Sr` fr<Y slim LE EM=l 39" YEAR. Tering of the "Compiler." 1/ paid Crudipilcr is published ever v M4n(lay morning, 1»: HY STAII LE, at-SL7S per :to n if paid iit wirittirr—:32,(lo per annum if not paid in adtaaee. No sub . _ scription discontinued, unle;s at the optio'n of the publisher, "until all arrearae•e:. ;ire paid: ki-4: 7 e . .Vdrorti'setnents in•erted at the usual 1110,!.4. Job Printing dolic; neatly; cheaply; and with dispatqh. 11.•,:iy-Otliee in South Baltimore street, flireet- Iy opiosite Wain filer'h Tinnin, , Establishment, one and a half squares from the Court-house, "Comribmi." on the sigh DISSOLVE THE UNION ! A FRE MM 11 • $ IN/STit. nErcur.tc.ois Dive the Union Who would_ intrt The chain that bind.; ti% heart to be.trt ! Each link W-Lri Corgi. I,y sainted airea A lind the Itevolution'.4 ; Ana cooled— , h, where Au rich a flood— Iu Warren'sadid in :4uillter•h Digmilve the 'Union Be like Franc© II hen Terror reared hi. Woody L i ne e , Atid And I% 0 wan, in her Daneci. in the hie 1111.figt ()flier Queen ile-ide the dreadful Guilotine ! thr rec, you may, Pour i•ou tvit , if Lub!.! clay heu wiu 1 ~ 11 111 wail ler u•itls the brute ; tbi•+tles hear 11eeperian fruit ; in lie; re i .A V,(41 . 111111.1 t% en to rurlt.taye I)i,•ul%`e the Union hull a‘sny T 1 t. 413 , ..urzir I Or glory's Not oat the bi-:cry of the brave, Au I .t .eack paitt t ; ! tiirn ain't e NV Irek 4.4u,Lir an eternity u 1 tea rs - tn.. Union tn it le . t they Nslto speak -in.!! v,tn,la are free God .114.a . ny die to itve wrt%telit, ',rola the grAve— iire..•t to hi r.t-t. uiid hiuu•f to brand, tjtir patriot, tattier, freed tip: laud the Union! IJo, forbear!' ~r ; Cur but the heir, ati I e.irth .4Jan know A darker. ile.t4lier: tale of woo Criliimrti page . , L4d.l ear itilt:ao 1 %t.ts roird I); 4 the 1:1114111 : 4 1,1...1k ye hills, Ye eveo4 , ling Cif; shrn•k out. )t, ,tre.t.iks and lologliug rills, oce.ot roar in Itgroir • ! le.ip from glory's hod, Au! Nhield utauur of your ii,lo ! the [hum ho i.s ho 11 h. rr h u i IXl,llld ile.Ll LILO thmiuing blow? De4eacr.tte AdatuN—e.w it Le' orbi t N 1.1.1 . 14 11.1.11 Oh, no ! Oh. DO Tht.'ll lila the pagu— 'l' wan but the iJk threat (,t rage. - Till 111 IX A MISIIELL J-tvige Nez,hitt, of Gicorgizt, (`ay the Bos ton. 1-'9.4,) coo of the W l higs who are playing the part Of patriots, in his eloy.ent letter on the in which he avows his determina tion to vote for Buchanan. says: •‘Tur. DE‘utistts - ric PAtITY.IS * THE ONLY NA 7/ONAL WHICH 'rum 'I pa a - BLEs or THE TIMES HAVE LEFT To lloNrsT MEN." • 'Nat's tin‘ pohn. It is ti volume -in .11. It's a ti:- \V or eii4 112;411 t() the poor, anise aI,Ia~ se.iseless flings thrown out that th e , I)e l ai m ratk pi.rty :is a sectional party 1 . T.an Ilega thin that the glorioui nation-Wide ill eitent, nation- broad .itk It .4)b3dats, kith. pi nel ples as 'cola- ioreheasive e euustivation, is sectional,' is el..du.unty, which Dein- ocrats ocizitt 710 t, to 1/I : eat 11 to refute More Converts to Democracy. toir .01.Xl111, of ii.enturky, ll .l. 4 ollle nut iu a and a hle letter, for Buchanan and ]b. , m,,eracy. lie z;ays my judgment coate.,t for the Pre•iideney is between Bu einb.2) .aid . .Ifrealuat. . The one a national, the other a seutional can , lidatc, and upon the re:ialt limy depend tin' safety :aid perpetuity of tht. Lu b-a. I shall r l fur Buchanan nod Bfe,•kinridg%! with all the energy I con bring 1,/t0 the eui:t•est, believing that the vote I shall ,cast, tuid,the exertions . _ I *hill make, will be fir the /..luino.itutiou of air be union of the St.ate:4, atop the probection of the inst:- tutians of the South.' The Waynesburg (Pa.) Messrnyer says;that ---4• Lien. Joshua 13. Huwell, one •uf the must .able and distinguished lawyers uf Uniontuwn, Fayette euuut -in state, and an Uhl-line of the mac, exemplary school, is out boldly iii favor of Mr. Baulial;au's electiuu.' IWe Think So- Too. The Boston Journal (Fremont) has the fol lowing paragraph in relatiQn to tile political prospee.ts in Pennsylvania: "Tile State has generally i , :the Harrison and Taylor CZLlll:taigtl,i 11e . 1114 tilc eXCepti:Jazs) voted for .tlv3 Deniocratie ca./didate fur Pre,i dont: and it would certainly he a singular fact if, on the first oi.7ecasion u: a eitiZeii of ItS own having a positiov at the head of the tick et, it should repudiate the part) and the man and go for the opposition." It would be singular fact" indeed—too sinutt/zr ever to be allowed to be realized. Pennsylvania. will do her duty to herself; her candidate, and the country. THE NATIONAL PARTY. The ha.tionality of the Dentocratie party is fully ilemonstratell by the fart that crery roan -11l Ike Union. w(/ ETlCSPittlyi at lb': din iir Cfinceittion, and that the platform of principles a .dipt - e , f-by-that-con-ventivia-paised ,Ly an tiiirinintrot L' 7 ;43 -- Ilarra fur Frai.)at'... maid a replied a. Desii,:ratiJ Do.). `i) i'tm?iii,l 11„ar5poo---Do..boic io, 3:iieNtlqiT,,, ii9i..iettilt!i.c, Tile = - 1)1:1i.i.{0 : 9; :i.oli gq3 Cle,qc.Nti :_fqieliii . .teqee, ?oiifie fijObeilisiq.o, Sce. =MEI THE STRENGTH OP J WES BIJOHAN IN IN PENNSYLVANIA. 01!EF.I.r •MA BENNETT, and most of that stripe tif political brigands, having placed their hopes i of s CCCS.:" , . in Pennsylvania upon -the fusion-Start eket, \\ ill now tie i;onsidera i4 Hy puzzled to decide what course to pursue in referonee to this 'trite in November.--- . 2. 1 Tit:l,l(l(.4ls Stevens anti I:4‘ id Wilmot are equally at a loss how to manage the' Fillmore men sults' to force them into another bargain. We can tell all these gentry in a few plain words that the day for their experiments tgion Pennsylvania has passeil. The day for their tricks is over. They can no longer operate upon the supposed credulity of our petipie.--- Their expedients and their machinations will all give way when they are put to the - test. Th e y ma y mine 'and countermine, they mar hide their tracks as earefully as they please —they may assume all sorts of disguises, and adopt every variety of name—they may go (lowa into the lodges of Know Nothiugism, or mount upon the-housetops, there is oi,e obsta cle that will bailie all their designs and defeat all their artifices, and that is,. the admitted strength of,Jaales Buchanan. amon,u.; 'the peo ple of his native, state. I.IIS is the phantom they have feared 'all the time. It was to avoid meetbor hint and the DenfOcratic party t, In November, that t'tey have tried, during a campaign of unheard-of violence. anti of un precedented effort, to break the fiirce of his influence upon the country, and at his own home; but now-the hour of their doom is ap proaehing, they mu , t meet old Buck upon his own i-oi., they must noßit Pennsylvania's, fa, vorite soil in the valties and upon the moan tainsof good old Pennsvlvania herself', and they will solin—tuo . , soutt—lind that all the rears which theyhave entertained in reference to him were only too NV,4!1l founded. Thaddeus Stevens' prediction will he abundantly veri fied. He declared a rior Judge Mi• Lean's de feat in the sectional Philadelphia Ciolvention, that James. Buchanan would carry Penns . ‘ 1- --- Yii — filadliftv thousanttnitifitv. - That is the figure, we will not take ink' less. one bla,t upon the bugle horn of James Buchanan in the. contest soon to be decided. is worth a thousand men not milt-, hut ten thou , and, yea twetitY thousand at the hack of it. When our • population comes to rogard the spotless puri ty of his life, the long .:old honorable record of his public career, his" high capacities, and the, unbroken current of his national antece dents, they will thrtiw aside their rejthliee's and rush to his biotiter with enthusiasm. LEA Tit E -4 1 ' fi.ACK FOR J A NILS-BUCHANAN TWO FIEMONTS The New Comedy of Errol s. ''Shake not your gory locks at me--:-..thou eanst not say I did it."—Slia4speare. There, are says the Pennsylt anian, some burlesques which are tooabsurd and ridicu lous to excite merriment. We have a not a ble instance of this in the case of the two Pro.. mios—the /ae Fremonts—the counto.r icit pr'esentumnis orthe Chang and Eng mon strosity, Or Ite.Wedition of the Corsican Broth ers. - The eattlu, spe c ul a tor of Californi a is nut the Simon Pure Fremont. The great Mariposa pri,nrietor is not the Patldinder of Rocky Mountain notoriety. The candidate for the Pieideney is not the man who hail the list:. ieuir with Senator: Foote, awl was so desirous of engaging in a duel with hint., The Fre mont who was dismissed from the army for insubordination, is not the veritable Mr. Fre mont who resi.ies in the Firth A vi.snue.city'of New - York. Both are supposed to. haN . e ,'got !-L SI - 1)1 ,1 3 - 4-11C-P-e,4441-S-V-1-44144-1a-e-lev,tiot e- Professor of Mathematics lias been cyphering fur two ilays—but the -ii:urcs w:Il atilt up the wrong way in spitc of all his arithemetieal cillal:fiCat ions. Our readers are aware that the New York Tri!war has recently announced that there are 'twTiFi'enliiiits"—precisely alike, one a C'ath 'olic, the other not. The record of the Black Republican candidate has been f , eund so full id' imperfections, that his ehantpi , nis are hunt ing up a scope-goat to bear sonic of the burden. The Tribune s'tatc6 the case as fol lows "There are two Fremonts,- both Of whom have I.7,elongell to the army : thuh. resided DI W ashiugton :'and thut they reseml,lc earn oth er. aitd that the Frei:lola who is the candi date for Presiaent not that Fremont who was in ti habit of attending the Catholic church." Is it this one or the other who is to he beat (-I....llu..t___.of_s_ight_in em1,41...2 which—or which is tile other? Which was lthn in Savannah, which in .Charleston, which in France? Which has already g ,, t Jessie. which will get A.IS iv% in. Nu‘elul,er? The questions are of a grave character—who is to decide ? Two Freno the one the image of the other and always f.aind in the Some. one asks if the Black Pteisuidicans are quite sure that they have gut- the right one in nominntion. The production ol a durilieate Fremont to divide and thereby les , ,on the dis , redit which attached to th - e on - Fr - individual 61 that name, is a great invention. We retneinher that there were two 3L,rgans invented a quar ter of a century ae.o, one of IPhnttl lvn.i ".g:'""1 enough until after election." What a f.,rtu-. nate idea at this critical junCture, when the one Fren:ont is found to have, forfeited all claiin to public confidence and re,pect, to find that he is not the man at the counter feit pre,entnient of the genuine o riginal. The Albany say.:: Ye-, there are two Fremont- Bank 9 running. tone of ti:etli in Peniisyixania nis the repre:•euttitive of non-interventiim. Dou, ,, las runs the 'other ni-; the repre-.,,enta tive of abolition and , f-rvile niaQ,a,rr• Yes, there are tWv'PAIL) : Thu priAerb pww=miwilmmifflii 1 says that "all eats are grey in Alto, dark ;" awl in the blackness of Abolitionism it is iiiipossi hly to distinguish the two llepuhliean brothers ztn,irt. Yes, there are two Premonts But the dif ficulty arises, which, utter election, will Le sworn in ? Dinnas in tine of his not cl., rep resents his heroes as attempting to place the Man in tllrun Mall; MI the throne 'of Louis NAV, whom lie resciniileil set closely ii, to de ceive all ordinary eyesight. The-Arne mow parts his hair iii tin' iniadle, hut the-po litical harliershave done as innch for his pro totype. We would-not trust Jessie with midi a ! q uestion: but WO 1:10'11• a Nose of such an instinct and pelletraiioa that it will detect the owner of the Marip isa title, :et an immensurahle distance. Let Mr. Wool tell nsovb ie IL is "Abe good_ en. aigh _Fremont till-al, ter • eleczion," and which the real one, and diatht ill cease. The 'Froy Bissl . lel has the foliowing items upon the,two heroes of this new Comedy of ui.—cll[ modern Prom ios There are two Frentonts. Yon c'an't tell them apart. Don't Note for either ; for pm don't knNv . which may swear ! There are two Fremonts, and one is a con ceded rascal—and no one kuuws which it is. Don't vote for either. . The lit rhthlicatts say it was "the other Fre nnOit'' that was running in Pennsylvania Yes terday, The Trihtini; announces - that Fremmit tuts left \(.‘v Y(}rk, inn lie nhscat nine or ten days. The ...I)virs- asks, ,I%hich prommit? it that one ! Or the true that looks so much like hint that you can't tell thew a ,art,"? Whole is "flue filher" Fremoiu : lie was last ;,;een iu Penitsylt ;Lida ?/tire;/ throuvh. To the People of Pennsylvania. FELLow-errizrcs rn State C'entral litimtnitteotrf Pelins - ylvattjn, emigrant lates thtt pie of Pennsylv a nia- and id 'all the StiLte-t or Lie Union, will ilte tityreeet - ed I.'t(trV )11011 11:1:4 CI'ONVII( . .. II our exA,T•tious 1401 of o:•toher, \ll heneefOr ward be memorable. to our ;ulna - ' Assailed - =from inithin by enemies of the Constitution, :not from without by the assail ants of our. glorious confederacy, we have no triumf)hed. T.. 10 much credit eawnot lie riven to the manner in vhirh our or,qtntization. has heed iwrreet.ed awl carried out. It for lang,nage to convey the gratitude utt eittertain !Or our gal= iant awl eloquent 1'1.1(1111 , 4 from other States Who have, come hither ti - at-sist us in this great sti-mggle. Ilia - our dlity is lint fully discharged 1V I .1 1;1‘ e ottp r ly routed tint enemies 6r . our free. in•tit.iitioup4 913 ,n the 1-:ieregi sell from 4.v;iiefi the hq•litrikimn of Intlepontlerire WILS and 111)i)11 which the Constitution ut tile / 6'10,1 States.was mloptell. ij o o h o ur Of victory it is ho‘vover \Veil ti) reniptili)er that there are Ater t - oliligatious to he fulfilled, awl that 88 orgailizati(oil so to,oll - so :tilutiruldt , su widely exi(mdoil, must still 1.)0 adhered tn.- Therefore, fellow-citizens, pi , r-ievere in the : Au nohly rej(dTte thv 111,1 , 2 :itirloont triumph you Illtvo L •liim it,l : and n411(9111,4.1. that the 4th day of No% einly.r, now at lotnil. is that day upon which Vnu are to (1)1111)10ft t lie great workoiC.lu .stlay so It US cuintriolv. the great harrier againqt whioli thew - aves or sectionalism havoilashed. has: mailitaintA her proud integrity. While n il th e n e Av %varld has looked upon her—while all patriotic hearts have liclied that she would staild firth. in the midst of the impiseil ml tier—sl'e Irn, pr' , ol'Ved it I(Jble )n , plonitifin and an inexo-ahle it tmlness . She Ihts,•re.pellerl from her pre , cnce the men have been sent among her population, to !win. The great victory . we have ac•hie'recl has first, of all, sustained our illustrious and lM 'Buchanan. I t en ., i n own State, the torrent of fitnat iei,m has liven stave 4. Itere, where he was horn, and where he has lived t life ofsignal purity awl patrioti;.in, lie has iiiwo prvud and generoor, ( i f Pennsyh, an Ot. Thu enohling sentihient of State pride h a s done much for us in this contra. Ont. have-respolideetto their glor . iims teeitis histeery, and to the long list, uf ii;es lietve innneirealized his name and ,friem this flay lieni•l'Vn;tli it \rill bei thing ti, sav that a j'elillSVlN'lminn, true to his ce,tilitry and true tu himself, Krill nut, Nvant ur wait fur friends anicin hi , own fellow-eitizn - lis. I'latl4ren of lin, 1 )omocrati(! National Ceniventiiett, upon which •J Mlle, BUI:113110.11 St'111(1:4, ilaS 'Welt C o! Itic 61:1/1)11111:11. :I , l‘ , ,rati'd in every seinen' I)istrivt and township in the State, dtaileg this fearful C,olllliet, lIIIS been vindica ted, and the et , persieens .upon his clutrain,er have liven refuteil and train ded under fi at_ And tne prowl honor of achio% ingthk splen did resnit lielong ,, , not to the old Democratic party alone, which, with reanimated vi go r, eutered into the contest and per , ecere4 to ti l e cud, but, we are glad to acknowledge that it lias been thared by than-ands of national Whig; who have as:s , istoil tt-: with all their energ.o.4, aull who are hence Forth to he count el as our br . other4, and our compatriots. From thi , , day till the N-vember, 14.56. let "meetings lie hel( 1 , i n e very s c h oo l Di•trict aml Town;llin in the state. Lot u, ku , q, up tiic fin; Ivllich nu«• burns SO 1/CPZ,I./t1 der•eivol the id(.a. that the ; , ,o,itioti will be Fu , ed on the 14 th,of October, and eonfus.ed by the trenieildou, ;Lnd, nieniorahle r e b u k e they have rel_eived, f.,r trying- to deceive the rte tide. of Cat; State, they w . l:. -1•1 A to ...h e i fer intan-eves by another ceniu:nat..•.,n ill Novein- ey arc enetnie , 4 to us un4l td the Constitu tion alike, no matter what name they bear, or under what flag they rally. Those lvho have proce-sed to he National have •sunit their Nationality in an ert.rer desire to defeat the only National part:: in existence: and those who were , -ectional has t jr)-ti , onf• or to apohcrize for their sectional ism, in order to win a guilty yi,tory. - Oncy the Dt.m ,ernri( S•at(. egmtral Commi:tfq. ;ippoak to the National ri(!o111.e, Of the State to maintain organizati:;n, and to coutimie the surd , a aubly I ) eg,m, Judi' it TII IS mi(arrv, ANd.) PRY I=l is as nohly finished on the .Ith tiny of Novein her, 15341. ;JOHN W..FOENEY, rbitinnan. Cirletm (. 1C t“ztvot t, J:is. V. Johnston, Plitt, Alfred Ililmoro, 11'i Mee. N. 11. lln o wite, I ii.‘orge Thonnis S. Fertimi, Eiminuel Street; William O. V. ..Nlet:rat.'l, Edward IV. Nivel., tieiirge mere.Thema.: Timmiee4, IVilliatii l'..llrirris , oll, IL Tippett. J. G. Lei 1 1,.-, .1. tja,Nyrence I IVm. K;truus. P. Vans:int. .101 m -D a vi s : I). nirminger, B. Swarr. James S. NoMlthon. 1;•an - c iiilrew 1101)kins, Wil liitin 11. Villt t Ricilard 31(..111istor, O. Bar rott, Simmol Biglor, Hoary Omit, William P. Worthington. .1), 1). ll'agouer, Samuel Wetherill, Nelson IVeISeV. .J !iii P. Lora, 1 illi:1m Lilly, Iteille„.1.11. Danner. William H. Kurtz. Vieorg,e IL Bucher, (George Strop. (;eorge White, J. Richter Joae.,, : IL L. Dif fenkteh. Wm. (IL Murray. IZ. Weaver, Dr.. B. Ir. Throop. r Litl,rur, William M. Piatt. dorms Sherwood, 11. 