REPORTER: WpjfnesAay, logilst 28, 1844. DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. • . For .Pcsident in 1844, . JAMES K. FOLKS OF TENNESSEE. For Vice President, GEO4Gr. M. , DALLIA .) OF, PENN3YLVA,NLI. 'l3lietois for Presiden •.,r," Wrzoos j - Asa Dixoex, L George F.lehma4.l 2. Christian Kneass. William H. Smith. !FA: John. Hill, (Phila.) ' - `5 . ; Samuel E. Leech. - 8. Samuel Camp. • , 7. Jesse Sharpe. 8. N. W. Siunple. 9. Wm. Heidenrich. 10. Conrml Shimer: IL Stephen Baltiy. 12. Jonah Brewster. • " ss ' Senatorial. 13. George Schnabel. 14. Mail B. Eldred. 15. M.N. Irvine. 16. Jatries.Woodburn. 17.: Hugh Montgomery 18. Isaac Ankney. 19. John Matthews. 20. Williapa Patterson: 21. Andrew Burke. 1 22. dolma WGill. '23..Christian Meyers'. 24. Robert Orr. For Governor, FRANCIS. R. MUNK, OF ALLEGIRLNY. Par Canal COMlilBBlolier, JOSHUA HARTSHORNE, pIiESTV.R. Gen. Patton's Communication. A Communication over the signature of 4 , W. Patton" will be found in Our paper of to-day, in which he complains of great mortification at seeing his name paraded in a whig paper" in connex ion with others. as a candidate for Con gress. We , Certainly, did not put it there, nor do we hold ourselves respon sible for its being' found in that kind of company. Gen. Patton -refers to a communication in the . whig paper of this—Borough from Col. Bull, and de duces from that article the inference that he was irrevocably excluded kern the columns of our paper. Not so, if he comes in at the front door. We have yet to learn 'that the Gen, is, or meat4lo be, a candidate for Congress, on the contrary he assures us personal- ly that he has no such intention. Then what injustice has been done him. if Gen. Patton 'had , desired• to become . a candidate, we would most , cheerfully have admitted any article written with a view to advance his cause—but we do not like to' be hood-winked., We must understand the object of any arti cle before it finds a place in our cot e umns, and whenever we think we have sufficient reason to believe a communi- cation is not designed to favor any one but to injure some other,. it will most surely be rejected. 'lt is certainly the right of every member of the Democratio party, to have a fair and full hearing throngti,,the organ of that party, and while- we as the Editors of a a Democratic Journal, cheerfully accord this privilege to- our Democratic brethren; we' must, be per mitted to jUdge of the character and gehiral bearing-of all communications offered for publication. In explanation of our course in re jecting t he c ommunication of Col. Bull • 'it may be. proper to say. That when the Communication was handed to us, we-thought we saw in it the seeds of dissension_and disorganization, and we distinctly told the CoI. that the publi. , cation of the article would belookedmp. - on at home and abroad as an . attack up on Mr: Wilmot, .upon whom public opinion seemed to be settling with nu- Paraded unanimity as the . candidate of the Democratic partrfor the next Con gress. The Col. secred'surprised that it should be so underetood,thought Mr. W. himself could not arrive at such a contusion and suggested that• it should be shown to him ; accordingly a copy was given Mr. W. and soon after he returned it concurring in the, opinion we had expressed. to. Col. B. and assur ing us that he had consulted several members of the Democratic party; and that no one dissented from that opion ion.; Belieiing that. Our conclusion was the legitimate .one, that its publication itvouldbe.untlerstood as an attack upon Wilmot, that the. introduction of such an, array of names, - was not for the purpose of adVancing.tbe claims of "either of them but a covert method of wounding and weake.ning; him who was most prominent before .the,people, and being,Unwilling to open hostilities of that kind or:aidin - W'yifirfare against what we _believe to be'-the? wishes' of our Democratic. friends, generally:•:— we rejected the article at the hazard of giiing offence to one of our most iod inate personal •friends—a consequence we should ever regret, as a misfortune, while a firm conviction , that we were discharging our dirty to the party, as its acknoWledgetl oreid, would