the tlillatchuntn. tam Avg illet /TIITICa TO •fit( 411eNY TUTS., . 1 %NN I'ORNT, IZE 'I4LLEPOArrI, PRY. I= (0 R DER San.l COR FSPOND VATS. Puent.., Why did the At tees )corship the San? If you really riCed an glower to such a c undtioid, ,yoor hot e applied in, a circles,' . - t-nettireeP - Ile Peruvians worshipped the :sun, tAc same A Ghrsitions worship God, • • lausiosees, ' elispeneuto• , biglit cad glory. rneretihe.h ~ t heite. h ple of Me.rico and Peril; Were happy, wealthy and innate/1k ' Nell. • The y lited inpeace with their neigh barsp, anJ ' Grated therialer arid to ;heir Aitrhrst: festfien. Their worship of the Mimi sertr4 , iesetrpritral for Spemish intia . •tvothi. , aid, ehe Pizarro, a debaroqied Cas ri/ian Turd, lord waste the ttrnples and the ' altars of „the i slyrshippees of the Slon, with ikt sanction of etc church, to promote rels pen, 411 With the hope of his .King, to rob • tiled plssAlicr. I'resceit's history of Ferilii, si sad and 14.gbella will give yon a bcoutifal alearrigiort of,thi: manners and CIIStV7III of the Aztec*. A v.synelL —it is scarcely necessary 'to inform; • . o.X.:(ttedditc Cril of which , you complain, Is .p w power of conclusion. The set i the location of lands, and neereerrity stringent, owing to the multi ,' ',icily of claims, and the (rands which km , ierst,tser)setretrd by dishonest weak . tura. • Ltite you, sec are opposed foveae' ' Aruniseitf lands fur any purpose ,and like amid, deplore the action of Coup cis in ;Je rre% thentsande of gerpa eif and to entourage tire tetedlidoneril of a corp.:nate railroad Ineittopey. tti.P.4rpt.— Who • !mold I to-lithe eide:tralls diner streets fire from alrtrurOl'os 1 ' The • - (14e - Burgett and High CAPIPIde are both rirested erttlit-straariftnar oicers,andil is • their. July Fa perform ,irrrlre; but s iel%ry good citizen Can cal isliere their - riScient officers of rhea nnernim 'oboes, by rain/ink thrir alfil hulloes', and rarer/44g before the;r ,hu'n doors. A second ronunim, cation from !• .4 4h afes •Of Howard Towaehtp," has been iei fired, 4111 vs postponed for consideration. Our Priced Is rertelsaly serer?, and as certainly sure in hie castigatAins. If possible hut "article shall appear nest weed. Ws Asti . tommeace the publication if a The/eh of the experient e of a gentleman in t*.. real Mel and the Sunny South, triiii../i wur/ prat... highly intereabikir to our rendeiii. - _ THE NE Ifs. rsva "it. I ocis, Irt - APott. Owl saalr. mrthilicaray I wenr fi S:ate eteo, by Cosgrove returned tie. fire shooting the liader of the <Afar party through the head. This remainder fled. A Fire State wan was abet at Blanton's bridge ou the 19th. It wia reported at Humes City that the people wore preparing to evactuate Lawrence, and Lod called upon Col. Suwner to protect their property. The towns of Kielospoo, Leavens °rill, Tkatiphan h and Atchison are almost deserted by the Oda population. who have gone to ibeaid of t, 8. Marshal at Lawrence. A. gestlemeas who 'mired yetkerday from i irgerson City, states tbst - s battle bud been 40104 at Lawrence in which a number of 14tritad been hilted on both 'ldes. No filet patticulars had been received. A mass meeting has been held at Kieka.. poo, at which it was resolved to sack the KJlSalla UOtti, at Kansas city, which was understood to be the property of Masaachu twits Imes. So certain was ita destruction sousidered that families occuplying it had rrnacrrcei. Tbs citigeras of Ktckapoo hare oft( red a reward for the apprchmsion of General romarrey, and paebc3 hive been bent in search of him. Gen. Sclintlee, Mr F. Conway and the Asti siVht emsts,printlent of the Bt.l..ount Dem orrel were attested st,Perkville 'on tht Nth, while of the way from Lenvettwortb to St. —Lord Clarendon has written a letter to Air. Dallas, in which he declines to recall Crampton and the Consuls at New York, Plihodelphis, and Cincinnati, as these g( n thine* deny on their honor any attempt to violate the laws of this Gorenonent. At last Lord Clarendon has the frankness to say "HOT Ms ITOy ' S GOTOTIIIInnt CUT uncquiro rdijr disclaim illy intention either to in(Finge no haw or to disregard the feeling, or not to rti*a the sorereiin rights of the Cnit,4 States." This dit.clainter aeons to he suffi ciently apologetic, and it is to he hoped the trtfortsmate difficulty pill now be hitt-14111y aeljtutied. • —Abe Bohmlearille (,),tiaa.) Larytudepit,Qi the Si July :—.Mr. David Lamm, a resident...! .11aeptalia, .ia this County, was tuddetWitilled in hie bead by the falling of a tree across Ms house, early on the morning of Ttsearlity Math tittering a atom of wind and rain ne htuit riseu front hie bed with his wife, alarmed at the approach of the storm, but simsttly afterwards repaired to his bed; Gut without his wife, mho was too much alarmed to Caawerinina. Soon after the tree fee von the house, eaustiingit to the ground, Lathar instantly, anal severely injur ing his wife. ' --Somerset, narrowly ranapisd arh inaction 1;7 firereeently. Tlie - cfarin tram* tyre= 'ea the public liqvare,`reerl9t ly oreppicii by Daniet • 14Ciarti, and It U. .Slaiks, sad also egatainiteg Uw clothing state of Illt4usatt I Schell, and law Office of vodka* I.•llHenn, first consumed— then the ‘41 . 02470u54.1 of Dlr. Cyreit . Iknford, ta twat don! Ala d d xiiHng were. much au tumn, Aritli rtio .the Durk* the stte • tterzatdo Weu frank the MOU IWO/ht. tax 11 30 3 ! 4 Q.7 ettersoon, upon the ad. juurninect Of the U. IL leniptc, }jr. gooks, " f 5 °4 0,0414 . 60 .44. 