Lancaster intelligencer. (Lancaster [Pa.]) 1847-1922, September 11, 1855, Image 2

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    inttiligenctr&gottnal
GEO. SANDERSON, EDITOR.
Imy Dratiol ai piltinfm
HOE CANAL COMMISSIONER:
ARNOLD PLIIIIIIM, of lrenango
The County . Convention
The County Convention will assemble at
Shober's Hotel to-morrow (Wednesday) at 11
o'clock. We have no doubt it will be a full
Convention, and we hope to see such a ticket
placed in nomination as will command the
respect of all parties. The Deinocracy have
plenty of good material in the county, and it
will be our own fault if the very best men are
not selected for the various offices.
Wonderful, the Swaps and Changes
The Abolition State Convention, at Pitts
burg, after organizing, appointed a Committee
to recommend a suitable person for Canal
Commissioner, which Committee unanimously
reported the name of PETER MARTIN, Esq., of
this county. This nomination came from the
Woolley-Head, Know-Nothing side, of the
house—the nomination having been made by
Theophilus Fenn and Dr. Gibbons, who rep
resented Lancaster county in that pie-bald
gathering. The other, or Silver-Grey, anti-
Know-Nothing wing, howeier, demurred to
MARTIN'S nomination, and carried their point
by substituting the name of PASSMORE WIL
LIAMSON-, the Abolition jail-bird, of Philadel
phia.
We infer from the above that PETER MAR
TIN 18 to be the Know-Nothing candidate for
Canal Commissioner—hence the effort made
by his Know-Nothing friends to give him the
Abolition nomination also, and fhus effect a
complete fusion between the two. Ws also
infer that he is not only a good Know-Noth
ing, (which has never been doubted,) but an
out and out Abolitionist to boot! Queer com
pany, truly, to find our quondam Democratic
friend in—but there is no , accounting for
tastes ! When a man once deserts the Demo
cratic party, even in a partial way, there is
no telling whdre he will stop. There is ap
parently no end to his downward career.
Delegate■ Elected.
City—S. W. W.—Henry Shaum, Chas. B. Moy
er. Benjamin Kautz, !Came
Withers, John Steigerwalt, jr
o S. E W".-IV..F. S. Warren, William M
Gormley, J. T. McGonigle
Philip Leonard, Geo. R. Ap
pleby.
N. IV. W.—Edward Kautz, Jno. H. Duch
• man, Junius B. Kauffman
John W. Jackson, H. Blink
ensderfer.
N. E. Ir—William Cox, John Hamilton,
J. L. Reynolds, Charles M.
Howell, George Reese.
Coney—C. S. Haldeman, John D. Ilefß, John
Haldeman, John Kob. John H. Smith.
Elizabethtown.—B. F. Baer, Emanuel Hoffman,
Jacob Grove, Ambrose Shrode, James Laird.
Leacoek.—John Reed, Robert J. Knox, Peter
Beam, John L. Lightner, B. F. Holt.
Illanor.—Conrad Krause, Peter Lyne, George G.
Brush, Park Mason, Frederick Selmer.
Mount Joy B.—Joseph M.'Corkle, Joshua Leader,
John Ream, S. C. Pinkerton, John H. Broneman.
Paradise.—James P. M'ilvaiu, James Alirvin,
Geo. Fondersmith, Robert Taggert, Geo. L. Eckert.
Strasburg B.—John E. Girvin, H. Whiteside,
Wm. Steacy, Alexander ShultzoJoseph D. Nichols.
Hemp . field East,—br. Samhel Parker, Henry
Hoffman, Henry Myers, William K. Martin, Henry
U. Imhoff. jr.
Monheim Twp.—Benjamin Eby, George Ham
bright. Joseph Wisner, Jacob Long, John Bair.
ll'arwick—Peter Felies, Jacob Busser, Sr., Benj.
Zeutmeyer, Sam'l E. Keller, Dr. Levi Hull.
Conestoga—S. S. Welsh, Henry Hammer, John
Kelp, Fred. Sourbeer, Jacob Kaufman.
Donegal East—J. S. loath, (.1 W. Terry, IL E.
Klugh.
Salisbury—Thos. W. Henderson, Thos. S. MeL
vain, George W. Werntz, J. B. Baker, David'Kurtz.
Ephrata.—Samuel Hull, Samuel Gorges., Daniel
.M . Cormick, Samuel R. Nagle, U. I'. Gross.
Ephrata Township
The following excellent resolutions were
passed at the Democratic Delegate Meeting,
in Ephrata township, on Friday last:
Resoleed, That the faction know as Know-
Nothings or Americans, while they hake cast
a stigma of shame upon our country by their.
bigotry, intolerant and proscriptive doctrines,
are to be condemned by every lover of relig
ious freedom as entirely at variance with the
spirit of our free institutions as contemplated
by our forefathers of the Revolution.
Resolved, That we, the Democrats of Ephra
ra Township, still continue to adhere to the
cardinal principles of the Democratic party as
they were handed down to us from Jefferson,
and that in defence of the great principle of
religious liberty, we will battle earnestly
against that miserable faction of demagogues
who pander to a low prejudice to rob the
members of one religious denomination of their
inalieniable rights, and thus take the first step
toward a unioh of church and State.
' Resolved, That no Democrat will hesitate to
subscribe his name to these resolutions and
guy one refusing to do so is no Democrat and
not entitled to a cite at this meeting.
SAMUEL HELL, President.
SAMUEL GORGAS, Vice President.
DANIEL. M'COIMICK, Secretary.
The ii.note-Nothing Nominations
The Know Nothings held their delegate
elections, ttrou4hout the county, on Satur
day last, and the return judges met in this
city, on yesterday, for the purpose of adding
up the returns. At the time uur paper went
to press we had not learned the result, for
they were not yet through with their labors--
but it was pretty well ascertained that, fur
the Legislature, Messrs. JOHN A. IIIESTAND,
of this city, CHRISTIAN 1731111. E, of Salisbury,
and P. W. HOUSEKEEPER, of Drumore, were
three of the nominees.
We were no little amused at the
Movements of the Nichts Wissers, in
this City, on Saturday evening. Ma
ny of them appeared! to be ashamed
of the company they were in, and waitet un
til thrtkness brooded over the earth before
thereentured out, and then stealthily wended
their way through alleys, stable yards and
dark streets to the places of voting. Well
knowing that their deeds were evil, they were
afraid of the light of day--ashamed to let
their fellow-citizens know that they belonged
to the dark-lantern party..
Boyce, the Know-Nothing Abolition candi
date, has been re-elected Governor, and also
the whole State ticket. The same party have
carried a majority of the' State Legislature.
Vermont was always a Whig Stale. It is
now under the rule of K'now-Nothingistu ab
olitionized.
Dauphin Count}
The Democratic, Convention of Dauphin
county has:, nominated HENRY LA GRAIN and
Jolts HALDEMAN, for Assembly; and appoint
ed SAM L: EL S. BIGLER and 0. BARRETT, dele
gates to the next State Convention.
Northumberland County
The Democratic Convention of Northum
berland County has nominated J. H. ZIMMER
MAN, for Assembly—and appointed D. B.
MONTGOMERY and J econ LEISENRINO, dele
gates to the next State Convention.
rer. The "Republican," alias Abolition
State Convention, met at Pittsburg, on Wed
nesday last, and nominated PASSMORE
LIAMSOS (the man who helped to steal Col.
Wheeler's slaves, in Philadelphia, and now in
prison by direction of Judge Kane,) for Canal
Commissioner!
Berko County
The Democratic Convention of " Old Berks"
has nominated the following excellent ticket,
• Senator--John G. Evans. •
House—J. Lawrence Getz, (Ed. Gazette,) B
Nunamacher, W. Hines, George Shenk.
' , lronies to . ate k 4 - ' Ly.
The President and Kansas..
The course of events in Kansas continua
to be a gat-send to the abolitionists. The law
establishing this territory, and the Nebraska
territory, contemplated free action by the ho..
na fide settleis of those two territories ; it is
based on the idea that the people settling them
might be trusted with the control of their
cal affairs, with as much safety as were those
of California or Arkansas, or of Massachu
setts ; and every movement designed to pre
vent such independent action by the settlers
is as contrary to and violative of the law un
der which they act, as it is to common sense
and republican government.. This will apply
as well to the forced action of abolitionists as
to the outrageous course of the Missourians;
Both have been against the spirit of the law.
And it cannot be denied that the Missouri
ans are proceeding from bad to worse ; that
the laws they are passing are as absurd and
ridiculous as their election proceedings were
illegal. Their act, for instance, makiug free
discussion a penal offence is simply ridiculous,
Do the men who passed it call themselves Jef
fersonian republicans ? Let them recur to the
great lessons of the sage of Monticello—his
own treatment of the slavery question—and
see how withering is his condemnation of their
proceedings. The very suggestion that Thonil
as Jefferson would approve of such laws as the
Kansas legislature have passed is a libel on
his memory.
But what do the abolitionists, and men even
who would disclaim the epithet, say as to a
remedy ? They denounce the course of non-
action of the President. They say he was
prompt to art- in the rendition of Anthony
Burns, but has not moved a finger to stay
back the inroad of the Missourians into Kan
sas, or to rebuke their legislation ; and then
they fall to and heap upon him denunciation
upon denunciation. Now let us see what
this clamor means : let us see exactly what'
these abolitionists demand: let us test their
political soundness.
And first, what these abolitionists demand,
what they virtunlly ask, is that the President
shall despatch a tnilitary force into Kansas to
control its local affairs; to act exactly as Lou-
is Napoleon would act as to a disloyal prefect
ure, or local council. If, under the French
centralization, a local board on the' outskirts
of France gets into trouble, it is the simplest
of operations to remedy it. The despot has
but to detatch a regiment; turn out the pre
fect and the council, and instal others. These
clamorers for executive intervention in the
case of Kansas are asking just this that the
President would send a file of troops to dis
solve the-legislature, just as Cromwell scatter
ed the rump parliament!
The searching question may be here asked,
what right has the President to make or med-
die with the local legislature of Kansas? He i§
made, by the constitution, the executor of the
laws of the land ; he is bound to govern him-
self by these laws; and the law establishing
Kansas expressly provides that its intent and
meaning is "to leave the people thereof per
fectly free to form and regulate their domestic
institutions in their own way, subject only to
le constitution of the United States." And
ag,am : " The constitution and all laws of the
United States, which ate not locally inapplica
ble, are to have the same force and effect in
liansas as elsewhere within the United States
Here, then, is the rule of action for the Pres
dent. The law actually prohibits him from
meddling with the proceedings of the Kansas
legislature. It is evident that the same oath
which obliges him to execute the law in the
case of the rendition of a fugitive, obliges him
to refrain from meddling with the internal af
fairs of the Kansas territory. The abolition
clamor, then, amounts to denunciation of the
President fur obeying the laws of the land !
Nothing could be more sensless than the
abolition clamor because of the President's
non-action as to the Kansas elections and the
action of the Kansas legislature. And the
whole outside interference with the local af
fairs Of Kansas is entirely uncalled for. It is
no new thing for intruders to interfere in the
incipient stages of our territorial governments.
Great Confusion,for years,existed in California,
before the regular action of government com
menced; hordes of intruders threatened the
peace of the country ; on the discovery of the
placers vessels were deserted by their crews;
foreigners of every description flocked into the
country : Indian horse thieves abounded ; and
there was no end to the confusion that existed,
up to the urge of civil war. President Tay
lo, in'his to congress, January 21,
1850, slates that the instructions given to the
government officers were, "that all measures
of domestic policy adopted by the people of
California must originate solely with thhm
selves ;" and that his ainuhad been to avoid
any interterence with the election of delegates.
The abolitionists, now, would sect bi want
the President to exercise a guardianship over
the people ; to station it military force in Kan
sas; and act the part of dictator to its legisla
ture ! When a case arises of resistance to the
laws of the United States, and the President
is called upon to act under the law of congress
of 1705, the past shows that he will be the fast
to shrink from the performance of duty.
The abolitionists are making the most out of
the state of things in Kansas; and the men
who have usurped the control of the territory
and inaugurated all but mob law, are playing
completely into their hands. But every other
people of every other state, in its incipient
stages, happily at length instituted its local
government. It was so With Illinois, Indiana,
Arkansas, California; and in due time the
people of Kansas will imitate their example.
—Boston Post.
A Know-Nothing Parson in Mississipp
At the present time, Rev. Mr. Clinton, a
Baptist clergyman, is attempting to evangel
ize Mississippi fur the benefit of the know
nothing order. if only a portion of the say
ings attributed to him be true, his congrega
tion would be largely the gainers in pure re
ligion and sound morality if he wholly forsook
the pulpit for the stump. A correspondent
of the Memphis Appeal thus alludes to a
speech recently delivered by thd-reverend gen
tleman at Holly Springs, Mississippi :
" Mr. Clinton commenced by abusing the
administration in the same manner as all dis
affected and disappointed democrats and of
fice seekers. He charged the Postmaster Gen
erat with sending out secret mail agents, with
secret keys, for the purpose of robbing the
mail bags—a charge so degrading and false,
that it should be spoken of only to brand it
with the infamy the author deserves by all
true American citizens."
The transparent falsehoods of this unscru
peons political parson will be properly an
swered and effectually rebuked at the ballot
box. Every speech he makes will only add
to the numbers in the democratic ranks. Let
him keep on.— Washington Union.
CORRECTION.-A slight mistake was made
last week in publishing the names of the vs
,rious Know-Nothing candidates. For Di
rector of the Poor, we gave the name of John
H. Brenneman, Mount Joy twp., whereas,
it should have been John H. Brenner, of the
same township.
Our excellent young Democratic friend, Mr.
JOHN H. BRENNEMAN, of Mount Joy, would
hardly feel himself honored by being connect
ed in any way whatever with the doings of
the Know-Nothing tribe; and we deem it an
. Sam tiln Articulo Mortes.”. • • Hon. Asa Packer.
- _
There is no mistake about it,. ,Sam's - most . We find the following reference to our esti
skilful physicians and best friendshaie given ; mable friend, Judge PACKER, member ()keen
* ut. &Says' the Miss' ouriDemOcrat. With- grass from the glorious "Tenth Legio l p"-in ,
out recuperatiVe force, or the requisite reserve this State. It is in a letter framlllaneh ghtink .
of vital energies, he is rapidly yielding to the , to the editor of the Philadelphia North ibner
paralyking and dissolving touch of death, and icon, and shows in what high estimatio l he is
i t
not all the nameless resources of the political ' every where held, end how richly he • end
materia medico, not all the Promethean fire I tied, by his integrity, intelligence an ' busi
at the command of the most experienced party ' nem qualifications, to the rewards, bo h pe
hacks, can rouse Lim from his mortal lether- cuniary and political, he is receivi g at
gy. He is moribund ; and will shortly be as the hands of the people of his district, and
dead as a coffin nail, which Dickens tell us is others :
the deadest piece of iron-mongery in reruns "In the fall of the year 1852, the entire
construction of the Lehigh Valley It inroad
nature. Forlorn, destitute and deserted in
vovasl place,
who ettoAsaP ppaackere,ars to
haveEsrl.,also a o ti ited
d i ent
his agony, he has had full trial of the stabil-
f this ity and constancy of fair-weather friends, -who it with great vigor, and in less than fort
rallied around him in the hey-day of his prcis- night of this time, it is said, will have i ready
perity and power,• and were fain to ride into for opening. At that time the North Penn
sylvania Railroad was not contemplat d. It
place and emolument on the rising wave of his i s
I now in course of construction, au will
short-lived greatntss. His melancholy career . connect, as before observed, at Bethlehe and
will furnish another instance for the page of Sheimersville with the Lehigh Valle road,
the world's history of the "vanity of human and thus place Mauch Chunk as near b. this
wishes" and the uncertainty of human calcu- lbiynetloief roads"e
a Reading
T t ' l li i i l l r a o d i e d l 1 , hi a as Potts' ille is
lations. The men who gladly hailed his ad- "I was unfo g rtunate enough not to nd at
vent when he stalked faith un the political home our old friend, the Hon. Asa Pack r, the
stage, with the poignard in his hand, and contractor for constructing this road. I had
abustliflibtaf noq uritidnetianocfebiNsvitl abilitiesr him
a in tni tl e n city,
murder in his eye, and proscription and
cursing on his lips ; and the more cautious of character until I visited this regioi . er l?e .
and wily, who fearful -of committing them- came to this place some twenty od years
selves in the onset, watched hiS course with since, from Susquehanna county, wh re he
wise and astute concern, ready at the fortun-il'ilideeacohf
a wo e o a d r s p ' e ' nte farm,r Ili
iti dstock
ate moment to step'in and reap their share of f l u a l d lo a w
ed smalls
hi t;
in trade consisted of the clothes on hi back . ,
the honor and profit, now shirk him, thread- a handsaw, jack plane, and stout heat, and
bare and out-at-elbow, as they meet him on indomitable determination to make h s own
the streets, and are even ready to administer w m a ig y h i t i v i tlhiettl'e'or e l i d ia ,
n an e d, ii i l f
b r i e s por o t e s k pe t a ' ,- i ß tr . ue,
the final, ungrateful kick as 'he descends found trustworthy g and active, ' he ' sou i w e
'
swiftly and noiselessly to the "tomb of all ahead. In a short time we find him fioating
the Capulets." , coal on the canal. From that he opened a
It wasthe grand misfortune of he Whig store, then
er contractor nlyit , fo i r lex b t l111;1 , 111g dRl f llB in
party that it was destined to survive the prim- "Roam Run" Run" mines,. belonging i. h : i s t e l e ie I.ehi t oi e ;
ciples which at the start informed and ani- Company, then owner of his own coal mines
mated it. However prejudical to the best near Hazleton, and contractor for constructing
interests of the nation those aims and princi-
itthiettlllsehtitgnliteVivaleleytinilaih a ill
e
Railroad, (47nnier
terms,
ble
and
0 :1...i ll die),,
pies were, they at least furnished, an intelligi- State Legislature for two o r three
ble object and scope for the action of a party during which he had Carbon county reeled;
altogether devoid of political virtue and patri- then an Associate Judge of that ei.uilty for
otism. But long before the death of either fi h( N ) ' l e d y t e h a e r s e 2
o i
ti n
r N t l , ' h a l e n ' I d time
t lr had frequrintly to
e
of the great chieftans whose fame is identi- quince of the absence 3 •0 . f. the I"'r a e u s s i7e i nt i J e u " d u i s, ec-;
fled with the doubtful victories and over- and now a member of Congress from th e cele
whelming reverses of that memorable faction orated 10th Legion of Pennsylvania, re-elected
—every one of the distinctive measures for after
. havin ti g voted fur the Nebraska Bill. The
mini; theconfesso trisid"lnOotth
comprehend,f.egiin'' ai it
butis
the promotion of which they toiled through
years of Herculean,. but fruitless effort, had was soon informed by the Democrats liel.o,t that
become but a thing of history, a f o ssil r emain it was so named from CaPsar's 10th Legion, u n
account of the invincibility of its Democracy.
of a political palasontology. Unhappily that
miserahle and false pride which urges hll- i‘ t h i; t i l
r c o o e m a p n o d se c i l t a o r f b. .N t no Northampton, n , n \ ,l l l r i an, ol Pi k t i, l
viduals. who have experienced the frowns of once parts of old Northampton, and di l e Dent
fortune, to to keep up a hollow and brief appear- oeratic majority falls seldom short of 3, 0 ' 1 0,
abntsd
been
e iften rit lis up. to 6,000.
making Judge !Packer
once of respectability, got possession of the
_party which had once numbered a Protective and enjoy l S e t r l y ie reputation suceti ir i f beiilg•r v' 3 e l l l ‘ '," 2 -1
Tariff, a National Bank, and rso-called . gen- oral as well as correct man of businesS. - flits
+6`
oral conservatism, among its leading objects.
To this may be added an esprit the carps
which-seldom deserts bodies of men while the
slightest pretext for continuing an organiza
tion exist. Men contiuued to call themselves
Whip, to glory in being Whigs, long after
the word WHIG had ceased to have an intelli
gent meaning: lung after it had become a
nomen inane, an unsubstantial shadow of a
past reality.
, What less wonderful than that ambitious
and self-seeking politicians should strive to
revive the dead corpse of Whiggery with a
soul, infernal, it is true—a dire, dreadful, sa-
tanFe spirit—but not the less likely from its
origin to disguise itself for a time iu the guise of
an angel of light. Its antics for the past year
are familiar to every reader. Its path has been
lighted by the lurid flames of arson ; has been
rendered slippery with the gore of hundreds of
unresisting, unoffending victims of its desper
ate madness. 'Through its Tile machinations,
the proud boast of our nation that it is the re
fuge of the persecuted and oppressed of every
clime, the home of civil and religious liberty
for the outcast of every sky, has been in a
measure, caricatured. Through it the tide
of emigration, which fur half a century had
been contributing so signally to swell the
volume of our national greatness and prosper-
ity, bids fair to be diverted to other channels,
and enrich other regions of the Dew 1% odd.
All this, however, belongs to the past. Some
future Bancroft or Prescott will render it the
subject of eloquent and indignant denuncia
tion, coupled with deep and unspeakable won
der that such deplorable and unaccountable
fatuity shouKever have taken possession of
any portion of a free and an enlightened peo
ple. In the meantime it will not do for our
Whig friends to gloss over tlu•ir sympathies
with, or active participation id the Know
Nothing movement. Do what they will, say
what they can, the foul leprous spot is upon
them, and it will stick to them. From the
beginning, the battle has :been between the
Know-Nothings and the great Democratic
party of the Union and to the latter belongs
the only and sole credit of stifling the mons
, ter in his cradle.
Latemt Forelvi Nei
The steamship Atlantic arrived at New
York, on Thursday, from Liverpool, bliaging
European news one week later. An addition
al force of fifty thousand French troops is to
be sent to the Crimea. In the White Sea the
squadron of the Allies had captured two Rus
sian ships, and was preparing to quit that sea.
In Aditolia a Russian division had driven the
Turks from Kenpri Kern,i and encamped three
laegues from Erzeroum. Russian agents had
been sent to the chief cities of Europe to raise
loans for the Russian Government. At Swea
borg the loss of life was quite small, but ac
cording to the account of the Russian admiral,
the Allies did no damage whatever to the for
tifications, batteries or guns. Two English
steamers bombarded Riga on the 10th, but
apparently without effect. Gortschakoff com
manded the Russian troops at the battle of
Tchernaya, consisting of six thousand cavalry
and twenty batteries of artillery. The whole
number of Russians buried was 3320, and
three of their Generals were killed. On the
10th the artillery of the Allies opened a fire
upon Sebastopol, but the bombardment had
not commenced. Gortschakoff's latest des
patch, dated the 21st, says that the fire of the
Allies sensibly diminishes and does but little
damage. The English have blown up four
sunken Russian • steamers_,in Berdiansk Bay,
and burned the suburbs of the town. One
British gunboat went ashore during the attack,
and vas taken by the Russians, together
with a complete code of the Allies signals.
HUNTINGDON COUNTY.- - The Democratic
Convention of Huntingdon county was held
on the nth ult., and was organized by calling
Nicholas Cresswell to the chair. After the
adoption and signing of a pledge, disavowing
any connection with the K. N's.; by the dele
gates, the Convention elected Thos. P. Camp
bell, Esq., delegate to the Democratic State
Convention, and John Gemmill, Samuel S.
Brown and G. W. Speer, Senatorial confe
rees.
A committee of five was appointed to meet
a similar committee, from the old line Whig
convention, to put in nomination a fusion
ticket.
ce.. The Democratic Conferees of Bedford,
Cambria and Fulton, have nominated for As
sembly Geo. N. Smith and Joseph Bernhard ;
and appointed Geo. H. Spang and H. C. De
vine, delegates to. the State Convention.
resources must be great, or he could n
driven on the work on the railroad
interruption, during the cmharrassul
the money market towards the clos
last year. 1 mention these eirtanostti
an encouragement to our young men,
what may be aecomplished by it life =,
rity, energy and decorum to business.
Packer is not yet 50 years of age,
success in life and in business would
him, 1 presume, in arriving at the sa
elusion to which John .Jacob Astor did
a man is just as comfortable when lit.
worth half a million as he is when lie
For the lntelli4encer.
.
The Importance of Good Nontinaitions.
Public opinion and the general welfare ca 1 loudly
i i
for the nomination of good candidates for the ap
proaching October election. To a certain : tent, it
is true this has been the cry at all times, at more
especially since the transactions of the last Legisla
ture have become a part of political
and
. filo
sounding encomiums heralded forth and pre icted its
mot glowing descriptions the good that would be ac
chru shed by the - Know-Nothing Legishiture "
par exeellence styled the ncodel Legislature' May
our Stat s e never be disgraced by another asemblage
of such niodel legislators. Intelligence and morality
were almost wanting, and the few healthfully moral
persons that were sent to llarrisburg as Le tslators,
found themselves utterly unable to give tone thesen
timent, or honesty to the purposes of their associates,
and in some instances were drawn into the ortex of
temptation, and sunk to the level of the gender:
dition of members in that home of politic I
tuition. A change iu this particular must be e'
or ruin to our prosperity and lasting disgr ,
name must be the result. It is to be hope
have now arrived at the turning point in on
The only true and short road to reformati
particular is the defeat of all the bad cans.
the held.
The plots concocted and deeds transact° at Har
risburg during the last session meet with a deserved
condemnation, and establish most clearly t e urgent
necessity for reform. Was it not a glorious .pecimen
of (American Legislation.'' Better give it at once
its proper name—genuine know nothing legislation,
the majority of the members giving trio et nvincing
evidence that they knew nothtn , but the In of in
trigue,
description. We need but hint at th attemp political were-pulling and low se teming of
every t
ed election of United States Senator, nn barely
mention the honest, irreproachable, unc rrupteil,
unexceptionable (?) canualato support° by the
members who represented the party which ad open
ly declared and avowed that no political) trickster
should ever become a member of their houcs, upright
and pure fraternity, much less she electedand en
trusted to °thee. The some candidate is sill in the
field, and our word fur it, as sure as he c succeed
in securing a majority of linow.l.siothings i 4 the nee
legislation he is certain of success. The' •heme is
still laid, and the conditions being present it will be
carried out. We know that ho is uctivel engaged
and spares no pains, and in the party fats ly stytet.
American ho has the corrupt material of btu politi
cal parties at command, and most judici sly will
ho mould the pliable stuff.
Tue lust, and only Know-Nothing legislat
ever disgraced our Capitol, was corrupt bey(
allel ; but it was nothing more than a dim,
oing of what we may expect should nnoth
Inc complexion bo elected. We may expect .
est calculation, one hundred new Banks m
State, together with the election of a corr
dialed politician fur United States Sena
means this wild, unprecedented hunt for o
Knorr-Nothings' To be a member—a
member of a Know-Nothing legislature
especially if one has considerable tact in
or council and knows well how to plot. I
in the dark of night, removed from the
public, beyond the reach of your constit
your mean deeds hidden from their inspec
in such a place that you must mature your .
labor for the interests of your constituents
system of legislation under a republican go
May we be protected and saved from the
disgrace of another Know-Nothing Logi
One was almost intolerable.
The defeat of Know Nothingism is the
to reform. In view of those things let us
a ticket for Assembly unexceptionable in
intelligence and integrity. Among the K
ing candidates we notice some, who have
gle qualification for the position of legis
yet are shameless enough to presume
availability, in the hope there will be nose
support them and by their aid debase 1
down to their own low condition.
The Democratic Convention assembles
days to settle a ticket for the various o o
county. Too much care cannot be exerc
lecting the very best mon before them, as
dates of our party. The public mind is •
ercised on this subject, and nothing bu
composed of gentlemen of respectability a
gene, will meet with approval. We do ri
for a very high order of talent, althou•
thing is greatly to be desired. What the 1
mond in their Representatives, is good
common sense, and business habits. Th
of success is beforeUs and the material
ticket is 'ready at our band. Let us pre ,
.public the best ticket in the field, by ~
I men of intelligence, integrity and sobnet •.
enness in a Legislator is to be almost as
damned as venality. Its evil influence i
greater, because the former is open while
is secret. No person should be placed upo
et who is unable to restrain his appetite f
ing. To nominate such a man, would b.
him to his own destruction, by an act of t
injustice to himself and the public. We
the members of the Convention, then, to
vete friendships seduce them into the sup.
didates known to be unworthy. The g
cumspection should be used to guard a
nomination of a single objectionable cand
the_ticket is sure of success. DEM,
For tho Intelligencer do
LANCASTER, Sept. s'i
Mn. EDlTOR.—Before the last local e
taken place, the cry of reform and retren ,
raised for the purpose of gulling the vot
caster into the support of the Know-Not
dates for Councils. They succeeded by t
in electing ther candidates, but have
promises of reform made by the Know-N
didates for Councils been realized ? Far f
instead of administering the financial al
City in a proper and economical manner,
passed a bill to loan $20,000, notwithst
debt of Lancaster city is already $312,0
Bonds selling from 10 to 12 per cent. belt
At the present time it is as much as tl
do to pay the interest on its Bonds, wit
prospects of ever paying any part of the
For, according to the Finance report fl
bnding June 30th, 1055, the expenditi
City for that year exceeded the revenue r
000, independent of the money borrowed
Market Nooses. a But in the face of all
Councils have authorized the Mayor to
sum of $20,000 more.
In conclusion, permit me, Mr-Editor
Know-Nothing members of Councils, n
thorizing the new Loan is one of the ms
promised? A T.A.X..1,
The Whig County Convention met at ,Ful
ton Hall, in this city, on Wednesday last; and
nominated the following ticket :
ASSEMBLY
Jain Bear, City.
James Myers, East Donegal.
John Strohm, Providence.
Adam K. Witmer, Paradise.
Wm. Konigmacher, Ephrata.
COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
Jacob Nissley, Mount Joy.
COUNTY TREASURER.
Joseph Clarkson, City.
PRISON INSPECTORS.
Jacob Frantz, Paradise.
Jacob Mast, Salisbury.
• DIRECTORS OF THE POOR
Robert Byers, Colerain.
John Huber, Manheim.
AUDITOR.
Andrew Mehaffy, Pequea.
Delegates to the State Convention
E. C.' Darlington, B. F. Spangler, J. F.
Herr, H. Baldwin, I. N. Ellmaker, D. W. Wit
mer and J. Foreman.
During the proceedings it was intimated
that Mr. Myers would decline the nomination
for the Legislature, when, on motion, it was
agreed that if the report was verified, that
-Henry H. Kurtz, of Manbeim, being the next
highest, should be declared the nominee iu
his place.
REWARD OFFERED.---Mr. Reinhold, the
County Treasurer, offs a reward of $2OO
for the return of the money stolen from his
office on the night of the Ist inst., and no
questions asked! Here's a chance for the
thief to make $2OO, in an honest way
RE 1T 1 t m.o.—Our good Democratic friend,
WILLIAM Winn! AN, informed us .a few days
since that from rather less than an acre and a
half of Rye, on his Ligalaw Farm," within
One mile of Churchtown, in this county, the
yield was as Mows, viz:
84 dozens; which, when thrashCti, measured
66 bushels of excellent Rye, and tied 29.7 .
bundles of tine long straw
We think this will be hard to beat any
where. We know that Ccernarvon township
is prolific of honest Democrats, but we were
not aware that, in the matter of raising tall
rye, it could also go ahead of "all creation
and the rest of mankind." Mr. W. knows
how to farm well—and no mistake.
tr4,%_, The Postmaster General .has directed
a contract to he made with Mr. Lewis Suter,
of this city, for the conveyance of the Mails
daily, except Sunday, from Lancaster by Ore
non, West Earl and Farmersville to Hinkle
toNV 11. ill two horse ctialqieq. Fits enterpri
sing, thickly populated villages referred to,
besides' the communities along the line of
Conestoga Creek, will thus be accommodated
with rit! , nlar daily mail facilities :Ind addi
tional advantages in travel. On the latter
thria: ale smite tiff o'll 11101'A:11a and grist
mills, factories, saw mill and other impr,,ve-
Monts. The , kn'N ire commenced on the t:d
day of :•,-pletnher, and continues until the
30 - th of done, 1:<",1',.
ul have
vith4 wit
eta. of
of the
t t f •%., 'rh e a d: 1 ,1111,1 (.'ourt or Quarter `es
:sions affil counovnee on the fir,t Monday of
Oetol.er, for Nvllich the Petit Jurors have hero
tmffinv , ned
tee, at ,
tt.tt It
intro
Jtni 4 t
'tut his
arrant
Jaen), Atinient, Drimeirc ; Benjamiu Been-
WeA D0n.,..,.t1; Benjamin Bachman,
West Lanipeter ; dliam Bachman, Salishu
r v Henry BOW Mal 12,t, Lam peter : John
Bitter, West Karl ; P. K. Brcncmat%, Lan
caster city : Mark Connell, West Earl :
George Diller, East Earl : George Dehaven,.
East Earl : James I'. Dickenson, Salisbury ;
Nathaniel Ellumker, Salisbury; Elias Eby,
Mount Juv ; Abraham Erisman, Rapho :
Frederick Pre, Mawr; J. W. Fisher, Colum
bia borough ; WillMm Gable, Lancmiter city:
Abraham Greenwalt, Elizabethtown borough.
Lewis It. Hibshman, Elizabeth ; Jacob Hoo
ver, West Lampeter ; Samuel Horst, Conoy
Henry Heidlebach, Pequea ; 11. IL Kurtz.
Esq., Manhehn ; Abraham Et Core , 0
go ; Christian It. Landis, Upper Leacock
Benjamin B. Landis, East Lam peter ; Davi,
Landis, East Lampeter : William McGuw
m. ; John Miller, East Donegal
'John Musser. Upper Leacock : Abraham Pe
ters, Manor: Jacob Reinhold, Esq., West Co
calico : Richard J. Rutter, Leacock Lot
Rogers, Carnarvon ;
Jonas Rumple, Colum
ibia borough ; John Rohrer, jr., Rapho ; David
Shirk, Carnarvon ; James Simpson, Martic
David Styer, Esq., Carnarvon ; Samuel Strick
ler, Ritpho; Joseph Shock, Manor ; David
Stamm, East Lampeter ; Philip T. Sheaff,
Lancaster city ; George B. Shoher, Warwic i•zr.
Henry Webb, Culerain : Martin C. Weaver,
Carnarvon.
eon
`that
wily
ch."
•ral con
-1 prosti
eilected,
o W our
that e
history.
! I n in this
dates io
CITY MEETING.- - A public mecting was call
d by the Mayor at the City Hall, on last
•IN cuing, fir the purpose of furnishing relief to
the cities of Norfolk and Portsmouth. Bette]
late than never. Something should have bee'.
.Icnc ago. We hope the meeting
w.io tended, and that something hand
some was done b y cur monied men in the way
of subscriptions.
The Editor , . Book Table
THE DESERTED WIFE. By Mrs. E. D. N.
Suuthworth, Author of the "Missing Bride," the
•Lost Heiress," the "Wile's ictury," etc.
The above is the title of a new work, to be pub
lished by T. B. Peterson, 102 Chestnut St. Phila
delphia, on Saturday the 22d inst. The book in
Cue volume will contain 000 pages, neatly bound
in cloth, and be furnished at St 25; or in two vol
umes, paper cover, at $l. Soyeral of the proof sheets
are now bolero us.
The scene is laid in one of the Southern States, and
the story gives u picture of the manners and customs
of the Plauth.g Hentry, in an age not fur removed
backward nom the piesent. The characters appea ,
to be drawn with a strong hand, and the nook
abounds with suoucs of intense interest. The pur
pose of the author, professedly, is to teach the lesson
•that the fundamental causes of unhappiness in a
married lita, are a defective moral and physical
education, and a premature contraction of the ma
trimonial engagenieut."
The book will doubtless have a great run. Copies
will be sent by mail free of postage, to any person
remitting the price of the editioh they may wish, to
the publisher.
• Dwhion
ad a
ud
ot'etml-
:tthelow-
re
w
re in the
pt, ropu
r. What
tee in the
genuine
.aye well,
i u eaueu.3
is there,
e of the
tents, anti
ion—it is
tans and
What a
eminent..
urea and
GEOLOGY OF THE BASS ROCK, by Hugh Mil
ler) with its Civil and Ecclesiastical History, Ac
Published by Robert Carter A Brothers, N. Y.
TILE DEAD IN CUBIST—Their State, Present and
Faults. By John Brown, D. D. Published by
Robert Curter A Brothers, N. Y.
THE MIND OF JESUS. By the Author of "Morn
ing and Night Watches," etc. etc. Published by
Carter it Brothers, N. Y.
We have received a copy of each of the above ex
cellent books from Messrs. MURRAY & STORK, Book
sellers of this City, who have them for sale. We
have not had time to give more than a glance at
their pages—but that is sufficient to seal), us of
their merit, and therefore recommend them as well
worthy of public patronage.
THE UNITED - STATES REVIEW. Published by
Lloyd & Campbell, 252 Broadway N. Y.
The September number is fully equal to any of the
preceding ones. It has several contributions of rare
merit iu prose and poetry, and altogether gives
evidence of progress and prosperity.
Terms, $3 per annum, strictly in advance.
THE ESCAPED NUN ; or Disclosures of Convent
_
I.nly road
heal sett!,
haracter.
. ow-Is oth
ot a sin
ator, and
pon their
I. ready to
:hemsehes
in a few
as of the
t-ed in se-
Ihe eandi
• early ex
' a ticket
.1 intelli
.t contend
:h such a
veople de
character,
Life, and the Confessions of a Sister of Charity
This is the title of an elegant 12 mo. of :344 pages,
from the press of De %Vitt & Davenport, New York.
A Miss Bunkley, recently escaped from the Nunnery
at.Emmitsburg, wrote an account, of the alleged mys
teries, &c., of the place, which she contracted with
Messrs. D. & D. to publish, and from some as yet
unexplained motive, suddenly changed her mind and
enjoined the 'above House against the sale of bet
book, after it was ready for publication. People
will have their own conjectures as to the cause of
this singular course of conduct on the part of the
ex-nun. But ip spite of injunctions these publishers
have presented oue of the most readable and exciting
books of the day, and it is believed to be, to all in
tents and purposes, the book which they first an
nounced by Miss B. under a slightly different title.
A VALUABLE AND USEFUL BOOK.—We
have examined a new work entiled a "Comprehen
sive History &Geography Ancient and Modern of the
whole World" by S. G. Goodrich our late American
Consul at Paris. The work contains 272 quarto pag
es illustrated with 200 beautiful engravings and SO
maps, it gives valuable statistics of the different
countries up to the present time not elsewhere to be
found. To him who wishes to have an authentic book
of reforenee; to a parent who would desire to buy a
a good book for a son or daughter or to the student
that wishes a "chart of life and mirror of the
times" we would say get the book. The whole
matter is arranged in a convenient and systematic
form for easy reference, and is the most complete
and comprehensive work for the use of families
merchants and others that has ever been published.
The Agent for this county is -now here, and our
citizens will be offered an opportunity to obtain
the book and as it can only be obtained by
the agent for each county any other opportunity
will not offer.
The New York Daily Times thus speaks of the
book :
We know, indeed, of no other work of the kind,
and now that we see its utility, it strikes us as re
markable that such a book has never been prepared
before. • The advantage of possessing a book of geo
graphy in which the history of each country is giv
en, is too obvious to need illustration. The work
is well executed in all respects, and is marvellously
cheap, considering its contents.
pros Act
or a good
:ent to the
ominating
Drunk
...uch con
probably
the latter
. the tick
.m drink
. to tempt
.0 grossest
rge upon
et no prt
..rt of can
eatest cir
ainst the
.idate, and
Is CRAT.
ea ion had
hment was
.rs of Lan
ing candi
.ose means
ny of the
thing can
.m it,• for,
airs of the
they have
. . ding the
10, and its
w par.
City can
but poor
principal.
the year
roe of the
'early $lO,-
or the new
'these foots,
borrow the
to mk the
hether ma
ny reforms
'AYER.
ttel.. Yellow Fever seems to be spreading in
the iuterior of Louisiana. At Baton Rouge
it is said to be on the increase, and in come
. nonce of its aevalence at:Clinton the town
The Pestilence
YELLOW FEVER - IN NORFOLK AND PORTS
MOUTH.—A. fellow has beeh directed in Bal
timore, who under the guise of collecting
funds for the relief-of the sufferers by yellow
fever, had raised considerable money in that
city. He passed himself off as 'Dr. Nevin."
A letter to the Baltimore American states that
the deaths in Norfolk on Sunday week num
bered over sixty, and on Saturday, forty.
New cases were' multiplying with frightful
rapidity, and the supply of coffins had run
short. There was also a difficulty in getting
graves dug. Among the deaths reported
were the President of the Common Council,
the teller of the Virginia Bank, the chief
book-keeper of the Exchange Batik, and W.
11. Garrett, it devoted and efficient member
of the Association. The correspondent of the
Baltimore American, front whose letter we
quote the above facts, says :
"There has nut been a bale of hay here for
several days; and the Doctor's horses have
nearly given out. Send us some oats and
hay fur the horses, and a blacksmith or two
to shoe them, as there is nothing of the sort
to be had here. When a vehicle losesa linch
pin it become useless, as there is no one here
to replace it.
"There is now believed to be 1000 cases
in this city, hut the disease has somewhat
abated in Portsmouth, probability fur want
9f material to act upon. There are said to
be nut more.than 500 cases itt Portsmouth,
and the deaths there are not so numerous.
Mayor Fisk is still dangerously ill."
"Dr. Rizer, of Philadelphia, wa.S taken with
fever yesterday, and is being most faithfully
nursed by Dr. Webster. Dr. Ricer is quite
ill, and made his will this monang, antici
pating speedy death, though his friends hat e
hopes that he may recover.
"A peculiar kind of fly, never seen in this
vicinity before, has made its appearance since
Saturday, bath here and at Portsmouth, and
vitas destru3ed nearly all the fruit. Among
the other trials that we are called up,ut to
suffer arc clouds of most voracious mosquitoes,
which swarm around you both in and out of
doors, mod sting you alm.,st with the smart
of a bee."
It will be perceived that the number of
cases of fever now in the city is stated at
1000. A letter to the Richmond Despatch
says that the Rev. Mr. Armstrong, who has
been constantly among the sick in all parts
of the city sets down the number at from
1000 to 1:00, and the writer believes the
statement to be correct. The large increase
creases and deaths is attributed to the recent
change in the weather, from a clear at
mosphere to a damp and disagreeable one.