afford us our consolation. Since then -we have either seen or heard from Messrs. If ilber, Baird, Webb,..aapenzvall, Fisher, Smith, Rus sell, Piallet, .11.1ason and Crandall,* whose 'names : were introduced in Col. Bull's, article as candidates for Congress, and they most unequivocally atiapprove of the uee attempted to be made of their • names. The other gentlemen, Messrs. Bull, Paton, Pratt anil-,Tozer can an swer for themselves. , The two first have promulgated their views through the Rothe prints. It is understood that; they_are dissatisfied. - - - From the .other , two gentlemen we have no information. We , had never , heard that they, or either of themovere to be candidates for the nernination, by the Democratic conventicia, nor• could we be satisfied that their . names were used with their own Consent—indeed it was not pretended that any of those whose names were used had any knowl edge of the transaction. As we had not, at that time, been informed that Col. B. himself intended to be a candidate for the nomination; and, as we had never heard the names of more than two of the gen tlemen enumerated, in connexion with the nomination, knowing that most of them bad taken decided ground in favor of Mr. Wilmot as the nominee of the Democratic convention, we could , not believe they- \ would sanction or approve such a use of their names, nor could we see any other end: to be accomplished but to. , weaken the regular nominee of the Democratic party, whoever he might be. Such were our own opinions, and 'we found they weretencurred in by almost every democrat who spoke to us on the subject. Entertaining these views, we could not permit our paper to be the me diuni of conveying erroneous impreSsions abrod or creating dissensions at home. and The President. /'Since the above was in type ye have received , nfortnation . from . Co/. Pratt, who also dissents from the use of his name, as a candidate. In pursuance of previops public no tice, the Polk Club of.Towanda tp., met atthe . house of Samuel Stratton at Sugar Creek, in the afternoon of Au gusti I7th, and erected a hickory pole in honor of - the Democratic candidate for the Presidency. After the raising of the pole, the assembled people pro ceeded to thescbool house not far dis tant, where able and eloquent eddies es were deliiered by Messrs A. C.. Al len: J. F. Means and O. D. Bartlett.— After these gentlemen had closed their remarks, the Club adjourned to meet at the School house near Mrs. Scotts, Saturday August 31st, at 1 o'clock PM. More people were present, at , this meeting than were able to gain .admis sion within the School house, and the utmost attention was paid by all pres ent. THE BRITISH PArerv.—i-The whigs of the last Congress" made an effort to pass a bill for the relief of, the'heirs of Earl Hull who surrendered to the Sri tish: The bill was crushed in the Ben ate. Thus it goes; 'the whigs go for refunding to Earl Hull, but against re funding to Gen. Jackson. It ie remem bered of some whigs, then feds, of this borough - , who had a jolification over Hull's surrender. CORRECTION.A mortifying error oc curs in theprectedings of the Smith field meeting, on the outside of our pa per to-day. - In the resolution relative to Mr. Dallas, line, instead df unjustly read is justly. • PO the'iEditore of the ;Reporter GErinatrarr:—l noticed in the last Bradford Argtis, that myitaine is there made use of as one of the committee of vigilance for Rome township ; a thing which is altogether agatnat rity wishes— and I ask leay.e' through "your . paper, to inform those who took the ,liberty to make such use of my name, to with,: draw it and _pitch oblige me ! I have never aupported the . nominees Of the federal party for high and important (Aces, but hest firmly supported*. monde men and measures ; therefore, I wish the wlliguto Understand . I am a democrat auto do not - wish to be identi. fied with the, federal Towanda Townshiti. MAYNARIi. Rome, A 46022,1811 - • V. N. Banksuid Muir CLat, The Federal do not :deny that if Henry Clay is elected; he will if he aaa:eidatilitatt a Ditithiiiak Sink: .