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ORLEANS INDEPENDENT STANDARD." A, A. EARLE,' PUBLISHER. 3STo Moro Oompromiso witli Slavery ITEHM5, 8125 IN ADVANCE. VOLUME 1. 1I1ASBURGII, VERMONT, OCTOBER 10, 185G. NUMBER 40. 4!tisccllanrou5 Articles. lti Hi, u, bb' 58; bill !K: I. 'J, !i 1 i: i u TH3 32ER SPRINGS. Tho following taken from Col. Fre mont' Narrative of his second expedi tion is an account of some of the re markable natural traits of the Great Salt Lake basin. Aug. 23th, 1843. This was a cloudless but smokey au tumn morn in sr, with a bold wind from the south east, and a temperature of 45 .at sunrise. Ia a few miles I noticed, where a little stream crossed the road, fragments of scoriated basalt scattered .about the first volcanic rock we had .seen, and which now became a charac teristic rock, along our future road. In about six miles' travel from our eucamp- jaent, we reached one of the points in our journey to which we had always looked forward with great interestthe famous Beer springs. The place in .which they are situated is a basin of miners waters enclosed by the moun .tains, which sweeps around a circular bend of Bear river, here at its most northern point, and which, from a north ern, in the course of a few miles ac quires a southern direction towards the Great Salt Lake. A pretty little stream of clear water enters the upper part of the basin, from an open valley in the mountains, and passing through the bot- iom, discharges into Bear river. Cross ing this stream, we descended a mile be low, and made our encampment in a grove of cedar immediately at the Beer springs, which, on account of the effer vescing gas and acid taste, received their names from the voysgeurs and trapper .of the country who, in the midst of their rude and hard lives, are fond of finding some fancied resemblance to the luxu ties they rarely have the fortune to en joy. Although somewhat disappointed in the expectations which various descrip tions had led me to form of usual beauty of situation and. scenery, I found it al 'bitvv "SetQer place of very great interest tthei' and a traveller for the first time in a vol- So fa -canic region remains in a constant ex THE I .citement, and at every step is arrested u-opctis iy something remarkable and new. There is a confusion of interesting ob jects gathered together in a small space Around the place of encampment the Beer springs were numerous 5 but, as fax as we could ascertain, confined entire ly to that locality in the bottom. In the ribelii' bed of the river, ia front, for a space of fcc-J .several hundred yards, they were very ico p6 abundant ; the effervescing gas rising up and agitating the water in countless bub bling columns. In the vicinity round a bout were numerous springs oi an en tirely different and equally marked min eral character. In a rather picturesque ; mt.be 6pot, about 1,300 yards below our en - 3 : i: ..t .1. Auipuicin, mm lujmeuiaieiy on me river bank, is Ihe most remarkable springs of the place. In an opening on the rock, a white column of scattered water is thrown up, in form like a jet cTeau, to a variable height of about three feet, and, do. 1 IA! IS Ut? ir.4 scr.- iu T."vs ba raw. 1 pirxa Jity d as into jss hs. M tr St: to rt pree" our pm atjit Is trollV if i If .1 a rtmw mouga it is maintained m a constant rU,0?c .supply, its greatest height is only at- utmeu at regniar intervals, according to It is ac- . 1 1 . . .cuuiaiueu uy a suoterranean noise, I-a fnfi . . 1 ter ins '""from i ;tije a'011 of tne force below, ' I. T . l a 1 ... .. . . ,w uicu logciner wun me motion of the water, makes very much the impression of a steamboat in motion ; and, without knowing that it had been already previ ,ously so called, we gave to it the name of Sleamhoat springs. The rock through twhich it is forced is slightly raised in a .convex manner, and gathered of the .opening into an urn-mouthed ' form, and is evidently formed by continued deposi- t TEB-0' :'on ror water, and colored bright putd, ii'ed by oxide of iron. ct'w"' 11 " ,10t ?Pr!n?' an(1 tne water tas a !ITC1,V -.pungent and disagreeable metallic taste, LAtriet, leaving a burning effect on the tongue. 0 ithin perhaps two yards of the jet d'eau Ctffarf' is a small hole of about an inch in dia- metCI"' CaTXyr "Wch, at regular interv Ji al4' "apw a Wast of hot air, with a Vbita' light wreaih of smoke, accompanied by naba. a rfgusar Boise. lh is hole had hmn -noticed by Dr. Wislizenus, a eenUeman -who had several years since passed br et' tL'a pIftCe' and wbo remarted, with very .otb? . nice observation that smelling the pas CriftiMtf which issued from the orifice produced a b. , sensation of giddiness and nausea. Mr. i it Preuss and myself repeated the observ- ation, and were so well satisfied with its correctness, that we did not find it pleaa- the ; produced A while we were sitting at the springs a band of boys and girls, with two or three young men came up, one of whom I asked to stoop down and smell the gas, desirous to satisfy myself further of its effects. But his natural caution had been awakened by the singular and supi cious features of the place, and he de clined my proposaly decidedl, and with a few indistinct remarks about the devil, whom he seemed to consider the geniue loci. The ceaseless motion and the play of the fountain, the red rock and the green trees near, makes this a pictures que spot. A short distance above the spring, and near the foot of the same spur, is a very remarkable yellow colored rock, soft and friable, consisting principally of carbon ate of lime and oxide of iron, of regular structure, which is probably a fossil coral. The rocky bank along the shore between the Steamboat springs and our encamp ment, alng which is dispersed the water from the hills, is compossed entirely of strata of calcareous lufa, with the re mains of moss and reed-like grasses, which is probably tiie formation of springs. Ihe Jxer or doaa springs, which have given name to this locality, are agreeable but less highly flavored than the Boiling springs at the foot of Pike's peak. They are numerous and half hidden by turfls of grass, which we amused oursely.es in removing and searching about for more highly impreg nated springs. They are some of them deep, and of various sizes sometimes sever-ii yards in diameter, and kept in constant motion by columns of escaping gas. In the afternoon I -wandered about a mong the cedars, which occupy the great er part of the bottom towards the moun tains. The soil here has a dry -and cal cined appearence ; some places, the open grounds are covered with saline efflore- cences, and there are a number of regu larly-shaped and very remarkable iaifis. which are formed of a succession of con vex strata that have teen desposited by the waters of extinct springs, the orifices of which are found on their summits, some of them having the form of funnel shaped cones." Others of these remark ably shaped hills are of a red colored earth, entirely bare, and .composed prin cipally cf carbonate of lime, with .oxide of iron, formed in the same manner. Walking near one of them, on the sum mit of which, the springs w.ere dry, my attention was attracted by an under ground noise, around which I circled re peatedly, until I found the spot from be neadi -which it came ; and, removing the red earth, discovered a hidden spring. which was Jboilin g up from below, with the same disagreeable metallic taste as the Steamboat spring. Continuing up the bottom, and crossing the little stream which has been already mentioned, I vis ited several remarkably red and white hills which had attracted attention in the morning, ibese are immediately upon the stream, and, like those already men tioned, are formed by the deposition of successive strata from the springs. On their summits, orifices through which the waters had been discharged were 80 large, that they reseabled miniature craters, being some of them several feet in diameter, .circular, and regularly form ed as if iy rt. At a former time, when these dried-np fountains were all in mo tion, they must have made a beautiful display on a grand scale ; and nearly all this basin appears to me to have been formed under their action, and should be called the place of fountain. At the foot of one of these hills, or rather ,cnts side near the base, are .several of these small limestones columns, about one foot in diameter at the base, and tapering up ward to a height of three pr four feet ; and on the summit the water is boiling up and bubbling over, constantly adding to the hight of the little obelisks. In some, the water only boils up, no longer overflowing, and has here the same taste as at the steamboat spring. The observer will remark a gradual subsidence in the water, which formerly supplied the foun tains ; as on all the summits of the hills the springs are now dry, and are found diminishing on their sides, pr the surface of the valley. of Dartmouth College, and distinguished for a lively imagination and a great fond ness for history. At the time of our marriage, he resided at Cherry Valley, N. Y. From this place we moved to new Salem, Ashtabula County, Ohio ; deputed Dr. Thilastus Hurlbut, one of their member to repair to this place and to obtain the original manuscript of Mr. Spaulding, for the purpose of comparing it with the Mormon Bible, to satisfy their own minds and to prevent their sometimes called Cooneaut, as it is situ- friends from embracing an error so de- ated upon Conneaut Creek. Shortly lusive. This was in the year 1831. Dr. after our removal to this place, his Ilurlburt brought with liira an introduc- health sunk, and he was Laid aside from tion, and request for tie manuscript, - : .1 V TT . IT., T ol-o active labors. In the town of JNew j j Salem, there are numerous mounds, and Wright and others with all of whom I forts, supposed by many to be the dilnp- was acquainted, as they fc ere my neigh- idated dwellings and fortifications of a brs when I resided in New Salem, race now extinct. These ancient relics I am sure that nothing could grieve arrest the attention of the new settlers my husband more, were he living, than and become objects of research for the the use which has been made of his work curious. Numerous implements were The air of antiquity which was thrown found, and other articles evincing great about the composition doubtless sug- skill in the arts. Mr. Spaulding being gested the idea of converting it to pur an educated man and passionately fond poses of delusion. Thus an historical of history, took a lively interest in these romance, with the addition of a few pious developments of antiquity and in order expressions and extracts from the sa to beguile the hours of retirement and cred Scriptures, has been construed wto furnish employment for his lively imag- a new Bible and palmed off upon a ination, he copefiijred the idea of giving company of poor deluded fanatics, as an historical sketch of the long lost race, divine. I have given the previous brief Their extreme antiquity of course would narration, that this work of deep decep lead him to write in the fiioit ancient tion and wickedness may be searched to tyle, and as the Old Testament is the the foundation, and its author exposed to most ancient book in the world, he imit- the contempt and execration he so justly ated its style as nearly as possible. His deservers. sole object in writing this historical ro- Kev. Solomon Spaulding was the first mance was to amuse himself and his husband of the narrator of the above neighbors. This was about the year history. Since his decease, she has been 1812. Hull's surrender at Detroit, oc- married fa a. second husband by the name curred near the same time, and I recollect f Davison. She is now residing in this the date well from that circumstance. As place ; is a woman of irreproachable he progressed in his narrative, the neigh- character and an- humble Christain and bors would come in from time to time to her testimony is worthy of implicit con- hear portions read, and a great interest ndence. in the work was excited among them. It -A- Ely, D. D. Pastor Cong. Ch. in claimed to have been written ,by one qf Mopscn. the lost nation, and to have been recov- R D. Austin, Principal of Monson ered from the earth, and assumed the Academy. title of " Manuscript found." The neigh- . bors would inquire how Mr. S- pro- THE RELIGION OP REV0LU- gressed in deciphering " the manuscript," TI0NARY MEN. and when he had a sufficient portion pre- I know I sigh when I think of it- pared he would inform them, and they that hitherto the French people have woum asseimmj 10 near reaa. ne been the least religious of all the nations was enabled trom ms acquaintance with 0f Europe. It is because the idea of the classics and ancient history, to in- God, which Vises from all the evidences troduce many singular papies, which of naUlre and from the dej)8 of fl were particularly noucea Dy me people tion, being the profoundest and weightiest and cotti4ijesily recognized by them, idea of which human intelligence ?s can- Mr. Spaulding had a Mother, Mr. John Uble, and the French mind, being the opauiaing residing m tne place at the most rap;d but the most snDerficial. the ume,Vno was perteoay laminar witli Ho-htest, the least reflecting of all Euro- this work and repeatedly heard the whole pean races, Ous mind has not the force ot it read. From New Salem we removed to Pittsburgh Pa. Here Mr. , found an acquaintance and friend in the person of and severity necessary to carry far and long the greatest conception of the human understanding. Is it because our governments have known in the language. History will have the air of an athiett, when sho re counts to posterity these annihilations. rather than deaths, of celebrated men in the greatest year of France. The vic tims only have a God ; the tribunes and victors have none.- Look nt Mirabeau on the bed of death 1 " Crown me with flowers," said he, 44 intoxicate me with perfumes. Let me die nt the sound of delicious music'' Not a word of Got! or of his soul. Sen sual philosopher, he desired only supreme sensualism, a v&st voluptuousness in bis agony. Contemplate Madame Roland, the strong-hearted woman of the revolution, on the cart that conveyed her to death. She looked contemptuously on the be sotted people who killed their prophets and sybils. Not a glance toward heaven. Only one word for the earth she was quitting " Oh, Liberty !" Approach the dungeon doors of the Girondins. Their last night is a banquet, the only hymn, the Marseillaise 1 Follow Camillo Desmoulius to his ex ecution. A cool and indecent pleasant ry at the trial, and a long imprecation on the road to the guillotine, were the two last thoughts of this dying man on his way to the last tribunal. Hear Danton, on the platform of the scaffold, at the distance of a line from God and eternity. " I have had a good time of it ; let me go to sleep." Then to the executioner, " You will show my head to the people ; it is worth the trouble!" His faith, annihilation ; his last sigh, vanity. Behold the French man of this latter age 1 What must one think of the religious sentiment of a free people, whose great figures seem to march in procession to annihilation, and to whom that terrible minister, death, itself recalls neither the threatenings- or promises of God ! The republic of these men without God has quickly been stranded. The liberty won with so much heroism and so much genius, has not found in Europe ... . . V . a conscience to shelter it, a yoi to avenge it, a people to defend it against that atheism which has been called glory. AH ended in a soldier and some apostate republicans, travestied to courtiers. An atheistic republicanism cannot be heroic. When you terrify it, it bends ; when you buy it, it sells itself. Who would take any heed? the people ungrateful and God non-existent ! So finish atheist revolutions ! Lamartine. Mr. Patterson an editor of a newspaper. I,way8 taken upon themBelves to th;nk ixc mulu u uuu.-mpi u mr. it., for u8j tQ,believe for us, and to pray for who was very much pleased with it, and ns ? Isit because we are . . . borrowed it for perusal. He retained it a military a t nation led for a long time and informed Mr. S. that by kings, heroes, ambitious men, from if he would wake ?t title page and battle field to battle fidJ making CQn preface, he would publish it and it might qnest3 and never teep;ng them o a source o, pronu inis air. ret used ;ng) charming and corrupt!ng E to do for reasons which I cannot now Lnd bril)!rinff homft mannppa . state. Sidney fiigdon, who figured so bravery lightne88 and im?et7 o( largely m the history of the Mormons, camp to the fireside of the people ? M luc umC uonuccieu wnn me prim- j knpw not, but certain it is that the ing office of Mr. Patterson, as is well nation has an immense progress to make known in that region, and. as Eigdonhim- in 8eriou3 thought, if she wishes to re self has frequently stated. Here lie had ma;n free. If we look at the characters UgJJ.-aat to continued the experiment, as iln&''lt&- Mna'3 of giddiness which it produ tim- waa 0 " strong and decided. rSiV " 111 waS0B with a large and CIT $$,fj ai:J 1 at our encampment ; and, 1 for "r' BOOK OF MORMON OR GOLD EN BIBLE. As this book has xcited much atten tion and has teen put by a certain new sect, in the place of the Sacred Script, ure, X deem it a duty which I owe to the public, to state what I know touchi its origin. Kev. bolomon Spaulding, to whom I was united in early life, was a graduate ample opportunity to become acquainted wjth S.'s manuscript and to copy it if he chose. It was a matter of notoriety and interest to all who were connected with the printing establishment. At length the manuscript was returned to its author and soon after we removed to Amity, Washington County, Pa., where Mr. S. deceased in 1818. The manuscript then fell into lay hands and was carefully preserved. It has frequently been ex amined by my daughter, Mrs. McKen stry, of Monson, Mass., with whom I now reside, and by other friends. After the ? Book of Mormon" cama out, a copy of it was taken to New Salem, the place of Mr. Spaulding's former resid ence, and the very place where the " Ma nuscript found" was written. A woman preacher appointed a meeting there, and in the meeting read and repeated copious extracts from the " Book of Mormon." The historical part was immediately re cognized by all the older inhabitants, as the identical work of Mr. S. in wlJch they had been so, deeply interested years ago. Mr. John Spaulding was present, who it an eminently pious man and re cognized perfectly the work of his brother. He was amazed and afflicted, that it should have been perverted to so wicked a purpose. Wis cricf found vent in a flood of tears and he arose , $n the spot and expressed in the meeting his deep sorrow and regret, that the writings of his sainted brother should be used for t purpose so vile and shocking. The ex citement in New Salem became bo great, that the inhabitant held a meeting and compared as regards religious sentiment, of the great nations of Europe, America, or even Asia, the advantage is not for us. The great men of other countries live and die looking at the spectator, or at most, at posterity. Open the historyof America, the his tory of France, read the great lives, the great deaths, Ihe great martyrdoms, the great words at the hour when the ruling thought of life reveals itself in the last words of the dying, and compare. Washington and Franklin fought, suf fered and ascended and descended, in their political life, always in the name of God, for whom they acted ; and the great liberator of America, died confid ing to God the liberty of the people and his own soul, Sidney, the ycung martyr of patriot ism, guilty of nothing but impatience, and who died to expatiate his country's dream of liberty, said to' his jailor I rejoice that I die innocent toward the king, but a victim, resigned to the King on high, to whom all my life is due." The republicans of Cromwell's day sought the way of God, even in the blood of battles. Their policies were their faith their reign a prayer their death a pfisJm. One hepre, sees, feels that God was in all the movements of these great people. But cross the sea, traverse 1a Mancha, come to our times, open our annals, and listen to the last wordi of the great poli ttcal actors of the drama of our liberty. One would think that God was eclired From the New York Picayune. IMPORTANT POLITICAL ITEMS. From ihe Daily Typhoon (Republican.) On the evening of Monday last a Re publican banner was raised in West re- kin, N. Y., amid the cheers of a large assemblage ! In the morning the ban ner was stili, tiiebe!! This is I gppd cmen for the future. A correspondent from Turkey Hollow sends us the following : " out of twenty mules in this village, fourteen are named Jack, and only four Jim, while none are known as Millard." The accounts from nil quarters arc very cheering. A correspondent f"9'u South Van Winkleberg says that a gen tleman of that city, who has always voted the Democratic ticket hitherto, named a pointer pup (which he had just bought) Fremont. This exhibits the sort of feel ing which pervades the whole country The Revolution has begun. From the Daily Blues (Buchanan.') On every hand there are cheerful evi dences of the approaching euccesi of Democratic principles. Last Monday a little boy wa observed tossing up a chip and attentively exam ining it. On being approached by our reporter, it was discovered that ho had written on one side Buck end Brcck and, on the other side Fillmore and DoneUon, and Fremont and Dayton. The Buck and Breck came uppermost three time out of five. This, too, waa in the Ninth Werd tha stronghold of the opposition. and wbre all the chirm have hitherto been strongly Republican. The hue water-cresses ia the garden of a very respectable gentleman living in the suburbs of this city came up in the form of two B'. No one about the houw knoB any tiling aWit the matter, and it is regarded by all as a prognostic of the election of " Buck and Breck." The in siiiuation that the cUct by sowed the seed in this form U rejected with K orti by the father. JFVtm the livening Paul Pry (Know-tiAhing,) Moat gratifying account arc pouriiig principles and the popularity of our can didates. In Hard Scrablc there is one paper the Hard Scrahbln WttVy Cou rier (circulation 70 1-2) which is Fill more to the bone. There is neither a Buchanan nor a Fremont paper pulhed in the place, which contains two hundred inhabitant. This shows the cour.e ol the political current. A gentleman in Brooklyn yesterday scratched the names of Fillmore and Donelson on a piece of gingerbread, and then on a piece of bread and butter he put Fremont. He offered the two toliiw son, a child of only 'x years of nge, which took the gingerbread, and rejected the Fremont bread and butter. LONDON F.DJrOHS ON k ANKKE roHTICS. The London Mtrrning Advertiser al ludes to Fremont as a Know-Nothing ! The u Tizer," as that journal is affection ately termed by its friends and support ers, exhibits in this a knowledge of Amer ican potties far superior to that of any of its English, or even American cotcinpo rarics. Yet the "Tizer" make9 a small mistake, which we can not account for except on the supposition that its long advocacy of the interests of the inn-keep ers of England lias incapacitated it for taking in any thing not even a fact- except in an 'arf an 'arf manner. The mistake of the " Tizer" is in the ncme, and, in order that its readers may be thoroughly posted in regard to our ioli- ties, we have prepared a short editorial expressly for its colums, as follows, for which we will charge it nothing at all American roi.rrics. itere are three political parties -in the United States the Old Hunker Woolly Heads, the Hard-Shell Abolitionists, and the Silver Gray Soft-Shells. The candidates of these respective parties for the Presiden cy are Fillmont, Frechanan, and Buck more, ihe V ice-f residential nomina tions are Doncnridge, Daytelson, and Breckton. The Fillmont and Donenridge party are opposed to the extension of slavery South of Dason & Mixoifg line, and are likewise ardent champions of the Tariff principles of Harry Webster iind Daniel Clay, two statesmen still held in grateful remembrance in the States. The Frechanan and Daytelson men wish to have the seat of government removed to Kansas, where Horace Greeley resides J while the Buckmore and Breckton party advocate the election of foreigners only to office. (This is supjwscd to be because offices-have been lauHy so amn-li disgraced by the conduct of those occupying them, that they wish to keep natives offt of it.) There is a fourth party whose nominee appears to be one Mr. Jessie, but our ad vices from America do not give us a clear idea of the principles which he rep- sents. To judge from the little that we have gleaned we should judge he was Southern Rights Barnburner. 1 Iowever, no matter what tut u affairs may tike, the Americans will be sure to have a Presi dent!" The Dangers of the Country- Nullification of the Constitu tion in Fifteen States. During our long experience in the dis- cus.-ion of public nliairs there have been severed crises of danger to the institutium of the country, of which we have not lies i tuted to warn the American people, with out reference to men, to cliques, partie or sections. But since the origin of tliis government tncre never iiuSucen a crisu of such open, widely extended, and fla grant defiance of the rights of a free peo ple, guaranteed by the federal constitu tion, as the crin'u that is now iimii us Not only in the Territory of Kansas is free speech, free opinion, and freedom of the press trampled under foot, but in fif teen States of the Union those " iiiblienii- ble rights" of the conMittition are uj! pressed by the despotism of an irrcspoii- ctldo t,iib. Practical cullifiouien r.uliifie&tion of the constitution of the United Stat' exisU, we ay, in the barbarous, demotic and danjrerious form, in fifteen States of this Union. The fundamental principles of American liberty, upon which lie at the foundation) of our popular inttitut lion, have no real existence now, except in the sixteen Northern State of t!s confederacy. In the South tho constitu ticn u a dead letter it u ractkaUy ex tinct it baa been urpereded l.y a des potic pi'mH2! over the juillic pr- and the privivte individual, ft stealthy, ciuni- pretot and deadly a tbtU cf the Coun-j. of Terror has arisen in our Southern States the terror of the mol compared with which the well-defined limitations of popular privileges, even in Russia, are better adapted to the security of "life, liberty, and tho pursuit of happiness." Within a few months p:it wo have had a number of striking illustrations of the prevalence and virulence of this su preme law of the mob throughout the South. Tho savage assault by Bully Brooks, of South Carolina, upon Mr. Sumner, in the Senate chamber, and tho lion which tho Southern democratic oli garchy have made of their hero of that frightful spectacle, indicate, in the outset, a condition of ,4le Southern povenui sentiment deplorably demoralized. Such a condition of the public mind can only exist where constitutions and laws have ceased to be morally binding, and whero irutal terroriMn is the older of the day. In rapid succession, after this bloody scene in the Senate' we have had a bru tal dispersion of popular meetings at V heeling, a., Baltimore, Md., and va rious other places in tho Southern States ; the lawless expatriation of Southern citi zens from their homes and their families, for tho astounding crime of speakihg ttieir own opinions upon the poliltical questions of the day, and sn interdict a pertcct Chinese law ot exclusion estab lished throughout the South, in defiance of the constitution, against all Northern men, uspecled even, of doubting the in- fallable blessing of Southern Slavery. The latest Southern outrages attempted, in this connection, have not been limited to Northern invaders of Southern terri tory. They have been addressed to Southern born men, and by tho leading organs of the Democratic Jacobin Club in the capital of Virginia. Mr. Botts a native born and distinguished citizen of irgnuii ventured, the other day, to ut ter the opinion in Richmond, that the South would submit to the election cf Fremont and remain in the Union; and for this audacious deelaraetion the demo cratic journals of that city have left no stone unturned in order to strip up a democratic Governor or a demoeiatic Mob to the forcible expulsion of Mr. 15otts from the Slate. A man cf less in fluence in Uie shoes of Mr. Bolts, and with fewer friends at his back, would probably have been tarred and feathered before sundown ; for a similar offence a imilar attempt to call into force the invisible powers of the democratic mob which now governs the South, was tried against the Hon. Henry Winter Davis a prominent ana promising member of Congress from Maryland. The demo cratic Richmond Enq-iir-.r is horrified at the temerity of Mr. Davis, and sugges tively says that tho opponents of Mr. Buchanan will very likely next aunouncc tfio appointment of Mr. Burlingame to peak to the people of Richmond. Mr. Burlingame is the gentleman who cut tho omb of Bully Brooks; butt let him iiy) snow ins lace 111 UiclunoiuI,il he desires to escape the vengenco of the Virginia Bu chanan democracy with a whole skin. And such is the existing supreme law of the South! the law of, practical uulli- lication: the law ot a democratic jacob in club ! tho law of brute force ! tho law of spies, informers, outlaws and as sassins! tho law of a general and ic- morselcf terrorism ' In fifteen States f the Union ive of :he North are thus d.-nied the liberty of speech, the liberty of opinion, and even those social privileges whieh barbarians concede to strangers, ua ri.itiir from the universal rights ol hospitality. We dura say that in 110 region of tW civilized world, during the present century, has there been a purullel 10 uiiiic-poiiriiiJ.;, lawless and invisible dei-potim which now lord it over the South. It is, ncv--erthcless, infamous, from the fact that it has been generally overlooked, in view of the bloody Cf;npiratv at work to mako Kansas a tlave Slate through the same savage law of brute, force. And where lies the responability for this frightful ktate of thing? It reels with this wretched democratic Pierce admini-tralion, wiiji its disunion mana gers, with the party, mid the candidate pledged to perpetuate i: poliey. It rests, first, with that plotting and deliberate sc cCMiorii;t, Jerler-on Davis, the Mephis topliile of the whole conspiracy, and with Atchison of Missouri, and poor Pierce, and Lis active confederate ; sec ondly, with tho Cincinnati Convention and the duinoenitii: Senate at Washing-, ton; nnii thir'llv, with .Mr. I jlhnore and Mr. Buciunui, and their traitorous re eointncndaiion to the South of a disso lution of the Union should Fremont be elected. Thii it is that the democratic Southern jacobin have been cneountged, not only to threaten disunion liould ibey fail to retain the ijMiils and their pjwer in the government, but practically to d cedo from the Union in advance ; Lecauw, with the coiihlitiilioii the test, the fif teen Southern State are already out of the Union, tij the Union is practically reduced to kixlecn tites of the North. Where, then, t the remedy ? Net in tho tlec.ion of Buchanan 5 f r ia ' the hand of Davis, Atchiaoti and that sece ioii crew, he will be K as cly iu the hand cf the p. ttcr ; not in voting for Mr. r tlhuore, fur he s but the lighter attend- f(9 1 it rv tr ft dim t. itiA tn1d cd of Tea of m ii,t emee, an. iidl-i iitf(s!y u h u tUctioQ of Kreniontf idtely mere odious than the existing ewi- j who U I'm only candidate for restoring (orhini, either of France, Aus-ina, Italy thj ccnttitiition ai'I tho U to Kama, or KtiMia. .Among tbe liUmui w . w v ... among the dcpoU of Europe thin may read hko an estravajjact exageratum ; Union. The fifteen Southern State, practically, are now out of the Union. Let u elect Frmot.t nd bring them hack into t! fu.!v .". T. iltruld. from the oul, that his name wa ua iu upon us f the jvogre. of American and yet it U the tlwphj truth. A rti'O m J'