11 Horn tad best n itio esitetaipt. VkiiNdia: - -tike lengl :4llll4itiiittscio via Law's abillitirt 4144/41e. Nes was st ufs time sick 1444,046 0 .1r m bil i vih‘, tAs r) , l.l;ritl s ocn,. rus,CIIANORS OP THE OPPOISITION V.9:4-TTITUDE OF DD afOON ROT Ons Isf the peculiar charatibeistiet Of al the toaltion srlVas 'tet t !' beeq vm ste d r c t i ccii tngen t , 'l ltni t t:lltitincrtles . t stylit wi 1 ithiclli setup ~ea antegoioein hare beet tilt adrolllitetti Aese4wingee, Me not so much eelltialleatly the peopleorleeillities, as they are the offspring of intenested clique, leaders--but it in in localities that their effect is most felt and deplored, by the real , lovers of civil and' religions liberty. The variety of opi l .osition to Demociatey, at the present, is more than entruerable. Ni t two Statesyin the Union Agree, upon a single sentiment—nor do a dozen prominent men, ' the leaden; of those who arc infatuatedly fitnattarlin, acquiesce in an alvowal of politi cal faith. Take ihe. confederation front Maine to California, nod there is rio`politieal unity between the oppofients of Demecency. Every section, appears to be moved by different motives, and yet each clique is intent only on the deft at of national own and measures, as ,et forth an the creed of Denim. I racy. In the North and North-East, the contrariety of political absurdities iv more than ridiculous. New York gave us a Carson League, which was swallowed up by lay tiralwatitst Abolitionism. Massochosetts, gluts - fled frce-noilism, which in Mali was destroyed by One flames of that modern achiesioctit of imposion termed the :ex change of free-love sentimt.nta. All these ditYcient i and apparently conflicting eletnents in polities, are controlled by the same motiv e s,l and set in 'tuition by the same spirit. Gree ley end killrrison are the same inately in feeling. ilthosigh they may differ in senti ment. 'Neal Pow is As much wedded to pa e xecution as Passinme Williamson is to trea son-- Millard Fillnwre is as flexible to the cravings of ambition, an Senator Halo is down by the weight of his ingratitude to his ftiends, and the shame lie hail brought upon his Wive State. These men, tooting in different spheres, and acting notice differ , era impulnes, have act veil for themseli es nothing hut ri worse and regret, and for the ptople whom they represent, au-accumu lation of aflame' which years will not eradicate. While three agitators have been reaping amid i xeitentent, the turbulent spirit of other sections, eq u ally intent oil mischief, !bare been 'enmity busy. The worn out isms 'four States transported to new territory, ;at once beeomea a theirte,„.tr„ pharamnietil declaration, and sates the raiding dema gogue better `Ginn the truth. The ltiddle States have all received tlaeiL, full share of sastere fisuatieel devoct ion —4lllile the west, glorying in her (tee, hardy population hoe i not eszaposl the plighting curse of this pulti cal ~roe, a. Ohio has bas ii the scene of nourder—in opposition to law, her elite; have hren threatened by the ineentliary--in defi ance of justice, her soil has been 'node ,to I drink the blood of her beat citizens. Tracing these phases thus through a few States, it jS not necessary to he minute in referring to their existence In other seetjons ; but ill'in proper to allude assail to the fact, that the 1 different oppositions engendered opposition to themselves, are merely the foes of pure Democratieprilaciptee. and if at all possible, Will organize to defeat the De rnocratic party in the corning Presidential campaign. The men who created the Carson League, and now encourage its secret espionage. lie the the' slime who are actively engaged in kind ling the civil tires of discord in Kansas. The pet. &alert who desecrate the protestant pulpits by fulunnetions ovaiiisi all who slitter with them to opinion as to salvation—. ate identified, Mid: the order n Inch lovers men to falsehoods, and erect a ntatlanl. by whichen judge the merits( of a man, born an God's' image, to the right to become a free man. AU these different creeds, so dissimi lar to their nature, harp been more than once exixred—but 'strange as it limy appear they find their adherents and advocates, according to their influences, in every sec tion. A Northern Know-Nothing is allitd to Abolitionism, and is sworn to carry out the I mandates of the Carson League. The South -1 ern Know-Nothing, lives only in the atmos• i pheve of' hotrod it) all who oppose the fugi tive Slave Law ; while the Welders') Know hothing„ deluded by the extremes of all sections, sill Lite to learn the deceit of los leader and the Manly - °flits oath. In refreshing contrast with this spieled(' of political turpitude. and confusion, Jim Democratic party if the Union, lodine proudly up and chatbentpra the admiration of the world. Never before., won there a party I organized on a firmer platform—and never i has there been a political organization, '1 which lit) RUCCCSAfIIkIy resisted and siinived ' ; the shocka of mistaken excitement, and the treachery of (else (ricotta', ' In every Stale in the Union, in every comity, there is that unity of action, which bespeaks an Attachment to great principles, and a , determination to resist the aggressive inroads ol'sectionson the Union, and establish that natioruil harmony so essential to our pational existence. There are no contralliefory sen timents among the Democeacy of the Union. Looking to the Constitution for a guide, and , respecting the laws as They exiit, the, party I is moved by the same impulse in Maine as it is in Louisiana—in the East as it is In the West-Ail tilt) fax-off Tallies ot•California, as ,it is among the mountains of t Oregon.- 1 No better evidences of this fact can be adduced, than the conduct of the Democratic members of the Senate and House of Repre sentatives. In the 'louse, it-will be i (mem bered, the struggle st as severe and protracted (w fpreiler, but - the Perms-racy from an section'', :rood as one man, and yielded only when their foes united, gter bating expended their statesof one for the other, So trill the Democracy again stand, but it remains for the Allure to decide whether her foes will % soda attics. \ . Otar.pliskims before the country, and the osseesisottems whiek we boast of, ere both, saitoselin end oneeeritin. Ws ' Intuit, aillowowiillftee WI haketrieent. The, tenth, that in peWone we hatsinosernytdotte rosistsei to Aril with, iiWnlei stir *talk than to Ada duty—wski in no other .Ikitte la the Union / have the Democracy more nt 'dale; then in Peuansylvtinik,' ' It remains Ilfcrl,,o. • ,-,.. 11,,w t), oinks, 111011 W( rt• Franitim, of I ret old Key-Stone once mom to .pronounce in fitrer of her ancioi,l 4ilike4dliernirtlict 1 againat the foe. of im clestituitolgoe add lo her vastsloryibil pr preset jrc eat. Plain . is thin didVila y odlio .. Will is 't. It, -bit tee 'trust * tier the 'll`sir l ,fif c, ' cat iconic* carry min will rally to, altte tihe llniati, and Maintain the prAilit atilt de,,or the Democratic Party. PEUsox.ir, Thi:, neck the H fil,l4l,lif IL enteral uporithe half year of its first volume—and we failed to remind our readers of the sucoestt which ha. 4 so 'mistily crowned its el:theta for reputation and extended circulation. In the shoft space of six months, and agitiiist the worst, oppo sition uliich has ever been engendered, the Donocrat te Watchman ltm ,been recognised by the people of a wealthy county as the re flex of their interests and the expounder or their opinion.;'. ft is not egotistical dins to refer to facts which are cheering to ourselves and alike romplimetitnry to the take of people who can appreciate the efforts of rum honestly devoted to the promulgation of the pt inciples which best serve the cause of la bor, and which protect all classes in their business pursuits. An nulependent Donee! atic journal, is a tHasing, to any community—and a newspa per conducted "with decent propriety, and endcarering to reflect the - %ants ) the opin ions and the interests of a people, seldom fails to achieve succesi . and do good for the community in which it is located, Journa inipmeini - on the advantagen of the Sim ad of 'won ledge, is fast approaching that position which its founders intended it should occupy. and in which the people are Al illhtg to render it respect. The Democratic Watchman tt a, sun led to supply the wants of a misrepresented party, and represent the business and industry of ,the county. It is not asserting name than the truth, to claim haring done all this—and na bare the hest of proof of this performance in the liberal mainly. in %shirt' the Watchman has been The circulation of the ilintchman is cer tainly larger than that of any newspaper in the county, and equal to that of any in Cen. ttal Pctinsyliania. It passes to the hands of all clitsses—represents all business inte rests—and a ith the aid of our friends, and an improvement on our own efforts, we hope to make it not only as good mid useful, but a more attractive newspept r than is printed beyond the neti,ioJi .4. We haro Fr noon to lie pliant Or our fin , CeSS. and more than res.,o n to continue in %lug that portion of our mtelligt nt community who can appreci ate honest intentions, and acic tio ti ledge the stipetiot enterprise of an honest cause. Our fi ictulp need nut lie asked to extend the cir culation of the Wilichnimi during the coming emit ast. They know the importance of the issue int.olNed,and w tIl zealousty aid in lay ing before the people truths which w ill vindi cate and sustain the principles upon which depend the very perMancncy of the govern ment. TE•c:itssgr. —A Democratic cmvention was recently held in the first distnei ni , cee for the piirpo-ic of selecting a presi dential iirctor. &nitre! Towel. ,of Hawkins county/waq unanirrously ,choeion In the report of the proccedinga of the con tention, as published in the Nashrtlie Union it I, stattil that lieueral Thomax D. Arnold, :in old-lino Whig, and formerly a distin guished mt tuber of Congress, being loudly called fur by the convention, appeared upon the stand, and in a most happy address cli ng tamed the convention for a con nderable time. Ile announced the fact that. he cat an old-line Whig, and, strange to tell, his party was now without organization and defunct. It had either turned Know Noth ing or fused with the Democratic party, and here was left him no oils. r alternative than to unite with the Democracy and ease the country from the rile pollutions of Know- Nothingiam. .1 Sturm:ie.: 11'wren.—A very curious instance of confusion oceurred.the other any in a family In Albany. A mother and her daughter Were IJOUI colihned on the same dsy, each having aII tlie gon. In the bustle of the moment, lath inGiuts were idaemel in a cradle together, and, to the confusion of the mothers„ ss heti the youngsters were taken from the cradle they were unable to tell which was the mother'a and which the daughter's son —a matter which, of course, must ever remain a mystery. The family in great distress over the ■tlisir• • WANTED AN HEIR FOR f. 100.001/. Cotton ing curious advertisement appears in the New Orleans Picayune of a late date : Wanted by a person who has one hum dmsl Omni:And dolling and no heir, to adopt from birth, a child. It ranst be of American parents, and from one hour to ten days Old, sex immaterial. Auy person haring a child they wish to dispose of. can thus secure it a Food home and fortune : or any lady about to become a mother and willing to part with her child. eau 'laic a respectable physician to attend her and no questions asked or sn• [livered. Applications must he tniude in ten days. Address "A," through the Post Of fice or the Picayune office. 1 THE PHPELiIt CURRENT. —Mter giving the rein& of the elections in severa l towns in Indiana and Kentucky, the Detroit Fru Prcu uye: " Scarcely an eleetjon—Ststc , county, city, or town—takes place throughout the coun try', that does not show a &tided tettftig-of 'the popular current towards Democracy. Every indication point* to the orerwhAvr ing success of the Democratic party, the , up• holders of the Conatltution 'awl' Me ,Ilnion. in WI approaching ,preeiticntial contest. Black-Republicanhun and peen& American ism are Foipbsiticany noWbere." Msc4xcnot.r Isetossr.—On Thurs ) asy; 24th April, two little children strayed Mrity frointhe lvwba of theti father, Mr. Cos, at the foot of tha Allegheny mountains, icy township, Dedistdeolustir, Petrasyl ,and for two weeks In urniewatted sear& Wel prosecuted, but:without eudoess, otittl the Bth 'want; what the poor shadrsu l lebrasi were found about Isis and e. isdritiles tiolpi bone, withis a few reds bf s Sltibllir road. • . „ .of it !‘pa9ll( cTer. tn° ' 7e !? 9a • ; .4'' i.g.p SL:rOS.O. KA.N.9AB,; . . —.. The &mitre part dr Pennsylvania. is fast 1 iii becoming I seoond Ka* ems—and w? re got withakttni , seitiretr4an, 4ci a lit ite' 'dark, it , et *miss' the I)V o er' mit, t, who is y it'er any ifiit of leOce. ' re' lift re r otganized itvt o -143esijn 014 . - glon`,.fattritvern td the overthrow or the Dernoenili4 party, find to accomplish this I ' 'object ' thermort to public slander and prb j I . 4 013 ,; “er , ftgali3oli. 01142pit'tht 'tiiklncit of this Oilllo/11101 - 11,' 13 Knew-NOthingiSm, Or which 100 may call the Carson League an. Auxiii my! 'ln Centre county, Know:liallingism has betoint. completely frantic in its attaelt's cm Democratic nien—wind - those -velvet viru lent in their smalls, rem- the individuals who once boasted of thei r` Democratic her- 1 aldry, and aro now living at ease (11,011 the gains of Democratenernsity. There k scarcely 1 3,p 5 6unitten0Know-Nothing in the county, who is not indebted to the princi ples vehteh ho would non- destroy--nor 10 ; there - a delutd, dna honest-man in tho or zdcrov,ho 33-nel'O'rTrieiTfirDemocrat, that does twit'yearni . to renew his attachment to the el4trines Which his coneciente tells him are edircet. The people of Central Pennsylva nia are Democratic in their rontictions--and a majority of the hardy yeoman, miners and lumbermen of this county, arc na strongly in favor of the"-real paineiples of Democracy,es ever a Democrat was .devoted to his party, both In the days of its pnlmiest ..; iumphs, and the hours of its worst digits 're. The permit' citizens of this emelt ty— that intelligent portion which has made old Penn's Teller, bloom and blolsonst, are, }with their sons, ready tee redeem the cotintY. In the coal and iron regions, among the feople, the some sentiment prevails—in the work shop, there is n correnponeling feeling—but strange as it may appear, the rent state of public opinion_ haa bean perverted, And Cen tre county, in the hands of a few designing demagogues, ban been irefully disgraced in reputation, and her people most shamefully abused in confidence. One of the trading causes of phi.; outra geous Imposition, is the fact, that with a sparse but industrious population, the in. , tereats of the county Aveiro confided to a few families, Who, living upon the sweat of tho laboring classes, became at last arrogant in their prerogative claims; and now u ish to appropflgie the et,dunive benefits of every enterprise fithiel. lo developing the vast re sof r esofllllti prohlie region. To 410 this, they deeirsto make a second Kansas of Cen. tre county: They Garr organized, ss nth the aid of a small chive iii Bellefonte, all kinds of assoeistions—and trith the and of a free• love organ, and the machinery of Knov. - Nothing lodges, the CArson League is thrust forward to .Iregin the nork of aggression This is but a feint of the enemy. Morality is used to disguise peoietution —religion is brought down frum her high pedestal to en gage in theciamors of political confrrition and private and domestic character, the dear est attributes of a well ballanced commu nity, arc attacked with all the ruthicssnoss .eith Which Ilfo and properly arc as •aulted in the Original KftIICIR. The peopl of the Tallies and mountains cf the county, are de ceived azitUalpt in ignorance of these w"leilivB by a grad 'chime of pale-faced pr. ichers and store-lotingets in Bellefonte— ehanx ious to divert Oittilte attention from their own guilt, labor to cast odium upon urcitreml ing citizens, and bring to their own mean level, every honorable Man who refb,e, to Mimosa hisSuell' to !hetr ear of Jangernaut. The second Kansas, like the tirat, how ever, has en intelligent population, which, when rightfully informed, will repudiate both Die abetters and the alders of* this scheme to Awn Democracy to the blaek al. tar of political eanabalistn. lkdlefonte is not Centre eomity— and although we firmly believe that the real feelings of the people of the borough tend to Democracy --there is strength and honor millicient lwyonil the borough limit, to redtem the Second Nan- SSA, and play Centro county where she be. longs, prominent in the bright galaxy of De mocratic Districts in Pennaylvania. Dmiocuaric Vic - roams IN I mins:Lt.—The Democrats of lodianaplin have elected their candidata for shyer by 313 majority, and tho reniainder of their city ticket by still larger majonties. At Now Albany—which has been cursed a ith Know-Nothing mitt rule fur two yyttrs past—the Democrats have succeeded by. a majority of 300. Law renceburg, the entire Democratic tiiittril for city officers 111 elected by a large majority. At Aurora the Democrats swept everything before them---completely muting the corn' billed hosts of the opposition, who made. a desperate stniggle to carry the city. At Lafayette the. Democratic tuujority is 248, end Tippoirucke county is +claimed as good ter 500 Democratic majoilty ly Noreukber. At ticennes 'the entire Democratic ticket was elected, with b u t ono eaception. . marking upon the above results, tiro Aenh nel says—'• 'ha Democratic Wiener to-dry floats proudly over the principal cities of the State. Id Octobvi atij jlluicuiLct neat the whole Oat, will speak end the Black- Republican column will ho abattered and broken." tnE, Licsyss LAwc—ln hia missal charge to the (haat Jury of Dauphin county, Jtu Pearatia gave it as AO' optnieso of the Court`that although the act of 1886 repeals all lota Ina parts of slits, luattbsiateu t t, there with, the act of l td etlll in full force, ex cept so far atilt ls Sapplied by the new , law. The proslaimui of the siet of 1834 which pro-, Whit gaming ritiuseir, require good entertainment .to 'fioiNed - for moo and horse,'aulph pro dolor to receive strati gers and' trite as it Igo to lkoo m nraldate thesis, and w so • Court to revoke Ikshais for eitimes, arestill tataritA.%.. '" VALIJIVWIDOV4BO ,I 4 - 74t Mary-, MON *444l"l4,44lockwatiskneF recelts, : fitiM o o Aint44 , 3' lIMOUPago. the 4 4 11 4 mss..aft Obi b9 S . SS t e l!rr 'e n Pin w ig 4* 444001v,ta.1thoik 40,1 1111 41 43 Ir #O 4 ), abireStAllkf2444o9 °Wing ler.:Aim rOtti4 l9 oProlitriEr4....%. , 7- , • • ••••• KNOTr-NIIIING FAc.B.E.IIOO.I)S The Philadelphia Daily News feeling 144 .. a d disapppinted at the 4.esul:t of the Ifsfi ' iiint l .Ar z , gt , * n o t; up , , " •attt ,'" p. • e tefty Ilboxifflttt g : bu,,;ithef i gal , oar 747 nailed ( to the ' i t eohnterthy ry real hi Philadelphia arra ciiiitetriptlbh . slander, Whitt' could only emanate from the brain of o. Know •Nothing. This slander an Sherin Magee lies been re nted by the Know-Nothing ergys in the interior, in the vain effort to create syMpa• thy for their dying cause. The people have Seen through their shallowness, and arc look ing upon them with that contempt that de portion and moth& always meet with. The Philadelphia Dispatch,* nceitral vapir holds forth as follow's: Tim 11ally News, which line well earned for itself 'the application of " a tin kettle tied to the tail. of Know-NO.li ingism," in an attempt to defend its absitril falsehood that Sheriff Magee appointed eight ; hundred special policemen on the day of 'destine, and that they all voted 11nm:times each, ind'ulges' in its " charactee istic to ad dle," and confesses that it knows ' , nothing afoot that of which it has sd flippantly spoken. The News having raised up the eight hundred and multiplied them to a tre mendous er,ttnt, now admits that it does not know how many deputies were appointed by ' the Sheriff. The " tin kettle," in relation to this matter, oliserves : Tlie fluty means that we litive of, ktQwing the number of these persdns - appointed, dint derived from very general aswrtfois en the day before the election, in reference to which we know that rho.ma i or bf the city addressed the Sheriff, who did not deign to reply. Thu e is, of course, 'no means of huffing the extent to which this outrage was carried, or the molter of men appointed, except through sources open only to those who were engaged in committing them ; and since they hare been successful, it. is by no means impropable that the funds for the payment of the persons employed a ill he ob• tanned front line treasury by such inflow twin as to guard against further exposure. This is a very candid admission. The Nora adopts " a general assertton"-- that is an electioneering lie-- uttered the day before the electron. It aser;i that there is no means of " ascertaining the extent." of the " out rage." Vet, it is true—and the News ad mita it —that three journals published in this city have specified the number from infor mation obtained from the Shenff. Mill, the Newt, which knows nothing about the mat ter, prefers a general assertion, made by. the lying toniue of rumor, to ascertained facts. Wu do not envy our neighbor its obstinacy and perveisity The " tin kettle of Knott - Nothingism" objects that we have pro nounced its charges of freed, made the day after the clectic , n as foamy. We were chari table tnough to semis° that they were mere ebullitions of anger, evolved in the too went of defeat, at which moment fond no tions of profitable printing n ere overtnrncd. As the "tin kettle•' still persists in them, after proper explanation, we withdraw our first word. The tuaddle of the Netri in re ference to this fraud, which is now