PORTER : Wednefdai, July 3, 184-4.. DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. Fot President in;lBl4 t JAMES. E. .POIN-, OF TENNES§IiE. For Vice President, Gtoti nt. DALLAS, ' OF rtNNSYLVAthk. an& Vice Preiident. Benstirial. J 3. George Schnabel. 14. Natiel B. Elated. 15. M. N. Irvine. 16. James:Woodburn. 17. HughMnotgomery 18. Isaae Ankney. 19. John Matthews. Electors for President, wlisoN *Caen Ass Enteric, 1. George F..Lehmsn.. • 2. Christian Knees. 3. William H. Smith. 4: John Hitt (Phila.) 5. Semite' E. Leech. 8. Samna! Camp. 7. Jesse Sharpe. 8. N. W. Simple. 9. Wm. Heidettrich. 10. Canted Shiner. 11. Stephen Hedy. 12./onsh Brewster. 20.1NilliamPatterson: 21. Andrew Burke.' 22. John mwat. 23, Cbristian Meyers. 24. Robert Orr. • For loremor, HON. HENRY A. hitiALENBUR% OF DERR& •For Canal Commissioner, JOSHUA.. 11ARTSHORNE, OF CHESTER. 7 7For the Canipalgn. We Will furnish the Reprorter until the first of December, at the low price of fifty centsoo be in all - cases paid in advance. Send on your names. OWING to a press of job-worb,,and for other reasons, we shall not he able issue the Reporter for next week.— , to or next paper i will, consequently be r ated the 17th of July. Great Meeting at Athens, . Pa ! An immebse meeting of the Demo eratie Citizens of Bradford, Chemung and Tioga Counties, was held on the 2d . inst. at Athens in this county.' It was in fact,l the largest assemblage we ever witnessed in old Bradfoid. Guy Tozer„ Esq. presided, assisted by.ihirteeaVice Presidents and four , Secretaries. • The meeting was formed into procession under the _direction of ctil. Westbrook assisted by three aids, and proceeded,to the square in front of the Academy, accompanied by' three excellent Hands of. Music. When or der teas restored, Dann WILMOT Esq. of To wands, COL. HATHAWAY of Elmi ra, Esqr, BateroL, of Facioryville, and Gat). SativERSON, Esq, of Towanda, were severaiJy introduced to die meet ing, who wet - e resolved with loud and repeated cheers, and then responded to the call of the meeting, in addresses of the most exciting a. -td thrilling in/crest amidst great 'applause and i mmense Cheering. We have:neither time i"or space, to present 16, proeeedingslof Act meeting in full this week, but will give them to our leaders at length in our next. YOUNG Ilicxnur.—A tall hickory I ,wawraised in front of the Exchange on Saturday. last, and Your.,:o Ilimxotte thrown to the breeze from its top. A. • / very large congregation-of democrats' assembled who were addressed from the porch of the Exchange by Messrs. Wilmot and Sandeison. MELANCHOLY ACCIDENT.--A post script in the Buffalo Commercial of . Monday, mentions a rumor of a melan choly and fatal accident at.L4kport on Sunday evening. It is said that while Alan Stewart, Esq. was addressing an audience occupying one of the bridges in the village, it gave way and precipi iated the'multitude into the, canal, and that three were drowned. O'CONNELL _bIIPSIIIONED.—By the arrival of the-Acadia, we have the "news of.the sentence ' and imprisonment of O'Connell and his fellow traversers.— O'Connell had issued id address JO the people of Ireland, requesting them to preserve peace and tranquility STOLEN JEWELRV DISCOVERED..... Last April a lady of New. Yoik, at an auction store, was robbed of diamonds and jewellery worth $3OOO. All , the property has been recovered. A. dia. mond breast pin was found in possesion .of a gentlemsa in. Philadelphia, which fie hid parish — aaed, and which is worth • , K D,. • -Mr, Peter 13romaghint. Roisie, St. Lawrence 4 . :Ounty; 'IVIIS in' the Arrstids,ingsged in malting wken-a tree (ell and Itilled a girl about 15 years -old. ;and a, 4i,about.ll years old. The #fleies •sere severelyr. injured, but net dattgerously. The Coon Model. The Easton, Argus hits off the Whig nominee for tire _Presidency with seereh ing sOnracy. It describes the follow ing is the traits of ehiracter which, in the estimation of the whigs, constitute theficiihts Wiiraefooon A CHRISTIAN who has - three' or four times shown his bravery by pt. ing to take away the life of bia fellow men in a Dud. A STATESMAN who is for a high protective tariff in the North, for a hori zontal tariff in the Middle suttee, and for } t ree trade in the South. A CHIEFTAIN who fights duels, and curses worse ' than any other man in his State, and who-, at the age of 70,years, is under bon& to &cep ttl. peace. I f PHILANTHROPIST who, if he cannot have BLACK slavest is itter mined to . turn his fellow-men into WHITE ones ! • A REPUBLICAN; whose wife and daughters are too good to .Work in lit' 1 %lichen. • A DEMOCRAT who. by a be se coalition, CHEATED GencIAUKBON out of his election in 1825. A POLITICIAN who joins each and every faction, however discorda'at theii sentiments, and secretly pledges him self to each to carry out hit. d(r.signs. A GENTLEMAN witio says to the Speaker of Congress, (Col. Polk) ..Go home G—d D—d yovs, where you be long."' Such are the qualifications which constitute Mr. Chi) , a Si Mon Pure in the eyes of coomism, and entitle him to their support.. What say the Peo ple? Opinf.ons of MriClay. The following opinion's of Henry Clay by the leading men of our coun try, sho.ws•up in great style the charac ter of the si coon Model " presented to the h.merican people Asa _candidate for the 'Presidency. We might multiply them ad infinitum: Gen. Harriaon's opinion of Henry Clay: I will do my. even if Mr. Clay is to be benefited by it, from whom I have experienced only UN GENEROUS TREATMENT. IN REQUITAL FOR YEARS OF DE VOTED SERVICE." Gent. Harrison's Idler to Mr. Brent. in the winter of 1841: . I have done him (Mr. Clay) many favors, but he has returned them all 'with the BLACKEST INGRATI TUDE." Webster's opinion of Henry Clay. Henry Clay has too many here , sies about him ever to gain my sup , port." Jefferson's opinion of Mr. Clay. " Henry Clay is merely a splendid orator, without any valuable knowledge from experience or study, or auy D 3 ERMINED PUBLIC PRINCI PLBS, founded in political science, ei ther ractical or theoretical." -{ • Randolph' s opinion of Mr. Clay. "He it,* talented. but corrupt. He stinks and shines, and shines and stinks. ,like a rotton mackerel by moonlight." Jackson's opinion of Mr. Clay. " Under, such circumstances, how contemptible does.this demagok,me ap pear, when he descends . from his., high place in the Senate, and roams ailout the country ;retailing slander upon the living and the dead. A DEMOCRATIC - MEETING, numbering" 12,000 --persons, was - held in Castle Garden, New York, on Wednesday, June 18th. Silas . Wright was the prin cipal speaker ; he was very flatteringly received. Aftei adopting reoolutions in favor of their candidate for tile Pre sidency, sustaining the. Democratic publican , prineiples of their party, .com plimentiog Mr. Van Buren, in favor ni our rights to the Oregon Territory, and of the policy of annexing Texas to the Union, the meeting was adjourned with A. three times three." •MAJORITLFB REVERSEIN-+Thfit Tray, • (N. Y.) Budget sips; The effect of Mr. Wright's eourre will bb to strengthen the Democratic ticket, and increase our 'majority in readilylgenia,.and New Jersey. With £he Lich* at gist presented,. the Empire . ptate would have. given. 30.0b0, majori 4y. "and the Keyatone State 25,000, whilst saith Dada's on-the ticket, Penn sylvania will roll up the 30,000," and leave the %MOO majority for Itietv , WABIIINOVINVAN , ne, Borough Wishingtian.Soeiety /peels attire Clintrt House MI Monday evening east. A lecture, will be delivered by C. M. MANVILLE. _ Nein tram AR 111211Aus. , The dreport etthe extraordinary tor. gerY case ~in,. Herkimer county, Auras out;to beteeurate in every partieulai. The culprit, Judge.theirth. has abscond , ed: afterl?eingheld to "bail in .the sum of $lOOO by Ms 'associates or the . bench. Off eers ,are= in pursuit of the fugitive.' It is rer i mrted that smith re= signed his Judgeship in clatter to Gov. Bouk. written before he absconded. A Ciceitinuti,_on Saturday last. t a man, namerl William bioore whilst engaged in making a raft fast to the wharf. thr.t cable got tangled around his left leg,. and before assistance or escape could be effected, the . poor fellow's limb w:ss completely' served from his body, about half way above the knee jo;tnt. He died the same. day, after ,F,rfrat suffering,,leavifig a wife and nine children. A jolly jack tar, rolling along Com mercial street, in Boston, enquired what the Demicratic nomination " Polk and Dallas," says a by-stander. —"Pork .and dollars'!" says he, " thee the ticket ;—something to eat and money in the pocket." A man lost a pocket-book in the Bowery, New York, on the 17th inst.. and offered a reward of $lO for it.