1111:=11 BY HENRY 'J._ STAIILE, 38 1 " YEAR. ' Terms of the "Compiler." .fiErThe Republican Cornpiler is published every Monday morning, by lEENuY J. STAIILE, - at $1,75 per annum if in advance—s:2,oo per annum if not paid in advance. No sub scription discontinued, unless at the option of the publisher, until. all arrearagcs are paid. tar Advertisements inserted at the usual rates. Job Printing. done„ neatly, cheaply, and with dispatch. ger Office in South Baltimore street, direct ly opposite Wampler' s Tinning Establishment., one and a, half squares from the Court-house, "Conrasa" on the sign._ . . A RALLYING' SONG, AIII-" DAN ITCKER.'' Come,join our throng, ye patriots true Come swell the Democratic crew; Come, gird your country's armor on, And fight until the victory's won, Get out of the way! for Thick is lucky, Get out of the way' for Buck is lucky, Get out of the way ! for Buck is Incky, And so is Breck, of alit Kentucky. The good old party stitud , ; once more, Just us it Mood in days of yore ; /t knows no dread, it feels no Tear, Its tiorizou is bright and clear. Chorus—Get out of the way, B:.c Brave hearts are twetedrfor 6f equal rights-and equal laws; Free wen are mustering; for the fray, . And Buck and lireck must win the day. Chorus—G-et out of the way, &c. The mongrel throng of every shade, IVhielt and plunder have arrayed,. Will vanish like the morning dew, Before our statemnen tried and trap, ettorttA—Get otit of the way, he They . rallied strong. in forty four, We VaLK ED them then WI they were sore ; ItS* CIWKD them La I in°Lifty-two. itud now we'll BUCK and blue. - elLorws--(it,t out Ql the way, ke..- The "woolly horse" com never run Agminqt the "Keystone's favorite .lon; " Fe humbugged Barrel in. as you, know, But he .An't, cheat the people so: Chorus—G et out of the way, A:e show Your Passports. About ten.days ag , l, thepa , zseng:ers on the fast line to Baltimore were arouied 'from their. half sleeping condition by a practical joker, calling out suddenly in the cars. “Show your ►ssports." The joke had a telling effect.— The train ha , / just passed by the Claymont 'Station. which is near the dividing line Le tween d)ennsvlcania and Delawarc......betwe" the North and the SotU.h.. F.very one who knew this fact, rAimazenced a commentary with p o n_the_free_rand_ Amu, s ete ( intercourse, and commerce enjoyed by the citizens of this country over the broad and populous States guarded by onr common Con- E‘ery_oite was eloquent upon the advantages of our ,Sys , teta. over that which pi:el:ails in Europe, where a milihiry guard, and officers of the revenue, confront the trav eller at, di e frontier cifevery petty kingdom and principality. llut the soleant fact which prompted this bagatelle expre-Ision, viz: that the first step towards a seletration of -tile States of the Republic, has already been taken by an organized party in the North, gave. se xtons interest and point to the discussion ; :and there- was not one in that company who did not have a more realizing sense of the im pending &L. Liget., when he contemplated that at no very distant day he might in reality be confronted at Naaman's Creek by the stern salute—" Short your passpoTts."—Pennvien. ti-V''Think X3l iy, citizens of Adams county ! :link of it, eitiz.eirs-of—lederick-attil- Caxroll counties! Were the Union dissoh?ed, the freiiintercuurse which now exists between you would be Abridged.. .A system of "pass ports" would awake you Jihnost strangers.— The best markets, Maryland and Virginia, I,r the prOducts of the mechanical labor of this very own ofGettysburg, would be cut cir by a line then impassable. 'flu NK OF IT ! =BE henry Clay and Jame. Bnehanan.—Some of the worst of the fusi.on journals represent that 31r- Clay had great cause of complaint against 111 r. Buchanan, growing out of the "coalition" correspondence, more .than thirty years ago. Yet this isi-zAtesly annihilated by the recorded opinions of Mr. Clay—by his known cordiali ty towards Mr. Buchanan for many years and up to the time of his death—and by the fact that his -son, now diving at Ashland, is a sup porter if "Buck and Breck." So fall, one by one, the opposition calumnies before the force of a pure character and the resistless power of truth! Knotr.Yozliagism, and Wad; Rcpublicani.s.m. —The Albany Register,* leading Know No 'thing paper, says that "everywhere, except in New York, these two titles [Know Nothing ism and Black Depublicaaistn] are indissolu bly joined together in a holy wedlock." The tegister further says: "If Fremont is elected the country will owe the ..-inwica.a party a debt of gratitude : for it is not doing injustice to other noble advocates of free soil to say that the American organiza tilix. in the Fast and West is the backbone of the Republicaa party." BE . rJudging from all that we can see and hear front. Indiana, the whole State„from river to lake, must be is a perfect furor of political excitement.. The Fremouters have evidently waked up the wrong passengers in that gallant State, and they should try to allay the excitement as soon an possible, or the Democratic triumph there will surpass all previous victories. And so let it be_ Ve'lt is said that the betting Democrats in Louisiana are exceellinzly incensed at the Cincinnati Convention for nominating a ticket against whielt nU vu , .; in that. State dares to bet, . . , . r 1 t . • + 0 1 I II) t . • . .- . ' . - - w • . . • . . . r • • - 44, It, 7 " t 3 I r • $ . t. ' . t . . . + i 111 . .: .. . ~. /tj:tl;tvotltr__ • ~..$ VcAmsplipei----Deboieo iii4o(cfs, Toe4l :10 eicvii-41 &e. From the Crisis r.~ ; t `' CORRESPONDENCE OF TIIE COMPILER. CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts, August 9th, 1856. To the Editor of the Cwn pikr: The Presidential contest is approaching ing, and as the readers of the foutpiter are equally with the whole country , interested in the issue, it may be , interesting for them to know bow the Democratic cause is prospering in the North. I propose with your permission to take an impartial survey\of the field and offer a few considerations which I hone will not be entirely devoid of interest. Whilst the Democracy of Pennsylvania are or.•,ranizingfor the striiggle" with inspiring hope, animated by an honorable feeling of state pride in be : half - of - h - erfaverite sen-,- for the -last-half cell tury their honor and their pride; their breth ren of New England are not slumbering on their arms, neither in imagined security from the desperate enemy which surrounds them, nor in hopeless despondency of success. Al though to you belongs. the honor of giVing to the Democracy of the Union its noble standard bearer, we intend to possess with you in com mon, the honor.of placing him in the most ex alted position in the gift of any people. We stand upon the broad platform on which von stand, battle fur the same principle 4 and love the same Union. Although fanaticism and disunion have run rampant, the snirit of De mocraey yet lives, and we firmly believe, lives to conquer. .111 . %ISE last 'year signally rebnk ed the mad spirit of fanaticism which hail swept well nigh over the whole North, and now it is confidently believed that notwith standing the desertion of .the traitor Handin and a few of his miserable associates, the state will go fur-Burk- and—ll-reek by a andsome majority. The remnant of the once honorable national Whig party refuse to join the Black Republican Know Nothing faction, a2L2Ley- Iv declare for the - party of the Union and the Constitution. A majority of the citizens are patriotic and' conservative, and will vote ac cordingly. Set down Maine in the Democratic column. In Ne.w HAM the home of our present patriotic Chief Magistrate, the struggle will be desperate. I. have rei.ently been through the Southern .portion of the State and found' the I hemi)crats awake and in good spirits. But their opponents have pus session of the State °faces and this is the last chance for them to keep them. If they fail this fall s they kniiw full well that the State will return to her good old Democratic faith, and-the spoils will be clean gone forever. In the Spring election there were three tickets in the field, the Democratic, Whig and know Nothing. The latter had but silty-eight plurality, and there now being only two tick ets, the patrhaie Whigs, who generally are opposed to the pros.erilqiye principles (4 . the Know Nothings andthe ahhorent negro equali ty of the Abelit ionists, will ahrost unanimous rttli e_De woe ratin_ticket., Manyliave already avowed their intention so to do, samongst whian are A. P. Hughes, D. D Dodge and W. