II II he 'Alterman. 11.QUAL LQ EXACT JIIIITICIL TO ALI. FOU PRKSIDENT, JAS. BUCHANAN, OF PENNSYLVANIA FOR "Viet PRESIDEN JOHN. C. BRECKINRIDGE, _ PREpI)EiNTTAL. SLECTOAR., • tir,N4TORIAL. os:les R Bookalon, Wilson IklcCandlsns uitnßicT. '1 'haring& W.,-Nehlngor, 11 Reuben %Tinier, 7 Puttee Butler, 15 aeorge .1 Cratell , rd :1 C.ll1 I ntol Wartmnn, 1117ame , Blank, I tt Mitten H {Vide, 17 11. J • Stable, ••• Joky 14sHair, IEI John D. Roddy, (t John H. Briuton, 10 Jaunt, Tureey, 7 David Lawry, • 20 J A J. Buchanan, 1 1 1• Charles Kessler, 21 William Wilkins, P Jaraen Patterson, 22 Jame, (4 Campbell, 10 In*e Blanker, ' 23 T. Cunningham, 11 X. WHughes, 21 John Koalloy, 1} Tbnhiss Osterbout, 23 V lneent Pholyal 13' Abraham Edinger, L EFO TE, pENNA wittorreiel)* rrro itoß e, I see E.TAITI,VE TOUR TICKET? • "The Democratic- eiLlectil -- for the October `ilhtion,.ara now printed, and will be dis. tributcd by *: ibe Chair Man of tho County Commiltre, W. a. Kealsh. Let every Dern- Gera!, before polling his vide, see that' his ticket bas the minus Of all the State and Coltnt,y eandidat'es upon it, like the ono we print below. It is necessary to be very cau tious; as there will be, doubtless, any quio tity of counterfeit tickets circitlafed through num!, by our opponents, foi the purpose of redneing the Democratic ma prier- rote Iho whop tie,tei.fivons top to butt - m, And see that it tends Illie this , ath•T 11 . .41 . it ff STJTE TACKEI'. run. , -.T.ZIII,ISaOKET., GEORGE SCOTT.- OE COLOMBIA CXNJNTY FOR ArDtTon Gr2El?..kL IArGB FRY, sin, OF MONTGOMERY COU TY !.;QP. EUBA"I'l.011 GENETt At, R 0 II E , JOHN 1)F FR Ai :MTN I_Ot N 1 CIMNTY TICKET 11=13:3 ALLISON WHITE AMMO( T. JOIN snuff, Penn towuship EE=I3 HENRY BARNHART, SR WIWI% M BURCHFIELD I=l7l =IMMM =I J AOB .POTTSGR.OVE JACOB EHRHART. 00Clin 1101V1IT011, NATHAN J. MITCHELL AUDITOR WILLIAM KERR GE .Y E. IV. STUfLD.tiVAN f This whole-so tiled, patriotic and influen tial old-line Whig has been doing m)od work in OUP county. lie has addressed n number of meetings with great °acct. Ilia speeches were directed to eourince—and they did so —all who listened to them. Gen. Sturde yant left tut yesterday for his home in Lu zern° °aunty, speaking on the way in a number of places. Gen. S. has made an impressionin Centre County that will be felt by the opposition. W D. WALLACH, ESQ , OF VIRGINIA This gentleman will address meetingm in Boil,.lung, Thursday evening, October 9, at ; at OM Fort, on Friday afternoon, Oct; 10, at,l o'clock, also on Friday evening at 7 o'clock, at Spring Mills ; on Saturday afternoon at 1 o'clock, at Aaronsliarg, and on Saturday evening, at 7 o'clock, at Potters' Mills. HARD iLINP PETRINE,.V This young and ardent Democrat made his first speech at Ziondast Monday eren ing. He made a decided impossiou uppn those assetrAtted, by the 'able manner in ultieth he gandler his -stajort. Mr. Petri ken is one of the moat prt)intsing young Then in our county. D. G BUS!!, ESQ Will address Oa Democracy of h,-1,1 Lowe. eloariloa county. or. Thur:!.ay e• 0'c10c . .4. and do Fr.,.lay burg, 'Siturdsti iv noggs t,r; ',ii, -1:-1.1,18-11 SOHN ID I:T. This champion of signal rights will address - ftargin . ocracy orri.ntre county, on Bnitic.: day aftarnoon. at 2 or'olock, at flublersburg. Attend, fraomun, • IViacritrell - Prart Tits Dlenitoi4 VICTORY TX MURK I —Not the patriotic frieutla of henry Clay! Not the supporta, of Daniel %fp bat( r ! Not the followers and fo lends of John Ser geant' of Pliitadelpitta! _ Nol but the enemies of the Americas Unioni, Who plead against our instidations in the cities of New &grand. Garrid:A, and 'ThetViire"Parkel, shout over the disunion victory iuine, and tie result shall roach the Enolitteau capitals, it mill give as much jov as the bur ning of WV city of Washington gave when the intelligence of that disaster wsti carried to the old world. l'i.rronr.s in - 1001h, at a recent meeting of the Democrats of, New Rampshire t spoke with great eloikuenee. In Me course of his spc,Tchlasisaid that " Fremont was a pith finder, and hai therein recognised his ream lance to Washington. Washington) duly.. :;ay: *ea a pathfinder. So be was. But Washington was a patilfluder for the Union; Feculent is the finder of n path cut of UP.' cr- CONGRES,§-MAW4 ZWINO If ever a party put their foot in it, that party was the Rtsow-Nothinge Of this Congressionil di'striet, in sending to Wash ington, Make-a 7 good-thing , ofdt Pearce.— Though a capital blatherskite, doubtlesss, - in their Midnight lodges, he was as dumb as an oyster on the floor of the Howie of Rep resentatives in Washington except on that , Memorable occasion when disgraced his State and this dist iet by calling out beyond the bar the lion. Win..3lillward, antl whis ' pored into his ear a proposition to induce him to betrarshis trust, ip return for a post tion on the kingraving Committee, in which he could rob the National Triaidiry, if choos• ing to play the scoundrel—which said posi tion was to hare been accorded to him by Abolition Union sliding Banks, in return for treachery similar to that of Make-good thing of-it Pearce, himself On but a single other occasion throughout the whole session, I was the Hon. Rev. John J. Pearce heard pf, The contemptible bribery atlkir having made it prudent for him to avoid the notice of the I House ever after. It it di retitiirc many 1 , years forlhe district to wipe out