4 tHE4TOPLE'S JOURNAL JNO. S. MANN, 5 Erirros EDWIN HASKELL, • IDLLITV TO THE pr,ofix l'01; DEItSI'OI - IT, FHIp9Y, li t kftpk; 10,1854. There will be a Temperance meeting at Ellisburg, on March 31st, at which time Lewis B. Cole and P. H. Johnson will attend and address those wh o e re present. Friends in that neigh borhood 'wig .. plea§e give general notice of /hip meeting. The freemen of Warren Connty, without distinction of party, met at the Court House in Warren on Monday last, tp enter their solemn protest against the passage of Douglas' infamous bill to repeal the Missouri Compromise. There pow remains but. one County on the Northern line of our State, that has not spoken through a public meeting against consumation of this monstrous fraud. • • ligr We learn that the . Schoql_ Di reetorvhave resplyesl to commence the pistrict i School in this Borough on the 520th inst. • pr The last independent Press, of Williamsport, broke ground rather tim, idly against the Nebraska fraud. Wp trust t h e Editor will pow more bold, and Appasr this attempt to cheat the North out of her share of the Mksouri ReMpromise, in such terms as he feels tbp importance of the question requires. GRAHAM for March is, as UM -41, qf the first order and among its many ecelencies . we notice the con? titillation of the life of Washington, by p. lleadley, with a sbuperb engraving of the Father of his Country wile at) ; pored in' 1772, which is worth the price gf a Tear's subscription. Graham has Rid he was bound to excel' all competi7 tors; thus far he has made good his wofd. We wonder a little, -however, at the bad taste which defaces two pages with wand cuts that pre bet 7 ter suited to a ..Crocket Almanac" than to a high-toned Nl4gazine. Educatliniieonvention, A Convention of Teachers and friends of Education will be held at the Court Cooderspotl, nn Saturday, March 11, 1854, at 10 o'ckk, A. M. An ad. : dress tyill be delivered in the evening by Foriirc.c A. Alen,: Esq., principal of Smethport Academy. E 7. We are under obligations to Hon. Geo, J. Eluired of the House, and Hon. B. D. Hainlin of the Senate, for iarious public documents of interest. ilr-" A sound conatitution and an innocent mind are the true ingredients for prolonging and enjoying life." rfr The Ladies' Wreath and Parlor Annual for March is received and is un surpassed by any previous number. There is another commt i nication from L. this week. Those of our lead ers who read his "history of a night fifty years ago," will not need an invitation to read the present article, and. those who did poi, will di) well to look up their last Journal and look it over. We hope this writer will continuo his in -Itructive articles. _gar We have received the March number of the People's Jounlal, an il lustrated Record of agriculture, Mechan ic.s, Science and the useful arts, by Al fred E. Beach, No 86, Nassau st. N. y. The preEp.nt number contains 61 engra ylngs illustrative of the subjects of which ir treats. The Journal is published in Iwo volumes in a year at fifty cents a volume or one dollar a year, making it pne of the cheapest as well as most - in ptructive records of the kind published. 4 Not for Byron U. Hamlin to crack. We showed in last, week's Aland that the Senate of this State postponed the consideration of the Nebraska res olutions by one !qte, and that Mr. Ham lin, the Senator from this District, voted to postpone—thereby .misrepresenting his constituents, and favoring the pass age of the Douglas sivind!e. The ef- Pc! of this vote my be seen by the fol, Joiving from the Washington correspond, eat of the Nort4 American. • A FqLy great change of feeling has cer tainly taken place against the bill in WV Houses. The question does not appear to be near a decision in the Sen ate, and has yet to run the gauntlet of its friends in that body. It ntuat pass the ordeal of a spore or two of constitu tional questions. In the House, while some old friends hare fallen off, it has gained pp pew ones. Had the Penn sylvania .f,egislalure passed resolu tions disapproving of yhp movement, _the b 171 would hove fallen diKra in , Me arms ofitafriends,. Coudersport 'Academy. Mr: Ploomingdalo bas got thipgs pretty well organized, and the school is going" off finely. Every scholar seems to be pleatted, and willing to: work. We looked in 'on •Wednesday afternoon last for an boar or two and were delighted with the exercises. The punger portion of the students bad made up a scrap book, which evinced spirit; energy, and taste. We listened to its read ing with great interest ; and hope the scrap book will long be sppported with the same sprightliness - anti propriety with which it ?started. The other exercises, sucb as sing ing, reading compositions by the girls, and speaking selected peices by the bpys, were , equally interesting; and we agais,urge the citizens of this village to visit the Academy teny Wednesday afternoon, with our guaran tee that they will be paid for all the time h U 9 spec}. What is Democracy? There is a large number of politicians. in the United States, who' are governed by no principle ezcept the •love of the spoils of office. 'nese, seeing with what zeal the people cling to the name of De mocracy are continually shouting hozan• nes to this venerated watchword t but they take good care never to parctise any of its principles. Of this class of politicians is the Editor of the yoga Eagle, who, in the last number of that paper, facetiously remarks that, There has been no Democratic paper published in Totter since Judge Lyman relin quiAed.the editorial chair." This sort of joking is well enough with those who pre fully acquainted with all the 'papers alluded to ; but as some who will sce the article'may think it was intended tp he believed, we think it best to make a law comments on . this humorous satire. In the first place, it would puzzle our friend of the Eagle, er any body else, to tell what Derhocratic principle - Judge Lyman ever advocated in the coluMns of his paper; but, he having retirsd,from the field, we will let that point pass. In the second place, wa think it will be difficult. for the Eagle man to show that the People's Journal is not a Demo cratic paper. 'True, we do not care a. straw what you call us. Our. paper speaks for - itself. But we would 'like those pro-slavery papers that are con tinually assuming to be, par excellence, the Democracy, to show some evidence that the self-laudation i 3 well founded. And agam, we ask, ;Mat is Democ racy ? If the following definition of Senator Allen is a true one, we submit that this Journal is a Democratic paper, and that the Tioga .Eagle is no! : " DGMOCRACT..-A sentiment not to be ap palled; corrupted, or compromised. It knows n 6 baseness, it Foes to no danger, and op presses :so wroisass. Dcstructire only of despotism, it is the sole conservative of liberty. labor, and property. It is the sentiment of freedom, Of equal rights, of equal obligaqous —the law of nature preceding the law of the laud." This definition of Senator Allen, is derived from the snyingp and doings of the fathers. Speaking of the institution of slavery, said THOMAS JEEFERSON "The man must be a prodigy who eau retain his manners and morals n CORItt rrrn by such cireuintances. And with what execration should the statesman ho loaded, who, permit ting one half of the citizens thus to tramp'o on the rights of others, transforms those into DEsrors and these into enemies, destroyingthe morals of one part and the ANIO a P/TRI4 of the other."' And in his gddress to the Virginia Convention of 1774 he said : " The abolition of domestic slavery is tit', great object of desire iti these Colonies, WHERE IT WAS USIJA Pettr ImtonvcEp lS Tpz!tt IN AST rreiE."- Says our country, speaking by the voice of Jefferson ; " We hold these truths self-evident. that all men are created equal—that they are endowed with certain inalienable rizhts—that among there are life, liberty, and the pursuit of hap piness." And again, in the Congress of the Confederation, he brought forward, as 'early as 11'04 resolution to exclude Slavery from all the Territory " ceded or to be ceded" by the 'States of the Federal Government, including the whole territory now covered by Tennes see, Wssissippi, and Alabama. Lost at first by a single rote only, this meas. s ure in a more restrieted form, was re newed at a subsequent day, by an hon ored son of Massachusetts, and in 1787 was finally confirmed in the ordinance of the Northwestern TerritOry by a unanimous vote of the States. And in 1820 this same principle was applied to the exclusion of Slavery from all the Territory then belonging to us North of 36 9 30'; and to maintain which. our best erorts are given ; but the Eagle seeks to overthrow this early measure of Democracy. Said Governer Morris: " He never would concur in upholding domestic slavery. It was a nefaripyi institution. It was the curse of Hpien." Mr. Aadisqn " Thought it a wrong to admitin the Constithtion the idea of property in man." And General Wash 11106; thelaireTolhrs" , i atritlad to the Marquis de Lafayettei6 thelsth: 'of April; 1783, said • . r • " The scheme, my dear Marquis, which you propose as a precedeut to enu µrage tbq emu, I:Toth:in of the bliCks, in this 'Country, from . 