THE HUNTINGDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS, &C. TH 15.1PTELEMOTI RA. Wednesday, August 22, 1860 LINKS ! BLANKS ! BLANKS 1 COTNSTABLE'S SALES, ATTACHMENTS, SUMMONS, DEEDS, SUBPLENAS, MORTGAGES, SCHOOL ORDERS, JUDGMENT NOTES, LEASES FOR HOUSES, NATURALIZATION WKS, ('OMMON BONDS, JUDGMENT BONDS, WARRANTS, FEE BILLS, NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. JUDGMENT NOTES. with a waiver of the 51100 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 FACIAL to recover amount of Judgment. COLLECTORS' RECEIPTS, for State, County, School, Borough and. Township Taxes. Printed on superior paper, ainl for sale at the Office of the HUNTINGDON GLOB .E. BLANKS, of every description, printed to order, neatly, at. short notice, and on good Paper. REGULARLY NOMINATED DEAIOCRATIC TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT, STI'EEN A DC:GLAS, OP ILLINOIS. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, FRE:: ENSON, 1:MM1ZBEI DEMOCRATIC STATE NOMINATION, FOR GOVERNOR, i-Iii‘INIY D KSITI, OF WESTMORELAND RE.ID TILE I'EIV ..IDVERITSEMENTS. Let the People Know ! ! That there remained in the National Con vention at Baltimore, after every disorgani zing Rebel bad-seceded, 436 regularly ap pointed delegates, entitled, under the rule, to east 218 votes-16 MORE than TWO THIRDS of a Full Convention. Let them know that, on the second ballot, STEPHEN A. Pot - GLAs, received ISI votes of the 218, over FORTY more than TWO-THIRDS of the whole vote present. And then, to clinch all, let them know, that the resolution declaring STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS to be the unanimous choice of the Convention, passed without a single dissenting voice ; so that Stephen A. Douglas actually received 218 votes—SIX TEEN votes more than two-thirds of a full Convention I Let the People know, too, that the Seceders' Convention which nominated Breckinridge and Lane had no authority from any constit uency to sit at Baltimore outside of the regu lar Convention—that it did not contain more than eighty or ninety delegates who had even a shadow of authority from the people to act —that it cast in all but 105 votes—not one of them properly authorized, or binding, on any body—let them know this, and let them decide which was the Regular and which was the Disorganizgrs' Convention, and which of the nominees, Douglas or Breckinridge, is enti tled to the undivided support of the National Democracy. ‘, Old Saintuck." True to the Union ! The result of the election in Kentucky, the home of the Disunion nominee for the Presi dency, John C. Breckinridge, should be a warning to political Traitors for all time to come. The traitors and disorganizers who bolted from the regular Democratic National Convention, and set up for themselves, selec ted John C. Breckinridge as the willing tool to carry out their treasonable designs to de stroy the Democratic party, and thus imperil the Union, boasted loud and long of his abili ty to carry Kentucky by an overwhelming majority, against all parties combined I Al though this empty boast of these tricksters and disorganizers was laughed at by all sen sible men, it had the effect abroad to mislead a portion of the honest Democracy of other States into the belief that the name of Breck inridge was really a tower of strength through out the South, and that, in all probability, with ins name at the head of their treasona ble ticket, the black flag of Disunion would be carried in triumph in every Southern State. But, alas I the result of the election in Ken tucky, the home of Brockinridge, has dispelled the delusion,of the Yanceyites and exposed the weakness of their infamous cause to the world. The people of Kentucky have wiped out the Secessionists to the tune of from 35,000 to 50,000 ! Last year this State gave the Dem ocrats a majority of nearly 12,000 ! Democrats of Pennsylvania, how can you, after witnessing, the overwhelming repudia tion of this Bolter and Disorgauizer in kis own State, longer hesitate in your course ?— Every vote cast for him is a vote cast to elect Lincoln to the Presidency. Dreckinridge cannot carry a single State in. the Union, and he is only kept in the field to defeat the Dem ocratic party and elect the Republican nominee, in order to afford the Disunionists, whose subtle tool he is, an excuse to DIS SOLVE OUR GLORIOUS ULVIONI itlizZ — lt is authoritatively given out that after Judge Douglas has completed his tour through the New England States, he will make a circuit of Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee, and that be will make his appearance in Pennsylva nia early in October. He will speak almost every day between now and the election, if his health permits. ATTACIrr EXECUTIONS EN ECUTIONS, The County Convention. Our readers will find in another column, the proceedings of the Democratic Delegate Convention, which assembled in this place on Wednesday last. The ticket nominated is an excellent one, and one that should be elected. That a majority of it will be elected, there cannot be a shadow of doubt. The Convention was harmonious in its action— more so than any Convention we ever atten ded in the county. Douglas men and Dreck inridge men agreed upon an honorable com promise in local politics, that the ticket nomi nated might go before the people with some prospects of success. The compromise was perfectly satisfactory to us, and we hope ev ery other true friend of Douglas in the county will be firm in his support of the ticket put in nomination by the Convention. Every Breckinridge man in the county is bound by the compromise of the Convention to give the nominees a willing and united support, and we believe every honorable Democrat Henry D. Foster is the compromise Demo cratic candidate for Governor, and the Demo crat who votes for Foster cannot honestly re fuse to vote the county ticket nominated as a compromise by the, Democratic party of the county. The compromise shall be honestly adhered to on our part. Douglas men stand fast to your prin ciples—the black cloud of fanaticism and disunion is already passing away. Breckin ridge is fast losing strength in the only Southern States where it was supposed early in the campaign that he would make a show of success. In the North he will be com pletely lost sight of. Lincoln stock is get ting far below par in all the States he might have carried if the election had taken place immediately after his nomination. Neither Lincoln nor Breckinridge can be elected President. The conservative votes of the States will elect Douglas or Bell. The two Sectional organizations, the Breckinridge dis unionists of the South, and the Republican fanatics of the North, will be thrown over board. Every day strengthens our belief that the victory to the true friends of the Union will be an easy one. THE OPPOSITION CONVENTION.—The Oppo sition held their County Convention on Tues day of last week, and put in nomination the following ticket Assembly, Brice X. Blair, of Dublin town ship. Associate Judge, Vim. B. Leas, of Shirleys burg. Prothonotary, Wm. C. 'Wagoner, of Brady township. Register and Recorder, D. Womelsdorf, of Franklin township. Comity Co»zmissioner, John Cummins, of Jackson township. Director of the Poor, Samuel Peightal, of Walker township. Auditor, Horatio G. Fisher, of Hunting don. Coroner, B. K. Neff, of West township Col. S. S. "Wharton received the nomina tion of this county fur Senator, with power to appoint Conferees. Hays Hamilton, G. A. Steel, and B. A.. Bear, were chosen Congressional Conferees and instructed for S. Steel Blair. There appears to be considerable dissatis faction in the Opposition party with their ticket. MIFFLIN COUNTY.—On the 13th the Oppo sition put in nomination the following ticket: Congress, Hon. James T. Hale, of Centre county. Assembly, Adolphus F. Gibboney, of Union township. Sheriff, Charles C. Stanbarger, of Lewis town. Register and Recorder, Samuel Barr, of Lewistown. Commissioner Samuel Brower, of Decatur. Auditor, Abraham Garver, of Oliver. The following are the Democratic nomina- lions : Assembly, George Bates, of Armagh town ship. Sheriff, James F. McNear, of Wayne town ship. Register and Recorder, Joseph S. Waream, of Lewistown. Commissioner, Thos. Cunningham, of Der ry township. Auditor, Andrew J. McKee, of Granville township. fr:rMr. Breckinridge is having a warm time of it in Kentucky. The Douglas State Convention held at Louisville on Saturday, the 11th inst.,'was an overwhelming demon stration ; seven hundred delegates from nine ty of the ninety-five counties were present, and took their seats. A straight-out Doug las electoral ticket was nominated. THE DIFFERENCE—MISSOURI AND KEN TUCKY.—In the Baltimore Convention all the Missouri delegates remained in it but two, and the party in the State, with an inconsid erable exception, supported the regular nom inees, Douglas and Johnson. The result is that they have carried the State triumphant ly, electing their Governor, a majority in the Legislature, and five out of the seven mem bers in Congres over a coalition of the Oppo sition. In Kentucky one-third of the delegates bolted the Convention and a portion of the party attempted to sustain them at home.— As a consequence, they were beaten some 30,000 votes, probably, in a State which was Democratic last year by 9,0001 This shows that it is the best to rally under the old Dem ocratic Union flag, and that the black banner of Secession leads to irretrievable defeat and disaster. ger..A. gentleman of means offers the fol lowing wager through the columns of the Nicholasviile (IBS•.) Democral, that Breckin ridge will be beaten in November in his own ward, city, precinct, county, district and State. The wager is one hundred dollars on each of them. Action of the State Central Committee-- More Juggling. In another part of our paper we publig4 to-day, the proceedings of the State Central Committee which met at Cresson on the 9th instant. We thought the action of the Com mittee at Philadelphia on the 2nd of July was strange enough, but that of last Thurs day far exceeds it in oddity, and is the queer est political juggling we have ever witnessed. Mr. Fulton, of Armstrong county. offered the following resolution as a compromise upon the electoral ticket, which, if adopted might have been accepted, viz : Reso'red, That the Democratic electoral tickets he head ed with the name of Douglas orDreckinridge as elector at large, and that in the event of success of said ticket, if the greater number of votes shall have been cast for Douglas, then the vote of the State shall be cast for Douglas and Johnson ; bnt if For Breckinridge, then Breckinridge and Johnson; brit teen igt Lane shall receive the electoral vote for President and Vice President, and the chairman of the committee be di rected to require a pledge from the electors, and if any ono refuse then his name shall be omitted. This would give the friends of Douglas and The preamble recites that the State com- Breckinridge each a fair chance, and the can- mittee, by their action of July 2d, committed u didate who received the highest number of usurpation by presenting to the Democracy votes would get the electoral vote of the State candidates not nominated by the National if the ticket should have a majority over Lin- Convention, but sanctioned merely by bolters coin. This proposition, which was meant ta., and Disunionists. That the committee on be an honest one, did not suit the majority of the 9th of August, refusing to rescind their the committee who are determined that the former action, or to call a new Convention, Democratic masses shall not have a fair op- have mutilated the electoral ticket formed at portunity to vote for their favorite in the Reading by striking from it the names of two electoral college. Something else must be electors; have devised a scheme unknown to contrived to cheat the people, and here it is. our laws, which the election officers are not The original resolution was amended so as to I sworn to execute ; have intensified the most read as follows at its adoption. .: ~ 1 obnoxious portion of the resolution of July Resolved, That the Democratic electoral ticket be head2d, masmuch as the recent scheme presents ed by the name of Douglas or Breckinridge, as an elector inducements to the Disunion electors, should at large, and in the event of the success of said ticket. if .t, they hold the balance of power to obstinately greater number shall have been cast for Douglas, then the vote of the electoral college of the State shall be cast for refuse to vote for Douglas and Johnson, and Douglas and Johnson; but if for Breckinridge, then for thus compel 'electors to vote for Breckinridge Breckinridge and Lane; if the vote of Pennsylvania can- and Lane, though they should not have re not elect the candidate for whom the majorhy of votes are cast, and can elect any man running for President claim- received a hundred popular votes ; that by ing to be a Democrat. then the vote of the electoral college the recent proposition the Democratic electors shall be cast for that candidate ; if it will not elect either of the Democrats for whom it is cast, or any of the Demo- are empowered, in an unexampled and dan crats who are voted for in the States, then the vote shall gorous manner, to vote for any man claiming be cast for the candidate who has the majority of the votes to be a Democrat, under which notorious Dis of the State, and the chairman of this committee be reques ted to obtain from the electors their several and distinct unionists, such as Yancey and Rhett, might pledges of acquiescence in the foregoing resolution, and be voted for. report the result of his action at a future meeting of the committee. The first resolution protests against the This is infinitely worse than the fusion usurpation of the State Executive Committee, proposed at the meeting of the Committee in in regard to the national contest, and declares Philadelphia, and it requires no very keen that, so far as the Presidential election is con eysc to discover the fraud concealed in it.— erned, we place ourselves exclusively under Let us examine it a moment. If this fusion the direction and auspices of the National - ticket should be agreed to and elected, then the vote of the State is to be given to Douglas or Breckinridge according whichever receives the greatest number of votes. So far it is well understood ; but now comes the trick.— " If the rote of Penns'yleania cannot elect the candidates for whom the majority of votes are cast, and can elect any man running for PA:ST ident claiming to be a Democrat, then the vote of the electoral college shall be cast for that candidate." This is nothing better than a cheat and a swindle, and we so brand it. It leaves the electoral vote of Pennsyvania in the market to be sold to the highest bidder, and places it in the power of the electors to disregard entirely the will of the people.— What is meant by casting the electoral vote of Pennsylvahia for any man running for President "claiming to be a Democrat."— This claimant to Democracy cannot surely be Douglas or Breckinridge for they are already disposed of by name? Who then is referred to ? Are any other candidates than these two recognized as Democrats ? We believe not. This provision must then have refer ence to some man " running for President" whom Democrats would not vote for, else why omit his name? The other candidates lire Bell, Lincoln, Sam llAston, an Ge6eil • Smith. Upon which one of these are twenty seven votes of Pennsylvania to be lavished ? These gentlemen all claim to be Democrats, and even Gerret Smith, the abolitionist, is as loud in his profession of Democracy as any of them. .Lincoln says he is of the Jeffer . sonian stripe, and Bell's friends swear that he belongs to the Jackson school. By this arrangement if the vote of Pennsylvania will elect neither Douglas nor Breckinridge, but will elect Lincoln, and he " claims to be a Democrat," the electors are bound to vote for him. No sane man can believe that the vote of Pennsylvania, will elect Douglas or Breck inridge, and therefore this resolution looks in advance to its being cast for some other can didate. What tribunal is to decide upon the orthodoxy of the claimant, inasmuch as none is specified ? Probably the State Central Committee will assume this in connection with its other duties ; or perhaps an Auditbr will be appointed by Chairman Welsh to make the award as in the case of a dead man's estate. We suppose there will be no testimony taken to prove Democracy, as the resolution provides that it shall only be ne cessary to claim to be a Democrat to entitle I the candidate to the vote. If the award should be made in favor of any one of the four, the others will have a right to consider themselves badly used, when without doubt their Democ racy is just as genuine ; and therefore to avoid giving offence we think it would have been better had provision been made to divide the vote among them. The thing assumes a form entirely too ludicrous to be pursued further. We ask the people to examine this snare• laid to catch their votes, without their know ing what is to be done with them, and answer whether they are in favor of such a swindle ? Will you trust your servants with such un limited power over your suffrage ? Are you willing to vote without knowing yvhetheryou are voting in favor of Democrat, Disunionist, American, Republican or Abolitionists ? If you are, you hold.the right cheaper than Avr- - do ; spurn this disgraceful proposition with contempt and teach this juggling Committee that you will not place your votes in the hands of an irresponsible body of men to be dispo sed of as they see proper. For ourselves we will neither touch, taste nor handle the nasty, dirty thing. There is another point in this matter to which we wish to direct the attention of Dem ocrats. Where did the Committee get author ity to mutilate the electoral ticket by striking off any one of the names ? To place the name of a Presidential candidate upon the ticket it will be necessary to strike off one of the electors. The Reading Convention gave no such power. If one can be stricken off, so can five, ten or twenty. Will President Welsh answer the question ? lie stated that he would not vote to mutilate the electoral ticket, and we therefore take for granted that he does not approve its being done by others. Why then did he not vote against it ?—Dogles town, Democrat. A HALE OLD MAN.—Judge Dewey, of Wa tertown, aged 94 years, is not only the oldest living graduate of Yale College, but the best rifle shot in his neighborhood. The Tines says he can walk easily and rapidly, preserves his mental faculties to a considerable extent, and can see with great distinctness. lie re cently beat a large number of boys who were striving for the honor of " best shot," putting the ball into the heart of the target, which stood 75 rods distant from the foot line. A Pure Douglas Electoral Ticket. A joint meeting of the Democratic State - Central Committee, and of ' the Democratic Corresponding and Executive Committee, ap pointed under the resolution of the Harrisburg Convention of July 26th, was held at 3 o'clock (Wednesday, Aug. 1.5,) at the Buehler House, Harrisburg, Genaal A. L. Roumfort, chair man of the last named committee, being in the chair. After some general consultation, to which reporters were not admitted, but in which we understood the prevalent spirit was unhesita tingly in favor of a straight ticket, the follow ing gentlemen were appointed a committee to draft resolutions : E. G. Webb, R. M. Gibson, Ira C. Mitchell, G. M. Kline, John M. Laird, E. L. Ortb, and R. E. Wright. After a recess, the. committee submitted their report. Committee as the only supreme executive power in which final supervision of the Pres idential campaign has constantly been vested. Resolved, That no better evidence of the insincerity of a majority of the Welsh State Committee, in proposing a fusion of the Doug las and Breckinridge votes in Pennsylvania, can be had, than the fact that in all such States as Douglas could carry against Lincoln, with a single Democratic ticket in the field, the leaders of the Disunion Breckinridge movement have issued a ticket for the exclu sive support of Breckinridge, with no other possible view than to defeat the Douglas elec tors running therein. Resolved, That having exhausted every ex pedient likely to win back the majority of the Welsh Committee to the path of its executive duties, and to the Democratic organization from which it has parted, and having earnest ly and anxiously striven to preserve the unity and integrity of the Democratic party, until it has become painfully apparent that concil iation and concession only embolden• them in their wrong-doing, that we, acting under the authority of the National Convention which met at Baltimore, and the Convention which met at _Harrisburg on the .26th of July, being the members of the committee appointed under the resolutions of the latter Convention and former members of the Welsh Committee, do now determine to proceed to the formation of an electoral ticket, pledged to the unequiv ocal support of the nominees of the Democrat ic party, Stephen A. Douglas and Herschel V. Johnson. All the above resolutions were adopted. The committee took a recess from 8 till 10, and after again assembling adopted the fol lowing resolution : Resolved, that we now proceed to the elec tion of alternates, to act as Douglas and John sou electors, in case the electors, or any por tion thereof, appointed by the Reading Con vention shall refuse, upon interrogation, to support Douglas and Johnson, the regular nominees of the Democratic party, and them only; and failing to complete the list the duty to do so is referred to a committee of seven to be appointed by the chairman, to act in con junction with the members of this committee in the. districts where such action is necessary. WIEY THEY HATE DOUGLAS.—Says the Lou isville (Kentucky) Democrat, one of the most able and faithful Democratic journals of the country : The abolitionists bate Douglas because he has foiled them in every conflict, even when they were backed up by all the power and patronage of the most corrupt vindictive and unscrupulous administration that ever disgra ced any government on earth. The southern disunion party are, if possi ble, still more hostile to Mr. Douglas than the abolitionists, because he has been " the lion in the path" that prevented them from effec ting the treason that they have so long medi tated. The success of the abolitionists is ab solutely essential to enable Yancey & Co., to effect a dissolution of the Union, and this suc cess Douglas alone has prevented. The Breck inridge party do not expect—do not desire— the election of Breckinridge. All their hopes of mver-essfully effecting a dissolution of the Union depend on the election of Lincoln ; and to effect this purpose, they are nominating Breckinridge electoral tickets in all the non slaveholding States, with no other object or purpose than to give those States to Lincoln. Their object is if possible, to give the vote of the southern States to Breckinridge, and have Lincoln elected by the non-slaveholding States. This done, they . intend as their organ, the New York Herald, informs us, to inaugu rate Breckinridge as the president of a south ern confederacy, and call a southern congress at Richmond. This general movement of the Breckinridge men to run tickets in all the States where there is a prospect of Douglas carrying that State, is not alone to gratify petty pique against Douglas. Iris the result of a deep laid scheme on the part of the disunionists to secure the election of Lincoln, and then make his elec tion a