persisted hi, despite of evidence to the contrary, has ceased to be " funny" -it is retched. If'nttr,t for the VrtnooratAr Irotrhota, Mx.ssits. Eorrons -The last WiWinton cuntaittinz the Communication of " Achil• lOC MRS highly apposed of by old and young in tins, section of the county. IVe know the Ret trend }wept ielor front hoybood to the present mement,'anti are acquainted with his industrious biting Long ago he had made up Ina mind to make his living off the tax-payers, as work Ito would not, and like another worthy, and friend of his, frotti our side, determined to live by office, which they obtained from the Democratic party. After passing them over the bridge of lush. gencc, they now turn round and Shallot like cuse and threw stones at those who fos tered and sustained them. IVe hope Achil les may go on ski he has promised, and you shall have some help from this side, of whom we know hest; and "Limo of ELL in must not think that their delinquincies of years alln shall be passed by, as their scurrilous sheet has handy ane falsely slandered the Demo- erotic ruu-ty of Centre county. lit their last sheet they smel, that the finuneial concerns hate se c t ed, yea for tkoly year+ previous to 1855," and " that Humanism and Demo. craey as it now exists, are twin sisters.' ' Now no one knew better than M. P. Cnostli wane, that this was a silo slander upon the bring and the dead. O, this side of the county we hate generally had two of the Commissioners. Who ever heard of Jacob Herring, George Herring, Jacob Kreider, John Ilosterman, Robert /Smith and many ethers, doing soy act as Commissioners, or while some or that in tilled, other offic e s, that Cer,xe county suffereirby their acts. And what had they to do ,with Itomanism I be sides we have no Cil!holica that I know of in any of our Democratic townships, and I neecr.knew of a Catholic being a Candidate or ejected to office in the county. Yet astr Atet would feign make. us believe that Cen tre county is in,' danger of Humanism. If grey are reasonable brings and aoßiiintable to their Creator, I presume they have a right to worship according to tbe dictates of their consciences. But tliis iwnot. the oh• ject of the Reverend Crosthwaito anti his compeers in this political crusade. It is only a tub thrown out to the whale and only intended to take _your eye ofr the tiddler; but we understand the trick hero, end it has no effect. We are a Democratic Protestant 'community, and fear neither ono foreign Pope, or seven native Popes, even if some of thewprimits and Mara did attempt to secretly es‘abliali Hindoo caves, in our townships to engender Know-tiothingistn. But they are now combined ; it is no go, and they here only one half of the 'old opposition with them, and they are as bigotted and vindia- tire against the Democratic party as ever. But we will show them what we can do this fall,' Row is it, Mears. editors, they charge yoti with being the editoricrf the 4' Catholic organ 3" Is this not soother proof that the Reverend political tiut, attic* to the truth? PENN TOWN:WIN Ilaan eass.—There iitTrow thirrgtatb. Ward Station house, Phlladelplasi a gem boy, who Li without a hobo, and unable to speaks word of English. It is alleged that, the etriwart of a ship, recently arrived 'at this port, smuggled the boy on board, and whenit - *Rediscovered by the Osptain, sage money was chtmanded of the stewart. This was rehired, lad Ora boy was put i ' irons mad'. treated With great hardiness during the voyage. On the arrival of the ship lit PkAil~ia. the boy was tanned I loose, to shift for himself. LAl:wee' YAni.—Tbe fair of the twdieii eon !imbed with ,tlitlipleeopel Bewias Society 'hsf Ihmtwille,l tett last week, cleared above 1 .100 stellate.' =I irts . m.s 64 7 aENERAi: Wit •Will of the late Jab4flarbei7 , fif Ohicako; w o with his wife anedaught4 acre pa4Sengers on the abate stamer ciftc,lobcon opened for prObao. Ilia tate *valued at $250,000, and his will Makes 'hormone of $lOOO to the'American and FOP. elgn kliisionary Sotiety, $l , OO 1.9 thAmer e Ame lean Home Missionary Society, $lOOO to the American Bible S.;ciety, and sauou to the Third Presbyterian Church, Chicago. ht tie a sole heir to his estate.' 07 - Congress has been asked to appropriate money to test the practicability of the At mospheric Axpreas, by which packages are to be forced through a tube at arralmost e'redible speed. Before fifty years passim gees Frill be conveyed in the same manner, nt the rate of One or two hundred. miles an hour, snit much mere saldy than they treat present by railroad. ID - Some year or t,.‘o ago a boat wai ed in descending a dream in Armstrong county, by'coming in contact'. with d badly constructed dam, and the owner was pre vented from recovering damages' by Judge. Burrell deciding that as he was running his boat on Sunday, the law would give him no raid. The Sup etne Court have reverAla the decision. 11';,?Wo learn that on last Friday night, nn unsuccessful • attempt was' made to steal two horses htilonging to Edward Mc- Garvey, in Karthaus tbwaship. The thieves htvl seemed one or the horses, and mounted him. But the olher4 gpirited animal, was not so easily contiollpth and made such noise as to arouse the family. The mounted thief made 011, towaida Einnemalioning, ttlt othor horse, tideless in pursuit -which convinced the thief that his only safety under such circumstances, WON to abandon on his enter prise, and lie accordingly distiMinited'and took took to the woods. Alr. Mellarecy was not at home. —Clear fiel d'ileyuld,. 'in Democrats harve - Zarried San Fran cisco. a- J -uow to read a news4rilei %%ill' a &at. . • consvience— . p . oty for it in rn. %nee, TolkkuMbhkAlvetatyilie Vona granted 45 beeps irfor taverns and eating houses. ri - Frank Lamar, found guilty at Whiol nig, Va., of rape, has been sentenced to 20 yenta in the penitentiary. ry-The, new budding of Franklin and Marshall College, at Lancaster, l'sL, was de (heated on the 113th inst. D.l; The St. Louis Agrictiltural and\ ?tie chanical A,ociation are preparing to have a great fah in that city, nest fall. I.ll7.erne county the Court granted 107 liquor Li (19(.4-27 mom than underthe old law, [Li — An aerman NI front thi• Railroad briilico at Pittaon, Pa., and was ilmwned. rili - The Mercantile Appraiser of Lycorning county teturtis the names of 212 taxable es ta6lishment:33. r-,-wilharn,port has 900 taxables, Jersey Shore 326, Motley 321. The real estate of IV/Mat isport is returned at ss29.3so,Jetsey Shore $187,295, %may $105;123. ry-A slc auger, huppose4 to be intoxicated, threw 'Wunsch' htio the river et ll'ijhums port, but Ras tithed out before drowniotc, and (lepoguteil u) the jai. , Mercantile Northum Ireland lionnty reixiris 149 taxable ellablish tuents. Ed‘N aril Everett hat, consented to deliver his atilre,s on tho character of Washington at I'lll'l.o 11411, N. daring the mining fall. Luke Pion, Dominated by tho Know.- Nothini party of Alabama for Pm:3111(.46:11 Elector, Ile sayer the platform of the late Philadolphia convention is not antis factory to-inm on the Kubject of slavery. ILT : The Albany Argus elassilloi the oppo• sition elernint of the Board of Aldermen of that oily as conslstmg of four Ullman Him. dooa, four Seward Choctaws, and ono Tippe canoe Republican, or eight Whigs and one nondescripts (CPA Know-Nothing editor in Indiana pleaded tho . Sunday act to avoid paying a poor widow for nuking him two elm is ; 3et no daily hia readers with personal &loose of Douglas fir '•violating a compact.' of the Railroads connector at Harrisburg, vie. The Northern Central to Sunbury, anil the Lelianon Valley to Read ing—will, it is experh d , be completed der mg the present year, malting right different read , : vvatrring at Itarri,burg. 11/ 'The lanidon (*mot JOU/ /Ltd Hays the 111314 American Mlnlatcr, Mr. MUNN, followa preeent of Mr. Buchanan--which WM ox acted by President Pierce—of w earing only evening drew while attending pc Queen's court. I.} -- A pear tree more than two hundred year.; old, was recently cut down in New Haven, Coup. It was transplanted from En;;land 111 the early daya of the colony. QUA wa;, on hearing that a man hail given up chimney sweeping, expressed his sell-palm, as ho thought the humiites.l routed him. Know Nothing grand jury in Vim comes refused to find a bill of indictment against one of their oath-bound brotherhood who had moldered a fellow being in cold blood. Iferein lies the dangerous tendencies of la, pros3.-iptive an order. Their (dings tiotui to society and the government are alike swallowed up in their hideous oath of pro scription. Beware of them. PHILLIP9/11;0AI AND TYRON X RAILROAD.— J. E. Montgomery, Erin. , chief engineer, and his assistants, aro at work, among whom aro itfactuanus, lisle, Pruner, Lingle and others, from Bellefonte. This road, when vonapleidod, will be a great feeder to the Central Railroad. But if the Lock Haven and Tyrone Railroad should be made, and connect with the Sunbury and Erie Railroad, the vast transhipment of coal .w6uld bo by the latter route. We tidier* the Sunbury and Erie Railroad will be made to Lock Haven ; then if they would adopt the Lock Haven and Tyrone road across the Alle gheny mountain to the summit,- and pursue the Tyrone and clearlivld route to Ridgway, ,atid, from thenie to Erie, it would be the batter policy, and by the time the Sunbury and Etie reaches Lock Haven ,-jhe.Phillips. burg and Tyrone wilt bo completed, as I be lieve, without an Melina' plane crossing the Allegheny, and through the bitinous coal holds of Pennsylvania. B. Otft.OV Tna ?4utuaas or '76. --Sarah Phi brook, of Hardwick, Vermont, a widow ca. a rovolutionsry soldier, and whose ago is ninety-k.ur yeari, mode and sold last season from two cows six hundrod pounds of butter beside:lA:silk and butter fur fainily use. Mrs. Pbilbrook low no esaistenco except whit is rendered by bp boy, who is not quite sev entypars old, and who does not intend to sintrify whfle his mother is able to do her wen*. -Tut RAILROAD EIM. itininti lAT MILLR 1 . 1 1 accordance with the eon homed by the E t adantire Cornmittee, there was a ateeting of the friends and stockholdereof the Lewis. burg, Centre and apfitme Creek liailmad, on Tlntratlity the 16th of It at Millheint. • h aiscmbled at one o'clock, and was rolled ie to order by Gen. Buchanan. The following namikl gentlemen were appointad otßcvn. ltok Gemini Boat.' Vice Presiiiitti. Gen. Gen, Buchanall, 61. an. Joiatebn, John Wilt, ley., Uene. . Oro. Youngtnan, r Dr. Pipet; Caburn,, • Petti . WM. Grord, John enter, • Pr. Wm. 1. l`Vilson, lleoryilfoytv. ' Col. Nett, • , Sure/arks., 7 --- T - : 4 ";:iili Merrill Linn, Jas..r. (Amok . GeoAF: Apter, 'Ee ry., of Isterisbury wee by motion cal on for a speech, and' in ' respon Mg ' d that, gni' the Ante lid now come f cling, no speeches were needed, and he would only state a few preliminary facts nocessnry to proceed understandingly to business. The original act ineihrperating thin Company was passed in 1858, and the tirrie limited expfred in 1856. 