la • Itisfeit - • - -" • , , - - ' 44, • ' f. • , * , ll , tip' I C % jo y .Pa. dati,...att ''. , 4 7 + • la THE COMM-LER. 4 %1 NERTY, Th E UNION, AND VIJE CONsTiTt7I)N.," !Mil G Tryspr'Ro, pE 'A .: Monday Morning, Aug.. 4, Domopratic :Llational Nominations. Fur Presidcnt, .L&MES EUCHANAN, Peno,ilvania Fire l'ro:idcid, JOIN C. I) Itr,C K 1 ...\; 11 11)(3 '4, of untuay Dolor:rat lc Tieket. L TO Rg 1 T LARV't;. Charles 13.. litnAnlew, of Col ni)11,4) county, IVilaun 3leCatulle4s, of Allegheny county. DISTRICT r,LIXTOII. 1. Qen. W. Nebitiggr, 13. Ahraltam Edinger, 2. Pieree Butler, 14. lieuben lyillu r, 3. Sthvard Wartman, 15. (ler). A. Cynwford, 4. Willitun IL Witta, 16. Jame ,, Ulna, 5..10hn 111eXair, 17. lieury .1. Stable, 6..ibhrtll. Brinton, 18. John D. Noddy, 7. David ' salty, • 19. -.Ta 0 , )1) To ..ni.y, S. Charkg 211..1.., .1. 1:1.11'111inaTi, 9. JOSePh Patterson, 21 .Witratn NY Akins, _ 10. Isatto 22, tittg, (lanipbell, 1.-Pro. W. Hughes, 23.11)0.).(J1111ningliatn, 12. Thus. Osterbont, 24.44)1111 Kcalty, 25. Vincent Phelps, Canal Commissioner, GEOR,G.}.; SCUTT, of Columbia, county. Auditur General, JACOB FRY, tin., of Moiltgomory Co DEMONLAM COUNTY CONVENTION' At a meeting of the IYeinocratic Standin;. - ; e...onntitteeof Mains county, field on the 26th ut .ittly,,Diflti, Ulu followiog resolutions were unaiiimoindy AdopWl.l: /eixavcd, That the Democrats, the friends of Buchanan and Brockinridgo, tho Union and the Constitution, .and the oppouutits of pro. seription ua account of hirth,place or rolig, ion, in Adams county, bo requested to 11)COL ;#,t • their usual places of holding Township and llorough meetings, on ,S:a!,ii./day, the qt 4 day Atlyeast wi r and elect . two I)elel.„%tus from each Township and Borough, to meet in euanty Couvention, iu llattyshiirg, on J 1 oL flay jollutoing, the Ilik,--for the )turpose of 'nominating a Ticket to NI supported zit' the .election, appointing. 'Cotigrwilunal end Senatorial Conferees, itnti Duleg,utes to the next State Convection,, L',..?„w/yed, That a rotinost also-he, and it is berelly . wade, that at the I)alegate Iklectitigs called in the above resolution, preliminary t •le,pB .he taltetr.towards the, organization of .“achanati And. C labs, in _order to secure; a otoro thorough orgunizatio4 in ovary - district of tho county? StrThe l)ologate Edections willhe bold be tween the hours of 2 and 5 o'clock, P. ex cept in the Borolloi of tiottysharg, where it wilt Lv !)old hotwe . en 7—antl P. M.. (Afar/min. Jolts. DUMMY; Sr., Recilattry. July 28, 1.850. LILLY, DEMOCRATS The BUCILAN.V.I .VSL) BilfiqLll4loDGE el,l-1) 'it 1 meet at the liver& of AV attleH, cfoadaY) Eittlang, o'Qluuk. litwine:is ui Llterest will IAI transacted, •;.a/(1 a 11111 at. Lelia:V:loo4S Iliquested, 1.11;(). la Y. 4 3, i'resitiot. August, 4, - • . 'TILE DEIJEGTIT t;LELVIONS, 'rho:,Dentooratip Delegate I.;loctions ,will take , place throughout the county on - Saturday • ntal—ithe:Cottvention 'to nominn,te a ticket to L Tho choice of j)elegatcs is always 44 ituPortant muter, iiontandim the refection or our y Q ry bust murk to represent the several (litriet.:•.--but it is peculiarly so at this juncture, whon the desperation proms. ;laced by aCUCM disappoialmeat is prompting the Know-Nothing loa,doN and manngors to the execution of • any plot, no molter how questionable its-character, in order to hold on to county' oat= and the patronage inciden tal thereto;. Let us but have a good strong tieket,z 7 the arts of dark lamternine ,will fall harniles` befiire it, and the euunty will be safe hj a majority of hundreds.. The Mass Chawber3burg. - The ridley ,Spirit is of the opinion that the Denim:rade 111 . -&s Meeting tti take itia,CO at Chambersburg On l'itureday next, will be the grandest political .4.6teotn=tration that has u\ or occurred. in 016 see tio no of Pennsylvania. I t says the 'adjoining counties, both of this Statz and Mar land, will be ropreAtuted by Inuarreds of enthusiastic fri e t Ids of our 1.0;1 riottS no'_llilhees f3r President 4.atitl. 1 re: . 3ident. LattelL,.- ter, the home of liccu4...