` That he is • under obligatirin to do -- so; can . • 'not be, ilenied.:, The inyest*ation headed by Mr. ,Clayton of dinigia, 'in-41832 - showed two items . offees which the U.S. Bank had paid as follows ' •To Henry blay. Daniel Webaterc A. subsequent investintion snowed the following heti : In 1830, 52 members of Congreis were indebted '0192,662 1831, 59 do. do. :322,199 , 1832, •44 do. do. , —178,069 1833, 58 d 0... do. 374.766 1834, 52 • do. do., 586,586 The'editors of the Courier &t Enquirer i in New York, W'ho had supported Gen. Jackson, received $52,000, and, imme diately espoused the cause of the Bank. It was, the editor of this paper.whogave the Ntr hi g s to the federal party !. soon after he espoused Omit cause. The Pennsylvania Enquirer 4iPhila delphia, once a-Jackson paper, received $30,000. of the Bank, and then deserted the Old General and carne out for the Bank and federals, and is a Federal pa per now. Tho National Intelligencer, now the Federal organ of the. Nation, received $BO,OOO from the Bank, and then turned'traitor. All this influence is now bearing in favor of the election of Henry Clay._ The history of the country shows the above facts—and by it, 'we see the company Henry Clay keeps; the position in which he is placed by taking from the Bank $17,000. Whatever may be the views of individu als of the tariff, are they prepared to vote for Henry Clay and entail upon ,the country a money power to diffuse abroad its influence, and corrupt the press and legislation, if it should see fit to attack the government. Is a monarchy more terrible, or more detestable.? Will the people with these facts before them, be gulled and diceiv ed by the false issue of a tariff, a mea sure which the federalists as a party,from the foundation of the government have ever sustained. To B. S..Goodrieh Esq . ., Senior Bdi: • tor of the Bradford Reporter : DEAR Star—The undersigned has seen in the whig paper published in this place; a communication calling . the at rntion of the Democratic party to the consideration of my name as a candidate for nomination to Congress, accompani ed by a communication from Col. Bull stating that the publication of it was re jected on the ground that it was objected to ,by a certain individual who is a pro minent. candidate for that distinguished station. I have ever been averse to creating any schism or unkind feelings „towards any member or portion of the-democra tic party and' when saw the field so well occupied by others, embracing in the campaign an invincible accession of valiant young warriors, I intended taking no other part in the elections this fall than to vote the entire democratic ticket as I have uniformly done for twenty-four years ; but, aside from the mortification to which : I have been subjected by Bei ing my name paraded in a Whig - pa per as if it were not worthy of a place in the paper which professes to be the organ of the Democratic party, in which I have done some service during that period.; and in the entire absence of any ambitious views I may have been supposed to• entertain by others, I look upon'the rejection of a communication of that 'character 'emanating from any member of the party,- whether applica hie to the humbtest individual of the par ty or to myself, as involving a principle Which if sactioned even by . acquiescence strikes a death blow at the `freedom of the presk and thretigh it at the liberties of our common country in defence of which some of my ancestral kinsmen in common with other , ievoliitionnry pa triots shed their dearest bhind. • I have examined that cemronnicatiOn with as: much ealtanesa, and deliberation as am capable of, and can discover no, thing in it that any sound dernoarat could reasonably object to, thereto substan4, tinily but ' one-point in it, besides the names of. 