NTINGDOY GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS, &C. THE HU THE GLOM. Cireztlation—the largest in the COWL( Wednesday, September 3, 1856 POR JAMES BUCHANAN, of Pennsylvania FOE NICE PRESIDENT, ;MIN C. BRECKINEIDGE, of Ky FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, GEORGE SCOTT, of Columbia couuty FOR AUDITOR GENERAL, JACOB FRY, Jr., of Montgomery co FOR suni - E - Yor, GENERAL, JOHN ROWE, of Franklin county DEIVIOCP..A.TIC COUNTY TICKET ASSEMBLY, NICHOLAS CRESSWELL, of Alexandria SIIERIFP, GRAFF - US 'MILLER, of Huntingdon. ASSOCIATE JUDGES. JOHN LONG, of Shirleysburg. JOHN CRESSWELL, of West. CO3ENIISSIONER, HENRY ZIMMERMAN, of Hopewell. DIRECTOR OF THE POOR, DAVID BARRICK, of Barree. AUDITOR, AUGUSTINE L. GRIM, of Huntingdon PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS = Charles R. Duchalew, IVII - - - mrin INrCandless DISTMICT. 1-oco. IV. Nebingcr, 13—Abraham Edinger, —Pierce Butler, 11—Reuben Wilber, 3—Edward Wartinan, L3—Ceorgo A. Crawford, 4—Win. 11. Witte, 10--James Black. s—Joh zi McNair, 17—H. .1. Stable, 6---job, N. Minton . , IS-401111 D. Roddy, 7—David Lanry, 19—Jacob Tllrmv, B—Charles Kessler. 20—.1. A. J. Buchanan, 9—James Patterson, 21—Wm. Wilkins, 10—Isaac danker, 22—James 0. Campbell, 11—F. IV. linghes. 23—T. Cunningham, 12—Thomas Osterhon h. 24--. john Kcatly, 23—Vincent Phelps. Democratic County Committee. William Colon. Chairman, Huntingdon, Pa Ferry Owens. Birmingham. tSitomel Bolliager,Cromwell Thomas Bell . Barree. Wm. Templeton, Orbisonia. John Porter. Alexandria. Jacob Mint. E , ;(1., William Taylor. Clay. Saninel McFeters, Tell. Caleb Greenland, Cass tavp. Jacob Cohort, Springliell. Geo. W. Speer. Cas , eriDe. David MOM Ea:: Ifuntinplon. Jacob Longoneeker, West. B. /haw(' Petrilcon, Thos. Ozbarn. dack , on. - - Jacob Jackson Fee. lienderson. ,Jacob Ilarneame. Porter. Dutton 31adden. Dully. Clio. It. Hunter. Petersburg. Simnel Eby, Mt. Union. 3. Vandevainler,Esq.Witilter Daniel Isenberg. Shirley 111. Jacob Grove. Fenn. J. G. Liglitm.r. 'Shirleyslitm.r. 11. Zimmerman, nopewell James Ch a I I erlaiu. Warrion,n:ark. THE. EA.TCHANAN PUG ATEOHIII. ‘• The Yederat Union—it nowt be prt,erved."—A.NDnEv. - J.!.CK4r)N'. —•• Disunion a word which ought vot to be breathed oioay:t fls. C. ?YU in a achinp••r. The zmrd cavidtobe consi6l - one of (11 . 6 - vllld wizen, and our altildrrn ...booty' be taught t7od it 1,7 so , ril, to proIIOIIIICC IN.:(II.INAti. Single copies of Tim GLonE clone up in wrappers can always be had at the office. Price 3 cents. Circulate " The Globe !" THE GLOBE Will be furnished to subscribers at the following rates : For three mend's. payment in advance, .. Cal 1, yea r We have hundreds - of readers in the coun ty who are not subscribers ! how many of these will send in their names? Since the first of August we have added the names of a good number of the most influential men in the county who have heretofore acted with the Whig party. We have room for at least one hundred more of the same kind, and for ail Democrats, Blaek Republicans and. Know Nothings who want correct information,— Send in your names. Don't depend upon borrowing from your neighbors. Our County Ticket We have received letters from every part of the county, assuring us that the ticket put in - nomination by the late Democratic County Convention, will receive the cordial support of every Democrat. The Old Line Whigs too, and here and there a Fremont and Fill more man, pleased with the character of the ticket, will . give it their votes. We have nev er known a ticket to be more acceptable to its party, or the voters generally, than the one put in nomination by the democracy.— That it will be elected, there can not he the least doubt. ONE or THE Fiturrs.—The Black Republi cans are partially successful in their business of creating disorder and panic throughout the country. The Pittsburg nion, says that one of the fruits of their factious opposition to the administration of the laws whereby they defeated the appropriation for the army, has just been evinced in the vicinity of Pitts burg. Over one hundred employees at the United States Arsenal were last week dis charged, and their work, though all-important to the Government, suspended because Black Republicanism to subserve its own ambitious schemes refuses the necessary supplies of our army. This is the beginning of the end they seek to attain. Revolution is threaten ed, and the practical movement toward it al ready commenced, Last week we gave notice of the receipt of a letter from John Ashman, Esq., intended. for publication. We give it below: Mr.. Ashman is one of the oldest citizens of Hun ti n g don vunty, and occupies a high position in the respect of all who know him.' Yet the vigor - with which he writes completely anni hilates the assertion of the " Journal" that his present political course is the consequence of doting old age 1 In his earlier days Mr. Ashman was a prominent man in our county, and took an active part in political affairs, but for some years past he had retired fromthe political field, or at least refrained from all political interference, contenting himself with the discharge of that duty incumbent upon every good citizen, of attending the polls and casting his vote *according to the dictates of conscience, of right, and of duty. His for mer political association was entirely with the opposition, and was twice elected to the Legislature by the Whigs of this county, but as "new occasions teach men new duties," Mr. Ashman was too honest and too patriotic -to allow his former prejudices to deter him from an open and fearless discharge of duty in the present political contest. This seems to have raised the ire of the piping scribblers down town, and to them the letter is direct ed. That all may perfectly understand the matter, we quote one of the Journal's 'flings to which Mr. Ashman replies : eel, r The last Globe parades the name of one John Ashman, of Clay tp., before its readers, as a converted Whig who now supports _Buchanan. This is cruel to Mr. Ashman, who is now as Shakespere says in " second childhood."— Besides this. Mr. Ashman is a native of , a Shire ,State and his proclivities therefore would naturally be for the "pecu liar institutions" of his native State. The Globes party is welcome to all such accessions. Mn. EDITOR their issue of the 20th inst. the Editors of the "Huntingdon Jour nal" have taken occasion to direct the pub lic attention toward me by a very personal and insulting paragraph under the caption, " Poor Old. Man." Coming from such a source, from parties whose reputation for slander is established, whose vituperations have no weight nor credence with the, public, and. fall harmless upon those whom they in tend to injure; I could well afford to pass this last illustration of impotent malice in silent contempt; but, as they have ventured to make an assertion which is false in fact, and which would tend to deprive me of an accidental honor in which I must confess I take some pride—it may be a weakness and an evidence of " second childhood" —I al lude to my having been born in Pennsylva nia, and. not in any existing slave State, as they would wish to insinuate ; I have thought it advisable to bestow a passing notice upon the scurrillous article in question. " Poor Old. Man." That lam poor is too true, but I have yet to learn that poverty can be charged to man as a crime, or that it is just ground for reproach, and with regard to my being old, I can only say, that, among manly and. true-minded men, old. age has ever been regarded as a passport to respect and consideration, never as an incentive to insult „ Ta i Tf T linve relameg. into "sec ond ehildishnes.s," I have at leas he satis faction of being accompanied by most of the high-minded and respectable men of the party to which I formerly belonged, and can solace myself with the refiection'that I was among the first old-line Whigs who joined the Democratic party from the conviction that it is the only party capable of preserving the federal union entire, and staying that torrent of abolitionism which now threatens to over whelm us with irretrievable disaster. My course has since been endorsed by Pratt, Pearce, Clay and a host of uncompromising Whigs, who, so long as there was a shadow of hope for the resuscitation of their party, stood manfully in the front ranks, fighting for their long-cherished principles, and resisting all encroachment. With such countenance and support I cannot well be disturbed by the petty but malignant attacks of the sapient editors of the Journal, who, like Pope and Pagan in Bunyan's allegory, sit• powerless within their den, grinding their teeth with rage and venting their spleen upon all pil grims who pass over to an opposing faith. That I am a native of a slave State is sim ply a falsehood,—l perhaps ought to have said an error,—but these gentlemen, are noten titled to any courtesy, whatever; they have themselves long abandoned all the amenities of controversy in their language and conduct towards others. Pennsylvania is my native State, and if these model editors wish to get rid of the falsity of their assertion by stating that Pennsylvania was a slave-holding State at the time of my nativity, then every " old man," " poor" or rich, who may have been born in this State at as early a date as my self, rests under the same imputation, which . they have endeavored to fasten upon me.— Upon the horns of this dilemma I leave them Impaled. S 50 Ild I have been a subscriber to the "Hunting don Journal" from its first advent before the public until within the last few months, but, having long been disgusted by the base per sonalities in which its editors are accustomed to indulge, added to the wavering political course which they have thought proper to pursue, I determined to cut the connection.— The Journal was established for the" advocacy of Whig principles, and when it deserted the Whig cause and ecame a purely abolition print, no true Whig could any longer consci entiously support it. I feel, Sir, that I am imposing upon your valuable space in giving refutation to the slanders of a paper so thoroughly contempti ble as the Journal, but I trust that your well known courtesy will induce you to conquer your repugnance on this occasion, as it is in behalf of a " poor old man" that your gener osity will be extended ; and I beg to assure you that I will not again be instrumental in rescuing either the editors or their wretched paper from that oblivion into which both it and they are fast falling. I am, Sir, very tinily yours, JOHN ASHMAN. Cf.Ar Tr., 2.5 th Aug., 1856. The Republican County Delegate Convention met. in this place on yesterday and put in nomination the following ticket : Asseruldy—Wm. P. Orld.-ion, Huntingdon. - Associate Judges—.Tottri Morrison, Shirley, and Jonathan McWilliams, Franklin. Sheriff•--John A, Doyle, Shirley. District Attorney—Theo. 11. eremer, Ilintingdon. Comnaissioner—James McCarthy, Director of the Poor—Peter Swoope, Iluatingdon. Surveyor—JaQ..E. Glasgow, Penn. .Itv4itor—Janies Crea, Dtiblitt. Letter from John Ashman, Esq. From the Huntingdon Journal Poor Old Dian. For the Huntingdon Globe The Itepublican Ticket. Were They Honest ? When. Know Nothingism started up, we ,denounced it as.a gross deception—ea scheme by which unprincipled demagogues - who had failed to accomplish their own purposes un der old party organizations, sought to rise to places of honor and profit. We contended • that the getters-up of that political pestilence were not honest, and did not themselves be lieve that our free institutions were endan gered by the Catholics and Foreigners living in our midst. Our impeachment of their honesty and sincerity gave them great offence, and they denounced us in fearfully wrathful terms for daring to question the purity of their motives, We maintain that they had given abundant evidence, of the impurity of their motives. They, says the Valley Spirit, professed to believe that genuine American principles and feelings were dying out under the baleful influence of "Catholicism and Foreignism," and they proposed to cure the stupendous evil by claiming for Americans the right to rule America—a right which no body disputes, and which none but Ameri cans, either native or adopted, can exercise. They filled the air with their clamor against Catholics and Foreigners, and plastered their papers all over with appeals to Americans to rally under the Know Nothing standard and defend their free institutions, the foundations of which were being sapped by "the Jesuits, the Irish and the Germans." What have they to say now on this subject? • Nothing! They silently acknowledge that their profes sions were false. They have dropped the Foreign and Catholic question, and raised the banner of Black Republicanism. Instead of leading their forces against a foreign ene my, they are marshaling them for an on slaught upon one section of our common coun try. The old war-cry of "Americans must rule America" is heard no more, save from a straggling adherent of Mr. FILLMORE. Kau• sas, bleeding Kansas, is now the burden of the song of the Know Nothing leaders. The Pope is no longer the great scarecrow he was a few months ago. The Border Ruffian has taken his place ! It is not Catholicism, but Slavery, that is spreading its dark -pall over our country ! It is the Missourians, not the Foreigners, that threaten to sap the foundations of our liberty ! What a wonder ful change a few short months have - wrought! Now as the FREMONT Know Nothings have shown by their abandonment of the princi ples of their order, that they were not honest in their attachment to the so-called "Ameri can" organization, how can they expect those whom they have so shamefully deceived to repose confidence in their present professions? If they magnified the dangers to be appre hended from "Foreignism and. Catholicism," as is confessed by their abandonment of those issues, what ne placed. on the Traneas stories they are now retailing with such hearty good will ? Are the people will ing to follow these corrupt demagogues through all their tortuous windings? Are the people willing to change their principles every three months, simply because certain ambitious "leaders" find it convenient to change theirs? Those leaders abandoned the old parties to which they belonged, be cause, as they said,- those parties were cor rupt. Sensible people laughed at the idea of these political prostitutes abandoning a party on account of its corruption, but that was their allegation: They went to work to build up a new party—a pure party—one that would restore "the purity of the early days of the Republic." By lying and cheat ing they triumphed in 1854, but in spite of their lying and cheating they were beaten in 1855 ; and now, in 1856, nine-tenths of them in the Northern States have abandoned the platform they stood on in 1855, and instead of crying out against Catholics and Foreign ers, their voice is raised against the South, that portion of the Union in which Wnsunce- TON -vas born, and lived, and died and was buried. Before the nomination of FitEnto:%.er, their cry was "Americans must rule Ameri ca;" but now the ilfHeans have risen to the first importance, and the white men - who com pose the army of the United States are to be thrown out of employment because the Presi dent, their commander-in-chief, will not so dispose the army as to promote the abolition disunion purposes Of GREELEY and GIDDINGS. If these renegade leaders—renegades first from the Democratic and Whig parties, (principally the latter,) and secondly from the "American" or Know Nothing party— we say if these renegade leaders are soundly beaten, as they assuredly will be, at the ap proaching elections, they will again "turn a short corner" - and be found advocating some principle or measure not embraced in any platform heretofore laid down by any politi cal party. Will the people follow them ? Will sober-minded farmers, mechanics and laboring men dance to any tune these dema gogues may play? In 1852, when many of these same leaders were endeavoring to se cure the Irish and the Catholic vote for GOD. SCOTT, the tunes they played were "Erin Go Bragh" and "St. Patrick's Day in the Morn ing." Two years later, when engaged in an unholy crusade against Foreigners and Cath olics, their favorite airs were "Yankee Doo dle" and "Hail Columbia." At present they play "Old Dan :Tucker" and other popular Ethiopian melodies. Traitors to the party to which they belonged prior to 1854, and traitors to the party which they formed in that year, they will doubtless, a year hence, he traitors to the party they are now leading against the Constitution and the Union. Can it be possible the rank and file of the opposition to the Democracy are so blind that they can be led from one political mon strosity to another, by the unprincipled poli ticians who led the Know Nothing party last year and are leading the negro or 2zotking party in this campaign ? Is there not virtue,. and honor, and manliness and independence enough in the ranks of the opposition, to drive out the self-constituted leaders and re store the party to the respectable position occupied by our opponents when most of them were proud to call themselves Whigs? Or have the rank and file, like the leaders, made up their mind to Africanise the Union or let it slide? They must answer at the polls. From the Chambersburg Talley Spirit. WAS PREMONT A CATHOLIC ? Did he or did ho not eat Mule meat on Friday:- The dispute between the FILLMORE and FREMONT papers in relation to the religion of the Black Republican candidate for the Pres idency, which had partially subsided, has broken out afresh and is carried on with re newed vigor. When we last referred to the subject, we thought the woolly horse was in a fair way to get clear of his Catholic rider. But the rider holds on and plies the scourge and steel to the lacerated sides of the affright ed Rocky mountain nag. It is in vain that the friends of FREMONT deny his Catholicism. The FILLMORE men are piling up the proof mountain high, that FREMONT was a Catholic, and that if he is not one now, he has chang ed his religion, as well as his politics, to suit the circumstances by which he is at present surrounded. This restless adventurer seems to be ready for anything. By challenging Hon. HENRY S.' FooTE to mortal combat, he showed a disposition to imbrue his hands in the blood of a brother Senator. By purchas ing breeding cows for his own use in Califor nia, with funds belonging to the government, he showed a laxity of morals that is not gen erally regarded as a qualification for the Pres idency. By changing his fire-eating South Carolina political proclivities, which led him to vote with ATCHISON and SOULE, and other extreme Southern Senators, against DOEOLAS and others who arc denounced as " slavery extensionists,"—he has shown that the polit ical opinions he so vehemently professed were, like the woolly covering he now wears, only skin deep. And by deserting the religion of his father, the religion of his youth and the religion of his manhood, he has proved to the world his willingness to sacrifice what all mankind hold most dear. And to what end has he discarded his politics and his religion? T 6 the end that he may be elected President of the United States, and from the _Mansion appropriated to the use of the Chief Magis .trate"may spit upon Pic grave of 1V Aslum - GroN, as GREELEY spits upon every platform which recognizes the rights of that section of the Union to which the Father of his Country belonged ! 'When it was first charged that FREMONT was either a Catholic or a renegade from the Catholic faith, our neighbors of the Reposi tory and Transcript fired up at once and came down with a flat contradiction of the charge. They are now confronted by a witness whose testimony it will not do for them to undertake to discredit. Who that witness is, they will find by reading the following from the Phil adelphia Daily News, the leading FILLMORE Know-Nothing paper in Pennsylvania. We copy from the News of Wednesday, August 90 Important Testimony PROVING PRE/lONT TO /3E A ROMAN CATHOLIC ! The following Letter from the Hon. Nathan Sargent, well known as Oliver Old School to our readers, we find in the Boston Ledger of the 15th. Col. Russell, whose testimony is here given, is a close personal friend of, and an old companion-in-arms with Fremont.— We can hardly conceive how anything can be offered of a more conclusive character on the precise point of Fremont's Romanism:— We give it without further comment: WASHINGTON, August 2cl, 1850. A. B. Ear, Esq.—Dear Sir : I have your note of the 28th july,, inquiring where Col. William Russell, of Missouri, resides or may be addressed, and asking me what he has said, or will say, in reference to Col. Fre mont's religious opinions ? Col. Russell's residence is at Harrisonville, Cass county, 1110. ; but I am informed that he is at present in Baltimore on a visit. Col. Russell is a man who will say what he has said ; and he has said to me that Colonel Fremont was a Catholic when hewas in Cal ifornia. I spent an evening with Col. R. at Brown's Hotel two or three weeks ago, and knowing that he had been much with Col. F. in California, and on very intimate terms with him, I asked him if he knew anything of Col. Fremont's religious views at that time ? He replied that lie did ; that he was with him a great deal, and in fact might say that he had slept under the same blanket with him for eight months. I then asked him what Col. F. was ? He replied, a Cath olic. I asked him if he was sure of this ? " Perfectly," he said ; and then added, " Col. Fremont won't deny that he was a Catholic ; every body there so understood it, and he made no secret of it." Further conversation occurred between us on the subject, but this is the sum and sub stance of it. I asked him if I might refer to this conversation and use his name ? He re plied, "certainly; you are at liberty to do so." But he again said, COL. FREMONT WILL NOT DENY THAT HE WAS A CATHO LIC." Col. Russell, you may not be aware, was Col. Freinont's principal witness on his trial before the Court Martial. Should Col. Fre mont deny over his own signature that he was a Catholic when in California, I presume Col. Russell will then speak for. himself. Col. R. is an old, ardent, personal friend of Henry Clay, with whose family his own is connected,' his daughter having married Mr. Clay's grandson. I am, very truly, Your obedient servant, N. SARGENT. What have the Simon Pure Know Noth ings and the Black Republican Know-Noth ings of Huntingdon county, who hate "Po eery" as the devil hates holy water, to say nowt It is plain as daylight that they have been cheated. With their vows against Cath olics fresh on their lips, they have been du ped into the support of a " minion of the Pope?' Our Democratic friends can enjoy a hearty laugh at the awkward predicament of their Pope-hating opponents. Passage of the Army Appropriation Bill. From the Philadelphia Daily .Argus we learn that the House on Saturday, under a call of the previous question, passed the Ar my Appropriation bill by a vote of 99 to 77, with the amended Kansas proviso. It was sent to the Senate, when on motion of Mr. Hunter, the proviso was stricken out—yeas 2G, nays 7. The bill then passed and was returned to the House, and the question then being on concurring in the amendment of the Senate, it was agreed to—yeas 101, nays 97. The bill thus passed, and both Houses subsequently, at 3.1 o'clock, adjourned sine die. The attention of the whole country was but recently called to the extraordinary spec tacle of a' continued and threatening dis agreement between the House and the Senate. The lower branch of Congress announced the position that they had a right to direct the President in his discretion as Command er-in-Chief. They insisted that the army should not be paid or maintained unless the Senate would unite with the factious major ity of the house in a double usurpation—a usurping control over the Legislature of Kan sas, and a usurping intrusion upon the func tions of the Executive. The action of the House, had it been submitted to by the Sen ate, would have constituted a most revolu tionary, disorganizing, and dangerous prece dent. Be the laws of Kansas as bad as they may, two wrongs never make a right; and it was no proper method of redressing grievan ces that one co-ordinate branch of the gov erment, cotemporarily refusing all offers of conciliation and accommodation from. any quarter, should attempt to paralyze the con stitutional powers of the other branches. The fact is that the Black Republican ma jority in the House did not wish the laws of Kansas to be repealed. Two or three of the hasty and ill-considered enactments of the Kansas Assembly furnish these agitators with fuel for electioneering excitement. They refused to pass the Senate Bill which did away with these laws, and provided for com plete pacification. But the Republican Par ty are trying to elect Fremont, solely by the Kansas dodge. If they lost this all their thunder - would be gone. They then are bu sily engaged in keeping up the Kansas troub les. They wish these Kansas Laws to stand on her statute book until Fremont is elected and they are in power. All honor to the Senate for its noble stand. It has proven itself to be a sheet anchor to the ship of State. Its firmness has.glorious ly triumphed. The factious majority in the House yielded at last to the Constitutional stand of the Senate—and the co-ordinate _De partments of the National Government still move in their proper orbits. Planks front the Black Republican Plat- For the benefit of the Black Republicans who are unacquainted with their platform, we annex some of the planks which compose it. Read them, and then say whether the object of the leaders of the Republican par ty is to dissolve the Union or not: Ist Plant,-.—"lf peaceful means fail us, and we are driven to the last extremity where ballots arc useless, then we'll make bullets effective." [Tremendous applause.)—Hon. Erastus Hopkins. 2nd Plant,:.—"l detest slavery, and say un hesit7.tingly that I am ,in favor of its aboli tion by some means, if it sends all the party organizations in the Union and the Union it self to the Devil. If it can only exist by holding millions of human beings in the most abject and cruel system of slavery that ever cursed the earth, it was a great pity that it was ever formed, and the sooner it is dissoly ed the better."—H. If. Addison. 3d Plunk.--" Was it not that the only hope of the slave was over the ruins of this gov ernment, and of the American church—the dissolution of the Union was the abolition of slavery ?"—Stryhen C. Foster. 411 i Plank. --"A great many people raise a cry about the Union and Constitution, as if the two were identical; but the truth is, it is the Constitution, that has been the fountain and father of our troubles. Shame's Rifles are better than Bibles."—.Thmry TT and Beech er.. sth Plank.--" Remembering he was a slave holder, he could spit upon Washington, (hiss es and applause.) The hissers, he said, are slaveholders in spirit, and every one of them would enslave him if they had the courage to do it. So near to Fancuil Hall and Bun ker Hill, was he not permitted to say that that SCOUNDREL, Geo. Washington, had en slaved his fellow men?"—C. L. Remond, Black Republican Orator at Fanelli' Hall. 6th Plank.—"lt is the duty of the North, in case they fail in electing a President and a Congress that will restore freedom to Kan sas, to revolutionize the government,"---Res olution of a Black Republican meeting in Wis consin. 7th Plank.—"l pray daily that this accur sed Union may be dissolved, even if blood have to be spilt."—Black I?cpblican clergy man at Poughkeepsie, Bth Plank.—" We are northern men, and we have a Senator in Congress. lam for having every man go armed, and if he is as sailed, shoot down his opponent."—Mr. Brew ster's speech at Paneuil Hall. 9th Plank.—The following resolution was adopted at a meeting of Black Republicans at Monroe, Green county, Wisconsin, on :the 31st: "Resolved, That it is the duty of the North, in case they fail in electing a President, and a Congress that will restore freedom to Kan sas, to revolutionize the government." 10th Planlc.—"l have said, and take this occasion to repeat, that rather than consent that the curse of human chattledom should be taken into Kansas and Nebraska, I would prefer to see the political elements crumble into dissolution."—Cleveland Leader. 11th Plank.--"We earnestly request that Congress, at its present session, do take such initiatory measures for the speedy, peaceful and equitable dissolution of the Union, as the exigencies in the case may require."— Black Republican.. 121 k Planlc.—".At a recent Black Republi can meeting in .Auburn, Fred. Douglas said, form. among other things, that it was the duty of every slave to cut his master's throat." 13th Plank.—"l almost hope to hear that some of their lives (emigrants to Kansas) have been sacrificed, for it seems as if noth ing but that would rouse the Eastern States to act."—Cor. of New Fork Tribune,. 14th Plank.—"l sincerely hope a civil war may soon burst upon the country. I want to see American slavery abolished in my day —it is a legacy I have no wish to leave to my children; then my most fervent prayer is that England, France and Spain may speedily take„ this slavery accursed nation into their special consideration; and when the time ar rives, for the streets of the cities of this 'laud of the free and the home of the brave' to run with blood to the horses' bridles."—lF. O. _ luth Plank.—"l look forward to the day when there shall be a servile insurrection in the South—when the black man,, armed with British bayonets, and led on by British 04- cers, shall assert his freedom., and wage a war of extermination against his master—when the torch of the incendiary shall light up the towns and cities of the South, and blot out the last vestige of slavery ; and though I may not mock at their calamity, nor laugh when their fear cometh, yet I will hail it as the dawn of a political millenium."—Joshua R. Giddings. I.6th, Plank.—"No man has a right to be surprised at this state of things. It is just what we (Abolitionists and Disunionists) have attempted to bring about. There is merit in the Republican party. It is the first SECTIONAL party ever organized in this coun try. It does not know its own ficc, and it calls itself national; but it is not national— it is sectional. The Republican party is a party of the North pledged against the South." —Wendell Phillips. The sixteen planks represent the sixteen States represented in the Black Republican Convention, at Philadelphia. Having given the planks, we will now give a few of the shingles. Shingles ! 1.91 Shingle.—"l have no doubt but that the free and slave states ought to be separa ted."—N. Y. Tribune. 2cl. Shingle.—"l have great hopes of the overthrow of the Union."—Rcz•. T. Ross. 3d. Shingle.—" The North must separate from. the South and organize her own insti tutions on a sure basis."— if L. Garrison. 4th, Shingle.—" The Union is not worth supporting in connection with the South." Horace Greeley. sth Shingle.—"ln the case of the alterna tive being presented of the continuance of slavery or a dissolution of the Union, am for dissolution, and I care not how quick it comes.'"--Rryit,s. P. Spalding. Shingle.—"On the action of this con vention depends the fate of the country; if the Republicans fail at the ballot box, we will be forced to drive back the slaveocracy with fire and sword."---James Watson Webb. ith Shingle.—"l hold it to be an everlast ing disgrace to sh oot at a man and not hit hi m." —Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. Bth. Shingle.—"l am in favor of going to Kansas, and using fire arms to kill the ras eals,"—Rev. Mr. Brewer. 011 t Shingle.—"l am willing to go to Kan sas, either as a captain or private. I would use Sharpe's rifles, and fire with good aim." —Rev. Mr. Lovejoy. 10111 Shingle.—"l am in favor of letting this accursed Union slide."—Y. P. Banks, 81ue1,7 Republican Speaker qf Congress.. 11171 Shingle.—•" The American Union is a lie. The Constitution of the United States is a covenant with death and an agreement with Ifell !"—Nrilliam Lloyd Carraon. 121 k Shingle.—" Before 1 would sec popu lar sovereignty wrested by force from the people of the Territories, (referring -to the determination of the authorities to enforce obedience to the laws,) I would have the plains silent with 'universal death. Before 1 would have the lips of our Senators and Rep resentatives sealed in craven silence by the hand of Southern violence, (referrinc , to the castigation bestowed upon. Sumner by Brooks for personal, not political, reasons,) I would see the halls of Congress ankle deep in blood !" —Black Republican print at Detroit. 13th Shingle.—"We haze no faith in the resolutions passed by large meetings, and believe that paper resolutions would do no good unless rammed down the barrel of a gun with powder and ball."—Emigrant Aid Society. • DtElJf our Black Republican neighbors want any more planks and shingles, they can have them. Plenty more of the, same sort on baud. We advise them never to say `platform" again. Their platform alarms the people like a fire bell in the night. na;Francis A. Hoffman, the native of Prussia whom the Know-Nothings have nomi nated for Lieutenant Governor of Illinois, is not eligible to the office, according to the Con stitution of the State, because he has not been fourteen years a citizen of the United States; because he is doubtful whether he ever completed his naturalization ; and be cause he is not 35 years of age, he himself having sworn that he was born on the Bth of July, 1822. This attempt to foist an ineligi ble foreigner into office, and to obtain the German vote thereby, is altogether character istic of the indecent union of sham Ameri-. canism and sham Republicanism. Proceedings of Town Council. SEPTE3II3ER Ist, 1856. The House met at the usual place. Present:—Assistant Burgesses—Thomas Fisher, John Simpson. Town Council—Messrs. Cornpropst, Grafi us, Lower, Snyder and Westbrook, Mr. Fisher in the Chair, The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. The committee on the proposed Muddy Ittiln culvert made report, when, on motion, the proposition of the proprietors of the llun 7 tingdon Mill property, and proprietors of West ITuntingdon, in relation to the construe :: tion of said culvert was rejected. The com-.- mittee was discharged, An order was granted in favor of Elisha. Shoemaker, for $20,38 for lumber furnished, and two orders in favor of John Simpson, amounting to $14,64 for labor done, and lum ber furnished the borough in 18,55. The committee on the extension of Mont gomery street was continuel, Robert Stitt applied for a reduction of the yaluation of his property—when after con, sideration, the house refused to grant any abatement. Adjourned. 3. SIMPSON AFRICA, Sec'y. t 11 little boy, writhing under the tortures of an ague, was told to take a powder. which his mother had provided for him. "Powder! powder!" said he. raising himself on one elbow, and putting on a smsle; "mother. I ain't a gun!"