the stain of 'this dishonorable transaction from its Pair fame. The fact tli it Pearce did not dare I again to venture before the people of this district, proves how mortified all honest and Sensible persons of the opposition are, on ric eon& of the grave tnistake they made In sending hint to Washington. That a man Ho utterly without • harneter or brains should' have been able to get loin Coligrt‘tis front' Pennaylvaniii, ix simply the result of the de moralizing effects of the Knew-Nothing or ganization, and like the Know-Nothing riots, rows and contemptible conduct in seine of the cities it must go to convince really patri otic persons who have been inveigled into their " 0041T1Ciilt," that, they cannot, consist ently with self respect, doutinue such :Oil- So, far as intellect and standing at home is coticcracd, the kdgeiThrthis Congreasional district. in nominating iu pleco of Make-ii good thing-ofit Pearce, have inertly jumped outof the frying-pan into there be. ing nothing wha.tveer of Wm. 11. Irvin, save and esoepes slight gift of gabble—inordi nate per octal v t pai ty and unquetichabl c thirst f l a and' who r eine Year f. 4 or of the doctrine of Letting the people of the ter ritories melte their own laws, and then for the sake of a f,..:w_,Abolition votes, repudiate and oppose the blame doctrine. proves that he is a political bpeculater and trimmer, ri Ming to melts all saer:flees of honor and 114.:COLIFZEJa 1 T/T., oml purposes. Tire:idea of soiling such a man to Wash ington to retrieve this Congressional district from the disgrace brought on it by the con duct of Mike.a-g - oodeahing-of-it Pearce, in the Milliard affair, is worthy of the rules and regulations of their orgailications where indemitgogueierna ud implicit obedience to the behests of demagogues beat away and prevail. c . The importance of a single tote must not ' be disregarded if we would,tnuniph at the polls—it should never be lost sight of for a moment,—that the primary - object is to de- feat the collie, who is master of gi at re- ' sources, and leady to employ them without scinple. Th opposition ix neither': weak nor dispirited. Be asstired that it will re quire the united rally of the Democracy, to overthrow them fairly. lVe should be watch ' ful, and defeat them in their acts of fraud and cOthiption, ellich two years ago aftbr ded them a disgraceful triu They have C ' money,and will distribut it throng anthem secret crevices of corrti tion! The importance elf a a has hien exhibited on many occasions—it 011C0 elec ted Marcus Martin, Governor of Massachu , setts. Lot every Democrat, at the ensuing elections, make it a sacred fluty, first to cast his own vote, and then by constant watch fulness, prevent the polling of a single vote fraudulent or corrupt—let not hix own vote be cancelled by the illegal vote of the oppo- I+alien. The secret workings of the opposi tion for the last two years, admonish us to ware of a wily, ingenious and well sup plied enemy—of a political foe, possessing all the arts, and experience of corrupting the ballot-box, yet possessing the greatest integrity and morality in private life, and manners. The unportauce of a single vote cannot be too utile.ll urged upon every Democrat who reads this short article, it may preserve the happiness of this generation, and insure to million yet unborn, the lured privileges no now enjoy. The importance of a single vote should lad every Democrat to make hmiwif (initialed to vote at the ensuing electiom— Let the united rally of the Deinueracy, eon centinte but i;s energies against the cowman enemy, end victory will be sure to perch up on the bauner of those statesmen and patr\i ke'l—Beichanfin and Breckinridge. ,TEE ABOLITION STATE TICKET. —Look to it. Laporte WiurneinstriatOtt-t6 - Weitire DiVid WIT. mot, an Alolition renegade from the Demo cratic party—an out-and-out Disnnionist. Plxlpll was nominatecl to please William F. Johnston, another Abolition renegade from the Democratic party ; known to be such by every man and boy in the State. Cochran ban long been the associate and friend of Thaddeus Stevens, the very prince of Abo litionini. Laporte travels with Wilmot in abuse of Ihichanan and Fillmore ;'Phelps is the echo of William F. Johnston in his abuse 9( Suchananang FArKte...; antlZhoinLl as B. Cochran bitterly denounced Fillmore'a ' 11,1mny speecli, in the streets of York. ABOLITION BOCCI ENT.? There ii not a day pas , ex.by That tl.e, e is not a large bundlobf Abolition '4ocuments received by express for the pufpose of Abolittordaing Centre county. They arrive so fast that one of the proprietors of the party US become tilted of paying fur them. d2it4tI*111111::1?, PRREMEN, THAT ElitHalf HAN ON THEBO-CALL. ItCrrtiON STATE TICKET IS A FIZZ 14ONT ABOLITIONIST. TIM' CANNOT BE DENIED. ONE VOTE KNOW NOTILINO COUNTY 'TICKET. het intend ,to indulge in any re marks' reapikening the County ticket,.derni nated by the opposition, knowing that,_ , :it tvould be rejected by the honest yembanry of Centre county; but, last week we noticed in the Mug, an artible, attempting to re flect upon the political integrity of Col. Hen ry, liarnhart, which has bein resurrection ized by an interested politician, and gar bled to suit his purpose. We can say with out fear of contradiction,' that 001,0.110 r: Bin nhart has ever been an uncompromising l i Orme: at. His conduct has always been plain and staighlforward,—Honestandfoir, towards all men, politiCally and socially.