One of the letters in the Richmond Dispatch
says :
" Mr. Z. ~Sykes, the assistant Inspector of
streets, gives us a gloomy picture of the mel
ancholy scenes he is doomed to witness in his
daily rounds. The other day he had occasion
he infoins• us to inspect a"„lot on Charlotte
street. Ile found in the yard three curly
headed little children romping about, rolling
on the ground, with unkept hair, and dirty,
tattered garments. Ile inquired fir the.r
father—•Pa—Pa is dead.' 'Then, where is
your mother P"Ma—Ma hi dead too!' Yes,'
uhied the youngest, and a big ugly black mall
came and carried them away directly they
were dead !"Good God !' continued Mr Sykes,
shocked at the scene—'and who have you to
take care of you ?"Nohody sir :Who gives
you anything to eat?' Mary the colored wo
man next door, gives us some bread every
day.' Never, said Mr. Sykes, have my feel
ins been so pained—the forlorn condition
if the little orphans—their tender years, and
childish insensibility of their great loss, made
me sick at heart, and 1 could not restrain my
tears! We need nut add that the bereaved
innocents were taken in charge by the How
and Association, and will be duly provided
tor."
The Herald inlormi us that in eunsequenee
of experience having demonstrated the bin
great liability of northern physicians to con
tract the fever, it is strongly recommended by
the health and other authorities of the city
that their:services shall for the present be
lispensed with, and thoee only employed who
are accustomed to a Southern climate, and
to y=ellow fever practice. This, we ,suppose,
will receive attention in Philadelphia and oth
er northern cities. At portsmouth, the fever
is increasing. from suffset on Saturday,
week to sun-set on Sunday, there were
were tour hundred new cases in that city, and
the expenditure fir the relief of the suffering
averages SSW) daily. An appeal to the coun
ties of Virginia for aid is contemplated. The
collections in Philadelphia haAt now reached
an aggregate of sixteen thousand and ninety
eight dollars. The nearest approach to this
is the amount raised in Raltiun re, which ex
ceeds eleven thousand dollars. he Richmond
Dispatch estimates the total number of deaths
by fever since the commencement at about six
hundred. Dr. Smith, of Columbia, Pa., who
arrived on Thursday week, and the nurse who
accompanied him [Mr. Craven] is in the hos
pital sick with the fever.
Tit F. EPIDEMIC Sou T11.—.111 reSpUll:se to the
Nordidk Commiitee, the President, after con
sultation with his cabinet, has caused artpr
ler to he issued to the commandant of the
Gosport Navy Yard giving hint discretion to
close the yard and advance a month's pay to
all the emplo)es who may wish to leave. An
order has also been issued to the com
mandants of other yards to employ such
refugees :is may desire it. The Presi
dent decided that he could not grant the re
quest to give up Fort Moor.° as a refuge for
tile Citizens of Norfolk and Puatsmouth, on
account of the time required to remove the
troops and other residents from the post and
on account of there being no suitable place
for their reception. The Cabinet, by the
President. paid the committee three bundled
and twenty-live dollars, as a contribution far
the relief of the sufferers. Mayor Fish of
Portsmouth, is reported dead. Rev. P. Wil
lis, Methodist minister, of Norfolk, is reported
dead. Commodore Page has the fever. The
scarcity of Coffins was so great that bodies
were buriedwithout them. Richard Gatewood.
correspondent of the associated press, and
junior editor of the Beacon, is hopelessly ill.
A large supply of provisions and other neces
saries has heist sent down by the Baltimore
Relief Committee Committee.
K. N. BLASHIEMY.---The Frederick Citizen
says that a Mr. Steele, of Virginia, the great
orator of a li.. N. demonstration made in that
. place recently, in speaking of those members
of the order who become ashamed of their as;
sociation. and left the dark lanternites in time
to vote for HENRY A. WISE for Goveanor, de
nounced them in the iblll,wing blasphemous
terms:
"'They are a doubly damned, deeply dyed,
hell begotten, Uod-forsaken, hydra headed,
triple tongued, cloven footed, set of perjured
traitors, whom if the earth Were the fulcrum,
and the heavens the lever, almighty power
could not in a thousand years raise to the com
mon level of culprits."
And these are the kind of men who head a
party who desire to take Religion into its es
pecial keeping !!
na. the Intelllgvoeer.
MA YTOW N, Sept. fith, 1855
Me. Emma--Dear Sir :—The Democratic
freemen of East Donegal held their Delegate
Election, on Friday evening, Sept. ith, agree
ably to the call of the County Committee; af
ter the meeting had organized the following
PLEDGE was offered by J. S. itoath, read,
and unanimously adopted, viz:
"We solemnly and sincerely pledge our
honors, as men and Democrats, that we hare
no/, and never will hare any connexion with
any secret society or order organized for politi
cal purposes under any, name whatever; that
wo are Democrats in faith and in practice,
adhering only to the well defined principles of
the Democratic party, and owing allegiance
to'none other. This declaration is made fully
and freely, without reservation. and we ask it
to be placed on record as evidence of our po
litical faith."
A motion was made that every man in the
house, previous to voting for delegates, sign
this Pledge, which was complied with by eve•
ry Democrat present. This is as it shonld
be—no dodging—all come out free and openly
and declare their principles in daylight—
knowing every one truly ;—for vile, indeed,
would be the wretch who would dare affix his
name to a pledge of this kind, and belong to
the foubdark-lantern-jawed crew, whose detes
table principles will eternally ruin American
freedom, should they be successful.
DEMOCRAT.
A man named Christian Kauok was
killed by another named Robert Dornan, on
Wednesday last, in Philadelphia. The Coro
ner'sjury who sat on Me case, reported that
the shooting and killing was committed by
PEWS ITE
Zinc hiran's El3l
WAIIINGTON Sept. 9.-1
gotiatitms th Court of Si
that the public interest requ
arms 4 Mr. Buphanan in
he or his frie . M.B in this co
His connection with that
thereto terminate at the tt
noune d: namely ; the let of
It i 4 presumed that his d
ence t 4 the Ceuiral Amer:v
13111ENSE
Einan'oier says]
on thej place ut
that city,
busbets to the
whicko were re;
n 4 hentlwas ern4l
:i.D OF WHEA'
. i that a fouroi
ti Mr. Jaeob
Litt bush,
[tare, exclusi
Inoved to al
After El
Russitins have
tower inf San
reader's perhap
the 1:4 Czar,
than three Fa.
tire peirsons un
the largest in
than 54,000 po
ree imats i
ephteed the
on the I
reealleet,
ell and brok
aerate etta ie4
Ihe:ti.ot. Tfi
the world, k
eds.
Enapetors givin
error Pollock e
of apiwinting
none tilt' enoug
lle hzl recent)
IlephOrn,
Court an oak,.
none the "1
NichtiWissers,
when Ithey we
they
GOIC:111 , 1' did
Ile term ;nt,se from Roman
office to thntr 7.do: Ger
rries out this ides, but instead
'riephews, (wti suppose he has
Ili he appoitkc.l odes to office.
apponitedi his uncle James
Reporter lof the Supreme
worth S• 2000 a year. We hear
y horror" expressed by the
at this set of Nellie that,
.0 Caned ' by 111 0 ;1' right name,
sloe- , Whet! a Demuerati
nythieg of the sort.—Eagtos
dcnli~Ci
' `` ATE OF THINGS IN LOUISVIII.I7.
t 3 Democrat has a forciblu art,.
