I= TERMS OF THE GLOBE. Per anrrarn in advance Six months Throe mo.nths A ELiiure to notify a cher:mill:mance at the expiration of the term sulAeribed for will be con:LlLL:red a new engage ment. TERMS OF ADVERTISING 1 insertion Fonr lines or 101.3 S $ 25.„. Ono square, (12 Line 5.).......... Two squares, Three cquares, 1 ..... 225 '3 00 Over three week and less than throe months, 25 cents per square for each insertion. Six. lines or less Ono square, TWO squares,.... Three squares,.. Four squares,. Half a column, One colinnn, 9 0 00 ^0 00.... ..... .50 00 Prolbssional and Cards not exceeding itur lines f:0110 year, $3 00 eidul istra tot's' umi EXCeit tors' Notices, Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. 1860 SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS FISHER & SON are now opening the larxst and best selected Stock of Goods ever offered in this community. _ It comprises a full line of Fashionable Dress Goods, suitable for SPRING & SUMMER, such as Black and Fancy Silks, French Foulards, (Chintz Fiunrei.) Fancy Organdies, Ducels, Challis's !ANN English Chintz : Ginghams, Lustres, Prints, &c. A large and beautiful assortment of Spring Shawls. _ A fine stock of richly worked Black Silk Tace Mantles. A full assortment of Ladies' Fine Collars, Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, such as Collars. Clarets, Ties, Stocks, Hosiery, Shirts, Gauze :ma Silk Undershirts, Drawers, &c. We have a fine selection of Mantillas, Dress Trimmings, Fringes, Ribbons, Mitts, (doves, Gaunt lets, Hosiery, limidleerchiefs. Buttons, Flogs, Sewing ;= ilk, Extension Skirts, Hoops of all kinds, &c. Also—Tickings, Osnaburg, Bleached and Unbleached Mtislins, all prices; Colored and White Cani brics, Barrett and Swiss :kin:dins, Victoria Lawns, Nain sooks, Tarleton. and many other articles which comprise the line of WHITE and DOMESTIC GOODS. French Cloths, Fancy Cassimers, Satinets. Jeans, Tweeds, Denims, Blue Drills, Flannels, Lindseys, Comforts, Blank ets,Hfee. 417 Hats and Caps, of every variety and style. A Good Stock of G ROOERIES. ifARDWARE. EENS WARN, BOOTS and SlloE.'lz, WOOD and WILLOW-WARE, which - will be sold Claw,- We also deal in PLASTER. FISJI, SALT. and all kinds of GRAINS. and possess facilities in this branch of trade unequalled by any. We deliver all pack:taw or parcels of n,dke, free of char e, at the Depots of the liroad Top and Pen nsyi Van in Railroads. COMB ON E. COME ALL. and he convinced that the Mc tropolitan is the place to secure nishionable and de: irable goods, disposed of at the lowest rates litintibgdon, April IS. ISCO --1 7E1 1 7 GOODS! NEW GOODS !! IA _ D. P. 0 V I '.S S2T 011 E D. I'. fl WIN kas just received th' larne , t and most fashiumdde and hest th•lected Stock of Gods in tie mar ket. consi , ting of Cloths. CassinnTes. I'lain and Fancy. Satinets, Kentucky Jeans. Tweeds. Beaverteens, Velvet Cords, Cotton Drill 4, Linen Duck., Blue Drills, and other fashionable Goods for Men and Buys' wear. The largest and best ass4rtment t‘f Dress nooit. in town, consisting of Iliad: and Fancy All ‘Vool Chlllie Delain:. Alpacas, and Fig;- ured Braize. L:te mi. Gin hams, Dueals. Larella Cloth, Do Darg,o, Traveling Dress Goods, and a beautiful assortment of Prints, Brilliants, ,ke. Also, Tie,kings, Cheeks, Masi i ns, (bleached and unbleached.) Cotton and Linen Diaper, Crash, Nan keen, Ac. Also, a large assortment of Ladies' Collars, Dress Trimmings, Ribbonds. Gloves, II it ts. Gann Het.. 110- isery. Silk and Linen flandkerchiefs, Victoi is Lawn, Mull Muslins, Swiss and Cambric Edging, Dimity Rands, Velvet Ribbons, and a great variety of Hooped Skirts, &c. Also, a fine assortment of Spring Shawls. Also, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Shaker Bonnets, llardware, Queensware, Wood and low Ware, Grocerie , , salt and F.lsh. Also, the largest and hest assortment of Carpets and Oil Cloths in town, which will be sold cheap. Call and examine my Goods_ and yon will be convinced that I have the hest assortment and cheapest Goods in the market. Country Proclnce taken in exchange for Goods, at the Highest Market Prices. D. P. (TWIN. Huntingdon, April IS, 1860. OUREKA!! EUREKA!!! M`l LADIES' CHOICE!!! PATENT ELI'-SEALIN , G. STLE-TESTING. AIE-TIGHT FR 111 T'CA XS. Just what was wanted—a cosrrsrcsr air-tight cover. to show at alt tines, the exact condition of the fruit within the jar. It is so simple that one person can seal up t2ven ty-four cans in one minute. Or open seventy-Iwo cans in one minute. No fruit is lost in u,ing these cans, for should any ono be defective, the cover at NV:I3 s shows it in time to save the contents. Tin, Earthen, or Gla,s jars, sold only at the Hardware Storc of JAMES2I.. BROWN. Ihnitiug.lon. July IS, 1860 1 000 cusTomErts 'WANTED NEW GOODS