'There was • supplement passed list winter siring. three years further time and permission to Wiwi Bonds. The subscription along the Use now amounts to between four and Ave hundred thousand dollars and the question now it 11110111er there hen v, been sufficient encourage. melt to warrant an organluttiSm. 'lll'iarder to take out the charter, Gore must be one tenth of the whole &motto( subetteibed and five dollars on every share paid in. which must be certified to the Governor. 'The an thorized capital of the Compaey is thirty thousand shares or 81,500,000. One hui • died and fifty thousand must be subscribed ' and fifteen thousand paid in. All prelimi. i»ary matters have now been Anne. A hall million has been subscribed ales* the lino, and AC bare power to' sell our heath" for five hundred thousand. A large amount, at least fire hundred thousand, can be obtained frorn capiiitlists, and there is no herilatkin in pasturing goal believing that it will pay six per cent., sod great probability of a high advance over that. No one oeght, now, to object to.a speedy organization. The great difficulty in obtaining subscriptions is because people hardly belle that the work will go on, and yet we carmrot goo without subscription. We however hay enough to warrant en organization, and *by it - unly ~..can we make people believe we are 4.17 earnest. They all feel the advantages which' will a.:.crue to them from it —that it ought to be built, and if one they had it, they would not part it and all that Jemaina. is to Mt. The first next ster•ile 'to . organise. The Tyrone and Lock Maven. road was started aid seemed as if going to bear es down. They elected a board of direotors. One of the mails, theirs or ours Mat fall through. We kept 'working on steadily. with leas parade and Nei. They were left on the banks, and we have come to such a stage es that wo need ontr int, and wo acute the prize. The ipiestheilets be asked is not what .trsiigcra from abroad ltreiloing, but what we are doing along the line. 4Yo join you, capi talists say, whcnyou have given an earnest of your sincerity. Shew us, they say, that you believe the road is important and n ill pay, It is important and we can easily prove it. Western men ask us only to get a lino gist will carry them from any point in the East to Pittsburg. They can get to an point in th Weal from Pitttburr—it is the central of the Western world. Any one by lacking at the map can see that our road Ia the'only link yet needed to carry travel and trade from any point in the cast to Pittsburg. The cost of our road as estimated by our engineer II $1,888,317.50, which is at least • quarter too high according to the present prkies of work, He estimates excavation at 2 :C,tlisi which can surely be done fur 12i, rock at cents, masonry at 55,50, 'which owing to convenience of materials can be done for a third less. Iron at seventy•ffire dollars par ton, which can now he got for sixty. His estimate was upon the basis of the cost of • New York road, at that time. Gar road can be built certainly for 61,500,000, and if one thinlof this be raised iii money, ` the line, We can ensure you that the road will be built. Net a cent of this shall be spent unless it is fully ascertained that the whole can he accomplished, But in order to act wo must become a body politic. ,We Most have a bead. The Legislature hit/shown us all the favor it could—renewed our eqi time, gave us three years more, let us UZ I ; our own terMS about our money, and let US build it where we , please. 1r we do not make it now it never will,nr can he made. Should we organize again ' June, we VW under proper arrangements have the road under contract before fall.. Every -prepared route along the line will bo properly NU' toyed. Those who favor each polity should Make crangeinenta to lay represent- Maoris of thesillvanisgea of each, before the board, and no doubt the route most soonori ical and adrantagnous to all will be solopoult• Even supposing the road would not pay per centage on stock, it wilt more than pay land owns in in the raised value of the land. We feel nfident the people are so much in earn they will not let it dle dow. At the request of the meeting Mr. Miller then read the supplement passed last Mig ter. "That for the purpose of oonstmet a i g bg d and equipping the said LerrisburgCentre Spruce Creek IDtilsood, the, 4414 - 0:00ay When duly organized, are hereby authorized to issue Bonds, not exceeding law Modred thousand dollars, in sums tentiellai thee Oka hundred doUan, at such riles of in such terms as ntsy bii decimalise by Board of Directors of the said Company. and to secure the same b 7 000 OT more amt. gages on said road,' TM mapplamott to the act, passed /dards 34,11354. - statixirised that the Company, "should they deem la far the best interest of the Company, townie. their Rosa with the Pennsylvania Bold ilk Tyiene, in the County of Blair; instead of connecting at Spruce Creek as now prorided in the act to which this is a supplement, or to Intersect with the All o ghany Patsy" Railroad at Hollidaysburg.' And the set midsection authorize) them to take pleas* along the line r before the charter is taken, to be as good and valid is 'tithe obartir bad *en taken out. Col. Eli Slifer, of Mao, wag thae on and remarked tbat he i 4 bete le= that no speeoh would be. aad_d* that itteotoam9u did not raga heiftlbe foot that lOU whe bad left urgentlatglon tlkYetllr:', mintene
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers