The Indiana Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 October 1858 — Page 1

FXJBLISHEID WEEKLY Si 50 EE EL- j^ZSTETUEl, EJ^YTVELE H^VEF YETVI^LY lET -A.EV A-ETCE.

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(TIk |nbiiin;t fhcss. HOWAKD I3KIQU8, Editor And Proprietor.

GwUcastle. Salnnlii), OcIoImt 2,1S58.

The Viciousnoss ” of Submitting t’onstitutions to ;i Vote of the People!

Sciuc6 for the Cniivtiss!

People!

Slaver) in the Territories. Mr. Sccvest, throughout this canvass,

has taken tho hold and true popularsovereipnty ground tliat tlie people of a Territory, as well as of a State, have the

(From the Terre Haute Journal.)

In Tilt: ItiGHT Place!—The Madison Courier, the editor of which is Chair-

Kek.i* it liKfnuK thk People—That man of th(‘• Itcpublican

tlic negro slavery <|Umtion in the Terri- ^ omniittee, in noticing the several candi-

A Pretext Furnished the Framers of lories is now finally settled on the Den.-1 'l"»cs fo r Congress in the various d.str.ets, Lecompton by IndianaKepubliuaus' .• . . , ; sets down John (i. Jhivis as tho iiepubli-

P nL.ms. ocrat.c principle ot Popular Sovereignty, ( ,, iu ^.mjiduto in the Seventh. Any Dem-

THEY OPPOSED A SUBMISSION OF OUR r rll '" l(, u r on wliieh the I nion 0( . rat) , u ,t entirely Mi-!, can.tasily see STATE CONSTITUTION ! of the States e. 1I he preserved from d in- who are Davis’ parttieular IViend.-'and ad

i-er. mirers just at this time.

iic.Am it i: A l>! Keep it More lire People! i KAm , l _ Tho ™ aaclp | lia „. puUi .|..r .u. t,.v. Yc .n.-,

<i . .. . . i ii- .or..- i. nartv came into

HEAD AND REFLECT! j ]ieople, and not of Congress, to determine

'what kind <d‘ domestie institutions they

Kt piil>U« aii TactU'M of thr Cam pa Ic, • > . . «

will recogmre, slavery not excepted.

(from tho Miami County «, ntmel.) | 0pp(( , eJ to tho rcpei4 l 0 f ,he Missouri The party which has taken the phu-c Compromise, and clamorous for its resW

State Central "f the old Whig party, is as ehaneeahle ration at that time, ami now not a word

as the chameleon in the issues which it to say in favor of sucli restoration, makes with tho Democracy and holds up In favor of the Wilmot Proviso, or to the people as important to their wed-, Congressional sovereignty, on the ground

fare.

that freedom was national and slavery

The \\ hig party is entitled to the me- sectional, and therefore, that it was the rit of having adhered persistently to the right and duty of Congress to preserve principles and measures which its States the soil to freedom, yet voting in the last men believed to he e ential to the good Congress for the Crittenden-Montgomery

„ „„ ... , r U rs- Hie I Iiunucimna nriMii.u-i 01 ' ,,lu cou " tr - v - Year after y«ir that Bill, which admitted Kansas as a slave Kcpublicans arc very tenderly wound- 1 h:,t Kansas t- now certain to heeomel^^^ pVmveiition held in l.S.'it; of which I'-'t'iy ^me into the contest advocating a State, if the people of that territory deed at heart, and very justly, too, if honest, :l VUKK STATE on the principle of i'| ( , ai Y L;ine, of Crawfords’villc. was Protective TarifT, Dcstrihution, sired its admission with that institution, right to regulate their domestic institu- because the people of Kansa- had notan • >,> I lU * ar Sovereignty ; and the doctrine I'losident, dcelared that Con >jriss should "; IS * l 'r ^'u-trine in the Abolitionists in their professed hostil lions, including the institution of slave- "I’P'U'tunity to vote for the adoption or intervention by Congress, on the no- legislate slavery and polygamy out ofthe " :l ' 'V* 1 '" ity to slavery and its extention from 1s>:>1

»***"• -.•jcoii.,,, ,,r the 1

own negroes, by passing the necessary '-eforc that instrument was presented to -""'* ,r y for many years with a useless, “sinlnilai' en laborer if Mr. Hon or universality of principle. Indeed did, for the Dunn bill, which legalized territorial laws to protect slave property, Congress. But in this matter, Repub- wrangle among politicians, is now over- |, j s t ] u , ip-myerat he i-ietemls !! ' it has no principles. It is a mere party slavery and made slaves of children then they can do so, and the Constitution of lien ns, of all others, ought to he very rulcil and it is hoped put to rest forever, j nlexpedicuts. Its sole object is to got unborn in Kansas. the United States will protect them in'charitable, been use the delegates in the I Keep II hefore lilt* People! Out WITH It!—It is a notorious fact f M l ,li i i V A al . V. MWC ! .T! it . "*!! party in this State in

,hc , ig h, n-„ ;7 Jcjire .Ij.vory 0„„ ; . I

in their midst, all they have to do to cx- <'-r the course they pursued; and to this , l^' k hepuld,, an.sm has been swept, J-xpns« has n.,h^ rupt and partisan tor deciding that law elude it, is to refuse to enact fostering precedent we desire to invite attention, ii""), »nd the only is>ue on which M hig> ^ ll.-puliHean i-fSu ir Creek 11 started out at its birth in 1854, an unconstitutional, and in 1858, afraid to

It is a reminiscence of Indiana legisla tion, for which we arc indebted to the buried.

Brookville Democrat.

The people of Indiana, in 1850, eleet ed delegates to amend their Constitution, which ofcourse need not he submitted to Congress, but might have been foreed

poliec regulations. Slavery cannot exist for an hour, in Territory or State, without municipal law to enforce it. This is the view taken by statesmen. Xorth and South, and is fully sustained in a recent speech made by Judge Douglas—

an extract of which follows:

“In tny opinion, the people of a Territory can. by lawful means, exclude s |., very before it comes in as a State. Mr. Lincoln knew that I had given that an awer over and overagnin. lie heard me

argue the Nebraska bill on that principle m **° “ a ubsolute that the amendall otcr the State in 1851-ati, and he ’ d Constitution should be submitted to has now no p\i-usc to pretend to have nny a vote of the people. The Constitution -doubt on that subject. Whatever the w;ls amended, and a bill was introduced Supreme Court may hereafter decide as „ |to the L(> ., isIilturc of our State, to proto the abhtrarl riue^tion of whetnor slave . , .. . ... ^ 1

viae lor tho $Hbnn&iiuii (>f tluil ti-

| tt,, d Abolitionists fused, is now dead ,1‘V^illl’relMtking tl

mse memhers of the :, .-gi'egatiiin of discordant elements, hav- say a word on the subject; refusing to Republican party who have siunified their n « union hut hostility to say whether they are in favor of the law

Keep 11 brio IT (he IVOpIr! intention to support John Davis. And 'lem.-eiaey ami love ot office. as it stands, whether they would repeal That the revolutionary eonduet of the it is further uuderst 1 that tho Express x . V* 1 ‘ 1 0 !. , l ,0 l f od to it, or whether they are for onylaw on the Republican memhers of our last Legisla man has determined not to give it puldi -- the restor-j subject. . tore ami the dc,-n- c ,l interests () f thc !< it y. for fear that, coming from such a : ^ Mtssmm ( ompromtse line., Uppo.-e-l to foreigners in 1854, and tine, ami the .tcpns.c interests ot tin hi 4 snum , it wi „ ,, avo , |l0 cfro(>t ot - ( , riv It was in favor -I the \\ ilmot 1 roviso up to a very recent period, charging u ? on people of the Mate, demand that the , r . „.... .. A - - 1 1 ‘ — J - — — •’ • • • ■ . .

uilil he directed to

ation

It was in favor ofthe Wilmot

ing many from the support of the “ indc , TJ ,0S '' ,| l " "dmissinn of any more them every opprohious epithet, depriving

upon ushy our delegate- fn-h from Hdu- attention should he directed to pen( i t , Mt - Will Mr. Hudson plaase pub Have Males. t was opposed to popular tliem of their pobtieal rights by violence,

our own internal allairs—to the welfare i;.], t l 10 r Creek communication ? sovereignty and in favor ol Congressional justifying the outrages that were perpeof tho WIIITK M AN. leaving the condi ° jaovcreignty. • tratod against this class of our people, and

-While Mr Davis is so eloquent on li'h»"il or 8tatepolicy wastcmj-er.ancc, declaring them unlit to hold any office,

of the 8lat-

sh

their hands, without so much as an inspection by the people. The law regulating the holding of that convention did

not

question of whether slave

ry may go in under the Constitution or not, th< /ni’jih oj n Tirrilorj) Imre lln lawful nii'ina In inlniil il /■ i.r<luilr it US /Aeyp/eos-, for the ta isonthat SLAV EI1V

tiou of the negro in distant countries, for, at least, a matter of secondary con-

sideration.

ktTp il InTore llit' IVoplo!

That one of the living issues before | Congress the people of luditina at this time, is whether the negro shall he admitted to the right of suffrage, and in other re-

the subject of “ hrnl.ui nluh/is," would il ! "" 1 ll ‘ 1>, " 1 "y to foreigners Doe- .t assort yet, in 1858, courting and caressing that not he well for him to explain why h, u, 'y fi,uh SL : nt,n ' , ' ,lt ' n "' v • , A,I<1 • s:, " u ' P 00 I' le . nominating them lor office, has broken four-score of “pledges,’’made | w,, y 1 n,,t 1 ,s ‘'•"'l"’'"'"''’ a virtm: and charging that it was the Democratio in 185(5, not t-i he again a candidate f or 1 |‘"' v than thenar le, essential to human party that was opposed to foreigners.

in this District? There

Where is the principle in such tergiversations and contradictions as these?—

mcHiled Constitution ton vote of flu; pro-

pie. On a tost question, in the Senate, placed on an EQUALITY with

every Democrat, twenty-seven in number,

the whites.

CANNOT EXIST a day or an hour any- voti; d to give the people an opportunity

where unless si i'Ihirteh »y local po- 1 lice REori ations. furnishing remedies and means of enforcing the right to hold

|toforc been the ENEMY of

! new States; that every one of the nim

tree States admitted into the Union with

Kt'tp it before (be People!

to pass upon that amended Constitution T1,at “ ,<5 °PP witiun “* liri ' k f ‘ or , ' re '- at the polls, and ev.ry opposition Senator but " olhl "«to SECURE it;

slaves. Those local and police regttla- votri/ayninst it. Those who voted in the it tlo ami 1 mion , lb p.uty ha. Ion lions can only be furnished by the local negative were: Henry Day, Joseph 11. ' ,eeu l 'io 1.. E.l\ ol creating

Legislature. If the people ofthe Territo Defrcc.^ W. P. Dole, (Jeo. (5. Dunn, A ry are oppox-d to slavery, they will elect ’ p Klli A- |, H AMRICK, Jonathan meainers to tho Lo'nslafun^ who will L. ,, .. .. .. .. adopt unfriendly legislation to it. If ,,arvc y> D!,V,<1 1 ' "“Howay,

they are for it, they will adopt the legislative measures friendly to -lavery Hence no matter what may hi (lie ileci sipn of the Supreme. Court on that ah street question, still the right if tin pm-

pleto make it a slurr TirriJimi ora Irii , . !

Terrimry, is p,,f,rl and complit, mnhr ,lurteCM ,ni,,anfl

the Kt hiii.. I, a hill.

happiness? If a proper subject for agi-

' ubiia!' ’ Ym.R.pshi'thlX h'imsdf the Republiea.^or People’s party of Is it not a party of miserable shifts, and nnl'v man in the land who ,-an fhlsity hi- ." ,, ! ana j a r>’ohihitory bqitorlaw disgusting expedients.

-.i . ami bar v known as the atne l.aw.—

promises with impunity, and without ex planation. on the |)ritieiple that no one expected him to abide by them. Il he puts it on //tot ground, we knock under. Then ani> Now.—The entire Black Republican House of Representatives, in 1855, voted to admit Kansrs under the Topeka Constitution, although that Constitution wa. made by a mass meeting, without the authority of law, and received

familiarly known as tho Maine Law. That Law has been pronounced unconstitutional by the highest Judicial trihunal of the State. Why has not the Republican party, which arrogated to it self the dcstim-tive cognoman of “hm-

Acquttai. ok Shooting a Seducer. Henry W. Bowyer, examined on the charge of killing James McDowell, sr., was acquitted by the examining court on the Itith ult. There was loud applause

Hiram ' a>i ^ Ib’ty-six years were

K.towltonVjoscphtL Marshall, Niehola! ^ 1)t ‘ mo(,ratic (’ongresses, and all but McCarty, W. A. Porter, and A. Tccgar 0,li: (^I'forn.a under Fillmore) under

1 h-mocratb- Presidents.

a.linitlt-il 1-- i -■ ZfUfXTt £ KlSft

p. runre party,” and designated the De m in the court room upon the announcement ocrtitic party tis the “wliis/ay party," \iro 'd the decision. It will be recolleuted posed some otlu r law to promote temper Hiat McDowell, who was a man ol family, nnce, which would not embody the uucon , wa - s charged by Rowycr with seducing stitutional features? Why did the par andabduetinghis daughter to Baltimore

Aii Iii<Ii > i»i > ih1i nt Candidate. “Country Democrat ’ writes to the New Albany Ledger a graphic sketch of an Independent Candidate of what he is constituted, how made, and hi ulti mate destiny. If true, and life-like, and applicable in New Albany, it is not !< - so here in the 7th Di-triet. We commend the article, which we copy below to the especial attention of the friends

of Stephen A. Dougla that gallant;

statesman, who is ever true to the Deni

den. Every one of them active opponent- ofthe Democratic party. Here is the precedent; and from the act of these

Senators the Kansas

delegates may have conceived the idea of forcing a Constitution down the throats

j of the people of Kansas.

Let any doubting Republican go to tho clerk’s office and and examine the Journal ofthe Senate of the State of Indiana for the year 1850, and satisfy himself where his friends then stood upon this question of submitting Constitutions to a vote of the people. See page 5!K{ of that Journal for the above vote. Where have the immortal thirteen,

Kitr il ImToit (lie People!

or while in a weak mental state. McDowell

,, , , .... ,, , ,•«. . ,t .. .... i law of Indiana, at the last session ofthe was tho president of the bincastlc Bank, the |»' 'pie .. hatkmdol | opu a so | isl;l( , jf it did not intend to stand and a mttn of influence and previous good oreignty ishat ?lwas gomlenouel. , ; and if it did not intend to stand by reputation. Ho declared ^ = tor the repaid tcanstn IS.,.,, I'«; aa ^tlmy |. > ^ ^ ;t hoU( . sty M / y : after being shot, but still

Not a word has the Republican ptirty to was positive against him.

say this year on the subject of Temperance, a subject, which, hutfour years ago,

wanted a fuss about Kansas and niggers; but theleaders ofthe same ptirty, in 1S5X.

his innocence the evidence

I,,dliina > ' P r,n • 1 n8t ll! ' two irate to th< Senate and three 'I'’ 1 l' :n, - s r6 ^ Be to r ?P cal th « Mich., and o> invesUgatioa the body Of a admt ton of Minnesota because foreign t( , || (iu< ,.t |f,|, e>0 rtiseallions i la ,iMaine Law last session.heeau.-ett expect rn n r „ a d conductor, named John Ilickev, WHITE .MEN were allowed to vote ; 1 p ;ir ti c lo 0 f they would hide them- 1 ‘‘''b’rvewt il,a lu-publican ^ . u|ireme (' urm (, r ]y 0 f (jeorgia, was discovered. He

ind that Senators M ade, Hale, Fcssen den, and other hitter enemies of tin Democratic party, voted against admit ting Oregon because NKUROF.S wen i not placed by her constitution

equality with white men!

selves in somccavc, and not show their| faces to an honest man as long as they live

Bench is elected? If

who, by their votes showed to the world their opposition to the principle of sub-

ocratic party, who adhere to it organ! Imitting Constitution* to the people for

ratification or rejection—that they re-

why does it not II1U! ,t have been killed nearly a year ago.

j announce it openly . A man named Kennedy is suspected of tho ! In IS;, , the Republican or I copic s lnul . dort but hc has escaped, although ho

More Facts !—The Sullivan Dcniomil embraced within its organisation, ha8 pursuo j throHfjb , ovorJl | oitiert commenting mi the recent speech of lien- 1 »“iitiro Know Nothing order oi Indi p t h e Union and heard from in Charles on an , v S . Lane in Darke county, and what he a "a, and in 185(., an open and avowed ton and Now Turk -aid ab.itit Davi- failhfuluc--, and that momhor of that order was nominated by ; — K .

i, . , , i ,, i ,• ,„(! . t ,.„| v . the Republican State Convention, for one IIorrihi.e Murder.—Mrs. Nancy Klt|l ll tX'IOM Illt‘ 1 fttplu . 1 n it , , i / /, V i stoad fiithful of the Stato offices. This year two Gcr- Ureal, a widow lady, living in Nevins Him; ami-(d hone.-( nu n j-.ithh.^’ ..,„i W Jcsen-es to be ,na " s ' KIV( ' l ,ut "l' 1 " 1 Hiat party’s township, who had been missing from BASELY BETRAYED into tie ^ n , d f or jt , do , Senator Douglas ticket for State offices! Why tkis «ad- her residenee since the night ofthe II th b ]uildiean party by the delusive doctrine |, u t Lane and his partv have no word (ii' 'I un '-’'lange ? Foreigners are neither inst., was found dead yesterday evening

that Congre.-> has the right to reject the endorsement or sympathy for him! Why application of Slave States for admission I is this? Douglas claims to he a Demointo the Union, and by the FALSE, ora t> and 'emains inside tho party organASSURANCE that none but Democrats i^Hon-pavis on the contrary, has

thrown liimsclt intotue tirnis ol tlie t.e-

ptildietins, and depends on their pledgeif support to he returned to Congress.—

nation under all < in um. lam c. yield-

obedience to its usage-, und supports its gard( , d Hll | jm j, s j on v j ( .j ous

Mominut*<. Here is the Ledger .-ketch where have they stood in polities since would vote to receive them, of an “ Independentthat time ? (leo. (!. Dunn and David 1*. j KtTp it llOfOIT IllC IVoplf !

“Any man who runs asan imlejiendent Holloway have been elected to Congres- That after alluring tens of thousand-1 Democrats beware of the nigger in the

candidate against the regular nominrr (,y tho same party who now oppose the' " f bonest men from their former political! woodpile! democracy, and Nicholas McCarty was' a ^ ,1 ‘'i a ‘ions by the advocacy of this un-^^ J ^|- c nro vcr y pert men facte; and eeruutn, nr stall for njfire or gain. It looks I ^ir candidate for Governor in 1852.1 tcmhle doctrine, Repuhliean leaders un

mean and low for any man who was not t Joseph (5. .Marshall was a favorite oannominated to strive to impose himself on ! didate of that party for tho office of U.

nominrr

chosen at a convention, is not and raunot Ac a Tri e Democrat. /A mmid si ll his

much better nor much worse now than . in aravitte near hor house, with her throat they were then. If they were unfit in cut and skull broken in. Coroner Me1854, to vote, much less to hold, nffire, j Croskey was suntfor and a jury ot inquest until after a prohatiou of twenty-one held on the body, tho veraiet being that years, how have they become so emin deceased had been murdered by some un mitly qualified for both in so short a time? j known person or persons. It looks very Contrast the two parties and see if we | much like a horrible affair. The woman are not correct in calling the Republican lived alone, mid bore an irreproachable party a party of expedients. A few years character.— Trrrr lluutr. Journal.

f the

ago the Republican party aroused the] ,, 77—‘ * — , ,

cKiiiity, committed murder this morning

that Congress has NO 81 (’ll DOW ER ; never elicited an answer. Any Democrat

we have repeatedly asked theRe-

blushingly admit that it was a (MI EAT-1 i'Stred’taJr Dou^'' weC | K^^1^ Za

,C1 "' tears of true patriots. They talked n11!. 11 ;" 0 ^ Hvelvo years, and

„ .. Iowcr8 men ''who ioined the Republican l» a vis will find it a very great error. Thej wlli le about its repeal hut now, its prin-

publicans, Know Noth-1 ' All the bv-, 1 '"| r ' i •" . Davi- Republicans are the bitterest cue- es are generally acknowledged sound, Digs, and everything els.: that the devil I m « excepting Mr. Ellis, are I’ al, y ""'.V 0, (0 l(ia antl „iies Judge Douglas has in this region. a,,, j " at l ,iir, y would not repeal it il they can invent, are a)tempting to hrrakdown 1 Kansas shrickors. Tho Republicans of s l“ycry doctrine wbteli they arc now | had tho power. They were opposed to

the lieuioeraLs when lie knows he is notjs Senator. Mr. MeCartv Mr. Dunn and yet they seek to retain as their Ibl who expects to help Douglas through

Lt; t,;:T csS k^’.nII.th ' ir ™

T ('CWf

Indiana have a beautiful record, truely, striving to kick overboard !

to go forth howling about forcing Constitutions upon a people without their con-

sent

Of the millions of Democrats, but and SIMM LS.

one of them in Indiana ha- been found Bficir till tllCSG FtlClS 111 who is opposed to the principle of sub i l^illd ! mitting Constitutions to the people—and And when you come to vote, remem

who regards such submission as vicious— her that it has

that man is Jesse D. Bright. Notasin- DEMOCRATIC DART) which has gle Democrat in Indiana—in office nr stood at the helm of our

the Democracy. The K. X.’s meet the •lisappninted candidate just as mild as a dove r but as drrriifid as Lucifer. “Well, sir,” say they, “you have been disappointed in the nomination—in fact, sir, you have been cheated out of it. However, a (rent many of the Democrat* say they will still run you for the office, and say you will be elected. I have not 4he least doubt of it myself, for I know many of my party will vote for you. Tiny say they dn not lilu to see a man ipnnp'd out

of his rights as you hare hern." They * V”"!'. 7 1 1011 t0

itteetbim as often as possible, and talk to ,,ut office, rich or poor, learned or il- State through nearly all the perils which of his up-country organ, the Rockville him in this hypocritical style. Well, if j literate—has ever approved of tho views have attended our existence as a nation;— lupuh/iian, which paper leaves no oeeathere is a soft spot on the disappointed of Mr. Bright, as thus promulgated.— REM EMBER that that good old party s i ,,n unimproved, to impress upon its Allcandidate’s head, he thinks it a>l gospel. Yet Republican orators and newspapers is to-day essentially what it was in the J' ,1 ' tlou 1 ’ , a, .l , ;rfi that Mr. Davis is opposed and sells himself to tho cneniv! He is . . • • , , , ...it , , to that decision, and essentially right on ana salts nunscit to enemy . He is! llbor to „ catc tho ^prcss.on that the'days ol Jefferson and of Jackson (ho T)|0 , lr .

Deniocratie party are opposed to Fopular REMEMBER that as it is abused and j | ^ partv in Darke to support Mr. Da

Our Excuses.—The “independent"

Kt*t“|l il before (he I’eojllc! j candidate for Congre s rub this paper That what the Republicans really want is considerably, because it has stated that

ssctionai.agitation,omen

I Died Scott. Mr. Davis, himself, saysh voted against the resolution giving thej

the youngest three years of age—into a well thirty feet deep, and afterwards jumped in herself. The woman was supposed tohavc boon crazy through jealousy. Daineui, Cot nil ov Long Standing

the repeal of the Missouri Compromise,

and clamored Ihttdly for its restoration. ('i reii.— From lion. JudgeN. ('.Stevens, Do they want it restored ? It don’t look' formerly J ndge of Hie Supreme Court, of Abolitionist Lew j much like it. They do not say so, and it the State of Indiana : fair to infer that they do not. Madison, Ind., Oct. 24, 1855.

,, They were tit that time opposed to the doctrine of popular sovereignty, and

seattoMr. Vallandinghu.n,consequently,! '••mended fir the constitutionality of the

it being a finality, he voted to keep Camp- '' F^’tso.

l»oc!i the COOP OM) I hell in his place! and so lor that charge; How are they now on popular sover-

'ho is condemnod out of his own mouth! ei'gnty ? Just ss the locality requires. ,| That he is opposed to Dred Scott, we are If it is ofaliolition proolivities, they think noble Ship ofj K , d l0 bl .ij ovc |,y the constant assertions| that, (’engross has power over the terri-

To all iqlnuii it may conerrii: I most willingly certify that about eighteen months or two years since, I was severe ly attlii t -d with a cough, for a long time, -indeed, until nil the viscera of the tho rax cavity had become very sore, and every paroxy sin of the cough was very pain

gonovaud the party is well rid of a mas-:

i:Hlshne.'S.'’

of set

^ «♦«— - Sovereignty, and the submission of Cob VI LLIFIED NOW , so tilsi) wan it ea vis on tie r ground-. If the independ Every two votes withheld from 'gtitutions, and that the Republican party lumniatcd in former years ;—and finally, ent docs not desire “these things why fejres * tC ffinX onllBEDT Y rem/" are th ° »P ccial friends and champions of REMEMBER that it is alike the part of Rot stop his organ-grinders?

her this, and fail not. to i, npr ess’ it 'Upon measures. Bah! Voters of Indi 1 patriotism and of wisdom to stand stead ' your neighbors.—Roekeillr Rmabliran. ana, look to the record wo have cited! lastly to that ptirty which through tin exIrieads of Ll BERTY I Ue.mwuats ! | Couwr.-The most pos istcncc ,0CVnl wi,h ,1,C ^ ahVw

last Saturday, Mr. Davis admitted that he might he driven into a Sectional political party, by what he termed the aggressive spirit of the South ! Mr. Davis did

O. n..k i. '■»*'> •"hurfMi'inr'tL‘o]' ,K Ml 1 !(Ei[«S t ik!lIlc!S5r. , Ilol«S laBo to kpiMaiorlhen pntly hj.a.li lion try ol UIII'.KI 1 ANII ]>AVISIU.||n m „ „f , CI .,.i, v Conn Cnop.-TI,. I.oui-villo Jonrnnl n ihan Iruo IVnMlM over n.lmit for. pr"l - Ho y oro mull.l,n lln- |,omt

."t/T '."r t r 1 v t

Kito'n,;.. In,Mi,,- U.,o- J n.inn.i!^ c ';;S:::^^”fmL ' ''r’;.'L'AZ. ”

LIBERTY ery for Davi ?

What itk Admits.-

torios, but, if they ean throw obstacles in the way of a measure supported by the Democrats in Congress, they will vote for the Crittenden Montgomery Bill, which permitted Kansas to eomo in as a slave State, if the people of that territory so decided, thus at one vote, trampling the doctrine that Congress had The power to prohibit slavery in the territories, which they had so recently advocated, under foot. If Democratio vnto.-

Tn his speech arc to be cajoled, they believe in the right

ofthe people to determine for themselves.' When they thought Dong Ins was going to oppose the Democratic party, they were all good popular sovereignty men. but now, as they cannot see any udvan

»*(, Ex Gov. Jones, ot Tcnn , i mg IHinoi., for Dougla

tump

as their delibegate.

I judgment, that our gallant »tandard-bear- , r will carry Vermillion county at the

'October i lection

never

so large in Kentucky a

iscs to he. H hears of fields in the Blue Sout i7 0r ' N ;, rth W j ltIl ;l man admit* | An anti Nebraska party tVom 1854 t Ira:,; region e.-tiinated at 25 barrels, or t but j,,. 1UA y b , induct d to do a wrong, the to 185(5, and now acquiescing in and comI?. 1 * bu hels to the acre, while field, prom ah t told and hr t la t drifting into! p< Med to adim.t tin oundness ot tho great Ling T6or od !"i *, 1 in quitr'on,m'’n.r''vot md mi .eonduet! | BOipUttl tb,tbii[ *hc right ofthe

1 forluuatcly iip[ilied to Dr George W. Dhillips for advice and relief. Ilo gave me a small phial of what he called Cough Syrup, a preparation of his own making, as he said, and before I had ta ken more than half of it, l was wholly relieved. The relief was so sudden and complete, that it seemed almost like magic. Also, my daughter was alllieted. previous to my affliction, with a cough ot long standing, and one and a half phiab of the same syrup relieved her entirely.— From those facts I have no hesitation in recommending the 8yrup to all who may be so unfortunate as to be afflicted with a cough. 8. C. Stevens. The Newcastle (ionritr says that! Mr. Hid Elliot, a resident of Elizabeth City, in that (Henry Co.,) cut his throat on the !*th, killing himself instantly.— The cause is supposed to have been pecu-

niary troubles.

Bste.RiY.-Jon S. Turley, formerly a min i ter ef tin Go. pci, was executed at Charlc. ton, Kanawha county, Va., recent ly, for <h mttidet ot' his wife