0 ai e Vaattiturati, ANN, 'EXACT JURTIII:C. MA. inxny wrvi FORNEY, "1""' Vtigt rtr.Esti,F.NT, Him, JAMES BUCHANAN., ' OF PETN4YLVItiI4„, Sqbje, I to drc decitiqo o.CDemocralic National "P Convention. V:)11 CANAL CO3OIIB.SIONFIr.--"--; GEO.R.GE,SCOTT OF oLvninrx nit Auvirm. JACOB FREY, Jit, 31ONTOONLitli C)1;;;TY r o n FtunvEr,R GENET:AT , TINIOTHY IVES, bP 'POTTER CJTNTIC, Ancozatio Ekletozel Tickot, IMATOR rII.IIILE3 it, BUCXALF,W, WlL3tri Mce-iN14.E.b13. - bis Is'.--..ogOitalt W. NF.LI:;uI:V., Do. 2 I -PIERCE BUTLER, Do. I-F.DW MID 11AI1TNI IN, 110 4th-1t11.1.T.111 ' Do. 5,h -4011. N t 9 .11- "th - -:ii.rvii),;4l7ltV. J. Bth—clf.iltl ES IiESSI,FII., Otli-JOSEPIt PATTI:U. O.,";; , 100t-18.1 Do. 1 Dli-FltA NCI3 W Do 12 h-T110:1.1 46 nBTplillttCT, 113. 11 %.--A , SII kit .M [NO En, Do. It 11-REUBP.N WILDVD. bo, Emu; ; .t citAWPOTto, Do. 11 1 li-JA3lr3 1 1 1. A cit., 1),. 17111--1 I - , T.4111.1:. 19 18 b-JOIN I) It.nDI,Y, Pe Ittli-JA11:111 TU11311117, Do 20.11-J A- J. DUCH Do 2let--IVILL et!if 11.1: ' Do. 211.-JAMHS 0 C.40{1 , 111.1.1,. Do. 231-11101 WAS CUNININ - 417101; 1 - 4 h--,1011:4 h:EM,TY, , L'ELLE'PO.VTX, PI:NNA s:rorr,u-sr !I.►B('l[ 10, ItStil. 20 RotlCSOr.ai earkc.43;czlatite Wit Ait, 4r: rc,t.tested to state that banking !Taus: 0:f hut's, lisle, U1.4.-Gee r des- »a r«n4 Oclan.o meth flan E, nor A' it a lean...A of any Bank in Pitttbeir 4 e or oily o , her part of Ike country. They it# busatesi — ah thew nun rctponsibli ity, aid 1111 uniicr the control of none.. Macs.—nt4 could rollilou your eye. for a ihetitypitypose than - mink into the private &whom of frirate people. To rent your , i , /eitu, you must 'tr.( other Fir ektns than thnie eifir s irdeil by the co!unn.‘ of -the •Tr4tehnian. -J.i.vgaitv.—The absence tf the , rector etl:t,r pievents its from get in; von a definite en terer, but no doubt the arraa•i:,acitt could 6c satafacionly myle. six 2 pkafaio have apormnal mt.-2r.ezo. DANK :A.—Km eau le gervainiodatagn Ihre foaP.. By refer:pi.; our aderly:am; , ct Lau a you trill be ark:l,o,7:cl. ?IMF rtL•wy .-....b.ia. awrksi 43... I. AS.. Pa....... 4%..—J.,............ ...II tie carried unit th)agli NicliAai mill lived. Thz Allies not kw i,.;; been orn , f illy informed of the delittiof si-1101,is and the sc:i.ssion of Alevinitcr, arc suppostd, ttploulati:ally • to be ignorant of the change. And should a treaty of gasa:u" bo sigued, one of the first st:ta of the Russian goverummt will be, on reantnlng diplotn.ttie intercaar,o with Eng land, France. and. Turkey, to inform thoso c a governments flat this Impe ial Majesty, the Czar Yictrgsa is no more, an l is august son, AlersuuLr, reigns in his stca over all the Rfuniarr. —Thiety,)les presers, mainly &AZ' tt to the Republican cause, and also containing 'enrol conservative Irhig and Amniean iourhais in this State aro opposing the notn• insition of FilintOre. In too North atifi West the opposition to the ticket el:env:Ss ne.:. - I.v ali the presses. In the city of Pittsburgh there is not a- single Journal that duos not openly oppose it, and throughout the North it e,t once arriie Ili Republicans against the iimericsmi istaite national contest. ,Gorornor Barstow ha 3 addressed a uffs• ,0 to the Legislature, denying situ juris d4tk n of this Supreme Court in 'the matter of the disputed Governorship, protesting aga it t .its action, and threatening to resist, with all the means in, his ibpartment, any infringo mad upon his rights. The message wan n:- ferrza to a committee. The ‘106.401.1 of. Via 1 Court teill probaLly be rentlered to day.-- Tho Dernocna's are determined to sustain Gay. Baritow. Drown,.of ih? tritited Sta:cs, has i traduced a bill for tho building of a railroad tale, b lino to - the Pacific. The-bill *filch tho Company arc to pay 50 n. • acre bdore obtaining title, and arc required ¶500,000 as security that the work . shall Le fa:tblittly•performsd. —To the case o: Craft el a/. vs. the State Bait of Indiana, Um Supreme Coot has do cid3 I that lb, 2iith cid 20th dais of February in leap year aro to be counted a•t otse day, and a note falling duo oo the Thb cannot he prAeited for non paymoot UST after bankihg boors on the 29th, -7 . :4ll.trimaAt might last, a actstructire ,„Xtrasotzurred it) AIM looktet* i4r4 of Fhilatlel- - phia. A tncicry iS - A3 4r.rcl, several dwell. jags Icstrepol, ands nu.nber of others .sc -700:90i-riserRatiod. .Th 4 ste a mboat lienry , L. Gave ettaslo 4 narrow' escape from destruction, co &tunlay tloraing—the fire being to-still.' gt s' tod•sviVa much difficulty. ---Tmt Wive* in Europe has been unusu „itaid, +MHO here it has bte-so:Mtensely . .Last month several beMitiful butter l i - Armin, caught in the girder's near Parit, ...the Nor York Cot trAl Railroad depot, IltitAtitY watt vritolly itroytd by tiro on lreddia4titaight fa.t. - I.tv bzedintl),ll4ml into the Ma resod Legit...W*lre, authorizin3 thit_auspe n . mini of all bitsiness o Huridity. ~..ii-ilartattn, it it raid, .1 1 14 Que.!, I $ wiNrod $ 1 .4 0 , 0 9„ 0 3 0 , 1 3 1 0- 4 otryrilist,stoneof im..iituela it. --Nothing of :my siwcial heipor:eivo tr3ulyinif 14 f'ofigmcc thiriog the pro weak. -- -7 , 1 104: 0 264 . 0 .4tgraYtF titaitlt , 'm i t"' ' • 'Vise 110011 sis soma eke tree at ASH. .. . ~ .t.. , h ead _. r• It_. •- . We inisci)Skt t h e oettut 4 MMUS, tO-: ~ The subject o f 4 sa f e *a d r oi a bi c ito ch ey day; the•ticket nominated by the Democratic is beginning to attract the attention ,of the Convention which assernblial at 'llarrisburg people, end business then agree that a tne• on the 4th inst. The Union and Patriot, in i talk cuiVency is the only safe system by alluding to,,tim candidates, says: ' --- '''' } which am i de and commerce can he conducted: Ceorge Scutt, candidate for Canal Cotn. I The s . c. , e i asfic American, in alluding to this uni,sioner, was a Democratic representative subject. says that gold is one of the oldest in the"Assenilly in 1853--F, Bairn the coon. of metals; and has been known and toed by ties of Colninhiti enti r loritour, and WAR' 0110 a ll nationy_aaviiiie•and civilized--from the of the most, popular. and intelrgent numb' 'il ihiwn of, history. It exists native in nearly . !of that 1-4.ri enlightened in -hie views, f‘ d' ore art of the world, as a Metal, eased firm in the performance of his public flub s. at w ith with otherinctals. It IS Of a brilliant Ile has had large epericneo in every thit/ marline° ; .a beautiful yellow oceter; tit ' connected with...the public improvements, malleable and ductile, and is transparent in has boon a railroad and canal contractor And I thii i haves.: It is lbsibla ate full red heat ; I conducted himself in all -the public relations , „sstailieea partially when skwly raided, of life with ability and spotless integrity. J i and isnot acted upon like zinc, copper,_ tin, He is a native of Bradford county, but ha s,or iron, by ordinary agents. That is, these been for many years a citizen of Cidumbia— 1 metals are readily oz . .y<linetlby some acids, ' te• the Star of the North." Ho is favorably moist. gasses, and cspobilee tot moist L i mos. 1 - I known throughout the North-eastern enan• !there, -whereas gold is notiesulily actisl upon I l ties, and his vote in that quarter will de- by acids, and it stands exp4ure, untarnished; monstrate tha.confldenee it Bh which he is in the atmosphere for ceinttiries.' It• has al l! regarded. Wo think the Convention acted ways been the moat valuabie of Metals, ow. wisay mid well in plseinghimin nomination ing to its adarcity, its beauty; its • unoxyitli, as the candidate of the Feisty. ~ iebl e nature, and the facility kith " loch i t, ,j Jacob Fry, Jr., the nortilitee fur Auditor Can inc 4 9rkcd Ilia any form. It coma General, is too well and Sayerahly knc4ll tii4":vn to.tteaa a matter. of history, that the 1 rtquife, any special notice front ust. Ile id a ancients were acquainted with a method of citiz.,llof Montgomery county:-served two reducing gold to-fluid, and retaining it (br iterms iu Congress from that district with any l e ngth of tim e in that state; We be +clredit to himself yid edtiro satisfaction 10 Hare this may be set down as fabulous. hiu constituency, and - last winter was a It Virmbera the Assembly: Ho- is-is ribtiman of rucyc than ordinary ability and of the most n pestle: s'ao integrity. His popularity at honio, and his vial name, throughout the State, will make him a formi candidate. , Timothy Iris, Sr.. tuo nominee s for Sur veyor Giontral, hails ,from Potter county. lie has served with credit in the State Senate has held many positions under the Govern ' meet, and has had much experience in pub- I &lc units.. We believe him to be a sound Masocrat, and hare no doubt that ho Will tal the ofticso for which he has beck selected with great ability and urfulness in the State. With such a ticket, and the prestige of suceeaa u hieh n•e derive from the numbers, character, intelligence and unanimity of .the Convention, we -, enter updn the contest of 1E454-with 0,- naoraLrartaiuty of Tag, MISSIXO STICAXIM PACIFiC.—The New York Journal of Commerce, referring to the missing steamer Pacific. says the in surance on her is verzylarge ; the amount on the,ahip is 51100,000, half in this country anti half in Europe ; the freight money is insured for 3400,000• more. e had boa ti t ten six and scum hundred tons of cargo, valued at over E 1,500,000 moat of which %NM insured, a good part in this country. The insurance is divided among various ofli. Cot throughout the country, so the blow wzuld not fall• exclusively on New York. The Pacific is commanded by Captain Asa fhlridge, who has navigated the Atlantic naval rc.gcsiusitle CD Cornittids _for neatly s guar trr of a century. As so.. reason for the ciicouragement of hope in her safety, the long dd•y of the Atlantic in 1851 is referred to. The Atlantic left Lifetime', Ih.‘cernber 28, 1851; and not a lisp of intern gence,of her reached her oWners for forty nine days. She went ashorc , on the coast of Ireland, and her passengers themselves brought the news of her safety by the Africa. She was missing, And yet she and her pas sengers were all safe. The Pacific left Lii erpool 'the 2;341 of January, and has thcre tore en out thirty-eight days. - LE OF VIZ PUZLIC WORZs.—Tiltt hell in t * tie 1 into the State Senate, a few days since, 11 l/r. Jamison, for the sale of the putdic works the i State dirides the line into arc sccticng, follows : 1 3 ',:--rlidjAdrlphia and coltunbia &Bros& , 23—Canal from CotermZ,::: 4 d ? tzle Unction. 31—Canal fnmetJuvietion to Itolidifsliteg. 4th—Allegheny Portage ftailroad. sth--Canal from Johnitown to Pittsburg. The 'price for the several divisions is fixed as folkiWs : - - - • Division list, not less than , 66,800,000 Division 2d, 1,600,000 Division 3LI, di Division 4th - , Division sth, ",‘, Fur the whole line, A Tsastst.a Witeras IN Tatesatres.—La Alborada, of Villa Clam, publishes extracts from letters from Santa Crux, Tenerifie, January 24, stating that the winter there was terrible ; rain had fallen' incessantly for . more than a month, and on the 7th of Jalltl -."Lafful hurricane, which did much damage to arms +hipping. At Oarachio the w aves . wore. so high that the sea encroacht.ti upon the land and swept, through the streets; a monastery was de l stroyed, and two of thq monks were buri d in the ruins. A barque from ''Gdmera w ar Goat; with ten men.' OPERATIONS OF TIIJI U. 8. Mmt.--: ; The I ststemcnt of the operations of the mat in Phitsdelpitis, for the miuth of February, shows ttnit. of _gold' for the morritciwisssB,Bol,Boo t of silver; •106,700. The coinage of g f old was 111,867,425 into 300,898 pieces. The silo r coinage $450400 into i.,13')5,500 pieces. The total number of pieces cotrmi, including cents, was 2,026,088, of the value of 13,318,240.98. Tise gold coinage is mostly in picecaoLmich &nomi nations as are calculated to go into lion—only about three quatters of a million being In double Eagles. TUE ELF.crrox in / Frederick, Md., on Mon day, resulted In the olettion. of Lewis Grun -1 tier, Democrat, fotl Mayor, try 4 majority. The Know'-Nothings elected six members of the City Cuwicil and an Alderman. The Democrats one Councilman and four Alder. men. Last year, thnuli.,,l2ow-Notionnga ear /Ca LSO - . majority. , ' !--'-!41. 0.-PrairieAz., by many regerdel' sr the Are of Ainerieati poets, no s iv &ate geologist in Wiwonnin, where the aettlers call hito r 0 , 1 61(111 CSOLOGY or GOLD—The present age is fur - grrst—tlis:vrt., its- of deposits in possessions belonging to nations whose inkthiltints speak the English language. California and Australia hare becmne watchwords for attracting ,the emi grant from the Lanka of the Thames, the Danube, the Stine, the St. Lawrence, the llud . sonr, and the Mississippi ; and the China man from the shores of the Yellow See. No elle_ Can tell why it is that sold is found in one pait oc the world 'and not ill another. If it be true that this globe once existed as a molten mass, gold should be found sea component part, equally distrib uted among all similar rocks in every part of the tvoti.:b Sir Roderick Murchison be- heves gold - td be a peculiar production of the Silurian eta, and that it is, 48 it Were, "a saurian fossil." Tho rocks, hoWerer, of Talifonda and Australia ? from which Buell large quantities of gold have been recently "obtained by digging and ;washing, belong tci the primary scrieLt, and not to the fossillifer or aedimentary bed +. The primary lamina ted rocks of our globe aro always found more or less on edge, awl their vertical cleavage planes am not due to the direction of chains. of mountains, for they pass or; r mountains, but they appear to he due to cur. rents of magnetii,m, or electricity, which seem to exert a'erystalizing power. Gold is found is scales, and in nuggets or pebbles, of every tile. Its.appearance is that of having once been combined with the primary elate rock.i, and then semirated by superficial actions, of air and moisture. By the aid of surface moisture, and the absorbing action of the roots of Garr trees-I:owing on the edges of gold bearing rocks, many of them have. twen gradually disintegrated .and decomposed leaving the gold behind, procip 'hated and aggregat«l into masses. Some of the largest gold nuggets of Australia had been found cinder such circumstances. It is common opinion that gold is always- found in greatest quantities in drift ; in the deep atilt corners, and eddies o( rivers, but tt has not thus been found in California. On the contrary, it has been found most abundantly in the rwdes, as the cdg, s of the primary gold bearing rocks have been moat' exposed to the action of' 'moisture and the atmos phere. GOLD RESOURCILS—The entire amount of gold received at the 11._8. Mint and its branches, in 1865, was 2 1 55,151,102; of this vast sum, E 40,351,789 were domebtic pro ducc—ncarly all from,colifornia. Since 1848 no /Of thin 113 - 13;t34,000 have been oh '- Med from tho Cti.i !orals minas. BincolBsl the, mines of Abe .."?ilia have Pr0&1,C. , " 4 0201,000,000. The gold producti Or iitusi'm is about t 8,000,000 per annum, a mere trifle in comparison wit ;that of the United States and England. The principal use of gold is that of making It into coins, as a medium of exchange to represent and be an equivalent for labor, merchandise, permanent and notating prop- erty. 575,000 575,000 375,000 58,425,000 In a review of the Presidenal candidates, running over some twenty names, the New York herald thus alludes to the statesman who now holds 'so distinguished a place in the thoughts of the American and European world :—•• Mr. Buchanan, who is on his way to the White House with his fiend;, is undoubtedy i an able statesman, besides be ing sometb g of a politician. Perhaps no imincnt an in the Union possesses as mtleh oc what is enrstryMn 'lenge •• James Buchanan. As long ego as 1825, when Mr. Clay was charged with 1, bargain and corruption," and there were no charts for politicians to steer by, Mr. iiOakn managed in that bitter controversy to make his position satisfactory to both parties. It must not be inferred from this that wo re• gard him as a frimining 'politician. Fa from it:. Few men have 'exprestied more prompt and decided Opinions. Even when the OregMt hill, with :the Wilmot proviso, was' before President Polk for approval, Mr. Buchanan sr.rougly advised a veto, regarding the restriction as unconstitutional. Al A Moot* great abilities, cosemon Henan, fear less energy and hold enunoiation, Mr. Bp ehapam is one of the first statesmen of ens Union, Ile New Orleans eivsahl names the Iloti. Xnho Slidell, the able and popuheit, Senator from Louisiana, and the cmbodlnieti\of the Cuban sentiment in Ns country, an Vico President on the ticket with Bon. limes Buchanan. it would be a fOiituidatile ticket. Roast iMPORTATION.—Among the impor titiont lsy Ibo,l 4 torthein Light, hrought to laidTftreHc from Calcuttal — wis ono but ‘ i4ritatninfrthico were entered at Custom House ' , as objects of taste," valued at *5 only, and stlin;tted dug fiec. • . Eli Presidential The *fee %NAN Litre. Clineieetre, rl'hencemination of Filliuorennd IC?tiefson, • by the la)m Knew -Nothing Convention sseine to be re&dred with very little corilinlity by a largC portion of that patt3', while theliew ard Republicans Pet their heels on it, and sayi very distinctly that, in no event, can they be induced or seduced to, countenance or sup port it, It is pretty evident now thilt, there can be no union Of the elements opposed - to j Dernocracy,And that there will, in the north atleast,be thrie Picsiderdial tickets Held.' The nationality of Sr. Fillmore, who sitted:,Abo'Fitgitise Slave Law, precludes the possibility of his receiving any support from the ncpublieans and that northern sec tion of the Know-Nothing organization who arc opposed to stereo'. lie will be Supper ) fed ditty by scittient,Know Nothings and , that small portion of the party north she pre- I tend to ho nationnl in their feelings and are willing to : let slavery remain where it is.— 1 Of course, under these circumstances he will stand no chance of success, and the real fight will be between tlie . Denaocratie amino publictut heitulneca. WVe hare, never ilr.,•;;Ait..l ed the success of the Democracy in the coin' ing Presidv.ntnl contest; wo consider it 1 certain in any event-; but •should existing, circumstances remain undisturbed, even the opposition could no longer entertain -a rea sonable hope of electing a President, and the Democracy would achieve an easy triumph. Mr. Donelson On add no strength to the ticket ittthe south, and in 06 north, Mr, Bjllmoro einiiet - Carr fa - Ararew Of\WWII aonelson The Know-Nothings . hobpe to gain much from this popularity of Andrew.)acksOn, and Parson Brownlow says it is arranged to print this namo of their candidate for Vice, Precl• dent in the above style in order to make him run well. Hear the parson "It had been understood as arranged that Major Donvisionlvihild'he put on the ticket with Andrew Jackson in lug letters and' non ebanjfivisiblo and then the old line DMn. crate tooted think thet Oldjhckory had coPe to I.fe again." The New York Mirror says : l'ltttrie candidate for Vice President, we know leas, and shalt say less to-day- Ile has a good name, and hails from the sunny side of the'"division line." . It Is presumed that id the approaching campaign, a large proportion of the bentgAted Mach Democracy of the interior of Pennsylvania will volt) the American ticket under the impression that they are again Voting for , Old Hickory,' of blessed memory." The result will show these gentlemen are placing too much reliance upon Dondson's praxes, aid the greenness of '.the benight ed Dula." Ir his. 141111 L LSON had John-Smith prefixed h his family name inatcad'of Andrew_ Jack son he never would litre received the Know' , Nothing nomination for Vico President. It. was because the conspirators thought his name would The better enable them to chest Democrats into the support of their ticket that tilts brainless fellow was placed on its tail end. Ile is devoid- of talent and has Jirither ebara e ter nor strength in TetinCRMA!, SCnvrt, he is well know u.• iti;apponi toil am bition has driven him into the Know Nettl ing camp, where he doubtless finds plent3 of of genial spirits eqnally as corrupt as him self. And this traitor to the principles of the brave old - patriot whose soma he un worthily-bears, dares to ,say in a pnblia as , senility that if general Jackson wore now living, he would he a Know-Nothingl The foul slanderer !, Andrew Jackson support a party whose creed proscribes inc_n for their religious views! Why, (very art of that wonderful man gives the lie direct to such a base assertion. ' We wonder tho, tongue o f ,this renegade didn't cleave to the of his mouth when ho dared assert foul a Sought. lie hid better petition the leglilatare of his State to hays his changed,. , Ntw JILASEVC Arm Ptiontarrios.--On Mon day, in tho noose of Assembly- of New Jer sey, the bill to Suppress the tippling: houses ?vas taken up on a second reading. This Litt rrovides aid no person shall sell - any vi nous, ,-;iritosza of !:! I °.zicating drinks of any kind whatsoeve, in less quantity than a'g:!" ion, without nlacense, (inCluding ale, porter, bees, eider, and other fermented, Several propositions wore made to amend the bill. Mr. R. S. Ihinareid moved to reduce the amount tootle quart—lost. Mr. Demott moved to strike out beer, porter and cider— lost. The question, shell it be engromed, was lost. Afterwards, Mr. (lould moved a re eorialdenttion.ot the rote by which the en grossment was lost. lair. A. S. Poinireat moved to lay the motion on the table. A- greed to, 20 to 17. Prohibition, or anything she emanating from a spirit of fanatteisnr, -- nvoets with no favor among the intelligent legislators of New Jersey. Viao►uis ThtltOonnic EnTrireotrewermar. --A telegraphic dispatch, dated Baltimore, March 3, Bays : " The Deenneratic Convention of Virginia adjonrncd orl Saturday evening, after ndop hing a platform, nhicli reaffirms the riglitA of the States, depreciates the granting of the public lauds for internal improvements, .op. posts any increase in the duty on imports, endorsers the whuje Baltimore plateorm, re conattrds the Cincinnati-Convention to nom inate the candidate most likely to be elected, denounces the views and purposes of the A. mericsin Order, and endorses the present Na. tional ,Adrftinistration." The delegates, although uninstructed, aro said to bo in favor of Mr. Buchanan. :71TNICID STATZB SENATORS. —Within rho isit two moz4ha the following states have elected Unik'd States senste'rs : .M 4544, Democrat ; Texas—Rusk, Dem.- , erat ; Alahaina—FitzPetriek, Democrat ; Pennsylvaria—ltigler, Democrat Derdocrat, Mr. Bigler takes the place of Jas. t'ooper, Know-Nothing Whig ; and 11r. Paris the place of - a Know-Nothing, Mr. Adams. Messrs. Mason, Rusk itnd Flrrpatriar, are all re-elected. There is, therefore, thus far a ttenc,-, atirgain in , the senate 14-103? - -ruchl , As wesilroady hate 4 large majority in that 13pdy, the•prospoct of the opposition ever getting it irszaall 44- „A upon, a single principle Otireiti .to fruilavertnnept astifatnititutiooad in the etifrirl - and warlike couditioo-otjka timely; wo behold &tigers to our porpettiity, was% ahoulaiL cause every good Mimic to ponder'Well the steps of his politicataction; and that wo earnestly invite the - lover of his country, of whatever name or creed, to join us in uphAling the Constitution in it _purity, and transmitting. s it uniuipared to out successors. Resolved, That whatever cases of dissatis titaidiit,CrTtit3Lotrattit. - . i faction with the working of our laws and in- Rego/cod, That in'the present distracted stitailions tnay exist in different sections of etsedition of parties, in Ouch sectional and i the country, the prOper r. reedy Is to he partial issues have ken allowed to attain a , -poneit, i n th e imp ol ite exer nsa of tbevlght dangerous aupecitaattly;wi: recognise in.lbo 1 .1 of efuse.uasion, and the ballot box ; that all policy of the Democratic party, that which .others can wait the sure atnelloMition of time, , rests upon the Constitution as its basis f and if the union be maintained ; but that distill i that, it is the iiin ty n lad' shove all others ion - would at once proie the, destruction of lies, iii the language of the illusti ions Madi- onr present intoreata-and happittcss as a pen. son, ever emit ititi«l"•to hold the Union NIL pie and the death-knell of our hopes. ~ , the States ns the ;basis of their peace ancti Resolved, That 'it was upon (lie a0i1.0.1 ' happiness f to supportthe ecnistitutionwhich i>eimigylvatilte that Independence was de i is the commit of the Union, use iced hi its elaretkand the Federal constitution consflue limitations Ss' its authorities; to respect the tell and tbat.it therefore becomes irisspe .— , rights and authorities retuned to the States cirdsensethedity of Pennsylvatntinte to Watch and to the pimple - as ' egpally" incorporated over its stifecy:as secured fly the - great char -is nth and essential to (lie Success of the gen- ter or the Union : to resist the first apptoach -1 oral system ; and to' avoid the interference es of-danger to its perpetuity, and forever to !'with the' rights of cookcienoo or the fulict i fonß cherish and maintain if invifilato, as the pal of religion, so wisely exempted from civil ladium of our happiness; political. social and l jurAelietion." it . cold. Ncsetred, That-hy the general consent of, !less/clef', That all vacancies that %Lay take , the wise and virtuous ofolt. n ations, the place in the delegation to Cincinnati, now se-1 banters of theßepublie of, i Dic United:States, lected, shall be filled by a majtwity_of the, l exhibittel in their individdel cha r acters and -whole number there present, and that the l intim reattlt of their public delilterations, a said delegation shall.havo full power and tat i degree of virtue and a prndticnl statesman- dainty. among themselves to regulate by ' ''ship, to which the history of the tiorld whom and how their votes shalhbe given in' allitrds no parallel ; that hi no Part of the the Convention. iFederal Comport is the wisdom of our-lath- l Resolved, That the Democratic State era more conspicuous, thou in leavi n g the Central Committee shall require a pledge whole question of slavery to the states in from each elector, to vote for the candidates their sioTra/ capacities ; And that in theta - o-- for President pnd Vice President of theiWiii l vision for the re-delivery of fugitives escaped ted States, who May be nominated by the 1 from labor or service, they demonstrated a Cincinnati Convention, and in OM of the acute Of justice-an appreciation of th e neglect or retrial of Any elector so4o du I value of the Union-au avoidance of one- within it rettsontdde time, hue Suite C e nt r al 1 sided philanthropy, and impracticable (Iwo- Committee hw and they ar.:llBre.:ll.emitower t ries of government—le Moll present a proper cd to substitute. example for the guidance and imitation of us, i• A nun-rate°, consisting of one front each theirdimecndatifs. n eso e t ,,,,l , Thm , ,,i,,,k on l y . (~, t h e c orist i,„ , Congressional District, was selected to report . tution, and the-exposition there/ if which has Nati onal Conventio n, and delegates to the been affinsted by the practice of Democratic ;Electors. The : contest for &loot .tt to de administrations, for the chart of our policy,. f einnal.i wact•exceeding/y spirited. The fol- That these constitute, CH the - " f u " datit ' ita ` lowing is the list of delegateltehosen law is changed by methods which itself pro vides, the Iligliest - TM f7t leer obedience as mnsimartus ter LASKY.. ..- ' citizens ; and that we utterly discard that Arnold Plumer, Venatigo. partial and exaggerated sympathy, the at- ; henry D. Foster, Westmoreland. tempt to carry a loch into preetiee. is at the 1 / a vid 11. Porter, Dauphin. - peril of our dearest hiterests as a nation, and James L. Reynolds, Lancaster• threatens the infliction of evils of tenfold' ntSTRICT ItnrielAns•' magnitude to those Which it proposes to ISt—Edward H. Webb, John Nthirthy. l/a bud -.1. C. Vardyke, l'•lumbt re llPl‘lhhten. React/red, That The. i polity of-the States 3d - john Robbint{ jr. (1 ,7 w . carrithin. I is the vital element Cif tie Constitution itself, 4th-Jos-Uppencett, jr., U. Brenner. , I and that tell intcrfercnce with t h e rights. °- f , , ' sth--, Owen Jones, lhonias.J. Roberts. the SW e 4 by those a ho seek to disregard 6th-John - Rutter, Charles D. Manley. a"ted guarantors ht the p ast, And Sy all ., 7th--John D. Stiles r Ea warl Nichulaun. others, should be rehlike‘with the Caine , Nth--J. mithey Japes, ..p. K. Miller. spirit t hat would denounce and reptialite all‘ 9tir--11. D. Swarr, Joseph B. Raker. attempts to ercet'odiotis distinctions lido-eon , lOth-John We iilinanrJ. 11. Kreiter. those o to are entitled' to shoe the blessings ' I lth -Wm, L. Den art. C. M. Straub. l end benefits of our free institutions. l Illth-n. B. Wright, J. Or 2diitagomery. Re,av , d, That the effort to direct the 1 13th-J. N. Ilutthitition, 11. li Reardon. I pole er of the lion union tit by anti-alaYer y l 14th-V. E. Millet, C. I. Ward. •• agi :a Lon unde • the t arious liana a and ptui... l 1 , 5 t ii _ wm. F. Parke , johaiabionsson. So sus of Piro-ilisin, Anti Nebra4nisln, Yu. A6Ol-Ilenry Wash, john Stuart: sionisin and Itepublicaniam ; and ley inter- I iith. __ Jahn Cessna, A. P. Lusk. ' faring with the rightsof •censcience in cant). 18th-John C. Everhart, Richard White. lishilig a relorkus fist as a (initiate/then for lO.h-Ja mb Turin y, Alex. .311iinney. office, - hi ths scent oath bound society of the 0 , t h__ j o b, f). Dail anus, Wm. If( pk,ins. Know Nothiegs. is epistsed both to the lett er . 2/st-.-Atufrew Burro, Charles flariwit. and the spirit or the constitution. and toine 1 earnest teachings shill practice of inc earliest and most honored ralmmirittzttnrc. 'std—Samuel W. Black, Jas..A. Gibson, , 23d-M. C. Trout, JelttYN. M. . Gib . , f 2-11.11,-S. L. Gillts.J. V. James. hi,,,,.”'red, Thnt 'Yr- are now as erre Huai. 1 2.5,h_._ al •., Porter Brawley,-Wilson,La'ri. ti rally i.proaed to the dectrinea and designs 114 an Organization u Lich co-Nit:top/ate the 1 overthrew of the cif it and religimis rights of , F the efirtleaf,„•,„ that tie, quality of the citizen,' MA Ilh e the <gruthir of the Motes, as a sacred PA and timlienable right, never 1-0 be interfered a with by factious parties and reckless legoda- la than, without a stiliVerttloll of the primary , Ur objects of our political system, and A repudi- 'l' , atnin of the guarantees of the past and the' 1 hopes of the. futitiss: i • f Resolved, That in the repeal of the act knots ti as the l'sliasiouri Compromise act, and I i,i„ ---, pas s age of the act organizing the Ter ritories of Kansas and Nebraska, free from unconstinitiotial re atrictions, the last Con gress performed a stork of patriotic sacrifi c e in mcetmg the di mends of sectional excite ment by unshaken ti hercnec to the funda,-, mental law. ?.11 • Retched, That GM icjilslation cannot be deemed scow-cry', but that it Was expedi• font to meet the questions of %%filch it dia -1 posed, and it hieli mold newer admit of a I more ca-.y settlement titan ut present. That we recognise in it, the application to the Ter. , I Moms of the United States, of the rule of 1 - equal and (Viet justice to all men" of all or/ctions.of the confeklcracy, which was de. , signed Hy the framers of our government, and which was defined as one of its csseu-; 'ial nnne•tples by the immortal Jefliraon. Re.soire..,' That - the Democracy of Pltittl- gylvithia, {Akio liig Om cci rned. of some of ,the 'Wisest statvaine a of tilt noi tli an,: , - , - ,,:0 , . 1 2, were natty on more than one occasion in the: past, to extuul tits - Missouri Compromise line to rho Pacific, so as to peke it the , basis of a lima nettlettent of the gentatint of slavery - in . the Terrieories; but when this proposition was rejected in 1848, on the ground that it itlVtilltt! etc 11114111. COlire.SiOn , to the south, by the very men olio now cla mor for a restoration of t the Nlishoori line, there seemed to he but one wise alternative left, and that tins to refer the whole question of slavery in the Territoi les to the people thereof, to be regulated as they aught dean proper and-we therefore'zheerfully extend our hearty support to flit policy of the goy, enitnent as recognized in the Compromise measures of 1850, and chiliodied in the laves organizing the Tcetitorws of Klllllll./5 and Nebraska. btilleenlti)e (suvto *lb , • PorAtlit:44, witibh astiembled at liarrieturg m the 4th inst., ma's dtatinguished•b e y grctithartnony of sea tintynt, rind finished its bu s iness with a de corum creditable alike to The participants and the principles they sought to t stablish. The follooing are the resolutions which wore adoptcdt--, Berrifved, That unerring Indications point to the Hon. James Buchanan—distinguished &IBA , by his high personal character, his tried Democracy, his great abilities, experience and eminent statesmanship—ha the nation's cltuic for the office of ?resident of the' United States, for the terra commencing ori the 4th of March,. ]hs7; and that we do~ hereby instruct our delegates to the National L'ottnintiort to assemble in Cincinnati in Juno next, to nap their eflhrts to secure him the nomimttion to that office. Resolved, That at a period when section. alisni,'in its worst aspects, attempts to un- ' &Trine° the foundations of the federal.con.' stitution, and, when an abolition tnajority aspires to supremacy in the popular branch of the national legislature and with the prospect of difficulties with foreign nations, who for their 'purposes may seek to Inter. 1 eept, and stay the progress of free institu.', tions on this continent, in order' that they i x mixt more •effectuall arrest the advancing footsops of . our re blimp example f.ho ,stateamanfike goalie a of James littehatian his long and well fried services in defence of the Constitution—his intimate knowledge of. all our retatiouS with foreign countries I --and his large and enlightened experience. —point to him as pre , etninently the man to had the victorious columns of the Ut =crony in November neat. - „Resoirmi. That,We fully . endorse the adi rmnistration of fireshleut Fierce asiationill, thithful, • slid efilcieut—fully equal Jo all the i, hunortane! ensiles which the country t, Satyr has 4344) sneer der. 'and that' he Mid — Word (hilly - maintained her interests and honor at home and abroadh Re v 'ree', 'That\ 11i ii othe'rj.ee at home olio _ • INNS t. FUGTIT OF A N ktuto Writ.s . rn W ITH A WAIT% MAN—THE FATAL. KISS—T[I6 CACTURE--Tlit PA RDI r.:4 Jr-G(iim —Early, yt sttrelay mistiming, a negro woman, Inlooging to Mr. Jos. New : land, a merchant wt II and favorably- known ho this city, decimprd from the prt [tikes other master, and. by a pi-e.% tom; understanding. ' met a Iris:mak Aholitionist by the name of El isb a Bybee, from New York, on Main street at the PtortAllliti lt,l4l.rukd Deftot, and the twain took passage and repaired to Portland, and thence across to New Albany. The woman w W 1 most gorgeously attired, being diarist:4 in a rich Llav's sills robe, Ming with innumerable floating Atomics. A mag i nilloent ret of furs graced her shoulders and • neck, while over bee nit( renting physiognomy * i, bung a thick green red. Thus equipped, no one ever suspected her or being at Ethiopian oxtrattion ; but the.pair were foiled in then ' endeavors to escape by a slight indis - ( s thin on the part of the man. After the ben' had reached the Indiana aide, and it In n the pas. songers had gone ashore, the party in (pus tMn wan Ilbolle 10 leave also, when the N( is Tork gentleman eon itith d that be woold steal - a kiss from her ruby I ps : and In artier to do this, the thick fella as rat,t it, it he li display ,ad to the view of the Collector on the boat th color of the woman's fare whit la upon he cid td upon lair for free pap( i s, and they not Imi ,Ig forthcoming, he instantly brought tier back to K.( ntueky and put Mr in poet soon oft -ail. 414ffitatte,..wla.bepticht....1w.E. tin to the city to the office of tacirtrrelbramk, n ..1/, after 1 a full hearing or tip) erne, lad hcr..friltairted to jail to await an order from her easier. Mr. Newland, up to that period, nos not aware that she had left his family rt snit nee. At the critical juncture, when the woman WAS teired on the ferry, her valiant and en amored modern New York Don Quixote Bud &nay disappeared, but vigilant and eflieent officers w ere despatched in quest o 1 him, who, after a short but diligent starch, found hint in 2 , 14)W Albany,: wad brought /Urn tothis city and lodged him is jail, where he will re main until tt speedy course of lace shall acrid him up to Frankfurt to serve the State for Ilk few years.--,/,ouismite Democrat, 22d lilt. The Whigs of Dcleware county have called a Conventhin to be held on the 17th inst., to takt in consideration the propriety of re'..,onitnending a Whig State Convention, to deliberate upon and adopt ipeasurne eat cuia.ted. to advaruio the future prospects and influence of the party. >' ‘, The 'Carlisle American hoists trio Fla mm* ticket, but says i ihat if Mr,-Fillmore repudiates- tisi - ekirii.ikieliateka-principle, It will repudiate him. It insists that he Pinat put himself right upon the' record before it can giro him to unpainted support. The American State Council of . Amuut. ohusetts passed a resolution refusing to sup port, Fillmore and Donation, until assured that they will vindicate' the jtitt rt , ghts of the North. . - „ Bavne..at. heavy robbiriti were perpe (rated in Philadelphia, on Fruday morning Met. Ono firm -9,Oheenut street, and an other at -Third and. Market att., were to gether plundered of about $1.2 i 000 worth of oak goods. —A petition has been presented to the -UP* At Berrisberip asking firth hierssise of 4 the 'saliiies of tlio Law judges of this - • —Magian L.Atei,oteA7l4, of Clinton IRV has ow:O4W Mr. Mirk, ifi'the of ths,,,yeerwtir Mr. , tithsfitatia mai Pasainkets of lifieSite*. torter bo the'resnit of thip,ifidao feNnee now sitting_ Paris, It appears be yond it.doibt thtt France *Ol come 'out of them seWer than she went 131:ZIf.the war Fyea ob, it..m.Rulte understood 'hit' A.Ustris. ibs the and Russia is overwhelmed a contincnlle aiitiaap and hence it con. fidently assumed thlkpeace will be Made.— Whatever England maY4stlifer Pfltn4 ll 4-hlty . .. lag .the power in her hanft,will datd,ogier. °wily with Russia. If the\ eUnew boundary through Bessarabia . *Wholly unpalatable, a line nearer th may 1' be taken : and in tlxchangelbr the a .nder I of the Salina sod MIA Mouths of the B in uhe l the Russian.. Plerdpqhmtiarica May fortified against:the obtletia deMiarkli of the Turks that Nicolaiefthe' tilsmarctiecic In like manner, should England persist in demand ing that the *eland Isles be not relortifled, in the Interest of Sweden, France maw in Bassin in pointing out the propriety o f the abandonment of ileligelimd by .Orcat Bri tain. The words "British preponderance on ,o9ntinent" are already as flegnesitly I heard at Paris as "Russian preponderant. in the'Ettat," used to be., ' It appears likely, In I short, that France will. play thp part of a 1 mediator, and will issno from the centered ' cos having laid England 'tinder obligations, having gratilled.Russia, and having inspired Austria with esteem. The destiny which will open to en empire connueticing the world' -we may say--r_undor these circutnittances, may be brilliant in the extreme. For, one thousand years, Franco Mu; had preteinsioos to the sovereignty of Europe. But they never Were Solid till now. Charlemagne conquered, but he eould not retain-, in him vanity overpowered policy, and he sacrificed en empire for thEeake of a crown. Louis the Fourteenth gave a in m arch to Spain, kept the King or England in his pay, and narrowly missed raising a de— pendent to the throne of Ate empire. - But his rower was a sham altogether. Ilia grand son 'S heir was the first to turn egninat him . the Enßnsh -.pot Nei in the way of lodging as well as hoarding thtir monarch • Ye thfi empire, lie died without a friend, ..I,tiefe than all, that power at bome rested op 'a false be- His. There were nq elements wherenut a preponderant - empire meld be fasliioned. Whatever was enlightened was debased and unmanly ; the foterepresentativer of virtue and manliness pile ignorant .and helpless. ao he failed.. Napoleon conquered : reaped the flrit fruits of a tieilitig di liacrsoc ; he• gcciated, too, witn far Iftfeitbility than it is non , the fashion to give.liim credit for nar rowly escaped raising France to t.. rank to which she had so long aspired. Zia liapo-. labs made the mistake of taking credit to himself for the meritorious works of Cho' revolution ho forgot that he -was. only ids instrument, and assumed to bias author it. from this .otiatkid laftmder: - Inissul to.-the still greater blunder- or desiring to consoli date a dynasty, with collateral 4ymudieles : was led el Way by the hollow sippcistance of force presented by an army ; a:.d so he tailedat The present Emperor, up to• this time. has committed none cf these errors of polity. Apart from his antecedents, tea i k r is by no. mean'bear vent form a whollY unfavora opinion, his ca rom, since his imitation to the empire, has been signally honest, atraightfurward and laudable. The commerce and • industry, u FranceVero never in so flourishing a condi tion as at present; the State credit is gooll ; antl-the popular burtliene, as compared with those of the republic, the reign of Louie Phillipe and that of Charles X, are not im moderate, white they aro nothing tut - corn. pared with those of the format empiret, It is true that F rancs is denied a free repro.. sentative Assembly, ands free , press : but— strange as the a.viiertion may seem on this side the water—it is by no meauseertain that the want of these necessaries to eery branch of the Anglo' Saxon family is appre ciated as a grievous privation by the French. Judging front the experiments under the limited franchise of the Orleans pcnod, and the universe/ suffrage of the republic, it, iv ewe doubtful whether the French—whet. ever the reason inky have been—were as successful in choosing legislators for (tient selves, as the Emperor has been in seleeting them for the nation. At all events, it ulcer. iiunly the opinion of the best. men in Franco ban the people will be bette (1110111 rd to use the franchise alter they,lnive seen the government sueerssitilly administered fur A few years without the disturbing accidehtv of periodical Appeals to the people. Thu political oondition of France is clear to one who bears constantly in mind the b broadSfact that there never has been in inixlent times more than one revolution, soeial and -politi cal : and that the changes 'edit It have taken Pince. 1702, namely. the COllllll/tiona of 1700, 1814, 1815, MO, 1848 ins 1851, have been no more revolutions than the fall Of a I Ministry in England, or the change of an administration here. Prance has been once revolutionized ; that 'sax when it became a republic from a monarchy. Since- then it has always lwerellemoemtie. 'rho Demo. erotic institutionv panted by the republic, One and indivisible. of 1702, have lnYt r been uprooted : there have been several changes of execullye, bloody and '6o,ra, in consequence of the want of proper pro= visions fur peacenil changes, of thd military preponderance of certain men, and of the sanest UniVertrai incapacity of all th e past rulers of France in foreign affairs; but under the outward executive emit lies the old re public still. That republic Louis Napoleon may exhume, vivify and tame.—New York Herald. WASH( NUTON'A 8111111-DA) IN HAVANA. - - he Havana correopondeut of the Charlchton eollri,er writes " - Yesterday was a day that issacred to er cry American heart. It was the birth-day of that truly great and good men—Ucorge Washington. When has the world, either before or aim*, prothiceil his peer 3 Irs in duty bound, I met with several dour fellow citizens, end although there was no extritor• dinary preparations mule for the celebration y el, a happier or More pleasant meeting it has rarely been my good fortune to attend.—' Would that you could hilvelenn ns, even in this despotically-govertiocniland, a blind of freemen ! asseniblell to do honor to the mem ory of the 'Fathers Of 'eur Country,' Could you but have seen the triirerin li ,thg tat ening, eye, sit we tatted' tbal to ourlips, when Standing, we drank 'The 'Memory of threrge Washimiton;"73:o4 would have felt tic least some of uis were 'worthy song of noble sires, Lot thoee ok(hs roes who, in 76, tbught , bled, and conquered that libe rty which they bequeathed to us air our birth-nght, and which we wal defend to the hurt hour of our liver.. , "A - startling sheet weri'produced • the t oast- The Union — no North, go ; yon -but pixl the Union.' Each mangraa his neighbor's handwith a heartineea that told of brotherly love and feeling, prevailing amongst all, gild pervading each Awart with a ppwer and spu rn'''. which.rny poor pew is quite unable. tea describe."' la'AfAatix Brow*, Anodotueer, b 0/3' ilabd• nry all the Wee in the minify: 110apriVINfet t .! tiro to witotorer , el3Y`On• friend D•stnt. Dias, Id will be roes by • ltfr advertteeniont, 4 now enstenged•ring • seporior 'iroehlocfor th:a dialling of Con.. If. fora tlie ek mrlre right for 'Centre oonuty. We teaoanneolf . Thirr as ti moat ingnnione ad* prompt worlapeet Sam of his work in at present in Imo/Ike, to whiAt are ihin 1111C140 11:11i *tor - - El
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