THE HUNTINGDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS, &C. THE IuGLOBE. 111EIEVLIEDOTI, TA. 'Wednesday, July 18, 1860 LANKS ! BLANKS ! BLANKS ! OTNSTABLE'S SALES, ATTACIL'T EXECUTIONS. ATTACHMENTS, EXECUTIONS, SUMMONS, DEEDS, SUBNENAS, MORTGAGES, SCHOOL ORDERS, JUDGMENT NOTES, LEASES FOR HOUSES, NATURALIZATION ICKS, COMMON BONDS, JUDGMENT BONDS, WARRANTS, FEE BILLS, NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. JUDGMENT NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT, with Teachers. MARRIAGE CERTIFICATES, for Justices of the Peace and Ministers of the Gospel. COMPLAINT, WARRANT, and COMMITMENT, in case of Assault and Battery, and Affray. SCIERE FACIAS, to recover amount of Judgment. COLLECTORS' RECEIPTS, for State, County, School, Borough and Township Taxes. Printed on superior paper. and for sale at the Office of the HUNTINGDON GLOBE. BLANKS, of every description, printed to order, neatly, at short notice, and on good Paper. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT, Si.ll-I.IC - A. DEIGLAS, OF ILLINOIS. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, JCHNSII, OF GEORGIA. DEIROCRA.TIC' STATE NOMINATION, FOR GOVERNOR, HENRY a YOST-B, OF WESTMORELAND New Advertisements. Fruit Cans : Jars, itc., by J. Brown. ta' - '• Farmers' and Dealers' Head-Quarters!! kIZ'• Proclamations, by John C. 'Watson, Sheriff. .irzr , Register's Notice, by Henry Glazier, Register. ire-See advertisements of Philadelphia, Reading and Harrisburg R. R. Company: Why We Support Douglas We are for Douglas and Johnson for the following good and all sufficient reasons : Ist. They are the regular nominees of the only regular Convention of the National De mocracy, having been nominated in strict ac cordance with the usages of the party, not by a mere majority of the Convention, not by a bare two-thirds of all the votes given (either of which would have sufficed in the time of Jackson, Van Buren and Polk) but by a unan imous vote of more than two-thirds of the whole Convention. 2d. Because Douglas and Johnson stand upon the time-honored platform of the Nation al Democratic party ;—the platform on which Jefferson and Jackson stood ; on which Polk, Pierce and Buchanan were elected ; the plat form which embodies that sacred compromise between the North and the South, instituted by Webster, Clay and Calhoun, and ratified by the people of the whole Union, in two suc cessive-elections, the principle of "Non-inter ference by Congress with slavery in State or Territory." 3d. Because Douglas and Johnson are em inent statesmen, natiunal and 'Conservative in their views, opposed to sectionalism of every sort, and admirably fitted by great nat ural powers and long experience in public affairs, for the offices fur which they have been nominated. WITO ARE IN FAVOR OF A COMPROMISE ON A DISORGANIZING FLECTORAL TICKET ?-ISt, Bu chanan and his office-holders. 2d, a majori ty of the office-hunters in every county—men wbo want a nomination and an election to Congress., to the State Senate, to the House .of Representatitcs, and to the county offices. Independent and consistent Democrats—men who can be relied upon when their party is in danger of being ruled to ruin by political desperados, .have but one opinion, and that opinion for the public ear. We want no cow ards in our ranks—we want men to take their positions boldly for or against the regular Na tional Democratic nominees, Douglas and Johnson—no others are worthy of a political trust—no others are derserving public con fidence—no others should receive the support of Democratic voters. The great National Democratic party of the Union has enemies in its camp, and he who halts between two opinions as to his duty to his party and the country, cannot expect the friends of Douglas ,and Johnson to give him their support. If the present National Democratic organiza tion should be destroyed, an example will be set by the highest authority to justify disor ganization in the ranks of the Democratic party in every State, county and township .organization. The Democratic party may be defeated next fall by the action of the dis unionists and those under their influence; but there will be a future—a future when the Democracy will triumph—then, the disunion ists and disorganizers of the present day will be remembered but to be loathed and de spised as having been enemies to their party -and their country. AN ABLE DOCII3fENT.—We find in the last Bedford Gazette a statement of facts connec ted with the Democratic National Conven tion, by lion. John Cesna, a delegate to that Convention from the Bedford district. We shall publish it in our next week's issue, and we hope it may he carefully read by all our readers. .A IMPORTANT FACT TO BE REMEMBERED.- That Breckinridge and Lane are the repre sentative candidates of all the Disunionists, Nullifiers, and Radical Firo-Eators of the country. If not Disunionists themselves, they are in Very bad company and cannot be „trusted. A FACT TO BE REMEHEERED.—TIIO Electo ral ticket selected by the Reading State Con vention was selected to vote in the Electoral College for the nominees of the National Dem ocratic Convention. If any one of the gen tleman on that ticket, or any number of them, refuse to give a pledge to vote in that College for STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS and HERSCHEL V. JOHNSON as the regularly nominated Demo cratic candidates, their names should and must be stricken off the ticket, and their places filled by men who will obey the in structions of the party in State and National Conventions. 'We desire that our vote shall be counted for DOUGLAS and JOUNSON, and when we vote an Electoral ticket we want to know that that ticket will not sell our interest in the contest to promote the success of the candidates of the Disunionists. Every true friend of Douglas and -Johnson—every Democrat who does not intend to bolt the regular nominations—will be satisfied with no other than a reliable Douglas and Johnson Electoral ticket. A Two-Thirds Vote Some of the rebel presses are making a huge fuss over the fact that Douglas did not receive a two-thirds vote of a fun Convention, as though it was a proceeding without prece dent. If they will brush the ,cobwebs from theit: memories and look back as far as 1848, to the preceedings of the Baltimore Conven tion, they will find that Lewis Cass was nom inated by a vote less than two-thirds of a full Convention ; and they will find that the Pres ident of the Convention, lion. Andrew Ste venson, decided—and righteously, too—that it was not necessary to have more than two thirds of the votes given. Indeed it would be ridiculous to decide in any other way; for the secessionists of little Deleware, or Rhode Is land, or any single State—or, in case of a State not instructed to vote as a unit, a single dissatisfied delegate, might prevent a nomina tion. The rebels must resort to a better argu ment than this against the nomination to injure Douglas in the estimation of sound Democrats. A BAD SIGN.—The Republicans are every where tapping the Breckinrige traitors on the back, calling them fine fellows, and urging them to go ahead. There is no necessity for this. The Rebel movement was initiated for the very purpose of electing Lincoln and pre cipitating disunion. Its object was this, and nothing else, and as far as they can go to wards its accomplishment, the Breckinridge leaders will assuredly go. They nominated their candidate at Baltimore without any authority from the people--the small gather ing of Buchananites and Distmionists who 'brought his name before the nation, was self constituted, disorganizing, in defiance of all the rules and customs of the party—and yet he will have supporters among the politicians and parasites. The Republicans may safely withraw their sympathy and encouragement. The movers in the plot to destroy the Demo cratic part are acting under orders from Washington, which they dare not disobey. MASSACEELTSETTS.—The statement going the rounds of the Republican and Breckinridge papers, that " there is but one paper in Mas sachusetts that sopports Douglas," is a mere fabrication. Every Democratic paper in the State, except those owned or controlled by office-holders supports Douglas and Johnson. Here is a list of the disunion papers that support Breckinridge in the old Bay State— and these have but little influence with the masses : Boston Post—editor Naval Officer at Bos ton—sallary $4,000. Salem Advocate—editor Naval Officer; sal ary $1,500. Lowell Advertiser —editor Postmaster ; sal ary $2,000. New Bedford Times—editor Postmaster ; salary $1,500. Lawrence Sentinel—editor Postmaster; sal ary $l,OOO. Essex Democrat—editor Postmaster ; sala ry $l,BOO. Greenfield Democrat—has a friend in the Custom House at $l,BOO. This is the strength of the disorganizers in Massachusetts. Xter- G. Nelson Smith, editor of the Johns town Echo, was last week nominated for the Assembly by the Democracy Cambria county. Mr. Smith was a do.egate to the Democratic National Convention from this Congressional District, and he supported Douglas throughout the proceedings of the Convention. A few friends of the Disunion candidate Breckinridge, seceded from the Convention and will attempt to defeat the regular nominees. No FuszoN.—The Democratic press of tha State, very generally oppose a fusion with the disorganizers on one electoral ticket. If the disorganizors are honest in their opposi tion to Lincoln they cannot refuse to vote the only regularly nominated National ticket, Douglas and Johnson. If they refuse to vote it they are out of the Democratic organiza tion, and it would be more honorable in them to at once declare for Lincoln—their second, if not their first choice. gar. The Administration is again at work in Illinois to defeat the regular Democratic State Ticket. The office-holders held a State Convention on the 11th, and put in nomina tion a full State Ticket in opposition to the regular one nominated .early in June. They will do the same in this State when they find they cannot rule. Rule or ruin is their motto. Douglas State Convention On the 26th July, 1860. As the only official representative of the -National Democratic organization in Penn sylvania, I find myself compelled by an im perious sense of duty, to protest in the name of the National Committee, and in behalf of the National Democracy, against the resolu tions of the State committee of Pennsylvania, on the 2d of this month, as undemocratic, un authorized, and impolitic. Iprotest against it as an assumption of power not conferred by the Reading Convention ; I protest against it as a failure to perform duties assigned it by the Reading Convention, which imposed the ob ligation to recognize and support the regular nominees of the National Convention—STE- ruEN . A. DOUGLAS and lirescnEn V. JOHNSON— and them only ; and I protest against it as an act of ,disorganization disastrous to the National Democratic party everywhere. The remedy for this unwise determination of the State Committee has been long and anxiously considered by others and myself, and we have found it surrrounded by difficul ties arising from the absence of any State or ganization competent to summon a State Con vention. Meanwhile we have been in daily receipt of numerous letters from the most prominent Democrats of Pennsylvania, and other States, demanding immediate notion.— I have, therefore, in view of the exigencies of the cage, and the revolutioner,y . eharacter of the political epoch, determined to request National Democrats from all portions of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, to meet in Harrisburg, on the 26th of this month, in Delegate and Mass Convention, when in conjunction with the National Democrats of the State Committee, the National Democrats of the Pennsylvania Delegation to Baltimore, and the National Democrats who were Dele gates to Reading, they may take such action as in their wisdom should seem best for the Democracy and the Union. R. J. HALDEMAN, Of the National Committee for Pennsylvania. HARRISBURG, July 16. 1860. Voice of the Democratic Press of Penn'a We give below a list of Pennsylvania pa pei.s with their political preferences for Pres dent. FOR DOUGLAS Doylestown Democrat, Bucks County Ex press, Huntingdon Globe, Luzerne Union, Easton Argus, Northampton Correspondent, Easton Independent Democrat, Allentown Democrat,flarrisburg State Sentinel, Greens burg Democrat, Greensburg Argus, Pottsville Mining Record, Juniata Democrat, Mifflin town ; Lycoming Gazette, Carlisle American, Carlisle Volunteer, Wilkesbarre Democratic Watchman, Sunbury Democrat, Hanover (York county) Gazette, York County . Dew crat, Monroe Democrat, Democratic Herald, Butler ; West Chester American Republican, Honesdale Wochen-Blat, the Mountaineer, Ebensburg ; The Western Press, Mercer; Lewistown Democrat, Democratic Standard, Hollidaysburg; Blairsville Record, Valley Spirit, Chambersburg ; Fulton Democrat, Pittsburg Post, Perry County Democrat, Bed ford Gazette, Brownsville Times, Washington Review, Fayette county Genius of Liberty, " Clinton Democrat," Lock Haven ; Union Argus, Lewisburg ; Brookville Jeffersonian, Upland Union, Delaware; Allentown Repub lican. FOR P,RECIZINRIDGE Philadelphia Evenink Argus,* Norristown Register,- Reading Gazette 4 Carbon Demo crat, West Chester Jeffersonian, Juniata Reg ister, Pottsville Standard.] ON TITE FENCE Milford 'Herald, York Gazette, Easton Sen tinel, Harrisburg Patriot and Union, Mon trose Democrat, Philadelphia Pennsylvanian,* Huntingdon Union, Lancaster Intelligencer. * See Covode Investigating Committee proceedings for the tunonnt appropriated to keep these "machines" in ex istence. f The editor is Postmaster, salary $lOOO. 3: See coal contract developments. Who are to Blame? The Valley Spirit, published at Chambers burg, opposed to Douglas until his nomina tion, is now doing good service for the regu lar nominees. The last number has several good articles, from one of which we make the following extract 1 " Who are to blame for this disruption of the great Democratic party? Certainly not Mr. Douglas or his friends. He or they had nothing to gain by creating a split in the party. Their policy and their interest were opposed to any other course than an amiable adjustment of all difficulties that stood in the way of a harmonious nomination. We must look somewhere else than to the Douglas wing of the party for the source of trouble and the real offenders. We have a duty to perform which we cannot discharge by "silent con tempt" towards the distractionists in our ranks. We must speak out for the good of the whole party and call things by their right names. We honestly believe that a great outrage has been perpetrated on the Demo cratic party by the vindictive course of the present administration towards Mr. Douglas and that out of that has grown all our troubles. Are we to remain silent and tacitly encour age this outrage, or to rebuke at once, and without stint, the - high source that gives it consequence and the suicidal and vindictive policy that dictates it? Must we enter the present presidential contest with two candi dates in the field, in our own party, and as a Consequence defeat almost certain, and not raise a finger or utter a word against those whose perverseness have brought about this disastrous state of affairs, and would glory in the overthrow of the regularly nominated candidate of the party ? The faithful soldier will as soon shoot down the traitor in his own ranks as an open enemy. There is but one course left for every good Democrat to pairsue, and that is to fight the enemy in front, as well as the enemy in the rear, and trust for victory in the righteousness of our cause." Dar- John Tyler, who attempted to Tyler ice the Democratic party, goes it strong for the disorganizing candidate Breckinrige.— Wm. B. Reed and Josiah Randall, both de serters from the Old Whig party, four years ago, are leaders of the Breckinridge disorgan izers in this State. They came into our ranks to destroy the party, and will succeed if not carefully watched. NO FUSION WITH THE DISUNIONISTS. Reply of Ron. Richard Wax to the Pro position of the Secessionists. PHILADELPHIA, July 9th 1860. MY DEAR Sin :—Your printed communion ' tion of July sth, with its enclosure, is most respectfully acknowledged. By both con joined you inform me, as one of the " Demo cratic Electors at large," that the "Democratic State Committee," of which you are chair man, desires to know ila the event of my elec tion, if I will give a pledge to conform to the arrangement made by that committee, at its meeting on the 2d July last. This proposed arrangement provides, as I understand it, that the Democratic electors for Pennsylvania, shall, if elected, vote for the regularly nomi nated Democratic Candidates for President and Vice President of the United States, if their vote will select these candidates: if it will not, then to vote for the candidates nom inated by a meeting of gentlemen, at the Ma ryland Institute, in - Baltimore, on the 23d June, 1860, if such vote will elect them : and lastly, if neither of these propositions can be managed successfully, then, that the Demo cratic electors of Pennsylvania, if elected, may vote as they may deem best for the in terests of the Democratic party. This is ray interpretation of your note, and its enclosure. . To this most extraordinary and unexampled proposition from a committee, appointed only by the chairman of the Democratic Conven tion, and for certain specific duties, I am re quested to reply. The proposed arrangement was made, in my opinion, without any authority. The Reading Convention gave no power to its committee to compromise the integrity of Democratic principles, the Democratic organ ization, or Democratic candidates. This so called compromise, in my judgment, involves each, and includes all. If it is competent for the " Democratic State Committee" to pro pose an arrangement with those not in the regular organization of the Democratic party, then I can see no reason why a compromise might not be offered with any of the political organizations now existing, under their vari ous political designations. It is almost incred ible, that such a proposition should ever have been considered, much less approved by a Democratic body, or one assuming to repre sent the Democratic party of Pennsylvania. Placed on the Democratic Electoral Ticket by the only regular Democratic State'author ity., at Reading, on the 29th of February last, without any interference on my part, I ac cepted the position, its duties and responsi bilities, because it was the voluntary offering of the Democracy of the State, through its representatives then and there regularly or ganized into a Convention. I owe fealty to the Democratic party only. That party ex pects me, as one of its representatives, frank ly, honestly and faithfully to execute the trust thus imposed and accepted. It gave me no power to adopt a compromise, or an alterna tive of this trust. The masses of the Democ racy do not yet understand how its represen tatives can hold a divided duty. Conscien tiously entertaining these old-fashioned opin ions, I beg to state, that in the event of my election as a Democratic Elector at large, I shall vote for the only regularly nominated candidates for President and Vice President, nominated by the Democratic National Con vention at Baltimore—S. A. Douglas for Pres ident, and H. V. Johnson for Vice President, and shall so vote until the Electoral College finishes the task the Constitution imposes on it. If the Democracy of Pennsylvania do not ap prove of this publicly announced determina tion of mine, thus unequivocally asserted, I will cheerfully surrender to the authority which selected me, the position it gave; but I will recognise no other authority to receive it. If, as it is said, there are difficulties and doubts as to the course of a portion of the Democracy in the present crisis, that the only mode to be adopted, is to convene a Demo cratic State Convention, and leave to its wis dom, prudence and omnipotent will, a solu tion for these difficulties. Every true Demo crat devoted to his party principles, and wil ling to be governed by its time-honored usages and organization, will, or ought to be cheer fully bound by this action of the party. He who will not so agree, cannot be sincere in his devotion to the Democratic party, and his separation from it will result in no inju ry, either now or in the future. With great personal respect for yourself and the members of the Democratic State Committee, I have only to add, that my po litical allegiance is due to a regular Conven tion of the Democracy of Pennsylvania. I will obey its commands, or surrender to it the authority only held by its commission. I have the honor to be Most Respectfully, Yours, RICHARD VAUX. To the How. Wm. H. WELstr, Chairman D. S. C. Another Elector Answers J. R. Crawford, Esq., of Holljdoysburg, Elector for the 18th Congressional District, has answered the interrogatory of Hon. Vim. H. Welsh, Chairman of the State Central Committee, in the same spirit that Mr. Vaux did. We shall undoubtedly have more of the same sort. Mr. C's reply which we subjoin, .is short but decidedly to the point ; HOLLIDAYSBURG, July 9th, 1860. DEAR SIR :-I have the honor to acknowl edge the receipt of your circular containing the resolution of the State Central Commit tee, passed at their late meeting in Philadel phia, and to which is appended a pledge, to which my signature as an Elector is requested. From a profound sense of my obligations to the Democratic party, I am constrained to withhold my assent to any such pledges.— Stephen A. Douglas and Herschel V. John son, have been nominated by the National Democratic Convention, in conformity' to the recognized, and long established usages of the arty. I therefore cannot consent to be made a party to any arrangement, even though it be of the State Central Committee, the op eration of which would be to ignore those usages, and to recognize disorganization and secession. • I therefore in the event of my election as an Elector, will pledge myself to vote only for Stephen A. Douglas and Herschel V. Johnson, the candidates of the Democracy of the Union. I have the honor to be Very respectfully yours, J. R. CRA.WFORD. To the Hon. W. H. WELSH, Chairman State Central Committee 055-• The Breekinridge organ in Missouri is the!St. Louis Democrat, the well known Mack. Republican Abolition organ. Action of the State Central Committee. The Democratic State Central Committee of Pennsylvania met at the Merchants' Hotel. Philadelphia, on Monday the 2d inst., being called together by the Chairman. Deeming it their duty to consider the Presidential ques tion, they gave that subject their attention, and in so doing traveled out of their path of duty to dictate to the Democrats of Pennsyl vania how they shall vote for President.— Inasmuch as many of the country members were not present, the federal office-holders had the majority, and took such action as they considered most favorable to the sece ding, disunion ticket. Knowing their own weakness in the State they wished to conceal it, and therefore fired. up a mongrel Electo ral ticket, on the following basis : That if said Electoral Ticket should be elected by the people, and it should appear, on ascertaining the result in the other States of the Union. that by casting the entire vote of Pennsylvania for Stephen A. Douglas for President and IL V. Johnson for Vice President, it would elect them over Lincoln and Hamlin, then said Electors shall be under obligations to cast said vote for Messrs. Douglas and John son. If, on the other hand, it should appear that said vote would not elect Messrs. Douglas and Johnson, but would elect Breckinridge and Lane for President and Vice Presi dent, over Messrs. Lincoln and Hamlin, then said vote shall be cast for them, and in case the united vote of Penn sylvania would not elect either of these tickets then the electors may divide it between them according to their own judgment oc what would be best for the country and the Democratic I)arty. We have not yet found a single Democrat, whether a friend of Douglas or Breckinridge, who is pleased with this stupid arrangement; the universal sentiment being, that when they come to put their ballot into box they want to know what use is to be made of it. Can any mannvbe green enough to sanction such a plan ? We hardly think so. Of one thing the Committee may rest assured, that those Democrats who support the regular nominees, Douglas and Johnson, will never consent to vote for a two-sided ticket. They are deter mined to have Electors whom they can rely upon, and who will cast the vote of the State asthey wish it tobe cast. A man who supports Douglas wishes his vote to be counted for him, and we suppose that those who favor the Seceders' ticket, also desire their votes to he counted for their candidate. It would have approximated more nearly to fairness if the Electoral tickets were to be headed with the names of Douglas and Breckinridge re spectively, by which means it could be easily determined who received the highest number of votes, and therefore entitled to the Elec tors. We are opposed to any Union Electo toral ticket with the Seceders, and are unwil ling that their disorganizing movement shall receive either strength or respectability by being recognized by the regular organization. If their course is Democratic and right, they can have no objection to showing their hands, and ask the people to sustain them ; but if they are sincere in the desire for a union in order that the Republicans may be defeated, we answer that they can accomplish this much better by giving up their bogus candi dates and supporting the regular nominees. The State Central Committee bad no au thority to take the action they had in this be half. That body has but a single duty to perform, which is to advocate the regular nominees of the party, and it is a piece of great impudence on their part to attempt to select any other candidates. What right have they to present a Presidential ticket to the people of Pensylvania, in opposition to the choice of the National Democratic Con vention ? None whatever. They are our ser vants and not our masters. The Democratic party of the State should attend to this matter in time, and see that we have an Electoral ticket which will carry out the wishes of the voters. We should recommend the calling of a State Convention, at an early clay, to take proper action •in the premises, and obtain ;the voice of the Democracy.—Doylestown Demo crat. The National Democracy There is but one National Democratic party in Pennsylvania and elsewhere, and that is the party which supports the nominee of the Baltimore Convention, and the Cincinnati platform. No other authorized National Con vention was held. The gathering of restless spirits—traitors from the North and South— whether at Baltimore or Richmond, dor's not deserve to be dignified by the name of Con vention. In both cases they were self-consti tuted caucuses of desperate men, determined to disorganize the party as a preliminary to the election of a Republican President and a dissolution of the Union. Whatever preten sions some of the Southern delegates may make to authority, there is not a Northern se ceder from the regular National Convention who will dare assert that he derived any authority from the people who elected him to act in auy other than that Convention, or that lie did not tear himself asunder from the reg ular organization the moment he left that body and acted with separate and sectional assemblages. They can offer no available excuse for their conduct. There is none.— They deserted the only body to which they were accredited by their constituents, and struck hands with known Southern disunion ists, in order first to defeat the choice of the National Democracy for the Presidency, and second, to carve out a new and independent Confederacy in the South. This is their po sition, and, labor as they may, with all the skill and sophistry they can command, they .can not conceal it. They are disorganizers, traitors, disunionists. There is not "a single drop of Democratic blood in their veins."— And of this traitorous faction JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE is the nomineee. We make no scruple to assert that he will not re ceive the vote of a single true Democrat in any Northern or Southern State. It is im possible that he should. What ! a man nom inated as he was, by seceders from the regu lar Convention, by disorganizers, by Congres sional Interventionists, by advocates of the African Slave Trade, which our laws declare to be Piracy I What I a man thus placed be fore the Democracy in violation of all the hitherto cherished principles of the party— the candidate of the traitors, sectionalists, and banded plunderers—how can he receive the vote of a single Honest, true-hearted Demo crat in the Union? He can not; it is out of the question. We do not forget that some, perhaps many, who have heretofore acted with the party, and who still call themselves Democrats, are rally ing to the support of this bogus nomination. No, no, we do not forget this—we have them of that stripe here, in our midst; men who, when Buchanan apostatized, either through sycophancy, cowardice, or interest, aposta tized with him, and to justify themselves, preached the brave and manly doctrines that fin was the master of the party, above all platforms, and that his word should be the law to guide us. These panderers to power, these slaves in the form and stature of free men, have raised the rebellious flag of.Breek inridge, and will form the column at' the head of which their treacherous leader will march to eternal infamy. But these men are not Democrats. Whatever they may have been, they are now only rebels against Democracy, following the behests of an apostate Presi dent whose oonscioue guilt has fixed a sting in his soul which is goading him on to acts of vengeance and madness. It is sheer im pudence on the part of these men, these Breckinridge rebels, to call themselves Dem ocrats. There is but one test of Democracy, and that is adherence to the organization, the candidates, and the platform of the party, The organization points out the mode by which the candidates and the platform shall be determined, and when once determined ill accordance with the rules laid down, the man who bolts places himself •outside the pale of the party, and has no further claim upon its name or its good offices. He is thenceforth, until he repents and returns, an outsider,. a traitor, a disorganizer. In this position stand the supporters of Breckin, ridge. The only National Democratic Convention that was held this year for the nomination of candidates for the Presidency and Vice Pres, idency, assembled under a call of the Na, tional Democratic Committee at Charleston, on the 23d of April, and subsequently, by adjournment, at Baltimore, on the 18th of June. That Convention, adhering strictly to the rules of the organization, after an arduous session, during which every impediment which ingenuity ar malice could invent VCRM thrown in their way, nominated STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS for President, and HER: SCHEL V. JOHNSON for Vice President, by a vote of two-thirds of all the delegates who remained—and these gentlemen are 71010 the REGULAR NOMINEES OF THE REG ULAR NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CON VENTION. If delegates tinctured with dangerous here sies, or having mischievous schemes in their heads, which they could not carry out, chose to secede, theirs was the fault that a two-thirds vote of a full Convention was not obtained. No blame can be attributed to the faithful and true delegates who remained and -con summated the work which they were sent to accomplish. We expect to elect Douglas and - Johnson. We look upon the Breekinridge army in the North as a mere puppet show, of no conse quence except to those engaged in it. The Northern Democracy will not readily fall into the Slave Trade and Disunion schemes of Yancey, Slidell & Co.; nor, leaving this nut of the question, will they, to oblige Mr. Bu chanan, Mr. Breckinridge, Mr. Bigler, or any of their mere statellites, break up the of the party and bring defeat and disgraoe upon it in the State and Union. There are but few Democrats, we fancy, outside of the Breckinride faction, who wish to see Curtin elected Governor, or Abe Lin coln President of the United States. We calculate, therefore, on a full Democratic vote in Pennsylvania for Douglas and Johnson, to which will be added thousands more from the ranks of the Opposition—the votes of moder ate, National men, who have grown tired of the sectional bias and shifting policy of the Republican party. We repeat, we have no fear of the Brech inridge party in this State. Let his friends run an Electoral ticket in opposition to the regular Douglas Electors—let them dare boldly to unfurl his rebel banner—and the hisses of the Democracy, coming like a torna do from the four quarters of the State, will prostrate in the dust their treason-stained flag and the mercenary battalions that follow it. Democracy never compromises with traitors. Harrisburg Slate Sentinel. Black Republican President. The Rebels seem to be seriously alarmed lest Lincoln should he elected President of the United States. In the annals of villain ous politics snch base hypocrisy can find no parallel. They should have thought of this before Buchanan attempted to disorganize the Democracy of Illinois in order to elect this same bugaboo, Lincoln, to the United States Senate. They should have thought of it be, fore they seceded from the National Demo cratic Convention at Charleston and Baltimore, They should have thought of it before they united with the Yancey disunionists and, in a bogus Convention, nominated that arch-trai tor, Breckinridge, and that aspiring numb skull Lane. Take all their actions together, since Bu chanan's first move in that direction to the closing scene at Baltimore, and he is little less than a fool who cannot trace a deliberate design on their part to bring about precisely the result which they pretend to deprecate. Yancey and his "revolution" "precipita tors" are laughing in their sleeves at the miserable northern dolts whom they have caught in their net. Those gentlemen who have fallen into the disorganizing movement are so many fish hooked in the gills by the Southern fire-caters, and they cannot loose themselves from the barbed steel that holds them. They must follow wherever the line draws, whether pulled by Buchanan or Yan cey. They are helpless, impotent, and the true Democracy cannot forbear smiling at their vain efforts to obtain relief, or freedom. —HarriAzov State Sentinel. [From the Cleveland Plain Dealer.] The Bolting Breckinridge Ticket Dead. "Hung be the Heavens in black." We thought when Mr. Breckinridge was serenaded and Jeff Davis, a notorious disun ionist, made the speech of the occasion en ondorsing Old Buck and going for Breck, that said ticket was dead from that moment. But as if to make it deader, Yancey, the confessed conspirator in a plot to " precipitate the cot ton States into a revolution" must appear on the balcony and endorse the bolting move ment. And now last of all comes the funeral pall. Old Buck himself has formally and publicly given his adhesion to the bolters' tick et. That buries it. It is deader than Julius Ceasar. The trump of the Arch Angel can not resurrect it. It is a remarkable fact noticed by all the delegates that at Charleston and Baltimore in the Convention and out, no man, office holder or not, had the temerity to defend the corruptions and rascalities of this Adminis tration, although anathemas long and loud were constantly uttered against it by Demo crats from every, part of the Union. If Old Buck goes for Breck that is damnation enough for any one man. Jl?.. The Allentown Demoeiat closes an article upon the Democratic National Conven tion with the following paragraph : As is known, we never expressed prefer ence for any particular candidate, but all along stood ready to accept the nominees of the Convention, and therefore to-day hoist to our mast head the names of Stephen A. Doug las and Herschel V. Johnson. Did we not do so we would prove false to our regard for party organization—lend our favor to a die ruption of the party.