EANCASTERIAN, OZO. SANDERSON, EDITOR A. BIArDERSON, Associate. LANOASTER, PA., SEPTEMBER 2, 1856 CEICUL 2100 COPIES ! Socasmaprzos Pram, $2,00 per apnum. FOR PRESIDENT, JAMES BUCHANAN, OP PENNSYLVANIA. - ' FOR VICETRBEIDENT, JOHN C. BRECHINIUDGE, OF KENTUCKY CANAL COMMISSIONER GEORGE SCOTT, of Columbia County AUDITOR GENERAL JACOB IPILY, Jr., of Montgomery County SURVEYOR GENERAL JOHN ROWE, of Franklin County. ,PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS SENATORIAL Cliarlee R. Buckalew, DISTRICT. 1 George W. Nebinger, ,14 Reuben Wilber, 2 Pierce Butler, 1 15 George A. Crawford, - -8 EdwardWartfinan, 16 Jamee Black, 4 Wllliamil. Witte, . !1.7 11. J. Stable, 5 John McNair, 'IS John D. Roddy. 6 John le: Minton, .19 Jacob Turney, rr Dieid Lanry, jai J. A. J. Buchanan, 8 Charles Hauler, . 21 William Wilkins, 9' James Patterson, . D.?. Jamee G. Campbell. 10 Isaac Sleeker, 23 T. Cunningham, 1.1 P. W. llnghee, 24 John Really, 12 Thomas Osterhout, 25 Vincent Phelps. 13 Arahain Edinger, , Jar- st-om, my soul Irespect the talesring man. .tsibus thefoundattim of the wealth of . awry counleg and u,r feet laborers of the North deserve respect both for their prowls, mid their intelltpercce. Heaven forbid that !should eo the. Wrong! Of all the =caries on the earth, on ought to have: the MOStecmeiderationfor the laboring mu/I.—BUCHANAN. /Sir Shroud/ Ibe placed in the Everoutirc Mau., I shall. use my but exec ions to cudiroad peace and friendship toith all natiOlth believing Ibis to be our MURES"' POLICY, as god( as our mast LI(PLIT4II9/ DUTY.—Buckwax. TO TILE DEMOCRATIC FREEMEN OF TRW CITY AND COUNTY OF LAN- MUIMI In pursuance of the authority given the un dersigned by a resolution unanimously adopt ed at a meeting of the' Democratic County Committee, held on Friday the first of August, you are requested to assemble in the several wards of the City, boroughs and townships of the County, on Saturday, 6th day of September next, then and there to elect not less than three nor more than five Delegates to represent each district in a general County Convention, to be held on Wednesday the- WM day of September nezt, following, at 11 o'clock, A. M., at Sho ber's Hotel, North Queen street, in the city of Lancaster, to settle a ticket to he supported by the.Demoaracy of Lancaster• county at the ensuing election. The several Township Committees are re quested to give early attention in their re spective districts, of the time and place of meeting for the election of delegates. By order of the County Committee. H. B. SIVARR, Chairman. Lancaster, August 19, 1836. air A Democratic Mass Meeting is to he held in Pittsburg, on the 10th of September. The Delegate Elections Will our friends throughout the county re collect the delegate elections on Saturday next, the Gth of SepteMber. The people should attend to this important matter themselves, and not throw the whole burthen and respon sibility upon a few individuals in each dis trict. Let good and true men be selected to represent the people in the County Conven tion, and let that Convention select a good and true Buchanan County Ticket, and, our word for it, we shall give the Black Republi— can Woolly-Head Ticket such a race in the county at Messrs. Stevens, Darlington. and Geist little dream of. The people want hon est and competent men to vote for, and if the Democratic Convention places such in nomi nation it will get hundreds of votes in the county that have never before been cast for a Democratic ticket. But to get a good ticket we must have a good Convention, and to have that the people should attend the delegate elections in their strength. ' Chester County In Plot lon We attended a meeting of the -Democracy of Chester county, held at the White Horse, about ten miles south-east of Parkesburg, on Thursday last. It was a magniftcent,gathering of the " bone and sinew " of that county, and shows conclusiVely the indomitable energy and spirit that pery.ade the friends of BUCHANAN and BRECKINRIDGE in that community. A goodly number of old line Whigs were present, who avowed their determination to vote the Demo cratic ticket. the meeting was very large and enthusiastic, and was addressed by Capt. GEO. SANDERSON, of Lancaster, Hon. GEORGE R. RIDDLE, of the State of Delaware, and by R. E. MONAGHAN, Esq., and Hon. THOMAS S. BELL, of Westchester. The speakers Were fre quently interrupted by thunders of applause from the multitude present. Cumberland County All Right. On Monday of last week the Democracy of Old Mother Cumberland had the largest and most enthusiastic meeting, in Carlisle, they have had for the last ten years. The meeting was addressed by Gen. Wird.r.ot 11. MILLER, of Harrisburg, Capt. GEO. SANDERSON, of Lan caster, and J. McDon - ELL SILARP, Esq., (an old line Whig,) of Chambersburg. The speak ers were frequently interrupted with the strongestmarks of approbation, and at the con clusion, three „loud and almost deafening cheers were given for " Old Buck and the State Ticket." The fire is burning brightly in that ancient county, and our friends confi dently calculate on a large majority for the Democratic nominees. The "Wool" Gathering. The so-called "Union" Convention which met in this city, on Wednesday last, was com pletely in the, hands of THADDEUS STEVENS, and after much wrangling and angry feeling placed in nomination the following ticket : Congress—Hon. A. E. Roberts, City. Assembly—William Hamilton, Paradise ; John A. Hiestand, City; P. W. Housekeeper, Drumore; Christian S. Kauffman, Columbia ; Joseph D. Pownall, Sadsbury. District Attorney—O. J. Dickey. County Commissioner—Jacob F. Fry, Ma nor. Prison inspectors—H ug h S. Gant, City; John Long, Drumore. Directors of the Poor—Jacob Hoover, West Earl; John Peoples, Providence. County Surveyor—John C. Lewis, Little Britain. Auditor—John Kurtz, East Earl. The old line Whigs and Fillmore men, as was anticipated by many, got just nothing at all. The whole ticket was dictated by Mr. STEVENS, 0. J. DICKEY, and J. M. WILLIS GEIST, and is made up of Black Republicans and Maine Lawites., From Congress down, it is all of the same stripe—woolly throughout —and precisely such a ticket as has no claims on the great mass of the people, nor can it possibly get their support. . The entire Northern section of the county is excluded—probably because the people of that neon are known to be hostile to the ul tra temperance movements which have dis tracted this.community for the lnst two or three years, and because they are known to be opposed to the prinoiple of negro equality advocated by Thaddeus Stevens, J. M. Willis Geist, 0. J. Dickey, and the other Black Re publican leaders in our midst. Be that as it may, the Ticket is an ex ceedingly Unpopular one, and can never re ceive the support of a majority of the voters of 'Lancaster county. We shall speak of some of the candidates upon it in &ur next. -110,..Gen. Wu,Ligat H. MILLER, of Harris burg, is the Democratic c ndidate for Con -41/4 gitqt, in the Dauphin—an aj. WILLIAM L. DzwAaT, of Sunbury, in the orthumberland Districts. The Presidenital Every good citizen, on the return of a Pres idential election, Owes the duty tnhis country, ' to examine parties and their candidate,s and, haying done this, vote as his judgment dic tates. There have been seventeen elections of President. Let the critical observer go over them all, and he will find that all have had a national east, that the candidates have been supported, and, afterVashington's adminis tration, by parties without reference to locali ties. On the occasion of the re-election of Jefferson, the 'party opposed to hiniL—and it had its centre in New England—voted for Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, of South Caro lina ; and he continued to he the candidate of the same party in the first election of Madi son. James Monroe was elected by the votes of all the States, with the solitary exception that one of the electors gave his vote for John Adams. In 1825 all the States but two, these Ohio and Virginia, gave their votes fur John C. Calhoun for Vice President. New York Ohio and Pennsylvania, and other Northern States, cast nearly as many votes for Jackson, as other Northern States cast for Adams. It is unnecessary to do more than name the recent elections of Harrison, Polk, and Taylor, where a national spirit is seen pervading them. The observer, in the results, will look in vain for the evidence of gectionalism, for they all bear the glorious impress of nationality. The same feature is seen running through successive administrations. The whole world can offer no prouder catalogue of characters worthy to be be called statesmen, men trained to civil affairs, and who understood the wants of our country, and who patriotically labored fur its interests, than the catalogue who have been at the head of our executive department. There is seen, too, the same feature of nation ality, the representative men of different sec tions of our country, ever faithful to the rights of all sections, and yet ever true also to what .the whole country required 9f them. There is Jefferson of the South acting with Hamilton of the North ; John Marshall, of Virginia act ing with Samuel Dexter, of Massachusetts; James—Madison with Albert Gallatin ; John Q. Adams with John C. Calhoun; Henry Clay with Richard Rush : Edward Livingston with Louis McLean ; Daniel Webster with Hugh S. Legere ; and so we might go on enumerat ing the great statesmen of the North and South who have honored the country, and whose re, nown is of the treasures of the country, and who side by side have worked together to consolidate its strength and promote its inter ests. Here, too, we see the marked charac teristic of nationality. Such administrations were not composed of men representing a fragment of our .country ; they represent a boundary as wide as the constitution of the Union, they represented nothing less than the whole country ? The true issue of this Presidential election is : Shall a party prevail which is exclusively confined to the North, which seeks to halve and divide the country ? The only National candidates before the people now are JAMES BUCHANAN and Jolts C. BRECKINIUDIM. Let them succeed and it will be like renewing the youth and strength, guarding the rights, and perpetuating the glory of uvr whole country and nothing but our country. Pertinent Questions The Somerset Democrat, in ridiculing the idea of ei? "union" upon principle between the Fillmore and Fremont branches of the oppo sition, puts the following pertinent questions to his shilly-shally contemporary of the Her ald : "Don't you know that Fremont received the nomination of the Black Republican or Aboli tion Convention, and was endorsed by the Abolition part of Hie Know-Nothing lodges? Don't you know that Fillmore is the candidate of the Southern or Pro-Slavery Know-Noth ings? And don't you know that Fillmore him self has declared that. Fremont's election would break up the Union and ruin the country." These questions are as forcible in Lancas ter county, and every other county in the State, as they are in Somerset. How the two wings of the opposition separated as they are, on principle, by an apparently impassable gulf, can unite for National or State purposes, without violating every principle of honesty, we are unable to conceive. And how the " American " wing can join in the support of the out and out Abolition county ticket just placed in nomination at the dictation of TuAD DEUS STEVENS and SIMON CAMERON, is beyond our comprehension. The leaders, who are for nothing but political power, have formed what they are pleased to call a union ticket for Lan caster county, but which is in reality a Black Republican ticket, the legislative part of which is intended to assist in elevating SIMON CAMERON (who presided last week at a Fre mont meeting in Harrisburg) to a seat in the U. S. Senate. But will the honest portion of their own partisans, who act from principle and despise chicanery, support such a ticket? More especially will the Old Line Whigs, who are identified with neither Know-Nothingism or Black Republicanism, who despise the 9pe and loath the other—will they countenance or aid the infamous juggle? We think not. We appeal to them as men of principle, as honest men, to set the seal of reprobation on such a ticket, by voting against it. A Regular Flzzle A Fremont Meeting was held in front of the Court House, in this city, on Thursday evening last, It was a very slim affair—not more tiian 150 persons being present, of whom at least two•two thirds were Buchanan and Fillmore men ! The meeting was addres sed by a Yankee vendor of Fremont maps, and also by a Mr. Caleb B. Smith, Of Indiana, and a Mr. Spooner or Spooney, who had °vie dently more beard than brains, from Ohio.-- The meeting, so far as Fremont was concern ed, was an almost total failure. At the con clusion of the speaking, the Democrats pres ent gave three thundering cheers for " Old Buck," which was followed by the Fillmore men giving three more for their favorite ! No attempt was made to give any for Fremont! Thus ended this most contemptible Fremont fizc!e A Sectional Ticket It was not enough for the so called "Union" County Convention on Wednesday last, to nominate a full Abolition-Maine-Law ticket, but they have also cut off the entire northern section of the county, with the exception of West Earl, which gets a Director of the Poor; The townships of Brecknock, East and West Cocalico, Ephrata, Warwick, Clay, Elizabeth, Manheim, Penn, Rapho, West Donegal, East Hempfield, and the Boroughs of Elizabethtown, Manheim and Mount Joy are completely left out of view. The City, with the southern and eastern portion of the county, where Aboli tionism and Maine Lawism prevails, get everything. Will the people of the ostracised districts stand this? We do not believe they will. M.'s the Register (K. N.) for or against the Black Republican " Union " county ticket ? Our neighbor has not yet defined his position. The Express (Black Republican Maine Law) is out flat-footed in its support. " Birds of a feather flock together." VD— Sixty-nine Old Line Whigs of Detroit have issued an appeal to their Whig friends of Michigan, urging them as they value tht Union and the Constitution of their Country, to support the election of BUCLIANAN and BRECKINRIDPE. Pay of members of Congress. The New York Tribune, of the 18th, con tains an article denouncing the members of Congress who voted for the bill increasing their own compensation to $3,000. In this instance, that paper has acted independent of party considerations, and the force of its con • damnation falls on the heads of Giddings and I a large number of other Black Republicans who voted for the bill. The Tribune gives the ayes ,and nays on the passage of the bill.— From the list it appears that of the members from the slave States, thirty voted for the bill and' forty-three against it. Seventy free State members voted for the bill and fifty-five voted against it. The entire Massachusetts delega tion voted in favor of it. The Rhode Island delegation voted for it in solid column, (two deep.) Vermont and C o nnecticut gave each one vote against it. In the delegations of all the New England States together, the bill had a majority in its iiivor of two fu one. Ar kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida and Virginia gave but , one vote. each in favor of the bill. Upon a fair review of • the vote, we have nu disposition to prevent the Tribune, if we could du so, from indulging in the following strictures: "It was just forty years ago that the Con gress of that day undertook to increase the pay of members. They put it up at barely $1,500 a year, which is about what they now receive, on the average, at toe old charge of eight dollars per day. We believe they did not make the rise retrospective, as the new act does. Yet this $1,500 a year demolished nearly all who were concerned in it. Henry Clay, who had not had a competitor at the polls fur some time previous, barely saved himself from defeat by superhuman exertions, unrivalled ability onthe stump, by appealing to his great and admitted public services, and by virtually confessing that he had done wrung, and promising to do better. Members of moderate abilities and ordinary services went down before the surge of public indignation like dry grass before a prairie fire. The new Congress hastened to repeal the Compensation Act and go back to the eight dollars per day s which did not look so insignificant to their constituents at their loriely firesides as to the dispeniers of millions • at Washington. But the retrospective feature of thenew act i s most indefensible. Every member now in c o ngress virtually contracted to serve through t h e last term fur $720. Instead of that, a majority have now voted to take to themselves $3,000 for that service. This is not exactly stealing but is very sharp kind of conveying. See if it does not bowl down a good many en gaged in it ! We earnestly advise all parties not to put up members who voted for this grab in any of the close districts. It will not he safe. " Peopie of the United States ! ask your present or prospective candidates for Congress what they - think of this new Compensation Act, and try to have their answers in black and white before you vote for any them !" It is not long since Mr. Greely congratulated the country on having such a glorious Congress as the present. He might have tolerated a little stealing in consideration ot extra ser vices on the Kansas question. Who nominated Mr. BUCHANAN? Let it be borne in mind, says the Steuben Farmer's Advocate, that it was the North ! On the first ballot in the Cincinnati Convention lie receiv ed ONE HUNDRED AND ONE votes from the Free States, and but THIRTY FOUR votes from the Slave States. The Southern States, with but two or three exceptions, voted against him in a body up to the last'ballot, when they yielded to the force of public opinion. Yet, on every hand, you hear the Abolition orators and pa. pers crying out that he is the Southern can didate—in favor of the extension of Slavery, &c. JAMES BUCHANAN has been in pub lic life for over thirty years, and we challenge any man to produce the first word or act to prove these base assertions of an unscrupulous opposition. -He was born and educated, and has always lived in a Free State—and his public life gives the lie to the charge that he ever favored the extension of Slavery. lie has always been faithful to the Constitution of his country, and has taken that as his guide on the slavery, as well as all other questions, and has always been found battling against the unholy schemes of Southern and Northern Disunionist& He is emphatically a Union man, and as such knows no North, no South, no East, no West. And who is JOHN C. FaxmoNT ? Born in a Southern State, and an upholder of Slavery through life, until within a few months past, when Seward and Greely and their Abolition compeers had him nominated as the embodi ment of Black Republicanism ! And this is man when the Negro Worshippers of the North and East give to the freemen of Penn sylvania, and ask for their suffrages ! This is the man, without the first claim or qualifica for the Presidency, that the people of Penn sylvania are asked to support in preference to their own distinguished Statesman, JAMES BUCHANAN. Let It Circulate The following extract from Mr. BUCHANAN'S letter of acceptance, cannot be too prominent ly or too widely noticed by papers desiring the peace and prosperity of the Union. The matters of fact contained in this short paragraph, should of themselves suffice to rally in opposition to the Republican flag nineteen-twentieths of the Northern people: " Most happy would it he for the the coun tryif this agitation were at an end. During its whole progress it has produced no practical good to any human being, whilst it has been the source of great and dangerous evils. It has alienated and estranged one portion of the Union from the other, and has even seriously threatened its existenee. To my own person al knowledge, it has produced the impression among foreign nations that our great and glo rious Confederacy is in constant danger of dissolution. This does us serious injury, be cauSe acknowledged power and stability al ways command respect among nations, and are among the beat securities against unjust aggression and in favor of the maintenance of honorable peace." Good News from Dauphin County Extract of a letter from a highly intelli gent gentleman of Harrisburg, to a friend in this city, dated `•The political horizon in this county looks fair. There are hundreds of the most respectable and Influential Old Line Whigs in this county who will vote for Mr. BUCHAN AN. Many of them will support our State and County tickets. Our County Convention met on Monday, and pla ced In nomination a very good ticket, upon which it was thought advisable to place three Old Line Whigs, Messrs. Kepner, Landis and Kelpir—all Bccn.tnav men. " Gen. CAMERON has at length taken an open stand against us, having presided and made a speech at a Fre mont meeting in this place a few evenings since. His in fluence is of no account now—it ceased when he left the party. It Is true he has many personal friends in the Democratic party who would do him a personal kindness, but, politically, they will no longer have anything to do with him:' The Editor's Book Table THE LIFE OF ROBERT FULTON. Exhibiting the leading Incidents and Ornaments of his Private Character, ele vated Principles of Action, his uncommon Usefulness and Celebrity, and his Undying Fame. By J. FRAN/111S lizaosarr, of Lancaster. Printed by C. O. Irenderson & Co., Philadelphia. This is a new and splendid work Just issued from the press—being a large and handsome volume of about 300 pages, giving a graphic but truthful hfstory of one of the greatest men this country list ever produced, and one of the most distinguished Inventors of hie own or any other age. The work is beautifully illustrated with twenty-six superb engravings. The biography of ROBERT FULTON—his great genius ita employed in the invention of steam navigation, 3e.,-13113 high character as a citizen and a great public benefactor— are all subjects fraught with the deepest interest to every American citizen, and cannot fail to give the book a most extended circulation all over the Union. Here in Lancaster county, where FULTON was born, every body ought to take a copy of the work. The compiler and editor, J. FRANKLIN ItEIGART, Esg., de• serves great credit for his industry and n❑tiring efforts to produce a work of suck immense interest to the whole Americas people, and we hope that he will be - abundantly remunerated for his trouble and expense. THE KNICKERBOCKER.. Published by Samuel Haeston, 348 Broadway, N. York. The September number is filled with a choice variety of reading matter, which fully keep up_the high character which the Hnickerbocker has•alwaye maintained. This martyr to, free Kansas, free Speech, and free niggers, as we stated in our last, is, or lately has been, rusticating at the house of Dr. Jackson, at Cresson. Since his arrival, what little sympathy . was manifested for him in this neighborhood bile entirely given way to feelings of deep disgust. There is nothing whatever the matter with him. He is hale and hearty, has a good 'appetite, and talks politics with all the bitter vindictiveness that a Yankee fanatic can command. One day last week, Col. D. H. Hofius, an Old Line Whig, and J. Blair Moore, Democrat, of this place, and Col. J. J. Patterson, Republican, one of the editors of the Harrisburg Telegraph, visit ed Cresson. In company with a man named Gemini!, at the invitation of Dr. Jackson, they called upon Mr. Sumner, who received them very cordially. He soon asked Mr. Ho fius how Mr. Ford had succeeded here. The Colonel told him frankly that he did not suc ceed very well—that his meeting was compos ed of Democrats and Fillmore men—that•very few Fremont men were present in consequence of their being but few in the place. This frank avowal irritated the gentleman with the soft brain, and he poured forth a perfect tor rent of invectives against Pennsylvanians.— While emptying his vials of black Republican wrath, he declared that the Whigs and Demo crats of Pennsylvania were White Stares, and that he should glory in seeing them brought to the block, and disposed of under the Auc tioneer's hammer. This unqualified assertion of the Yankee fanatic did not fail to arouse the indignation of the Pennsylvanians, and Col. llama made some tart reply, which only aggravated the martyr the more, and he show ered abuse of the foulest kind upon Pennsyl vanians indiscriminately, and when the party atempted to vindicate their State, the dignified Yankee Abolitionist coolly opened a Boston pa per, and commenced reading. The party came away completely disgusted, and Col• Hofius, who previously felt great sympathy for the man before he uttered such atrocious senti ments, declares openly that his Honor earned a great many more caneings than he has ever received. It is intimated by one of the nigger sheets that Mr. Sumner is about to traverse• Penn sylvania to make niggerite capital. If so, we advise him at once not to make use of such language. The people of Pensylvania are freemen—he who ' sa,ys to the contrary is. a black-hearted liar—they love the Constitution, the Laws and the Union—they are law abiding, too, and they will not suffer any Yankee Aboll 2 tionist to come from among the slaves of the cotton mills of Jlassachusetts, and heap vil lainous abuse upon them with impunity. Holl idaysburg Standard. Creed of the Democratic Party Equal and exact justice to all men, of what ever state or persuasion, religious or political. Peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations ; entangling alliances with The rigti i t of States and Territories to ad minister their own domestic affairs. Freedom and equality, the sovereignty of the people and the right of the majority to rule when their will is constitutionally expressed. - Economy in the public expenditures, and a sacred preservation of the public faith. Freedom of religion, filedom of the press, and a general diffusion of information. Opposition to all secret political organiza tions, and to all corruptions in politics. A. sacred preservation of fthe Federal Con stitution, and no religious tests for office. No bigotry or pride of caste, or distinction of birth among American citizens. Respect and protection for the rights of all. The preservation of the naturalization laws, and the right of all to the public domain, and the protection of the American government. Opposition to all chartered monopolies. Common brotherhood and good will to all —especially to those of the household of faith. The Summer Harvest of the Democracy Never before did a party reap such a crop of victory, as the Democratic hosts have garn ered in, within the last month. KENTUCKY, ARKANSAS, MISSOURI, NORTH CAROLINA, TEXAS, are safely gathered in by the Democracy, be yond danger , of drought torivet, rot or worm. Pennsylvania, too, is safe beyond a contin gency, and she will prove it, by her State election, before the November contest comes on; Tennessee, too, is about to speak, and will be heard on the side of Democracy. From this time forward the Democracy will date a series of victories in the several States, which culminating in the election of Buchan an and Breckinridge, will terminate the ex istence of the Black Republican , and Know Nothing parties.—Albany Atlas. The leading paper of the Black Republi can party of New York, the Morning Courier and Enquirer, in a long and beseeching arti cle, seemingly addressed to its Black Repub lican contemporaries, confesses that Mr. Buch anan will get in the South one hundred and twenty electoral votes : that he will, also, cer tainly get California; and that it is "only ne cessary to give him the twenty-seven electo ral votes of the honest old free State of Penn sylvania, and he is the next President of the United States;" Pennsylvania (says the Union) will insure her vote for her native and favorite son by twenty thousand majority. The Black Re publicans may well fear that they are running down hill. A few more weeks, and we shall see where the revolutionary blows struck by the Black Republicans against the Constitu tion and the Union will place their party.— Pennsylvania is truly an "honest" and patri otic State. She is proud of the name she bears amongst her sister States. She is the keystone that will assist to save the Union in this contest by such a triumphant vote for Buchanan on the 4th of November, that Black Republicanism will forever hide its:diminished head. If ever known again, it will be under some other name and some other leader. HARRISBURG, Aug. 28 COUNSEL —But few of the reading public are aware how continually an editor is called upon to advise his patrons on every subject, from politics to the breed of cattle. Through the whole range of our duties none has per plexed us more than to tell our readers what to take for a cure when they are sick. Hith erto this has been a severe trial to all our skill, but it will not be hereafter. We have been taking, and have seen the evidence from oth ers that have taken Dr. Ayer's Cherry Peo. toral and Cathartic Pills. They need but a slight trial to convince the most sceptical how far they are superior to the other medicines we have had in use. They have one single property of great importance to the sick, and that is they eure.—Boston Herald. The True American, a Black Republican organ in Erie county, Pa., in commenting on a speech delivered at a Democratic meeting, says: " THIS T WADDLE ABOUT THE ' UNI ON' AND ITS PRESERVATION' IS TOO SILLY AND SICKENING FOR ANY GOOD EFFECT. WE THINK THE LIBERTY OF A SINGLE SLAVE IS WORTH MORE THAN ALL THE UNIONS GOD'S UNI VERSE CAN HOLD !" . . . . Here is Black Republicanism, pure and un adulterated. Hon. Chorlez.ilumner. The Republicans Frightened Black Republican Sentiment 'evolution Begun I ! . In the defeat of the Army Appri»riation Bill by the Black Republicans in tIR House of Representatives in Washington; we see " Tin RECHNNING OF THE END. " This is the first instil...Le 01 such a defeat. The, 'supplies have nevdr been thus 'stopped bee. At former periods, aii'gry men have • attempted revolutionary remedies, without siccess.— Violent itocisos have been tacked h retufure to appropriation hills, but have been fluted out again after conference and discussionq Now, however, the madness of the oppositiba has led them one step farther. They stop the pay of the army and those connected with it, rath er than leave the constitution and laws to be administered by the constitutional and legal functionaries of the government. Tilley un dertake to decide upon the legality of Legis latures—upon eases of invasion which may hereafter arise—upon exigencies which they only guess at—and 'then they profile, that fifteen millions of money shall be stopped in the treasury, and that no officer, soldier or contractor shall' be paid, unless their l Yiews of these anticipated cases shall be sanctioned by Congress. , If they could enact a law 1 to meet their views, their course would be less objec tionable. But unable to do this, their under take coercion, and threaten to stop the gov ernment, unless they can have their own way. The point they make is on Hans* They might just as well make it On Nebraska or any, State ; The •President is equally bound to suppress domestic violence in any) part of the Union. But there is one placel in the Union, where the opposition (it is too clear) do not want it suppressed. They aim to nul lify all laws in Knaves. They take' from it its only government. They recall the U. S. troops. They leave that territory al prey to dissention and violence. They Send out Sharp's rifles. They exasperate alike the Northern and southern settlers. Ani having taught them to hate each other, and to spring at each other's throats, and having refused all bills for giying them peace, they look for re newed capital to their party from the very outrages which they thus invite and !encour age. Let the people understand thii ! For every outrage which is committed in I,kiinsas, the Black Republicans are answerable. They have had opportunities to pacificate the terri tory, and have refused them. They have been offered the registry-list, the pure ballot box, the speedy election, the ample protection to voters, and the admission of the State with a free constitution, if the people so desired— and they have refused the offer. They now stop supplies to the army, rather than have the army employed, under direction of the Executive, to preserve law and order lin Kan- Sas. Suppose this should be done in Maine. Suppose one branch of the late Legislature had been in favor of the Maine Law, and the other opposed to it, and that the latter had said to the former, "We will not piovide a dollar to carry on the government, unless you will consent to nullify the Maine 1 Law ?" What would have been the reply 71 Why, simply this : " Repeal the Maine Law, if you can, in the ordinary powers of Legislation; but you can't compel us to violate our duty, and agree to an act we are conscienticiusly op posed to, by threatening to stop the Wheels of government. When you reach that point, the State is in revolution!' This is the point now reached by the -Black Republicans in Congress, and they have taken the first step in revolution. The President, in discharge of his duty, has called Congress together in extra session. This involves new expense; and it remains to be seen with what result. We earnestly hope that better counsels will prevail in the House, and that it will make nd further attempt to force the Senate into its own views of legislation, by stopping the supplied. The times require every patriot'searnest attention. Disunion stalks boldly a road.— Revolution has begun in the capito Civil i war seems daily threatened. Can it jbe that this great Western republic, the freestlgovern ment in the world, the noblest example of suc cess, thus far, ever known on earth, and the bright example to which oppressed and strug gling nations everywhere look for encourage ment and support—can it be that this great light of humanity and freedom is destined now to go out in darkness and in blood? ;We call upon all who love our free institutions and wish to have them preserved, to rally , ; now in their defence. Check the spirit of ; discord which is rife throughout the land. Bring back the old days of brotherhood. Think less of sections and more of the whole. Arrest the tide of violence which now rolls over the coun try, or else the present generation will surely look upon the end of the American Union.— Eastern (Maine) Argus. An Exploring Expedition.i Next November will witness the setting out of another exploring expedition, under the command of " the Pathfinder of the Rocky Mountains," (as his followers exultingly style him,) JOHN C. FRE3IONT. His out-fit will not come from the public treasury of the United States army, as on former expeditions. He is to be sent to a country visited by many, but a definite account of which has never been received. A river, not so pleasant' as the Amazon, nor as. majestic as others explored of late under the direction of Gdngrese, ibut one, well suited to his " brave and hardy" nature. Of Salt River, little is known—very few who have ascended it have ever returnedi It is appropriate, therefore, that to such an adven turer as Fremont, the enterprise of explo ration should be entrusted. The " Aiaraposa claim" will furnish him means requisite for its prosecution, while the steamer "Woolly Head" will be plaied at his disposal by the sovereign people. His crew will consist of n motley group— "Black spirits and white. Blue epirite and grey." Accompanying the expedition will be GREE LI' and BENNErr, as " special correspohdents" for the Tribune and Herald, as well as SWARD, GIDDINGS, STEVENS, and others of like ilk, who will each have a chapter in the fina report of the survey. As it is to be presumed there are no cattle in the region whither they are going, there will be no possibility of !making any speculations in beef and a supply from California market should be secured. Mr. Fremont ought not to forget, if it turns out otherwise, to give us (" the dear peopl i e ") the full particulars of the transaction. In that unexplored country will he found much to in terest our travellers. We shall look forward with intense longings for the journal d the ex pedition, as well as for the " flights" descrip tions of " negro worshipping correspondents. We wish them a safe passage through the "Kansas" quick-sands and "yoligamy-Utah" shoals. After the obstructions are cleared, their voyage may he more pleasant. ' As an adventurer, merely, Mr. Fremont has no equal in our country, and the people could not have done better than give him charge of this ex pedition. Ho is the right man in the right place.—Harrisburg Union. FLETCHER WEBSTER IN NEW HAMPSHIRE.- Our Black Republican friends, who have been making their calculation about carrying New Hampshire, are doomed to a sad disappoint ment. The ancient fires of the Demoeracy are burning clear and bright, and the firm, steady, onward tramp, of the old brotherhood strikes terror into the ranks of the Freeboot ers. Among others who are active in the can vass there is Fletcher Webster, Esq.,, who is resolved that the native State of his illustri ous father shall never be given up to the seo tionalists and disunionists. He addressed an immense Democratic meeting at Portmonth, last week, which was received with unbound ed enthusiasm by a large number of Whigs who were present, as well as by Democrats.— 'Tie the sun of Austerlitz. Religion and.Rillee Lieut. General and Cardinal Field Marshal, the Rev. (!) Henry Ward Beecher, pledged Plymouth Church for twenty-five Shaip's RI , fies.—New Haven paper. It has happened of old for political Jots, That churches were rifled by fanatic mobs; But the tables are turned by the strangest of Inrchea And mobs are now ri f led by Louth churches. Nem York oetennissionaire." Mr. Buotoman at Home. Mr. Bucaitcor reached home a week ago from hie visit to the Bedford Springs. ; He is in excellent health and spirits, and daily visit ed by friends from all Neetiomv•r-'_ CITY AND COMITY ITEMS. Draxosra Attantros.--The Democrats of the different Wahl; of the city, will meet at the following place., on Saturd9 evenine next, 6th inst.. between the hours of 7 and 9 o'clock, for the purpose of electing Dele gates to the County:Corm:lokm: .x. W. Wand—atTioutb,lirest Orange street. S. W. Ward—atlitcputrick's, South Queen street. ' 16: Ward—atalibler's, Pad Chemint street. 9. R. Ward—at Watkins', corner South Queen and Vine. By alder of the Ward Committees. "414170iir triendekie thedliticent Wards, at the delegate • electlots on Satiiiriai evening, would do well to take im mediate measures to organize their wards. A thorough and complete organization should-be effected at once. FENCIBLES' . PARADE.—The Fenaiblea, Capt. DDCIELKAN commanding, paraded in their new and beautiful uniform on Thursday last, accompanied by their Band, and attracted a great deal of attention. They marched well, looked finely, and performed the various evolutions with the skill gf older veterans. The veteran and patriotic Op - mixes may well feel proud of his Company, and the citizens of Lancaster are honored by baying so gallant a body of young men in their midst. We understand the t a large number of new members are being enrolled. Lon g life to the Fenctbles. The Company was Inspected, in Centr; Square, by Col. William EL Amweg, Brigade Inspector, and after tuls cere• mony was over a fine Daguerreotype of them was taken by Mr. ADDIS. N. W. WARD DZMOCRATS.—The Democrats of the North Wart Ward will meet at the Hall of Wheat land Clnb, on this (Triesday) evening, at 7 o'clock, for the purpose of forming a permanent organization of the Ward, and will also meet on every succeeding Tubsday evening, until after the election. WHEATLAND CLCB.—The Club met at Con cert Hall, North Queen street, on Saturday evening. Ad• dreasee were delivered by Mr. Slagsler, of Illinois,. and John S. Dougherty and Samuel U. Reynolds, &gra., of this city. Several gentlemen, heretofore old line IVblga, joined the Club. ,‘• Au invitation from the Democracy of Parkesburg to at tend their )lass Meeting, on Saturday, 13th Met., was A Committee of Arrangement for the Club, consisting of the following gentlemen; was appointed:—Dr. Samuel Wel chem, Sam'l H. Reynolds, John H. Carmany, William A. Morton, J. F. Gibbs, Jacob Foltz and John M. Johnston. The next meeting of the Club will take place, at the above named Hall, on Saturday. 13th lust., at S o'clock P. M. s. RALLY DEMOCRATS !—A meeting of the De mocracy of the City will be held, in front of the Court House, on Saturday evening next, at S o'clock. SrEsnr.fl S. Rraux, Esq., of Philadelphia, one of the finest Stump Orators in the State, will address the meeting in German and English. Mr. R. speaks both languages flu ently. An invitation has also been extended to that el.' quent young champion of Democracy. Casa it, W. CARRI GAN, Esq., of Philadelphia. Turn out, Democrats, one and all, and slam - your do vm. tion to the Constitution and the Union. - THE LANCASTER DEMOKRAT.—A liermati Democratic paper, bearing the above title, has just made its appearance in this City. It is neatly printed, and will, no doubt, be liberally sustained by our German Democratic friend.. THE FUSION CONVENTION-WOOL IN THE ASCENDANT!—The mountain has labored, and brought forth —a prodigious lot of Wool. At the on-railed Union County Convention, which met at Fulton Hall, on Wednesday last, the Woolly Heads and Maine Law faiuttics, under the lead of Slovens, Dickey, Black, Geist & Co.. had all their own tray. Although the Convention was truly a gathering of ••Black spirits and white. Blue spirits and grey, the -black spirits" controlled the whole affair, and all the candidates, with perhaps a single exception, ace out and out Fremont men, and great "freedom shriekere." The Convention was presided over by Jolts STROHM, the same man who, in 1646, voted against supplying the Amer ican Army with provisions. The ticket is composed of nothing but Wool from top to bottom. The Fillmore dele gate's became disgusted at the proceedings, and a great many withdrew. At the close, those who remained, gave three cheers for Fillmore, and three groans for Fremont and the County ticket. They won't stand having the Wool crammed wholesale down their throats. The great Thad deus pulled the wires well, but still there is furious kicking. It is rumored that Mr. Darlington is very sick of the ticket, and his new associates. Poor man, he has been completely blind-folded. He has been speculating too deeply in Wool, and, as a matter of course, his fingers have been badly burned. Ills bosom friend, the profound and tuna. noes Attorney General, Thomas A'. Franklin, who "is in Aver of any thing to break down the Democracy," even to accept-a seat in Congress, consented to descend from his high and lofty position to take said nomination, and re ceived a highly complimentary vote from 25 gallant spirits for hie patriotism and self-sacrificing devotion to She cause of Fremont and Freedom. "How are the mighty fallen l" Column STONE LAYING.—The corner stone of the new addition to the Masonic Hall, on West Kiiig street, was laid yesterday, at noon, with appropriate cere monies. Cincos.—Dan Rice's Circus is coming.— See advancement. Of course every body will go to see it. Legislatttre. ELIWIZTEMOWN, September 1,185 U CAPT. SAPIDERION—Dear Bir As the time ofisettling a DemocratieCounty Ticket is fast approaching, I wouldbeg leave to altl2oo.llCB the name of GEORGE 11. BIRDWELL, of Columbia, as a candidate for the Legislature. Mr. Bard well was formerly a resident of our Borough, and is known as an honest, intelligent and active Democrat, always ready and willing to advance the Interests of his party, and pos. seems all the qualifications requisite to make a good repre sentative. lle Is ales extensively known through the County, can command a large number of Whig votes in this place, and,: therefore, will contribute, largely to the success of the Democmtic County Ticket. DONEGAL. slassas. Entions : Seeing the interest manifested In certain portions of the commonwealth relative to the feel ing along the routes of public travel, on the Presidential question, was led to take the vote of those navigating;the Pennaylvania Canal for the week ending Aug. 30th.— The following is the correct vote as taken by me at the outlet lock, at this place. Monday, Aug. 26, Buchanan 101% Fillmore 25; Fremont,} Tuesday, " 26, 78; •• 9; •• 2. Wednesday • 27, 115; " 27; •• 8. Thursday, 28, •• 97: •• 30; • • 2. Friday, . " 29, •• 108; 22; " 6. Saturday " 30, 118; . 1 21% 8. Making a total of 780 votes- of which 616 wore for Bu chanan, 139 for Fillmore and 25 for Fremont. Presupposing this to be a fair sample of the way In which the different candidates for the Presidency are regarded throughout the State, it& easy to determine who will and who will not be successful in the coming contest.. COLD NIA, Aug. 30, 1850 Elizabethtown Buchanan Ululb A spirted and enthusiastic meeting of the Club was held at the public house of Col. A Greenawalt, on Saturday eve- ning last—Dr. Bowman was called to the chair, supported by Phillip Trissler, eon., Geo. Enterline, Abm. Redsecker, (miller) and C. W. Murray as Vice Presidents. The mee was addressed in • very able and eloquent etyle by C ool. G. H. liardwell, C. 8. Haldeman and William Patton. Esqs. A vote of thanks Rag on motion extended to the speakers. The meeting adjourned after a goodlY number of additional name's were added to the Club. *3_ The Buchanan Club of Paradise, which now Lm bers over one hundred members, will meet this evening at Lemon Place, (not Kinzer's as erroneously stated In our last.) The meeting will be addressed by Samuel H. Rej nolds, Esq., and Dr. Samuel Welchem', of this city. /Sir The Democray had a meeting at White's Hotel, in the Borough of Blenheim, on Wednesday evening last, and organized a "Union Buchanan Club." The meeting was addressed by J. S. Keener and Nathan Worley, Bagr's 41Q- The Buchanan Club of Drumore awl Fulton bad a large and enthusiastic meeting at Centreville, in Drumore township, on Friday evening last—which was ably and ef fectively addressed by H. B. Swarr, Esq., of this city. This wimonly the second meeting of the Club, and it already numbers over ono hundred members, amongst whom are several old line Whigs. 'The good work goes bravely on in every section of the County. The Army BM Passed t THE BLACK REPUBLICANS DEFEATED The House on Saturday last, agreed to the Army Bill, without the proviso, by a vote of 101 to 98. The President immediately sign ed it, whereupon both Houses adjourned sine die at 3f o'clock. The memher from this district, Mr. ROB ERTS, voted in the negative. as.. We hope our friends in the 'several districts of the county will condense the pro ceedings of the Club meetings and Pole rais ing& We cannot afford so much space as they would occupy, if published at length. Unless these reports are more brief hereafter, we shall have to use the pruning knife our. selves. • A Fact to Ponder Over All the old soldiers (says an exchange) in the war of 1812, whatever may be their polit ical predilections, should vote against Fre mont. When in the United States Senate in 1850, he voted against an amendment to the " Bounty Land Bill. " introduced by Mr. Underwood, of Kentucky, extending its bene fits to " widows and orphans" of the deceased soldiers of that war. This humane provision Fremont voted against, and on account of it every old soldier in the war of 1812 should vote against him. If any body doubts this vote of Fremont, they will find it recorded in the Congressional Globe of the Thirty first Congress, on pages 3005 to 3007. m ar The Butler Democratic Herald denies that Gen. J. N. Purviance, has.come out for Fremont. The editor bases his de7nial on the strength of a personal conversation which he had with the General, in which the latter ex pressed himself unequivocally in favor of Bu- Buchanan Campaign Papers. - NO. .