Weekly Reveille, Volume 39, Number 40, Vevay, Switzerland County, 1 October 1856 — Page 2
Teat Votes, • A vole taken on the Terre Haute carV, on the 12tli in* t., was os follows; Fillmore, * - - • ■-■S3. | ■* BoOliamui, - - . - . 61. : Fremont, • - . • 36. | A vote taken on tht;*caia between Cut-, cinnali ami Seymour outlie 22d irist-, resulted as full jw>; Fillmore 37, Buchanan 21; Fremont 15. ■
[dark and mysterious part for the accomplish; {meal of Cmhbltc designs on 1 he "country. Bill « t mutt’ insisUon their Idling atone [tbegood priest hood..y 11 jviiruot do mendi of Wr:.Tremo»t lb I malign filsely the character of the good old ■ Jesuit, Father Van ’ Ubrselgbi who married ; him. Respect for I he memory of a good priest now deceased, will one day compel the over-; , ‘ l.nuIir.jnT the coarse charges of .the Tribunal ; : that lc had no regard for the requirements of, t,is sacred office," ’ 1
The. Pope Coming to the Rescuel Amer- . '•. ■ leans,: Attention! - ■
Squatter Sovrelgnty,
6fea fWiltj lelmllf.
• We copy from the New York • Tribune,’of tbe ISlhofSejpt, tie following adveiltsecpeRl, anil | recommend jit attention of Very American :* * ' ■’ rf V; .j f I "• I'' 11
OPPOSED TO IT.
' Col/Joteph, S; planter of Louisiana, and#gentle m an 6ft tie highest character nndstan4) ng hotli'iu that State and in Tennessee; where ho formerly resided, called upon Mr. Fill more, a few weeks ago, and afterwards,’in responsoto a letter from, (lie.distinguished editor of; the Mem. phis Enquirer, wrote' out the following statement.of what wajT said during the interview: . •/, - fi 1 • Mr.urui8, ; Sepl 15,1850.
Vedneeday, • * September 31; 1056,
O* W R E A n Y ; ; L% Tilt:-DULL- OFI’OI'EGaLGORVXVh
Against slavery. .Tbit fcmous.-'DlILLV POPE GREGORY, j XVI.. forbidding alt Roman Catholics to countenance,- nsshu or 'in anywise participate ini tbe Extension of.'Slavery, but*jtut been UioeJ: ill pirophtcj a / ■ • H t nl kep I c&entc am paign liai llu itraUd.by.] ahandsomeItkcamjaEtbe POPE, 1 surrounded j bybii Cardinals. engaged i n the work of freeing a stave fr yi]. hiycbfips./af complied; with some si tikinV extracts from tite' celebriled LcV-! tesof the '-IriihLib’eralor;” DANIKLO’CONNELL, Bddffsscd to lhc peoplc.uf .Cincinaoli,' against tbc sysiein of AMERICAN SId» VERY and.particufsry Its' further Extension. No Homonbt, in view of this allocutioo.from tbe Papal Chair, can. conscientiously cast a vote whichsbaU'sidto make ; ’ ■' ‘ ‘ i-L KANSAS A SLAVE STATE? . and tbe tract should be freely circulated in every'Roman Catholic district and neighborhood in ibc wbuic country..
3. firjmml In CsJIfornln.
Terrible Disaster. . * Chicago, Sept. 2&. Tiie Niagara left Collingswood at '2 P, u. on Monday, between 1&U and 17& pas* songcn, -o left (he lost at Sheboygan, where they arrived at - 1*. M. yesterday. Two hours out from bhtWgun the passengers discovered fire issuing from (he tn ginD-ryoni; in a few'minute* the cabin wai in Games, and the wildest cou.lernauon ensued. The Louis were lowered a ;d tilled, and all capsized except one containing i!U p*s - eengera; number* jumped overboard aii i wore drowned instantly, TheTravelerwasHi* miles tliKlonl when bhu discovered tlie. fire; tho saved 30.
't he New-York ('iriren, a Catholic paper; u.j.n-s the It;:*. : of Hon. N. Sargent; tmd says:
.; A vote taken on the car* between Indiauapolia ami J.efleisonville on flic 23d, atood —Fillmore 53, Fiemonl34, Buchanan 32. The following votes were taken on tho 24th/ Cn the : cars front Terre tlaote to indianapolis—Fillmore 56, Fremont 40, Buchanan 44; irom Indianapolis to Louisville—Fillmore 27, Bnchaiiaa 13, Fremom 7.
If it.*’ - letter is not ultswered satisfactorily, it must he as decide or Mt._Fre;, uviot’i religion w hen he a,-as in .Califortria.— Vet he lots attowed'his friends to declare not nniv that hers not, but never wan e Catholic: The wnlet of she letter, lion. Nathan Sargent,u a man whose character is unimpeachable, and who has held offices of high rejp.tDMlrii*, jy, such os;Register of the National Treasury. He refers <u w it nesses, t«o, of equal rerptetahi lily with himself.'
Col . J. P. Pryor—Dear Sir: Your note 'of this lnstaDt',* a>Elng for publication the substance of a.conversation between Hon. Miilanl/ Fillmore ’and myself upon tho e'uhject of “^^nalter ,, or Territorial eovcrcignly, bus just/bt‘en , ;handed no. 1 cheerfully comply with your rcquiwt.as I was placed under no restraint by him in iefcrcuco lu tho-inaller.
The prbpollor -Illinois, bound down, picked up laboul lbirty,/and she left them at Sheboygan. : - ■ - ■{ The life-boat al Pori-Washington teacued 20. Geo- Haley, clerk of iha Niagara, w supposed, to be ! Oil. Probably 50 or GO lives lost.
’VATlOt'tAL AMERICA* TICKET.
For Preuldnili M I 1.1. A H 1J I 1 ' 1 M.M O II K. or ,sew*-inee.
For Vice PreddroU A N D R i:\V J. DONKI.SON, nr TExsr.s<i;".
A- gentleman, in California, fmntciJy of ChMlesUn, Mass., writes-as follows , to the Ih-slon Patriot:
■ Upon nty return honte front tho North, I called to see Mr. Fillmore at his home in BiiOaio, N.;Y;, on tho 4th. instant,— Duringotir conversation 1 asked him what He .thought of "squatter horcreignly,” and in reply he entered into a free and unreserved expression of hi a views.*- He said he was decidedly-opposed to tin's doc.;trine, a* . advocated by Cass, Douglas, Buchanan,'Vail Bnivit, and others. He believed that a Territory,.until its inhabitants were-sufficiently numerous to Authorize the formation of a Slate constitution, preparatory to admission into the Union ns a State, could only be regarded as in a condition of pupilage, possesring no sovereignty whatever,- and referred to the Utah and New Mexico Tetri to rial hills,’ sanctioned by him, a.-ra collect indication of hts opinions, -■ 1 was g rati Red to findthnl if r. Fillmore occupied the- same position upon this question which is maintained by the Amcrican party in the Smith, and hy the whole band of national Americans of the North, beaded by such' men as Fuller of IVntisylvanin; Haven of New York, ami others, ami 1 told him 1 would like to be at liberty to /peak of the cyplnnation received from him. Jfe replied he had ex* pi es sed the same vie ws 'toiuthet a, and that I could j make such , uso of them ns 1 thought proper. Yours, truly, Josnni S. Williams.
A vole taken on the steamer Ella front Louisville to Cairo, Sept. 19th nx-uked as follows: Fillmore 24. Buchanan-16, Fremont 1. Ladies' cabin two to one for Fillmore. • '
There wa* a rumor iu the city that it waa the work of aa incendiary. It is slated that,'immediately after discover j of the Hame-'. a keg 01 powder exploded, blowing the fire in every direction. The first'ongiacek way not on board*. -
SacraMcsto, Oil., Ane. 19. FSftS.
Eire (ora for the Mlwte nt LorRe. nEORGE G. DUNN, of Lawrence cointly RICHARD W. THOMPSON, of Vigo.
I see by some of the Eastern papers there is some doubt about the. religions opinions uf Col. Fremont. A: for flat, I think 1 can pul you right. la November, learning that Col- Fremont was in attendance at the Roman Catholic dturth, and having a desire, from curiosity, to •re him, I followed. Is aw him go to the holy wettr, dip his . huger in, and-cross himself, ■and then go towards the altar and get down ! on his knees. During advice I Sjivbim cto« himself several times I have since, on' »n« . occatiui, seen him partake of the sacrament i in that church. J, Mon«ill.
It ts adapted to be one of the ib'osl effective docuinmvs, among ibis class of tbe community, that has ever, jet been - tstued for'tbe .purposes of tbe campaign. An edition uf Forty Thousand is already out from; tbe press, and ithother edition of ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND
ntttrlct El re I or*. I. Jiiicji fl. Jo\us, of Vpndeihnfgh. 3. Datip T. Lmrp. of Perry. J. Joh.s IUk.er, of Lawrence. •4, Wiluih K. Whitk, of Dearborn. I. FtiDKarct JonssoantJCH,*gf Wayne. C. Hrsr.v II. Hatin.tv, of Johnson. 7. Wilijak K. Edward*, of Vigo. 8. C. \V. I’ftvrnr.R, of Montgomery. B, OtoROR W. Hr.iRtnoRci of St Joseph 1 0, J.‘McNutt Smith, of Mien. 11, WiLi.rsM R. Milk, of AVaba.Oi.
1 Fillmore ia Wisconsin. - The National men of the "Fric&l ridden State of the West,” met at MilvvanLie un the 24tli inst., and nominated the follow- j ing electoral ticket. ' , f , j Electors at large— II.-irn’>on Ltidington,. of Milwaukee; U. A. ■Fairchild,..of Min-j oral Point. i District Doctor*—1st, Robeil Chand- j ler, of’Milwaukee; Zcni Rottmis, of 1 firccn county; 3d, Richard 1 (art. of Mar-j quelle. ‘ .. . _ ! For C6tigre,:s, First DUlricl—Satii'l ; liiriiop, nfMiltvttnkct'. | State Central Committee—-^Ulms. R., Dakin, of Wnnkcsha; .Joint Colgate, ofj Milwaukee; John - Bracken, uf .Mineral ■
will be leodyos sooa as tiecesssty. - Lel eveiy friend of ficcdqra who knows a Roman Cal Italic voter, sec tbalrne uf these Tracts is placed in bis bands. A (.-cu tie man mNcw Jersey wbu bas Sent an order for a Tbouianil, says be is cun(idenl lhot their distribution vicinity ‘will,honorably win ' - -■ . ; FIVE MUNDRED VOTES for freedom! ■’ V
Lieut, Wuirbangb, of Cincinnati,., inform* tlitr 7W.itlt.il lieijwd’ r i«sitited with Mr* Morrill, ami knows/h;,/ t It ti man whose wind ran be relied on to .,re greatest dearer, -
- Great Men of the World, - Tin* greatest man ever born or known ; to the human race, George \Vaibing- | ton, an American. | Tiwrnost brave, feailess'audbcnavulcnt ! Military Chieftain of thedast two hundred iyon ix, iva-r Andrew Jackson, an American. ! Thu three greatest and most learned parliamentary- Statesman of the ago were [Thomas ilefiersuti, Henry Cl ay and iGuJcl I Wohetcr. i The 'greatest Doctor of Divinity wa* | Jonathan TNiwaida, an American. [ The greatest philosopher was lt.nj. > [Tunklin, an American. 1 i 'IVgrMt.M ot living Sculptor* is Hi;ram Cowes, an American.
rremont's Roman Calholoclsm. MORE EVIDENCE.
■ ■ Price SlOper thousand,$t ?y per hundred; twu ccnls single copy. Crders, with the itioney.twill be pruntpuy cxccuit-d, ; Address, ■ JOSE1MI H. LADD. . ' No. 22 Uccknittii-sL, New York.
*4. Krentont In Sr*
Thi Catholic Presi Speaking Out!
It is now u sc tiled -fori, that John C, Fremonl Aoi Arm a Catholic, and bii friends have never site in plod to show- he denounced his Catholpcism. We ask every I’rotcrUin'. Ftenionlft to direst himself of prejudice, and retd the following unanswerable ond ■lacunttoyeilible evidence, and then vole for Fremont, if you can : —
On lilts' ir.th September, the St., Louis Lead- ; er, organ uf ; tbe (toman Catholic Archbishop' there/spoke as follows .* ' . U would be affecialirm in as to 1 keep silence I in regard to whofrs said* in this eity'on this ; question. ■ Tlut Frutionl professed to be ;n , CmhoUc w hen in St- Lo«fo, admit* not of a , idoUM- • \Ve Oiulerstatill Ihili.au even ;iig\tor!_ ■ I temporary will-titildeh some import Hitt ftiejs . j on the subj>c« ibis evening..' U’c have certain : further developments in reserve, amt are niffy waiiiiig jVr ihe'pcnmssiun ofn third party to ’ \ publish them, be b Catholii iim/dfoI qualification fol ihei-tiitc of :President of the | Coiled,htates. Uluito bn a Cniholic and at. : 1 1.c same lin.c, the enndidate of the Know! | Nothings for the I’re-.ltuicy is certainly.a; very | curiotts. combination. To ku of axv religion, j I and to suppress or deny it, for fear of losing votes, is despicable. —j ; What is nsjcrtetl, is this: That when Fie ntopt was’lierc as h young- engineer,.he , whs considered a Catholic by hi*; tin mediate, employer, #nd "!he;lat!er being a zealous 6 nVldriiself, look pains that the young, men with him should practicejlheir'-rcligion.' 'A i cntltman, moreover, whose, name ran be produced, recollects an to Fremont, but bearing on Ihis'point. j At table, jn a hotel, an EnglishniBn/nfier-dinner, gentlemen only Tpresenv of course/uttered a mqj>t insulting opinion in. regard to the chastity/pf Catholic women—and . Fremont sent hiirijf* challenge, on the grouniLibal he had instilled the members op his church. The Englishman vamosed., .frjAnother gentleman, {vow* Hhal he taw Fremont - at, the altar rails of the Ca thedral, j/S ho rcceived.cbmmutiinn or J not; cannM be nosilive.j In fact. *»*”«ily Catholics t hepi • iclvw tfor ihelrtry first people in St. -Lobb, you know, arcjCatholies,—and it is a recojnmendolion in.jhc beft society}, ond we haye yel to meet lit first man who knew Frrmdnl here,' and did riot regard him; as aCdtholicf— We pals ess. however, evidence of a far;more delicate and reeAcrcAi/ nature, and if ve are permitted, wiltpublish it. /Suffice it to say,?al present that. ji establishes in our mind the conviction that when' here, among Qatholijis, arid in Catholic Creole Society, this then qb- . sen re )|uung n:Sn O’ parsed himself off pi* ■ Catholic, professed at; least to perform devotions peculiar |o’the:Catho|!c Church, and rejected by fill ProteMspfs/xi bod, in short, was citber a Catholic or a hypocrite. : I & Ufcourse, no one can possibly view, this question of o man's relic ions, faith as a qualification fur office with more profound covlernpt than' we do, id the particular .shapei at lea it I, in' which tl is {made a question by the.Know Nothings. .This; feeling has long kept Cntliplins silent, id; whom Fremont's professions were vriy well known. nqw.maUersifc really come lb;a. pblnrwhere.delicacy biP.'a certainly delicate subject—that of a ‘inin's'religion—*hau id- notbepcmiiUed to interfere with the, exposure of /npon—a smooth kpd . double-faced pretender—who is actually the candidate of a’party that’puts "Slavery, Popery a|id Rom’*{'iij lhe same category of con 1 tempt and hatred. JP such a man is or was’a Catholic, the world ought to know.it.. If he was opt, buij is one no longer, they hare a right to know the parted 1 a mi, the, motives 'of |iis'changed More particularly is thiW the.case since, we bavejundcislood'that Monsieur Frc- ; mo nV ; p ro n OU peed. pfaymong) p to feSSCS: .to ■ fratne bis fepliyson the subject so as, tq sliit ; both pDtiies, oud. get voice from both. r I..
’ The ctlebrjted' , rinll of Pope Gregory XVI.” is to hr' ciicnlatcil as’ a . Republican tract, in every Roman CaihpUc district in the country; ami to supu as iji ii brought to the attentionof well I’uiuoiiiM, ho •‘coimiil in view of tl is allocution from the . Papal Chuteh, cdnicieoliutjsly cost a -vole; which wilt.aid to make Kanawa Slave \Ve me exceedingly anVious to learn-what impression is to be inadu upoji the uubelieving minds of pur Democratic brethren, as Ip the temporal power of the Pope,. When they .witness tbegeBCtal itaihpedoi to lining vff from them hyMKousomls/in ohediente to the Pape’s mandate —.against which "they ‘cariiipt'cooscieniioi;i|y .vote,” .will-they' tiU become more : firmly Convinced that the Pope cicrciscs no- ooniroi [over the puljtieal affairs of ihiscouiitiy. Ilal knew jou nutscd i viper in’yput'bosom, - shat would sling you,'; Now* your 'doyi ;• a re numbered — yoiir requem : is. sung in AT he Uiili ofiPope G rc-gbry ; KVi.” against' slavery. WAV A.; trilune.-': , .-A.'. ’ ' ''A; A*/';'
I’oim; Zeui Rounds, of Ctreon ci»un|y, Ricltnid UarL ofMrttqiieiie. .Oiily.two or three Ntqtes in the Union am now '.without a National American Electoral Ticket.' .No other party can say as much. / •'
; Tlio iriMic-t living Historian i« Wm. \ w • C* # J.H. l*ie»COtt,’ nil American. ! Tim gtoahtid Oinitholcgiitmu •!, J. J Andulon, nn Amoman. ; The greatest Lexicographer liacs lh» •time of .Johnson, was Noah Walter, an American. The greatest Inventors of modern day*, were Fulton, Fitch, Whitney, and-Motse, all Americans. I The imwt honest and candid atattviit.ni 1 which ever lived in any age, iv Millard i Fillmore, a;. Ameiican.
I. Frrmunl In Sotilh enrollu*.
The Cbarlaton founcr, alluding l» its pie vious assertioiflhJt FtiCior.: wu always ie yarded as a niember of tin: Cutkolie Oh.irt.'i during lis resldenre m itiai city, .says:
Indiana Fillmore Electoral Ticket ■ At »i meeting of t(io'Executive Committee of the I rieuds til I’ilhuoreand Moiu'laou, in Indianapo!h-, on WudiieMlny, Sept. 24, 1856, the following were adopted: ’ Jtciolfrd, '11 Ml ihc.'tatemeuts made by certain news papers to tho effect that lire friends of Killnioro anil Doiu-bou in tins Stale have mi licit with tho.M: of Fremont nti4 Dayton, amt will Mippoit the‘winn* Electoral ticket,with them, is.md into; *'iit on tin) contrary, that we have oin own Eleclorjil ticket^,composed only, of Fillmore men, and intend to anpjiort.iliat; ticket and no other, without union or fusion with any other party. ■ lietUctJ, That the Chairman of This ii.t- tvsolu([(jii ui be published and ciiculated dsextciiBively ai. pusMile. ' ‘ - i . ■
We agree with the New-Votk Commercial Advertiser, and cannot think Ibol Frciuoni will dare to deny pu-thfly the eisftliim wc have made. Since nut fitit statt-irwot of that tiers, Wc have received corroborntivi.- evidence from distinct and independent lources, and we leave it bofote the public, inviting ami reiiaeating a refutation and authorl'.ive contradiction, if such can be given. ;
• J3T The. Slate Sentiud, in urging its friends to elect.Willard speaks as follows: . After he shall he elected Governor.* the void of, the Stile is settled as Mire for Mr. Buchanan. ■ A-vote for \ViLLAiu> in October, is bettorby far than i vote for Been? anas in Koyeiuler. -AYhc will he so silly and'green as.to W out of-his vole for AViLhAlib,’when >o much depends upoblho resnlt o.rhia election or defeat? Sensible niea;will sec the effect of sustaining Wiuakd, ni tho firstglnnce, mid they wiU iipl allow* one vote to bo given against him in so critical in .epoch; Bally to the last man on., >yiu.AHDj for hu is ’ your china p ion,' ■ null -The . flag of Dembcrs cy |mhslafaiid'or fall with him.. . - Cv, .tw iivniuviiii'r aitmliTlinVlhc defeat A' 1 ' '' s'” > ■' ■ ' ' ■*'*.■ I " ■ • • bf .Willircl wiirkill the.parlyBn Indiana. ' A con did nd mission'. ’ M 6rt on wj 11 be elected l>y fL 1 iugo innjoriiy, so good bvo Old liincrk. ! ; ; '*
Itucilfs'i'i:n, N, V.. Supt. till.
: The Fillmore Ante) icon Stale conve.v I lion met lids afternoon and nuiiuuated Kiirnatns Urooki for tiovemorby ac.'laumilion. i The Auii'iienn Contention nominate! Lvmeti Odell for Lieut. Ooveihar.
2. Views of the S'. V. Cndtollc PrcaN.
Tns Ncw-York Ciiurn, an Irish Catholic paper, edited by John MeCle-iiehan, bus ltd following on the subjeel: _ It secnis strange tfiat ’ibile the question of 51 r. Fremont’a.religion is'agitating the whole Union, he sbrinki from avowing principle's, II is true tbit, religion has nothing to do with political questions that are. to be tried in his person., But what his Jprvftiud religion is now has something to Onwi'.h his character, and therefore with In* ■' fitness’ for office. That fit i cat a Catholic ftrnt 19 he tcrfAev&tft; nbwV rtS' portodii, tflt*lrfs L ‘WTlo'a%1fii bis immediate confidence, including.Rev. 11. Ward- Beecher, one and all declare. TVArn the change took place does sot appear.; That ti the.point.' If Mr. Fremont has honestly changed bis reliciou, no pertop hns a right to make that on objection against him; but if he baa changed hit religion' fur the sake of lhe office to which he aspires; well knowing that if be wet* known to be a Catholic, (be fanatic* would, not vole for him, then we say-that he ia nothing belter than the miserable "souper" in Ireland, who becomes a Protrslniit for a ness of pottage. If the change in his religious professions basLtakuo place recently, the •circumstance is certainly suspicious; and' the feci ought to be known, whichever way it is. : U ta due to Mr. Fremont's own rbatiictcr to make e candid slotcment on the subject. ;' The New-Vnri Frnman't Journal, ‘the effi* eialorgin’of Archbishop Hughes, he* the,r»Iilqwing article on the subject: ! . Rcuotpx m PounciL Tcsr,—Were it not disgusting; it would amuse us to ae« the savsgencss of the contest that has been waging for months pail between the two Enow Nothing parties on the subject of the religion of the candidate of one of them. It waaperof the nature of n farce lhat an o»t-and-out Know Nothing faction should have selected for their Presidential candid ats nql only the ion of a foreigner, but one who, until recently, was looked upon by his:friends and associates as . a. Catholic. : The parly known as Choctowi. No.lh Americani/br Ad-ti-SIavery Know Nothings offered Mr/-; Fremont Ibeir. nomination, and he fornially . accepted ft, having avowed his sympathy ; witli most of their principles,' end his purpose, to carry them out if he’ should be elected, .'Ac cording to- the New-York Times/ a Fremont paper, this cohventiOn which thus nominated Mr, Fiemont/was composed of-those "who bolted- from the American N.\ National Council and Nominating Convention tnPhiladelpbfa, by reason of.the. admtssidn'therein of delegates representing 1 a Roman Ctlholic • constituency—thus taking the most decided position as anti-Roman- Catholics, and still maintaining that position.'*, Yef. as if to il ; luslrate how utterly profligate, Know Nothingisni isjnnd bow neccmnli'sclf stultifying, they take ri their candldileia min BUpposed.to. be a Oilbwtic, ; ;,' A v. 1 -. a ■ . Uayinrselccted. such aa.oue, for .their can.didale, the’- ne’it curious, step is to attempt to make out—not that Mr. Fremont had given up being a Catholic—not that he was now a Protestant, or no religion—a thing possible ia itself, plausible, moreover, and which he ccrtainly has the political right to do’without being political!) qjestioned about it—but tba; he bed never been a t’albolic, never so professed himself. Thit it the matt Jtaffrant imposition upon the American people that has ever been tried. Had the appeal been made to the real American principle, that a mao's religion Is not a matter on which he ought tr submit to questioning-however contradictory this might be to Uiv inquisitorial dicta of the Know Holbincs -their inconsistency would have found some to pardon it, But the attempt to make the public swallow in absurd « story as that Mr. Fremont did not for years profess himself a Roman | Catholic—and nothing but a [toman Catholic—has actually something in it hardly one step from the sublime. There is a relieving feature in this unpleasant business. It isthot while there are scores of men who, by personal intercourse with Mr. Fremont in other days, are in a condition to give the most conclusive teitimony—and many of these are hostile to Mr. Fremont politically —not one of them nf any character ha* been found to violate the rights of private’ intercourse, or the - political privilege of religious liberty, so much as to be induced to publish a word on the subject- The, unseemly contest has been, left to the two Know Nothing factioni to dispute bctvicch thcmvetvfs. The otie’sel avtrfjrit—what Mr. Fremont . does notjlwttb'.htf own words aver— that he l’3B never jirofeH.rec? him.-df a ((renin Cat ho ii-;—the oilier M-t avrlitii: ’.-ia 1 h- /ns m,; ■! :*i t- a ('t;! 1 ; o;i. K i,-- -urno
' ,; A- .,' - '■): : 1Vvrilwn forllio KovotlU, ■ Old Lino Meanness In Craig Township.
’ The North’American.seiv-k-rs not lit .this i*i»y lo-«I(ij>_r. \V. Walker presiding. .0. ltd words Letter toad ait addic*-,, giving u lilntory of the Ninth American parity : nnd I lie uw imis inhigi.v- with which it has- hud to contend, M-d m om mm lii.g il.i.t the on,volition fratv.Iiizo vvillt ii.o Killnioie Atmoic.u.v o.r the utetlhiow of the ' |{epi:Mlc.in*. 1'ite 'a Ute.-i wa* .i dopin'.
;;; For some time pash it htta been the unit versa! 1 ptactice of apmo'.young vBnckaV ’ to tear down all' American posters that they cau’ftnd,^ : band utils; callinglfora - M&r,s''Mccl):ig »v Vavay, oil the:4lh',fwr re pot up in dillcreut parts of the' towushipjand as early as Siiiiiluy’ morning scarcely any if them rain aidH ; 1 mviitg bucu ioru tlown on : Satf urday, night‘by,; apuic old I inera; Ho rciort to the'.' mean cowardly act of moping through thcduikhess watcliing an opporlnnhy''* to accomplish' their b ase purposes. -S’ d w.y oy uginen (or rather tilings) yon hail beticr bcware how yon perhiaL tu this 1 iiugenilcHianly course, as one of yoil are al ready known, yonmamc hiving been.rcroalcd'by one of your unprineiph'dclique. ; : • OavUIiver.
; ; A; II. DAVIDSOX.-Chmimin, C. C. JltTun, Scc’y. ; .!
.Ions lini»CGH.-'nu.‘C{.'Ih-fnntaiu(OJiii>) RtpuUUan stiyt: tins distinguished gentieman was in. that city n few-daya. since, and bciii}; .requested to make a speech, said-thst it was not Worth while to make speeches now; for the question; was alicudy scttlotl as to who would be.our«e.\t I’resilcnt. Hu considered that ho'had some cxitorienca in political’ matieisv and wa* Mire that the current against ;fi:irhanan in the North; was. irtcMMiblc. . Alluding to the flood-of 1840, lie said that in .that campaign he made on> hundred and twenly*one speeches, but worked .without faith, as he saw that the Democratic parly was to lo defeated; and, in Ins 010111011, the signs of the times indicated (ho same re- ■ nitnow. that they did then;
Sr. I,on-, Stjjt. I*,").. AjMii’l !u tLo Hfp'jhHcVh, diitni \Vt>lport, llMh. says: ; Gci«rr, n{ tlic heal uf .av.mi1 uf dragoon*, lias gone in fcifarch of Kino, itcUTtitiiiwi loarreit him, if in the. tetiitu* ir, Ilo w.n ea runic lo NulirukJta. ■ Tim pro-staveiy party is lakimr mennrci it* thoroughly organize for -dtciii.n uii the 1st Mondav in Oct.
i, -As a; Medicine,■ Only. A corre.-pomlent of the Indianapolis Banner, .writing from Kvunbvillo, say-:
}■ Wo can swallow; the Stale ticket for the purposeof killicg off the old line Democracy, but we take it as. medicine, just as we, wonld tube {duo root (0 kill worms, dreading all the time its effects, and fearing it may give us spasms. 1 The Banner says in regard to the lit ale .Ticket:
New Vour, 6ept. -If
The Slate Convention of t colored men , is now in session here. Wm. Rhode*, of Troy, presiding.
. '.The same acts tiiiyo.beeircommitted in other par ts of the County, and in Vevay. '• ”• Editor Reveille.
■- Wo take the Statu ticket just as you take it, ti listing that the cm a will effect much more (bun the diseafri. ' We see it now stated that the Fillmore moii all ovcr the Stato are going to vote fur the Peopled State Ticket: as preferable Lo the Old Lino ticket, with the notorious Willard and Hammond at its head.;
Resolutions were repo; lad and adopted, pledging the Convention to support the Republicm National and State tickets.
They will Lie.
• Mit. Clcjia.nan’s \ViTiliinarrxL.—-Lit* imhitjiatp. One as Bi’KASK. —Wc copy tlir t following from the LMtiladelpLia Fonnryl--vanianof the 19th yilt., the main organ of Mr. Buchanan in hie own State:
The^opponents of Fillmore in Indiana are determined that bur electors shall decline; whether thty ard willing or uot. : — The 1 folio wing note ji anotherclinohcr: r | : ; ■ CnAWFonpsviuB, Ang. 27. Dr: au Sir.—Yon noticed in the Lafayette Conner and Montgomery Journal a stalcident;ihat should be corrected: They state tbat I; one of the elactdra nominated On the' FillmVro ticket, have declined. 1 wilt say that 1 have, not resigned' a ml ueithertrilH; 1-jt tbo ; resaltbo what it will. M r. F(11 thoreV position' ia tbe o n ly eon - sorvative onenowbeforetho people, and 1 belieixthe dnly'man; that can quiet the present difficulties of onr nation; Thereford neither- of the ■ ofoither party can transfer nie to their ranks/whilst they bptli acl upon the one isolated acl : of the present administration, and Mr. Fillmore retains his present national character. ; Yours kindly, 0/ W.- Prather. .
OCT The Moniphiu . Kaglo and JCuquirer says the accession of; Gen. Wm* T. Haskell to the support of Fillmore will ( increase the ! majority; of Fillmore and. Dontlsoa inl'enncssee at least 5,000 votesHis!ability on the ;stump, forum, * and :oyory where where great . talking is to, be done; is known throughout the Union/ and we should not bo*surprised if with his; powerful help, TennysKCO . goes for "Fill in ore anil the Un ion” by over 10/' ! .000 majority: r* ,••• ? / ; ;
" Will Jfr. Buchanan ]VUhdrnu! ,, ~- For a antis factory reply lo this ofi-rritor* nted- interrogatory, the jitout editor of the Evening Bulletin, for some days past, hat evidontly hoen on tho "anxious bench." Agaioiond again is tho-question ashed, and an answer demanded. If it bunny re* liof tq tho edhorof that journal,, wo will Ftaje that we arc authorized to reply to his question in the affirmative. .Mr. Buchanan dott intend to ‘.'witlibraw." We may-remark that this is hot quiteoil of tbe FeQiiRylvaniAn'B paragraph on I the aohject, bQt lhe ro5t is r o.ovidenlly | fa|se' and aVnonsensical os not to be worthpubl(sldng.|.f;/; i ’ ’■ .'j AVe can ftBsnje r tho friends of Mr.' Buehanan.that, withintwclve hours afterdlie formalannoncjation ‘of bis withdrawalrl there wilhbe nioreahd greater fatificaMon the world nas’ever yet heard of.—Zou Vpujr* ' . ' . - ‘ '. Oe£t i Tho^Cincinoati r Gazette; 1 . aayrra Gtirthan Fremont Club was formadi'afew evenings slribe.'at Nsir Richmond; and already numbers . one hundred apd'fifty members.-'-'- ‘ < • . /. y • - ■
New Fillmore Papers.
Uuiou, Dcsota, 111,*: Times, Wythoville, Va. Advocate of the .Union, Walerhufy Ct.
; ■ Wo have received the first number of 'the Ariiericaii. Banner, a Fill in ore; paper printed at Indianapolis, Ind. It is a neat , paper and printed at the low price of 81 : per year, SO: cents for the campaign;-4 ; copies for .81 i ’ We hope it wi 11 be well ' stfst’amed. ■ ‘' ■' ’ ; ■ ." '
■ 8*, Fremont in ,lVa*blngton.; ■ v .V■ . The editor oj the' Button Ledgrr, referiUo Ihe e'u Vjeci in *lbc fol I o w i ng ra*n n e r t}, v ' When last in New Yorliwe paw-p gentle-i nan from Waihlnglon, ami a HomaniM.who was quite indignant at Fremont’s Undertaking to deny Ma Calholoeism.-“Why,** said he; "dbn’i. FreOionl- Know that we Catholics in
v Addrosa to" the^peoplo;of Indiana : 20.00,0 (■ CoriEfi.OKDERRp TO BE FOISTED; - The American State Convention inJ aly last, appointed a tb prepare an Address to the peoplo_ofth|s State./ Tbo comm 1 flea;laid/tbo/Addrcss before'tho. Central Comraitteo liwt W?edpesday/and it'was ohleredub’at’.twenty ihbniand copiek shouId bo.printed? ia pam phlot. for m, distribution. / It willbo isr sued next’-ty consider,-the ablostpo) itical ’db\nmeht issued this canipaign.—Rmng Sun Vitxtor, ; ';
Washington know bur own men, and that he, was always Trho wn and' reckoned on dbf us f There never was, and never can be any'doubt obout the Col.'n being a Catholic; 1 ' Why Ore 1 ly Catholic nigger almost was cogniwnlof-Jhe tact. ;.AVhen< be- atlcmk-d -cjiutc.b anywhere .he' atrerided the Catholic. 'And forbid) or any one' fb say that Rev/ Father Van lloKeigh
j‘ A New Fillmore PatUR.—A uew'pa- . per called ‘The Fillmore Uriiou’;h,a«'juKt ■ been established at Peoria, Illinois. It | will ridvocate tho.elcc.lion of . the National j American, candidates, and is intended to 1 lip's campaign paper, 'v .. ''' .' 1 i ' The _ Union Guard r i« the 1 name of anew [•’illmore pajfer that has’ jast been ! started at Qomey/ IIIs. v Fillmore paper* ' appear to bo springing up every side.: | XST The Fillmore Flatfurm, is tbo ' litledf a now paper just started at Belle■foutaine, Ohio,. Success to it. , L -
would ever consent to marry a couple ’unless at of them wns a Catholic, is n libel. Let them or bin say w hat they may, he never pretended to be anything but n Catholic, and such'he always was till now."
Tnt Noutii rouiso to TitB'BmccE.— An intelligent and well informed genllemnu, writes from Steuben/county,;New York to the Louisville jonrnal as follows’:
The Wrif among the "Uudefiled."
I It is no iiilo talk that.Fillmore’s chances for currying the North at this day are, equal to those of Fremont whiloBnchanan stands no chance at all. Fremont is losing rapidly and Fillmore gaining,"there hoing between thirty and forty papers that havo dropped the Fremont flag and hoisted that of Fillmore. The people of the North j just begin to. see the from hug, and are I flocking to the Fillmore ranks. One club ! of ISO Frenjontors in Ulster county re* I cently disbanded, burnt their banner, and Joined the Fillmore club. We shall look | for a good report from Kentucky.
>;>*c \s rj*.T -.Good:■ News.! •. : .. . . The Jcemont Excculivo CommiUeo for tha v Slatq York haye kurrende^ed thoir.ehargq and resigned.. On tho of September, they publish* od thmr disbanding Stephen M. F. Win. Walker, Jno. Williamson, Horace. A.. Day, Fpenctps Webflier, 0. Edward Lester, in which they Renounce all allegiance to sectionalism, and every one of whom hare enn tunccd their intention’to support the Union ticket Fillmore and Dohelson. , '
The war among the Democracy of Swiltcrland i-ounty is growing fierce. The "organ" thus "romts down" on Ml. p. Case, the acknowledged leaderofllie party in former campaigns:— .
OCT The Indianapolis Sentinel makes a calculation of the vote in November for President. He seta down the total vote as follows: Buchanan, 1,600,000; Fillmore, 1,100,000; Fremont, 800,000.
PEOPLE'S STATE TICKET;
If old Case thinks he can *rel US into a per sonal controversy, and thereby retrieve ‘ some of his lost standing, he is greatly mistaken." If be could be kicked any lower in the scale of moral, social; political, or pecuniary standing, 1 '-WE might condescend to kick hipi down a little lower, bulit can’t he done. He’scfor rfoicn and WE promise not again to offend oiir readers by miking use of his* name. The "organ 1 ' arrogates much importance to itself, and boasts .of its pecuniary standing I Well, that’s rich! Its motlo appears to be, "rule or ruin.” ’
'' -' V / i ‘ 'For Oorernair,, i .. : OLIVER P. MORTON, of Wajne; * For Lieutenant Oof'enior, CONRAD UAKEK, of VaBdeihurjlui ■. ■ SecrcUry of SUte;. • : ; t : JOHN AV. DAWSON, of Alien, r ■ Treasurer uf State, -'
It will bo seen by this statement, that oven our enemies now admit that there is “some chance" for the American candidate!
AVM; R. NpPSINGER, of Ptrlte. : ’ '' .Auditor of Sute i
(£r On Tuesday a wager of 81,000 was made in tho city of Now York, that Millard Fillmore would have twenty thou* tand majority over John C. Fremont in that city. The money—82 000—was deposited in the hands of a gentleman to abide the result.
' jpar A prominent merchant in New Orleans, who has till the present, been an ardent supporter of Buchanan, writes to his partner, sojourning in Louisville, that he has determined to do what ho can to secure tho election of Fillmore; nml hia reasons for the change is, that he finds all tho leaders of the Buchanan parly of, the Jttiehafiaii potty in Louisiana me rank VtfUhlvlii' 1 ). ~f
SiiiMFic.isT.-— 1 The Ithaca N. V; Citizen says:. *‘A large trots, reaching its entire length and breadth, bos been pointed upon one side of the Fremont'.banner which hangs across onr principal street, and face* that aide of.tho town in which roost of. Ibo!Catholics:reside. , • > '
.... E. \V. H, BLLI& of Marion. Sniieridlrndllit ofPublitlmtroctiou, CHARLES BARN of Floyd.., , ■AUontey General, i' jambs h. cravens, of;'Hipi*V?> ; Reporter of Snpreme Court; - JOHN A. STEIN, ot Tippecanoe. ’ Clerk orSupferiieCoiiit^ ' JOIIN A. OBAL'.of'Miemi. Pot Congtnvs, ■: ,
jf5T At a lalo harhneno at WhiteBInff in’ToDnessce, a Fillmore man got intoxicated nud declared for Buchanan.. Ho got acher again and declared forFillmoro. Ito ii> nlivays for Buchanan when he is dntnh, and for Fill mom whtn ho i-n't. H-'Mivarii he will not touch a drop on th-.- vh- lion day..
In the Field
Hon,. Thomasi Corwin will take the (‘lump for Fillmore and I)oiic)»oii,in Ohio, earlv in October.
XdT There arc now fonrUokcla* in tlw tic&ljn Massachusetts—Uto American, the Whig, the Democratic and the Republican.
JOHN A. HENDRICKS, of JtlH-r Sept. \H, 1S35.—:i
