THE HUNTINGDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS, &C. Democratic party from the shame now sought to be put upon it, and bring its Conventions— State and National—back to the principles with which it can alone succeed, and without which it must forfeit its own self-respect, and the confidence of the country, we shall have performed a duty far more important to our country than if we had assisted to elect a President by false professions, or hurled our opponents out of power upon a sectional ap peal. How, then, shall we escape continued de feat, and how repair the shattered fortunes of our once proud and conquering organiza tion ? It is easy•to break down an Adminis tration or a party unworthy of trust; but to reconstruct such a fabric as will stand the ravages of time and the continued seige of an intelligent and vigilant antagonism requires the exercise of the loftiest patriotism. Let us address ourselves to this momentous task. We are here, not for negative declarations, but for positive and unequivocal action. In the first place, we assert that there can be no success in the future for the Democratic party, unless there should be an instant union against the aggressions of infatuated and treacherous public servants, and the exac tions of an imperious faction of Southern disunionists, who distinctly claim to control that party. No Convention, whether held at Charleston or at Cincinnati, can ever wield such influences with any hope of triumph for its candidates. We must arrest the tenden cies of parties and of power towards section alism. Above all, we must set our faces sternly and everywhere against the new and scandalous dernana that slavery has become the controlling power of the State; that it shall be elevated above all other property, and shall be forced into the Territories at the point of the bayonet. This is the practical question ; whether the people shall rule ac cording to that which was nominated in the bond—whether they shall control and regu late their own domestic institutions in their own way—or whether they are to remain the abject creatures of a Congressional majority, who, in defiance of law, shall sit in judg ment upon their acts, accepting them only as they come up to the new standard of in tervention for the benefit of slavery ? The principle of popular sovereignty and non-in tervention is cardinal and first with us. We can accept no candidate for any office who does not accept that without reservation, and we refuse to recognize any decree intended to ignore or to set aside this fundamental con dition. The address was signed by the commit tee, composed of the following named gentle men : I. W. S. Wiermart, Jas. Gilliland, S. C. Wingard, Samuel Ringwalt, S. E. Keller, Dan. Kistler, Jr., Geo. W. Nebinger, Samuel L. Young, E. N. Willard, John 11. Negley, Thos. P. Campbell, W. Whitton Redick, A. C. Noyes, John R. Breitenhael), John Flanagan, G. J. Higgins, Bailey Thomas, John W. Brown, T. W. Douglas, Wm. J. Hurlock, L. S. Cantwell, R. J. Nicholson, J. W. Forney, THE (LO B P,. Circulation—the largest in the county ~11~~113~~~~0~~~ ~~p Wednesday, April 27, 1859 LANKS BLANKS I BLANKS I CO7NSTABLE'S SALES, ATTACIPT EXECUTION'S, ATTACHMENTS, EXECUTIONS, SUMMONS, DEEDS, SUBP