11. Pint. W'ini am S. Coiniu. Robert P. Cochran. Jos. Dougla4s, 13. F. `!oa t . . .Janie: M. Breaiii, J. 11, Keuster, Suyiuel D. * David Lynch; *-.11. L. Stewart. Workmau, charleh A.- Black. Georg e , W. BoWillall, J. B. Sajoionti , S.Jamison, - Charles, Lumberton. A. S. 'Wilson, Tioona, Bower, J. S. Miller. E. J. Keenan, U. P. reniiii;eit: - Barnard Reilly, This..). ,1Ie( lamant. THE DEMOCRATIC' PLATF,c)R.M. Atlopicfl ett Jititc 4(//, 1856 I 1, That dill Deintwriro f place theirtrust in the intelligenee,, the pat ri otism,and the discriminating justice of the .Ainerielto people. L'emiirc , /, That we regard this as a distinc tive feat tire Of our political eret;tiz are proud to maintaiii I,efore Cho World, it: „ the ' , Toat morzil element in a form of \ Vll - spritigingfrion rntl held Hp. by the pop ular will and we uoi,trast it. with thu creed and practice of Fe,le,:aiism, under whatever name or form, which seeks to palsy the will td—w-hicli—coticeiTem—no imposture too monstrous for the popular ere ' Resolved, therefore, Tlnit entertaining those views, the Democratic party of the Union, through their delegates as.4onhled iu a gener al Convention. coming to;.::ether in a: ?)suit eoneo rd, ilevotai to 'the doctrines anal faith of a free r(Tre,-,entative not eminent, and appealing to their fellow ritizets for the rec ' titude of their imentliols, renew - and re-a t eotri helOre the American - pefople the deeiutatom of principle.; avoy, 141 hv them when MI fornier ,wcasions, in general * Convention, they have ' 1 p •eseoted their candidate for - I.4)pula - r storm- I. Th a t the Federal Government liulitel iiietrer, dev:ivei.l front the ; and the grants of power wade L 1101.41111 ought to he inrietly eon:Arne& by all the de partaten ts-and itgltitts of the il.iveratitent that it is ihexpeilient ail , ' dangerous to exa c•ise doubt fttl coitstit titional pow ers 2. That the dees - tiot confer up on the Ile:it:1 . 31 tiloverentent the t i ,iiiNvet' to cont inence atol carry On a ,general imprownrwilts. 3. That the (locti.t not confer authority - uptin the - Federal ( if_ rert fy or Indirectly, to t o•stime the ilehts of the heveral States, oontraeted for 'owl ttnif in ternal improvemeitts, or other State purposes, Aol.r_tvottl4f—sueli_assot lopt (n 1( jtt,--(1,--t (741 eat. 4. That justire awl soutol policy forbid tho Federal Ilii‘rertinteitt 10 .luster one linnich of iodustry to the dittriatent of any other, or to cherish the iitteresz of „1., 1 ,0•6,,,, to the portion oflour violin/on einlatry : that elery citizen LOU!n evety seetiou of the itionttr y Ita-z a,right to liontawl and (11(((11 an I`llllllll ty o 1 rights awl ani 1 to eoniplete and ample prOteetion Of persons 31111 priqieny front tinine.-Aie violence. or foreigoi ar e r_crits;sion; - 5. That it is the fluty or m-rry branch of the Governnumt to eiduri!e and pro , Airo tho most rigid economy - in affairs, a'!ifl that no Inure revcaue he rlii:•e , l than i 4 requiredto defray the liec(”:,a --r fiffrql• -- CTII'l: 11 - 0 - ; r • grai 111111, but certain extimltion of the lothlic • G. That the proceeds of the public. hut& ought to 'he saerelly applied t,, the "national oloet!tis 81)0CifiWi iu tht . Con;4;ttltif)ll ; 8:111Lhat ~ re are oi posed to any law for the 4livtril,ulint of such proeuedi anion:r.•the State-4, as - alike inexpelient in policy and repugnant to the Cotitit"itutiun. 7. That Congres4 has no pir.ver to wharter a national bank ; that we believe i-uch an insti tution one of deadly hostility to the best in terests of the coitntry ; dangerous to our re puhFran institutions and the liberties; of the people, and eitleutated to place the husines , , of the country within the control of a voncentra red money power, and al,ove the lawi awl the will of the people ; and that the re , ult:: of Democratic legislatii.n nn this and i.l! other paneial moasu'res upOn which is:. ues have Leen made between the two political partie. , of the eountry, have demonstrated to candid and praetical men of alt parties, their soundness, safety and utility in all business pursuits Alta the separation co ,re moneys O. government from banking institutions, is in dispensible, for the salciy of the funds of the government and the rights of the people. 9. That we are decidedly opposed to taking from the President the qualified veto power, by which he is enabled, under restrictions and r e . T onsibilities amply' suWeient to guard the publie interests., to ,i,nspenfl the pa-sage of a bill who-u merits cannot secure the approval of two-thirds of the Senate and Ilimse ozAtep resentatives. until the jinig.nent of the people eau he obtained thereon, and which has Katie l the American people from the corrupt and tyrannical dornination of the Bank of the Uni ted S'at7F4 .-- and from a corrupting system of general internal improvements. - 19. That the like al principles embodied by Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence, and bauct iuued in the Courtituthiu, -which =2 7 15 S' 6 t males ours the land of liberty and the7 - asylum of the oppressed of every nation', have, ever b been cardinal principles in the. Democratic hat h., and every attempt to abridgo the prix-. of becoming eitixensand the owners of soil among us, ought to be resisted Nvith the same spirit which swept the alien and sedition laws front our statute hooks. AndWu r,I:EAS, Sit we the foregoing declar ation was uniformly adopted by our prede cessors in National tliniventions,,,an adverse political and - religious test hue, ken secretly organized by a party claiming to, lie exclusive ly American, it is proper that the American Oeumeracy should elcurly define its relation thereto, and declare its determined opposi tion to. till.seeret political societies, by what ever name they-may be called. Resolver?, That the leundation of this Union of States having been laid in. and its' prosper ity. expansion and ln'e-emineitt example in h.ree g,o cm mint buil, upon eutirc freedom in . mat , tel'S of religious 4u titer•umciit, and no respect of person in regard to rank or birth ; no lou ts can 'justly bedeented national, constittilien- , ul or in accordance with A Mericart principles, ltliieli tenses its exclusive Organization upon religious opinions or accidental birth-place. Au d hence apolitical crusade in the nineteenth century and in the United States of America, agaiiist, Catholics and foreign born, is neither jw.itified by the past history or tie futurtlpres pects of the cJ i untry, nor n unison with the spirit of toleration --and enlarged freedom which peculiarly diking :undies the Ameri, can system-of popular government,. , - Rex* That we reiterate with renewed, energy of pitrpose, the 'Avell considered declar ations of former Conventions' upon' th Section- 1 al issue of Domestic slavery, and concerning the reserved eights of the States— ]. That Congress' has no power under the Constitution, to interfcre with 'or control the domestic institutions of the several States, and that silt+ States t are the mole and proper judges of everything appertanting to their tlnit all ell'ort..4 of 'the atlolctionists tit others, made to' iTutoce Uonigtetili to interfere with (1114:4;110104 4/1 . Nlareq, or to : 141cpineipipt. steps in relation tln‘reto, - are calculated, to lead; to tlio_most alarming And ilangerous conseven ces;' awl that All Noel), efforts 'have an inoilta; 1)10 tendinicy to (liminigh t:to happiness of the pe,plo, and endanger, thastability lUlll porta _nenry of the Union; alai ought, 114 to be coon. tununced by any frielnki of pur political s intiL tutions. : preposition-jeerers,- and was intended to embrace the. ~ , vholtr Hub; iect of shivery agitation in Congress; and. 'therefore, the Democratic party of the I:lnitin,' standing on this national plittform, abid& by mid a lliora to a faith r;' execution of :tots houvvit its the ,Cumpremisp Measures ! tm - t-, t led by the Cengressof 1>3,"t9; "the act for re idaiming lugitiveS frOth service or laber;" in cluded which not being designed to carry nut uu express provision of the Cutostitution, can- , wit, with fidelity thereto, bu repealed,. ur su ehang,eil as to destroy ur impair its Vill“ . lCllCy. That the Deemer:l6e party will resist all attempts at' reneWing, irr COngresit , ar mit of it ; the itgi tatiini of the slavery quttAtun, under whatever shape or color the attempt may be 4. That. the Democratic party will faithful lx abide hy and uphold the principles laid down in the Kentucky and Virginia rnsiolo- . Lions of 1.798, and in. the report of Mr. 31adi son to 1 116 Virginia LegiSlature, in 1790,,., that 't adopts thoSe'rinciples itA Constituting one o 'the Main iiiuudatioos of its PolitiettLereedif and re , :olved to carry thorn out in their. 01.0. Violl , -; meaning and import. 40d-that wonay.mre Ow, issue Oil which a-sectional - party; siti&istittr„, exylasively on slat ery agitation, now relies to test the fidelity of the people, North and Soilth, to (lie, c,ipd,itution and the Union : -I,'-Pkoir , , 'That chtimin-g---foll4iwship-With, and desiring theA,o=operation of all who re g;Lni the preservatiOn-of the. Union tinder the i.!,(nstit talon as the paramount issue—and re padiatiog seetional parties and platforms l'inecritin• domestic slavery, which seeks to embroil the States and Territories alla whose uvoood pur;tocs, if consummated, ontist end ii vii 'war aunt di:soulful —the American Dean ort•a-y rocogn;ze and adopt the princi ples containe.l in the organic law cf,tablishing Tci:ritories of Kansas and Nebraska as on ny,(l : , h og the only sound and safe solution o f to: -slavery que,tion," upon which the great tuition:l I of the 1).Npl?, ofthis country can repose in its di:termitic , ' conservatism of the Cnion--Nos-isTERFERINce; BY CONOREsS WITH SLAVERY IN STATE AND TERRITORY, Olt IN THE' DP-111.MT Or C4/LunRIA,, 2. That wa4 the Lasis of the conipro-' Ill; 1 )1 by hhth tho Dem ocratic an ilittigparties . in National Conven tioli--;ratilleil by OW people in the election of I:;32, a nd rightly apphed:to the urganiza,tion of Territorich • 3. That by the uniform application of this Dornoctratic principle to the organization of I to t r-- urri Tories, anti to_tne nit - mission new with or without domestic slavery,tis they may elect—the quid right of all the States will be pre,erv,9l intact—the original compact of the (..!oustitutiou maintained inviolate, and the perpetuity- and expansion of this Union insur ed to its utmost capacity of embracing, in peace and harmony, every future American State that may be constituted or annexed, with a republican form ,if government • 11 , soirrj: That we recognize the right of the people. of all the Territoric., including and Nebra , ka. acting through the le gally and fairly expressed will of a majority of actual residents, alidlthenever the !lumber _of their inha!ii tants justifies it, to form a Con stitution, with or without domestic slavery, and be admitted' into the Union . upon terms of per feet equality with the other States. ./I , :soireil, fin/tag, That in view of the con dition of popular institutions in the Old World, (and the dangerous tendencies of sectional ag itation, combined with the attempt to enfbrce civil and religious disabilities against the right olaequiring and enjoying citizenship in our own land,) a high and sacred duty is de vok ed with increased responsibility upon the Democratic party of this country, as the party of the Union, to uphold and maintain th e, right of every State, and hereby the Union of the States.; .aulto sustain and advance among u , ,-,.6.4e;titutional.liberty, by continuing to re sist all monopolies and exclusive legislation for the benefit of the law, at the expense of the many, and by a, vigilaut and constant ad hereuco to those principles and compromises , rwo poLLA US .A-YEA of the, constitution which are •brond enough and strong enough to embrace and uphold the Ilniun as it was, the Union as it is, and the Union as it, shall be, in the full expansion of the energies and capacities of this great and progressive . people.- 1. licsolrol, That there arc gnestions con nected with the fin eigu policy of this country which are inferior to no domestic question what eVer. The time has come for the people of the United States to declare themselves in ra ter of free - seas and pro g ressive free treilo throughout the world, andby.soletrin manite, Wimp% to,plaee their moral in Anence at the side of their-successful example. 2. Pesolved, That our geographical and - litical p4ition with reference to other State , . of this continent, no less than the interest of our .00mmerce and - the . developement of our growing power requires that we should ho a as sacred the principles involved in the Mon roe doutrinet, their' bearing and import admit of no misconstruction—they should be apvlied with Unbendingrigidity. 3. Resared, That the great highway whie h net 11144.118 well as the assent of the St;:te.i most 'itumediat ely interested in the maiuti:- mince, has marked nut for "a -free coniumnic a tion helween the Atlantieand Pacific Ore-au , constitutes-ono of tbe most important achieve., meats jealised,bythe spirit of modern times ttnetlie unconquerable :energy of our people. Tht4 resukt,iliould be secured by a timely and efficient'exertian of the control which we ha% e tip:V - 000u' claim over-it,ltlitt no power oat earth4lionkl-he suffere4toimpetle.or clog its progress ,by puy , interference, with the rola tiows . Wineys suit our policy to eStablisli_lie tween-titir:Fortiment, and The goi-fetinfents• of States 'within whose doininionsitlieii. can, -under no , circomstanee,, surrender our prepoaderance in the adjtistmetit of all gtief tions arising . outer it'. 4., /?cso/red, That in view of so command ing an interest, the peopla.of the United _States. cannot but Sympathize with' the eflimts which are being made by the people of Centi%ll Continent whiet eeyers the passage aerugs the Inteivapaiiie fghluNs• , 5. Restgrs'erA, That the Democratic party, will eipeet of the nest Administration that in e! 'y proper / effort be 'made to insure our *templet.; eyzin the Gun' of Mexico, and to maintain u permanent protection -to the grciit outlets through which are emptied into its waters the products raised out of .the soil, and 'the coin medities created by iii - diiktrY of tl,e,peo pie of our -Western Valleys, and of the Union at-large. 33. F. 11-ALLET,-Chaitintan, • W ZtEr"Diseountenanee whatever may fnrggest oven ,a eitapieipii that iG [the front' can s he , ahamioned ! And indignantly f'r•siwit &pint the Aral dawning every_atleastpt to alhoitile um!' portion our. Colintryfrom the rest, or to en -I;•e,ble the saered ties whirh tOgeiher 'the marinas pane.",aa —W46ur. xGrorr. AerPatriotic citizens! Remember the groat words of Andrew'Jaason when be re tired from public life :—"lt I 8 ai,soivicry /Kees xalff that the laws passed by the constitutional author-171'4s should bejaithfully executed in every part of the country, and that every yood citizen should at all Wines - stand ready to put down, Vlll.lll THE ,COIfIIINED FORCE Of' THE , „NATION, EVEV ATTEMPT AT 11.NLAWFUL RE! SI STA NCF UNDER -WHATEVER . PRE TE NUE IT MAY BE I‘IADE, 'OR WILAT- ; EVER SHAPE IT MAY ASSUME." 14;71A Writer in the :ProgresNive Age., Fremont paper down in Belfast, Maine, rsayrt t --"Vow,Tellow eitiiens, I affirm, (and I'ATo so with Inmost eenvietions of the truth,).that the Nurth will not submit If they aro defeated:, Pcul, the dirette The 'Advertiser states that George Peabody, the London banker, with 'his charabteris . tie liberality and large-heartedi less, inacte a volun tary offer Of ten thousand dollars • to assist iu fitting out the late Arctic expedition under 1)r. Kane in search of Sir John 'Franklin; and that the money was -aceepted. Rd:funding M 6 Honey,—Tho New Orleans Picayune states that the Kansas relief, com mittee of that city have concluded to refund the money to subscribers as "the General Gov ernment had taken in hand the settlement of Kansas difficulties,. and any interference on the part of individuals would Le unwise." Fifty Years in Ike Penitentiary.--Wm. B. Smith, charged with killing his own son, has convicted of manslaughter in the first de gree by the Circuit Court of Tipp:tb co., Miss., and sentenced to a term of fifty years, in the Stuto prison. Smith is now over seventy - years-of ag,e, attd-will-accurding to tha - "frli er law'' of nature, be reprieved by death be fore the expiration of fifty years. A Rich California saner ttlls the following of Lieut. Derby, "John Phcenix," the humorist : One evening, at the theatre, Phoenix ob served a man sitting three sea7s in front, whom he thought he knew ; he requested the person - sitting next to him to "unch the oth er individual with his cane.'' "fhe polite stranger did so, and the disturbed person turning his head a little, he discovered his mistake—that he was not the man be took him fin-. Fixing his attention steadlirstly on the play, and affecting unconsciousness of the 'whole affair, he left the man with the cane to settle with the other fur the disturbance, who being wholly without an excuse, there was of course, a ludicrous and embarrassing scene— during all of which Phoenix wits profoundly interested4n the play. At last the man with `the cane asked rather indignantly, "Didn't you tell me to punch that person with my stick ?" "And what did yoti want ?" '`l wanted to see whether you would punch him or nut !" The Canadian Committee of Agricul ture offers three prizes for so inany essa,:ys on the history, habits and means of counteract ing the injurious effeeti of the weevil, the wheat-11y ,and the wheat-midge. NO r • •t ) •