BENJ. JACOBS Has received a fine assortment of DRY GOODS for the Spring and Summer beat,un, comprising a very extensive a‘sortment of LADIES DRESS GOODS, DRY GOODS in general, READY-MAD;. CLOTHING, For Men and Boys GROCERIES, HATS & CAPS, BOOTS AND SIMES, Sc. The public generally are requested to call and examine my goods—and his prices.... As 1 am determined to sell my Goods, all who call may expect bargains. Country Produce taken in Exchange for Goods. BENJ. JACOBS, at the Cheap Corner. Huntingdon, April 4, 1560. COME TO THE NEWT STORE FOR CIIEAP BARGAINS. WALLACE & CLEMENT Respectfully inform the public that they have opened a beautiful assortment of DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE, in the store room at the south-east corner of the Diamond in the borough of Huntingdon, lately occupied as a Jew elry Store. Their Stock is new and carefully selected, and will be sold low for cash or country produce. FLOUR, FISH, HAMS, SIDES, SHOULDERS, SALT, LARD, and provisions generally, kept constantly ou baud on reasonable terms. Huntingdon, May 9, 1860. TT ROMAN. _X_HL• NEW CLOTHING FOR SIRING AND SU 4 'tMER, ' JUST RECEIVED • AT H. ROMAN'S CHEAP CLOTHING STORE. -For Gentlemen's Clothing of the beatmaterial, and made in the best workmanlike manner, call at 11. ROMAN'S, opposite the Franklin House iu Market Square, Hunting don. [April 4,15 W.) T HE best Tobacco in town, at D. P. GAVIN'S Dlargest,GWlN keeps the best • assortment and cheapest shoes in town. Call and examine them. Abeautiful lot of Shaker Bonuet.sfor sale cheap, at D. P. GIVIN'S. CALL at D. P. G'IN'S if you want GOOD GOODS. ASplendid variety of Carpets, only 25 cts. per yard. FISHER l SON. Eyou want handsome Lawns, Delains l nd other Dress Goods, go to D. P. (TWIN'S. 2 do. ado. $ 373 , f; ""; 75 .100 MB 1 00 3 months. G months. 12 months. ...$1 50 $1 00 ;05 00 .... :3 00 ....... 5 00 7 00 .... 5 00 SOO 10 00 ... 7 00 ...... ....10 00 15 00 9 00 ...... ....13 00 12 00 ...... ....10 00 MITER & SON FOR SPRING SIT)IMEN $1 ,0 2 00 WILLIAM LEWIS, 20 00 21 00 VOL, XVI, MEI tY 1 t ICU I " SPEECH OP HON. H. B. NALL-LIGHT, of Luzerne, On, faking the Chair as President of the _Mass Stale Convention held at Harrisburg, July 26, 1860. Gentleman of the Convention: I return you my thanks for this manifestation of your par tiality towards me. I regard it as a matter of distinction that you have conferred upon me to-clay. To stand here in this place, as I do, called upon to preside over that portion of the Democracy of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania which rises up to vindicate the regular nominations of the National Demo cratic Convention is not merely an ordinary, but an extraordinary privilege. [Cheers.] As regards my ability to discharge the du ties of this chair, I shall not now consider.— I think I can get along with the business.— [Laughter.[ With regard to the object and character of this Convention, and the causes that have brought us together this day, I shall claim your indulgence, as your presiding offi cer, to make a few remarks. What is it that produces this uprising of the masses of Pennsylvania this day ? What has brought us from the remotest corners of this Commonwealth to meet here in Conven tion ? Simply, gentlemen, because those who held the custody of the rules and regulations of the party have committed an act of usur pation. [Applause.] I measure my lan guage, and know what I say. The reporters dill write it down just as I say it. We, are all, gentlemen, of age. I believe there are no minors in this body—at least, none under my eye. It becomes us, then, as men of maturity, to speak out—to speak frankly—and, above all, to speak with deter mination ; that is, to say nothing that we do not mean to do, and to lay down no programme that we do not mean to carry out. [Long continued applause. Let me go back a mo ment. The Democratic party of Pennsylva nia, as a part of its organization, has been in the habit, through a long series of years—(l have participated in Conventions here for thirty years)--to appoint a Democratic Exec utive Committee, sometimes called the State Central Committee, and sometimes called the Democratic State Executive Committee. As I understand the rules and usages of the par ty, the duty of that committee has been to call Conventions in case a candidate or a nom inee died or declined. It has been their duty to issue addresses to the Democratic people of Pennsylvania, call ing upon them to disharg,e their duty faith fully and honestly to the party. It has•been their duty to exercise,- a general supervisory power, and to perform ministerieal acts. I speak as a lawyer now, but not jud;•ciallv.— But it has been reserved for the year 1856 (I am confounding myself with Mr. Buchan an's nomination, and I beg his pardon,) [Laughter,]—l mean for the year 1860, after the Den - low acv of the nation had met in solemn Convention, after a prolonged session, and by solemn, decided action, had presented nominees for the party of the nation—l say it has been reserved for the year 1800, for the Democratic Executive Committee of Penn sylvania to call in question the act of their superiors. [Cheers.] They have actually met in the city of Philadelphia, as I am in formed and done that thing. I have not read their proceeding's, and I cannot. [Laughter.] Revolutionary measures I never honor by reading. That committee, lam informed, met in the city of Philadelphia recently, and sent their manifesto out to the Democrats of Pennsylvania—that is to those Democrats who are on the electoral ticket—demanding of them that they should, in the first place, cast their votes for Mr. Douglas, if Mr. Doug las had a majority of the States ; and in the second, for Mr. Breckinridge, if he had a ma jority over Mr. Douglas; and then, if neither could be elected, leaving the electors to vote just as they pleased. Why, that would jus tify the electors when they met in Conven tion, to cast their vote for Abe Lincoln, the rail-splitter, and Hannibal Hamlin. [Laugh ter.] With my friend Brown, of Philadelphia, with whom I have spent years in the busi ness of legislation in this hall, and who I am happy to see present, I will cast my vote for no such mongrel concern, trammelled with such conditions. [Applause.] I have voted for thirty years steadily along for the Demo cratic nominees, and if it has come to that point that I cannot cast my vote for them again, I will stay at home, shut up my doors, and weep for the degeneracy of the times. [Laughter and applause.] Why, gentlemen of the Convention, sup pose, for example, when your State Conven tion was in session at Reading, that a minority had seceded from that Convention, and that such minority had pretended to issue their ticket. Suppose they had got a majority of weak brethren to join them—suppose they had met and nominated a candidate for Gov ernor against General Foster, would you have paid any heed to the calls of their committee, or of a party brought together in such a way, in violation of rules ? Certainly not. And the same principle must be regarded as gov erning and regulating the political affairs of the nation. Let us act with prudence and deliberation, and whatever we resolve on let us do that re gardless of risks and fearless of consequences. [Great Applause.] It is not for me to lay down any platform of principles. I might say, however, that I would question the pro priety of a body like this, called together in discriminately, to assume to put out an elec toral ticket. We have, I know, the right to support Douglas and Johnson to our heart's content, and to shout for them until our throats are sore. [Cries of " good! good !" and applause.] It is a matter of extreme doubt whether this body of men can assume the power of the Slate Central Committee, so far as the call ing of a Convention is concerned. If that committee has abused its power, let not that charge be made against us. We are not here to act as disorganers, but regularly to sup port regular nominations. [Applause.] The men who have seceded from the ranks of the Democratic party would be glad to have us make that false step. Let us not go contrary to Democratic rules and usages. It appears to me fitting that we should resolve that Doug las and Johnson are the regular nominees of the Democratic party for the Presidency and the Vice Presidency of the United States.— [Applause.] To resolve that they and they alone are the nominees, and that they and they alone should have the votes of the true-heart ed and gallant Democratic army of this solid old Commonwealth, [Renewed applause.] Let us be true to our party and our princi and the inevitable effect must be, that like a tornado the miserable mon who sneak under Yancey's Disunion banner will be swept into deserved oblivion by the power of the. people. [Applause.] Whatever we do let •it be with prudence. Let us do nothing that we shall have to reconsider—take no step we shall have to retrace. Let our march be always an advance. [Applause.] Let us ratify the nomination of Douglas, who, more than any other is a living embodiment of the noble characteristics of our great Jackson, [cheers,] and pledge ourselves to vote for no other can didate for the Presidency. I shall not speak of the regularity of the nomination of Stephen A. Douglas. It is be ' yond doubt. For eleven days, at Charleston, I voted for that man, knowing him to be the choice of my constituents. [Cheers.] Give the constituency of Luzerne an opportunity of showing it, and you will see how manfully and gallantly they will endorse him. There they are now, waiting to seize the banner and rush upon the battlement walls, crying victory ! [Cheers.] I voted for Douglas day after day at Baltimore until he was nomina ted by a two-thirds vote. There is no way in which he can be wrested from the arms of the Democratic party. [Applause.] After Yancey and the Disunionists went out of the regular Convention, it occurred to me that it would be profitable for me to go into the Secession Convention and ascertain for myself the sentiments there proclaimed. I did go into the Yancey Convention, and during the two hours I was there, as God is my ,judge, I heard nothing but with reference to the expediency of erecting a Southern Re public upon the ruins of the present Union. [Cries of " Down with the traitors !"] If Mr. Breckinridge be not a Disunionist himself, it must he conceded that he is the candidate of the Disunionists. He is, then, in the hands of the worst men that this coun try has ever seen. Those men are fixed upon a dissolution of this Union and the erection ' of a Southern Confederacy. I do not care what their apologists may say—l have heard their debates and I know that -which Tdo speak; . [Applausel Disunion was the, cry of the secession movement at Charleston and at Baltimore. Breckinridge is the pliant tool of the Disunionists—the men who proclaim from the housetops that they want disunion. And such are the men that the Deawratic party of Pennsylvania are asked to support ! For one, I never will submit to such burning dishonor. [Applause.] One word more. I wish to pay a passing tribute to the Hon. Caleb Cushing, of Massa chusetts. [Laughter.] I want it reported, and I want to send it to him. He became the President of the Convention, how and by what management I know not, but I say this of him--that after he went into the chair, baring given to us his pledge to conduct the affairs of that Convention in a proper man ner, there never was a man whose parliamen tary history is written, who disgraced himself as Caleb Cushing did, both at Charleston and Baltimore. [Long-continued applause.] An educated man, he ought to have been familiar, and I presume he was, with parlia mentary law, and how did he dispose of the questions presented for his consideration ?- 1 will refer you to one or two of them. In the first place, a question of order was raised before that Convention, as to the number of votes it required to result in a nomination. The rule is, that the man receiving two-thirds of the votes cast shall be the nominee of the party. Caleb Cushing ruled that it required, not two-thirds of the votes east, but two-thirds of the whole Electoral College! [A voice— " The double-dyed traitor!"] From the State of New Jersey a delegation brought in their hands a resolution from their State Conven tion. That State Convention requested their delegates to vote as a unit. Caleb Cushing decided that that was not a request but an order, and that they were bound to vote as a unit. A portion of the delegation from the State of Georgia at once withdrew and marched out under the Disunion banner.— The true Union delegates remained in the Convention. In calling the roll, when the secretary had reached, in order, the State of Georgia, the question was raised whether the remaining delegates could cast the vote of the State or not. Caleb Cushing decided that the voice of the State should be mute. I could hove— l- don't say what—but if I had been in_ his vicinity, in health and strength—well, I think I could have resented the deep 'injustice.-- [Applause.] When we got to the city of Baltimore, after the Convention had been or ganized, we kept out Secession men, and ad mitted pure, honest party delegates into the Convention. We had adjourned from Charles ton for the express purpose of allowing the Democracy of the Southern States to fill vacan cies. After we had filled up these vacancies at Baltimore, and had become organized, and the Convention was in favor of the nomina tion of Douglas, Mr. Caleb Cushing rose in his place, and said he thought the time had come for him to resign his position. God. knows we were glad enough to get rid of him. [Laughter and applause.] In making his remarks, he stated that in his view, it would be improper for him longer to maintain his place in the chair.— He sneaked out and did not again return, but united his destinies with Yancey and that party, which had raised the sword to cut the baud of the Union in twain. I hope the Convention will make a bold and decided declaration in favor of the great principle of non-intervention. I want to see that principle of popular power in the Territories incorporated as an article in the creed of the Democratic party of Pennsylva nia, in addition to the platform laid down at -PERSEVERE.-- HUNTINGDON, PA., AUGUST 8, 1860. Cincinnati in 1856. [Cries of "Good I" and applause.] With that platform, with that glorious principle of popular sovereignty which was established in - 2.848, affirmed in 1852, and re affirmed in 1856, and with Douglas and Johnson, I defy opposition. [Applause.]— There is yet truth and honesty in the heart of the people to uphold the right and strike down the wrong. Appealing again to you, gentlemen, I trust you will be cautious, that you will act delib erately, but what you do, do effectually, so that it cannot be undone. [Applause.] I am reminded that I have not said a word of our candidate for Governor, I-lon. Henry D. Foster. It affords me great pleasure to say that I believe him to be in every way worthy of the support of the Democratic par ty. [Applause.] The election for Governor precedes the Presidential election. It is the hinge upon which the latter turns, and I re gard it of vast importance that we should secure the election of Gen. Foster. [Three cheers and a tiger for Foster.] The Conven tion is now ready to proceed to business. The 'Fusion Electoral Ticket Every true Democrat &sires, of course, that the men and measures of his party should be sustained by a majority of the people, and is therefore willing to do anything in reason to priKluce this result - . But there are some things that no true Democrat will do, be can he cannot even think of them with any degree of patience, or attempt them without di,slen or. Ono of these things is the novel and start ling proposition to pack up the whole Demo cratic vote of the Keystone State, like a bundle of dry goods, to be handed over after the election, not as the people of the State have directed, but as the people or the poli ticians of other States may happen to render necessary fora certain purpose. Now, there are zlt least three good reasons why no good Democrat can ever consent to this. In the first place, the candidates name , '. in this com promise do not represent the some principles, and cannot therefore both be Democrats. Douglas is most clearly the representative of "Congressional non-intervention" in the local affairs of the Territories, while Breck inridge is as clearly pledged to "active inter vention on the part of every branch of the General Government" for tho protection of slave property outside of the slave States, Douglas believes that that which is property by the common consent of the whole nation reouires no other protection in the Territo rie"s than that which the people there will cheerfully accord to it, and that that which is 7 , roporty solely in virtue of local laws will 130';;rott7eted 1..!y- them as soon as they desire it, but should neither be established in oppo sition to the will of those who are adverse to it, nor withheld from those who are willing to adopt it, while Breckinridge is solemnly pledged to a creed that deprives the people of the Territories of the right of self-govern ment on a most important point—that would compel the representatives of the whole na tion to recognize and protect as property that which is only property in certain portions of the country, and by force of certain local laws, which laws are repudiated by the local legislation of other portions of the country equally respectable, and equally entitled to national recognition and support. Candidates thus representing adverse prin ciples cannot be run together without gross inconsistency. In the second place, only one of these candidates cam be the "regular nominee" of the party, even if the platforms were the same. There cannot be two regular Democratic Conventions, nor two regular Democratic nominations—one or the other must be irreg ular and spurious. The regular National Convention, representing all the States, met certainly at Charleston, and as regularly ad journed to Baltimore, while there was no regular Convention either called at Rich mond or adjourned from Richmond to Balti more. The Convention, which was regularly call ed at Charleston, did not adjourn sine die un til it had formed a platform and nominated candidates. That platform is the one we had in 1556 at Cincinnati ; and the candidate running on that platform is Stephen A. Doug las—a very consistent friend of it. Those who did this did not "secede," because ma jorities never do secede—they vote their way through. If, then, the old plan of submit ting when out-voted is wrong—if the modern idea of seceding when you happen to be in the minority is improper and destructive of all order, then the assembly which nominated Mr. Breckinridge was irregular, and ho is not the regular nominee of the party. Now, all true Democrats believe in "regular nomi nations," when made by "regular Conven tions," or " regular Democratic platforms," and they frown indignantly on all irregular movements, as subversive of all order and or ganization, from that of the township up to that of the nation. They will not—cannot, therefore, with any consistencey, consent to this arrangement. Again, the State .Committee have no right to propose, nor have the electors any right to agree to such a proposition. Custom has de fined and fixed their several duties. They are appointed to carry out the w,i.sh.e.s of the State and National Conventions. The former body is bound by party rule to pledge the latter to vote for the nominees of the National Convention, who, in its turn, is, by the same rule, bound to obey or to resign. Instead of this, they unite in this proposi tion to defeat the will of their masters. They are told by the National Convention, "Here is the creed of the party for this cam paign ; it is the same on which we triumphed in 1856, and has been deliberately reaffirmed. Here is the candidate of the party, the faith ful advocate of our party creed. Put now in motion the machinery that will give to them both the party vote." The committee and electors reply : "We hear you ; but we choose not to obey ; we choose that man who denies the party creed and opposes the party candidates shall have an opportunity of defeating both ; of turning the whole vote of this State in favor of the creed and the men that have been repudiated by it in solemn conclave, even though that re pudiation may be ratified by every Democrat in the Commonwealth. We hear you ; but we choose that a seceding minority shall have as good a chance of carrying the State or na tion as the regular majority can by any pos sibility have; that those who depart from the party creed are as good Democrats as those who adhere to it ; that he who can muster but eighty seceding votes in a Convention not called or adjourned to Baltimore is as much entitled to run on the Democratic ticket as he who has received one hundred and eighty regular votes in a regular National Convention. "In short, the States and National Conven tion may do as they please-:--wu will do as we please. We will hold the vote of the State in our hands, and watching the other States with one eye, and our own private interests with the other, we will throw her vote, not as those who elected us wish, hut as circum stances may require. Who bids ? and how much ? We are pledged to no one—the high est bidder shall be the buyer l" The plan deserves nothing but contempt. It is a cheat from beginning to end. No Democrat who believes in "priciple" and in the binding obligations of "regular nomina, tions," will touch it. There will be but one Democratic creed and one Democratic candi date in the field in the coming campaign.— Those who oppose them may call themselves Democrats, and ring the changes, on this good old much-perverted name ; but how any one can claim the name, while he spits upon the platform which he gloried in and tri umphed on in 1856 ; who prefers as a candi, date* the man who openly denies the Demo cratic creed, secedes from the Democratic nomination, and throws his whole force against them both, is a matter which is en tirely beyond our comprehension.—Pros. Stephen A. Douglas--Who and What Is Among the distinguished speakers at the Douglas meeting in Philadelphia, Saturday, 21st inst., General Dodge, of lowa, ex-gover nor of that State, ex-minister to Spain, and chairman of the lowa delegation in the Bal timore convention. In the course of his re marks, the General said I know that Henry Clay relied upon him more than any other man, entrusted to him the drawing of the compromise bills, and call ed upon him, when his voice became so fee ble that he could no longer fill the senate, to take his place and fight the battle for the ad mission of California, Utah and New Mexico, [great applause,] at'',-!1. - for the establishment of die principle that the people shall be left free to shape their own domestic institutions and control their own destinies. Who was it that lashed Sumner, Seward & Co., and triumphed over them in the great debate up on the Kansas-Nebraska bill, which estab lished a living principle by which the matter of slavery is to be settled, and the vexed ques tion to be forever banished from the hall of Congres.3:. It was Stephen A. Douglas. [Cheers.] You all know him: [A voice, "and love him." Cheers.] I knew him when he was an honorable pioneer, with his pack upon his back. [Cheers.] I knew him when he push ed the jack-plane in a village in Illinois— [Cheers.] I knew him as a village school master ; as the attorney general of this State ; as a Judge upon the Supreme Court bench, and subsequently when he was elected to the lower branch of Congress and from there to the Senate, where he is now serving his third term. ,[Applause.] And, gentlemen, if the bolters and political tricksters who are now at work to defeat the choice of the people for the highest office in their gift succeed, he will grow upon their hands just as old Hickory did, when he was defeated for the same posi tion, and by the same means, in 1524. [Cheers] The familliar name by which he is known among his Countrymen, is that of the "Little Giant," but if he is cheated by these Seces sionists and Disunionists, he will be known in the futuro as the "Big Giant," before, whom intriguing politicians will fiv, as from the wrath Co come. T. tell you, that if be ever comes down on any of them the unfortunate man will think he weighs morn than a ton. [Great Applause.] If he is beaten now his success in the fu ture is certain ; while those who oppose the party because he is the nominee, will be con signed to oblivion. ["That's so," and cheers] The people love him because he is true to them and maintains their rights. They have watched with interest the persecution to which lie has been subjected ; they have seen him removed from the chairmanship of the Committee on Territories by a tyranical ma jority, because of his independence, and they have seen those who should have sustained him and strengthened his hands, resort to every trick to disgrace him, because they were jealous and envious of his hold on the popular heart. The result of these attempts is before- you. Without patronage, without power, he has stood forth in the Democratic Convention at Charleston and at Baltimo.re triumphant and victorious. He received from that convention the greatest honor it could pay him, the regular, legitimate nomination for the Presidency, and if you are true to yourselves, you • w;.11 ratify that nomination at the ballot-box. TRUE AS HOLY WRIT !—Col. James W. Ilarrh, of Georgia, made a speech at a Doug las meeting in Atlanta, on the 17th inst., in the course of which he reviewed the action of the Douglas delegates at Baltimore, and de fended them from the asperations of the se cessionists. lie said : The Seceders made no efforts at Baltimore to defeat the nomination of Stephen A. Douglas, or to modify the mi nority report adopted at Charleston_ Their only object being in going to Baltimore to with draw from that Convention those delegations from the border Slave States which refused to secede at Charleston. They did not go to Baltimore for harmony, but for the purpose of sectionalising the Democratic party, forcing the election of Lincoln, and then to consum mate the ultimatum of their hopes—a disso lution of the Union. Editor and Proprietor. NO. 7. He? No Compromise This is now the cry from the lips of every loyal Democrat in the land. The true, faith ful and consistent Democrats cannot compro mise with Traitors, Seceders and Disunion ists. To do so would be utter ruin to our noble party. Upon this subject the editor of that faithful old organ of the Vermont De mocracy, the Vermont Patriot, very perti nently says: " The inflated Breckinridge supporters, in the Free States, may as well understand, first as last, that they have got to face the music. Their ambition is first, to retain their offices, and next to retain insides seats in the Demo cratic wagon. They propose to retain their offices, says the Providence Pore, for the pres ent, by abusing Douglas and his friends, Mad denouncing the Baltimore Convention. They propose to keep in the party, by getting the party to stretch its covering so as to enclose them. They want " union electoral tickets" in New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut. and some other States—a sort of half-way endorsement of secession and treason—and an admission on the part of the regular De mocracy that a slave code and slave trade may, after all, be Democratic "institutions." " We risk nothing whatever in saying that these gentlemen cannot be accornmodated.-:-- They can hold their offices until the 4th of March ; they can abuse the Democratic nomi nee, and the Democratic Convention, and the Democratic platform, and the Democratic party to their heart's content. But they are out—AND VIET CAN'T COME IN I The Democ racy will make no bargains with outsiders, no, compromises with traitors. The people have set out to preserve the integrity of the party —and they will do it, though every State in the Union should be los'c, to their candidate. "But there is no prospect of any great losses. The probability is that Mr. Douglas will carry more Northern States than have been carried by the Democracy since 1.852. The more conservative of the Republicans are coming to them every day, and already it is certain that in the North, at least, they will gain more than they will lose by tho Breckinridge movement. Many States will be redeemed ; many Democratic Representa tives to Congress will be elected in district i now controlled by Republicans ; and best of all, a gang of Northern politicians who have proved themselves to be as corrupt as cor ruption itself, will he everlastingly disposed of. "No—we say again—there will be no zom premise between the regular Democracy and the men who have bolted the nominations.— The Democratic party has never yet left its high position to trade with renegades, and it never will. In the present case, it of to the manner of bolting, to the bolters' plat form, to the bolters' candidates, and to the bolters' themselves. The motive of the lead ers is too plainly written on their foreheads. You can go your way _ n. gentlemen ; hut you cannot harness to the Derneetic team."— Stale Sentinel. The Seceding Idlovement Dying Out in the South It is evident that the Secession movement is wilting and dying out in the South. The people of that section of the country are, not desirous of contributing to the election of a Republican President; neither do they want a dissolution of the Union, to both of which ends, votes against the regular Democratic nominees will tend. As a specimen of how things are working, read the following from the Augusta (Georgia) 0111'0120e and Sentth:th "Consequently the Democratic people are 11.1)andv-.1,g the .ckm.l.l,Jles twkel, the res iduary legatee of all the corruption and anwn inations of the present outrageous Adminis tration—the supple tools of the camp-follow ers and plunderers. "In this (Richmond) county, it is said by, those who ought to be posted, that there are only thirty-two Breekinridge men out of a vo ting population of near two thousand. Gen tlemen from Columbia inform us that there are seven, out of eight hundred in that county. From Lincoln we hear of none. In Wilkes there are a goodly number, but they are very anxious to compromise. The Franklin Demo cracy, we learn, are almost u.nanimons loz Douglas and Johnson, and the same news comes also from Hall and liabersham. The seceders bid fair in peor g ia, according, to present appearances, tonic out before the first frost." A State Convention is to be held in Tennes see at Nashville, next Saturday, 2Sth inst., to perfect a Douglas electoral ticket. The Mem phis Appeal, a leading and influential jour nal, has the following upon the subject "The people desire discussion ; and there is besides a strong effort being made by the leaders in the secession movement, to fore stall public sentiment, which must be met at the earliest day possible. We are assured; from the best information we can get from all quarters, that a great reaction is even now going on in favor of Douglas and Johnson. Tho great masses of the people cannot be persuadd that it is their duty as patriots to follow up the secession movement at Charles ton and Baltimore, and thus complete the work of destruction to the great national Democratic party. They will rather prefer to do battle inside of the regular organization, and in support of the regular ticket. Out of the Party The editor of that old and able organ of the Rhode Island Democracy, the Providence Post, with great force and truth says that the men who support John C. Brekinridge for President have gone out of the Democratic Party. Nothing can be plainer than this.— In the first place Mr. Breckinridge was nom inated by a Seceder's Convention. It was neither regularly called nor regularly held. It embraced only one hundred and eighteen* delegates, and had majority delegations of any sort from only eight States, and the dele gates from only three States had been au thorized to act in it. It was:thus, in its compo sition and organization, an unauthorized Con vention of Bolters from, the Democratic party. In the second place, the Convention, if Convention it may be called, refused to stand upon the Democratic platform, but adopted a. platform which had been distinctly repudi ated by the Democratic party in its National Convention, while that Convention was un questionably an authoritative body. Nobody will dare deny that the Convention which met at Charleston on the 23d of April was the 2C - a r tional Democratic Convention. Every State, every Congressional District was represented in it; and while they were represented—be ; fore a single delegate had bolted—a platform was adopted, and that subsequently adopted by the Seceders was distinctly and 9ruphati,- cally repudiated. We say, then, that the men and newspapers which stand upon that repudiated platform, and support its nominees, ARE OUT OF TUE PARTY. Their talk about Democracy is more twaddle. No man is a Democrat who stands upon any other than the Democratic Platform, and support any other than the regular no'..?- nees of the party.