pretext for dissolving the Union. At the head of this infamous plot is James Buchanan—its tail is James Gordon Bennett. The body of the plot is made up of just such material as might be expected . tii lie between such a head and such a tail ; but they have 'exposed their hand too soon, and henceforth the Hartford convention will lose its place in the niche of infamy it has so long occupied. Jae- That modern Samson, Dr. Winship, of Boston, has recently astonished his friends and admirers by lifting a dead-weight of eleven hundred arid sixty prounds. Muscle, not mind, uppermost now-a-days. ' Our Candidate for Govenor. It is certainly a gratifying fact that amidst the differences of opinion among Democrats upon the Presidential question, and the difficulties surrounding it, all interests in the party unite heartily in support of Henry D. Foster, our nominee for Govenor. His nomination was made without effort on his port ; in fact, he was not a candidate for the office. It was a free-will offering of his party—a tribute to the character and integrity of the man : At the very mention of his name the voice of faction, as well as of personal interests and ambition, was hushed, and then, like the storm that succeds the calm, with one univer sal shout he was proclaimed the nominee. Mr. Foster is a good man. By 'his indus try—his unbending Integrity—his devotion to the duties of an honerable profession and en tire freedom from anything like the trade of politics—his manly adherence to the prinez pies of his party because of conviction and not for the purposes of official position, as ev idenced by the conduct of his whole life, he has gathered to himself the confidence of the people ; a confidence as solid and unwavering as his own character isspotless and deserving. It cannot be disguised, for public sentiment upon the gubernatorial question has become patent all over the State, that to-day the hopes, not merely of his own party, but of the sober, intelligent, conservative people of Pennsylva nia, are centred on Mr. Foster as the proper man for the Executive Chair in preference to his opponent, Mr. Curtin. All, or nearly all of that class which Daniel Webster denomi nated " the solid man of Boston,"—those men interested in, and who control the great com mercial and monetary interests of the Com monwealth, and who more generally in the past have voted with the opposition, infinite ly prefer Mr. Foster, and are ready to give him their votes. The reason of this we have given in describing the character of the man, to wit, that he is not an office-seeker, or a mere politician, but a man who has built up that solid character that imparts confidence in his integrity and conservatism. These great interests always desire stability in the government—they dread change, innovation and experiments—and hence they naturally dread the accession of a mere politician to executive position. This whole interest is for Foster, and will be felt in the electioh as a tremendous power. Indeed, it may likely de cide the contest, if the Democratic party as a partisan organization, does its duty, and polls a full party vote. Mr. Curtin is a very different man from Mr. Foster. He was pitch-forked into public notoriety, like many others of his class of men, by the Know Nothing organization of 1854, and became the Secratary of the Com monwealth under the administration of Gov enor Pollock,—an administration that is re membered in Pennsylvania only for its imbe cility and corruption. Mr. Curtin was the banker of that administration,—offices were bought and sold, vetoes were in market at stipulated prices, or a favorable consideration of bills purchased in accordance with the pro portions of the scheme and the abilities of the parties to pay. So shamelessly was this car ried on that it became a subject of public no toriety at llarrisburg, so common, indeed, as finally to attrack little remark. Mr. Cur tin is a man of considerable polish of addrses, —plausable and insinuating in social inter course,—ambitious of political preferment and unscrupulous in its attainment. As a Know Nothing, he was at the very head of the order, and learnedly skilled in its mysteries and secrets ; but as that became unpopular, ho gradually slid from his position, coming out first as an open American, throwing off the disguise of secrecy,—then a member of " the people's party," an amalgamation of Ameri cans and Republicans, and finally turned up at Chicago, when Lincoln was nominated, as the advocate of a plank in the platform repu diating the whole doctrines of the Know Nothing or American party. As banker of Pollock's administration, he became rich.