'that state of bondage in which they-are held, is a Striking evideneo of le benevolence of your heart . I shall lie• happy to join you in so LAUDADLIC a work, but will defray going ; into a detail of tile business, milli I jiave the, • pleasure of seeing you." To another friend General Washing ton Wrote,. " that it was among his -.first- wishes to -see some-Plan adopted- by which plaveiy may be abolished by law," and that to this end " his suffrage should not be wanting." ' "In accordance with these noble sen tinients• he emancipated his own slaves. By the light of this testimony, or by any other which emanated from the men of that time, we challenge the Tioga Eagle to show that the People's Journal is not A Democratic paper. • Pour In the Petitions, It does one good to see the consterna 1--- , . twin pro d uce d among the conspirators at Washington,, at the arrivsl of such a flood of remonstrances against the Doug. las fraud. We say to our friends in this county, there is still hope of defeating this monstrous iniquity, and that every petition forwarded unites to swell the mighty influence of the people. We are proud of this county. From every section we hear of activity, and perseverance in the circulation of remon strances. Mr. H npBARD STARWEATH ER spent two or three days, in traveling over the townships of Stewardson and Abbot, for this purpose, and he did no bly. He obtained 130 names to his re monstranee which was duly forwarded to oar member by Mr. Samuel Haven of this Borough. We hope this,woric will be continued. Those who • hare not signed petitions should do so at once. If:one is not pre sented to you, get one up without delay now is the time to work. Here is a form taken from the Tribune of the 2nd of \iarch ich will be sure to spur you up. 'fica following form of petitions will be at all the Brooklyn ferries through out to-day and to-cuor.sow,...and every, passenger who-does not desire to see the great rascality now before Congress per peVrated. wUI add his name to the list. It is p short but pcinted pretest, upon a subject which we cannot afford to waste words upon ; it is time for action: This protest will serve to tell how many. are ready for action ; To the Honorable the Senate and House of Rept esentalives, in Congress assembled ; We, the udersigned, inhabitants of the City of Brooklyn respectfully protest against the passage of the "Nebraska bill," or any measure extending Slavery into territory now free. ,/frahl of the People. The Temperance men of this State have been asking their legislators to pass a law to prohibit the salq and manufacture of intozicating The politicians say the people are not prepared for such a law. Our fiiends reply, Pass the law and then submit the question of repeal to a vote of the-peo ple. Is this not democratic ? We say large- majority of the people are in favor of a prohibitory , law, and to show our sincerity we say to our opponents, Let the question be tried as soon as you like/Now who are they in- this Stale that are afraid to trust the peopled The fol lowing.from the last 'Crystal Fountain of Harrisburg, will answer this question. Tee defeat of the eighth eection, which recognises the right to search premises where there is proof that liquor is kept far sple by persons not author ized terse!! is virtually a defeat of the bill itself; for without the right of search and seizure, the law would be practically useless. In order that the people may know who are the FRIENDS and who the ENEMIES of this great reform measure, we put on record the yeas and nays on the eighth section of the bill. Whigs marked thus : ( 4 1). • Yzss—Messrs, Barnes,* Darsie,* Ev ans.*. Ferguson,* Frick , 4 Hamilton,' B. D.. Hamlin, E. W. Hamlin, Hoge, Ja mison, Kunkel,* M'Fariand, Platt, Skin. ner,* Shfer,•--15. NAVS—Messrs. Huckalew, Crabb.! Gresswell. Darlington,* Foulkrod, Fry Goodwin, Haldeman, Heister, Kinzer" M'Clintock, Price,* Quiggle, Sager, Wherry. and M'Caslin, Speaker--1118. It will be seen that a large majority of the Whigs voted for the bill, and that a large majority of the Democrats voted against it,' The four Whigs who voted against it are from the great Rutq cities of Philadelitia and Lancaster. From all other parts of the State, including our own district, the Whigs proved tree.' Mr. Kuria - 4 made an eloquent appeal is furor of the hill, and labored bard to save it— but the edict had gone forth that the bill must. I tie slefeated—the "power behind the throne must be obeyed—and men, with professions of friendship warm upon their lips, .c oo lly cut the throat of this great measure, and e r Prinkled' its hfooir u - port - ibe - altir of Nu& ! Thel tippcoltiokcf these - party/ •tricksters to the Bth : section wa*-01.1114 they consigereil the. principle it em :hOied wrong. but because they lwanted 'a pretext for.killing the . bill uself r - for - they - knew - that; strippef - of theimport ant feature of the right of search, the law would be practically useless, and therefore unucceptablp to .the friends of Prohibition. We call'opouthe temper ance men of the State to fimark' the -political tricksters" who -have brought' about, this result. What Shall Wo 11;17 The Nebraska fraud could easily be defeated if all who are opposed to it would only do stunvhing. There is McKeon county, with three fourths of her voters' opposed to.the Douglas swin dle, as yet perfectly inactive, so far as any public meeting is concerned. And there ate many people in this county who have not yet done any thing to pre serveiNebraska from the curse of Slave ry. What is true of McKean, is true of most of the ceunties of this State, and bereih lies the great danger that Slavery will 'again , triumph. We trust that every reader of this paper, will see to it, that no part of the responsibilities of this crime rests on his shoulders. , Should 4py inquire What more can be done ?we answer every thing. Read the following from the pen of Him: WARD BRECHER. in the last N. Y. In depend en I, and then resolve 1p THERE is every where a questioning, What shall we do? 1. : Let. petitions .be circulated in eve ry school district, in every village and town; and las Mst as a hundred' names are got, let them be sent to Congress ; and thus let every day's mail carry one, until a stream of petitions j sets in. In this Work American women,can proper ly engage. This may incite those "to action with whorn_they have influence; they 'may see to it that petiticins are cir culated, and do much toward it by their own Services. Was there dyer an occa sion or a otiose that should draw forth a woman's heart, if it be not this—the sa ving of countless numbers of their own sex from the shameless degiadation of a slavery which ignores 'marriage, find tramples under foot the tenderest and holiest ties of humanity. Schools of young men, and colleges, woikmen in manufactories, nd societies of every kind, might send petitions to Washington, from their 'own members. In short', let every thing that has breath speak, so that it may be known at Wash ington that gambling politicians do not represent the Northern sentiments, 27, Let documents be circulated among the people, the speeches of 'chose, Sew, ard, and Sumner. Let papers be , pre, pared in every, prindipal neighborhood, giving concisely the facts, an/ the fu ture bearings of this step, Ito be issued in country papers, and in hind-bills. We should know how tq work in the Temperance cause ; and just 'so must we labor in this cause. 3, Let every - man of apy influence, write to his rcpresentativi.. It is 'not enough to sign. petitions. Let there be thousands-crrpriVate letters, asking them what they are doing - to preterit this evil, and representing the' heme interest which is Jell. j • 4. There should prompt:ly be called public meetings, great and small,. all °vet the North, that mar t may kindle each other's zeal, stringthee each other's purposes, and give movement and, ma jestic power to public sentiment. 6. The *pie should not wait'until public men, great men, influential men, or any men, tell theM to move: The people are competent to move of them selves. Wherever a heart beats in this cause, let that heart give its emotions utterance. Let poor men, unlettered men, mechanics and laborers; in short, the great industrial class—let them move with spontaneousness. : But whoever works, and wfatever is done, it must be done with promptness and vigor. No time is to be lost The matter will speedily ha settled in one way or another. . • Tzwi ANDITRUE.—The Boston Cou rier has the following plain talk about the Nebraska bill : “ There is not the slightest question of constitutional prin ciple involved in the Nebraska question. It is' simply a quention whether the nation shall tell a lie or not in respect to the Misiburi Compromise. It is simply a question whether the agree ment we have made not to do a specified thing shall now find us true men or false knaves. A bargain has been made, a solemn compact entered into, that Slave • ty shall not , be legalized in a certain region and the question is whether at this moment, without the slightest ne cesiity or excuse, we shall wilfully, abd in the face I bf the whole world, break our word thus solemnly-given, and corn, mit an act of national perjury,'l Liquor Law In Pennsylvania. UARRISBURG, Friday March 3,.1854. The House this afternoon considered the prohibitory liqour bill. An amend ment striking out all after the enacting clause, and inserting a simple submission of the question of prohibition to the people, ,vvisi lost—yeas 43. Nays, 49. The first section of the bill was. the neg atived—yeas 41 Nays 52. - -- . • MIAN . DEMOCRACY. _ The , +i National allies of Slavery" mei in COnvention at Pittsburgh on the 20th of Inst. Month. to' choose delegates to die State Convention, to meet on the Bth of this month. A Committee of five was appointed to prepare resolutions—delegates were chosen to represent Allegheny county in the State Convention—when the Com mittee reported resolutions praising Big ler and Judge Black, and congratulating the people on their prosperity, etc. One of the Committee, Dr. George . M'Cook, said he did not exactly like the resolutions, and oared the following as a substitute: Whereas; the Hui. Stephen A. Doug las has introduced to the United States Senate a bill proposing that Congress shall exercise a non-intervention in refer ence to the 'e'stablishment of Slavery in the Territories of Nebraska and Kansas. . , And wherees,such a proceeding would be a violation of the plighted faith of the South to the . North, aid a virtual re peal of the Missouri Compromise. - And whereas, the introduction of Nebraska into the Union as a Slave Territory would be Prejudicial to North+ erni greets. - Therefore, ; Resolved, That, as members of the . national democratic party, we view with deep regret' the introduction of the Ne braska Bilho the Senate of the United States by a Northern Democrat ; that said bill is not required by the wants of said TerritCriei—has not its origin in any known exigency of the times—is a trans gression of the Baltimore Platform—is deeply. injurious to the people of the North—is a contemptuous treatment of the Missouri Compromise and of the friends- of 'that measure, and therefore cannot be, end shall not by our silence, become a measure of the national dent cratic party: We ask the reader if,these resolutions are not true. Are they not just and reasonable ! Do they not speak of a subject of 4nepsing importance? How think you they were received in a pro fessing Democratic Convention ? We will show. you. We quote -from the Pi uSbu rg h Dispatch Mr. A. B. I.l)dalmont rose to reply to the last speaker. He contended that the Nebraska bill was not up for considera tion before the Convention, and that to entertain . the report of Dr. M'Cook would be to pass upon a subject not be fore them, and entirely foreign to the object for which they had assembled, He indulged in several petty flings at Dr. M'Cook, whom he termed a disor ganizer,&c. He defended the Nebraska bill, and declared his readiness to meet the lust speaker, or any other who sup ported him, there ur elsewhere, on the subject. He charged Dr. M'Cook with being an Ohio Abolitionist, and as such he warned the Convention against adopt ing his resoltition. It was offered con trary to parliamentary rules, and the delegates from the townships should bear in mind that it was not before the CoO rention for Consideration. Captain Ward followed; he saw the efforts that Were being made to choke the resolution of Dr. M'Cook with re gret,' as he' r believed that ninety-nine Democrats out of every hundred in dap county held ;the sentiments it expressed. He dared . those' vvhe opposed it to give it a fair heering before the Convention ; they _were afraid to do so; for if they did, it was4.fire to pass. If they did n't want to gag the delegates, they should let a vote un,Dr. M'Cook's resolution be taken,. j A gentleman, whose name we did not learn; conten ded that the minority report was out oli order, and could not be enter tained. The Chair sustained the ob jection, and 'another Acene of confusion followed, 4 u. And so, this peitr, quibble, that the report was not i , i order, was successfully Used to gag: I the rank and file on the • I • most • important question that has been before Congress for thirty years. Such is the Deinocracy of Pennsylvania. As Captain s War d. said, nine tenths of the people want to oppose this Douglas out rage; but thi leaders shy,. No, that would he out of order,-not parliament. try .If that is democracy, we should like to hear despotism "defined. The Pittsburgh doughfaces acted in perfect keeping with their masters at Washington. Pierce and Douglas know perfectly well 'that nine tenths of the people of this nation are opposed to this Nebraska Swindle. Nevertheless, they are determined to force it through Con gress; and their atatelites are every where at work with parliamentary rules, and questions of order—tricking and lying to defeat the will of the people. Why, one of these Jackals of party had the impudence and arrogance to assert that if he had been here on the night of our-anti Nebraska meeting, those resolu tions would never have passed. He would have a erUshed out" all such nonsense. Pretty Democracy, is n't it ? But this would-be Judge of the polluted Territory is a fair sample of the leaders of his party. They all act on one prin tiple, to wit. : that the politician is every thing—the people nothing. But there is trouble ahead for these seltconatittited itialtlians:of the 'people's _ consciences. The massca grow restive under the iron • rute of party.