\ - a.N, scud at least a thousand of her :tow; to 'lathe county on the occasion ; Dauphin county will turn out a large number ; aml' probably !miry county uu tho line of the .11,ailroad friun to Pittsburg-will be well repre::ented; Thu Eire tare . to be on the laoNi: ontensive veal°. Wu hope our friends in till:, u.iunly will attend. this great assetohlago in largo .numbeis. The distance is tilto.rt and the e - pan se will be tri iii ur. lion. A. Lt. 81'0'111;s:3, of Cloorgin„ long asd , known as one of 64 inort aeuoia plished debaters in Con...;res, and for years a di 3 tingaslied Old Luc Whig, 311111) 1 4 need as certain to be tnuong the not.akers. So is Col. SAM. 131.ACK , Pittsburg, To heal: prove a, rare treat. ra"'CoJ. J. W. 4.; I:A itr, of Pent ia I: a , ..; been nominated to the Senate, by Llu. <lent, as Governor of Kanba , , of t; ay. Shannon. 110 is rep fewAlted ar admira bly fitted for the wilie diheliar , ,y ) ;; Chq ;I-rati o/13 duties of the host. r.O.G a Col.oiel Alexleatt war, whero he diAinga:.,htal 1:11-aself for bravery and ; I flu., postal affairs of California ttnacr and wa:; the first gayer oft;au FraueiLeu. The nomination has ion ("Pi firnie,l. Iger , This Lamas 0mte,44.11 ,y t • by the lticeLi. , “ WL..;.116.1 41141 BEIRESaI PM fiNOW NOTHING "SITERIOR COUNCILS:'' now Nailing's, for the purrise ()I' furtlicrearryingimt one 01014)060ml de , •igh), dkritlantern Order, ("PrelCl o l l , attOUlt , i to 1T111..w.0 pp 0,1 the credulous by wisPrtio;f, 4 1 , it it. Ceaneils, Oaths, have 1 11 b e en and that the)urder ii 110 wore it iieeret pro-criptive Sono. people' lofty he thus )10CeiVell, but, as have taken 41)t tvothle to keep no eye on the doings of the politleal gameAers who gave Know Nreth • higislu life, f)n)I would still retain breath in 3)(aly, hace not I)c),ti eo eaNily ; but, hive rather ftcl h crudtU tho Whatnot, tkoogli it may .lave )44)1111,11f its practices, the rawn.liay and Pl,( ITTI NG for the spoils tif Nifirc which ellaractvrized the concern Eton) the first, are carrica on now by the managers and/de-ter/thaw to WI grim:, an extent as ov4,:r --)-only %Vali more caution. It Wit Sink the ()tiler day that aCE Flf*A7n, (no doubt accidentally lo9t, by the owner,) was ibund. in, this place, in which the ['resi dent of "Superior I 'imAeil,"—tho buu .,b er is forgotten , quiierihed to the fact that the holder was ontitkd to one dollar and fifty twits for two nights' attendance al *aid Coun cil The names attached were thoso of well kuowri know Nal tin gs, who have been unceas itig in their efforts to get up and keep tip the Order, as a political en:;ine of proscription of those born on other soil, or members of a par ticalar_church,Luad_the_dates cent, within a week or two, ' ' , This is a beautiful ninentary on Know Nothing veracity. Is it not? An 3 yot tho -managers and editors of the order have the bras:en-faced intionicnei," to ask the vary men whom they acridly swear to I , nosclun:;:, to I,elp them to ofjice!--arid that, t , ,0, under thr. ahal low pretoxt of a "union" Cotinty or States tiekot i Vorily, this io "throwiug ouusoionoo to tho dovil 1."• flreeley's New York Trihnitc, the lending, opposition liner, seve,ral weeks riinec, with unusual frankness, ail LI that ;kir, Buchan an never made use of any such expression as -has been falsely attributed to him, -Yet, seine of the low and ecurilous Black Republican and Know Nothinenpers, for want of (Aim-- g4B against Mr. Bagimilan, aro weekly grind.. ing away at this unmitigated fal.;chood, Thiy eliews their desperation and how little confr dunco its be placed in their assertions. Large rewards,. rproarks Lilo York '.GazettA;, live been, fur months pint, and are still of lured, various parts of Union, fur proof that Mr. Miamian made such 'a remark; but no pro 4 ever. been attimptod, showing Most co nclut.ively, the.entirefalsehood of the charge, ,f 1 Me. Buchanan ever made Such a remark, his .iJpeeeli must be on record, ot , sonic parsons must have heard it, w to loalcolt HUSeoptiLlu of proof; but, in truth, it never was ioade, curl the men that aro ut , inr, It ti,r the purpose of deceiving this people, kneuPiL to 6e. false ; Tho charge that Mr: Buchannirhas-ailvacat od a rollnetion of htlinring, mon's Nvagoi to ton relltFl pir (lay, hag but a Vary partial !rapport is fact. 'lle eisrtainly novir made any such proposition iliroetly, nor anything which ha uwitadtou4 to havu that effect, • If the slightest doubt has existed with re gard tia Fremont's • complicity with li.now Nothiilgini, that doubt is dispelled, 'lie Know Nothing convention which assembled ta New ' VOrk and nominated Bauksand John ston, and then adjourned over to await the ac tion of the 'Mack Republicans at Philadelphia, re-assambled, and, Banlcs having declined, iitnizinalea Fremont. 01' tlio event, the New York llaridd sap 14The midden change which has takon place in the sentiments of the convention in regard to Alr, Fremont is attributable to the liutt that that gentleman :was waited on. by a delegation from this party, with whom he had a long and earnest confalailaion, extoniling • into - the small hours of the morning; that he then and them i h ie h t red unroservedly in favor of the prinei lam; of the linow Nothing party, and 16111 , 1 give them his entire and eordial adherence ; and 'that he was perfectly eonvine oil that not recoivo the support of the America!) party throughout the United States, he had not the slightest prospect of be ing elected." It will ho reeolloetea that the bellotings which resulted in the nomination et-Pranks axhibiteil the fad that Fremoot way th e seeend (their° of the Know Nothing enliven. f)onlitless 111141 the members been n.:l well assured of his sympathy with nil °slim to Knew Nothingisin in the outset ai - ; they were at the interview mentioned by the Herald, ho would have been its first choice. ThnB, t.ho tunAlgamatiou between northern Know Notliingh , n) am! Block Ropublieanisin is thorough and compldte, so far aas a Presi 'dent:jai candidate is concerned. The split on the Vice Presiduney is lint is temporary affair. , The Know Netllit::s decided to ml here to hut Lo will 1;e withdrawn at the, metnelit that movement shall be &clued most conducive Co the interests of the comninun poAtion. Re-Election of 11chsrs, crooks and K6ll, election in tho trios of I:rooks and Keitt, has ro;init ,q „ t!, ( . 1111;11L imms ro , elo2tion of loth of tlii..4... , ;en!cs:om. Then; :vas a largo wzo Vo i ow Nothing :t, in their tinimera tion, yerc even reporting- that 31r. Buchnnan is to -bo witinirawit "Tho wish is fathiir to the thcinglit." r• - -75.11,,, late o:octi. in in Oregon has rosult in 0.4 triumph of a large in:ijority of I)uni_ ocratie tiJe, 10.2.,Hattire. r..72) -- V. L. Davt,ql, the N.ithing 311(1 for vote , l,c , /.. 4 .4 Chu bill to 41pAisli tho BEM Id 4(1 111_?\ rt-,•ontly pro- 1111=ft• •• • • t ;I I 1 1 • 1 I An. = o sy- 11 j• i'lt'.•olcliti:ll 4.1v4 (j 4.01 tht.' t: , iri y ' ' 4 ' ; 1 ." int -1 , 1 1 . N‘4l, .T 111.. • 111,11t1:': 1 1 / I q;.l'r Iltl• I/110110, ut . t'"it 1111 ' cxt•ii C r,t i..1k.A./t..z. Thu 4 1 . r • j r " MEM Tim Ten Cent Fabrication. Wrom ilte New York Tribune IMIIIIIIIIIII Fremont on Know Notlkingistn. I==l EIIOCI =I =2l CARO OF COL J. I. The Work Still Gang; 0 n Brardy The annexed card of COL Jusitrytt J. KUHN, I of Ityx/finp.; township, scan unciuscd tout+ with a flinple request that it lie allowed t' appear in the Vompitor. We eomply with it roost eliii i .rfidly—indeed, it Int mon: than ar di nary pleas° re so to do,-7-hut we cannot let the oeeasion pass without hearing testimony to the high character and intfilligkmee of Col. K. He occupied to prorairtent position in the W hit party of this county until its dissolu tion, and was regarded by, teeth 'friends and foes an ono of iti best, mord, ef ticient,and most reqiecteil nwmbers. But when Know Nothingi , un swallowed up his old par ty, it became necessary for him to ticchio syltieh of the, political roads left it was( prolific for him to follow, and, being a Union and Constitution loving citizen, l,e rangel 'himself on the side of ;itati.-ooen and Patriots, JAMES 13 rcitAN.is and Joys C. P.inr,ia: Ism ring, along with thowands of ()theca of the followers of Clay and Webster, who are now battling for the Democratic nominees. The following is CO2, Ws, card. It explains its4,ll: iltit‘wE'r,4 S. is 1:1,1)9, ESQ,-,,,Dear Sir; am gruteul to you. for the honor conferred upon me at a recent Meeting, (at which you worp ('residont,) by appointing me a 111 HO Kt!' of the Virliig Committee, lint t,t the same tithe would re:lieetfully decli w, an I intend to vote fur 11Iensps. IN.I NT and 13aff!KixittucE. 11 SIGNS OF TIM TDIES Dilimqnmes B. Clay, Esit„ Bon of 'the late Henry Clay, is making Buchanan speeches in ii.entucky. • ,Cr-arEr;.-Gov, Pratt, at present U. S, Senator from Maryland, in out in a letter in the .Na tiunal Intelli_g4ncer, in which ho takes decid ed grounds in favor of the election of BitePlan an and Breckiiiridge. Su too ie Senator Peirce, of the :Mlle Stdtel Lx;'s - , -.The 110/114/aysiniry ,S"rnffnel says that. not less than TWENTY-Old tine "Whigs in that borough have already op,nly driclarol that they will support Buchstnatt alol I:reekinri4lge.. The same feeling exists all ty.'er the ciamtry. • kr r irq.alut O'Neill, one of the al)lt!st lawyers in Zanesville, Ohio, In,ret4;fore t'a.)t.oug..ll Whig, has osee out fur Buchanan, tal:un the stump is old Afusliin;rpo, rLnd mill be ftecoln panied by a large force of bis WhizcJia panions and frienda, laislut Irkitt/c.vey.—All the Union honors and respects Elisha Whittlesoy, of Olou, Ile was always a Whig—ad. nu; of tht, lip;ltt.3 toot ornaments of that. party, Ile is fa tuous fir his solid sense, his cubit judgmont, his stern and rigid integrity, ,It is gra:titYin" to learn that this witinent Patriot has given his adhusiou to James Buchanan and I)eukue- racy. &OF-John Scott Harrison, rcresentatlvo Cougreqm from 41}(1 8011 or the latu Pres ident Harritton; refuses to .isoititort Frentont, He also voted against the Toi;eka 'eenstitution bill in the House. "Luoka like 131 f), doesn't it ?" 13t,..5.The &Wind, an old line 'Whig paper, of • Homy county, Tctunt:;soe ; the oilier Of which says 1I& was a Clay Whig for twenty y3.trs, 11y,19 00100 out fer the National Demo cratle nominees, T!te -! ,C35 and liejniblll:4a.n, 1111 infimiatiul Whig paper, Sent,oa euuuty, N. Y., 1148 6umi,l out fur Buchanan. Later to the Editor. Yytm, July"3l, 18503. Pdenti Stahre•---We kcal (ittite a.large and enthusiastic, meeting last night, tri organize the Wheatland Club. The Court-house was full, PETER 3 . 161 NT-tag, Esq., was chosen President, On taking the chair, ho made (I speech, accepting the post and defining his position, ht a few well timed and appropriate remarks, eying he had been a Whig all- his life time, but would sacrifice none of his grin /ides by voting fur Bevil ANAN.— Itata e wa, , L_thit utiLtj±te_sti tho_twubiod waters,", and that he would use every and all honoral4 moans in his power to Necuro his election. Tine meeting WaS also addressed by Wm. 11, MILLER, Esq., of Harrisburg, son of Jesse Miller, in very eloquent speech of ;Heart an hour and a quarter. A mung.t the officers are b: C. STuowor, Esq.. former editor of the ,Idvocate, and about eight more old line Whigs. Look for a good report from yoTk county The Advocate, (Fremont.) says Buchanan w ! ill,gct York county by 1.2u0 to 1500 majori ty . _ L. ll'lly lie Snpl►nrts 31r. Buchanan. The editor of the, Lanmster Pass, (a paper which until recently VitiS Opp°Silti to 010 DCIII - party,) gives the follolsing masons why he Nviil support Mr. BuchANAN : "lioenuse he is our neigl Ilkor and friond, and 'because Ito lays done more for tint poor of this city than all his trudneors put togethor, "Iteratisil hC i 8 a stattislnan of tho first or dor of hitt - Al:wt., and is vustly thu suporiur iu evAry respoot of ztli his competitors, Bueause he it; au honest nm, and will ad Inhatiter the government houbstly and faith fully. "Because Ito will he the President, not of a faction, or a section of the Uni on, but of the whole American pelde—and will know no South, no North, no East., no West, let treat all alilt, fairly and impartially, in the true spirit of the Com:6El:6on. "Because we know hint, and can truly say that he is one of the purest, as he is among the :Most, statesmen now living, "l'ar the..:e and other reasons, which we might gi'm had we the room, wo prefer JANtr.s IIuenANAN for the Pre-:Molloy, and shall do what, we can to t,rotoot, his election." Nov York 111 I'ho Dentooracv of New York (WO hattlin - * manfally and unitolly for Buchanan and Ili-oekinvid: , o. 'rho ilards and soils hare tog other, and notainatod ono set of candi ilauN, with goad f.ueling and unatii..nity.— 1:Z=Z111 IV, to /itivp.s/ore a , :sure our triellll4 in othur Status that the I)olllw...rats of New 11:unAiro, thoogli ilcrit:tps a t luakin , , $) 1111/ell ni , ise as their oro i loneht , . are :u:7,-itl4 , awaki.,activt., and (itui , rminoa a= at "IS 111', CAPABLE-IS 1!E HONEST r' The Pliukder of thareasiuy. If the probable result of the .happily iim possilrlo contingency of Col„ ili'nEhowr's elec tion to the,Presidericy is to be judged by the antecedents of hinisclf and tloe-e who are his leading ttopporters, we can arrive at no other conclusion than that 'the plunder of the Na tional Treasury ar.d the dissolution of the Union aro the two great efTects which would inevitably result from so direful a calamity. Gil. FREMONT fltAtlldti bc (Ore the country brand ed as a dishonest man in his financial trans actiono with the United States Government, -- The ciihrgo htt been reiterated upon unques tionable testimony, and never denied by him self or Mends. In fact they seem to regard the charge of dishonesty in their candidate as a matter too trifling for their consideration, If he is sound on the Slavery question, they care_ but little how deficient he may be in the old fashioned homely virtue of plain honesty. We have already alluded to St.llJe of his fitian viol operations in California, and the Boston Timm opens a new chapter, thus FitEIIOIN - 7 . 3 eAI,IF - AitYft OPEKAIION'S. ' She operations Of Jt)111 Freiront, in Cali for:lie, ►n 1846—'47, if fi►lly dev.eloped and given to , the public, would present some very astounding and what some people ;night c&1 pretty gigantic frauds, more gigantic than any befom cornrnitt4id. t h, (yd. k ! .. w ;Lye, is m rung fTriguage, nl not nioro so than th‘i thiA3tm warrant, as will be seen by the following ea :pwc drawn from official r,ourecs: (u the I`_'tl► of-Deeember, in -18.54,-the-See , rotary of War trallSEllitted to the•Sena,te and jiou s B" of fiehres , 3:►tatiees a report of the Board of Officers appointed for the exaruina, tion of claims contrneted in California under Tremont 184i . )---'47. We have before us a cony of this rt.:port—No. .13, 33d Cong,, 2nd :341sion, This report, which signed by COL C. F. Smith, Lieut. Cul. Charks Thomas, and Major B. Lee, of the [l, S. Army, contains a schedule of tie clainiB contracted by Fretnont, ant , t, Wing in ail to 8‘.160,61-1, Of thitiamount had bon t proviou s ly paid by Con anti wore rf:.-eowinext4kll by the iloord to he paid—making, with -the amouut 1 - 40*u $157,375, or about one-sixth, of the u bole amonnt claimed by Fremont and coll , :agues ire the, work of depleting the Tri.nsary. The 'Board disallowed 8157,:11.7 of - the ::/nount chlinn:4l, and smspanded ti307,,9:2.7 wriiil i•t7iiviimbity V,, expir. Ettliorr. v 1:Irgor portion Of these won . s for v;itt le and hursus purporting to ha,vo b oon cnil l isned to Ftwoolit.for Governtuunt For lostane.l: . m. G. vathji, claims the following specific - afnutiats fur hurscs, cattle, anus, Makin, Sri nil $250 ; G75 Jnlin elnittoi 517,5(10 for Inirses. I 'avir-tann Juarez, 510,520 for thy ta s te. Salvador Vallni(i, lOU for tint same. Bruno tiornal.sl,o7sl) fin• la krses and eattle, Vietor (aqr(), S 1'2,912 for hurdos awl cattle. J. .1. Cactro, NI. tr. t.•.:anelloz, ii;),0:;0„ J. It Alvivrillo; 11411,1;115. J. IL “onztilup. V. I': Czoliwz *11,2;11. And many orbc:r various 9umA, from $5OO up to s2o,thio for t t,4! Katt It! speelesuf property. Now, as Fremont had a very Fmflll lOree 11117 dor-hi s command in 'California. iii Dviti—'47, we may V.TII inquire what heetuno of the ha toense number of horses and cattle which - he pretended to have bought fur the use of goy y erntnent? The board, ofollicers who made the report from whioh the above' statement is copied, evidently re,2:orded the greater portion of the claims as fraudulent, in:um - inch as they re commend the \payment of only $8,1_211, in ad dition to the'Kl4l►,2.ldalready paid-or SPA -3f15 in all----hoim4 /e than one,vixth of the anmunt claimed. by Fremont to be due from the United States Uovornment to those very honej, gentlemen runt sharpers With whom Ife associated himself on his arrival 'in Cali fornia in 1846. The average price paid for horses in Cali ! foruia in 1846-'47, was $2O apiece—for cat tle, $8 apiece, At this rate, the simplest reader will perceive that an enormous num ._lier_ofhorses no cattle must lolvtillean_fain.! isherl to Fremont, to justify him in presenting the eiaims referred to _in- the Report.of the Board of Officers from which our extracts are doris ed. Yet our whole force in California fur which their supplies are presumed to be I furnished, was extremely small. -It was cer tainly not over 1000 men. What disposition could so small a.foree make of more than half a million of dollars worth of horses and cattle in one year? • The Truth at Last-•-Read. -We have said, long ngo, that the philan thropy of the Muck Republicans was all bosh. They are hypocrites of the darkest dye— blacker than the blackest nigger they pre tend to worship, It is not to prevent the ex tension of slavery they are fighting, not ft - A - chit of it, but.simply to attain political power.— li ad they the pow or they would plant slavery in Kansas to-morrow, if by so doing they could elect Fremont and I>ayton. The leaders of the party are odd, calculating politicians— speculators in stocks and lands—who care less for a soul than they do for a dollar, and who would-sell a negro as soon as they would a sheep, if they eouhl ''put money in their purses" hy the operation. The honest people of the country aro daily humbugged by thom,_ and unless they pause soon nod leave the ranks, they will become the instruments of treason and disunion in the hands of a set of cowardly scoundrels who will desert thtlta in the first monnAtt of danger. Dr. Cutter, a Yankee lecturer on Kansas trauHes. at a recent fusion meeting at Mont pelier, Vermont, let the cat out of the bag in such a way that none but the wilfully wicked or h•polossly blind can fail to sco the animal. lie slid: "IE YOIT WOITLD CARRY THE ELEC TION NExT Nov EmBEN KEEP BLOODY OPT I .I.ItIES is KANSAS BEFORE THE EY ES OE E PEOPLE. YOU . HAVE NO OTIIEI PLANK. sETTLE THIS QUES TION AND YOU ARE DEFEATED." Peoplo Ponn: , yhvania—vitizens of tho tjuiou—opon your ours to the truth. • ..- -, T-Tho.linow Nothings hold their County Novinathig Convention to-day, The meet ing: for the eheien .of Delegates in this Bor on:1i ;Lod Cumherland township, were, as we anticil:ated, altogether in the old hands—tln very mon ulm controlled the dark lautern said meotin,42.:s. It is he /ton the Penusylown4/1 $24,7'50 143,301 MOM lieep 11 Before the People, tlv3 tertnn of the Sic bill Tor the pa, eilloation of Kazuw4 wore prop/ounce(' by John , P. llnle t.,0 be unexecepuoinwh;; ul , yet the Mork opp*se : this hill :Lb(' thoso 'lnca! laws which (;en. Clts3 deJumnees 'AA unworthy of the age ; !,,ct the Blade Ikpublu a,IY 011e,.q.e —That it abolklies thiHe ofttlp; wliieh the Kanikas legislature itapoi , ed as to the fugitive kdave bill; yd the • llepalicans oppose, it: —That it abolishes all objectionable qualifica . - tions as to the manner of voting ; and yet the Herthlicans oppose it • —That it also prohibits the Kansas legis lature from enacting similar lawl4 in future ; and yetTMe Black Iteptib!ream won it —That it provides that ali Actual - settlerA driven out of Kansas may return and vote ; and yet 1119 Black Thrthlicans. (ippon : —That it provides for the protection to the settlers of the whole army of the United States to uphold this law; and yet Me Black Republican:l oppnBe Rat. November the Time to Drive Them! Rev. Dr. Bethune, in his address on the 4th, at the inauguration of the statue of Wash ington, in Union square, New York, spoke as follows of the Father of his .Country, our Union, and of those who would - tear it asun- "God made him and gave him tons, in him self the type of what our republic should be, in all his elements great, oven, consistent— .etteh -yigorous-in-its own action, - yet - all held in harmonious balance , by the unity of a single purpose. No wonder lum work survived him. Survived him ? No. He still lives, though his mortal frame has long been dust. tied, who gave, kept that life with us, fot when that spirit is lost, when our elements revolt from their oneness, foul, like the maniac among the tombs, w hosei devils were legion, we cut and tear ourselves, this fair confedera cy will soon lie beneath the heavens the most mangled, loathsoml: corpse that ever polluted the.hrertth of humanity with its petrification. 0, for the God of' our Cabers to drive them out and down into the sea of an infamous oblivion. ' November ides will do this, Doctor. Vox populi will then be, if it never has been before, vox Del. Into that deep sea the people will then hurl the disenionists. f boll and persistent falsehood will elect Fremont, he - will not hick fur votes. We have shown ILOW false is the Republican boast that the Germans are going for Fremont ; and there is the hest reason to suppose that if they make false representations in (Memo they will in another, - The numher of Germans in the United States who will turn Know Nothings for the sake of Fremont is, we suspect, rather small. Will they support a man who is pi t dyed lo proscribe ihon / Fremont I..?l)l , dgecl body owl breeches to the Know Nothing part f. Let the Germans ask for the secret agreement which he signed with the Know Nothings at New York. le-Nebraska appears to ho filling up with large bodies of emigrants, mostly young men. They go.with the plow and. the axe in hand, and not Sharpe's rifles, This may account for tho peaceable and secure settlement_of th e. territory, in such striking contrast to Kansas, which was commenced With swagger and vio lence, and has continued 'with trouble and outrage-ever sink nerThe llartford (Connecticut) Times thus boars testimony to the talents, 9.tperience, and exalted patriotism of the Democratic candidate for the Presidency : "The life of Mr. Buchanan has been a life of (Votion to the country, and very much of it has been spent in tho country's service.— Few men, even of hiS advanced ago, have boon bottor 'trained in civil affairs, or are more il lustrious for commanding power of intellect. We look upon him, and the country and the world look upon him, as one of the ablost and most aceomplishod of the -statoqmon of his age; an ornament of his country's legislative halls, and a respoeted, able, and dignified reprosen t—aEVo of country in foreign courts. it , ‘Z-Tite Natienal lll9cm:ex' says : "Mr. Buchanan is a man of character, of stainless private life, and of long and varied experience in public affairs." It says if the anti-Demo cratic power of the country should fail to beat him, "they may still hope that his success will give to the country a President wlio will prove a friend to the Union." Ek'F.:llr. Joseph hiss has Wined up again. fie is a supporter of Fremont and "American ism," and has Loon chosen a. delegate to the State Convention of the Fremouters from the first Ward of Boston. ..Keep it vp . —One of the abolition N. N. ep Rublican writers from Lawrence, Kansas, to the N. Y. Times, says to the editor : "You must keep up the Kansas excitement. It is the only element of success for the Re publican party in the coining Presidential election." llow'Can an Old Litte Whig Vote for Fremont ? It is said that John. C. Feenirml, the Black Republica - I candidate, remarked: "Sir, 11wec lief, I 011 Mirk Beef awl Gra.ll,,,pper ri es , b u t WHIG Principles-sicken and di . ..vitst the more 'bon either." rlow, then, can any who ever had any respect fur "Whig principles" vote fur the Abulition candidate? Republican Sentiment, The True American, ono of the Republican organs in this county, in its last issue, in eornmonting; upon Jwlge Thompson's speech llvt week, iudnigei in the following atrocious sentiments: "The twaddle about the `Liiio/1' an il its .preserratian' istm and sickening for any good effect." The preservation of the Union is "tAraddle." is "siekeninl. - , , " and "sil ly;" according to this Rentwit organ ! Again, continuo the Amerivan, "Put we think the liberty yf a since re(4clll more Ann AL L THE UNIoNS (Jon's UNIVERSE TAN nail?! " llf this is not treason and profanity condensed aantl combined, we klloW nOt what is. And yet it is the sentiment of an organ of tho republican party of Erie county.—Erie - full Filler re eleet4 , ral ticket _lfe7 , r)whoty Patedity,—Mr. Ifarris, an nominated in Indiana on the ltitit, the "Re- ' neer, killod at the time of the recent collision pni.licaos" having in vain, tried to pre out it. on the North Pennsvlvania Railroad, was tim an 1 1_1,__(.....3,=,0,1eir_e for thir+l,44on-4-hif, visjri ac c; toe State at large. Filfinoro w ill got a , Gents. It is slated that there are two broth -I,h, ‘ ,.t e in ...ton,. parts f Indiana, i , ut lie- ers of anotlosr family now in the employ of tho clianan Hill. Lunt hiLa and Freinuitt put to- ReaditPB . Rwlruad QaClt of wheat It‘t4 lust a gt.tt,t..r 1 loe4l i'filiciits. SEVERE TIIUNDER STOlMS.—Several severe stornss of thunder and lightning visited this region during the put week, the heavy rains attending Chun being s adly needed by the parching vegetation, New life is visible on every side, and the hopes for a fair cons ele(rp are again revive& The storm of Tuesday evening was regard ed as one of the most terrific that has oecur red here for years ; yet little or no damage was done by it in this neighborhood. In the ad joining counties, however, heavy destruction of property ensued, five barns being burnt in Cumberland county, and - several in Franklin► county. Benjamin M'Keehan, of West Penn : . horo!' township, Cumberland county, lost his entire-crop of hay, wheat, rye and oats, about 900 bushels of last year's corn, and a number of farming implements. His loss amounts to ss,ooo—no insurance. lye learn from the Westminister Demoirlit that during the thunder storm on .Tuesday night, a fine barn, owned by Mr. Dennis Grymes, in the vicinity of Finksburg, Carroll county, Md., was struck by lightning and de r stroyed, with its contents. A number of in dividuals were stunned and made sick. The valuable barn of Mr. John Thompson, in thb vicinity of Taneytown, was also struck by • r I I r_o_y_ed„logether • contents, consisting of his crop, five head of horned cattle, four excellent horse's, Ace.; on which there was an insurance of $5OO. Loss $4,000. The barn of,Mr. Altoff, in the same neighborhood, was also destroyed; Loss un knoivn. Four horses ftnd a colt, valued at $lOOO, the property of Abraham Martin, near the Spring Forge Mills, York county, were killed.while standing under a tree in an open field. The point of the lightning rod to the barn of Mr: David Shriver, in Cumberland township, was melted off.. A small dog in ono of the cells of the jail here was singed on one side, and it is the opinion of the per Son who was nearest to him at the time, that it was caused • by lightning. The storm was an extensive one, despatches from Cincinnati, New York, and Boston, giv; ing accounts of destruction by the lightning. THE NAMES of tho three miners who lost their lives at the Caledonia Pond Bank, on Wednesday week, are stated as David Miller, Edward .Kane and James Murray. Miller was aged about twenty - years the other two about thirty-five years. Two wore single and one a married man. The particulars of the occurrence were given last week. • RAILROA.D.—Messrs. WARREN & NOUS itt, on Wednesday last, commenced work on the Railroad immediately east of Carlisle street, and have a good force (:)f hands. mph g ad, -Work along the entire tine is, since hat- vesting is over, again vig,orously pushed for ward, and at least halfof the road will be grad ed before many weeks. geir-The Chambersburg Transcript ; says there aro ono hundred visitors ut CaltAleniu Springs, D -1 7-The difficulty between Mr. Brooks and Mr. Burlingham, of the House, at Washing ton, has not resulted in - a duel after all. Mr. Burlingham, in accepting the challenge of Mr. Brooks, named the "Clifton House," ia Canada; as the place of meeting. and imme diately started east—but Mr. Brooks didn't see proper to pursue such a wild goose chase, and of course-did not follow. Burli ugh= e, though said to he a pod shot, certainly show od feather," in naming•the place.- SkirMon and women are traversing the - country in every direction, making speeches and begging money in aid of Kansas. A.Kan sag ,correspondent-of the New York Post, (an . boll ti tm-pa per,-)---whom---the-)ditor-endor-ses--- as highly respectable, says “not a dollar of any of Me money subscribed in Me East ha t s ever reached these parts!" . ge".The "explorations" of Fremont in Ore:;. gon and California -were judged of so little im portance by Dayton, his associate on the Prey idential ticket, that he 'voted on August the, sth, 1848, against an appropriation of W.:- 000 to continue and complete them. The Mariposa Grant.—tive Oak anti fipples. It is, agreed upon by certain high-contract;- ing parties, chiefly editors and that in the - event of Fremont's election, the whole power of the government shall be exer— cised in driving off the squatters from the Mariposa grant, thus securing the spoils ; also, that the claim Fremont has against .the United States for $900,000 shall be inconti nently confirmed, though it has hitherto been rejected w ,fraudulent. In, such a happy event, what a ridieulong sight it wilt be to see Brethren Greeley and Bennett, James Watson Webb and George Law, arm-in-arm, parading their beautiful persons at the White (louse ! how we apPleti will swim ! Live Oak, too, will take a rise in market ! Wall street, stand from under ! Exchange. ,Pl',D-Among other silly mottoes displayed at a late Know Nothing Fremont meeting in Ilartfbrd, was the following : • "We neither knock down Senators nor shoot Irish waiters I" Oh, no l you hang no Senators in - elOgy fir "freudorn of ITeeoli" iu Conim-tieut, and shoot no Trish and German voters in Cincinnati, St. - Louis, Louisville And ICew Orleans: on burn no Ursuline Convents, "Hiss" no timid girls at Catholi. institutions: rob no churches,. Oh, no rvric Daily New.. More Nominatiwo.s. —The "Bible Times," a religious publication issued in Baltimore by the Rev, Thos. 11. Stockton, nominates nil on its own responsibility, Jndge ,IPLean for tho Presidency, and Hon. Theodore Frelin,g- Luyson, of Sew Jersey, for the Vice Presiden cy.—Ll'hil, Amer.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers