TN% WATURMAteo 111: 4 8. 86 - gt.Y AND it.B. O.6NDART, COITOILS fITi.i,EFONTE, PENS 'A THURSDAY,-JUNE 7, 18601 DEV I ClUrie STA* NQMIN ITION FOR GOVERNOR, OEN. HENRY D. POSTER FOR Pit Etil ENV AL ELECTORS. RI.KCIOItS AT LARGE - GEM Gs M. KIM, of Berki county. Ricn Alto V At. lc, of Philadelphia, FE=I I FIR ti. k. A Sewer, 13. JOS Lanbach, 2 W U Patterson, 14. knac Iteekhow 3 , J , s. Crockett., jr. 15 II it Jacks.on, 4 Jelin 11 Ittettnet, ' Iti John A Ala, ...,.., U W 51•Vo l 'Y;t• 1 17. Jot') 11 Pawl( r h Chides K. ov, IS .1 11 Oa wtottl 7 Ow. rt P Jantuth 1 15 II II Lech 11 1),tv7 , 1 Seto 11, 12t1 ,1,. IS, 11ovk rll, 0: Jurl 1. I.l4lltner, N I' Fetterman 10, S S Lt.o b r, 2 S Mar.lllll, 'll Thu , : II Walkcr, 23 lV i limm 12 S S tnehestrr. 21 II 1) ('h iI h 25 I a ) lord aMOCRATIC STATE COMMIITiE I ha fullowing r.nan d g.•” 11.11,1 e , 1111 : 1. ,4 0 the =EEO ll'a...tAx II 15 rt 1,11111.1, 1 1 1 11. ~ .datum o f tho esJll.ll.. Ftrrt lontriet coy t 1,0 rl.ll Ilmrtlton, Jr i I:meow I. itimit , < I lleor, Arkius lierj own II P i r,nt. %4 11 11. I,lrArrumr. <'nrn t ;u. Itoloot Ethwor.l Li Cleary, W Irqin. John NleF.ol , l, n. A et< tti ti rrir r Stroben II Ai +lwo., M I)orinit., Inane IA nob F P I,oger .Cohn H efol,tek Urorge ollt V (' Mite hell ( on, .1 Lnnmi • •florl - to') I:trh. if I. .1 1f 111,41.1,1 Ftarrrh Piro r•Iro• I r.hr. I itrlr I.ittit,t -it II NI./..11 Wf lit r nth lli.rrirt - I.r 11.10, IL , r+onll 1)r NI01.1,1” mv. .1 I rrr•u e rretr Ur t.1,1.VP1••1, it I • ro , hen r.th It • ,r I I `1..111 , 41 „.11::.11Y'r1.1 J ,k =I Nita° I itetric .I,n I , 0 Tenth Justin:. -t. if Ire I. it „r-,1411 Mos outh II A (I c...(1,11” 1" . " , 1' lilde TWIIIrth Irnht. r- to Dail , 1,1, iti W 11. Plan . c - I nirteenill • W llr.`v" CIIIIM , II,gt It e. c ice F ...tteencL Discrtet--I.chn ti 11,0 ton Joseph 1V l'oik,r Fifteenth 1.1-'net —A 1, Itoctinfort Th,ann2 I. ` Itln e lloweil II 11.,1, Pi c , lin I) ,, e.r. , cer Montc... .1 Is r. it. I I/ It ctt 11 Bowmen. WWI to II I.c bt, 11 7 ri,glnr Sivtrett/ - F. drri. k Pt fer tor S rnrki r J L 111.4 rlar kMAS It.ll. S,ventri. uth 1 , 1 , 4tri,t Pt t 4 M, lair te 1 Ilse ptond Gies Fi g ht.. L th 1), $ 1 t wt 110E13 .r 'table j 1.41111.411 Nitirteenth I)l4triet fl F M.yrr, 'truer. re I rik tweucietli Dien t fsrsel Teat Tvirenry•firlt I , lcnet .3 Ale,tn.ler Fulton, J M Thautoson TwentJ•uw , •nd DlPttNt .1111..11 C Murk T I.Mwright. Twenty thir4 bier, t -17 e, IV Shiler A A Purnze.n fwenri-Aparth Noriel—Andrrw Burl. Joh M Joh', Mr , Itavy, l% hAVI, ram Mt Clair Edward 0.'10)4.11 .7r , Y M lliacEittoon. Jam , •aP Barr Twetot) Ifath litAtzlet—lhommt unuinghtim J,ll n ra Twenty Math Dintrie(- Thompßon nrglinTo I Pi lierr Twenty Revenrlg Dlot t IJ I Jmnte F NieFi;iltand TiF•111 y Dl•tri. i 1% AI , cxnor .1.. i IfpJr, R' "TA. ti IV AT it WTT. - .'JT • Lincoln an Orthodox Abolltioras Th e tn yn i ,,,,h,,,, of \ hrrtrl) I,rn • rlo, %%tide it t. received coldly by the eonveraiives and dittrwits the ,Innern•at.v, is eordi rlit appri,v ed by the Alto! tittnitdx' (toy Ohio, iu endnrvip - ; the ritttnitivto, .Ittlid that •Ithough defraud !Junta-II hw prow uplr s tri umphed ni the nomination of kbrnm at Chicago, Jotthua It ttitidingq enmint ed the ettinination of l.un•nln on the vrtnt %here it wag made Evtn Mr Set, al I, the fllld4t of la. llMnpjnnnhnrnt, sntr. Ihrit he tintir to t ht. r doi ton, of tlir a platform nv %.111 , fectors r, i f I t 1, 3 ,j Lira framed with his nwt :to ',how that thece m , n hare good ground for confiding 111 I,locoln's orthodox .11,11- tinware %le or% !WV . olation cvm• held in the Stale 111,nois I hat holy nt (,„ f,th lktolit r. INS 1 It tt a ,nll,l f r iTo pitrpo. , of ~vganintig n nvw rnty and repudiating all atialinients 'rile Committee (111 appol II tell I.y the Convention, wasconipii,..l of Abram Lincoln, .1 F' Farnsworth and lelialiad Cad (l•ng The resolo I IIVIN reported by tlw corn -1,11/Ittl'e were Una adopted by the Convention, and nrnottg tht.lll was the foil lovvlng which ue n‘di cnnservnnie 0011 of nil patties to ri ad nnitrwrvfully dtgvst Re , nl , ed. That the titnes imi,eratirely de mand the re-organization of part leo, and re. pinlintimt all previous party attachments, names and predilictions. wr unite 011 radvem MO , Iler?Mil - Fa his IT Moon of the country. and will hi reafter ro operate as (ho Itepahliran part v. pledged . to the accomplishment 1,1 the follovvilig purpo ses 'li bring the adantwaration of gov• rinbent tack to the connol of tirbt pritici plea , to restore Nebr.o.ka and Kansas, to the positihn of free territories : that as the r onstitution of the United States 'vests in the Stilts, aril' hot in Congret.s• the borer to legiblate for the extradition of fucitives !rain labor. 'lO REPEAL r 1 NI) ENI !RELY AiiROGATE THE FUSITIVE SI,A VELA W to restrict &story to those States is, which it extol.* : TO pßom Bur THE AnNosstoN OF ANY MORE SLAVE STATES INTO THE UNION : to abalrsh slavery in the nottrict „r Caluriphia ; to irrlude 8101 rry from all the terrilor,cs over which the gen eral zovernment has eaclustvi jurisdiction ; and to arrest the acquirement of eniy more territories unless the practice of slavery thereto sAall have been pruhdlited. A CoNiuticrvat.r. PARTT (—The ' , People's Party" of Pennsylvania appears to bays been s mere beggar st Chicago—angered to sit in the 9911vcrPtioll.'44.t fluenco. So much wag it 'degitisal by the pure breed of Black Republicans there, that it_walittefused--s_zuember__on-tlut— Alietionst- Executite Uptntnittce ! fluchit party—eo pqpy, so opera/ diehonored—ntay beg, but it dare not WIN its head to dictate. 1 The "People's Pasty" Abandoned The Harrisburg Patriot very' truthfully remarks that the nomination of Abram Lin coln, an out and out '•irrepressible conflict" man, by the-Republican Conventionoitipliew a severe telt to that deceptive humhirg, the •• People's Tarty !" of Penn l ;3lvania. * The question in now presented to the Americans who have acted with trio organizatiorr, with the undrrstanding that it Was a fair compro mise between Republicans and Alngricans. whether they will consent to be transferred to the support of an avowed Abolitionist ' for such Lincoln unquestionably is. Republicans of this State, think that they have played a very shrewd game, and , that ' . .the Americans are caught so completely in their foils that they cannot extricate them selves. It is curious to observe the gradual process by which the American party of 1851 s e nd 1855 has been transformed into the Re publican party of 1860. In those years the American idea was the prominent principle incorporated into the Platform of the Oppo sition in this Slate. In 1856 the Republi cans and Americans were separdteil m some extent.by dillerent cimulidates for Presidiint. In 1857 a Combination was formed between 100 two factions or the Opposition tinder the, name of A ll'lrrilll/1 this hay was generally adopt.) tlirvim.rwot the Ilmr mane ratio tp ihm it I I'iiiiren * l inoc I f Doling the yews I S.lB and 1839 the alliance was contintietl miller the newly ins eifted name of the :•People's "Party "fhe dele gab , to Chiehgo n ere u laded by . a Corn en lion eallid by this ''People'. Party " - hot iii.tead or fnlfiling the trust commuted to tin m, by laboring for the noniinainiii of a moderate condnl It.: for President, they de.- ..erred after the fir.t ballot, and a , ,otstril to the 1,11111100(11n1 of Abriltll LI11 , 1)1,1 one of iho moot violent and extreme Itlaek Reptiliticam of the west ISM this was not all - they also helped to pass it resolution distinctly repu diating the principles of the American party. Seth tihieh they peoligsed to he associated. in the futlon ring words of the fourteenth re, olut ton Req. , /...ed, I hat the Natiorial pmts no oppiMed to any elisege to nor Irvin raliration lass or any State lilrl.'llllMl ins h the rTzhts to roi7ett , for) hitherto 31" corl it to antmerank from Mretzn lnnda 0 1 ,01 he algolged ot I Ml/111r1.1), 1111/1 m favor ofKnmg It 1111 a n d tfllrlf•nt profret ion to Ow rtgllk of fin rla,st•, of cituonQ Ir‘ht.thvr ua live or ilalmrahzed, al home and nhrond MEM he very men who reprisenicit Pennsyl vania in the Con{ cntion and fiS , l•lO4l 10 1484 (Owl resolution, contended, less than fire short years ego. that the salvation of the country depended upon chancing the natu rahzA 'lnn lows - anil now they n' r heel4siiiiare %round and dint their, own ilierished pent eiples, at the huldnic of thi Ir Republican toaster;' It is a striking illustration of the tergiVerkationii, faithlessness, insincerity aria unprinelpled character of Opposition politicians The ,•ottrse pursued by tip se (If legate. must tertnniate the alliance helm. en the Amur:cans and Iteriblicans xnaintattied un der the name of -People's Party ' if there is a spark of manhood or principle rernsin r i ing In the Snit ricane They were not only basely sold at Chicago, hut groasly limited into the hargain , ani,k4f they can stand all, that they will henceforth submit to any tn.' dignity... We shall are Free Trade The (Mowing IA the free trade resolution adopted hp the Black Iteputdienio; at (I, l ra gn In M-1 . 1 the Tlemocrats 11 , 1.11,t4 d n 1.4 ; 4- °ll/111/II in f ,vor of a tariff s fur revenue with incidental prow Goon, vi hi -h eno hltter:y dellollllet d ty out oppolletllS 11M it , Mlll. to American industry. The y have ever since burned to be the ~ p 1 cid frn a la of tonne In dustry and a luta fur protection. Their platlonn adopi«l at Cho 'lgo IN all inglorinip. Nurrender tn't lie doctrines of the llilnocrntic party Tree///h, ' Chat while provithrig revenue for the glippoet of the General I;OVeralla.llt, 111/1111 l'apt.tta, a tittiiittil pokey re toireS suit an nihilist theta Of those iiitiettt, to I•lifourno.lfir developlrl4.lo or the iti this'ri.ll thicreAt of the whittle eititntry . awl ire ettrntheetl Ihnl polity of iiiiitittied se , tires 1 ,, vt t 11,4 Men 111 ern] urwo-c to agi retmliterattni; pre ., t.to rut Chow, and tll.llllll3 , llirt rti an 3111 , 0 tle r(14111 , 1 for Ih,ir Shill, labor an I 1,01•11 , 14”, dad to (lie nation evtnutercial prosperity andtniependener Republican Love for the Irish. fit,. Pt., I. .01 bar our 1.11 fellow rit,zons grt at n s In the !Atm.'', Wipe! Book an election- eeting doelllll, whir)) onprommled men are now eiteidating broad east thiough- out Pt on.3lvanta, and much all the leading, Republicans in l'ougres4 endorsed. w hich Vin II Sl•ward gave a speetal ree• mnendahon, the follow specimen or log.p (try and mtolleranee :X to be round. the intelhri . ,ent Protrwelgrr element or the Fatherland o;ermant ) on °lir side, we l l ran well afford to dtspense with the ignorant Cathohc element or the Emerald hilt.. lo 'The trllttierree - atlelt - ITitry - r• tat there is an Will' fillrerevire between.,Slavery . Popery, and bil e driving Democracy that we are not nt all sttrprp,ed to seo them go ing hand in hand to Oleo - dm bobcat work of inhumanity and digsolutiott." -11elper",t lo de prodtnq pine A liArry AnJusrmsx•r•-- The Arabia brings news that Belle's Life (London) an- j nomices that„a ineetiug bad taken plane be- tween Sayers and Heenan of that office, to discuss meaaurea for terminating the dispute betweep theni as to the champion's bete— It wlh ultimately agreed that two new belts, exact counterparts of the one no mush cov eted, should be made for the purpose, to be rai , ,ed by public subscription ; each of the aandidates was to head the list for that to be held by his opponent. The old belt sill remain in possesxion of the proprietor of Bell's Life to he fought for by whoever may aspire to the honor of wearing it, Sayers. has engaged to retire from the prize ring Wa4T ARS nts iLsCORDS 7 The Repub. Ilettne hereabouts profess to bo in favor of a •tectivelaHfl," yet The New York papers chnrge that their candidate for Vice Presi dent, Mr. Hamlin, is an out•aod•out free tradesman. What are hts rec,)rds Voice of the Press on the Republican ! Senator Ands' Resolutiona. . • Nominations. e.l Mr. Davis' territorikl,resollitions, which For the benefit of dome who &sire to have been for some ti*,.itsubjeet of diseata- I know how lir Chicago mink ations have' sion in the I.llted Sti*frenate, were thifeo , A/1441 road-Ro4l_ til-difiltaant- tluarters sve-auht-- 1 , A:Trott — The. ad./ ,nu • itroi - lITITII -- peß 36 gr: There arc seven of them, Mid the first fou'r , w e lt tidop4nl, as hillowt : I 1.. Resolved, That ill the liy,Fipticin of the' Federal Constitution, the Sliktes adopting the same twits' severaVAsst free and Indy pendent Havereiglities;Witing a portion, of their powers to be Oxerci•eil NV the F , ' , l - erdl (fevertunent fur file increased twelirtlY ' 'of each agalogt dangets, donlestic as well as! foreign : aturthat any intertneilling by any one or more States, or by a combination of their citizens, with the dmiestie institutions of the others, a n rat It whatever, po- 1 'Meal, moral - , with ,R view to their disturbance Subversion, is in viola ' lion 'of the Constitution, fristiltin_ to the : States .0 interfered with, einlana ra their domestic }ware and trammility —objeeta foe yawl] the (loom, notion wan formed -and. by Inecessary eine,equeneo. tends to weaken and destroy the Foam itself*" 2 Relayed, Ttrittregiii slavery, Al Tt exit.l4 in fifteen Staten of Una (JlllOll, cent , 10 11 0 a 'an important porti,iii their dorm-illy iwitiiiitimis, inherited from -their anctiatora, and ex ist ing iii the tiliq!'of 1110 adoption Of the 01111tIlli111011, bywhich it is reeowilxed am consul atiott an miportant element in the 01.10/11101 . 1111PDI Of powers among the Stales.: an d t h at till al t ah g e,F.ll optima) or feeling- nn the IRII of 110 . 0011- 6 111VIliollhog S 1011• of Ow I men ill ti'ti'an to (hi, nwhillition can _moire them or their citizens lii open or co ver: attarl,4 thereon, with a vitiw to it, Fitt rthrow ; rind that all much at hicks are 111 m ,ifif,,..t ',ohm.ut a the 111011131 not solemn pledge to protest awl defend each other, giv co by the Siang. ri pan clively, on cot ling moo the eonstinitional COMOlet µlllolt form 1.1 1111 . I 11100 trot are a 111 1011041 breach of 111101 IVIIO R V iolation of the itim.t solemn ob jowl swot. eitressiol.lß or 1.1.tc hailing lour: The Old Line Whig %Mon Courierfits represciitg m the coudition which the 11 es saelmsetts Itupubliciuo; wercArown brthc news : • Friday, May 141 , will longVe . remembered ' by the men of Massachusetts an the day on•! which the Itepol4lllll patty was executed. Sin , ce the titian' of IVebster, we have DO: seen Men so sober au so sad in this gity.—i.l 160 the Capitol on Hkeon Bill, from seine hidden cause, sunk ititic Ottirc rust ef the earth—had the,Court tleulleltirdied round— had the City flint antrthe Ohl State house- moved arun , in arm on a visit of ceremony to the Cipktmn house --all these untOtir:d things enttilittied cutild hot have proilnced $lO profound a sensation a, did the unlooked for annoinicenient that %%tie Lincoln. of Illinois, had teiteured the tinnily:non of the liepithlt caii convention at Olden°, Such ttav the intense sailiiciot of the ft, , pubhcalis —so real was their (bocs:non and wo, that Democrats could sot find it in their hearts to mike light their affliction. * M * * * • • - The gland trouble a ith Mr loicels will foe Platlli, re is no leas on liateftr "'limn Imo iOll, 1114 111111 e, Call he rinl,ged, except. th,t he re,nle, 111 the wt,t -55 hi..h is.rt 5,1) shut account indeed to give of the ramaid.tx rut that peat Republican party, a loch. upon high prdessions of political and metal pt mph% his (Aane torn ard with, the liVirvi f'd 1,119r4nr taieflig pos.,tssoot 111 11. iovei went. 01 lost it ung va , o„ minims in our nn tional atlairs, 1.1 1(t fact, of earnmg out a I grand politic.il and ,IPCI d rrVolll l ll , l 141,41;111g truoitlitainS have truly produced a most rideit ills 111011,e 3 kr...11,d, That the I 'Own of (flew Suites rsts tin Ulu equality of rights and pii.ileges anteing it, members, and 11111 it is cope, rally the. duty of the Semite wi.,,r; repr, scuts Die States to their sovereign co pat.ity, to resist all attemp's to discr, imitate eitlat.r in relation to Timm' of ,property 111 the Tarritortial) atk nhi ihtt ebmmon pat a i , si,sions of the Uni States. so as to give ladvantages to the eit , 1 1 .4 of one State which I are not equally assured to those of every i other State. I .1. Pr , ,dred, That neither Congress nor I a 'l'. rrtiorial Legislature, whether by direct 1 ltgislation of an indirect or onftleffilly na ture, possesses the power to wenn! or Ini -1,,,- the constitutional right of any citizen I of the I lilted States to hike his slave prop e.rt v tom the common Ti re iten iesi , Lilt It Is the dill)' of the federal government there to 11111411, for that tin for other sperms of prop irty, the needful prig l ecti ti, mid if expert race should, at any time, prove that the Jo dte•tary does not possess !sorer to insure life qua , e protection, it will then heroine the ditty of Congress to supply such deli •ieriry I The first resolution was adopted by a vote of 3G yeas to 19 nays, as follows Veers Messrs Benjamin. Bigler Bragg, Bright, Brown Chestnut, Clay. Clitignian, C, 'tirade ri, Basis, Fll7,patflek, Grieco, twin, Ii a illOlOllll, Hemphill, limiter. I ver4oll, .I„f i nt,on of Arkansas, Johloviri ~f Tenni' The New 14)1k Journal of Collilll , fey 0111 , .. see, Kennedy, Lane, Latham, If allory, Ms I , lihhilifo% 4 sorne of the appliance, by wlit.di sin. Nieb"laon. Prime, hint. Pow , II high. (lure, Sebastian Slie.kl, Thompson, Toombs, the t litcago managers hope to add popular• tl ig a , 1111. 