(Ittention of the law-autt-order
city to the present deplorable
Bugs which exist there. It
A RIZETTY
--111(1 LousiNH,
ele calling the !
eitize4s tha
condition of t.
says
ehaveL
e
miniolt of Knol
fact ? I On eleci
proach the poll
hroad ~1 They •1%
tnent.t They •
scouniltels, an
praiskotthy 4
the city from fi
sonad violence!
ty priperty, bi
of it.
n this city the unrestrained do
-IW-Nothingism, and what is the
4lini day foreigners dared to ap-
Is under the penalty of a broken
Ivere unsafe in their employ
were met by crowds of lawless
beaten and abused. Their
Ants to protect the property of
fire have been rewarded by per
and the destruction of the ei
kAUSC foreigners had the charge
the legitimate fruits of Know
n(' we tell the gentlemen in
, and others who proscribe for
they have waked up n spirit
" lihese area
Nothingwan,
whit cravats,
eigners, that
they ;can't la:
tho ti•mpest
tiiemfielves H
of the wicked I
They are ilowerless before
icy have invoked. They are
able to become the victims
pinit they have let loose."
tNiuCRATIC STATE CONVENTION. -
IC State Convention of Indiana,
Indianapolis, on the 29th ult.,
after adopting-resolutions rc
rinciples of the National Con
-48 and 185.2, denouncing the
th the Missourians and Massa
in interfering with the legal
ansas settlers, and maintaining
nment should protect all legal
er native or foreign born. The
s the largest ever assembled in
INDIANA DE'
The Democrat
was bold at
and r adjourne
affirming the
ventrens of 1
condliet bpi
c hwitts men
right of die 1
that the Govei
citizens. whet
Convhntion w
that ity.
i
ted— A keel
near r poluuabi,!
crossing a hrj
in ia naequen
and illed-oni
i
entni any. T
had had char
Wesi, in the : 1
to take the iir:
stanlly killed I
I ,er was killed by an elephant,_
r , S. C., on the 26th ult., while
ge. The beast became upruly
e of the breakage of a plank,
of the horses belonging to the
o keeper of the elephant, who
e of hint for nine years, named•
rttempt to punish him, omitting
caution to secure him, was in
hy enraged animal.
fon. William Crunch died at
n Saturday week, aged 80. Ho
Judge of the Courts of the Diel
bia fur nearly 55 years, and was
is learning and the soundness
his character. He was appoint
going of the administration of
W ll44r aslicii . g r t i o le n
had 'Oerved as
trietiof CDion
etniiient for I
and purity of
ed op the ou
the Older AD.
moerats of Philadelphia county
following nominations for the
IIEP,..The 0
hares made th
Legifdature : I
Se:nator—llarlan Ingram
. Agsembly—LFirst Distriet—Chas . M. Lois
enri9g. Seccnd—John McCarthy. Third—
Jatt 'rho mps in. -Eighth—Joseph Ituneker,
Nintii--Jtilin Hancock. Tcoth--Townsend
Ye:14810y. Eleventh—Chao. Carly. Twelfth
—Frederick Walter. Thirteenth--Samuel
Hible. Fourteenth — John Roberts. Fifteenth
—RtchardsotL. Wright.
Ptut3. Sei
day,jbetweel
pimps, wl
t n allauck
barlreper of
h:mQliue ~tre,
G.—A fight took place ye,,ter
the adherents of two Fire Com
ich a young man named Chide
as shot by Robert Dolman, the
It tavern at the corner ailth and
te. Kane]: died alinust utstant-
Tlie
c u4ty liar I
leoloeratic Cunventhln (d . Union
nuinated CoL i tobert li. IlArher
and appointed Col. John Swine
agate to the next State Convent
truetions to support the
N. for the Pre:ideney..
for ...sseinbly
f .rdltheir ‘l.•
tioni with it
J.% Brcii
t
deni l t 1 the \V
.41 o; this Suite have
it of thibeas Corpus b) Passmore
The opinion of tho Conrt—a
—MIS delivered by Judgo Black.
dissented. Williamson must
sin in prison, even should he be
Commissioner by the Abolition-
veryl able on
Judie no
the Ifore rei
ele*.l Cana
BURLINGTI
Tendered a
de+re that
ning off of
trail', while
a 14ir of ho
horles bein
thecae was n(
le Railroad AciuWent.
N, Sept. s.—The Jury of Inquest
erdict this morning. The Jury
the immediate cause of the run
ic cars was the rear car of the
racking, coming in contact with
ics driven by Dr. llcneken, said
attached to a carriage ; that
due diligence used by the driver
of said card
~re ; that the engineer of the
backing trei I did not observe the rules of the
eurripany am the laws of New Jersey in referl
enA to blow ng the whistle when approaching
el-this-roads ; that the conductor is exhonerated
froth blame, nasmuch as he was acting in ac
c.,rdance wi 1 his instructions in the time ta
ble
p . said r )ad ; that the forward brakeman
is censurabi ; that one of the immediate causes
es df the co lusion was the carelessness and
reeklEssness of Dr. Ileneken in driving his
horl;es on th 'railroad track ; that another im-
I
mediate cau e of the collision was, the careless
amt reckless manner in which the train of
cars was pr eceding backwards, at a rate of
speed unser and inexpedient; that by run
nu) , regulat ons issued by the company, the
11
po ibilitycollision between opposing trains
on single rack is so great as to prove that
sour more eicient mode ought to be adopted
to &event a recurrence of the cause which
hest called tl is together, and the jury hereby
sugest, the the life, limbs and safety of pas
seners is o moil) importance than saving a
fewirnintrtes of time.
ff.
------“,..--- •
lius. PARTY OF CONTRADICTIONB. — The citi
zeu who are to vote at the doming elections
stall(' dermind the Know-Nothing oracles to
I.
solve the follr l wing singular mass of contradic
- .
timis :
if
nowNo ingism is national in the South
an( section 1 in the North ; is secret in New
Yoik and o en in Georgia; Catholic in Louis
iana and Pr testant in New England ; black
in Maine - an white in Virginia ;it swears the
t .
son: to prose ibe the foreigner, even if that for
eigner shoul be that son's father ; it opposes
thet caucus, . rid settles its candidates in pack
ed cabals ; i elevates the negro and degrades
thei adopted citizen ; it curses all monarchs,
and adopts the creed of George the Third
agliirtst emi rration ; it abukes the Pope, and
dedlares its" if infallible ; it assails the Spanish
inquisition, rid imitates its clandestine perse
cuttions ; it professes Christianity and pro
scribes its i eighbor ;lit adores the Bible and
shoots dow unoffending citizens; it adores
thd coustit tion, and sets up a test by the
codstitution prohibited ; it pays a premium
foil treason o friendship, and affixes the brand
of erjury t all who refuse to obey its oblige
li
tio s : it - as s for free schools, and proscribes
po r, help' s female teachers ; it repudiates
th Catholi and admits the Infidel ;—to crown
all; it perse utes the most eminent native citi
zer who t
doslonwst of
uf
not approve
it mummeries,
feels :
ITward Everett for a William Poole.—Wash
sh Mission.
ho state of ne
t. James, is such
I ires the continu
.ndon longer than
ntry anticipated.
1 •
.ussi
on will not,
me heretofore an-
October.
, tention has refer
n question.
.—The Frederick
crc field of Wheat
Nickel, north of
In of wheat, or 47
e f the rakings,
'other field. The
Icessant labor, the
great bell in the
remlin, which our
I being tolled for
through n& less
of vaults, killing,
ac bell is said to be
veighing uo less