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FOR PRESIDENT, STITIII-P,_\: A DOLGLAS. DEMOCRATIC STATE NOMINATION. FOR GOVERNOR, _i .. .. 3 --1 1\RY D q'CV -1 _,R ____l OF WESTMORELAND The "Constitutional Union Conven tion," (so called,) met at Baltimore on Wed nesday last. Delegates were present from nearly all the States. The lion. Washington Hunt, of New York, was chosen temporary Chairman, and was afterwards appointed per manent President. lion. Joseph R. Inger soll, of Philadelphia, represented Pennsylva nia in the list of Vice Presidents. The whole of the first day's session was taken up with preliminary matters. On Thursday morning, a preamble and resolution were passed setting forth that plat forms are calculated to mislead and distract the people and occasion sectional divisions, and declaring the Constitution, the Union, and the enforcement of the laws, to be the only platform recognized by the body. The Convention then voted for a candidate for President, the first ballot resulting as follows: Houston, 57 I Bell, 6Si4 Everett, 25 McLean, 22 Graham, 22 Sharkey, 6 Crittenden, 28 Botts, Whole number of 'FMCS, Necessary to a choice, On the second ballot, Hon. John Bell, of Tennessee, received 141 votes, and was de clared nominated. Hon. Edward Everett, of Massachusetts, was nominated for the Vice Presidency, after which the Convention ad journed sine die. The Chicago Convention. The Republican Convention meets in Chi cago to-day. It will be largely attended by outsiders. Several delegations from this State, almost unanimous for Cameron, passed over the Pennsylvania Railroad on Sunday and Monday. It is impossible to guess, with any degree of correctness, who will receive the Republican nomination. The friends of Seward will push his claims, and will not be satisfied with the nomination of any other.— The nomination of Bell, by the Constitution al Union party, has considerably confused the chances of the several gentlemen who have been looking for a nomination at Chi cago. TRUNDER FROM TILE SOUTH!—The Democ racy of the whole South are incensed at the action of the Disunionists at the Charleston Convention, and are already actively at work manifesting their displeasure by holding pub lic meetings in almost every city and princi pal town throughout these States. At St. Louis, Missouri, on Friday of last week, an immense meeting was held, at which the se cessionists were unsparingly denounced, and a salute of 153 guns was fired in honor of that number . of Delegates who voted for Ste phen A. Douglas ! Missourians now pledge that State for the "Little Giant" by 20,000 majority. LOUISIANA SPEAICIIsTG I—The people of the South have already begun the good work of repudiating the action of their Delegates who seceded from the Charleston Convention.— The meeting alluded to in the dispatch below, is said to have been one of the largest and most enthusiastic political gathering ever held at New Orleans. Read: ANTI-SECESSION MEETING IN NEW ORLEANS. A mass meeting was held here last evening to denounce the secession movement at Charles ton: It was resolved to regard all as ene mies who attempted to produce a separation of the States. KEEP IT BEFORE TEE PEOPLE !—lt is a fact that should be constantly kept before the people, that Stephen A. Douglas, after the bolt of the Disunionists, had, on every ballot cast in the Charleston Convention, a clear ma_ jority of about FIFTY VOTES OVER, ALL THE OTHER CANDIDATES COMBINED! And yet this is the man the traitors and Disunion ists tell us must be withdrawn in order to conciliate a handful] of reckless, corrupt and unprincipled office-holding demagogues. ANOTHER POLITICAL MOVESIENT.-A large meeting of the friends of General Houston, from all parts of the Union, was held at the Metropolitan Hotel, New York, on Friday evening last. The Baltimore, Charleston, and other National party Conventions, were represented, and the determination expressed that the people shall make their own choice for President.. Goggin, Rives, NEW ORLEANS, May 9. Southern Sentiment. [From tho Pennsylvanian.] We 'find nowhere in the South, save in a few journals of the fire-eating class, the slight est disposition to justify or excuse the action of the Southern Delegates, under the leader ship of Mr. Wm. L. Yancey and others, in seceding from the Democratic National Con vention at Charleston. The secession is held to have been wholly uncalled for, and meas ures are already on foot in most of the States to sand new aad more national men to repre sent the sentiment of the South in the ad journed Convention at Baltimore. The Mo bile Register of May Ist speaks of the action of the seceders as follows : RAsn Couusaas.—The latest news from Charleston an nounces that the delegations of five other States have as sumed the fearful responsibility, without the warrant in struction, to join the States of Alabama mid Mississippi in arraying themselves against the sentiment of the .Vemo craticparty and against the convictions or judgment of Vir ginia., North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri—all the border States, their tier of Southern States most ex posed to Northern aggression, and which must bear the brunt of the battle, if battle there be. If this is not " pre cipitating the cotton States into a revolution," it is be cause the people will not second the desperate moves which the mortified pride of injudiciously committed poll ticians has inspired. - These gentlemen will have to return and give an account of their stewardship to their constitu encies. What the decision of the people will be, no cool headed man will doubt for a moment. Coor. IMPUDENCE.—The Ebensburg Demo crat & Sentinel is very anxious to get the Lit tle Giant of the West out of the way of the Disunionists of the South. Ilear its cool im pudence: "Let Stephen A. Douglas withdraw from the contest, and allow a conservative statesman, acceptable to both wings of the party be nominated for President at Balti more. If he is a patriot he 'will do this. If he is a dem agogue ho will remain in the field." When the Democracy of the Democratic party are willing to make mud-sills of them selves, the editor of the D. & S. may expect to be gratified, by a submission to the will of the fire-eaters, but not before. SOUTHERN SENTIMENT.—We find nowhere in the South, save in a few journals of the fire-eating class, the slightest disposition to justify or excuse the action of the Southern Delegates, under the leadership of Mr. Wil liam L. Yancey and others, in seceding from the Democratic National Convention at Charleston. The secession is held to have been wholly uncalled for, and measures are already on foot in most of the States to send new and more national men to represent the sentiment of the South in the adjourned Convention at Baltimore. JUDGE BLACK'S HOM E.—The following, from the Somerset Democrat, a paper that has had, until very lately, the name of Judge Black at its mast-head for the Presidency, is a com plete sunzmerset from its former opinions: "That Hon. S. A. Douglas was entitled to the nomina tion, after receiving 152 1 /, votes—a majority of the whole Convention—no candid and lair-minded person will deny. Mr. Douglas is undoubtedly the choice of nine-tenths of the Democratic party ;Vora and Soutit, and all attempts to op pose their will must prove unavailing in the end. As to the seceders, we have but to say a word. We are right glad that they left, for they were, for the most part, tricksters and fire-eaters, and of no possible use to any party. Their seats will be filled by sound Union Demo crats, and they will find themselves rebuked by their own constituents." THE Tatum—A bill passed the House on Thursday last, by a vote of 105 yeas to 64 nays. All the Democratic members from this State voted for the bill. Tie 'bill gives very general satisfaction. It may possibly pass the Senate. Jae— We see it announced in the Pittsburgh Press, that President Buchanan has appoin ted R. Bruce Petrikin a Judge for Utah Ter ritory. If true, God save the Mormons. From Chicago [Special Despatches to "The Press."l CEIICAGO, May 13, 1860. THE CITY OF CHICAGO. There is no city in the Union better suited for Convention purposes than Chicago. it is easily reached by railroad from all parts of the Union, and its hotel accommodations are second to those of no other city. THE CITIZENS ENTERTAINING THE DELEGATES Most of the delegates and many of the out side visitors who have arrived are being en tertained by private families, who, with a gen erosity in striking contrast with the sharp practice of Charleston, have undertaken to provide accommodations for large numbers of the strangers free of charge. Democrats are vicing with Republicans in extending ci- Ntities. TUE EXCITEMENT COMMENCING. There is intense excitement here. Most of the delegates have arrived, and the friends of each candidate aro actively urging his claims. VIE OUTSIDE PRESSURE. The largest outside pressure is from the West, particula'rly from Ohio and Illinois, whilst New York and Pennsylvania are both well represented, independent of their res pective delegations. THE FRIENDS OF WIL.H. SEWARD. Wm. H. Seward is being earnestly pressed for nomination by the shrewdest and richest politicians in the Republican party. His principal manager is Thurlow Weed, whose hand is seen in almost every , movement made so far. The opponents of the New - York statesman fear and dread Weed's power. TUE CHANCES OF N. P. BANKS. The nomination of Bell and Everett is be ing quietly used against Seward by the friends of Gov. Banks, of Massachusetts, who assert that it is necessary to place a man on the track like Banks, who has been identified with Americanism, in order to carry Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and even New York. They point to the fact that a part of the Republican tick et was defeated in New York by the Ameri cans last fall as nn evidence that if Seward, or any other man who has Been opposed to that party is nominated, the vvfiole American vote will be thrown against him, and the Em pire State thus be lost to the Republicans. THE PENZ:SYLVANIA DELEGATION. Most of the Pennsylvania delegates, par ticularly those from west of the mountains, are already here. Hon. Andrew G. Curtin, the Republican candidate for Governor, and A. K. McClure, the chairman of the Repub lican State Central Committee of Pennsylva nia, are also hero. It is understood that Cur tin and his friends will be satisfied with the nomination of Simon Cameron, but if this cannot he accomplished I think they would prefer Bell, of Tennessee, with a Republican on the ticket for Vice President.. They say that if Douglas is nominated at Baltimore it is very doubtful whether Pennsylvania , could be carried against, him, even by a combination of all the opposition votes in the State. SENVA.RD THE STRONGEST CANDIDATE. The friends of Seward are the most san guine, and confidently count on his nomina tion from the sixth to the twelfth ballot.— They complain bitterly of the course which is being pursued by those opposed to him, declaring that they are not actuated by a de sire to make a nomination which will pro dace harmony in the party, but only by a de termination to defeat him. They charge further, that packed delegations have been made up from Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky, and Missouri, for this purpose.— ILis however, they look upon as certain, claiming Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and a part of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, at an early stage of the ballotings. DATES AND WADE Bates has very little strength, and will not be kept long in the field by Missouri. His friends are then counted upon for Senator Wade, of Ohio, who is looming up as a for midable candidate. If Seward is not nomi nated, Wade will be. His friends seem to have a good understanding with the Banks men of New England, and it is certain he can control a majority of the Ohio delegation, though the Sewardites, who seem to be the only opponents he has, say that McLean and Governor Chase's friends will never submit to his nomination. TILE DEIIOCRACY INTERESTED The Demodrats are using considerable in fluence in favor of Seward. They say that they will carry Illinois for Douglas by a large majority if he is nominated, no matter who the Republican nominee may be, but they re gard Seward as the weakest man who can be put up against Douglas in the Middle States. Their indignation is great at the treatment of their favorite at Charleston, and you may rely upon it that there will be thousands of the Western Democracy at Baltimore to see that the " Little Giant" has fair play. TEE PLATFORM. The Philadelphia platform of 1856 will un doubtedly be reaffirmed. Pennsylvania will try to get a strong tariff plank in to help them at home, and it is rather probable that this will be accorded to them. Comments of the Democratic Press on the Charleton Convention. [From the St. Louis Republican.] From the very hour of the meeting of the Convention, nothing can be clearer than that there was an organized conspiracy, on the part of the politicians and office-holders, to defeat Mr. Douglas for the Presidency at all hazards. We say this IV:_3 palpable before, at the time of, and in every act of the minor ity of the Convention up to the moment of the secession ; and yet, in the face of this combination, there was not a period when Mr. Douglas was not the choice of the ma jority, and when that majority was not able, on a square vote, to beat down all opposition. The Yancey platform, which looked to a slave code, and the re-opening of the African slave ; trade, was voted down by a deAded majority ; and finally, an addition to the Cincinnati platform was adopted, which ought to have' satisfied any conservative and Union-loving man in the Convention or in the country.— But union and harmony on such a basis was not what was wanted by the enemies of Mr. Douglas, and instead of yielding, in true Democratic style, to the will of the majority, they left the Convention, awl took up a posi tion on the outskirts to see what further mis chief could be done. The balloting commen ced, and of the two hundred and fifty-three delegates still present, Mr. Douglas on every vote received a large majority over all others combined. He not only had this majority as the Convention was actually constituted, but upon one of the ballots he received 1521 votes, being an actual majority of all the votes in the Convention when full. He not only had these majorities, but he obtained them in the face of desertions on the part of office-holders and others who, it is notorious, were elected for their voluntary pledges in his favor, but who were afterwards bought up and paid to oppose him. This is Mr. Douglas' position ,before the country. He is the choice of the •people for the Presidency. There is not a man in the Union who can command a greater Demo cratic strength in any single State than Mr. Douglas. He will be readeinlinitely stronger by the efforts of the minority in this Conven tion to destroy him. lie stands before the country now in an attitude when every true Democrat should come up to his support, at the same time that a proper rebuke may by this means, be administered to the disunion ists of the South. That faction do not want his election, for the simple reason that it will preserve the Union, by putting down Black Republicanism in the North and secession at the South. The nomination of Douglas, if delayed at Charleston, ought to be consum mated at Baltimore ; and to this end the watch-fires of patriotism should be lighted all over the land. The public will should not be cheated in this way, but meetings should be held in cities and towns and counties all over every State, and such a voice should go up as will strike terror into the hearts of those who have been guilty of these gross outrages upon the party, and who yet threat en the severance of the Union. There is no time to be lost, and every good citizen should join the work. At this hour Mr. Douglas is the representative man of the people, and they ought to see that he is put into the Pres idency regardless of all opposition. [From the Augusta (Ga.) Constitutionalist.] Oh, yes, let us have protection, or dis member the party, for protection will people with Southern planters the sandy wastes of the great American desert, crown with vine yards the earth-bare slopes of the Rocky mountains, and be justthe thing for the South when Greenland is annexed to the Union. Now what is our future ? The National Convention has adjourned to meet in Balti more on the 18th of June, and those who re signed their seats in that body, will have their places filled with men who will repre sent the States. As we have said, the action of the bolting delegates has defeated their own prime pur pose, which was the nomination of a South ern man. We went to Charleston prepared to vote for Mr. Douglas, if ho was the choice of the majority, and to support him if nomi nated—but almost sure that he would not be, and that a Southern man would be. The certainty now points the other way, for Mr. Douglas has got rid of the factionists, and having received one hundred and fifty-two votes, which is a majority, he is, by the usage i of the party, entitled to be nominated by two thirds. We now believe that the nominee of :the party in, National Convention, and the • ,next President of the United States, -will .be Ste phen A. Douglas, of Illinois. ' [From the Louisville (Ky.) Democrat.) These opponents of Douglas - - have been mistaken all the while in his strength." ."Their blind hatred misleads them so that.they can't appreciate the signs of the times. ...That he is the first choice of three-fourths of the Dem ocratic party to-day, for the office of Presi dent is plain enough to any one who does not obstinately shut his eyes to the facts.— Against the combinations of politicians, and the use of Federal patronage, the intrigues of Cabinets, Senators, Congressmen, and out side politicians, he got a majority of the whole electoral vote at Charleston, and did not then show all his strength in the Convention. In this condition of things his friends are mod estly asked to withdraw him, to accommodate the most reckless and unscrupulous opposi tion that ever was arrayed against a man.— His friends, the delegates, can't be so accom modating, and the people at home will be much less accommodating than the dele gates. We are even less disposed to concede. any thing now than ever. The whole country now sees where the heart of this'opposition comes from. It has made an exposition of itself by secession from the Convention. The only honest and intelligent purpose is a dis solution of the Union. Those engaged in it will not openly - confess it. Some disguise the end even from themselves; but one cannot talk with them a moment without getting an avowal of the ultimate result. We, there fore, have no compromise to make with them. They are gone, and let them go in peace,— They demand what no party in the free States can grant, and they know it. The people of a Territory shall not have slavery, if they want it, is the Northern Wil mot Proviso. Would it not be sheer imper tinence to ask the South to sanction such a doctrine ? Well, what is the demand of this secession party in the South, who have seduced so many into their purpose ? Stript of all itsdis guise, it is simply this : The people of a Ter ritory shall have slavery, no matter how much they are opposed to it. This is a plain, unvarnished statement of the position. They say, if a Territorial Legislature will not make laws to protect slavery, Congress must make them. If the legislation be unfriendly to slavery, then the Federal Government must interfere and nullify such legislation. Does any one expect that this Southern Wilmot Pro viso will be tolerated North, ? The Catholic zeal of James II led him into acts which irritated his subjects, until he was driven into exile. A French courtier said, in decision : " There goes a man who sacri ficed a crown for a crozier." The Demo crats South are repeating the folly of James, with infinitely less motive for their action.— Indeed they are more like a spaniel who dropt a bone of meat to plunge after its shadow. We submit the case to the Democracy of Kentucky. Will they allow the secession ists to separate them from the Democracy of `the North, and thus sectionalize their party? Or will they tolerate this hatred of one dis tinguished man, which would accept the de feat of the party to defeat him ? For our own part, we don't intend to sub mit to 'any - such factious and unpatriotic movements. We shall support no sectional party, and we trust there is virtue enough . in the Democratic party to repudiate it. If There is not, then the Democratic party has fulfilled its mission, and will pass away as the old Whig party did. The Baltimore Convention will nominate Douglas beyond a doubt. The Opposition in the South, where it is honest, straightfor ward disunion, is scarcely a fragment. The political wire-workers who seceded are gone, and in their places we will have men fresh from the people. They may prefer another, but they will not sacrifice the party to favor itism. Our party will come forth from the fire purified and strengthened. Many office holders will be laid in limbo. The sweets of private life will be conceded tosmany politi cal aspirants in the Southern seceding States, and our candidates will sweep the Union like fire in the prairie, and the nation will have a new lease of life. [From the Providence (R. I.) Post.] We shall be told that the Southern States which withdrew from the Convention will maintain their hostility to the Democratic party. W know better. The PEOPLE of the South are, not mad, and they will rebuke the madness of their representatives. The idea that they will unite with the National Union party, whose Convention is soon to be held in Baltimore, is absurdity itself. They can nev er stand upon a platform which will be satis factory to the \Vinthrops and Everetts of the North, and to the Know Nothings of the South. An independent Southern party—a sectional, pro-slavery Democratic party—may do to talk- of for a while, but cannot long find friends. The idea of throwing the Presiden tial election into the House of Representatives, cannot be tolerated. There is no Democracy in it. Either the candidate nominated at Charleston, or the candidate nominated at Chicago, will be elected. It is yet six, months to the Presidential election. In that time we are confident, the South will see its mistake. If it does not, and will not, then let the strug gle come, and God defend the right. [From the Petersburg (Va.) Press.] Much abused, much misrepresented, and most cordially hated as the Hon. S. A. Doug las is by extremists of all sections and of all. complexions, he has planted himself upon and - defended against "all comers" the constitu tional rights of the people everywhere, North, South, East and West. With the comprehen sive sweep of a real statesman and a true pa triot, his mighty intellect ranges over the en tire Confederacy. Taking as his motto the very first line of the Constitution, " We, the people of the United States," he stands by constitutional government and the rightS of the people, from one end of the Confederacy to the other. And this we say, is the doc trine of the National Democratic party, the firm maintenance of . which, in our judgment alone can preserve and perpetuate the Union of these States. [From the Chicago Times.] " What will the Convention do in June ? The answer is a plain one. It must nomi nate Douglas. If it does not do that, it is a matter of perfect indifference what it does.-- The nomination has been long since decided in the popular mind. Douglas or defeat is as distinctly the fate of the party in 18G0, and is as well known by all men_of all parties, as if it bad been proclaimed by the trumpet of an angel from on high. There is no use of mincing matters, and quibbling and equivo cating. The great mass of the Democratic party will support as against the Republicans any nominee; but there is a, vast multitude of Democrats—men wbo were veterans in the Democratic party when Bigler was a Freesoil er and Randall an Abolitionist—who will not submit to the dictation of Slidell, Bright & Co., and who will stand still and take the consequences of a defeat. Mr. Buchanan has during three years made the people of the north pretty familiar with the rule of an opposition president. The people who do not live by .office-holding nor by permission of secretaries and senators,, and who have raised their crops and prosecuted their business successfully during the last three years, are not very likely to be terrified at the prospects of Seward's presidency— thousands will run the risk. There .are but few men of - any party who will not attribute the failure to nominate Douglas at Charleston to a concerted scheme on the part of Slidell and Buchanan. And no man of whom it can be said that he was nominated at Baltimore by that faction, can hope to receive the cordial support of a peo ple who feel themselves cheated out of their candidate by unworthy means. But we have no doubt of the nomina tion of Douglas at Baltimore. It will do del egates no harm to go home and mingle with the people. If they are honest men, that com munion with the people cannot fail to remove all uncertainty as to their duty to their party and to their country. There is but one voice among the people, and that is for Douglas.— A convention of the Democratic party must indeed be wonderfully constituted that will close its ears to the popular voice." (From the Washington States.] That the seceders did not withdraw on ac count of the defeat of their platform is mani- fest from Their subsequent proceedings.— They deferred „action in regard to an inde pendent nomination, and hung around the Convention, like birds of evil omen, with ar rogant threats of what they were going to do if the favorite of the country, who obtained a majority of the whole Convention, should be nominated. With swagger and arrogance they endeav ored to frighten the body into submission, and were willing to swallow any platform, provided they should be permitted to dictate who should be the candidate. If the party submits to the arrogant dic tation, conventions are mockeries, and De mocracy a by-word and a ,- corn: Is the par ty so pusilanimous that it will yield itself to the control of men who, like spoiled children, set to kicking and bawling unlesa their In n:mrs are indulged ? Douglas is the man of the people—because he is from the people, and the ardent defen der of the principles the people love. Hence he is hated by the arrogant, would-be lord- Hugs, who have nothing to sustain them but overbearing pretentious, and success in plun dering the country. They denounce Doug las, because they know he is not of their tribe of political gamblers.. We hope that - his friends will stand like faithful men to their position. If they yield now, the independence of the party is lost forever; and submitting to the despotism of men who are determined to rule or ruin, must sink, a withered and despised thing, to everlasting contempt. An. Interesting Document. That arch traitor, Yancey, sent a letter on the 15th of June, to a gentleman, which has been published, in the Washington States and Union : " NiesreoNEßY, June 15, 1858 " DEAR SIR :—Your kind favor of the 15th is received. I hardly agree with you that a general movement can be made that will clear out the Aegean stable. If the Democ racy were overthrown it would give place to a greater and hungrier swarm of flies. " The remedy of the South is not in such a process. It is a diligent organization of her true men for prompt resistance to the next aggression. It must come in the nature of things. No national party can save us ; no sectional party can ever do it. But if we could do as our fathers did—organize Com mittees of Safety' in all the cotton States (and it is only in them that we can hope for any effective movement)---we shall fire the Southern heart, instruct the Southern mind, give courage to each other, and, at the prop er moment, by one organized concerted ac tion, we can precipitate the cotton States into a revolution. "The.idea has been shadowed forth in the South by Mr. Ruffin ; has been taken up and recommended in the .Advertiser, (the Mont gomery organ of Mr. Yancey,) under the name of 'League of United Southerners,' who, keeping up their old party relations on all other questions, will hold the Southern issue paramount, and will influence parties, Legis latures and statesmen. I have no time to en large, but to suggest merely. In haste, yours, &c., W. L. YANCEY. " To James S. Slaughter, Esq." The Judas Kiss Who would have thought, when Bigler, al ternately with tears in his eyes and smiles on his face, at the Reading Convention, went round among the Delegates begging and sup plicating to be sent to Charleston, and prom ising to use his influence to conciliate and harmonize the conflicting elements which bad distracted that party, that beneath his vest was hidden a heart as black with treachery as ever beat in the bosom of a traitor? Who would have believed that this miserable, " weak-kneed" dough-face was kissing but to betray ? No one. Yet such was the case. No Disunionist was half so potent for evil at Charleston as this same traitor Bigler. It was he who gave "aid and comfort" to the Secessionists I It was Bigler that urged and implored these traitors to leave the Convention. It was the Pennsylvania Senator who prom ised, in order to induce the Disunionists to bolt, that a majority of the Pensylvania Del egation would follow I And this is the man, (how unworthy the title !) Democrats of Penn sylvania, that you have honored—warmed in to life—made rich and given position to.— Aye, this is the serpent that you have warm ed into life by the fire of your kind favor, who now turns round and endeavors to inflict upon his friends and benefactors the sting of death. How well he merits the hissing cur ses of an outraged people that:rare now falling so thick and fast upon his treacherous head I —State Sentinel. FICESIIET IN THE SITSQUEFIANNA.-A des patch from Williamsport, dated May 11th says : " There is a freshet in the Susquehan na, which is now increasing. It was occa sioned by the heavy storm which prevailed during the last forty-eight hours. It is sup posed that an incalculable amount of damage will be done to the property along the river, and more particularly to the stock of lumber now on hand. Over 50,000,000 feet of lum ber wore swept away. Squatter Sovereignty. Those who denounce Squatter Sovereignty as a new-fangled Democratic doctrine evince. more ignorance of the subject, in all its bear ings, than would be pleasant or agreeable to them, were they aware of the fact. Gen. Cass has the honor of giving promineney to the question of Squatter Sovereignty as a party measure. lie first introduced the subject in to the arena of politics, and established its claims to the highest consideration of the American people. It then grew rapidly in the favor and esteem of the National De mocracy. It was warmly espoused by all the• prominent leading men in the Democratic• ranks, from its first introduction into politics, till the advent of the remarkable struggle to fasten the Lecompton Constitution upon the people of Kansas whether they were willing . to receive it or not. Since that time there has been a regular, persistent effort on the part. of some of the. Democracy to cast obloquy upon this meas ure, under the delusive hope that they would thereby destroy the future usefulness of a prom inent statesman, who maintained, with un answerable argument, his unswerving devo tion to a fixed and fundamental principle of his party. The old adage that men may change, but principles are eternal, should never be forgotten. If Squatter Sovereignty was right in 1848, in 1852, in 1854 and again in 1856, we can see no reason why it should not he right in 1860. The Bolter's Conven tion at Charleston, were violently opposed to Judge Douglas as a candidate for the Presi dency, on account of his Squatter Sovereignty principles ; yet we find they were willing to go for Daniel S. Dickinson, of New York, than whom there is no greater - Squatter Sov ereign in the Union. Fur the benefit of our readers we make a few extracts from a speech delivered by Mr. Dickinson in the United States Senate in 1848, which verifys the truth of our assertion on. this subject. lle says: That system of government, whether temporary or per manent, whether applied to States, Provinces or Territo ries, is radically wrong, and has within itself all the ele ments of monarchical oppression. which permits the repre sentatives of one community to legislate for the domestic regulation of another to which they aro not responsible; which practically allows New 'York and Massachusetts and other Atlantic States to give local laws to the people of Oregon, Minnesota and Nebraska, to whom and whose in terests, wishes and condition they are strangers. Again he says : Should the domestic legislation of Territories be left with their local Legislatures, it would transfer from the Halls of Congress the bootless sectional struggles which have eit-ated bitterness at home, and served to degrade our institutions in the eyes of the world. It would leave local communities, Territories as well as States, to consult their own interests, wishes and sense of propriety, and to erect or prohibit, to continue or abolish, such institutions as may not be repugnant to the principles of the Constitu tion. That was sound Democratic doctrine in 1848. We believe it to be equal sound and Democratic now.—Kentucky _Democrat. Southern Fire Eaters. There is no way of accounting for the se cession of the Southern extremists from the Charleston Convention, but by looking upon them as disunionists anxious to break up the Confederacy. There is no right given to the South by the. Constitution which has ever been denied them by the Northern Democracy. We may go further and say that the Northern Democracy hap gone beyond a strict and correct construction of the Constitution for the purpose of conciliating the South.. Year after year have yielded, until at last they find thnir columns broken, and the enemy trium phant. It is time now to pause and reflect, if not to stop. We dare no longer take the Southern I.lotspurs at their word, because, from sad experience, we find they do not ad here to it. No concession we can make, even outside the Constitution, will conciliate them; no compromise is held sacred ; simply because what they desire is a dissolution of the Union, or the universal spread of slavery. To neither of these can the North accede. At the Charleston Convention the Southern disunion ists, headed by Yancey and Slidell, encour aged by a few Northern traitors, such for in stance as Cushing, Bigler, and Dawson, would listen to nothing rational, They would not even agree to submit 'the Territorial question to the decision of the Supreme Court, but endeavored to hold the party to a recogni tion of what they claimed to be rights, against the plain terms of the Constitution. In other words, they asked, as the price of their action. with the party, the privilege of doing as they pleased, in defiance of the Constitution and the Courts. With such men we have no de sire to, act, and we have reason to thank Heaven that they have voluntarily left the organisation to which they were a positive injory.-21arrisburg Slate Sc It Can't be Done. Now, since the conspirators against the Democracy of the nation have been signally defeated in their efforts to "kill off" Douglas, they have adopted a new dodge, and clamor for a new man—a compromise man. This is a pretty piece of impudence, to be sure.— What I the Great Democratic party compromise with a knot of dangerous Disunionists, backed up by a handful of Federal office-holders?— NEVER 1 DOUGLAS has been endorsed by a fair majority of the whole Democracy of the Union, in solemn Convention, and to with draw him after that would be inevitable de feat and death to the party! No I no, gentle men ; Douglas will be nominated at Baltimore on the 18th of June next, and there is no power, save that of the GREAT JEHOVAH, that can prevent him being the ne-,t President of these United States Delaware Speaking Out We have received the following handbill, which speaks for itself: ' " DEMOCRATIC MEETING.—The Democracy of Appoquiniraink Hundred, who are oppo sed to the seceding delegates from the Demo cratic National Convention, Charleston, are requested to meet at the hotel of Richard Fer guson, Blackbird, on Saturday, the twelfth day of May, 1860, at one o'clock, P. - M., to take measures to assist in having this county fairly represented in the Adjourned National Convention to be held in - Baltimore., on the 18th day of June. Come, all Democrats who are prepared to stand by your time-honored principle of submitting to a Deniocratic Na tional Convention to nominate a candidate for President. Our delegate appointed from this County has betrayed the Democratic par ty; left the Convention, and counselled the holding of another Convention of the disor ganizers, and sat as President of it; there fore the crisis has arrived ; the Democrats of New Castle county must speak out, and as sure their Democratic brethren who atood firm in the regular Democratic National Con vention at Charleston, that we DETEST AND RENTDIATE our delegate and sub from this county, who,proved recreant to their trust.— By order of the Democratic Central Commit tee of Appoquinimink Hundred: May 4th, 1860,"