- Speaking of this same Pittsburgh Convent*. the-Dispatch Bays: , . The felt and expressed by the untrammeled democrats who took part in the Convention, convinces us that the sentiment of that party is en tirely anti-Nebraska-bill, and that those who were insulted and abused by the machinery of the corrupt controllers of their 'party, will, ere long. give these unscrupulous politicians a striking dam. onstration of their views. Whatever the Administration may do at ynshington in whipping in its retainers to the sup port of this anti-democratic measure, the ,wire-pullers here have ascertained that Pittsburg democrats cannot be driven, like xattle, to the shambles. ',They made themselves heard, yesterday, hoiterer, at the Convention ; they will cause themselves to be felt, at the first °nor tunity, at_thelpolls. Througb the Senate. The Douglas fraud was put through the Senate on Friday night last. Thy following is the account given by the Tribune of the final vote. . THE debate Was continued until 5 o'clock, nt which thour he final vote was taken, and the bill passed, by—Yeas 37, Nayi 19. as follows: " YEAS—Messrs. Adams, Atchinson, Badger, Bayard,. Benjamin, Brodhead, Brown, Butler, Cass, Clay; Dawson, Dixon. Dodge of lowa, a nips Emir, titzpat rick, Geyer, Gtv in. Hu nter,lolin son, Jones of lowa, Jones of Tenn., Ma son, Morton, Norris, Pettit, Pratt, Rusk, Sebatian, Shields, Slidell, Stuart. Thompson of Kentucky, Thompson of New Jersey:, Toucy, Weller, Williams. NAYS—Messis. Bell, Chase, Dodge of W is.; Fes se nde it, Fish, Foot, Hamlin,. Houston, James, Seward, Smith, Sum ner, Wade, Walker. Messrs. Bright, Toombs and Mallory are sick ; but all would haue voted for the bill!. • Mr. Allen (absent from sitkriess in his fsmily) would have voted against is. Messrs. Phelps. Pearce, Cooper, Ev erett, Clayton and Wright not voting. The title of the bill was changed to Bill for the Government of Nebraska and Kanzas." • Mr. cAp---f Cougratulate the Seo ate on the triumph of the squatter soYel eignty. Adjourned till Tuesday. Be Faithful to Your Obliga- tiona. We clip the following from the lade. pendent Herald, of Westchester, Pa., as an evidence of the good to be accom plished by a faithful discharge of duty: DEAR BossE—Elizabeth Wright of McKean county, Pa , now on a visit to parts of Chester and other counties in State, attends the religious meeting of progressive Friends at Atrelborough, on First day, the sth inst. She is a Methodist, traveling with a certificate, or credentials. of unity and goad standing in that Church ; is a young woman of great apparent piety, of n vigorous, methodical, and cultivated intellect, and gifted with an- ease and fluency of expression rarely equalled by one of her sex. Her mission purports to be art moral and religious character; but especially the advntement of the great temperance reformation. Her lectures at Kennett Square and New Red Lion, on the lattersubject, were justly consid ered by the large auditory in attendance amongst the most brilliant efforts they had ever listened to. Being pervaded by such a devotional feeling, such a deep and profound knowledge of as sudject, by clear and forcible expositions, a solemn and impressive, manner, with powerful appeals to the reason and judgment of the -hearers, rendered.har discourse peculiarly impressive and irre sistible.. Her sermons are divested of every thing of a speculative or dogmatic character; are catholic and bractical in their tendency, and calculated to unite the honest and truth seeking of all denom inations, in the great work of divesting true religion from technical theology, and concentrating their efforts for the promotion of the brotherhood of man, in opposition to the desolating systems ,of war, slavery. intemperance, and opprea aion of 'every character. Such devoted and self-sacrificing travelers, and laborets.for the promotion of truth and righteousness in the earth, with the cordiality and christain toler ation with which they are sometime,' received, remind us of the assemblies of the primitive believers, where, with. out prejudice- or denominational bias, .‘ each one spake as the spirit pro orrn utterance." Free Boil Nomination in Molt igan. [Correspondence of the 'Evening 'Post.] ANN ARBOR, February 21, 1554. • ' The* Freesoilere held a• large and en thusiastic state convention at Jackson, yesterday. They nominated for gover nor, Kinsley S. Bingham, a gentleman of considerable talent and ability, He was a democratic member of Congrss a few years since but. as excommunicated from the party by the Cass portion of it, because he was not enough of a senile,- and has since acted with the meatier., The nominee for lieutenant-govesnor is Nathan Pierce ; He has been a mem ber of the Legislature for several ,terms having peen elected through the 'mut support of the Whigs and freesoilers. =