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man wt' •» decreed • foothold M a aojoore uMtitution in all the tree Statee—and by of tbo Breckinridge mMaty. Um pougUa inJtfferrnct, nod the Boll aod Erer eit i</noranct policiea. gaio a *• laaae of na tion*! power—Um n—ah conaequcnt rra tormtion of Um foreign tnSt in nwjro alarea and Um cheapening of hnman cattle, will at once teach Um duiubeet tongue to cry oat, the coldaat haart to foal, and tbo blindest in carnation of respectable nonchalance to aee— that Um only remaining inquiry for the Amer ican people ia wnanua all row an shall n« sutm oa all slats shall aa iam ran. ^jretemitjonrnitl. Biddeford, Me., ▲ngnst U, I860. ( K.1TI0ML REPIBLIC l.\ Mitt4TIMS. (iLicnoi is iu tu t, 1MA.J FOR PRKiUI>K.VT. ABRAHAM LINCOLN, OF ILLINOIS. FOR VICE PRESIDENT. HANNIBAL HAMLIN, OF MAINE. Htuto Nominationa. TOR OOviRNOR, ISRAEL WASHBURN, Jr., or oro.no. For Elcctun < t l*re«ld»Dt and VW« PmldonL At Uao*. WILLIAM WILLI?,of Pbrtland AUNKR COUl'RN, of HWina.ld. Km«r Din LOCK O COWAN, of l»idd«ford. roeitTi * N. RKKI>, of Bath. BUT* - A.VDRKW I'fcTKIUH, of KlUworliu. Fur RtpnmtollrM to Coafnu. Fian Dm JOHN !*. OOODWIX, of R. IWrwIck Knuio " - -l' II AH. W. WALTON, of Auburn. Taiait - C. FK*»F.NDKN. of Rockland. Pocara - _..ANMON P. MORRILL, of fUadfltUL Sura - .....FRKDERIC A. PIKE, of Calais. County Nomlnatlona. roa IDUTOBJ, LEONARD ANDREWS, of Biddeford. N ATU'L 0. MARSHALL, of York. JOILN II. G00DEN0W, of Alfred. roa co. ooimiusioxhi, JOHN HEMINGWAY, of Shapluigh. roa sumrr, GEO. GOODWLN, Jr., of Walk r>a keg. or raomTS, (itO. II. KNOWLTON, of Biddeford. mr jt nci or i-robati, COW. E. BOURNE, of Keunebunk. roa co. triasirkr, SAM'L K. ROBERTS, of WaUrrborv)'. York County Appointments. The people of York Vamniy will b« wMwwtil mi polUt««l toptwWjr LEONARD ANDREWS, Ecq-.ttf IHtldeford. and uthrn, M fullywt, " Kittcrv, Aug. 2#, Leonard Andrew*, J. L. Swift, and G. II. Knowlton. " Buxton Centra, Aug. 29, Mm* Meet ing, John A. Andrew of Boston, F« -wendon, and other*. " New field, Aug. 31, Goodwin & Wood man. " Limerick, Mm Meeting, Sej«t. 3, Washburn and Woodman. " I.iin rick, Aug. 31, by Walcott Ham lin, &»i., of Dotct. *• Lyman, N?pt. 1, (Union School House) by C. C. Woodman, L*j. and Leon ard Andrew*, Em. •• I/ehanon, Ang. 30, ny Geo. U. Knowl ton and Mark II. Bunnell, at 2 P. M. lion. FREEMAN 11. MORSE, of Bath, will rjwak aa follow*: Monday, Aug. 27, at Searhoro". Tu.wday, ** 23, at Saco. • Wednewlay, " 29, at Ruxton Groye. Thurwlay, " 30, at K*nncbunport. Friday, " 31, at Welle Tillage. ~jf A(lT«rtt*en are particularly requeet »i 17. hand III their ad*ertt«emnifc «* early In the wftkup>wM». In order U> teeure their losar (Ion th*r iii ut be reeelr«U by Wednealajr Boon T. M. llayet' Acceptation Speech Thin gentleman's n| wh accepting the Dem ocratic nomination for Congr*e« in this div trict » published in the kit Democrat. Mr. Have* commence* with setting forth the beauties ->( the Democratic creed, in general terms. The Idtva are arranged quite logi cally, and set torth in terse and vigorous lan guage, and M an exposition of principal would be accepted by the whole people.— They are in truth American doctrine*, ac cepted by all partiea, and belong exclusively to no party or political organisation. In a* turning that they constitute the idea* or creed on which the Democracy would rule, or hare ruled the country, Mr. Hayea commit* great enure. Take for illivtration the fol lowing: Mr. llajca mjt the Democratic creed further areerta— ••That juatioe and aound policy loroiu iw federal government to cherien tb« inUrrreta ol one portion to Um detriment of another por tion ot oar common country ; that every cit i*n, and every portion of the country, ho* a right to demand and inskt upon an equality ol right* and privilege." Now, whatever may be the Democratic creed in this reepeet, every pereon converaunt with the history of our country and the his tory of the Democratic party perfectly un derstand,that for the loot twenty yean it hea been the object and aim o( the Democratic party "to cberieh the intereete of one por tion to the detriment of another portion ol our common country." All of ita power and influeooe baa been given to advance the inter cata of the slave State* and to injure the in tcreata of the free. II Mr. Ilayea will look over the legialntion of the country bum the time of the admiaaioo of Texaa, which waa put aolely by Mr. Calhoun and the Southern Democracy oa the ground that it wai made necemary to protect the alave institution,thro' the exciting timea which hare paaaed aince, be win m that the Democracy have done little eke but to put tbemeefrea in oppoaitioo to the priciplea which he amerta. ®l"0oieJ' build up Um alave power, gave $10,000,000 to Texoa. reaiated the ad ***** <* California., pamed the fugi tive Save Uw.np^ the Miaaouri Com pcuaiM, r^cte all pewpoeitione to protect eommcroe oa the WeMcrm then and lakae, I turns a deaf ear to *11 lequests for protec tion to American indatfrj, prevents the linking together of the Atlantic with the Pacific coast by aaans of a national railroad to the Pacific, endeavored to thrust a hated constitution on an unwilling people, still re sists the admission of Kansas because she de sires to be free, obtains decisions from the Supreme Court subversive of the principles on which our government is busrd, and is this day, either by the mission of indilfcrenoc or by bolder means, attempting to make the in stitution of human slavery as broad as tbe domains of the republic. No matter what the creed may be, this the Democratic party has done 0* is endeavoring to do. It tui "stolen the livery of heaven to servo the devil in." Mr. llaycs speaks o( its being one o* the articles of the Democratic creed, "Per fect equality of the States and all sections ol the country.1' This is a well turned sen tence, but its Democratic explanation is this, and simply this—a right to mako a 1 the States slave,under a construction of the Con stitution that declares "slaves to be property on an equality with other property." This is tbe sense in which the tenbs "equality amon;; the States" and "equal rignis anu privilege* auion^ the individual citisens" must he understood, to conform to the pres ent teaching of Democracy. We hoar of popular sovereignty (thiamuchabusedterm), equal rights and equal priril^jes to be yielded to our Southern brethren, and reduce it all domrto real Democratic moanuij i t is the righ t to mtmblmk sUrary in all j> iru of our com mon country. Thia we are aware would be no objection to Mr. llayes, who ia, an we know Irom hia own lips, a friend to African slavery. a believer in its blessings, and a hater of tboee miblime truth* promulgate 1 by Jefferson in that immortal state paper,the Declaration of Independence. Mr. Hajes looks upon the acts and meas ures of the father* "as mere traditions of tho elders," and hence he denounces tho Missou ri Compromise Act, and glories in that act of the traitor Douglas by which it was repealed. The people of this Congressional District in three successive instances have passed judg ment on that question, and we have no fear that they will now reverse that judgment by electing Mr. Hayos. The old time Democracy ho ignores be cause it hated slavery—the new time Democ racy he loves because "it does not care whether slavery is voted down or up," «r because it wants its extension. Tho Democ racy of Washington, I*fayetto, Jefferson, Henry, Randolph, Wirt, Madison, Monroe, Denton and Clay, "is merely the traditions of the elders," but the Democracy of Bu chanan, Douglas, Davis, and others ol the present day, is anobjoct of his especial admi ration. We have not space for extended comment on Mr. Haves' speech. We shall content ourself with giving our readers two passages which are characteristic of the man. They are these: The tongue or a maicroiem pouaniry, se» on (ire or hell, may, perhaps, delight small fanatical assemblies with barluruus di«N|ui«i tions upon the faneied KarUirisma of other communities, but it will not to suffered to disgrace our Congressional Imll*. Con ti ted skeptics may, perhaj*, continue to repeat their impious suggvwtioii, that Dei ty Himself is a failure, tm-auso their feeble vision cannot {vnetrnte tin clouds and <Iark ness which are round ahout Him, and recon cile all human condition* with their views of the justice and judgment which ought to be the habitation of IIin Throne—l>ut the God of our fathers will still abide—the tuuie yes terday, to-day and forever. No man in our community but Mr. Hayes could have so coupled the firm of hell with the attribute* of Deity. It take* a concen tration of malevolence and hate which can only emanate from the bottomless pit to put ! words together In such a way an to convert the grand truths of that Gospel which touch es all men to love one another even as Christ loved his disciples, and which d»uiands the breaking of the rod of tho oppressor, into declarations of his Providences, and to treat a* the suggestion* or "conceited skeptic*"all of God's eternal truths which denounce the wickcdnesa of that system which i* at war with tho precepts of tho christian religion and man's humanities. It is because the people have confidence and trust in the "(tod of our fathers,who will still abide the same yesterday, to-day and forever," that thoy will turn away with scorn and loathing from one who, in thi« nineteenth century, with all the lights of civiliiation beaming upon him, dares tho impiety of sus taining an institution which the immortal Jefferson Hi id "u frawjkt talk mort tut si ry tKan ayts of that trhtfh our father* rose in rtbtlUon to opposr"— which Dr. Franklin de clared'was an atrocious deboMewent of Hu man Nature'—which Henry said "was at va riance with tho purity of our religion," and which the great Wesley said was "the sum of aU human vilUnies." Mr. Hayea may make mouthing speeches 1 about popular sovereignty ami equal rights, but a people who bav« breathed the pure and free air of New KngUaJ, who Ian grown strong under the blessed influences of her school-houses and churches, and prosperous under the life-giving fruits of free labor, will understand that all his talk simply means the extension and perpetuation of slavery, and understanding this will reject him at the ballot-box, and consign him to that political perdition which he merits. Dm|I» Ii Salie, Hon. J>T*rnti A**oli> Docqlw, the traTel line candidate for lb* Preehleney made a flying Tiait Into oar 8tate last week. He went by the boat, ttrst to Bangor, nxl «u present in that city while the Young Mcn'a Democratic Con ten lion vu in progress. On bis return he pasa cd through Augusta an.I the various towna on the route toPortland, where he met a large crowd who aseembled to *ee him. While there he made one of his political speechee, m he did also at Bangor. Theee epeeebea have been published in the Democratic papers, but after a careful p» rueal of them we do not find that he givee any reason why he (loea not care " rktlktr sJarery is rottU Joi«a or up,' or doee he tell the peo ple why that he la running on th« same ticket with Herschell V. Johnson, the Blare CoJe ad vocate, who mid on the »th of May last, in a letter to n Oeocgia editor that " he believed U is Me rifht of Me South to itmmmd, and (At du ty of Conjrru to txU*4, nsticnoa of ran toms ajid rnorrarr erjrrrar hid (ivclcdi.vo turn is raa tsuitoeid) renmo tuib m nrroniAL state. On 8aturday morning he cams ont from Portland in the lint train, and getting out at the 8aoo depot waa carried to Factory Island, what* the people had a—em bled in goodly numbers to see the show. He wae Introduced to the people by Uua. Wa. P. Haines, who Mid in iubsUnoe, that jrwri ego, a man vent from Saco to Washington, and that Bukditon, and that ton bad bom to Un a child, and that child was the wifr of the dis tinguished pereon whom he had the honor to introduce, Stephen A. Douglas. We hoped tc eee Mr. Haines' speech in the Dtmotrat, bat felling this have given the part of the greatest interest Douglas bowed to the people, a fen (hint shouts were heard, and |he proceeded to make a brief speech, saying be waa glad U meet them, but could not make a long speed on aceo«nt of his lungs being about used up and because, although he loved the peopU much, there was somebody down to Newport whom he loved more, who waa waitiag for bin and who would be sorry if the train did nol take him directly to see her. At the doee o his remarks, K. R. Wiggin, Esq., called foi three cheers " for Douglas," which were giver somewhat faintly, and he then caltcd for thrt< cheers " for the next President," which, ai there were many republicans preeent who knowing thai one Abraham Lincoln would b< the next President, and could therefore proper ly join in the cheer,were responded to more gen trail jr. stepping into .Mr. n iggins earner Mr. Douglas wm taken to Diddeford, thence tc to the depot, where he took the cars for th< Weat. The "little giant" la by no mean* i I handsome man. lie is short and thick, with I • somewhat flond complexion, suggestive of th< good living which abound* in Waahington. W< i or* quite confident that the exhibition in oui place did not meat expenses. The laland Ex hibition waa deficient in every thing like gen uiae enthusiasm. The people were there it L true in goodly numbera, but it waa apparent ' that the larger part of them, though ready t< I satisfy their curiosity, thought the attempt o Douglas to win the Presidency waa very little if any, in decency and propriety, above the ef forts of the Distinguished American travellei Pratt, to reach the same office by the sam< means. The Tennessee Importation. A Mr. Perrln, a Democratic Importation from the Slave Sute of Tenneaaee,brought hen to teach the freeman of our State their political duties, and probably paid a good price for hii | lectures, addressed the Democracy of Diddeford at Union Hall on Saturday night. Th® Ilall wai well filled, the republicans aa usual contribut ing largely to the number and respectability ol the meeting. The speech ot Mr. Perrin, though generally making the same points aa Mr. Mar shall's, was more genial than that made by his brother from the Slave State of Kentucky. We will do the Tene«eean the justice to aay that he retails old anecdotes well, and mixes up the "wool" of the negro and the cotton ol the plantation owner, so as to make the dish, by its odditiea, of a laughable character, and he succeeds quite well in keeping active the risible faculties of his audience. Iu matters of political history, we should judge that he went on the principle, "that a lie well stuck to is better than the truth." He said he was formerly an old Whig, and he claimed Daniel Webster and Henry Clay both u having advocated the 'Popular Sovereignty' of the humbug Dougta* stamp. Every intelli gent man familiar with the history of Daniel Webster known that he never endorsed or advo cated the doctrine. He was always an arserter of the right* of Congress o*cr the territories. In a i|>e«ch made in the Senate of the Uulted States in 1850 he said : We have always gone U|x>n the ground that these territorial government* were in a state of pupiltge, under the protection or (wtronage of the General Government. The territorial leg islature has a constitution prescribed by .Con gress. They have no power not given by that Congress. They must act within the liinita of the constitution granted thein by Congress, or el»e their acts become void. The |»eople under the territorial government are not a sovereign ty ; they do not ponscs any of the rights Incideut to sovereignty. They an* it' y«u please to de nominate it, in a state of inchoate government and sovereignty If we well consider this ques tion upon the ground of our practice during the last half century, I think we will find one way of deposing of it. It is our duty to pro vide for the people of the Territories a govern ment to keep the peace, to secure their prop arty; to assign to them a subordinate legisla tive authority; to assign to them a subordinate judicial authority, to see that the protection of their persons and the security of their property are all regularly provided for; and to maintain them in that State until they grow into sufficient im|>ortancc, in point of population, to be ad mitted Into the Union as a State upon the same footing with the original States. It seems to me that this is all our duty. I shall most readi ly concur in anything which tends to the per formance of that duty Dut I can not go into any general discussion about the rights of the people while under territorial government, and do more than they are permitted to do by that constitution which creates a government over them.' Again Mr. Webster said: 'There is no land, not an acre, the character of which is not established by law—a law *ihich cannot be repealed without a violation ofa con tract, and plain disregard of public faith.' And in s|>eaking of the Wilmot l'roviso, he used the following cmphatio language which cannot be misunderstood: 'Sir, wherever there is a par ticular good to be done, wherever there is a foot of land to be stayed back from becoming slave territory, lam ready to aurrt (At pri'nci plt qf thetxelution q/ tlartry. I hart bttn pltdgtd to it from 1837. / hirtOttnjtltigtI to it ugriia and again, and I trill jxr/orm thou pltdgtt.' Is this the languageof'non-interven tion 7* Is this the great principle of'Squatter Sovereignty!' Mr. Ten-ill himself must know better, and bi< attempt to drag the great name ot Daniel Web «ter into the support of this Douglas cheat, was simply an imposition. Mr. Clay was equally emphatic In his asser ; tion of the right of Congress over the territo j riee. All that Mr. Perrin said in reference to | the opinions of either of those distinguished u»en, was simply assumption. It was said with an air of recklessness which led us to belie** that he did not care whether he uttered false hoods or not. Mr. Perrin, as did Mr. Marshall, essayed to t:y the "scare dodge," anl grew quiteeloquent over the terrible calamities which his imagina tion conjured up, when his brother Slave Holders of the BreckinriJge stamp, dissolved the Union. He said he himself, on account of his conservative sentiments, and Union loving ideas was a proscribed man at the South, and said that he was only induced to come up here because of his great desire to save the Union. Ue was actuated by a heart overflowing with patriotism—and had come all the way from Tennessee to these cold regions to persuads the psoplt of our Slats to vote for Douglas, and in so doing save the Union from the certain de» s:ruction that awaited it if tbe Republicans succeeded—not that the Douglas men in the South were going to destroy it, but "Yancey Slidcll and the Breckinridge men were going to do it A* there is no Disunion sentiment here, it would seem that Mr. Perrin expends his patriotism in the wrong place, and that his ml field of labor is whers the sentiment of Disunion is found, among his democratic breth ren in the Hlavr States. We advise him to go there, or quit the field altogether, as we are quite certain that this "Disunion Scare" has J run itself into tbe ground here, and that not a man in Maine will be frightened into an abao I donment of his political convictions through the bar of what Yaaoey Slidell and other Breckinridge men" will do IfLlaeola '4rlt^r1 I Adieu Mr. Perrin' What importation from the Slav* States will oar Democratic friends girt us next, and where is 8pinol* T If we cannot hart somebody from the Slave States, by *11 means let n hart Spinola. The people are all anxious to see Spinola, who voted for each and every measure of corruption in the New York Legislature last winter, about which tbe DemojratM preee have declaimed eo loudly. Another Oreat Meeting. The meeting Arranged to b«r lion. Henry Wllaon, of Mia*., on Wednesday evening wu held In the area fronting the Congregational Chnreh. Union Hall wu engaged, bat some tine before the hoar for assembling had come, t wae filled, aad gnat aaaabere assembled around the doore unable to gain admittance. Under this atate of things it waa deemed expe dient to hare the apeaking in the open air. HrJ Wllaon waseeoorted to the place of apeaking by the Wlde-Awakeeof oar two plaeee, who with torches numbering two hundred and fifty, made a moat brilliantappearanoe. Mr. Wllaon apoke ' to the erowd numbering several thouaanda for I near two hoars. We have no room for anjr ex ' tended report ot the apeeeh. It waa both elo quent and convincing in argument and facta, and iiatened to with great earneatneea and aU u tent ion. Our people aeem to be thoroughly arouaed to the importance of the iaiuee of the campaign, and will ahow by their voteaonelec II tion day that their love for free apeeeh, free aoil and freemen, haa increaaed rather than di ' miniahed. Mr. Wilaon in the coarae of hla apeeeh, after showing up theinconaiatancy and hypocriay of i Douglas in relation to freedom generally, and > czpoaing the abeunlity of hia aham popular i sovereignty, recapitulated aome of the act* of 11 the iaat Kepablican Home at Waahington, mea i tioning the jt**aige of bill* to admit Kansas, I the Homeatead bill*, the bill to repeal the ia • i famous Slave Code paaaed by the territorial leg laiature of New Mexico, the bill to readjuat the i tariff ao aa to give adequate meana to carry on the government and to protect American labor, 1 and other meaauree, all of which had failed ' through the action of the Democracy in the Senate. Thia recapitulation waa made to nwet and refute Douglaa' aaaertion that the Ilepubli | can party bad but one idea, and that it wai *o | buaied with the nigger question that it c->uld | find no time to attend to the other interest* of the country. Mr. Wilaon not only ah owed the j falaity of thia aaaertion, bnt he showed that it waa the Democracy In Congreaa and (specially in the Senate which by the agitation of the alavery quration were reeponaible foi the de feat of all uieaaurea calculated to prooote the real interest of the country. On many of these measures he showed that Douglaa, to fain fa vor from the South, or for aome other selfUh purpose, acted in auch a way aa to taks awry all pretence that he cared either for freelom or any of the material interesta of the people. One fact mentioned by him is worth remem brance. Douglaa haa been represented here at the North aa faroruble to the admittance of Kanaaa aa a free State. The people acting in the proper way, adopted a free constitution, fUKCU lor aumiwun, ariu mo iiuuso jmnsei mc bill and sent it to the Senate. It was there refer* 1 red to the Committee on Territories. This Com mittee consisting of seven, kept the bill in thrir , possession a lung time. Douglas was n member of tbe committee, and the committee being di vided, three being In favor of reporting favor* ably upon it and three agaiMt, held the bal anoe of |»ower. He dM not attend the sessions I of the committee. Ilia vote iu the committe favorable to a recommendation for Its passage would have taken it out the committee and placed it before the Senate under circumntancrs favorable to its passage. The bill was Anally > brought before the Senate, but without any 1 recommendation for its passage. There were | seversl important votes in relation to It, but when these votes were taken, Mr. Douglas was not present, and throughout the entire session 1 seemed utterly Indifferent to the admission of Kansas as a free State. Organisation. Our Republican friends must not, in the whirl of the demonstrations now goiiiK on, and the public speaking, forget the work ofof. ganixation. This is the real solid work of the catn|taign. Speaking is all right, and process* ions and toroh-lights are all right, but a thor ough, effective organisation, one that will bring out the last voter to the |>olls, is thegreit \ want. Let the party be thoroughly organixed and ft full vote polled, and a 18.0 i Republican vote will be reached Town Committees who have the work iu charge should take stejw early to have absent voters brought home, carrhges provided for the infirm on the day of elsction, votes properly distributed, and all proper meas ures taken to secure the casting of every Re publican vote. Oruasiic ! Orranixe ! this is the word. We believe that the Sham Democra cy will go under from fifteen to twenty thous and in the State, but if this shall be the case the Republicans must work—work. Let us not o.immit the fault of despising the enemy, or, counting on their weaknesses and divisions, re lax effort. Our opponents fttv making vigor ous exertions, sending money, especially in ; this Congressional District, without stint, and have a ho|>c of carrying the district and coun | ty. We have no doubk but they will be badly beaten in both; but our prediction is made in , the full confidence tha't the work of organ.'xa ; tion. on the part oi the Republicans, will be so perfect as to bring to the |k>1Is the whole Re publican vote. Again we say, don't rely too much on publio speaking and brilliant shows, but let the work of organisation go along with them, and the result will be a Waterloo deleat of the Sham Democracy. How Donglns mnltrentrd nnd nbused the Free Htate Men of Knnsns. Liston to tho Facts! Bead the Becordl Hie last number of the X. V. Indtptmltnl contains a searching review of Douglas' record on Kansas matters. We quote the scathing conclusion: I "Time would hardly suffice to track Mr. Douglas through his long career of subservU I encjr to the slaveholders in their struggle to plant their "institution" in the soil of Kansas, yet one general view must not be omitted. On the astembling of the XXXIVth Congress, Dec., 1853, two opposing claimants for a seat as Delegate from Kansas appeared at the bar of the House, while Senators and a Representative from the embryo State of that name beeeiged )he halls of both branches. Mr. Under, whom l'resideut l'iercc had appointed Governor, had returned accredited as Delegate, and as Sena tor also whenever Kansas should be admitted into the fiscally of 8tates. He and his associ ates brought tidings of unprecedented outrage and wrong—of a Legislature wrested from the hands of Die people in whose name and behalf it was to act, constituted by conspiracy, inva sion, force and fraud, in the intereet of their deadliest enemies—of all the forms of republi can sway prostituted to the ends of subjugation and oppression—of free citiiens murdered, families hunted from their homes by night into the bleak prairie and compelled thence to look on the devastation of all their possessions—of a Federal Governor removed for sympathizing with the people rather than their invading «p> pressors—ot Federal power wielded to the nt termost against the defenceless settlers, and in flavor of I be marauding, desolating usurpers and invaders. Never before or sinoe was there so flagrant and formidable a case of villainy and rapine cloaking itself under the forms of government and law—of wicked sees rampant and insolent—of robbers and assassins calling on the Government to chastise peaceable clti tens as rebels and outlaws. Ot this gigantic atrooity, this organised crime, there was no more unscrupulous, no more untiring upholder than Stephen A. Do^gtan, then an eager candi. date for the pending Democratic Presidential nomination at Cincinnati. Forslx long months, he misssd no opportunity to nmllgntheFree ssttlsre, who then as now oompoced a large majority of the people of Kansas, and to pcfl fog. with all the blended ingenuity awl audac ity of his natars, the «mm of tie awplng. ravaging Border Bafans Hs sinned in the theeofthn clearest light—for not only the foots plain on the foee of the matter aa It nnlbldad itself from day to day. bat 1—dsr, and Parrott, and Dclany, Mid Robert* (all life long Democrats) ware at hand, pouring bto hia «r the prayer* and entreUies of a down, tramp lad. long-suffering p tonic Yet (Menken A. Douglas fought them day by day, month at tar month—fought them by reports, by aeeeh ea, by rotee- fbaght them acorn fully rrjectinc their prarer to be admitted aa a atate, ana 1h— eoabUd to sorer* tad defend thsmsslrsi —fought them by nsing *11 hia influence tc kaep Oor. Render out of hia aaat aa Delegate, and keep the Missouri usurper, Whltefield, In it—fought them through his serritora in th< House roting against erery effort to institute an official inquiry Into the fWcta of the caae ai a preliminary to eatabliahing the right and un doing the horrible wrong. Eriry Douglai Democrat in the House resisted to the last the instigation Anally carried, and among the rotaa recorded against it are thoee of Wra. A. Richardson, Mr. Dongas' ableat and moet de roted lieutenant in hia present struggle, and James C. Allen, now (aa Mr. Richardson was in 'X) the Douglaa Democratic candidate for Oorernor of Illinois. And so from first to last —with the single and honorable exception o( the Leccmnton struggle — Mr. Douglaa has fought the battles of the inradera and oppress ors of Kansas with nnsnrpaaaedderotednras and energy. He haa fought them aa one who un derstood well their and their eneraiea' relatire weight with a Democratic Contention ; and, eren during the late aeaaion, when Kanaaa pre sented herself with an unexceptionable Free Constitution, so regularly framed and so orer whelmingly approved that not a whisper In its disparagement could be breathed, and when Mr. Douglas' single rote might hare carried that Constitution through the Territorial (his own) Committee, and his roice might perhaps hare procured for it the sanction or the Senate, aa it already had receired that of the house by an overwhelming majority, yet no word in its be half iseued from hia llpe, and they were ooldly remanded by Democracy into Territorial de pendence, though she waa inritcd, urged, brib rd to come in as a slare state two yeara ago. These be thy gods, " Popular Sorereignty." Facta which cannot ke Denied. Fiituros whioh cannot be Chanced. In 1836 under the Welts Administration the State Printing cost the large sum of 921,341. 41. Since the year 1837, when the Republicans came into power, the annual cost has been as follows: 1837 $12,480.30 1838 13,007.02 1830 12,501.70 These figures are offloial—right from the Treasury lk»oks. They exhibit an annual sav ing by the Republicans of about NINE THOUSAND DOLLARS. A similar re trenchment and economy in all the depart ments has cut down the ex|*nses of Ciril Gor M-nment, and lightened the taxes of the people. Our Great Victory in St. Louis. Proud tone of the RepubUoans of that City. The following closing imragraphs from the leader in the St. Louia Drmocrai, announcing the great Republican victory in that city, ex hibit the tone and spirit of true chivalry. Head the proud words: "Ourvictory has l>e«n won without n trade or coalition of any kind. It is a straight out Republican triumph. True, we gave our votes as a general thing to the Union state ticket, but this we did from high motives of public duty, and without asking or receiving any return. St. Louia is, therefore, a Republican city. W« had to withstand the unpleasant sentiment oc casioned by the " Impending Crisis," a work which, now (hat the election is over, we will aay that we do not endorse. The contest has Ixvn fought by the Republican party on the Chicago platform and on the emancipation principle. The one was our National, and the other our Htate platform, throughout the cam paign. We took no backward step. We low ered not the (lag. On the contrary, it waa ad vanced higher, and further forward than ever l>cfure. We even refused to diaclaim any po sition, however extreme, on the slavery que* tion. which the enciny attributed to us. We actcd uniformly on the offensive—never on the defensive. The apologetic tone could not he discovered in anything said or written on the part of the Republican party. We dared to in \ite the most radical exponents of our doctrincs from abroad, and to publish their speeches in the storm and whirlwind of the canvass. If we erred at all, we erred on the side of bolducs*. It is therefore with feelings of just pride, that we send this message, greeting to our Republi can brethren throughout tho country. We have fought and won the Montebello of the Presidential cain|iaign. We even give aesur ance that St. Louis County will go for Lincoln and Hamlin in November by two thousand ma jority, and that the two candidate* will recciv* nt least thirty-flve thousand votes In Missouri. We have satisfied both ouraelvea and the pro. slavery party that the Free Labor cause can never lie crushed out in this Htate. The strug 5le for a mere footing is closed, and the re emption of the State Is now but a question of time. St. Louis is indeed the Gibralter—the impregnable fortress of freedom— in the Slave States." Wesson's Patkxt I'ockkt PinuL-We saw a few days since, at the store of Henry McKen ney, a pocket pistol of the smallest dimensions which, for convenience iq loading and other advantages, beat* " Colt revolvera." It la lua led at the breech, and can be loaded with great rapidity, and i> one of the neateat piece* of workmanship we ever law We are not an advocate of the practice of carrying deadly weapon*, but eircumitancea sometime exist which-not only justify a man in preparing him self with weapons to defend himself or his fam ily from the attacks of desperate vljlains, but seem imperatively to demand of him proper safeguards. There have been several attempts made recently by persons to enter in the night time the dwellings of private eitiiens, for pur poses, it is supi>osed, of plunder. If these vil lians should And preparations to receive them, and their reception should prove as eool as lead can make it, they will understand that Ita coolness can be traced to the shop of Mr. Mc Kenney, who we understand has sold quite re cently a number of these little affairs. Patent ed by Wesson. l-'iud oi Aiiroa. A Lincoln ind Hamlin Club liu Into organ ixc«I in Alfred with the following officers. Prttidfitl—Uthtr A. Hall. Vict Pretilent't—lllnm N. Tripp, Gardiner (J. Harmon, Enos H. LlttleAeld, Jobu U. bay* ward. Recording Secretary—Charlea II. Moullon. CorrttponJing Sectetary—Abner Mitchell. Prvlenti*1 Commitlee—Jo thus Phenix, Daniel Ferguson. Addresses wen made at the laat meeting by Meears. Adam*, Lord, Goodenow k and other*. The Republicans of Alfred are awake, and will give a good account of themselves at the polls. The Coc.vrr Tax last year was 8J3.3M. This year it Is only 'JO,000. Under Republican rule the County, as well as the StaU Taxes, are con stantly diminishing, yet Our opponents are constantly crying oat extravagance in the ad ministration of public affairs. Woods Mirstbxls.—'This celebrated company of Ethiopian minstrels, originally founded by Geo. Christy, will perform at Union Hall, on Monday evening next, and at the Town Hall Saoo, on Tuesday evening following. Set ad. vertieemenL jy We have from Hortoa Bros., who have recently removed to 8000, la the Patten Block, and who keep always on hand a large assort ment of new music : " Equestrian Quickstep," and " Rosa and Moon," a new song published by Rneeell * Tolman. Also " Hurrah 1 Hur rah ! the Union," n Republican song, words by Eugene Batchelder. OT The Atlantic for Um ooming month of September presents a varied and pleasing table of contents. Among other thing*, there ie a moet beautiful poem by Longfcilow -"The i Children's Hour." Sold by Boyden. The Springfield Monator Mooting. ZntofMllnc Twttotalan, Western paper* eonUIn a multitude of inter ring particular* of the Moxrrtm Mcrnao at the Home of Ilooeat Abraham Lincoln,a few of which ar* giren below: _ "We art (saya the Chicago Tribunt) anr ed by many and these good judges of such gatherings, that tb« crowd at8pnng)eld throws far in the ahade the gathering in this cltjr on either of Um occasions of the United States Fair, in the fall ot 1830, and the more recent National Convention ; that the monster proces sion was almost interminable, and wore out the patience of dense crowds in waiting, through which it passed with difficulty, the streets at •one points being well nigh blocked up with spectators, who aid not join the pageant. At the time of the day when the In tereet cen tered at the great Fair Grounds, joe* outside the city, and the proceaaion colled its taat length up into a densely packed mass of hu manity and korumanity about the three sepa rate speaker*' stands, we have It from several sources or untmpeacnvi creuiDiuiy tnai me gathering exceeded that at any one time Men upon the United States Fair Grounds here. And all this while Springfield seemed appar ently as fall as ever. The streets were fairly chocked up, and wheels of business clogged with the flood tide, a very freshet of Republi canism. The telegraph office operators, ma chines and all, were removed to the cupola of the State House. Many of the storekeepers actually closed their doors to kasp out a crowd too much under preasure to do shopping. And farther along it says: And when evening passed, and to the excit ing scenee of the day a period of rest succeed ed, bow was it to be spent by the thonsa&ds of actually homeless guests. Fortunately a mild summer's night joins no very serious terrors to a lodging at f into. Hundred* of farm wag ons had their sleeping occupants, the steeds tethered to the wheels. Ths long lines of cars at the depots were fill ed, and when the seats could hold no more, men lay down the aisles • Tired humanity shrank from perpendicularity In every imagin able and unimaginable covert. They camped ander trees, Invaded hay ricks, and bams, and cairiage bouses, stoops, porticos, and vesti bules of buildings, publlo and private. They infested the State House until it swarmed like an ant hill Tub Cabs.—Great Western Railroad, regular trains from State Line, D cars ; 1st extra train from Chicago, 14 oars ; 9d do do 11 ear* ; 3d dodo 13 cars; 4th, sxtra, from Dement, U cars ; 3th extra from Decatur, 3 cars ; 0th do do 10 cars. Total from the east, 73 cars. Reg ular train from Naples and Meredosla, 8 cars ; 1st extra,«from Jacksonville, 'JO cars ; 3d dodo 7 cars , 3d do do 7 cars. Total from the West, 43 can. This gives a total of 120 cars by this road. St. Louis, Alton and Chicago Railroad: Reg ular trains, 13 cars ; excursion train front North, 28 cars ; excursion train from South, 17 carr. Total number of cars by this road, 00. • The ptoce s!ou was immenss—almost Intermi nable—occupying three hours in passing any point, while hosts of people, as usual, did nut go into the line of march. The procession reached the Fair Ground at about 1 o'clock, P. M., and in a very short time thereafter the entire grove was filled— crowded to excess with the vast multitude. How many were present,U is impossible to tell, but by actual count more than 10,000 passed in at one of the entrances alone, while the fields ailjoinlng were packed and jammed with wag ons and other vehicles. E.wii'SIASm roa Lixcouc.—One account of Ibe affair says : "The prominent, ]>trhfip* moat prominent, iilca conveyed by tho dcviccs, the train pur sued in the wagon*, the rail-splitting, kc., and by tbe implement* and utensils with which the wagons were decked out, had reference to pio neer lifo, and to well known incidents In Mr. Lincoln's early eareer.' Some of these devices —especially those carried by men who have beeu our candidate's friends for thirty years— inen with whom he has toiled in the forest and the Held— touched him in a tender place, and more than once his eyes glistened with the ev. idences of an emotion which hacknied politic ians rarely feel. For his old Mends, m tliry ad dressed him by name in passing, be hail a hear ty word. The oration was one thai few men have ever received. The people rushed to bim, not by command, as soldiers Die before their leader not to gratify their personal curiosity, not to show themselves and get praise for their teal; but to testify their devotion to the ability and unstained integrity which have made Lin coln what he is ; and to show their profound confidence that in his hands the affairs of (be nation will be safe. By all these thronging thousands he was recognised as a man of the people — one whose sympathies are always found on the side of honest toil, and never with the extortioner and oppressur. What wonder that the high honor paid that plain, untitled man, by the Chicago Convention, should have signified to those masses that a new era is ap proaching, in which patriotism shall stand in place of political'chicanery.and honesty in the jdace of profligacy. What wonder that the en thusiasm was irrepressible! Krronrs to ATTf.in.—Fifty car loads of Re publicans went from Chicago, 5W0 miles. Five hundred men went from Champaign County in horse teams, ono hundred miles. A company of Wide Awakes marched on foot from Bearda town to Springfield, 40 miles. The Wide Awakes of Hannibal, Missouri, went nearly one hundred miles to wave their torches before Hon est Abraham Lincoln, and other travellers, in numbers vast and enthuaastic, made e>iual ex ertions to be there. Hartford Ins. Co.—This is ono of tlio old oat and most reliable Firo Insurance compa nies in the country. Wo are glad that it has oatablishcd an agency in this city, and that our friend £. II. Banks is Agent for tho Company. AU persona insuring in tha "Ilartford," may depend on having their looses, if unfortunately they should suffer any, adjusted at onco. Hersciikl V. Johnson a Disunionist.—'We presume there U no higher democratic authori ty in Massachusetts than Geo. Butler. When he aocuaea a brother democrat of being a die* unionist the charge cannot be repelled as a " black republican " calumny. This ia what he said, in a speech at Lowell, last week, of Mr. Johnson, the democratic candidate for Vice President with Mr. Douglaa : " lie ia a disunionist. Has run as disunion candidate for Governor. He has declared in favor of the opening of the African slave tradq, He made a speech in IBM in Philadelphia, in which he aaid that " he thought it was the beat plan for capital to own its labor." It ia gratifying that the only political party that ever suggested the disolation of the Union as a remedy for the constitutional and legal ac tion of the people, in the exercise of the right of suffrage, has divided into two hoetiie Ac tions, each charging on the other the offence that both have committed, and rivalling each other in their professions of loyalty to the Un ion which they hava both vainly attempted to weaken in their straggle (or power. It is a fa vorable indication of publio feeling when such sentiments come from such sources.—8alem Qattltt. Wtuox'a Bangor Srucii.—Our next issue will contain the great speech of Senator Wil son, of Maaa., made at Bangor, Aug. 10, la which be examinee the non-intervention doo trints of Douglas, and expoeee his hollow mock ery in aaeertlng that he ia fbr popular sover eignty. We ahall j rint extra oopiee for distri bution. Brilliant Torch Lioht Paocmio*.—The Wide Awakes of Portland, flaeearappa and Gorham Joined In a, prooeesion at Baocarappa, on Thursday evening. There were 749 torches In the prooeesion. The meeting held la the square was very WM by Boa. W. P. Fissiatisa aadMr. Preeoott rW Harpers *>r September li as rich aad raiy as ever. Foaa three or four illustrated articlss, Porta Crayon first aad foremost of eoane, capital stories aad other artklee proas aad poetry, with the Kasy Chair audita aceompaniments make np a rare number. A. Williams It Co., Boston. For sale by L. Hoda dsa, Saoo. fer the Union Mi Jiml. Doaglaa mt Jfwtk Berwick. Happeaing to be promt whea Senator Doug eidrnwi the few person* ****mbled at the North Berwick depot on Saturday morning last, to gmt tha dlMU»*l.bad aspirant for thePrea tdaaoal obair, I waa eoesewkat aawd by tW manner la which ha ao^ht to deoeire tha boa eat yeomanry who were kla nadltora. "Although," aald Mr. D., "I waa born in New England, I bare (pent asoetot my — hood in tbe Nortb-weet," and went on to any thai be thought It Improved New England men to go out Wert, and it waa always a good pUn for tbe people of oaa taction of oar country to mingle with tboee of another, inasmuch u It often destroyed our prejudices, to. "I should be glad," aald be, "if eoiae of thoea Southern slsga holders would come up and spend a aammer with you here la the State oi Maine, for I think if tbey should tbey wonld not talk quite so banl against yoa as tbey do; and I should ba glad if all tbe abolitloaista could go dowa South and spend a winter oa a plantation, aad aaa bow tbe slarse are worked, and elad, and fed, for I think they wonld fcel mora charitable towards our Southern neigh bors than they now do," fto. Now I wish to supply through tbe column* of your exoellent paper an omlaeion of the Judge, which probably was made by him for brevity's fake, and that is, he should have stated what were tbe objections to this very sal utary arrangement, and why it may not be par tially at least carried into effect To bring this more fltblly before tbe minds of the Democrats of York County, let us suppose tkat, acting upon tbe hint of Mr. D., some on* of the an setuoiy, s»y hw i*w*i pminiwn who propoaeu the cheers, determinee to "go down South and spend the winter on a plantation." Accord ingly he pMka his trunk, and bidding bis bul ly "good bye" Is off for ths South, and lb due time arnvea at Charleston, 8. C., or Atlanta, Ga., and registers his name at the hotel, , North Berwick, Maine. On the fre tting he arrive* he eonclndes he will take a stroll in the town, daring which time one of tbe ever vigilant Vigilance Committee discovers the name upon the hotel register, and inqulree who this Northern abolitionist (as he suspects him to be) is, and finding no person to answer the inquiry In a satisfactory manner, he proceeda to notify his associates that he has caught a suspicious person at the — Hotel, who, by the time our friend returns, have assembled upon the steps of the hotel, nil prepared to rid the town of a Northern abolitionist. Aeeosting him in a roan uer not over mild or genteel, the leader asks his business. He replies that be hts none, except to see the "peculiar institution" At home, and especially how "the slaves are worked andclad and fed." Here Is evidence enough fur any Vigilance Committee, South of Mason and Dix on's line, and they are now sure he Is a travel ling abolitionist who reeks to overthrow their darling iiutitution by inciting the chattels to rebellion. In vain may he protest that such is not his object—In vain declare he is an honest lawyer from the State of Maine who has pro. posed cheers for Douglas, and whom he intends to vote for; this only makes his case worse, and a burly Dreckinridge Democrat demands the keys of his luggage that it may besearched. To this demand he replies with true yankee spirit, that his trunk contains only his cloth ing, and is not open to the inspection of any strange ruffian who may chance to accost him and demand the key. He is roughly handled, and the key taken from him by force; in vain he appeals to the landlord for help and protection—that gentle man informs him that bis hotel shall afford no protection to abolitionists. Now it may have happened that in packing his trunk for the journey he has wrapped a pair of spare shoes, or with a prudent reganl for cleanliness a cake of superior soap, In a copy of your journal, or some other of the numer ous journals in this good State which conceive it to be their privilege to advocate the restric tion of the slave power—or it may be that his wifs or a friend here may have sent him by U.' 8. mail a copy of one of these newspapera. In which some paragraph relating to slavery hat i been ecratchM against in oruer 10 insure iu | peniMl; It Is found, pronounced sp Incendiary publication, and hia fate is sealed—formal no tice is given him to quit the town forthwith, and he may thank hia good foitune if he eacape » coat of Ur and feathers. Does Senator Dong las think, or does any body else think, that our friend "In pursuit of knowledge" would t» more charitable after his return towards our Southern ,/Wfnrft, and do the good people of York County think he would longer advocate the Squatter Sovereignty doctrine of the Illi nois Senator .because his recommendation in r» ganl to visiting the South had worked so well? We think be would esjwuse the cause of Repub licanism, and aay to the bUck demon, "Thus (kr and no farther." KqCAUTT AND Jl'STICK. August 21 at, 18*30. Defalcation*. The Democrats are very fond of referring to the late defalcation of the Treasurer of this Stftte. As they seem to enjoy such things eo much, we prupose to serve up ft bftteh for their especial gratification, which will show that Democratic stealing has been done with an ex oeedlngly liberal hand, llecent Democratic plundering* are as follows, on the United SUtee Treasury, all discovered within ft very few months: Post Master ftt New York, 9173,000 Quartermaster M. Corps, Washington, 30^00 I'ost Master at New Orleans, 60,000 I tec of Pab. Money, Nftchitoches, La., S3,000 Low by the United Stfttee, 0340,000 Let us now Uke ft look ftt Democratic opera tions tosaetsl uliw ia mm mi the hutee during the last three or four years : Iowa, Superintendent of l'ablie Inst., f 130 000 " Treasurer of Warren County, 21,000 Ohio, Treasurer Dreslin, W2.000 Add ftbove, • 1,003,000 340,000 91,403000, Thb is quit* a respectable liuJs sum to be , stolen by public officials of one party ia so | short a time. To aggravate this matter, in « most cases the bail has been found to be worth- ( less, or nearly so. And yet the party with such a record behind it is constantly prating about the defalcation in this tftate, wherein the | State loeee next to nothing. Were ita leaden ( not born belbre shame was, they would blash down Into their eery boots at every glanoe at their shame Ail record, and would never prist the word Dtfalcation in the pegee of their newspapers. It woald be as great an error aa Uanquo's Gboat or the Coffim in an Egyptian bast.—Ttmp. Jour. M ochamot for Balo! THE subecriber has on hand two ezoellent Carpenters, three Blacksmiths, and one Wheel, fright, ail ezoellent mechanics in their reapeet> ive_ lines, young, strong and healthy, of qaiet ud peaceable dispositions, and several of them inite pious, all or whleh will be diapoesd of at ssoderate rates. Persona ia want of Meehss be are lavited to call aad —these, ae Ah. 40, Csssl St., *ihsss*,Os. | The above ia a qiselnssa of the ndrettieing that we often Aad ia the newspapers of that portion of the ooontry whsee capital owns its tabor, aad then ia a great deal ofrifaileaaoo in It If mm n, Mu good, peaoeable piout mechaalci, la what kind of aaUaatioB mast fret meebaaleebebeld In that oomnraaU tjT Ifamanaeeda a ateehaaie will It not b« cheeper for him to bay aa excellent niooi oar* penter for *1,000 or eo, than U wUl to Mn on at a dollar and a half a day. bit Strang* that Umm owners at UMr own labor iboaWI stl«ma Um the workioc men of tbe fres State* m the 'nod sills of aoolety,' 'do better tbea southern ■lares!' Do tbe free working bmo of thl< eom. munlty thoroughly uoderetaod that tbe present political conflict in our country la, whether tha syatem of ctpiUl owniaf labor shall rale the nation for the benefit of that idea, or whether free labor and free men ehall rale tor their own beoefltT—Mtlford, Dtl. JWtM. Doaglu for Intervention. % ' DougUa U for CongTaaatonal iaterraUoo. Hear him. In hit ipcech in the Senate made in February lut he mM : I *1 do »«* hold that Squatter Sovereignty la "nwrtor U thj CoastUutioa. I hold that bo SUCH THlftO AS SOVEREIGNTY POWER , ATTAauaTo A-wanimnt ASA TERRITORY. II hold that a Territory bomm wbnteter power U derivee from the Constitution, aodcr 1 the organ to act, and no nor*.' | Thia iweepa away at one Ml iwoop every vestige of thia "Popular Sovereignty" which it the burden of Mr. Douglas' aoaf. Every sensible man will perceive "that If a territory pcMfaeia whateTer power it derivsa from tho constitution of the organle act aad ao more," that there la so each thing aa "popular aova reignty" in th« territoriea—the power of tho people in them being derived entirely ftum the organic act giren them by Congreee what la the organic act of a territory but th« rcaalt of Congreaeioaal Intervention. Whoever supports Douglaa will give hie eup port to the doctrine of Coagreaaioaal Interven tion aa moeh aa if he aupportad Lincoln, Cell or UreeklarMge. Douglaa la oorractly nnderatood In tbe'South. The Georgia Coatlifafioaa/ii/ speaking ofthe then forthcoming Douglaa State Convention, aaid: 'The Convention will affirm the mat princi ple* of equality of alave property in the TenU lories, which Mr. Douglaa has adToaated all hie life. It will entlone that noble decision of tho Supreme Court which Mr. Yancey so eulogiaad at Charleaton, which our State Convention in December demanded and which waa adopted in our platlorm at Baltimore.' The Atlanta (Geo.) Conftltraty, a Doug las organ, says: | 'But if the worst doea come, let ua with ona 1 heart and mind forget the put and GO OUT OP THE UNION TOOETHEft.' Herachell V. Johnaon for a Slave Ood® In the Georgia Stale Convention June 4th, I860, Johnson introduced the following reao luuuni ; IletolvtJ, Tliat the citissns of the United Statrs hat* an eauai riaht to settle with their property qf uny Kind, in the orjjanittd territo* rie* of tne United Malta, and thai nulrrthg decision of the Supreme Court of the United Htalea in the ease of the Dred Heolt, which we recogniie aa the correct exposition ol the Con ■titution in thia particular Ware property tland ujton the tame footing at other deter iption of property, and that neither the enteral govern meat.NOR ANY TERRITORIAL GOVERN MENT, can destroy or impair the right toilava property In the COMMON TERRITORIES, any more than tlie right to any other deaoritv tlon of property ; that pro|*rty of all kln<lf, tlarei at trill at any other tpectet qfproperty, IN THE TERRITORIES, Hand opontheaamu equal an<l broad eonititutional baaia, and aub ject to like priaciplea of r«co(pilllon and pr»» tection in the Legislative, Judicial and cxecotive department of the government. •2 That we will aupport any man who may he nominated by the Baltimore Contention, for the I'rraideney, who bolda tho priaciplea aet forth In the foregoing resolution, and who will give them his endorsement; and that wo will not bold ourselves bound to support any man, who may be the aooloee, who entertains principles inconsistent wkh those sst forth in ths above resolution,or irAi deniet thai HLAVK PROPERTY in th« territories does itand oa an ti/ual footing, and on the in me eonititutional baiit it other detcrlptiom of property.' Oa the 28th of May laat, after the Charlen lon Convention, and nearly four weeka before he was nominated at lUltlraore, John*« wrvta % loiter to a Georgia oditor who bad declared bin to be in favor of Popular Sovereignty, la which he said: - 'I believe that It Is the right of the aoath to lemand and the duty of Congress to extend. PROTECTION OF PERSONA AND PROPEIU rY OF EVERY KIND (including ilavt.) in Lbe territories duting their Territorial itute. rbia is no new opinion, I advocated thsdoetrina u far back aa llMS, In thettenate of the Unlied States, • • How unjutt theif/'ore are tha inii'auftHon* with which you intersperse and interlard your editorial comments, that all are in faror qf'Squatter Sovereignty' who hap pen not to agree %rith the tecedirt from the Charletlon Contention. I REPEL TlfE IN SINUATION so fir as it uiay lie inteuded to apply to nie, come from what quarter it may, and plead my own m*>nl in vindication.' On another occasion he said: 'Property of all kiud*, tlaret at trell at any other, standi upon the same eonititutional basis, and eutjiect to the tame pritriplet uf recogni tion and protection in the LeguKtive, Judu-i.il and Executive Department* uf the General Govern roenL' 'Pew, at the South, deny the power of Con. greas to pass laws for the protection of slava property in the the Territories, /certainly da not.' Every man who votes fbr Johnson vfll praetk Dtlly ny by the act, tliat he la fkvoraLle ton Blare code la the Territories. Ntlll Another. It hai l**n discovered that 9)0,000 nor* of the public money baa beta stolen by a govern ment officer. Major Sutherland, QuarUrmatter of the Marine Corp* at Waahington, is the of ficial robber. Tbia makes two knnlrtJ and fifty fit* tkouianddollar$—murethaa a quarter «>f a million, that baa bee* stolen by Ibeie Democratic officials, wlthla two soothe f .laJ tbe bon-le of these JefWolteraar* worthlee*—ai» much eo Uut they arc not even read. Aad yet when there la one Iteputdioan turna out a de faulter aa Peck did (though nearly tbe whole aum ia made good by bis bond.) tbe Democrat!* paper* bowl awfWlly over It. Why, the tkult amount of Peck's defalcation is aet eqaal to Ik* intereet oa what tb* DemocratM wAca-koUer* iteal erery six montha. Hf la the karaagurs d*U«er*d oa hit pO pimage through tbe country, Douglas trie* to Ind tkror with tbe fra* men of the North by iboxing Dlcuavar for trying to fovea tb* La lomptou Constitution upon r . vbea the Mopla didn't icant it. But he ekun't say a surd aboat his ova dellnqaency In refusing to let through Coagreea a Conatitutioa which the People of Kansas did want. Is not tbe ooe aa bad ae the other f Nomas aas beea eo viadktive aad aboaireofthe people )f Kansas a* Porous, aad Bvcwaxab blmaaif eould be leee a hypocrite if be should now prtkud friendship for then. Deaet forget rbat Docaus, with all hie pretcoded friendship f >r popular Sovereignty, opposed by his elleac* ind non-action, the admiaioo ot Kaaaae let® the Union. He reflued toeall apthe WI1 la the Senate. Rusoa: II* was afraid of oAadlag :b* South, and was amwiOimg that Kaaaaa ihoold havea voice ia thealeetlon of President it tb* Caltai State*. The chaaoee now are, that be will not obtain aa many Electoral rote* is Kansas would bar* oast I WbatIlnecuuxV. Johrsos uts. labia ipeeeh in Philadelphia in Sept 1M0: We believe that capital should OWN LABOR, a all eouatriee aad under even fona of eocial rganlxatioa there must ha a UUria# rfese—<a ilaes of nsen who get their living by the sweat if their brow; aad Iktrtmmtt b4—MUr tism hat oontrols aad directs tha capital of the touUy