:Argon braitoll . Solsettit flf—,atorry artiarrAto3 g 3 • 'au% ttl 1141 . 40 .v.• wo doom.")tii; fr4i.3l !• a 7 ,laroorld bgn , N•ltuvtr.zil r../h 11.3 4 34Wh: !VT! w 41114*6;1"';'":. bt*lewi .r :raCi Ica . 7.; 1 igkleti . 3o.l4 , ‘ a!, 1..:0; . , ' • '.l O -htv,,,i rts444-.4,;., 44 , n 71 . a tr.... 4) "v.: 4- Ar i aM " s " i141 "1" r: !.- - ESETESI == lo ttf„v. lo 4 01111,4 ha% 1 re r .2, l;b 4 iits - ,t 1.146„, MIS itlanicobas „„K0mpt„:..wa1m.....kra2,385,8 DesortettO i tlartktonvesioil. t. „camenpille 4)4 afgraag andseMalione,vemstaed-ihe 'follow log .addres, andleitioiioaa, which he awed had been Mak& bOVe. 'Canimittee: lotidlmits - -"Phe represernetiveg of the .Demuerats -ofTenn srvirnia., lti'CrOention asset:rib - 14, felicitate' their PlAitical:Pkwis uPoikqiP ProsPerotia. cOndition of the eine:my-and the brilliant triumph oiler arms Sim* the delegates of the Democracy' of the Stale. last mete within this Wall, to make known their choice for President of the United States, vast and; Important events lave illuritinated, the page of our history, and effected the deistinies cf oat pi itiat /union: We look abroad and meet none attic cif: . dencNif the " ruin" prophecied by t'edendism with its theusand , tenguea.' We Me our commerce expanding to the mostillstant parts and whitening the most ffiffiterit seas. Manufacturers have flout., ished beyond all precedent and example. Mecha nics, and 'corporate and individual industry, are 'producing to honest enterprise a sufficient cortipe tency.- Our credit at home and abroad is unsus pected and firm; exchanges are equal in the midst of a foreign . war---and the great measure whichse parated the giovernment from the Ilan* intended only.for a, time of peace, has preserved our mon eyed circles and great cities from the disasters con sequent upon all those expansions whielloccur dur ing perinds of National speculation. Siuce'lB.44, a new and flourishing State has been added tixiour confederacy ; and a war, long defer red byloOrselves, and lung provoked by Mexico, although it has been prosecuted, (after Jaaving been commenced by the latter,) into ,the heart of the enemy's country, and has made those who intend ed only to prevent egression, the avenger& of aeon molated wrong—has served to elevate our charac ter before the nations of the earth; to display new elements of national strength, and to 'present new reasons for the perpetuity of our political institutions. The present general administration, which came into power on the 4th of March, 1845, has lived to see its policy and Its .principles fully vindicated by the test of time ; and the firm and fearless Execu tive, who did not hesitate to avow his,great re forms, and to pursue them unffinching,ly to comple tion, is greeted t the tributes of the reluctant wit nesses; who daily confess in the wisdom and fore • sight of his measures. Pennsylvania, which was the first to be prostrated under the iron hand of free trade according to the horoscope cast for her by 'ear .political seers—still stands before her sisters, with herlfair fields unblighted, her iron hills alive with thehum of industry, and her teeming valleys jocundwith the roi:e of well rewarded toil. It is under auspicious circumstauces like these that the delegates of the Democratic party of Penn sylvania, -assembled once more to express their un alterable. attachinent to Democratieprineipies, and to reassert . their_ satisfaction at.the experience of the past, and their confidence in the prospects for the future. • The grave duty of expreasing a preference be. twecn the several distinguished name's presented is the country, n connection with the high office of President ifif the United States, has been com mitted to this Convention by the , Democrats of Pennrfylvania. We fulfil that duty with a deep _ sense of its importance and its responsibility. We do riot conceal, \what indeed it would be in vain to conceal, that the country will-require of the 7..xecn tire, Who'shnll take his teat on the 4th Of March ; 1849, pieuliat abilities sever before has it been - moue casentialohia a vigilant • guardianship of our blessed political Unieri, should he demised. 'Ne betbre has that unequalled political compact, heeta;sC insidiously threatened. .Never before have the theories of the eneirries °four country, assumed a more faseinatitrj- - or more damenrous• aspect.—' lie that:shall:govern the helm Qf the ship of State,. for the nisi four yeatsonust lie a man equal to this pressing and formtd - akdeemergelleY- He must bring to theVerfortnanee'of its , duties, not only great - experience, wise discretion, and a well-poised in idled, but be must show to the country that his watty to her institutions is not bounded by the ho riztin of focal doctrines, -but is broad and general as' '-the spirit of freedom itself: lie must respeCt the sacred and inviolate compromises of the Constitu- - non. He must keep before, him always the dacri fiees which all portions oPthe Union made, when 'that Constitution waslannebed Into being under cir cumstances toll of peril. Be most, remember that as our territory expands and our civilization pro gresses—as the gen*, of Republicanism forces its way down to the very elem 4 the Pacific, and crushes beneath the wheels of Umshilable Progress the feeble add hloodytdespotisms of another age--- the eNperimeni of fre4 goVertnnent itself may de- Pend upon the bet, that oar Chief Magistrate should be mindful of tlit experience of the past. Hciwev- . at the timid mai hesitate -and doubt, the mission of :hie Republic is one which, under providence, can 011,te hemn4;l in by geographical divisions.— Hieverthe cautious statesman may shrink from and deny the'probability of our example civilizing , and controlling this entire continent, even while he atottrull of calamity, the sublime experiment is tin dicznag,itsedf, end making still stronger the fabric of religious and political liberty in this hemisphere. To the 'Democratic patty the question is full of in, terest, for to that party the grave duties arising un der it ; will de hereafter committed. Surely we have seen nothing- in the triumph of bemocratic Principles, since the Organization of our govern ment, to mak4 us fearful for our country in time to come. These principles, and the measures which have been originated under and by them, have ev- er been assailed and doubted by the 'Federalists, with etival ability and malignity. Prom the ;cle ment when tie illustrious JrrrEaSoN proclaimed .... ... • _ _.... ..-- . ____ --- ..... -....-. -- .. - ...._ ~:-___ •:_-.. _ 1 . :.....: ---.• ..-._.--- -------- -- --- :-. --- -- 7 - - --- • -- -- •- - _ci_ • - .. ' .., • - ~•. - ..- -- 7 --- -----7----- ---; '• - - 4.4 74 7 7-- - -- ." 7- - ..77. -- 7.! - -: - 7777 7.77 , ::::: ; -,.. i.- :.- . 77 ~ . 7 . . . _ . ....., _ _ _ . __ _ ___ ____ _ ____ _ i .:4 i.; . {.•A nail ter=gititi= 4 .- '4 . i i.'"...kiatZeo . 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A 1..... .--- ----.. •;;,-; ' 1 — ll4 4 a =,t ,;...k~,: r-,r~ MIME I; i.-tw A - 41:1 re 'J •PTISIMPJ MEM the greet' Creed' lipztilar'orie • sitiee been fotinded,lo ilie tithe *lain' his estr>itpls was iftiitablirbY feetticer, 'VA* *id& and'Ffoki;it busy and relentless antagonism has constandfMiti %Ake fder!, deayingi -the. PflrietkiiibirqrmLigeßie !eating the beeekei.Se-egtieleatiEwthe 41 1 4ectelw queeeeeisif thu „Degpccaktic..,,polif-y• air! :4441.4 hiore-Weir,ll*Orgattuunitief , awaypd *4 4 14, led by the ominous predictions of Vedetalismi Vhil,?tleplerieg "id depreciating fhe . teicies i of ITeaoc~ principles flow elte.e• §aTe we these piedietiens alienate 43l* who jbo u rd have been first to dpirimea ao deny them ,The elo client aridlinpresiiire commentary upon this, Tong and Consistent hostility to the Democratic creed, is 'to-be found in the fact, that at this day liaidly a re lie remain of Federal policy, white thotOntliii4i heirtibeett among its leaders - notebear unwilling testimony to the complete and Sweeping Success Of De Tri3Oß :PriftEjekee.. We: 4ve V; fee ' Wess-rsa bearing witness against a MUM OF THE Herrn Srives j as en "obsolete idea"--4..itserte, admitting the wise provisions of the Irrieesireerr TILLiSITAY I —Joiinaos, vonfessinglo the virtue and justice' of a tasesat. taturr--Pnecoxrtza, vindica ting TIM cause or tint" cotorrav,—and CLAY him self, longing for the opportunity of drawing his sword, "in some nook or comer," thathe too might . "-tzar a Ilevicsv " The favorite measures of Fe deralism are - buried deeper than "plummet ever sounded ;" and when the entombed cities of other days, now covered with the waters of the earth and t he accumulated deposits of centuries, shall be again restored to life and light—then, and not till then, will the trump of political resurrection recall to being the condemned theories of the Federal op position. ‘They will be recollected in the fact, that they were hang upon the wheels of Democratic ' progress, only to be crushed by its irresistabte re volutions ! lf, then, this be so of the .past, why may not oar future destinies be Boned to the hands of that great party, which has so Pell deser ved its title to the confidence of the coqrary ? The Democracy of Pennsylvania,' with these. truths before them, proudly submit the name of JAMES BUCHANAN to the Menet-al Convention, as their favorite candidate for the,Presidency. For a long series of years this distinguished ,statesman has been connected with the councils of his coun try; and weare free to refer to his public career, with the assurance that he is singularly well quali fied to discharge the duties of that exalted position, for next four years. He comes from a State, to use his own beautiful language, the Democracy of which " holds the balance with steady judgment and enlightened patriotism, between the opposite extremes of. consolidation and disunion." Even since he has been in our legislative halls, this has been the motto which has regulated his conduct.— He has been indeed, on all occasions, the vigilant and consistent representative of the Keystone Stale. In regard to Pennsylvania, to use the language of the address, adopted by the great Democratic State Convention which assembled in this place in 1843, herself one of the very first to abolish slavery, and . occopynig a, position, its it were, between this in stitutioreind its misguided enemies she has ever thrown her weight of character, and counsel, and position, with signal success on the , side of the country. This position has been !admirably ewe• scnted in the national councils by Mr. BUCHANAN. His profound disquisitions on the doctrines of 'State rights, and his consistent opposition to the madden ed excitement of fanatical zeal, while pursuing an imaginary evil, regardless of the very existenee of our country and our constitution, have become' Me morable in our political history, and here given his name a warm place, (not only among his coun trymen in that' region which be has befriended; but everywhere else;) in the effections of all tbe - friends of the country. Fennsylvania thus stands as a barrier between the North and the South, and her g i gantic interposition - has always been-felt with effect, to - the dinraceatind confusion of these who plotted our common down-fall in the name of phi- lanthropy. , . Pennsylvania presents this distinguished citizen to the Union, at thevery Moment when such quali ties and such experience as his, are most to be de sired !in our candidate for the 'Presidency. By withdrawing, his namelrom the list of Presidential candidates in 1814,.Mr. Braman increased his title to the respect and consideration of the country, and showed how f a r above all motives of self he esteemed the union and the ascendency of the De mocratic party. If subsequertcireninstanceschang,- ed the aspect of things, Me. patriotic spirit in which. that that act was resolved upon, did not lad any theism to commend it to the approval of the-Democracy of the Union. That it was aprreciated by the disen .guisned Statesman who cattle into the. Exectutive clairithreeyears ago, is shown by the fact; that one °fibe first acts of his administration was to of fer to Mr. %cumuli' the first place - in his Cabinet, —a position Tornterly filled by Jerrassosr, /mists, CtAT, VIN EVREN, WEiSTTII., CALVOCZI, a nd oihe; of the master intellects of the age. It is unneces sary to allude to the manner in which he Sii met the expeciationn of the President and the 'country, in this tialponsible and arduous lunation, filled dur ing one of the meet eventful administrations in our history, and bearing intimately upon 'our relations withfoteigt goveinments. The admiration which greeted his masterly argument on the Oregon clues don, and - which -has•since applauded the ibility with which he has asserted our county's cause, in his correspondence with,the Mexican Ministers, is a proof that JAIN= K. P 01.1( knew where -to find a wise, 4 profound, and an experienced statesman, when be appointed Loos Bucatila Secretary of State. • We deem it unnecessary to allude, at any length, to the political tie - Rory,Of Jain BCCIIANAS. Every true Pennsylirrinilia knows it by bead. The ardent young American, who volunteered to defend his eountry, during the Wei wnr,--the fiiend of -Mos so; Who offered 'him a %reign mission during his first mission of congress,—the friend of7s9csoa, who appointed him minister to one - of the most pol. .?J *r.,. t" , 4 ONO lvtiilitsgA ;04. so vigwit*illoi cprweli,,.„,ylKolip *gym stai*,4 ,l 3*teit 94!thc1 prom 41 0 14 4tri))9 IRAI»c , 9 4 tang 994 h9Vniti4e ilier * Li t ' ci n9° !-et- 4 ,;e1 , 4;#11 rcAl it # 9o -9r 461 4 ,rd9Atlci „a; !'414 a 144 - bemnd qii# ,name jhat wall live Arr the,he i arta 'it , tt&egoWirieu age 4enius, fibe'rtfrilieo„pe*riterica tTurlet. , • , .o,4 ll iii 44* , INS/ 14 ,P0 1 .0 # 4,401 4- n ' 4 "VOW old rTm . 9iiiioa• 4 1 / 30, 43 ° the hitilliarat _our settlers et Ow ikestrhe ken'efin ie t rins. Of familiar gratitude, as the early eloquentand advocate of pre-euißtituttigatfyVAind the power • Of Federal persecution- 911. th• New York frontier, he iaregarded as thenuttdy and teal lees enemy of the humiliating tergiversation ,of tboie Who, with all the right on their side, permit ted the blood: of outraged innocence to go nnaveng. ed, would have been rejoiced to. ; instruct. our courts to pronounce a verdict is IAV" or Biultia, swum:leas. In /chine he is applauded as the un flinching statesman who, even for peace, would not see his country dishonored by a tame surrender, of our territory and inherent rights, to a government whose towering ambition and love of dominion had just been rebuked by the opportune interposition of our representative at the French court. , . Yn Michigan the noble effort of Mr. Bantuslss, in 1837, in favor of the admission of that State into the confederacy, an effort 4iginguished by the ad vocacy of the popular government in its broadest, , most universal sense—will long boreinembered to his honor & In Rhode /grind the friends of free ma& fnige regard him as onci,of the most eloquent havo mteis, at a time too, whenthe tempest of perseen tiOn woad have swept them from exigence, and when the dungeons of the landholders and Royal charterists wcre need to. frightened there: n submis sion. In the South, the clear and perspicuous, and profound s expositions of State rights, by JA 31143 Be- CHANANi are recorded among the productions of their ablest eXpounders. Each of these separate acts is well kbown to every section of the country, and each, in rapid succession, has won the ap plause of the democracy of the country. The•lame of JAMES BUCHANAN is indissolu bly connected with that of Pennsylvania. He is her favorite and cherished son. lie represents her peculiarly, in . standing by the Union and the com promises of the constitution. .The vow of Pennsyl vania is important to our emcees at the polls, in November. She presents a candidate worthy of herself. She has claims To 'the Presidency song proved andjuimined; and she lays before the Na tional Conxention her preference, in the full awe- . ranee that it will be respected. Resolved, That in JAS. BUCHANAN, Pennsyl vania's candidate for the Presidency, we have a statesman whom we present.to the Democratic Na tional Convention, as worthy of the entire confidence of the Democratic party of the country, and equal to the grave responsibilities and duties of the high est office upon earth. • Resolved; That JAMES BcCHANAN as a public. man worthy' of the support of the whole- country, and especially with reference to th4se great ques ttpna which have heretefOre constituted the cause of unhappy, divisions be.tweed i two sections of the Union. itesolcul, That wet-mpuse IliKccm - fidence in the administration of JAMES R. Potx, President of the United Stites; and that history wlll emblazon, upon herbtig,htest page, the triumphs and achievements which have resuhed from his wise policy. Resohed, That the war in which we are now engaged, is a just and righteous war; aiid that the' resalotion of Congress, which 'declared that It was commenced by the net of Mexiio, titas in strict ac- cordanee with the plain and nnaniswerable Truth; and ciinnot he'idtered or obliterated, no matter how gross die inconsistency or the desperation of Fede- Resolved, 'That if the President of the United Stales had hesitated or failed to protect the fro,.tier of Texas, after the annexation of that State to this Unitai-i4md especially in view of the fact, that we were ;bound to maintain--her boundary to the Rio Grande, as declared by the act of the Texas Con gress, dated December 19, 1836, and sustained -by such distinguished authorities mammy Curt mid •IOUN QV/UT ATNXN be would have been dem: lid of his duty before God and his country, and would have opened wide the door and extended' the invitation to Mextcan cruelty and rapacity, to &tits won* upon nnoffeuding Arriericanittof - all co ditions. Resolved; That wheii the - blow -was nit struck by. Mexico, war, thus precipitated, became inevita ble and the sword, awe ,ansboatbed, to -defend, became the potent and inesistsiblis agent to avenge, or numerous inju ri es, suffered at the hands .of i wilco, and-to secure "indemnity for thepastand security for the future." . Rnoired, That after our flag, has been tarried forward to victory, withalmost incredible valor and Providential success, it would be szt.ouleme upon the dead, who repose beneath the_sod of • Mexico, arsine insult to the living, who *earths honorable scars NM in deadly battle, if this :war tienotcloeed with due regard to our great} claims and to our te peatatkiajnries. Resolved, That Pennsylvania has good season to be proud of her absent sons in Mexico, andtiiat she istb9 / 95 9JlettOkt,0 . , the fi eld of beithi,.and not thelaseasszned of their claims upon the nation's gratitude, noir That Lotion would diebonor the cause, of .uur country , and de grade, in the national eiteent,:those who deserve the notional greritorle. liesolft4/ That we approve thoroughly . of course of the Nationel Adreil#Ptra t i° l / cm- the wag sad than , justice muskpronopuce the verdict,. fOropet-toognork 4,4 whilerilr.losr , rireed resort was Imstlictned so, long as it could be post- Pellet!, wheraarath_ * 5 were filially Precipitated by the I '4 Pe Mexico herself, t he F9 3 F e ei 4 the ,Press- dent was nulguathloPfa and bieriit* the exhinia. 1,„3, rs Alsof.aptais OTvucillrmliPaOS axs 41 ;' 11 rTf . • . MEM 11111 El miumnsineffig rOgt;tonfirrit.,til_:ut.,r - b, :k:26 61 ; lid , ' *1 s'. 4 . =ad c • tthe in, cq S S T S iir Protract the War !. tgisrepreliciting tliA l eam'of the' birnit;',l!Olitfliti . 'a ad awl Comfort,' !a* cbanhtbn enema :tta . thWiao mi;prl4o l tbat ner Warn_ soydjera:iii,*iiesley l ipo . 4ri t ut 1 44c44 1 441Auk4tip 1 494 ,014 :0 0 m , RPost atm J e atese.iocettel. ei their.•refwetationend thei r " feta; 4,01014,110 ;the driratille 0 11 4 coanitYja clue fii:thebrave 111E11 ants and to all-who have shared in the &nom oftheppeeete war read that 'one of the brightest pages in the anhaitof Pennitylvanitt, 'is that Which records the gallantry and saffe'rings abet absent SOWS from the bigwig officer in the line, down to the humblest-Ovate in the ranks, who left his home to defend the flag of the 'Union. .itereived, That an the world bears witness to the bravery of our troops, and to the skill and intrepidi ty of their leaders; and that the names of Tinos Sort, Tatou and Wcarn, Qerratts and Sam" SNITS and Purace, PATIZRSON and Pulow, and CADWALADER lad Meatus, and ea other heroes, win always be remembered as conspicuous exam ples of gallantry, and cherished as the peculiar ob jects of the nation's gratitude. &Joked, That we owe to/Major General Jomir A. Qtrastax, of Mississippi, the accomplished military leader, and the able and intrepid Democrat—warm thanks for the manner in which ho defended the fair fame of the Second Pennsylvania Regiment, against the attacks that' reflected upon its reputation and *widened its honor. Rada* That we tepees full confidence in the political and personal integrity of Flares R. Sammy Governor of Pennsylvania, and we regard his ad ministration as one that noblir- . represents Demo cratic principles, andetficiently supports the true in [ masts of the State, and the rights of the people ; and that good old Pennsylvania has never had an Executive to whom her citizens could point with more pride and pleasure. Resehed, That this crenviation entertain full and entire confulenee inifte honesty and stem and on. wavering Democracy of Imsar. Pawnee, the nomi nee of this Contiention for Canal Commissioner, and unanimously recommend him to the support of Democratic party of Pennsylvania. Readval,- That we heartily approve of the hide. pendent Treasury—the wise and l arintirable institn 7 tion originated by Mama Aratator--repealed during the " hundred days"' of ptoscription and tyranny that succeeded HAMM'S ituaugunaim, and restored -under the glorious administration at Tsars E.. PoLt; and that , the friends of this mea sure, have been tioblravenged upon its ; enemies, by its triumphant salvation of the whole republic from the effects- of a spirit of speculation, that must have resulted from the use of the people's money by the banks.' Resolved, That we do most fervently hope, that the national House o(Representatives will take the first fitting occasion to espimge from its journals all • traces of the disqaceful AIRMAN amendment to the thanks of Congress to Gen. Tarim', by which, after honoring the • hero for his valor, his kir farce is soiled by a falsehood, in regard to the war; mid thin we trust that the . Hos. hates TaO.IIPSO3, the atialor of •the resolution to expunge it,. wilt perse vere, until the find wrosw, is buried in Shis.usuis grave were festers this insult upon he sox, tont from the journals of the United - Statesenate, indignant Democracy. Rasaloci, That the tariff act of 1846 has malized the most sanguine expectations of its advocates and friends, and as signally falsified all tle world pre diCtions of its enemies. The Democracy of Penn sylvania cling to it as.one of the crowning mea sures that have rendered the present Nationdaul ministration illustrionalm . the page of history, and are proul to, nrd it as a demonstration, eigabl4- eci by the inble lests of truth and time, thata re strictive commemial policy, like au expanded Na.. tioaal paper currency, has degenerated into an " ob. Miele idea." • Befto',wed, That we recognize in Zzo. M. Dar.r.ss a true Demoerat--a distinguishod *mailman, and a pure patriot ; and asa sop. of. Penusylvania, we take pleasure in bearing testimony to his virtue, his tal4 eats, and his integrity. Ifilsoired, That the Demoi.racy of- Pentwylvania regard the administration 01 3111 , 1„TIN VAN &rims with pride. We Venerate his prineiples—ithey are ram only, rind have been sustained, but the stind ard bearer, for die time being, was overwliebnede itesolwal, That we look upon General Le w» Cass as a great and glorious man ; and whilst, we reiterate that the Dernoinaey of Pennsylvania pre= fora their coin great and pare man, Bricninarfrto otheri We proclaim to the world, that the choice of die. Baltimore Convention, when fairly nadir, shall be errs, ..- 14 # 1 ',!!' 1 ,ket is all ipiestioni respecting the, or. iMizaticsi4cr proceeding.. of the Baltimore. Con wen. Lion, the.delegates aedt from-this State be instructed to vote in loch manner as a majority of them ibis decide to be material -for seeming the ISUCCeiIe of thitresidennal candidate whom we have tusani• modally recommends& "Reaulse4 Tliit this Convention pledge ibellitillt or tlie Piimocreks party of Pennsylvania ,noW more Confident than ever, in its giant stietSgth, to support the nominees of the National Convention, for President and Vice President 44 the United SWIM. Read Fed, Thatin the event of airy of the delegates appointed to the tense:Tail National CoriventioN finding it inconvenient to attend, he is Itereby t , authorized to appoint aisubstituto. "On motion of Mr ICRATi',`the address and reso lutions were wurnimowey adopted. ltir,toWßY g rnovad that•ilitt thanks of - the Can vention he.:pnesented. to the laws ef this Comp sention,.for durable, dignified * sad, 114 1 01111110 1 7 manner in which they the!a l .,* ; whi c h iris manias:hub; . the following• ' ' • itesilred That the'tfel l / 4 'etes to the •ce: - ••- C"':• .1 I.P"rt t ffuzi2l(r • 'a ~ .r PC .. M tin' GO °DR= r . rzrza =critic Cenvektion br WM are heathy alstritetedi to , yovit sicaivirin4-ksitoo# the intitg#44driet? f4iil,-#.4'@ ingibm-usege ut the. imaity-t-is Rtheiesdly Demo civic faisell•hoitestpurposets. Tfiia•reioluiert/ Wairen;lticined bt:MestriMri-, Wilfzipt ? '-so4os , s arat '",l4wsori," . ited - oprAed . .:l4 Mr. Fotzer:,,vooo4.,Weit atiopted-7,Yeill ;SOAR ti 13--safotawase I/. „0-1-.-..t0 Yesii=-Melitii. Atkins; New nett, Brewer: B' water,:: Clover, Creswell, Curren' Drwsort,'DfrprOck, Mei. Dougherty, JClin De erty, Eaffl4 l ,.lely, FO tst lakillf, GallmiraLt vi; thkon, Gocidrich; Obiges, Hays, fiazletmehtlick man, Hitt*, 'irons, Sack, Kean, Kerr, Vine. Kre7 man, Crici, Laird, Llgorlor4AgeY,Ltsdhnert . l4wilt Lowry, Lynch, ,M'Armal,4l•Celmont, i /fiat:ran, Mr. M'Creley, Alex. M'Xitiney,,;‘,S.,MlCinney, Magee, ManderfieleMano' n, Marx, Mertz, Mitch. ell Morthno, Mott, Murray„ Orr, Oyster, Palter, Phillipps,Pdlock„ltaleson, Reilly , Schnell,- &how. bet, .Schneider,. - Scott, Small, Smith, eSttodgrassi Souder. Stambaugh, Taggart Weiler, Williams, Wilmot• Woodward, and Yooki i --78. BiAcs—Messrs Arplebangl ryaiii r E linekaktw, Canfield, Cos, the Coyle, CratiCrans,iDfdiembach, Evans, Felton, Frailey, Fnizer. Gamble. Gren'nell, Johnston, Re isti; Lumberton', Lerma - Miller, Pat. terson, Pnreill, Puterbsogh; , Roddy, Ryall,Slabach, Smith, Stallmanl Sterrett, Tyson, %%ellen, Wr i ght, and Zecbe-33. . • - The CHAIR then announced the following STATE CENTRAL COMMITTER. Edwin W. Butter, Lancaster. Mucus D. Holbrook, " Francis A. Thomas, 0. Solomon Demeors, Philadelphia. J. A. Phillips; g * Lewis Pelotas, John. Robbins, Jr., John W. Ryan, George Wm. R. Ranken, Hugh Clark Win. J. Leipet, Owen Jones, Montgomery. Charles Engler " John Hickman, Chester. John Johnson, Luzeme. L. P. Hitchock, Wuhirigton. A. K. Wright, Clear&ld. Geo. R. Pil'Farland r Robert M. Barr,' Berks. Wm. M. Mister, John- C. Myers, " Peter Bowman, Carbon. - 1. R M'Clintock, Allfttry. John , C. MAUD, John Coyle, Rody Patterson, Henry 9. MGraw, C. Hale,Mifflin. George Bam, Syhulkill. James E. Buchanan, York. Dr. Luther Riley. Dauphin. Hamilton Alricks, Christian Seiler, Jr., " H lsaac enry G ßue t h li le iai r, ey' Jacob Babb, E. A Lesley, • a Kintzimr. Pritchett., " Dr. A. Niemen, it D. W. C. Brooks, 44 R- A. Lamberton, A. D. Wilson, Lreoming. Arßears. B. T. Sloan, Erie. A Omar REvortv.—Whoover undertaltasto put a joke on the " Razor Strop Man," is sure to get floored in the long run.. Last Moran'', while sea.. in,g his strops in Plymouth, arieezpatiating, the While pr the evils of rum drinkir% kiipley, fellow cried out, " If rum made lie as fast as you in sell yourritrops, I'd quit it to day." """ Very griod," - replied he, the only ditlercitee between your lying and mile, is this,: My strops enable me to he in a good warm bed, while rum makes you he in the gutter." 'The tipsey man sloped, evidently under kvery great mistake, in supposing th,s he could get the upper hand of the " Razor -fir Mau. Omuta:re .ftntrams.—An hottest man, for the singularity and doggedness of his opinions hidbeen several times on a jury, and always eaterOined no. time of law and justice totally at valiance wag the with-the jodges and all his brother jaiors, One of the'inages asked him hew it was _possible that ho always gave.so much 'trouble. „Lie replied,. with the utmost. •gacrity— • " I Out% know hoW but it stirays happens to bOzny miafrutone -to ..be Oa, ll:jnovith clout obstinate sten." ExcLesiva AsstmaLas.—hbijot Noah, in his Sun day Tinies and bressonger, says that the, only teal -eraelain..eassemblies in New York,ara aristocratic chetehes. U When - are Tass by them on' Sunda, and see thaltyi)riicl SerVinits wally Oritaide k their masters and mistresses are worshipping with-. in, werthink this posed:43 , 4le thing maybe reveka ad lit the-nett 7votld , Wheb the masters Max have to stand Qt*it." • There are difrereal, opluicaut. about what copal taiwtespectability- Our•uvighhor, Simon, SniPest optima' respectable 111811"64110 who keeps his hands out' of other pee Ole's toocketg chows the best tobaceo, and .behavaa himself.. His wife holda a diffeient faith, and believes that a reepectetairtaa never spits dilate° juice apon theliaidirette. An ei4 lady dewneswenis Speonk, Long Wed, once sell her idea - co good mail end.....nA m a n . what is k s earinl of tits clothes, done drink no Vey riterkirr leadihetallelnibent apelike the molds, and i l k eat a cold dinner vitLwash - day,' to save the winittwifolks from conkjit." ° Vregosolkle ask *moll!, what you taro done ) why you have done L it Ulu will teachyou So irk., spelt—fust, 'your actions ;Istvan& Tow motives; and third , .the nitimer mrlSch you diauhatio your • I, • duty. White; spa the, hares from iota as, makes wises the thstatarsgioaathey toosedy con coaled; WAWA' °asp lob us of our enjoyments only to Vita* —AIeY ,ni*Pele"f etenl'it t e'r e tir ifecitemoch mote Igbe vieioos thettldoes to berYgratrel. It•irtieettei kifeeetterntajoreetice Oidimago 'Cher, rice - idteii mete more gran timvirtueef 11-oiitill;lik . ... l ilitiulifd. 71111 •1G F3l-ffigiOZ • A TOATI.MCLikW BIZZLXISO Lava 1 , 011!-10 taco rn te Ocnas - o—When the torrent of Are precipitated, itself into the oee.att, the seems assumed , a oti,rri,guasif terrific and tetißde grandeur; , The magnifies:Kir OfdeMuc 'ticat• Ws* never more perceptibly display ed than when them antagonistic elements met in deadly strife. 'The mightiest of earth'. magazines of fire poured forth its burning billows to meet the mightiest of ocean. For two oogoo wiles '} t came Iturribling, swelling forward, an awfulwin of death. Rocks melted like wax in its . piniti u very hills were lifted fronktheir prinieval lied. just sank beneath Its tide, or were borne onward loy,its waves; the works of man were to it but as,aseroli in the flames; nature shrivelled and trembled tw l fore the irresistible foe. imagine Niagara's stream above the brink of its falls, with its dashing, whirl ingoossing and eddying rapids, madly raging, r 4 hurrying on to their plunge, instantaneously cpa verted into fire, a gory-hued river of failed mine rals; the wrecks of created matter blazing_andstit appearing beneath its surface; volumes of hissing streams arising; smoke curling upwanls (rota ten, thousand vent 4 which gave utterance •to as many, deep toned mutering, and sullen, confirmed, omia ; ous clamoring,s, as if the ,spirits f aller demo ns were strualing a c oinst their final d oom; gsseede tonating and shrieking as they barst frgm their liot prison house; the , ) heaveus lurid with flame; die atmosphere, dark, turgid and oppresSive; tiro buri. zon'inurky• with vapors, and &earning, wit4e,re ; tleeted'conteat ; while cave and hollow,4as the hot air swept along their heated walls, thAv back the unearthly sounds.in amyriad el prolonged echoes. Such was the scene, as the - fiery cataract, leaping a preei2icc of filfy feet, pkered its flood upon the ocean. The old line oreasugt, Mass 'of compact, indurated) lava, whitened, cracked, and' fell, Tlie waters recoiled and sent forth a remeat`iif gentry they learned and lashed 'around ; they bnited with the hest, and the rikii the conilictirig agencies grew thicket.' The rispcnts of the exploding gite Wireilikfirictt, heard fieenty-five miles distant. - "fheY Nieia t erfto the drschargers Of whole broadsides et heavy adinery. Streaks of the intensest light glanced like lightning in every direction; the Oirtikirti of the burning late ris it' Hi, "cooled 1,3- the - ,shoik, was shivered into of f -- r.tent barrio aloft by strong breezes, towards the , *hare reaiterred it acintillaht showers ftir into Ili condtry. Far three successive week's this:S.o64i ilisgortied imiriferrnOted • burning tide, , "With! a-Aacaty a diminution, feta the ocean.' OA Misr side; for twenty-miles; the sea beearriti`heate' with Such rapidity that, oa thoiciond .ortholnac- don, fishes came 'an shore deed in "glint nun:theta' at Kean, fifteen miles distant: weeki later, at the base of the hills, water continued scalding hut, and sent forth !team at every wash otTie wages.- „Tani.? Scene end Scenery in th gincraicA Istatii.,• Tem is Ticanartt -Lyn torktarr.-:-Itoritig the pa., riot! eithe American revolution, t yOnngthatinese. , Indian 'Vali 'aken prisoner by . the - Chem:loes, aoa condemned to die; He was tied to the etas ever preparation as made for his humediaie - exca - , don when it Chenlicee woman arrived- With a par. cel 01 goals, and throwing down at the feet Of kite warrior lowborn' the 'prisoner belonged begged his release, alleging that 4he was a widow z 'and would' adopt the captive. as her son. The request was' punted, the prisoner released, and delivered Over to her, and on dui same day he waited' Upaed dowathe village well' dressed. His protreetnwe relied so much upon his fidelity, that ohoponsaitted; hint Ao visit his family and friends in his. own coun try., lie proved faithful and aopetsuattionener.en-, treaties of his relations 'mild peered won .him Ot.„ forsake her. 5 . 1! , rFtl.r 4 P1, 11 P . ...4 , • • .z • .“ =I • • ' . 4 iililiireiiiiiiil l 1 -- , " 7 ~-: i . . - ~ 6 r I • . 1,11 i 1 S. 410:11* : n6an one eviii` t - c'' •"- 4 , - 4 'I lioiiedlei • di to the aCsf - ', Y. J '' ' 4 ' Odit - a .ot *Those .11.4 - ''' l.S.L '''. " 3 -- -,, I, ' 1 itial OnOpe : i lie 6SO, cr z , , -Lew t 14,11' tat pikise iiitlkiiider l i - "- 1--. 1- I ra l ''Oit *6 6 ;4 thePnetlian'aiii,;' - 't! 4 Afni-ine — l.l4priithe and' eoriOn4 s '" -- t For 11i kfitu " .stEtil be-hob:l' --'. `. .: . . .--..-, , , t - Foe I Wind ; ritin feet the.stirrive Of its destiny redeem Who bar rightly view, the present. WAbits tomtit heart aid . iniad.o 1 Taitiag rini7ard Many agnihr have found a Owe': '4lk Some are nearing to the summit.-- Sown are at theifionathiliet blab. Progress is .the mining iratchword— , ..Cheers,4heut upward to the height': Cense thou pause and play the laggard, With its glories' tan in 21;ght And ohne fair and broad-and glorious " Jul (Mt iisioe we can set, Still the future brightly streehing: ' 1 "'lnto far infinity : Who shall cell what:bond of barrier To imprbeement heaven designed I Who shall dare to go the limits. • To the onward march of mind I Only He; who ioto•beitir ." 1 " ' Called the.onfathorned human soul, He for whom the hymn of progress . Through eternity shall roil!, • •• A ruing couple !remaining together =deviled: . ly imetine rormeitie spot with birds lied &Vim' around';. it least the Vender is left to irtfiir — that they' had cg all these applisece&- end ems*. to, hoot," .whee.ths following conversation turserit • My dear; if the saorifve !or Pit -1411.1treuld please yOUtalOitiaiadlY wtkohl /. 1 4YrAt•dowil at thy fret" "-Ohsa YOU Ocolind bat it. jost reqlitais , me wit* *may me .tor yom ,quipinatkm use of tobacco." Can't think of it. We a habit." l'He'llesiWasece....7—Tbe question ' why printeris do not .succeed so well in business as *swelPiP., was thus aneweted: "Because printers Work., for, this heard, and limiters work for the stontrk ; and Where tweniyfnen have a stosikk bye one hka, head."'