'persons suggested : ;' all of whom" are . known to be' democrats of re speetable standing; and thatone poini is simplir cautioning onr democratiefriends gout those who h'ave been promnigating the doetrine of flee trade ," opitol4.. t i on th e - - interests ,t which I oiderstand to mean those who are oppo sed to a tariff which every democratic member of Congress from Pennsyliania supported atilt° last samien..lf the ob., jection was-,inektoit on that ground, it then become's important that the'people should knoir it, and is ihe best evidence olthe necerAty of the caution. If the objection was to the publication of the rtemes - as Competitors. for 'nomination, I. contend, With dim deference.to the opin ions'Of others, that no democrat has a right to. rectise to enter into honorable competition with the .humblest individu al of the party. If the association of our 'names with that of tbe individual in qqestion' iris :Objected to either po litically or morally I for orie will cheer fully submit to any scrutiny or compari son which the public may choose to in stitute, and I presume the other gentle men named could with equal confidence submit to the same ordeal. , $17,000 8,000 As a matter, growing out of the sup pression of the article in,question my , at tention has been directed icriresnlution adopted by the democratic convention of Susquehanna co., designating 'by'name and commendatory of one of , the candi dates itt this county, „While I cherish the highest respect for our democratic brethren in ,Susquehanna county feel constrained as a democratic citizen of Bradford county to which 'the candidate is conceded, though in a Spirit of friend ly courtesy and with respectful deference most solemnly to protest against the right of another county to interfere with the nominations of this county in advance of the legitimate expression of our own preferences through our own convention. , It. will then be for the' conferees of the other counties in the district to concur, or, if our candidate should be, specially objectionable, to require our ,conferees to present a less objectionable name to the conferee. Otherwise the system of our congressional' conferences 'would be a mere mockery. Such hasty commit tals in other counties than the one which has-the- right to the nominee are usually founded on partial information and are calculated to weaken' if not to destroy the salutary influence and binding obli- . gations of county conventions and con ferences. It sometimes happens that over-zealous Candidates hurry their spe cial friends into acts - which on mature re flection they themselves would deem unwise. Hence I know of no rule for candidates to adopt, which leads to fairer results than the one laid down by the il lustrious .fackson—.. neither to seek nor decline office." 1 '. I 'have thus respectfully given my views of this transaction with convictions of duty paramonnt to all personal con siderations and with no other object than to rescue from the danger of violence to which they baveibeen unguardedly expo; sed, those long Cherished principles of democracy. on which are based the secu rity and 'permanency of our noble repub lic—a departurC from which would en danger both ; and respectfully as a pat ron and democrat, ask their publication in your paper/as a matter of justice to myself but more especially to the party whose organit ;professes to be. Resp'y your obedient servant, W. PA.TTaN. Towanda, 4 , Aug., 1844. STICK TO rr:--We proved by the 're cord that the Argus Was stating a false hood in 'saying that . Ezekiel Polk, the grandfather Of. Col. Polk, , was a 'tory; but-without the least evidence they per sist in it. • AVe now ' refer them to in other proof, nd will see if that sheet is entirely given over-to lies. IWe refer 'to the " Documentary His tory of the 4Merican Revolution," now printing under the auttinrity -of Can gress; 3d volume of the 4th sums,. pages 40, 44, 48, 4nd 70. Where it will be foundthat zekiel Polk., r and Thonkas Poll his , brothers were both officers in the Arnericn Revolution in the year 1178. • , We hav e ` received a communication :from. u . 0.1 N. Warden" in answer to * the article in our last headed " Seasona ble•cautionfr.r The communication. of Mr. W. is Oouched in 'such terma, that we, cannotodtnit it ‘to our columns.-- Yet we deemit proper to say that Mr. :Worden denies. having 'had_ an inter , View .With anyperson desiring to be a candidate for Congress is relation to the issuing-'the,extra % frem , his office, and asserts pisitivEly :that 4. .4 ihe Ipaper was made to before, the .passage of a would be .111.- C. to. EastS'intithfi.e/d ort the - -15th, aiwrilot altered a ishit,on - his accitunt." • .- • The ( Glorious loth ;of . Septtlllter. imulgemests for the Zan *dog. The Committee . of Arrangements-for `the Masa Meeting oil the 10th Septem ber-next, met at . the Exchange on Mon °day evening, Aug: 26, Geo. Sanderson in the Chair, and P. C. Ward - Secikia: ry.—The follOWing appointments were • Committee On offlieri—P. C. Ward, D. M. Bull and 'l'. B. Overton. 'S On Reception—Wm Elwell, D F Barstow, Col V E Piollet. Gen. Win Patton, E W Baird, and Addison M'Kean. On Resolutions---E S GoOdrich, F. Fisher, Col G F Mason; Geo. San derson, F Smith.l H Stephens, P C Ward D M -Bull, C H_Herrick, E W Crandall, Seth Salisbury, E W Mor gan, L S Maynard, Ulysses Mercur, L E DeWolf,. ' , On Mizaic 7 —W Perkins, T. B. OVerton, Jere Culp. . On linanci—N F Means, and A. S. , Chtanherlin. On Printing--E 0 Goodrich. _ chief Marahcz/1---Col John F Means. - Assistant Marshalls-4 E Piollet, Livi . _Weatbrook, W: F: Kellogg, Capt Geo Itßull, Maj B Laporte, F Ransom, F Corwin, Findley M'Kean, Cot -Asa Pratt. M R Wilco*, John Baldwin, Daniel BrinkJr, G. S YVhitman, David MlVattlea:. By order, P. C. Wean Sec. The committee of arrangements for the mass meeting toile held in,Tovran da on the -anniversary of the 13attle of Lake Erie, on the 10th of September : next, respectfully request the following regulations to be - observed on that day. All the delegatiOns from \ the town ships east of the river, will assemble at Cot. V. E. Piollet's inVysox, by 10 o'clock A. M., which point they will leave in a body under the direction of J. E. PIOLLET, assistant marshall,at 101 o'clock for Towanda. The delegation from Sheshequin will fall into the line. atM. S. Warners'. The delegations from Athcns,Ulster, Smithfield and Ridgbury - will assemble at Ulster, at 9 o'clock A. M.; which place they will leave in a body under the direction of one of the, oasis taut Mantas at 91 'o'clock A. M. for Towanda. ' The delegations from Troy, ,polum bia, Wells and Burlington,. will assem ble at Burlington corners: at .8 o'clock A. M., which place Ithey will leave in a e' , body -under the , direction of th assistant ,marshall, at half past , eight o'clock for Towanda by way of .Mon roe ton, if convenient to . adOpt that`route. The delegations from Canton, Le- Roy. Franklin, and-Albany, Granville, Monroe and Towanda townships, will assemble at J. F. Smith's in Monroe ton, at 9t o'clock, which place they will leave in a body under the direction of Capt. GEORGE IL 1%4., assistant marshal!, at 10 o'clock A.M. for To wanda. y• The delegation from Litchfield will unite with the delegations on the east or west side of the river, as may be most convenient for them. The delegation from Springfield will unite with the other delegations at Ul ster; Or accompany thp -other western delegations, as will suit -their conven ience. The delegations from Asylum, Dunll and part of Monroe, will assemble at a convenient, time and place to fall into the line of delegations'on its way, from Monroeton to,- TOwanda. Delegations from all townships not named above,' will please meet and join any of, the several processions named, that may be most convenient to:them, aud appOint their own .marshalls, to act until they fall into the lines named. Each township is requested to have some appropriate banner or banners designating their delegation.—The whole _line will, be forme d ; imme diately on arrival of all the delegations, under-the direction of the maTslialls the right, resting on the. .east! side of Main street, opposite the feet of ; Paine street. It is earnestly requested, that all de mocrats, whether from this] or other counties, in or out of , the state,! who ex- pect to attend the Mass , Meeting, should join the delegationti at some,o'ne of the pohits of rendezvous above mentioned that shell be most convenieutto them. The-vast- concourse of, peoplei expected on the airve occasion, renders-it:abso lutely necessary, that the , utmost order should be obserVed::, ' By order of. the CoWinz : itte,i. . B. ‘Tlie Bridge will kafree fol. all p erdons, gotgandretlirctini s ?, l olhe,l6tll Septemher. Thefffeet of the innuation of li t % - - Slavery.: • pen. Waddy Thompson, hast tt ly ;addressed a letter to the N a . Intelligencer, the National orgy Whig party, in which after staj opposition to the. Annexation, be, Holding these opinions, my 0 , is not to postpone this resultforei time; but to prevent it forever. ariv Ortedeny any of ihese'propositi, 'l, That the -most eflicacious in favor of abolition Would be to it ee the value of slave labor? 2, Th u reduction of the price of cotton to or four cents would destroy the • of slave labor in' the old slave S te 3, That any large increase in the . 1 tity of cotton produced would have effect to reduce its price to that p, or even lower, say, for example;a dan increase' of five hundred- thous bales? and, 4, That the annexatio. Texas would cause an increase p r , Lion ? Much the larger portio n o f produce of slave labor is cotton, the price of cotton which re,ghlate, elusively the price of slaves, as o f most every other , article. L et 0 borne in - mind, too, that Texas's mirably adapted• to the productio, Sugar, long *staple cotton, and tobae. the only 'article with the excep t i o rice, which are produced byslavela But if the price of cotton is not ruinously reduced by over pe o d ue it, will not be. denied that slue t call he employed in Texas witbatl twice the profit which it yielda m average in the , slave States of tbaU s Our slaves will then be carried% as by the force of a law as fast certain as that by. which I finds its level. The slave s very soon disappear from Mary„ Virginia, North Carolina, Teo. and Kentucky, and in a period short for such an operation, those will become non-slaveholding and whenever that is the case, will not only longer have aconite. terest with the remaining slavehe states to defend the institution, bat soon partake of that fanaticalspitit false philahthropy which is now , vading the whole world." On the 17th of April last, Mr. alsoaddressed a letter - 6 the Nan Intelligencer, stating his objecno. the Annexation of Texas. ... other things he said : But would Texas, ultimately ally add strength to that which is considered the weakest part of Me federacy ? (The South.) If of formatioa be, correct, it would not. cording to that, the territory of T. is' stisceptiblaof division into five of convenient size and form. Of two only, would be adapted to thos. culiar (slave) institutions to whi have referred, and the otltdr thrte, ing west and north of San Antonia, ing only adapted to farming and ing purposes, from the nature of soil, climate and productions, tr , not admit of these matitutions. la end, therefore,there would be two and three free states probably ad to the Union." Mi. Barrow, Whig U.S. Se from Lousiana, takes similar gnu Here then are three promiseac So ern Whigs, and exteneire Slareh ers—vtz : Waddy Thompson. SeD Barrow, and Henry, Clay, sips the annexatnon of Texas because it weaken the slave interest nod do tendency to emancipation. ilminzir.—Thisdreadfulcal l is generally preceded by P'- 0 head, giddiness, (especially in tar' suddenlysround,) dimness nista, por, loss•.of Memory, and °theta?! ant symptoms, which indicate all and corrupt state of the blood. ;Wright's Indian Vegetable P a Airect purifier of the blood, and itherefor,e, a certain preientive of plexy, because they expel from th , dy those stagnant and corrupt hu; which ate the - cause of every incident to man. Said Indian V ble Pills also aid and improve digs as well as .purify the blood, and fore, not only drive disease of name from the body, but are Pne' best, if not the "very best medicia the world, fgr te cure of choir. t 1 tary, cholera morbus, and otter dis of the intestines. CautiOn.—As conterf are abroad. aVoid all stores of da character, and be particular, iti'd es: to ask for Wrrght's Indian table Pills. For sale at the store of J. D. D. Montanye, in Towanda, e, agents published in another cof this paper. _ Married. , In Sheshequip, Aug. 18th, by the Fe Ginson. VALENTIN% SMIZE Ittla NOS rEne.sui Taompsou. 1P01621 IBLIVEg e lidr: A YOUNG HICKORY .raised at the school boo Scow's; in Towanda tp., on Satenhlb S at I o'clock. • glar. WE are outboard tto • the name of Lieut. E. W. i t ' of WV.= ad a-candidate' fin Lie but_iotr" lonel of the let.. regiirent. ' 2 4 1 Militi