— As a lawyer, lie is unknown to fame in his profession. Unlike Mr. Foster, he has none of the severe mental discipline that laborious study and ardent devotion to this profession always imparts. He is essentially a politi cian, thrown upon the surface, as a promi nent man, by mere accident, and sustaining himself in his position by the usual resorts and appliances of a mere politician of the present. This is all there is of Mr. Curtin, and independent of the character of Mr. Fos ter, is of itself a reason why the commercial interests of the State look upon him with dis trust, and why the conservative element of the opposition will not support him at the polls. This being the position of the contest, and we believe it to be so, it behooves every Dem ocrat to go to work at once, and ardently.— Mr. Foster can be elected,—the character of the State may be maintained,—the recurrence of Polleck's administration may be averted, and this a sufficient reason—should be a suf ficient incentive, for us all to labor with un tiring zeal and unflagging energy, till Henry D. Foster shall be declared the Govenor of Pennsylvania by the votes of her people.— Wilkes-Barre Union, THE SOUTH DESERTING BRECKINRIDGE.- We gather from the Southern exchanges the following items: The Haynesville, Alabama, Watchman, a Democratic journal, published in the rich and populous county of Lowndes, and hereto fore supporting Breckinridge and Lane, has abandoned them to advocate the election of Bell and Everett. A correspondent of the Memphis Appeal, writing from Galloway, Tennessee, says : " The people are for Douglas in the coun ties of Fayette, Tipton and Shelby. Where I em conversant there are twelve Douglas to one Breckinridge man. The people are moving. The banner of the great statesman of Illinois is floating proudly from the castle of conservatism." The Newborn, North Carolina, Progress, Democratic, says : " If the seceders persist in running their ticket, we say to them now that they cannot count, with any certainty, on Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, Alabama, or Louisiana. These thinge may be unpleasant, but they are so. The people want one man and the wiro-workers give them another. The Augusta, Georgia, Chronicle, says : "Hon. A. M. Gibson, a Breckinridge and Lane sub-elector in Blount county, Alabama, has declared for Douglas. So also have Mr. Slanton, Senator, and Mr. Aldridge, Repre sentative and colleague of Mr. Gibson, from the same county. R. S. Tharin, Esq., who was a delegate to the Seceders' Convention, in Montgomery, from Coosa county, ha's come out from the camp of the suicides, and decla red for Bell and Everett." The Chronicle, in giving these facts, says, " the Breckiuridgers are shaking in their shoes." Large Snakes Accounts of large snakes are going the rounds of the paper just now. The Pennsyl vania Argus,Westmoreland county, th is State, gives the following of one seen lately in that county: Mr. Francis Cost, a resident of Ligonier borough, says the Record of that place, was down at Guffey's landing last week, and was told the following terrible account of a mon ster snake, then harboring in that neighbor hood. He gleaned the following from Mr. Guffrey, who it is needless for us to say, is a man of undoubted veracity : Near the " Yough" is a wild, rocky, rough hill, unfrequented except by aniAals, and is overgrown in many parts with bushes and briers. Some acquaintance of Mr. Guffrey, a respectable young man and a number of ladies went thither a few days ago, to gather black-berries. After arriving on the side of the hill, the young man separated from the ladies, and went higher up, where he soon found an abundance of ripe berries. Uncon scious of the presence of danger, and rejoicing in his success, he proceeded for a while gath ering berries into a large tin bucket. All at once, within ten feet of where he stood, peer ing up above and among the bushes, he saw the head and neck of a huge snake, or rather serpent, fixing its awful eyes on him. Around its neck was a white ring, and its body was as thick as that of a man. For a moment, horror stricken, he was petrified to the spot —then involuntarily he raised his bucket, and with both hands dashed it at the head of the monster I Suddenly it darted at him, and suddenly he turned and ran for his life down the hill. Proceeding some distance, down the steep and rocky bill, he cast his eyes back, when he found to his dismay, that it was now close at his heels, and coming with great speed, its head erect, and its body thirty or thirty-five feet in length I Finding escape impossible in a direct line down the steep, as quick as th,lught he sprang to one side, and ran in a different direction. Hap pily the serpent continued its course down the bill until it disappeared from his view. He immediately repaired to the spot where he had left the ladies—with horror depicted on his countenance, and trembling in every joint. He related to them the horrible story of his adventure and miraculous escape from instant death. It is needless to say, the par ty immediately started for their homes, in a state of mind they never before experienced. The fright so overcome the young man that he immediately went to his bed ill, and is yet confined, and unddr medical treatment. One thousand dollars are said to be offered to the person or persons who will kill this hideous snake—s3,ooo for it, if taken alive. Since the above account was put in type, we had the pleasure of an interview with Mr. J. iv. Miller, of Jacksonville, this county, who says that there is a general, well-founded be lief that there is a monster snake in that re gion of country, and that its den is among trs shelving rocks. As evidence, he says, some time ago, a Mr. Taylor, a gentleman of vo racity and courage, and with him he is well acquainted, was driving his wagon in that rough region and passed an old field. Look ing towards the fence, he saw the head, and about twelve feet of the body of an enormous snake, projecting through the fence. Its head was erect, and it seemed watching some object_jn another direction. He immediately stopped his wagon, and ran to the fence for a stake, with which to attempt to kill it. Un fortunately, as lie took hold of the stake a noise was produced, which attracted its no tice. Quickly it turned, and for a moment looked at him, and then turned and retreated through another opening into the field. Mr. Taylor testifies that he was within a few yards of his snakeship—and that if he had been so fortunate as to have had a gun, he could easily have killed it. He judged its length to be thirty feet, and its body at least six inches in thickness, or diameter. Besides this, its track has been repeatedly seen as of a log dragged through grainfields, meadows, &c., in that section. Companies are organized, and they are now making a thorough search for the creature. The Presidential Question. The Erie Dispatch in commenting on the election of a President by the House of Rep resentatives uses the following language : Every man who really loves his country above party, should so cast his vote at the approach ing Presidential elections as to keep the elec tions out of the House of Representatives. It is the genius of liberty and of all free in stitutions that the majority should rule ; hence we regard any provisions to destroy or mod ify this great principles as inimical and weak ening to the superstructure upon which rests all our cherished hopes. It is thus that we view the Constitutional provisions for the elec tion by the House of Representatives of Pres ident of the United States, where each State, large or small, has au equal voice. That is to say, three States, viz : Delmore, Oregon and Florida, with only a single Representa tive ; six States, Rhode Island, Arkansas, lowa, California, Texas and Minnessota, with only two Representatives ; three States, New Hampshire, Wisconsin and Vermont, with only three Representatives ; four States, Con necticut, Louisiana, Michigan and New Jer sey, with four Representatives ; one State, Mississippi, with five Representatives ; and three other States, Maine, Marylandand South Carolina, with six Representatives—twenty States, a majority, with only sixty-two Rep resentatives, actually controlling States with one hundred and seventy-three Representa tives, and electing a President for them ! Such an election can in no sense be called a popular election ; and we doubt if there is one voter in one hundred, throughout the country, who in his sober, deliberate senses, would prefer that the election of President should be taken out of the hands of the peo ple and be given to the House of Representa,= tives under such a provision as this. 'With the New York Times, we believe that no greater calamity could befall the country at this time than for the selection of our chief magistrate to be givin to a body of men who have so long been wrangling and- quarreling with each other, with some of whom money is more an object than principle, and who would have no scruples in setting aside the wishes of their constituents to obtain place, power or lucre. By all means let the elec tion be kept out of the House or Seaate. A FACT IN FAVOR OF HOOP SKIRTS.—Wo learn from the Taunton (Mass.) Gazette that a boat containing six men, two women and three children, was capsized in Mount Hope Bay on Sunday afternotn. Eli Irving, one of the party, swam three quarters of a mile, when obtaining the assistance of some boat men, the whole party were picked up in a comparatively comfortable state. Hoop skirt s wore the means of saving the women. Z=l