— One " Thaddeus" who writes him, sends the book, but keeps the money, as he "is in want" of it. That is cool. The Jamaica Despatch predicts that the month of June will see the French Flag streaming from every Fort and Harbor in Hayti. The French Admiral, is now at anchor at Port au Prince, quietly wslching the progress of events. The Hen. Gulian C. Veiplanck, a strong Harrison man in 1940, has aban doned Clay, and signified his inteniion to vote for Polk and Dallas. Thti price of a passage from Buffalo to Detroit was, but a few years since, 114. It is now twenty-five cents, in cluding meak ! The great gun manufactured under the supervision of Captain Stockton for the Prideeton will be finished by August. The Pottsville Miner's Journal pie diets from present appearanceti, that in less than three years. the Iron works which• will spring' up in and •about Reading, will open a ma , ket for the annual consumption of at leastlso,ooo tons of Anthracite coal. Doubtful. • Parker Cummings and Charles Ri der of Freetowv, have been, found juil ty of removing a rail from_ the New : Bedford Railroad, and sentenced to the State prison. Served them right. Several traders from Saniw,Fe. Mexi co, reached St. Louis on the 4th inst.. With Considerable sums of sOeie.— They left Santa Fe on the 10th April. These men gen‘erally . make a great amount of,their pin:oliases in Philad'a. A horse recently ran away in Pitts burg while his owner was absent. A little boy, after much danger and diffi culty, secured the animal. The own er presented the boy with a, five cent piece, whereupon 'the urchin handed over four cents change; At Fredonia, N. Y.. on Tuesday a Mr. Henry Dalrymple committed sui. cide in Stockton, by shooting himself, because his father left his property to a brother instead of himself. .• ' .Mr., P. C. Latham. a very respecta ble citizen of,Springfield. 111., was on the road to • Shawneetown. se!. er6l days i since , by being thrown from hilt horse; aotl the dry branch of a tree falling across 1 1 .)i4l- ' At public diniter at, Alowick, - after the toast... Prin c e I : Pier& nd the rest of the Roya 1;1'114," , 'ill, band struck -up the air... 'rhat'sTihe ,Qtly the money goes." ' ' .; .., ~ , sh 'I A few days ago an .4tiva.ice ..; 1,, --* taived from a Piushurg inerelian.f, on two imutlred barrels of potash—wh.tch turned out to he paving stones. • ._.: • •-. I Low. * who was shot by Ford. at - St. Lottis_did not the ;is pcported. He was still alive two days ii&rw.irils. litiltougb shot throtigit. tht. Isilitl: . .. A ftltow" was, re ! 't.tilly ' arrested .in Hillralri for a potty tlitift..!tp!Lwas found li o n searc h. to tiavO i a , tout him. no less than $BOOO- in counterfeit hills. l• : • The, ChUrels 'at iterien,, ; N.' J., • lw a i, braken into' last .weeL and robbed of , Re-' carpets,' and other furniture.' . , A re ward of $5O is offered for- the' arrest' of the burglar. ' ' ' ' ' = Cassius . M. Clay has not manumit- - . his. tad slaveic_yet...he 'claims. to. be a piaclieal abolitionist. , .' ' . - NOW= PP 4CII MVTUtI AND Moro Dzit.Ther MY iteti,latis 'ship* renktnt din Saisdin', o f which mention ha :: beets heretofore mid!, and die:arreze isf,she six men fonnd - upon her, hatteat - hiet led to the developnitint of ful mutiny and' blimdshed. din was, wrecked near Halifax, about a fortnight since, 'and appearances were , so much' against those' found on boar d thit they were lodgedta prison. The names of the Prisoners are—Carr, Ga. loivay, Johnston, Hazelton; hate and Anderson—the last a Swede. On Saturday , a ;week, two of the prisoners, Carr and 011oway, ma d e a confession to ihe:following effect: The SaladiP., Capt. M'Kenzie, nailed from Valparaiso about the Bth of Feb ruary with a complement of twelve persons including officers.. Some of these were new men, four of the crew who had gone - out to Valparaiso, hav ing left her there.' A Captain Fielding whime vessel had been siezed for smuggling a cargo of guano, and his son, a lad about fifteen years - of age, were taken on board as passengers.— This man, it appears, instigated all the mischief. His plan ;was to kill the captain and officers, seize the ship, and proceed with her to th'e St. Lawrence, on the shores of which they were to land, divide the - ,plunder, and then sepa rate. to enjoy their gains. The bloody drama happened on Sun day night, the 14th !tpril. The first mate, whose watch it was, had been unwell, and had lain down to sleep on I • the hencoop or companion. and was the first victim. The work of death was then continued. the captain, and second mate. and all ethers pot connected in the plot, were butchered and thrown overboard singly. Fielding then took 'charge of the yes set. and harrangued the crew with a speech. He soon became tyrannical and threats were beginning to be' heard among the crew: To'prevent another outbreak he had all the arms but the Captain's gun thrown overboard. Some arms were found, however,.in his berth, and it was said that he had more con cealed about his person. Two nights after the massacre, they seized and hound him, and the next morning threw him and his son overboard. They then gave themselves up to debauchery, and so kept on till they were wrecked, as "above stated. SECRETS . OF THE GAMING A famous-,gafning house having been broken up in Baltimore, the secret tricks and machinery of the establish ment have been , exposed. The Sun says:—The most important part of these contrivances was a hole through the ceiling, over the gambling table'and a secret sliile, in a reflector over a lake swinging lamp, which could be remov ed 'at pleasure. through which, and the hole in the ceiling. a person above could look down and ascertain the _cards 'in the hands of a stranger playing 'with one of these honorable swindlers. lie would communicate his discoveries to his partner below, by a string which passing along the floor to the wall and thence to the room below, hanging down about three feet from the, ceiling, with a 'anal on the end, looked like the appendage of a bell extending to some other part of the house. A kind of telegraphic alphabet having been previously agreed upon, between the gambler and kis colleague, so many jerks of the went were given for each of the important curds: in his opponent's hand, and kence the fleecing of a green horn 'was made more rapid and certain. There are nine more of these establish. ments still in successful ()iteration at iialtimore. in which similar machinery are doubtless used. ATTEMPTED SUICIDE DV A CLERGY. uks.—The Rev. J. Hamlet Fairchild. a Congregatinnal clergyman of Exeter; N; EL, attempted to comma suicide, in Roitan, on Thormlay morning, by cut tiirt*. hie with' a razor. It is t ha ug -ht, however. that he will recover. He Wa..l rorperly considered a very pious an d worthy man and , minister. b ut „f k i t e hos been suspected of greM The deacons* the mom) cnrruptio.n%. elqtrpli andthren t l clergyman Mate. • that after'investigition they ;found nothing to impair conodence- in his character, Via VICE PRENIDENCit.:—The Mad. isonian says the subject relotive to the candidate for the Vice Presidency to roil with Mr., Titer, is under consider: ation and the result will „ere long, be made known. , - EFor the 13 1drod Foriter4 ' , HAM - stiaintionallaititiver; )7/ 11 e People Tip begin i to move nl valid Ztilumns, thedzelt of the ship ii cleared, of its tni i glisb,lindino7 for a long pull, ti - stmorig pull and itpull s, al. tcifether t, the balot boxes are wide open for the Dettiocracy, and all good citizens have an .eye single to 'the glp rirus achievement of the coming elec• lion; not that democracy requires the additicat of a , chlstian name , such as cra whiidemocy, federid democracy, or \national demo cracy ; but that old fashioned democracy *hidh gained a victory for Jeff+on over Adams, for Gen: Jackson ovzr the younger Adams and Henry Clay which which had no alliance with the Hartfovd convention or the 1 bluelight federa ists, nor even the in famous buckshot war of Pennsylvania. No, fellow-citizens, we claim no kin to the party who are foreed to add a Chris- tiara name to democracy to disguise their sentiments; but we will march on with the young Hieltory, Polk of Ten nessee, for our chief, and with Dallas and Muhlenbur l we will finish the grand Keystone o the arch. ct to elect our can the 'people with po f ndeed the real demo ! men. and have some. We do not ex didates byy gullin etical numbers; crati are workin yet we could try and st at as the modern thing else to do.; make as good a whip. We whipp'd yo • In nines that' To whip their .; The present f. fathers well gone en 4 o'er, - ns We rty four 'miker my poetry is hig poetry. but still there is more truth Ido not know quite as good as ' has one advantag Ma 1 - zens I do not mean p the federal Whigs behind their backs, 1 : election ; we shall example that their will be a sufficient fcir 'many years .to of young Hickory , the broad . extent of nterwoven with true e combination of ail es added to blind the 'evail. Then let our until the ballot boxes democracy ; not with laying,- but with .the ty and equality- I rig hickory. icy . Ye! , fellow ei l that we shall wh l out their backs no! but at the comin eet theni su9h a own conscience whipping for the come—the sound has gone out into the country, so democracy, ' that t . I the christian na people, cannot p march' be onward are filled with federal whig pipe trove spirit of Jibe Polk, the yo Dallas and r 'entlal Contest. I of the Democratic The Pres' The restoratio d usefulness, cannot N. The "many—the hold of the work in party to power a be done by the f masses roust tak earnest. The ermont Patriot says, truly : ""The b rden of the contest r, rests on the peop . They must come up the support o the Press, GENEROUS LY, MANFULLY, IMMEDIATELY - ;- they must talk, they ust reason, they must organize and disc min'ate INFORMATION. The Republic is 'n danger: Since the days of John Ad me a more momentous crisistbas not s ari 'en, and it behooves every friend of his country and its free it institutions to wake, to arouse, to shake offal l apat y, and enter heart and soul into the co est. :Thin is the way. 1 . brother Remoc I ts, to do it. There shoOld be no , i,b ys' play" about it.— It is the work of ett, true Men, whole souled men ; and every man who claims to be a Ireinotri all--must work to gether, that ALL AY TRIUMPH." Who are e Tariff men ? f Maine; on the 7th\ long -simech in the nate, in favor of tilt Mr. EVANS, 'j inst. , . delivered .1 United States SI proposition to a; iron into the c Mr. E. is a mann' party which clad friend of a high enemy of what free trade r served in the N. well-known the. designed for tha great and impor sylvania, in whi so much at stake fore; to out. reaii the two contend; the deepest iute Pennsylvania in 1 , mit foreign rail-road 1 untryfree of duty ? h member of the whig 'ins to be the exclusive ariff, and the declared t is pleased to term When JAMES K. Pots tional Congrels, it is. 1 his whole course was protection of hos. that nt interests of • Penn ell her capitalists have We submit it, theire i era to, judge, which of Ing panics has evinced est in the protection of dustry. . • RESITINO Ta the 12th :Nita Deputy Sheri; 111 four assistants.. _Hinsdale. N: Y pOssessiOn. and. some one hundr and driven . ofrt siderable dame , ' persunti,!!itfniu pieces; LAW OritcEns.