1 - n ice . 3' b f II I l' 1 • , lII' Instead of " ii. "g 4: ',• 61118 - and •' Ha "' Nolo Atesiirs. Bingham. Chandler, Clark , 1 1 " Wigwam''' 4 " ' Coll/inner, Dixon Doolittle. Fewacrolen, rota ' Oder - we are to have • Splitting of Italia " ' I Foster, (armies, Ilantelin, thirteen. King', Sim. 'Probably an attempt w ill be made to 1601311. 1 8:11,111ef,' Tan Zak , Wade, and IVil raise a factious issue ; to present tom as R " - "'''' ______ __ ittaiest ,the Lincoln,' norninaten in the Wig- I 't he second resnln was adopted by the Saw, the eatllildell it, it 110 cat. 'split !albs And " me e ,,,,_ yeas 36. tiny. 20 _with the ad I maul the Demo , rtli' Si, There n 11l be 4 great dittos of ill r. , ~ excii.,..iiieiii. throughout the land, and •'A 44 """'" " m r. ' r " In "°". (al' / of 'Homo , Warns' wlll be Wilk now, as log cabins were to the na)s. who dui not vote on the first in 154(1 , the passions instead of the JIMA 1 resolution Ili. t it, of lie p• "plc will I.e appeal, el to, and The i 1 ,,,,,i ress i utias was adopted by 36 the tittention of the wilily: do, l r id, as lar bl • Ir m 0 rent Issues I , hole die as posol t , u thel c o unts y• ' ' • )ear to In nays (wing the same rote as on the nest. Firepl that Mr King. of New Xoek. and Air. Ctinitttler. of Alichigan --b , utib 'Diu New 1 irk Express, (Emon -.nothing ) , that omelet Fie moot elm fly alter a 'Art of 'Republicans did not vote The fourth te‘oliithin was adoptoel by a ' no popery - faalooll, and 15 lets' fur !hit, . vote of 35 y vas to 2f nays—Mr Pugh (Deal,) preferring Iltruston, says of 'Abe ' of Ohio, voting ill the negative. • 11, has the re iif ree,rie of • Ili , taletil ' On deli of , theNe resolutions, exre pt t h e ('ol Fremont, •the grvat trat,ler,' had -lor , hot 'trout Is' 'save his recent visit East, have i fourth, the I)4:nlm:rade !it.patoeY, with Mr 1,, t•ti nearly all confined to the stomp of ph Crittenden. of Kentucky, and Mr Kennedy' 'inn. Ni vet ( I" I"' he is a Peat milirti , e . of Maryland, (South American) voted solid mutt upon tit , Ere moot nomination , and to the affirmative. Er. Clingmari explained though tie is nett a gr, at 10411 lioN., oue we. It that intlimposition was the cause of Mr isiince ' he will be the gee alt st. 111111 living,' and a c shall all he denounced who 11 0 not Douglas' absence linoleum,. loin 4. The oulllillaLloll of Llll- Pending the nu resolution, which efe "el" s"'}' , '"' a n d lice ' II " ""t'St ft"'" the , glares that the inhabitants of a Territory, peiev,iol,lll.ici IA hush would have loflOWed the when forming a State Constitution, may 5, , ,,, iiii,Liwi i iii,i tion : irffil divests tt of 'maces tit its ha poi's and bittern e ss ' then, ha the first woe, decide for themselves whether slavery stied be maintained or pro• tub:tee?, the Sonata a4journed. On Friday the radiations were again taken up The waseilMmeglr - of Mr Clingman that no necessity need exist for the intervention of Congress to prOtett slave prom rty in the Teri mines, way ad4te I by a vote of yt as. ..1"t; nays 2.; as follows . Vete. , -Ales:it's. Bigler. Bingham, Bragg, ('handler, Clingman, Collarner, Crittenden, Divot, Doolittle, Foot, ( , r u nes, lisle, Ham lin Ilarlan, J01110:011 of Timoessee Kennedy, Latham, Polk, Pugh, Simmons, Ten Eyck, 'rooms, Trumbull, Wade and Wilson. Nowt - Memoir'. Biinjamio, Brrght„ Brown, I Chestnut, Clay, Doom, Ettzpatrick, Green, Ilarninoint. limiter, Iverson, (sane. Mallory, Mason, Nicholson, Pearce, Powell, Bice, Si elsbury, Sebastian, Slidell, Wigfall, and Yu Ice t This amendment Was afterwards, on mo t .* • ,Lata.. , 14.11.r....Yli.iliuga„...calcausadripsii,artst-then amendment negatived l'he fifth resolution wan then taken up, AN To I.lk about suc,• e sn f o r th e Repul,hcnns with such n would be the, were intuit) of lbi unikrsiamluig Ifo,ton .14Ivertt4LT, n Black ft can sheet. tLough riot outspoken, actually confirms the above mtateinent of the L'ourier, though it affects to hope for success with Lincoln in spite of .. the tineaptch I iu, and • the new mid mrigular cause of iliV I " to w huh hl`i 11011111181.1011 V. 111 ViVt• ISe. Ilere, howavei, is Its could edgiuntit The intelligence that Mr I,olcolii Nips noininatt d oil the third ballot at l'lttettizo, jestt td , ty eiftetnnon, Cattle Ilpirfl 110 Stliail part. the continually 3•1 a sill!), lee. I t may be traokly sae!, that to the ardent mend, of the chief . competing candidate it way all int% eleume burp' tee 'I hi• tenor of the procoedittg,a on limsday had led to tile le hit that Mr Sea arts 4 1/10,1),VAS 11311 111,011 111 C %%twit ithroi.cd in spite of the innitienne" outside pressure and Ibai Itza fnrudw 111111 the leatlmg, I)uyi Lion It was the old story, I bonesrr, 1111• Ch 1111 beets Itllll ui Marty a l Coillt 111 ion he foie this • • • can vass wilt be a arm and narrowly contested new and singular CA1141.1 1.11 .11V1h10,1 have comptieated the issue ut a manner to perplex all takulation 1I St Low; Nit s. the organ or Edward iiev quite severe on the proeeedings of the Chicago Cony, otion for its repudiation of R.l.v Inc the "irreyressible" Lincoln lo New la V 4 1,1,•.,4,, Mll. EdA'nr.l 80, of MI, soon, w AS AMU Ised roof defeated As a. prom mem contestant for the lulllllllatloii of Tres, dent, on the mole ground that he pre , rderl over the 11 lug NationAll ' oriventior. of 1 8 rdi which tommiateri Mr Villmore, and was, therefore, rimier the strypiortill of having Ilan a sympathy for the Ann mail eause, although it was know it full well that he had never hr f.ll ill 'my way tmnrierted with that party. liovr r nor homer, of 111 two v, Carl A, of W I °mn, and other; wrmairs. As exponents of that foreign element in the United Status, at Chmago. formally waned on the Indiana delegelho, that AAS tdlipletyll to be favora bile to Mr Bates and threnterrid the revolt 44.11w-aatuole-kiierainalua-veasee(-44 , weervivntry; siwl• the ruidirig of an independent ticket, in ease Mr Hates Was nominated. In tins way the sentiment. arid s,) mpatims (if the Amer- I wail portion of the Opposition all through , the tree States, and the fat fully slave Stales I Resolved, That if experience should at ass dolled and east conteurptiffilisly.yrit oci any Wm' Prove tharniejOdleal and exec" - the programme of the Chicago nominations I live authority are not possessed of means Eve n tirtvrim or Barth s, of massactt,ti,, to insure adequate protection to constrtu thorough Iteptildieati as he is, was rattly tonal rights in a Tferriiory, and if the Ter hooted out of the field at Chicago I,res,p4i, O f- ritoriill Government should fail or refuse lc, his Allier lellllllittl. These are • facts, morn ( provide the necessary remedies for that purz (ling and tinge: and hhw they are I pose, it will lie ihealuty 01 Congress to sup likely to elleat ithe SV,ling and Americap sots ply such deficiency.: in Illinois, Indiana, Pennsylvania, New Jur- Mr. Toombs,,lL(lseiegia, nftered 'an ICI Do , eware Connecticut say, Rhode Island, mendment that 0 Ilia action of Congress, land New York, remains to be seen. should ho within the limits of Constitutional Power." Adopted. 'rho sixth resolution was then reported as DICLOCftATIC Wie/W All—The Baltimore American says that it has been proposed to erect a suitable temporary building for the express accommodation of the forthcoming Democratic Convention, and capable of seat ing all who may wish to be present. To obtain the means for this purpose a public subscription is proposed. Each subscrip rots ar $5" COI entitle 'the cOiiiributur to a ticket giving him a claim to a reserved seat In the building ht all tirneswhile the ilon, vention is in SEssion. Prom 1000 to 1500 anbscriptions of this kind will US required for the" successful accomplishment of this I . proteet, I igwll IN follows follows Resolved, That the inhabitants of a Ter ritory of the United States, when they right fully form a constitst•on to be admitted as a State into the Union, may then, for the first time, like the People of a State when romp. ing a new Constituttion, decide for them _VlM whether- idasery-ait-a—datnestie -insti tution, shall he maintained or prohibited within their jurisdiction ; and if Congress shalt admit them ape state, '' they shall be I reeolved into the tlnlTM "with or without alti: very, as their constitution may prescribe at tho time of their aitsaission." I— The resolution 'was adopted- - - J , C11;" 71, • neys 12 The seventh resolution was thou taken up VIZ: 16 , 1) 1 1 , Pii, That the provision of the Con stitution for the rendition .44 fugitives from se ry iee or labor, " _without the Itti"-Id-lult-DI which the Union could not have bean %I 01 in ed,"and the la W 3 . tif 1793 and 1850, which were closeted to scenic its oixecution, and the nnyn features of which, being similar, lnur titst impress of nearly seventy years of sairtiA by the IMUstijudieifil author ity, * have inkitiesti4iiii • ethiin to the respect and, ; ohs , erlillher or-ltrr enjoy the benefit of our mil part of muo and that the acts of I,,`,itaie Legislatures to defeat the purpose or dmilir} the requirements of that provision, and the laws made in pursuance of lir are hostile in character, subverstve of the ti Con- ( :diluon, revolutionary in their cot and if .poi fasted in, meat, sooner or la r, lead the states injured by kuch direach the com pact to exercise their jottgrnont u to th proper mode and measure of redress. The resplutiout was adoptet, .., (For tho Watehmam 1 W W. Brown In the Educational Con vention MEN.on SKELY •Ai 11ARNIIAnT •—1 the Centre Democrat or the 24th ult., the e of that paper, W. W, Brown, has taken a position th'fit stu prises me no little , Ile has carried opt flit? : ;,erviest and per pi Ira:, d what seems to be a most tin sel II illll,lll, fellt ttre of ti !pi 1011 iti re tard to cos positimi at t.lw recent. 4.tilueittional Convention, held in Belle,f4te, Oil t h e RlllNry to be paid the County Superintendent. In his arte•le, he has taken occasion Le rectify what lie calk a ',' ims-statement" of the ed. Mos of the Democratic Watchman, and also the e tutors of the Press in their report of the le Wet Snare thinking soberly upon the sul9e.•• he has dmiktless reasoned bun self into the belief that he did not advocate a /1101 io/oi y Nets the question IS ronstuntes a high S.ilary It was thought that Mr II ri.eeivial a highet salary than the nature or the circuni , tatices re• quilt d, or at all even's, than lie rendeted services tmthe schools. I have seen so little hum lit del tired from the system, that I .11111 opposed to it, and believe that my opinion is eorri,borati d by it large mayirity of the peo ple of the County It may be this imply!' S ant realm eof the ease, whieli has induced ilr Brown ill arty one month after the Con• vention to set the Press and Watchman right on the record But to the miestion and the facts Mr Mihtson, of Marion township, moved to reduce the salary from eight to five hundred dollars W. W. Brown proposed to amend Itobison's !notion, by strilmg out the ' live hundred" anti substituting one thorivirnd, and endeavored to prove that the people of Centre comity lost nothing by doing so It es true that Mr Brown with ilcew his motion when he found it unpopular, but his wh ilc effort lei that Convention, was concentrated to the purpose of sustaining the . /ion°, 'rah r Cuuniv'' by the Con remain semi¢ et leas, right hundred dollars 1.14.1.11 E Sup. Whether Mr Brown ii4v4eatol n high salary or not, he ivy the; 111(1/ (man ColtVetaltln, COMpOSed as It wasof moue than (till' hundred honest and udelhgent school directors, to speak at tune upon the ettbp et, and speak he did, just as long as Liu Convention leeraait . led )eet lte do to Phil you know Messrs editors. for you were present at the nine Mr. Brown are roes that the salary should not have been chang.il and that Cent! 11 county has lost Just three hundred dollars It rosy be true ' that Mr Iddlihari lost something, but the stateinint Oil( the people of Centre county 10411 Anythi”g, is iii•yona tile facts, and pre- IValeell..; a little too strongly on their intent genre Is It to be supposed that a Slate up pl oprtatton ,Iles not come out. Of the pockets 'of the la ople 1 II it does not, then we should like to be informed from WIK TICe the 11110 Of the originates It is Jost .111 , 11 v.{ ravage Messrs. editors, that 115'4 harshened us for years past with a heavy Stat., debt, o i l'h there is but little possibil ity o f e'llll.l. hog for years to come, and yet Mr Brea,' s Sys that it " rnake , ..s not a pg tele ur i e to the nix payers of Centre county the Cher they paid live hundred 11l lour 11.11141 s a year of a salary to the IComity Supernitendatil We might, with as F touch consistency, ask the State to make an appropriation of olio thousand dollar'( to every 11111 n, woman and child in It, as to ac cept, thus absurd theory Every candidate fir the eitspersetendency knew the salary Would he railtired, and was well aware of labor to be performed in dis.:lntrging the du ' ties of the (till",' and yet a large number so , 11 , 1ted tire lagition Five hundred dollars a year even, seemed to be 1111 0 Itiert worth o ve k l og for on tht ir part - the salary having been lived previous to balloting for a person to till lute otll,e'.. If hir llrown consider:, himself Aggrieved, you ran refer him to everybody who was present in that Convention, and more par ticularly one of the &mow. lhancroas 'HOU Puma Twr. We had intended- noticing the article to which our correspondent refers, but as he Aa.l4-41temeased—She - antrjetit — fftitilitTli;" ''''''' understood ea Brown's position in the Ed r urational Convetition, in precisely the same light that we (lid on the subject of a high sal• ary, we defer further comment. Tho alge -1 nivntB embodied in his communication are hubstantially correct. ED- A Republican Banner for 1880 Inwiew of tlw fact that A. Lincoln when to Congress in 1h57 siipp - ortell Corwin in bi g ' opposition to supplying American soldiers in Mexico with arms and provision —leaving thOm to the mercy of Mexican guerrilas,and that Hannibal Hamlin, a few days since, noted against the Homestead Bill, we pro pose the following banner for the supporters of the Chicago DOMIIICC . ---- - —-- A BRA It AMI LIMILiOLVI. ---,. f ,— . ., I notild welettin (twat [the Ameri can Roldirrs) with bloody hands to boa pitable graves." •.,_ - -- -- ---41! 011 .- Tftr • nareruss.eir I Eternal opposition to the Hotrie-_ , Mead BM —Taw Tratte."- DPATII OP Juton May 31. - Pester V, Daniel. Judge of the S. Suprb. Cut.rt., died in this city to•da7; Thi) Con' We re publish the questions to be animei ed in taking the census. If every citizen yots_cgqcctly informed ithr_tlation to the matter, it would not only lessen the labors and many difllmulties of the -marshals, but it %AM lead to a more nrrueate• result -- Ithrelofore many persons have iefrained frhin giying„correet answers to the questions asked them, under the Mistaken impression that it would read to an increase of taxation. This 'is not so. Correct, answers to all quegtions are very desiralff, as allowing by comparison the progress our country is making, not only population, but in every department of r industrial pursuits—agriculture, mann fahturea commerce, etc ,—the increase of the field, the mine, the shop, and of every othei• branch of industry that tends to devel -1 op our united national wealth end resources If all could be made to understand the int portance, in this respect, of correct answers, Stun aggregate wealth of our young nation, when summed up,lt•ould astonish the world Thelteit of Congress providing for the ta king of the census, makesit obligatory urn the manulactnter, farmer and all otl*rs, to impart to themitirshals all the information rc• quireil, end we ilontit not ingt our ritlzens, who have just reason to e h" proud of their stn listics, will s elkerrftilly and promptly I furnish the desired facts when"'ealled upon. To those vi he object to answer the interro gaTorien- on the t, , ronnil or not IN-I,lllllr, to ex pone the nature of their business, it is prop er to state that it is riot desired any 1 1'1(.1m:0nm which will he oath nr published 'nn concerning the rit e'rntions of any nn livid sal or concern The primary fachl are con thlentinlly received, nnd will only be 1 1 1, Ith.,hed in connection with, and ns n put of, 1' a great body of similar facts ft ,on it bid, it will be inipmoublo, to abstract or tit,' loglllol those of individual firing nr corporal iiMq The marshals will rommenre their wark on the Bret of Juno anti classes. 44net—fione el Alignst ; having allotted to tbto only the short spare of tv%fl 111 , 111014 to rornplrlr their lithors. They will aililregs you politely and we hope our citizens will .how that they cherish a nol tippre-intion of this matter by going prompt arid intelligent atom-. rit It, each nod every question propoomiled A refusal to do hii, through o him or caprice Riihkets the person so rertiirig to a penalty of 830 The marshals are the agents of the government, engaged in an important worti, ant they s ho u ld be rerpircd and I.Opt elyd accordingly by one and all In the first glare it is necessary to write down the name of every person whose usual place of abode on the first day of June, 1860, Was in the family • The Age of each, vex and color, whether white. black or mulatto. rr. , ft inn, nertupt ion or truly of each male person over fifteen years of Age Value of real estate owned Plare of birth, nagiing the State, Territory ( . 01113ry Married within fir vrar Attended school within the year Persona over twenty years of ago that can• not postl or vr rite Whither at it or dumb Mina. ine.ane or Idiotic, pauper or convict Name of owner, agent or manager of the farm Number of improved sorra Number of umtnpreved arres. Cash value of farm 'Value of farming impliments and ma cbmery. Live stork on hall(' June Ist, 1 g(71(1. viz • number of borsea twile. and as.e• oxen, mulch anus And Wher cattle, mvi me and sheep. Value of live stork Value of animals slaughtered during the year. Produce during the year ending June Ist. 18411, via Number of bushels of wheat, ryr, Indian corn, oats, beans and Less, buckwheat, barley. Irish potatoes ; pou•rds of wool arid pounds of tobacco Value of ore land products in dollars faillons of wine, value of products of mar ket garden, pounds of butter, pounds Of cheese, tons of hay, bushels of (lover seed, and bushels of grass seed. pounds of hops, pounds of flaa teed, pounds of ma ple sugar gallons of molasses pounds of hooey and boorwoo, r.{u• of home mad• noiroufactoren, Name of corporation, company or indi%id ual prod uririg article's to the annual rata of five hundred dollars. Name of business, manufacture or product Capital invested in real estate and perso nal estate in the liminess. Raw material used including fuel, viz . quantities, kinds, values, kind of motive power, machinery, structure or resource. Average number of hands employed, viz • male, female, average monthly cost Gr male labor, average monthly cost•of female labor 7 ,Annual product, viz. quantities, kinds values. Name of every person who died during ..thr.4e.a.Lasadiag..,Luxio.JA4.lB4o,..tetwass..taima... al place of abode was in the family, the age, sex and color, whether white Clack or mu latto. married or widowed, place of birth, naming the State, Territory or country, month in which the person died, profession, occupation or trade, disease or cause of death. In addition to these, there ■ee a number of other questions, the answers to which can be obtained now oven with little trouble. It is hoped tbaLevery parser, wbo sees this requeat, will, before the drat day of Juno, make out the answers, and in case of ab sence, leave it with the family, ready for the officer when he makes his appearance. CoNvicran. —Andrew McKinly, indicted for the murder of Thomas Shevland, was folind guilty of murder in the first degree, Jul the recent session held at Danville, Montour county, Hon. A. Jordan, presiding. The MoutourlAwerican says there wasno percept ible cnange in thocouutenance of the FM- I onwrAttring - the -rendition tif the - vordtert,-ifor yet when he arose to receive the sentence of death. When asked if he had anything to! ally why sentence of death shouldsnot be' pronounced upon him ; he shook his bead, and heard the dreadful doom with cool in-' difference. - • - - The prisoner waatben' Y rsmanded to the jell. within the y walls of "which he will bo executed. Ittio; from attn. otoontito JUNIATA COUNTY. —Mr. William Hartman, of ycringnaugh_ township—had_ _his left-arm brolum last week by afa 1. • e * Cabe, a resident of Altoona, and an ant ployee of the Pennsylvania Railroad Com. ' pang, while in the act of coupling cars in Patterson, on Friday 'morning. had Ida hand smashed by being caught between the cars * • " r " DnowNsn. —On Monday night last, Peter Getchkin, a young man from Catawiesa, while in a state of intoxication, was drowned in the" three mile level of the Wyoming Canal, about one mile abovo this borough. It appears from the evidence of a companion with whom Getcnkinwas walk ing, that he ran up the tow path, and cross tog a bridge, retraced his steps on the berm bank,' lie came down nearly opposite the point from which he suddenly diliappeared, and after taking of his obat anti over shirt, I plunged or -fillinto the canal and drowned without a struggle. Diligent search was made for the bddy during Tuesday and Wed• ncsdny, bucviithotit success. ()n 'Wednes day night the leis! was drain, and on Thursday morning hhe corpse was 'found i few feet from where it . e fatal occurrence had taken pines. An inquest was promptly held over the body, by James Bedford, ESq of Dena Haven, end on examination conducted by Drs. D. 1.. Frew), and It U. Littld, wound was found on the left ear, which was tuippmeil to have been produced by the fall The &erns, d atiubtleis drowned while nn• coliseums from the elfeci of the contusion received in Whig. The - vet dun of the jury way in accordance with the facts. riiKaTP.n COuNTY —finites STOLPN _,t horse belong' rig to (I Taggart, 111111, r at Ilitltown. Chester co , wlt'l qt(dell from the ! , t111,:e 011 Stiturday night ,(In Mniulay, au the thieves were (hiving out the Old Laiicai • ttr road, below the {Payne Tavern, they at ere Met by a gentleman, and thinking hinn to be looking . !'or the horse, Jumped nut t ,l' the in agon and ran The man at that timi bail uo i.leit that the horse had been atolcii Lot l 4 hell he w the action of the men, he ut orw, ~ iigrect,d them and took the animal haw at hen it vies soon ascertained t %stem, it 1,0",,g,d. • lb nay CouNTY.— A COUNTIMFLITER Alt James White, alum John T. MO o,othey, erupted at the elehUlliCrer House,. on Saturday night, at 11 o'clock, by P A .1.111114011, a ( ' unstahle (Mtn 0.3(0rd. ! ( ' Pavia, county, nn n charge of forgery on the ( ) Clued Bonk. Ile came to S•limacker . !louse on Thursday a•refl mg, but did nut car as hat into husille , o4 may, further than that hi , wanted to remnant for some time. Ile came with a hoi AP and sulker White is very tall and alim Man, being . about 0 feet 7 in in MovTGoVVIII COUNTY --klAmmorit t'titv - A rhw rented by Reuben *am of Chetten hani township, Montgomery county and by him mold to a byteher of Frankford k tiled a f. w tits ago fox market 8. fora sliughtering h she was weighed and drew seventeen hundred and ten pound; After being dressed she weighed ten hundred and three pounds, bring fifty nine to the hundred lire weight. She yielded one hundred and ninety six pounds of rough fat Her age was four veers, and she had been fattened nine months. Toe FASnION% Very wide sleeves ere still mach worn, though tight ones are quite fashionahle. For dresses or light fabric the sleeve , . are marls wide and very open or to large bnillions • -The skirts of these dreste, are ornamented with small flounces riot reaching higher than or knee, and bound with a shade of deo, colored taffetas. O lf eliw it.... is flovieeees wewookate ab►d. be the same as the flower! Skirts are also trimmed with one-wide flounce, headed by a pink ruche, with !hien other ruches at the both - ono(' the flounce. This Is a partlctiley ly chirmirig style, when thirache'is black. upon armlet, green or brown dress. Robes _made in iIICIGIM-a-laatowt --OW- he to say, with • point-- continue to be much tri favor for more dressy toilettes, especially ni tax . , - las. antique, which Is then ornamented welt elegant rostementro let en tabber• Saslool, shade of the same material is the dreg , ' Grp excerilitigly pretty. They are made welt. ■t the htitiom than at the waist, arid trtin met] round with a frill of plaiting• Reeorddig to the trimming of the dross. 11111 Poi.LoWINO is a ,'ample of the numer ()um letter,' rotislintly reeoictrig for Hoed ter '8 Stuniach Bitters : GANANumwA, July 15, 1559. Mess, s Ilustethr 4- Sonsth, Pittsbutgh Pa —Goan . As we are stranger'', I here with enclose you twenty eight dollars for four dozen Ilostetter'a Stomach „Bitters, which please ft rvrard via Michigan Southein Radioed, Toledo, Ohio, and Clayton Strtion I hove purchased several dozen bottles at Toledo this Summer, but the sale it on the increase so much that I wish to open a di. Po trade nub you. 1 was IndSeld to try out Batten by my physician, for the Liver t•umplaint, and received such material aid that I have recommended it to others and lime sold about Imo dozen per week for some time I have all kinds of medicine in my 'tire, but thi re is none that I can so cheerfully and truthfully recommend as your (titters, for I know they have helped ma bc• yowl my tap ctution Yours respectfully. MILO WILSON ('t'a'ils AND GIDDINGS —ale close identi fientioti of Mr. A. 0, Cuavrar, at Chicago, with Jusitu A. R. DD ING L14.141.1.C.t 41.1XISSir • welv64Bolwltifillttfrififriirs active efforts in the enuec of sectionalism is exciting no little re• mark, and no small amount. of indignation among our roniervative citizens. lie now presents himself before the people as anout and-nut Abolitionist of the moat ultra &shoo', and AN such asks the suffrages of the cow carve iv - e men of Pennsylvania. NVe are not mistaken in supposing that he will be indig- nantly r ebuked.- Pennsylvantan. AGAINta lit 9 PLAT/01141,—/111110iblii Ham lin, who a few days 151000 hal been placed upon a ptatform in favor'si 001:131.111.014 Lim ) by the Republteansfl 171111esgs, shows Inkspir - ora ion of thifrplank o f the Repo hit can platform last week, by voting AostNsr Johnson's bill to give every actual settler a home upon Me public domain. In Philadelphia, on Tuesday, &policeman named Wm, Kachenperger died from a sin gular cause ; To increase his muscular strength he was in the habit Of practising with dumb bells at the station house, while oft duty. On Monday he waluthua engaged. when from Willa!rot ormrni a. he i k toted an internal injury. The nest day he died from the effete of it. Fanotnow IN A COAL kltars. , —Tmum Lyrae Love.—Sottortim, Pe,lday46.--..ate•iplos i ion of Eire damp' 000ntiredyt is afternoon in the Scranton .unne, um kiabacre. Pa.— A eon of Mr. Broder* 0 Wee and Barry Edwards were killed. Aflotlw men wee in jumil by thr; explosion.