which, the Enquirer prouounces as " rampant and revolutionary " as the' American ?- "MivFillmore is equally -opposed to native" and European black re puClicanism .andabolitionism. He is a national man tbe ouly nation al candidate in tho field and. tlie only one who has dared, 'with the courage of an ;American Patriot, to breast-the sectional storm now raging so furiously aul rebike ' the foul fiend, of Black. Republicanism. Will the South turn its back on such a man? We hope and trust the day is far distant in the dim vista of fntnrity, w hen she will act with su:h insane'ingratituJj. In conclusion, it. is proper to remark tha the italics In the above- atracts fioaa the 'Enquirer1 are ouv own. Ol'It TABLE. '! . 'Torters SriRiT." We have recei-el the first number of 44 1'orter's Spirit of the Times, ' a new sporting journal, devoted to the Turf, Field Sports, Literature and the Stage. All the recommendation thi3 pa per reqinies is the simple aiinouncement that it is edited aud conducted by Wm.T. Toiter, Esq founder, and fyr tbe lastqoar-. tor of a, century editor, of that famous pa per tie New Yoik'Spirit of the Times. Price 3 per annum ; address Win. T. Porter, New Yoik. Tetersox, for October, is already to hand, with its usual amount of new and tasty ladies' fixings. Frank Leslie's Gazette and Journal, have l oth beenleceived for. September. The plates aud patterns in these two mag azines are worth the subscription a year. Universitt lAGAzixE.Tbis welcome visitot has been received for September, with an interesting table of conteuts. Documents. We have-received from R. M. DeWitt, 1G0 Nassau St. New York, " "uwlioicu me or rinmore I Y one.son, 32 octavo pa' witi n C T t Os.o, uo ,u lurnisn at 38 cts per dozen. 2.50 Der hundrfH sand. bend on your orders, Americans. Carouna CcLTiviToa for September-Is now on our table. York District Chronicle. We have received the first No. of this paper Edited by T.J. Eccles "iu appearand is neat and bids fair to be an interesting- "Chronicle" of the times. ' A company of one hundred and fifty emigrants from North Carolina r,. .ed through St. Iuis'for 'iCmsas last ' Fri day. , r r ' THAT RESOLTTTIOK. JL We invite attention to. an extract from tbe speech of Hon. Jere Clemen to be found in. another column of tosda's paper. This disXingoiisbctt gentleman was njf 'miany years a Democratic Senator from Alabama ; bn;h cah!notct With.the mis eiab'je sfiam deipocracy t)f ihisadirrintstta tion! vVe call attention ; particulailv t!y that portibn of bis remarks touching the Pacif c Rail T.e d. It vfil be seen tha 111 Pemofcratic papers rite playing -the same trick, which was exposed a few weeks again tbe Raleigh 'Standard by Mr.iiaf ringer. In Nc r.b Carolina and in -Alaba-ma,.wbere it i Democratic; ta oppose 'in teinal Improvement by-'tbirf fJenetSl1 Gov ernment, the Pao.ifie RSiil Road'Resbhition is 'studiously suppressed, but rin Missouri and Atkanf as, where eveVyvw'ild scheme finds eager favor, tbis sarhe "resolution ;is blazoned" forth' at, the mast bead of evtrv democratic paper 1.! I . But is it not astonishing that' whan de tected In thV'-fratid, the Sfctt(a-rfhould cooHy deny that such ; a tescilutibn zy$ passed tWe Cincinnati! Convention-! The Standard say irwas-tabled. Vn-y, then, was, it published Tsy theitbi. as bavmg passed as we are Sufarmed it vrasl 'Why was it published for Weeks Tvith he.Test of fbe t "platfotrn, .by- Deth ol-Tatid jpn pets, -in'otof pwn"St3te, less" cunnihgut' more" 'honest than tbe Standard f j We have not seen a man, who, pretends to be' conVerVatnt'ntb the-proceedtrigs -of thVO'Sfclrrrratl C6nven.' tion, but.adinits that!iiuc a fesjb'ftAioiTjvas passed, and is-astoniiicdlat anyvdotiial o" .it. . ; i : : - If'may be sa'td, as' it isrtid in extenua tion, that-tlie ;U'soTulion does not consi. tute any; parfof the! platform; but is mere- iy a sort 6f trrdependefnt, 6ff-hand, Jitepon aiuie, expression oi epimon oy me uonven .tion. We-are willing to admit this ilea of confessioJi' and avQidance.'to.wboTiisoev r ftliiayribe satisfactory, f We warit.no q.uiouies aooui qiuouies.rf' iui to oner sucl a -plea V a viy different ind a far more hoj-iesLthibg tlntn to s.iy oa'trigbl, as the Standard does, that tbejesohuion was ta bled and not passed at allL A't anv rato , .1,- j t whether it was" a mere opinion or sorhe:- tbing worse or better, it was jhe duly of the. StaAdard to infojmits readers faithful 1y of tha doings of the Convention Ti.mt it ha3 not done It has not 'yet.' nor lill it ever publish th's ruiuausrestluiionjand, those papers that have published it now that the Standard has given them the cue; .will henceforth suppress it, arid so Demo- crairc -pters will gofo the ballot.bisx stone blind,-voting-fo'r ten iccnt! "Jiinmev and a five bundled million Railroad. THE ARMY WORM. This pest has been! devastating tle gar deus.in this place for tlie last few weeks. Myriads of them may be seen iu our fields and gardens, and they devour "everjtbiug green that comes iu thtiriway. Look out some folks.; Ettgy. On Wednesday mortntrg "last an efigy was foua 1 snxpead-od in a public street in this place, near the -carriage -shop of Messr. Wagner & Leslie, juxwi which was a placard, declaring it to be tlmj last "remains" of a young in ai connected with that shop. . Publkropifiioa is iacUoed to frown npon this attetupij to disgrace .the young us am, ra this base aud cowardlv mauner. We -should take it as a mark of ftomr, fwr oip of the greatest men" of;the age have been tieated in like manner bv an envi us rabble." , Charter Oak' Items, On the night of the tall of the brave! old oak t Haatford, Mr Stuart, the propnetor, was engageS till midtHgtit in writing tils last chapter of its history. A copytighted engraving of the treo as it appeared after its fall, is be ing made; and a! sound limb is being made into an elbow to a new snip, to be called "The Charter Oak." A swarm of bees came out of a hole ,fn tbe fallen trunk, on Saturday morning, ,and lodged upon another tree, but soon returned to their old qilarfers, from whieh they were ' securely and safery hived. They; will be tenderly cared for from the associations connected witli them. Theirj presence in the tree was hot .known till after its' falls ' ' The Vote of the Army Bill. The Bab. timbre Sun says: In our hoticeof the vote on this bill yesterday morning we Stated thatallNorthern natioral men (Democrats) voted for the bill. as passed. This was all. the general information we had upon the subject. We have since learned that Messrs. Harrison of Ohio'Tyson- of Pennsylvania and Haven and Whitney,- of. New York, Americans, also voted for the bill as it pass ed. Slop The Murderer.' A man calling himself Thomas Jefferson w ho in appear ance h about 5 feet 7 inches high, stout built with long strait hair,arid is two thirds Indian and one third; negro with thick lips and a scar on his face, ancthis color rather dark, committed a rape upon j the person of a young lady about thirteen years of age, in McCracken county, Kentucky a few days since, as the young lady was on her way to school and murdered and hid tbe body in'the pushes. ; A reward of .two thousand dollarsis offered for the arrest of this dastardly wretch and bis safe delivery atJPaducahv'Ky. HOW THEY Ti Is die House of RepreseHatc onth .v : -! . I : e pension of the rules of the ucJ&t.to ena ble Lim to introduce, for the! oT an L the. appropriate Committee ndte final de ciaipn of Congress, the fpHjh'S bill, , . of "Land urantftoucs. r "Mr. OARLILE, of ViieiiH; moved a i-tt-pension df the rules toexjll bim Win- t'oducfel for the put Doseta reference-,- a J bill to equalise 'the gr!an,tst fcf'lari lo the: several S:ates.: wlifcli WotitfuJid-not pre. vail-Tcas' 3, nays-'St. f . .rj 11 ;u:w iuj; is luc mi$ m.. r.n : : .i " " ' 1 A BILE.loec.uahze thgrir.'srbf Wnd to tbe several States. "Be tYenrfrfpit'4c-;Ththe'rernay he ara nreov is ETaijiea to ear oi iueoiaie of Afaine, New Hamsbrre, f'erriiont,M'ite-. o!ii.a,Sputl, CaroliriaTennriee, Keattlcky, nau wcorgia puDiTc lanus antie raie oi - . . Lir ,i -a. l.1 :.. V two hun.tredaiid fiftv ihdiisand, acres for eah civnjtfor aiid representative to"; which saidStrfte.afe Respectively entitled.1 ,:Sec.-;2. Lihd he'll fuAhrr enacted:- That laYhl VaVrants shall be issued tdacli. of sifid St-lVe to the,nmpunt fn aU'tobich tliey: aj'evtefpec.ivelv fenrided-ubiler tha piicediHff.sect'rob-.sud kld5tjrtesj'a're seVi ernuy numouzea toswu saiajaCd wairants .atfd tfpy.Sprbceeds flieieof to the sup! ' rort;ot &t-ht?0," attd.'ra; aid' of the 'cbh-sti'lictlon- aud''c'cyiwetr(iu of -iaiu'roads ti catriits. : .- ".Skc-2. And bejt fur titer' Hatted.- TbatsJid land waflants shall, "be for not le's tbah; eighty nar tnoVe ihtin one- 'llui: dred aud sixty acVe! each, and shall be Valid in .tlie .hands ' tha purchasers and holders thereof" 'and may be. located; 'any uch tfwner or llder upon any of the ; surveyed public ,huls which shall be' at ' the time for sale aril subject'to private en tjry ; and -ihe -title t the land so located under sji'tJ warrant, shall be perfected to the owners .or holdirs thereof,, in tbe.sainc manner as under cf her land .warrants fs sued'hy the Unitei Statts.' ' ' . In yiew of the nillions of acres of tlie . ' - . ' - - public doma:.n Which have been . lay- l ished. iipon 'the new abolition states by Congress, for internal improvement' ; edii calioual 'purposes-, fe(, no reasonable man will deny the jlstice of this resolution, and its especial importance to our own state, which is now birtbened by a public debt of near ten millions; but wb-m the ques tion .was .taken on the motion to suspend rules in.or.der to bring tlvis tesolution be fore the House, ie find t!be loco partio'n of oflr representatire, jtrwe to" their anti-NA- tioival instincts, Voted .'KAY 'j- Nofa loco in the. House ;otel yea. W-hat a com mentary upon the nationality of tlie o culled -tldnlecracj ! The eld, -ongwal Thirteen the states which expended their blopd atdrtieaser for the aequibntion f this same territory are ftet-sly refused any part or lot in it, and-tltat too by-tbeirown sons, while' it is lavished squandered with a prodigal hansi Iff tlose same sons, upon, new abolition Jtates 2 - jFrom Kansas Chicago, Atrg. 30. W have the follovijig iuteligeiioe riom Kansas, dated the 23d ibstmnt. Three thousand Missourians are collected at Westjio"rt and Kansas City and is is e pected tlrey wili Mnarcji on the 30th .in diffei-eit de'achments, aldng both sides of ilfe KaHsas river to surround the free state settkjiiiefi' B all the way west as far asTopeka Gewral Richardsoo had Marched north to iute.rcept and capture General Lane. No communication could be had with tire river except at tbe risk "of life.' Provisions were very scarce at Lawrence and the citiaens hd'asked a government escort to obtain supplies but they' were refused- An attempt was to be made to obtain, supplies under a guard of the Free State force. - , ' St. Louis, Sept. J, Kansates to the 27th August state that the acting Governor, at Lecompton, on the 26th issued a proclamation, declar ing the Territory to be, in a state of insur rection and, calling on. the. law abiding citieens anddegal authorities to preserve peace and -protect persons and proper ty. ' '; ' ' Col. Lane has parties stationed at .differ ent . poinU in Iowa to receive .supplies or aid lu bis escape if obliged lo flee f ' w ' . XationvU Debt of England. The last Parliamentary return shows that on the31st M:trch last the amount of unredeemed na tional debt of great Biitain was 775,312, 69tjPounds. and the-annual charge for i t upon the nation nearly twentyfour millions sterling. ' - m Gruano.---OneH$tablishment at Freder-. ickshurg Viiginia, the Recorder says, has sold 160,000 worth of guano since the open ing of the season. The price there has la tdy advanced .wo dollars a ton. . POLITICAL SERVICE- Some brother will please raise the tune ; Flow happv Franklin fierce nniit be Since he's tcrne oit so well ; For he can leave off war, and soon In peace and oosooso dwell. Another Fremont organ Dead.-Tbe Rochester Free Press a Fremont organ that came into existance wh en the Fremont fire was at its highest. This is the third Fre raout papr in the Stateof Iew York that has gone down within the last ten daysy besides one that liaa turned to Fillmore. These are signs tbat'truly indicate the pop ular diift in the S4e and Country. . sachusefts, Connecticut,"fixle Island,-; New York, New .Jej-sey, $ rnnsylvania-? 4)e'awave, Mary land, VirjriD, Norib Cai-. SPEECH 0 UR, s. JAi fclloing is an extract from Uie Vpeech aneaka for 4twK;:I:'inWeQttwUt:fasten Pacific Kail Road 'resolution upoo.Hhe CincVnati.t the Standard's litxnXio IU .Oat and the Btiiill frr loco Drihts in: this- State. to 111 fry loco prints iff .this- State, Jbock out ofit We shAJl 'gTyHhefpeh' in fulljnexfc .wfeek r- .. 1 . 'ffiii .ia-flie' e'rU- 5f tie 4Hn6crtic ;pbit- orraf.- : It Is headed.i Dytribcrmtic J Pitt- foim1 in 'fullJ", " Aml'id'itkieaded iu dth rer-So$tieTn,'-pk,pers iiutuhat-Mslioi. the hruthj.NThe'feT TOmetIfiK2niore.nwhTch I iths do not. wbildor at thei'r trying tp IiiUe Irohr t)ieaderv" 'At the sstfte time th1s'p1at-J f J i. . 1 1 i" j - ' ' .t ..--Ji.-.i'h trm wrs venorieq, .anoiner resuiuuvu nw compitmeSI it. ' 'That resolhti&n . rad: thus : ' . ' . ' "That the Democratic, party "recognize 'thergrekt' importance, in a pylftical an H c6Tiirrie'?ciaU'joTn( bfieVf ' a safe and ipee:ay ciittrnitatidri by ''military "and ptafYoitds through our ovtfnlerritorybe tweSn the AUaVtre and Pacific coasts of th union, hncj that it is the duty of the Fe deral Gofnrnnt fo exercise promp ly-all its constittitioual 'power for the attainment of tilaCoiject;'. . ' : . .". . . . this resoijution was, laid upon the table bv a'vote of138 to liO. It buglit lo read' ' 1 35to T25, be ause. three of the Alabama delegates who wanted toCvoteor a road to the Pacific were overruled tv their col leagues and prevented from doing so When the resolution was laid up m ihe table',. Mr. Inge, of California, nomiuated Gen. Cass, and voted for bim until Buehi anan's nomination was no-longer a matter of doubt. He. then, made speech, au extract from which I will now read "And now, sir, so far as Mr. Buchanan is concerned, we have a high appreciation of his eminent qualities as a patriot -ttnd statesman. We acquiesje in-his'nomi.iiia tion notwithstanding !the -course 'o"f fite 1 ennsylvania vJelegation in reference ,;to an ovevland'Aoinmuiiication .with "Qahk)r nia, which vu's'ipresented' to tho iCovCU tion. "We believe :h does not 'tigree -to itihat thaUdelzgatioh has done ? ' j 'Bnt the .pwivate assurrfnees which sStis 'fied Mr. 4'ngedid-not satisfy Missouri, and Mr. Shields. "offbred -the -following 'resoju lions-: ' I' - . - ' "That 'it is the dury of the Federal Gov ernmeijt to-'constrecti .as far as it lias c6n stitutiorial power ato 'do,' a safe overland communication -with our own territory, between the Atlantic and Pacific "Stares. ' Mir. iiHsder of AYixoemsirv, off -ed a jpubs'itute 4 . 'That the Deraocirat'rc iparty recc giizes tfe great vmportam e, ia a JJoKtrcail, and -ctinmeroia4 ipoist of yiewvof a speedy CCm-muB-ipatkmi through our own territory, be 'tawa the ! Atlantic and Pacific coasts ofJ the UniiKs, a-nd- that it is the duty of the Federal Government to exercrae li its constitutional power for tlie attaift-ftrent of that object tlrcreby binding the union, of these States in mdissoluWe bonds awd o ening to the rich commerce of Asia, an overland transmit fiom the Piroic to the Mississippi River and g"eat Lakes of the N.f.h. The thief difference between this ub stitute and the reso?u.ion first reported is that it has more wnWeaning words in it, and is, therefore, nearer- to the -.Standard jo( Sag Nk-fat teste. The substitute was a dopted by a NXejJf205 to? tho Ala bama delegates reversing their former po. sition and voting with the majority. And thus this wild seheuie of huilding ,r railroad to the Pacific o-ifir lofiy inoun taius and impassably snows, at an expense of hundreds of mi"riions was retoguised as a cardinal principle of the Democratic creed. No wonder thtjy wet? ashamed of their work-1 No wonder when they pub lish what the call their wiiole platforinj, the.y leave out th is ruinous resolOtioni. But it is not left out in Missouri and CatH' foruia. There where it is supposed it will help Buchanan it is dwelt upon with in tense .delight. Fr the Concord Ofttstta TO TEACHERS Perhaps the 6r6t question that, the teach er will "ask himself, will be : What manner of spirit am i I of !. A spirit that seeks not .alone pecuniary emolument, but desires toN be in tlie highest degree useful to those who Are to be taught, a spirit that trem' bles under .the weight of responsibility, a spirit-that looks upon gold as the contemp tible dross of earth, when compared with that, imperishable gemi ..which is to be polished and brought out into heave u's light to shine forever, a spirit, that seeWi the highest of all reward ,an approving conscience, and that burns. witb tbe desire to be instrumental )n training a mind t tbe highest attainment of which it is ca pable. Let the teaoher well consider . what manner of spirit be is of Let him come to this work only when he has care fully, pondered its nature and its responsit Ulities. The parent has an overwhelm, ing responsibility, he can uever part witii of transfer to another while beholds the relation of parent, j The teacher is not on ly responsible for what be does, but for what he neglects to do. It is a great thing to guide the mind aright, it is deplorable nay,-a fatal thing to lead it astray. The teacher should often tell .how-the hsson should he learned; ' liilman. life is, loo short to hate anyf it eropiovvd lo di&adij vamge. . ieie is sur u liing as excii-j ip gu t iKperyaa ivg loierest j n- grojp or. the retuiO'cf school hours, by Tils- clieet-' fuVrtep-iaAd KnliflateVJ ye. TheresVuch' m thing as crarrilning'th''rnihd bfajijiild', "till bd lotheeveVy thing iu'tW wnyp( c: iHuwUrbnf .'the educatiBn bf "ihfi.hebVis confessedly fou'mucli "riegTected Jn'ail up schob!s.i)ear teafher, eacbTchUd In your, cBool hasasOhlj "kul dear '-to hTm who )made t a'sotd'rorvwhoseiSAYv"atiin- Jesus sheo! bVblboijT and for the loss .ofhrch. .iioleirQfkr Kbtild be bo- conpensa- ifctf)caulJligart. , ; ; . .- p The Vaehe.r should Tjc well vf rsed in luiinan wliiT.-he should Know, the power efi conscience; itnd the means of reaching it his example Is everything before his t .1' lT 'jI.mTI momM tan. llOOr. lit; epuurvi cici niunw iuv ,u- derest regaid to-the law ,Vf rigt4 and bf ore. He sbould never violate; Ms own sense of justice, nor outrage that of-his put pils.. He teaclies as he jjocs'jn and out wfore the school, as woids can never ftacu, lei a "living epistle' kuown and "read of all. He faclies iy. ns exa.npio lor gooa, or for evil, whether he will or not, It is bur glory, if not our boast 'hat we have 'diescended from an ancestry, that feared God and reverence his word if wo are in debted to the christian religion for what ye are and all that we hope for, how tm portant is it that our ybiith should.be nnr iured under it influeuceSv i Let the teach er take heed that his leaching shall never. lead one child of earth away .from God dr from the rest of the righteous lb the home of tbe blest. Theres no'tlasa of. parsons whqm I respectmore lhaVtehchersj with twenty .years 'experience, litnow litfw to ynlpaiite with ihep,'l- !ktttiv sattiAhlhg of the difficulties.-wifli which fbey "ate cal leju.'to'mept-; I bnbw.whatit'is'toicotitend with the ciprice of parthts, titid bc,HFay i-ardness'of pupHs t know: what'itjHs. to Wtetnjt to put-brains into empty-tkulls. r The teachei Should have his -eye . upfn re-. 'ftgidu Vn': all Ire oes and.sa', fens! 'must1 b hs poliir-star; lie 'slrouid tta'fe a . seep .ter, Ire shdbld always bold it-, Commands should "be sacred things. DappY is .that .'teachier who has aUaiued to. such skill in govei ument, as to guide ,with a look,rer ward.. with a smjle, or puuhsh wiih aVrown.' You'tire traiuing up tire 'cithMus for the world, and the christijm, for the cJhurch. I ar comfltidn ndboob sip'porred Ijt'fhe public cpe'rrserirfld Sn. whrbh the children of afl denomrnaUons meUcfr.injtrtictiou, I do net 'think iha't any hianjhas.a iiht to -cro-ft-d bra own ipecuKar notfops di- flre- ?4og upon nil, "Jlretbef jheyare nccepta b?e or not. . Yet there is a voitiltpqfl dntid winch' he canocCu7 -and to f4iich no VeasonaWe tean can ot JecL He.cafn fceacii a veverauce for tbe Supreme Being, a re'v- te.Wnce foi bis holy word, for the influences of his spirit, for the character and' teach ings of tbrd -Savior he can tench the evil of rs:n ifi'ttre sight of God, aud its awful consequences, he'can teach the duty of repentance,-he can teach out duty 'to .wor ship Godv to xbey his 4aws, he can . illus trate tire beauty of beliees.-, and thre.joyful hope of heaven to a!i this no I'easonable man' will be found to object, so long as it is done in a truly christian spirit. . uWho is sufficient for these .things'?' . My answer js the ttne enquirer after duty w il' hot go astray. Fi nally dear bre hretj, let tts go forth intod.' en.denVor 60 to teaoh lhat when we meet our pupils at the ffnal ljudgment, where vettsust "meet thetn al!, may'wetben be abWt'b gi've-a good ao couut of the influence Vrhieh wipshave t xs erred over mi'.id. May wo ' seek that di section yhich God never vrithhohls from the lmnest inquirer after Lis guidance, abd though the teacher's work js,and ver must b", attended iwith Overwhelming responsi bility We will be sufficient for these things. ft B. From the American Organ. r Bow will Pennsylvania VqUI From tbe terriWehuHnballoo the Fres tnotintebanks rnake overPennsylvanin it is iuferred by manythat they are ure of the State by at least 50,000 majority. The despondency of the Bucbafciers orer the same State confirms this impression. But before we concede so important a State as Pennsylvania to Fremont let us examine the statistics of the election of 854as there were f5883" more votes polled at that election that there was at the last State electiodi 4 In 1854 Pollock received t he American and Whig vote Bugler received, Ihe foreign vote, ; ;.. 204,008; including all 167,001 Majority for Pollock, 37,007 In the coming Presidential election, the foreign rote will be decided which has hitherto gone solid for the Democratic par ty; ihat Tote is at least 60,000 in Penusyl rania the half of which will probably! vote for Fremont flow take 30,000 of the for-eio-n rote from Mrs -Bigler's tote and it leaves but 1 37j000 votes for Jr.Bucbanan to start Willi. Suppose lie gets 3,000 of the old Whig vote which went for Pollock that would bring him up to 140,600, and reduce Mr. Pollock's vote to 201 000. Now give Mr. Fremont onevfifth, or 40,000 of the Whig and American rote which went MrJollock and.tle.rwult would then stand thus: . " Buch'arnnn Fiil'more -' .iFreiiion't in'the opipron WelejYhlg." in the. liJUddpW?.: tliT estinfate v r 000 DemKrit7cbtes ijw allow JTiirf i; OO-demolTn'oVi111 fsKseS ' .to OtC(rift ? PSV an J-lvVMrr-rfmb 1 la&ujjfoi. m NewiYork CourieV edited by that -. mighty blundej buss of uReppblb3 bW,' - -General Wbb, p?gard& rennsylrocia nt" . . very dlfelt Jtate fori Fieifipat tb cany, ' and suggests tlie employment of 5.QO0 po. v litidH culporteurs .Ulere to casrj the Gos- pel,ac"codingto Ifetichetfnto every -fanjijj This proves that thtf Fl6ripuntetanks ar - I y no- mens so confident.of Penbyvanuv ' as their Uibedvfreedoni 6hiietegs.profe"a to teKeve. Tint consideration, takenjri -con.nexion. Vith tho aUtisjigs of the tlection, o(;l54 . iinu tue jreceni' nprising or iue oiuimo. Wings for fjllroore should stimulate tiro American party iuPennnlvalikiHo.rei eed. ' effort. NiiluiL is esiiecialiv ueeded in that State, is a larger oTrenUtion of American newspapers. 0,pe:Uundred thousand ebpies of the Phifcfdttlphia Nws, scat terel brow' - cast jn every cbunty affd a geberal increase of ihe circiilatiba of the American- papefs in the Ulterior counties wduld "alone a'mos't be BuSicient to sccurt the State ftr fiil more. -POLITICAL ITEMS, Alsbn bfO. AJ BrwnSbn editor of th . Catholic Quarterly review informed !his . un'ijfi inpiionda oouhty, New Ybik tbt ji'rj raH.ier.and ArchbUhbp Hughes .both support Col." -Fremont beaxuse h?. a Cuth olie. . . i " - - t t 'GrfbLt ylccmoft.Thfr'Fiemont Clnb of Plattkill, Tew York nomberi ng i30 stemg he!d 'a 'meeting Saturday nlgbf,. and.afler " some talk llrrew up its Frefbbbt. banner and bVrnt.it up in Ihe fire VhA tharch? ed over In a body to Ronk's "ftdtl, where, they joined the Fillmore and todtfelsbt; Ciub.v Fillmore's vote id Elistern ew-Vork ifl 'be enormous; for great accession- ai . taking. place iflraost'diifiry. " On Tueiay "there was an'iinniene gati ering.of the fi rends of Fillrnbre.and Donel son. at York Pen nsrlvattirt. -A gentlein.'.n who was present informs us tha't We- n,eVell witnessed more eitthusiaMri ori. any sfinilar 'occasron. . iThe Ttiecting was addressed bv D. IT. McPhail of Baltimore and French S. Evan! of Washington. The apint manifested at this meeting gnarattUsp that Adams county , will ghe' large 'majority toV Fillmore and Donetion. ' Fifty 'fliotitVhd Pezple iu Council. ITie yhlfl, Kentutltjr, and IndiairX grand Fillmore and Dyb6l)n Council wer b session on the Ohio river and its leve.es dh tbe 27th inst.! selecting that place as the Union river of the -West Tbtre were 60,000people present, and more were exjected. A wir was stretched across the river and on it was suspended a flag; with the word. Union, encompassed by thirty ope star. A sreamei having on board sixteen ladtts, started from the'-Ohrbhbre, representing the Northern Stales.and another from tha Kentucky. shore, having on board fifteen ladies .reprtsenting thoSoutliern ISttes. i The -boats are lashed fast and 'proeeedtd. up the river under the Union flag-. The artillery roared a thune'erittg wel- conre. ... Th6 lion" of the mighty WestT is at. last ' shaking his mane. Stand from uhdfcr Uis unionists evei"y-wbere. " Out For FiUmore. The Repablitian of Mercer, Penosylvatja,has pulled dowfa the Fremont flag and raises that of . Fillmore and Donelson. 'It is an able "Journal and will do good work for the American cause. ' . The BJooniviJle Mirror,New Yorhhoista the banner of Fillmore and Donelson with the determination to push forward the great work. , Within tha last few days thrett more in fluential papers in New Jersey have aban doned sqUatter sovereignty ism and come out for Fillmore and bonelsbu and tho tnion. . . The Templar and Watchman at Ithaca New York,runs Up the Fillntgre and Don elson flag. The Culpepper (Virginia) Observer,! has comeout for Fillmore and Donelson formerly neutral. The Winchester Scott county, Illinois) Chronic'e heretofore neutral ,inL its last Issue hoists the Film ore" and Donelson flag.' The Graysville Iterald (Illinois) has raised the ban net of Fillmore and Doner son. v The Sobora (California) Herald -one of the ablest papers in the mining regions also hoists the American flag and is now doing stbut battle for Fillmore and Donel son.. Tbe San Diego Herald formerly the or gan of the Democratic party in the south erb portion , of Alta California is out for. FUhnore and Donelson. Its edito, J.Jud son Amessq ,says h cant stand that par J t ny longer.

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