—ton t Sheriff White -,and Walker, with three or ent into the- town of , to execute a writ of • ere. :set by a force , of d men,• partly - armed, e premises. with cOn.. • tit' their clothes and being able , to' execute . Fiix,moit i wiH be the Wh nor, at the next • ,: ; of Buffalo; it is:Ould,, , g 'candidate for Gover. election itrNetv Rewro te itti Heim Clay 'should ea I t - of the felted ilk ,The, following fifty out, Boni have struck us as a concl potent against the election ; Clay; to the Presidency ; m i d not that' every person familiar history, who is anxious for th l of moral and republican ser can'increase the - number to dred. ' • He should not be elected because.— I. Of his coalition with Jol Adams, by which he secured 1 of Secretary of State. 2. After that coalition, he at all the republican principles ti n previously adiotated, and tat became the champion of old - 11 federalism. 3. Ms election would restore measures of the administrations the;elder and younger Adams. 4. He 'rook the lead in the: on the generally approved adminia of General Jackson. , 5. li e was the author of the mous resolution in' the Senate United States, declaring G ee , guilty of an impeachable deo the constitution. 6. He urged the adoption of solution in the Senate, the or nal where such an offence —.thus making himself the as judge. 7. H e is in favor of a nati which 'Daniel Webster has et obsolete idea;" and thepoivei which Mr. Clay himself, in 181, 4 , a wandering power." 8. 'Whilst our country is in del Ty $27,000,000, he hi advocatim tribution of the proceeds of our lands among the States. 9. It seems to have beadle his whole life to be disterbink arranging the, the tariff Fmk! Government.; at one time.rat duties down.to 20 per cent ad and at another running them amount equivalent, in mans prohibition. 10. He is now Janus-faced tariff question, advocating a tariff at the south, and a protect at the north. 11. He would confine the n 1 great agricultural staples of thi to the home market. • 12. His home market dostrint ruin our foreign commerce; turn thousands of seamen low world to seek other- employmi compete with the poorly paid in other branches;' and wool our ships to be sold' to the cc men of other nations, or to rot wharves. 13: He is inseparably with those advocating the asst._ of State debts by the General GI ment. OLD SOUTH. 14. After pledging. in 1840. the Government should be carried $13,000,000, he proposed in Senate an annual' expenditure of 000,000. 6. 15. With a majority of filen( both branches of Congress, whr could control at - any time, his prco expenditure 'of only $13,000,0( increased to over $29,000,000. 16. In the two years of whit dancy. when everything went dictated, the national debt wash from $8,000,000 to 820;0000t 17. His election would be as an expression of the peopli of another bankrupt law, similar one just repealed ; the avowed I'M which, Mr. Clay now is. 18. Under his constrnetlaa constitution, all the reserved rit the States wjll be destroyed. 19. After saying in March. when he belonged to the demi party, "1 maintain that an app' people are authorized, teheneYer can, to rise and break their fetters," now. since he joined the federalism 'poses the people of Rhope Island their efforts to throw off a charter I vernment given them by Charles King of England. 20. He supports a random schen internal= improvements , has bankrupted most of the State& 'which, during an adntinistration of years, would run us itt deist ovets 2 000,000. 21'. His moral character ii not as it should be. since it is nselest try with the rising generation 0' the standard of morality, hig_htti that adopted by the men:Whom te e ~vats to the highest stations. 22. He is the only person who' traveled over the country pets° electioneering for the highest MEd ;he gift of the people. 23.. He has offered to Great Bri all that portion 'of Oregon 'Perth north of 49°, aftes admitting that had no color of a title io the same. 24. He opposes all measures for protection of the Oregon settlers fo r the British and Indians. '- 25. His doctrines in relation to Tt will lose us the command of the GUI Mexico, and bound our country ow Ty side bylkitish territory. 26' He is opposed to. adopted chi: 27. He has opposed all the veto( -Presidents Jackson and Tyler -280: He is under $6,000 bonds to the peace. 29. He in passionate in countil.