— Before the controllers of the Wing make such aisertions against the Democracy they should remember, that on. their own ticket there are men oho have been guilty of acts; I poll tieslly speaking, that will requite o etablo explannation, before they will appear in the light of day as honorable ti onset , - tions., We need only refer to Win. P. Wit. son, Req., who was appointed e conferee by the Democracy of Centre coon y, m 1851, to 1 • nominate a Congressman. lto attended the ICooference, and voted for the nomination of - Allison White, pledged himself to support that nomination, came home, and what did ho do i We leave it to the controllers of the Il'Arc to rinswer —foe they belonged to the same Know Nothing conned that Mr, 'Wil son did, and had sworn the same oath to de , ceive the Oldie. " Col Barnhart was brought forward by his &lends, without his consent• as a candidate for tho Legislature, in 1831, against John Hasson, who was hot then recognized as a reliable Democrat, which after events committee of the Whig party nailed on Col. nry Barnhart, promising to give the wind Whig vote to him, if lie would vote for their candidate for D. S. Scooter- - This Col. Barnhart indignantly refused, and the IV hig vote oat tbniwn to .101111 IlatlNoll. Now, mark the result! John Beeson was elected to the Legislatiwo; and whoa the balloting took place for U. S. Senator, this same JOllll Hasson-VOTED TWICE FOR AMOS ELLMAKER, the Whig and. Antima ' ionic candidate, and against James Buchan an, thereby carrying cpt his bargain and sale with the Whigs. This is enough to eee that Col. Henry Barnhart is honest , and upright, and that John Hasson is not.— Witile speaking of John Hawn, we will say, and defy contradiction, that ho is a po litical trimmer, willing to do anything, so that he can get office, We have been in. firrincellty.n..gen.llPOOlll oL earatity,thot Jno. Hasson declared " THAT ANY, PERSON THAT EVER BELONGED TO TI T KNOW NOTHING ORDER, AND LEFT IT, WAS A PERJURED MAN." A r atan who has been gttilty of such Sentiments will disgrace any position in sot icty—particularly that of I Associate. Judge. The people of Centro co. will hurl this political speculator from the office he has disgraced, and send him back to the shoelace private life, there to remain and repent his political ingratitude. For Mr. Hasson, personally, we have nothing against him, note ithstandieg his unfair at tempts to injure us in our business, and misrepresent us imOnler to mains spite on men who advocate the principles that put him in power. For what he has done to twin dividually, we Will forgive him, and hope 'that he will, in quiet retireanent, in Harris township, end his days in peace add wi.h good will to ill nice. TILE LOCK uM ric ira re n m. 4 N The following card published in the last is s u eu f this paper speaks for itself • To THE READIMS or TOE WITC/IXAIC. With the preNerd number of this paper, the connection of the undersigned with it ceases, having sold our interest to D. S. Dunham, Esq , by whom it will hereafter be conduc fed. In taking leave of our readers, it is scarcely ireceareary to repeat what we have often told them, that our editorial course has been based on principle alone. We entered the American party in good faith, and bat tlid for its principles until they ceased to lie issues before the people. The great American Party w hid] swept the Country nith resistlZes force two years ago, has now no existence. It has been literally ground to Tirrwiler between the tipper and the nether null-stone. ' A new and powerful organiza tion has taken its place—an organizati in in whose efforts we cannot participate. The propriety, therefore, of abandoning our po sition is at once apparent, To our friends who have steadily adhered toad through good report and evil report, we t tender sincere thanks. W shall ever grate fully remember their kr nese. We leave the Watchman vle esper, a, and with a de gree of influence and c aracter second to no other newspaper in this section of the State. We leave it with regret. We should have been glad to continue on its tripod for the balance of our days, but duty seems to point us out a dillerent course of political action. Thu books and rterounts of the office re main in the bands of the new proprietor, to whom all moneys due the °lnce are payshla„ T. MARTIN. Mr. Martin has eittliviWhis party in Penn tyliapitt. The party he adopted and defeu dal!!osold to the Abolitionjsts,_bul he wartAlito honest to ho sold with them. Mr. Martin, while he had charge of the Lock Haven Watchman, edited it with a degree of gentlemanly -courtesy 'that fa 'found in all men 'of honor. That . tie could not be pur chased by the Abolitionists and dieunionists shows conclusively that his love of country predominated oviisMtllvidUal gain. Where ever Mr. Martin goes he will boar with him the character or a true gentlemen. DEMOCVTII 111 ON YOVllaxtre desperata,AliamostAandiDCAtilifit • was wet by any party than you have to fight in October. Let every Detticsorat look (hit for all *Antler ofhauds. Lit every' Demo. enit repel every - preposition " to trade off:" This is the &mut of the eniesitson. Let evnrMillaragriiite the ticket.;•nta wnoul reurr—fhw Canal Cottunissioner to Au ditor, and nothing less, and secure hie neighbor to At) likewise. Como Boxes Whnotrr Erre.—the Baton Medical and Surgical Journal sbronieles • ease in fibmwsbury, Mass., where • 'w•s•torts — iritheut eyes"; It was •. * healthy boy, well :developed ht every "other respect. There were eyelids, but no eyeballs. * • "THOMAS*JEFFERSON, !ill' Opinion the Oonitoonise. THE DIOCRACY TRUE TO ir mp. pimp. We frequently heat it elated by Republi can orators and newspapers, that they aro' followers of Jefferson, and that by the repeal of the Miskeuri Compromise, the Democratic party, of 184, deviated from the principles of the Jeflerstotinti Democracy of 1820. To ) show that the Democratic party has never ' departed fromJelteraonien doctrine, we sub mit the followntlettElrirwrtttenby him at the time the Missouri question was agita ting the country. On the 13th of Ain't, 1820, he wrote to Mr. Short as follows : " The old achiam,of Federal and Repub• lican threatened nothing, because it. 'related in every State and united them together by the fraternalism of. party. But the reined-, deuce of a winked principle, moral and po litical, with a geographical line, once con- 1 eeived,.l feared, world never more he oblit crated teem the mied ; that it would tee re curring on every occasion, and renewing ' irritations until it would kindle such 'mutual and morel Mitred as to tattler separation preferable to eternal discord. I have been among the most Sanguine 'in believing that' our Lnion mould' be of lung duration. now doubt it much, and see that event at no great distance, and the direct consequence of this question ; not by the line which has been feeconfldently counted off—the laws of nature control they--but 17 the Poioninc, the Ohm, the Missouri, or more ?et-of:ably the Mitdsaippi, elm - ante to our,Z‘lerthern bound ary. My only ceinfort and confidence is, that 1 shall not live to see this ; and I envy not the present genteation the glory of throwing RI% ay the fruits of their father's sacraflce of life and fortune, and of render ing desperate the experiment which WAR to decide ultimately whether man is capable of self-government. This treason against human hope will signalize thew epoch in fu ture history, as the counterpart of the model of their yr ez‘....... t iy mi . •da TROar.t9 naTERsoN. Mr. Holmes of Maine, Member of Con gress, addresac.d Jefferson a letter, which tires from hits the following remarkable reply MoN - riCci,to, April 22, 1820 I thank you, dear sir, for the copy you have been so kind to send me of the letter to your constituents on the Missouri ques• tion It is a pet (lel justiiication to thi m. I had for a long time ceased to rend news papers, or pay attention to any public af fairs, confident they were in good hands, and content to be a palsenger in our bark to the shore from which I am not far distant. But this momentous question, like a fire bell in the night awakened and tilled me with tenor. I considcivil it. atoncethe knell of the Union. It is hushed, indeed for the ma tuent--t- hut Ode- t reprieveettly, -not-a ' • sentence. A geographical line coinciding with a marked principle, moral and political, once conceived and held up to the angry passions of men, will never by obliterated; and every new writs.' ion will mark it deeper and deeper. I can say, with conscious truth that there is no man on earth who would sac • rallice more than I would to retore us Iron this }navy reproach, in any practicable wny Of one thiag f am certain, that as the pas sage of the Waves from one State to another would not make a slave of a human heir•fl,' , who would sot be so without it, so their dif fusion over a greater surface would make them individually happier, and proportion ally facilitate the accomplishmeot of their emancipation, by dividing the but then on a greater windier of coadjutors. An alastmence, too, from thi, act of Ina % - er, nould iemove the ,jealousy excrte,l I.y, the undertaking of Congress to regulate tic ttondition of tho ditfeaent &script:one of men composing a State. This certainly is an exclaim e right of the State, which noth ing in the Constitution has taken from them, and given to the General (alorernment.— Could Congress, for example, say, that the non-freemen of Connecticut shall be freemen or that the% shall not emigrate to any other State ? I regret that I am not to die in the' 'belief that the listless sacrifice of themselves h the generation of 1776. to acquire self government and happiness is to be thrown away by the unwise and unworthy passions of their sons, and that my consolation is to be that I live not to weep over it. If they would but passionately weigh the blessings they will throw asNay, against an abstract principle more likely to be affected by onion than secession, they would pause before they would perpetrate this dreadful set of suicide on theniarlves,and of treason agninst the hopes of the world. To yourself, as the faithful advocate of the Union, I tender the offer of my high estet m and respect. THOMAS JEFFERSON. no wrote December 20, 1820: "Nothing, how ever, presented so threat ening an Alva as what is called the Mis soon question. The Federnlinte completely put down, and despairing of ever rising again under whig and tory names, devised a new one, of slave holding States, which, w lido it had & semblance of being moral, was at the same nine geographical, and calculated to give thernarseendaney, DT debauching their old opponents .to a coalition with them.— Moral the queAtion certainly is not, because the removal of slaves from one State to another would never make a slave of one human being who would not be so without it indeed, if their be any morality in the question, it Iff on the other eide r because, by spreading them over n large surface r their hapnin,eas would he increased, and the bur den of their future liberation lightened by bringing a greaternumber of shoulders under jt. llowever, it seemed to throw dust into the ' , yes of the people, and to fanittichre tlwinovhile to She knowing ones it gave q geographical and preponderating lino to the Potomac and the Ohio, throwing fourteen States to the North and East, and to the South and West. With those, therefore, it lat merey &question of power. But with the geographical minority it is q question of ex istence, for if Congress once goes out of the Constitution to arrogate the right of regula ting the condition of the inhabitants of the States, it, majority any, and probably will, declare that the condition of all within the United States shall •be that of freemen ; which case all the whites south of tbp Po tomac and the OW, mast evacuate their States, and most forturnatefor those that can He wrote December 20, 1820, to Lea) , ette: •With us thinly are going on well. The boisterous se* of liberty, indeed, .is never without swaps•; and that from Idissonri is now rolling tpwsrds us. But we ehtiV ride over it as yrs have done over all others. , It is sot a moral gipiption, but one merely of power. Its object is to raise a geographical principle for lbei course of the President, and the noise will be kept up until that is ellbete ed." ' On the 22A1.0f January, 1821, be Nina. John Adams ; anxiatj in this quarter is all' conceit. letled in this question whit does the holy alliance in and out °let:ingress mean? And this by the-by, is but the name of the case ; it is only the John Doe and Richard Roe of the ejectment. The real question, iirseen in the States, afflicted with this unlbriunitit population is, are our eleven to be presented with freedom and atiagter I torif Congnise has the power to: regulate the condition of the isahertrtnants of the States,' within the States, it will he but another mtercitie of that power to declare that all shall he free. Are we then to sec again Athenian and Laceda monian confederacies ? To rage another Peloprmassinn war to settle the ascendancy between them ? Or is it the tocsin of mere 'ly a servile war ? That remains to be seen; I Out not. I hope, by you and Inc. Surely, they will parley awhile, and give us time to get out of the way. On the Mb of February, 18?1, he wrote: I (sterol() not' see the speck in- our horizon which is to burst on Limas a tornado, sooner or Inter. The line of givision, lately' marked out between Myren t portions of our confederacy, is as will never, t fear, he oliterated," After the storm had passed over, he wrote November 4th, 182.3, to Lafayette : On the eclipse of Federalism with us, thougb not its extinction, its leaders rot up the Alissouri que-Aion, under the false form of lessening the pleasures of slavery, brit oath a real view of producing a geographical division of parties, which might ensure theta the next President. The people of the North went blindfolded into the snare, following their leaders for a while wit h a zeitT truly moral and laudable, until they became sen sible that they were injuring instead of aid ing the real interest of the slave, that they bad been used merely cc tools for election et ring purposes ; and that trick or Ity'poerimy I then full as quickly as it had been got up. Such were the Opipiope of Jellerson upon the Missouri Compromise line. Yet 131nelt 116pubticans are to be the ftillowers of J. Mr- CO O. Arc finch mem igporant or dishonest LET ITBE REMEMBERED That on the 10th,ofJoly, what Wag called Kaunas Aol Convention,'' WIkE, convened. at Batfaltit, and a ifogranime of &v. wan IVI 4atilLeptely iedopted. It was deter mined to raise a fund, " which should not Ifall short of' Sloo,oooeach month." Gerritt Smith igiered to flay " Of hundred dollars la month ditrim the war." The lat ter gentlemen, more noted for is boldness I than his prudence, wan in favor of march ing "an armed force to Kansas," and said "Mat he was now called upon to contribute means to r ains melt and send them out to fiThi." GOi 'Reeder, although not differing from Mr. Smith in 1,10 end alined at, was for mote prudence in rtiiOnng it, "111 didn't twisli to grse the So'ith notice of their mien ' irons by tnCfri-441 , , , aroicit Men into the Terri tory. 1k wanted the enemy to have the first nes+64-4-144.-bloiSkini-1464t0w-iteet-f. "- Smith replied to Gov.iteedcr's feats about " notiqe" by putting a proper interpretation upon n-hat the Convention had already done; he said, ‘. the South could not but know that BOSIZTIT/X6 WAS TO an 'DONE 'when resolutions were passpi raising 3100,000 per month." That the 3100,000 per month thus provi ded was committed to a committee located at Chicago ; thatithis committee at onoe en tered upon its war like duties—concentra ted a force under Lane, who commence/the war from which the Republican demagoguea are now endeavoring to make capital call- Cilnt to elect FrallOta. That thane Republi can leaders and agitators are responsible for the results. That their hands are stained with tho blood of their countrymen—that they have made widows and orphans of the living, and loom cursed the country with a fatricidal war !—Ex. THE BCRIL CONVIIACT AND TEM 111011111.1. CAN PARTY.—The Burr conspiracy to divide the Union the only precedent for the Fremont party in attempting to do the same thing!— It is just half a century ago when the noto nous Aaron Burr formed a conspiracy to di vide this Union by seizing upon New Or leans, and erecting into a separate govern ment, the Western and South western portion of this country, watered'hy the Mississippi and its tributaries, and for which an indict ment for mason was found against him. lie was tried before Judge Marshall, but fur want ot full evidence, owing to the .secrecy with which the conapira,y isms conducted, ho was acquitted by the jury. The people, however, believed hint guilty, and consigned him to merited igurany and contempt, sail he sank into abject vireteliedness—au impress ive warning to those who listen to the stig• gestionn of criminal' ambition ! Strange to say, that what he and his confederates at tempted to do clandestinely, and which was then frowned upon by the whole Aini_rican people, except the few who were concerned in the conspiracy, should now be openly at tempted lfy the Black-Republicans, and, with hold effillintery, proclaimed by their leaders in open day ! EFFKUTS OF in Pennsyl vania in producing its legitimate consequen ces in all the Southern Statca. WI en South ern, politicians become :hilly itiA:ore of the fact that the Fillmore, party are supporting Fremont tickets at the North, they withdraw from-the American organization. Wo have recently - given quite a numbtr of cases in point--here follows another lion. Luko Pryor. the late Know-Nothing candidate for the United States Senate in the State of Alabama, and an trlector for Fill more, has declared publicly for Buchanan. This gentleman and Percy Walker were the two leading spirits of the lf.now-Nothing par ty iu Alabama. Mr. Fillmore, from present appearances, will be left without a party south of Mason and Dixon's line, before the November auc tion, and this will htd•Wing to the treachery of his professed friends in this 1540_1,01i elsewhere in selling out to the Fromm:item KOIXUILIII CALAMITY. —A calamitous fire occurred in West Union, Va., on the night of the 25th inst., in which six persons were burnt up, and a seventh so badly that lite is despaired of. The letter convoying the information does not give full — particukre, but we infer that a houie was destroyed by fire in which were sleeping eight persons, one only of whom escaped. The lire is sup , . irilsed to have originated in the kitchen. STILL Axcrinna.—J. C. Dullitt, of - Phila.. deli:this, known as an influential' okl•line whig, has taken the etnmii &nor of Mr. Buchanan. '• ' • • 4irti RE CONVINCEII , `, TOIIIIIO-cArliti TlPlow Baetc.2llrat Ntoi.o to tavoitiosarr or Trto Eti6itZs OP rll.l.MOkri Ono TWOOP,lrlipli tun oPr.!4ADVOCATtI or lons O. Paws?. . We are authorized by the Democratic State Central Comniiitee to lay before our readers, and the public at large, the fortes.- Mg evidence of the Fremont-Abolition char actor,of the smealicil Union Shite Ticket, for Which National men, the friends cf Fill- HMO, and all believers in Constitutional principles, are expected to vote on the four teenth of October. We give first, the State ment of tile Clairinati of the Democratic COrtimittee of Correspondence forArrnstrong county, residing 4--I(ittanningrthe-toiern in which hir. Darwin Plielps, the Abolition Fremont candidate for Auditor-Oeneral, makes Ida home, which statement is also signed by_ the President.of the Bughtturn. Club, at the Isame place. The gentlemen whose names arc attached to this Paper, are citizens of the highest character, and the statement they make dt.fles contradiction.— We defy any man to disprove the facts which arc herein met forth. rida 1 --- a , ArtnatrenaSounty, Pa , Sept, 29, 1856, In reply to the euriWkaa:--" Is Mr. Phelps—the Republican or Union candidate for Auditor General in favor of John U. Fremont for the Presidency Is ho in favor of the Abolition doctrines avowed by the Fro Mont party? And, le he ngainet Mr. Ifilb more 9 " We answer: Bret stating, that we are citizenn of Armstrong county, residing In the Cato town Kith Mr I'l,opm—hairs known him well for many ,yeart. and have beard Min, publicly and prig-ately, express his nentiments.in regard to the candidates now before .the people for the Preeb dency, - and upon the polktionl questions now agitas tang the country Mr. Phelps. for severed years, has been regarded eit tho loader Of the oppositiost tonna in this.tiounty, and that apposition now lee • most unactinteus in nrpport of Mr Fremont The are not In this country two hundred Toilful who ad vocate the eThation of hi-L/111mm e At home here Mr Phelps Is looked upon es the Captain of the Fremont forces, and as Ruch Ito In en altendent of their meetings lie pro:A/M/14 111111,0 f n Impportrr of ,Col Fremont openly and boldly, end (Ito men In this community, ohm,. Intl 'nits soil .Ir,:inratine aro publicly known. who would erel,;ll him any other ohmmeter, watild be laughed at Oa all oonvions he re t public mid Fri% itgvirb ore Mr Phelps has announced Ins tiontimente, lb y are well understood to be the Lame as rhose entertained and homulgated by the le4ers and stumogre of the Fremont faction In en nintiiclintion meeting," rte it was °Ole& held in the Court Mese hero, no the 4th of June lest, (Court week,) relative to the affairs of Kahane, Mr Phelps made, In our hearing whet we believed, and what stymy person who lis tened to him considered, a most rrolsrit ',An/Jowl Aptierh. in which he denounced the Booth and ito institutions, and mgt.'', if no other meting would Avail, armed resistance to what ho termed rho B-(- greasion of slevety " This 'peeling wee led by tie. rampant Abot hounds of this county and that epee" It made hit. Phelps !huh- "f.lsoiltn " N' prominent man of theopysnsit inn in this coon t] con be Ibund to advocate (ho election of Mr Fillmore All limb. owietings aro hold, And all their apoisehos are made for Fremont. All thelrilocunaent s, nags. bannors, soup, enthusiasm, and ehanta are for Fremont—none for Fillmore. Against Fremont Abolitionism, howling about eltisnrysal' hinedinit Karma," we hove hers to contend Np Yillmore organittitton exiles in this county—no Fillmore speaker hos jet boon heard in Armstrong No marriserefad ell *wings with-41.-mM • • Mr Phelps, doubts his position on thee° question 4, and no man here would prosaism to accuse him of boing_a supporyr of Mr. Fllhnore, • Very truly yours., T. A CANTWELL, flsh-mita CoM of Got of Armstrong ou , Pa J FORNEY, Prts't of Buck A Brook Club of Kittanning, Pit The second is the statement of the citi rrncof Tex anda, Bradford minty, in which Bartholomew Laporte, the Abolition Fre mont candidate for Surveyor General This Rtzjitinent is 110 less clear and explicit than dui Older, and those who made it at e men of the highest reputation and standing in their community. The facts they set forth defy denial or contradiction. We, the midereigned ciriYene of Bradford county, and for a long tlmareside aia therelo,and poolsonally acquainted with flertholemew Leporte, a candi date for the °Sloe of Surveyor Demerol on the State Sokol( (thy Republican party of Pernvyl‘ Dia, declare freely and unreservedly, that he maw. pies the same position as David Wilmot upon the slavery question, and generally upon all political questions. Hie eremitice before the 'people of our region, leave no doubt whatever as llyy his being deeply imbued with Abolitlonirm; In thErt, be is a ingot upon them subjeots onto most ultra descrip tion He it, and ties been ever duce the nomina tion, an open and melons supporter of John C Fremont for the Presidency. and an opponent of Millard Fillmore, and oopies olmely the exempla and efforts of Wilmot in the proventytuvam Wm Patton, Jno F Means, E. W. Baird, J E. Piollet, A I. Crammer, William Scott, C Anima D Club, D. C Hill, . William Elwell, D. A Overton, J. D Montane, Wm R. Storrs, Win A Chamberlin, Fran, Smith, H. B. MoKsan, Stephen Pierce, D. F. Barstow 4 A. McKean V. Piollet, Of Thomas E. Cochran, the Abolition can didate for Canal Commissioner, we need. only say that within the last few days he has been travelling the cmintics of Adanis and Franklin, addressing Fremont meetings, in company with that reckless Abolitionist, Thaddeus Stevens. Wo Etna in the Gettys burg Sentinel of n late date, a glowing ac count of the speech of Mr. Cochran at a Fre mont meeting at Petersburg, in that county where he was proceeded by Stevens in a long and violent harrangue. Cochran, while a Whig, was strongly tinctured with Abolitionism, and he is now in full commu nion with the Abolition Fremont party in York, a fact which neither himself nor his friends in that quarter will attempt to ques tion. The national men of the Whig party in York county no longer have any cond. , deuce in him. What more need be said? What addi tiooll proof dßil any honest friend of Mr. Filtinore desire 7 What more need be said to convince any true believer in national doctrines, that this whole State ticket is mixed up with the- vileat..and. JllOl4 odipua sectionalism 7—that it was framed by tfioae who cheated Mr. Fillmore at Philadelphia and New York—and that its election will be a Fremont triumph alone 7—Pennrylva man. COOL StIOCPTINO.—Under this tl)e Crockett (Texas) Printer. of tho 20th inst., has the following :—Trio men, named Rigs by and Robbins, at a whiskey shop tin the northeastern portion of Grimes county, got to quarrelling ; both had rifles. Rigsby up Willi bit .alitl.shat Rohl/buy who WI *netts+ ly wounded. but staßigiby turned Q 0 cursing hist, Robbins took OM at him as ha lay on the ground, and shot Rigsby throne . * the totlidied almost instantly, rtty . enged even in depth. MORI: 'OWLS ~ .LOVZIB3I.--The Rev. John Holmes, a p•Htical clergyman of the Black 'Fusion party, and ono bf the three thousand who signed that blasphemous protest Mewl., gress, has recently sedtsbed and absconded with a girl of sixteen, the only daughter of a poor widow, leaving hilt own wife and two **all children in destitute oirolmistancea. rigs is the twelfth case of sednetion sad , goio of young glib, of of ruoolog slimy with other men's wises, .by„thrfelitlooljsfe.sts who signed that pitltitt`. ifilalk I MAIIIA COltilligli', • tathiNk4ber 4, 1858. SC 'E D : —Since e mote you. the polithill e iron hna not O*M - to -"boa and bubble," - nor has the exditetnent in tc. gam' to the chanties of the difterint,candi. dates been one iota less., The extra queen: matt in this city has Ledo the kcaylest for a nuolber of years, and in many Wards the feeling hes been very inten4e, esipiei - ory*l t h the )(now-Nothing asseagol. Thax a : my/ell aware that a large Anajorliy or libil• ski m ashessed voter* Ivili vots . ,the Deettooratie - • - , • -- - ' ticket. . The Reptiblica l lia'are:gottjng motil ious evary:dar 'a - thototigti the Fillmore man; and the Whole cause of it is, they do not Wish to let their modems' be known : for that they aro in a spry heavy mi. ' norsty hereAlXuti t a, no reasonable man will deny. '1 li dr amalgamation ad one good effect at least, and that is t ore a large number of veleta to the folds of the good old Democratic party, trail which they had he. coin() momentarily estrawd. lklao toy words, if •this prediction is Mt alkfifMi in the election, so farkakthis city is concerned. Thotruis Lawlor, a miner, from Schuylkill county, was killed on the railroad nt"Dlk and Walnut streets on Thuriniay morning, the 2d lost. , Groat preparations are tusking en regard to the Agricultural" Fair Whidi lirto 'Aspen nestf. week at Powelton. T.he perade.of the butihers, which. is to take place 0* Thurs. day, In honor of the crent, will by a grand d Unisising afikir, and one which should be witnessed by all who can make it vonve• nient to lisit our city on the occasion. A ntw Fiunday paper, to be called Tht Saialgy Transcript, is about to be started in this city, by Johnson, Greene rt Co., but it nowt set the i ivcr on flee ! The prOpiittore are, or have been, connected with the Morn. .ng TOnas of tilld city, a bitter' sheet, which is kept afloat by-the yid W Qov. Johnston Juni ElaFiposa bonds. • - 'l'llo number of deaths in this city daring the treek ending to-day, even.;lo2.. 01 con ti : scarlet Beer, 17; at Adults, 88 : c114.1;, , ii, 114 ; tuh; one year, 40, The oentlrt r is getting - winter•likc,.and overcook and t.tair s ))egni to got in 4enuatnl, whlle ill aro compelled to blow ot tit hinede to take the numbness from thew. gut why should we not like winter, for it brings with it pleasant cr. lungs at home, and that gre it event to tie juveniles, good. glorious old Christman, and 1.1m.t.e 'l% e leo me v iwit of old St. Nicholas, or '• fit Ilsinekle" as ,:onto de. light,44)4ortn-tho 'Tines those joyous lima fur the lads 'JO Joules, when Tiokle, tibiae all the uigbt and day, Are heard the merry - bells of lb. good old sleigh— as they bound with heat!s of glue over, the while:Mantle irtikli nature Lim spread, as it were, to hide her beauties from humor Rare: But trien theio is another shade to ihe pie ture. allude , t 4 .10 the peer I the maul wortii; poi to v`i'hOtit such joys never coma, and Wflose nature causes them to slues* EFeen Making knowri' their wants, Prereniult td struggle on in misery and hopekuit asc t. God help the poor ; awl IA ye who aye blessed with plenty : even Jour bestiairel poqr forth the holm or 4.0,1116 rt. uu t/wes ar n un f ig, now that the hying kit itllllllll s r i at the same Ittle 11111(111 beeillg Whit' 11 .gieri' . ous promise is made to you by s mAuttliAwal! CI cater. A meuting of our merchants and tmera has been announced to lg. plige, to night at the National Hall, 44 tbosis w4404r0' opposed to the eicction of John C.ArpploAt.• It is intended as so °Diet t tbs &nig meeting to come offon Monday. Yulsirs,. TkrO• OFFICIAL Ppm FOS thavtllNOlL 18T.4854r0p 0411414, mssetorms, IN 1855 Commis*. Pliorner.ll644ol.B4irkr.P•4l4.a. Adatrut, 171r4 , 1879 214441 - 2124 Allegheny, 6740- 5811 5116, 10377 Armstrong, L 1633 2149 1949' 2699 Rorer, 1884 1090 'NW *233 Bedford, 1677 1791: 2919 • 21.57 Berke', 69 48 3264 8493. 6143 Blair, 1406 2392 15,13 .2706 Bradford, '2416 4173 2369 4811 Bucks, 5329 4128 6089 6498 Butler, 2182 2582 2381 295 6 Cambria, 2063 1437 1789 16 27 Carbon, 1187 519 /227 1056 Centre, 1851' 2033 2113 2174 Cheater, 4460 4608 4412 5544 Clarion, 2134 1508 2173 2015 Clearileld, 1409 1013 1446 1188 Clinton, 934 996 035 1491 'Columbia, 1738 984 - 2180 139 9 Crawford, 2015 2091 2687 3496 Cumberland, 2.496` 2850 3581 - — 73157 Dauphin, 9081 8021 21314 4061 Delaware, 1447 1682 OM* 2 192 350 236401 Erlo, . 1698 2113 2526 , 3637 Fayette, —.. . 8 . 2620 23 . 12 2440 485 Franklin, 2411 2860 2199 3579 F u lt on , . 822 609 876 - 705 Greene, 1997 1393 . 2007 1740 Huntingdon, 1106 1920 15Q0 , 2011 Indiana, 667 2315 1264 3161 Jefferson, at 1039 1043 9118 1559 Juniata, 831 1023 . 1 4 111 1 1 t /1 70 ' Lancaster, 5099 _s'ol . -. Hlqt rsiviace, - 104 1197, 249 25 rollbation, 1865 2956 " 1751 2634 Lehigh, I'l 8394 2(218 3996 3034 Lustrne, ' $961 ' 11671 436: . 4663 kirniug, =4/6 .10a. , 1. , . , ... 244405 Mercer, ' can, 265 4,5 /I , 495 Merter, - 1633 - • 1 .., .1 - ' '3634 Mifflin, 1810 1382 1387 • t 1680 Monroe, 1327 531 . •1017 626 Montgomery, 5207 3573 6660 siii Montour. '920, 438 in 77b577 Northampton 3738 2443 3685 41 17 Northuinb'd, 1983 1011 2182 1 ' 2121 Perry, , 1332 " 1639 14153 2121 Philadelphia, 28284 470 . 24 1 M 28)11 Pike - , - - 61 r 4 Potter, 436 434 1156 478 Sehuyll4ll, 5012 1 8175 5838 0 , 0 ! 4262 Somerset, ' *4Bl • 9060. litalk 81 88 ! Snyder 819 1090 ... Bus9uehatina, 1.579 2164 2126 3819 Sullivan, 341 292 417 329 Tfoga, 1381 1724 189 2i 3 17nlon, 793 1500 1 1913 Irenango, 2501 140 1466 1679 Warren, 717 958 1118 1450 Washington, 3182 3214 . 3447 4274 Wayne, : 1594 1420 1877 1408 Weatmorel'd, 21541' 8200 '3BOB 9773 WYougligy 529. 794 898 1.1 24 York, _ 5383 401 ' 4707 47/6 o .12.010!4915F4.1; iT~}~'R'~'f~sf'~'x~}tt'~'r'Si[i~ii~~ tfI)ENOR.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers