Jasper Banner, Volume 3, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 October 1856 — Disclosure of the Conspiracy. [ARTICLE]

Disclosure of the Conspiracy.

Ob Saturday, \\l£ published the folio diopatch, dialed ►St. liouis, oci&fnbai* ff: ,■ “»i vnte adtjfcbs KymaaEstatc that" on Tue Hay Inst, •’very jVe«i State maa was driven lVom Leavch|worth nt~The point of the bayonet, and all property destroyed or l-onli: c.itcd. Mr. Pltdlyis the correspondent of the \ow Voik Tribum ana ES brother were kiTleilT" The house of the Termer, rind’the storb of the latter were burned. It is said Mr. Phillips fired IVom his house and killed two pro-slavery men. Forty sufferers arrived here to-day entirely destitute. Fuller particulars to-mor-row.’’ The same dispatch appeared in the New York Tribune of Saturday, which paper of that day says iti its editorial column : “Our correspondent at St. Louis appears to be under the impression that Mr. Phillips who, with his brother had been shot-, in the special Kansas correspondent on the Tribune, whose deuth had long been an avowed object among the Missouri ruffians.— This, however, is a mistake. Our Mr. Phillips recently left the Territory for a brief visit to the States, and on the day of the battle was in this city. He is now returning, and will soon be at his post again in Kansas.”

He was in this city on Friday, and came into our office, mistaking it for one of the Black Republican newspaper otiices. He introduced himself as the Kansas correspondent of the New York Tribune, on his return to the Territory. Without dispelling his allusion, we asked him “if it was probable such a row could be got up in Kansas as would subserve the Republican cause and aid the election of Fremont?” He said, “Yes, that is the intention, and I think we shall succeed; our plans are well laid and can scarcely fail; we are determined that the war shall last until November, at whatever cost; I shall be in Kansas in ten days, and I have instructions in my pocket for Col. Lane.Z’_.. ..\Ye.askcd him some other questions, which he answered with singular frankness, disclosing a conspiracy of the Black Republican leaders regarding Kansas more heinous and villianous, we verily believe, than any conspiracy ever before hatched. When we in formed him that he had entered the the. wrong pew —that he was in the office of a Democrat and not a Black Republican paper—that he had been addressing a Buchanan and not a Fremont man—he wa&struck dumb with amazement from he did not instantly recover. When he did recover, he muttered something in audibly,and incontinently fled. The information thus obtained assures us positively of things we have not at any time doubted. It assures us that there have been but few difficulties in Kansas that were not the result of plans deliberately laid by the Black Republican confederates, and deliberately executed by the agents of these confederates; audit assures us that provision has been made, of men and money, by which Kansas will, if it be possible, be kept in the most terrible state of turmoil during this month and the next, for the sole purposeof exasperating the northern mind and effecting the Presidential election. We have no language to express abhorrence of the plot revealed. Is it not abominable, atrocious, hellish? Could pirates be guilty of anything worse? Could devils concoct a more damnable scheme? Civil war is instigated—innocent blood is irhed — all in pursuance of caucus arrangement, to influence the pending political contest? When will the people see this Kansas business in its true light? —Detroit Free Press.

Black Republicans have got to carry every Northern State save Pennsylvania to elect'Fremont. If they lose California, they are gone. If they don’t carry Connecticut, they are used up. If they fail on Rhode Island, “Little Rhody,” they are whipped. To loso Maine, at this time, their stronghold, would have annihilated all their hopes. This was well understood by all their leading meh, and a desperate 'effort lias been made to save the State. They fused all their opposition elements, nominated an out and out Democrat, Senator Hamlin, who was shre on Nebraska, for Governor and thus by dividing our party, they have carried the State—Very likely \Yhato( ti? It does not increase Mr- Fremont’s chances a vote. All New Ragland can’t save him, so Wait for the wagon.” A western Democrat has sent to New York city SIO,OOO, with instruc--ions to put up $5,000 each on Micnigan and Indiana. ■ . , QCjr’Thc Tost Office ht Morocco, iivthis county, has been discontinued.