-By That the oppodthm seek the dissolution of the Union, no well minded man, acgusintaii With the state or upset of Black RepW o dicanhen, can doubt. The Union must be towed—saved re the Ignominy Of weak imbecility, from the relentless hand of the traitor Abolitionist, and from the contempt of- European natiorucialch will follow so soma as she loses her :national greatcoat. Hog is the Nation ality of the Union to he iireaerved 1 Be answer by close, compost union—by eleolizegno sectiomatian to administer the government, and In Wading =writhing calculated to foment Jealousy, hatred and n disoord . between the different sections of the country! Sectionalism will never pacify and hold together the distinct parts of a Nation, let its bonds to ever so strong. I Everj State is a distinct pardon of this Confederacy therefore It is unocentitutional, un charitable and suicidlal ;for any one portion to attempt to exert an undue amount of Influence on the other. At the present time disunion stares us in the face, and what has mused this! Nothing under heaven but sectional disputes which have kindled a dame of discord, of hatred, and of bitter jealousy, called into being by the reckless doings of the fanatical leaders of thedisorganising party, now pitted against the invincible Democracy, for the purpose of se curing to themselves power, and drawing tighter the bonds which bind us ms freemen already. The Union to be pre served must be upheld by a party that is truly Natiouai— its every beat and pulsation must be pureNstionality,and without this no country 'can be great, nor long rorvive.— Now, it has been fully ,demonatrated that the Black Re publican party in Be unhallowed onslaught on Biutharn institutions—ln its inniference with the Territorial gov ernment of the United States in Maness, is a party which Is founded on, and upholds purely =glottal principles as the basis of its actions. IWe have said That - the principles of the Democratic party were National, and Es, are Its nom inees. Bucaziux is a National man, and in the momentous etruggles between the' Democratic and the Tory Principled in this country, he has ever been known as fighting-under the banner of the former, while his present opposers have as zealously (to, their erbrlasting infamy be it =l4-advo cated and been' enrolled4under the latter . - When In 1844 the black clouds of A litionhun, threatening disunion, hung heavily above the, legislative halls, at our National Capitol, Buchanan was nt and foremost in proclaiming to his countrymen that t he glorious Union of States must be sacred — sacred to the American citizen as his God. , -And he rode forth to defend her. And her pail:leas worth proclaim; Challenging each recreant traitor - • Who aspersed her spotless fame." Aud situ any one doubt, that, now when he is the nndi. date, by acclamation, of the united Democracy-that De. mocrecy which holds sacred the bonds - of fraternity— which binds in one the Union of States, that if placed Its the position which the united voice - of the people so loudly calls for, he will now,-as he did then, battle vallanUy to perpetuate the destinies Of this Republic, and that he will detend the Constitution from the m editated attack M Black Republicanism. Ills intellec4 eloquence and wisdom alike lit him to grapple successfully with this party which has avowed principles sittagoaistic to the instßutions Cl the country, as granted by the Constitution and the end 01 which is the dismemberment of our Conf ederacy. This detestable doctrine of Albolition, and of disunion, should find no response from the -patriotic Union loving citizen— let TORISS talk as they will their p-ue object is hidden, and it does not seem to us thlit the honest man—the man who loves liberty and regscd his rights as the fee simple of a rich legacy—dan have nolinterest in the furtherance of the hateful doctrines of Abolitionism. Did the freemen In the South—they who have every opportunity afforded them of becoming acqualuted with the workings of this system which he/41111111W to the Northern fanatic such au emir . mous stock elf fund from which to manufacture sympathy, ' and which they apply to politics for the double purpose of success to themseives and opposition to the future pros perity of the Union—did they who Live in the States where Slavery is the law of thi, land, rise in opposition to the system, then we might conclude that Slavery was an evil, . the bane of society and hydra-heeded monster which Abo lition claims it to be. This, however, Is not done. On the , contrary, and it is a significant fact, Slavery agitatfbn Is confined almost exclusively to those States which are most remote from those that Slavery is tolerated in. As one ! State has no right whuceyer to meddle into or with the internal regulations of another, why not leave Slavery ' agitation to those who -.labor under its galling yokel"— Why, if Slavery retards the progrees of the Slave States, not leave its abolishment and adjustment to these, and not to dime removed far off, and those which it does not affect? flow can Ileemichusetts be affected by the local institutions of States removed far from her patriotic borders, and which forme uo part of tom laws and peculiar institutions t By why ptifsne the idea? It is preposterous that they should feel so deeply on this one subject—Negro • Slavery. We say, as we liavit said before, that the whole scheme is but a bait held out by wily politicians who are the opposers of Democraey and Buchanan, for the porpom, of securing votes, and inveigling, the people into their treacherous glut for didoiving the Union. Now we, as Democrats, never wish to see the Union dissolved, colitis linently we will rote for t h e Cincinnati nominees. Citiren, to whatererparty you belong which is attached Co the op : position, you are most certainly wrong. Why you aro help. lug to betray your Country Iscariot like to Great Britain s You are heaping a sin oat your shoulders which will crush, aye annihilate you Are you mad that you are doing this lraiturouti 'act against the very,..institutious which have wairished you from the tender yeafs of infancy? And is thirthe way you [repay these some institutions lu ' your manhood—by basely betraying them? Think a mu. maid of the atrocity of your deeds—then shudder at their enormity and become a better man. Bxplate your past min-step by voting for lIMAIANAN and BRECKLYIUDOE—than you will have done your rountry s service and saved your self front perdition. ME Eulrous— . l.rempaing that u little newel from the " South" may prove interestin g to your readers, I shall now and then keep you adviied of what is occurring in this part of the county politically. At the store of H. H. Bren eman, Esq., Camerae, a vote was taken during at few days last week of the vocable eustomers who visited the store, which resulted as follows: Buchanan,i fill; Fillmore, 17, and John C. Fremont, 1.U.: This vote was honestly taken. Those persons who know anything about this locality, po • lineally, no doubt will feel somewhat astonished at such a result; knowing that a l few years ago you might have travelled two miles In each direction from Camargo, and could not have found sli democratic voters in all. Now, the majority of the voters' of the neighborhood may safely be counted for Buchantin. Foremost and most active amongst those who have Ohanged to Buchanan, is 'Squire Breneman. Heretofore he has always been an old line Whig, and one of the must intelligent and influential in the southern part of the 'county; but being a national man, and not havii.g a 'stomach to bear all the "wool" that is being crammed down the throats of those whim, who have fallen in with the Black Republicans, he has tur ned from them with disgust, and serves his country's good by supporting James Buchanan. There axe many more In the same neighborhood who have pursued the same course that Mr. Brenemen has taken. Depend upon It you will hear good - news from Eden and Providence townships next November. In the southern townships the prospects are bright, although that portion of the county is the hot-bed of abolitionism. The " Nigger worshippers" held a meeting last week in Little Britain. At least one third of the gath ering was composed of he and she Darijes. The meeting was wholly under the control of those insane fanatical ate olitionists that infest the isouthern portion of the county, and with whom the Es:amines has allays worried, bat whom he now hugs to his bosom with all their insane doctrines with a recklessness to be pitied. C. M. Johnson, the magnanimous and rerionmed little "filth squirt" edified his beloved "colored breddirrs" fur the space of an hour in a style of unprecedented blackguardism—hurling his invec tives against the democratic party in a torrent of abuse that even frightened' tie poor darkies, and canned the white of many an eye to roll towards him suspiciously.— That speech of Charley's, and the proceedings of the meet • lag in general had the very happy effect of making quite a number of Buchanan votes. I conversed with several old line whim; who positivelj declared that they won* sup port Buchanan, having become so disgusted with the meet ing, and with' Charley'spaekgtutrdism. I could name them, but it is not necessary. You may rely upon It that for every such meeting that is held in the county, with Charley as a speaker, we will gain a dozen votes at-least. Although Darlington presumes he has sold the whole whlg party to abolitionism, we can tell him that there are hundreds and hundreds ;f old Line Whigs In the southern part of this county, who re not sold, but ..who men of intelligence, of spirit and iof influtmce, w . pn eho noble and patriotic stand of the Hon. /. E. Relater, and who now look upon Darlington as a mere toady—a servile Idta tool hanging to the a lof Thad. Stevens. The Strasburg Bee has of- late gradually become the receptacle of the su perabundant filth of that stuuneleu reviler of the prliate character of James Hue an, who controls the Express.— It Is very well known in this section who is the editor (le facto of the " Bee." Of course no person would have the presumption to insult this "easy youth" whose name stands at the head of the paper by charging him es being the au thor of the editorials. Re tried his hand once, editorially, noticing Ed. Bauch's papa, which fully satisfied the law— press man that it was no go. Consequently the readers of the "Bee" are now comp Wed to read weekly those abomi nable disunion sentiments of the Ds-press man, or else not take their papers from the office, as quite a number of the subscribers are doing. Sometime next November the pres ent Vol. ends, and with ft ends the Bee's existence, most likely, as the majority of; subscribers understood it to take no part In political tters, but which is now ac Sized for under the silly,pretext of being an independent paper. The Express man's signification of the word in e• pendent, is "the Insane fanatical doctrines ofabolitionl9." The " Bee" is a commodity with which the community can very easily do without, and the Bee plan will very likely find such to be the decision of many of Its subscribers be fore long. More anon. , JACK SOUTOREIL • Ns, Peovtoz:scs, Aug.,27th, 1860. For the Intelligencer. Respectfully yours, J. S. ROATH For thhabitelligencer. Musa& Fautona—it le gratifying to see the mdon and harmony prevailing in the democratic ranks throughout the Union at tide presentitime, in comparison to the torn and tattered fragments of the oppceltion party. With inch union and harmony 'whwcan doubt the success of our worthy candidates. In Chester County the prospects of the democratic party never were better. In this county where Johnson had 1,000 majority when he was elected Governor, that same majority will be reduced in November next to 800, and a number of Mr. Buchanan's friends even assert that he will have a majority. You must recollect the Uhl, county was formerly a part of Mr. Buchanan'e Congressional district, and that his friends here have not forgotten him. The firma Buchanan Club in the county was formed at this place, and here the Ball wee first put in motion; it is now rolling over the county in all directions and gathering strength as It goes along.] Our Club holds regular weekly meeting and addresses delivered by able speakers. We are under great obligations tq our Lancaster friends who have honored us with their presence and addressed our people upon different occasions. On Saturday afternoon last we had a meeting at this place which was composed of about 800 persons (it would have been larger but owidg to a meetingat Christiana that same evening prevented many from attending.) It was ad dressed by Sam'l H Reynolds, Eaq., of Lancaster, In an able manner. There was but one opinion of his discourse, aed that was, that it was the Most logically arranged address they had ever listened to;; it was delivered iriiin exceeding ly pleasant and happy manner, and altbo' It may have failed to convince those Whom eyes and ears are filled with wool, yet all will admit that the muse of Buchanan and our glorious Union were ably defended by the speaker.— He likewise carried the war into "Airiest" and brought for ward facts that proved conclusively that the present lead. ers and friends of the Fremont party are advocates for "letting the Union elide" as It was a " hall bought com pact." He pictured to his audience what their common sense admitted was the Simple truth, that those border counties would suffer in an hundred fold their there of the horrors of civil war, negioes running from one side, and arson and murder as retaliation on the other. Iffearadessrs.Editors, I May be occupying too much space in your valuable paper with this communication, and will therefore close by statingAst on the 13th day of Septem her we expect to hold a t mats meeting at this place, upon which occasion we expect to meet a large number of our Democratic friends from Lancaster county. PARKES/MAO Aug. 25, 1866. For the Inteiligencer. Masses. Roams :—Pormit me to announce through the columns of your paper, the name of W. Suoes DARROW as a candidate, before the ra:zt Democratic County Conven tion for the Legislature. It ban been quite a time since this section of the count , has been honored with a Demi.' nation on the Democrati c ticket. Mr. Darrow is, and al ways has been, an able and consistent ffennocrat, and is most eminently qualified for the discharge of the duties of a faithful Legislator. His nomination would meet the warm response, and cordial endorsement of the citizens of Earl and adjoining townships, at the October election. DEMOCRAT. New Holland, Aug. 23d,11856. Muss. h)1T0118:—Halng teen on a tour for the last few weeks, through the central part of the State, I observed the above question eotudderably agitated. Among the number of gentlemen st ep of for our next Governor, I have heard the name of Hon. J. Gumnr Jonas, strong ly urged as the met ataffabic candidate that amid be se lecW. His !sake and consistent course as a member of Congress, his able and patriotic, &fence of Mr. Goshawk° against the false and malicious charges of Black Beribli =bun, have endeared Mtn' et Wand of that great and good man. Hie privet. widget Isitain f his capacity as a atateematt untimely acknowlefilwd, an d his demotion to Demoenv, Walt* laiptlitad' kixi. every ofaclal act of his Ufa. ,oat disparity: Mii' - othat itito• thiman that maybe muaaii.lhr aaldjpittioni the moral hapreadaa Is, tha Damooracy watliS itó wan to select hlr, ;OW alt tilt atm- • 'kora ear ClittPatiPte/567. CATIONS For the lutelligencer Gubei . .natorial.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers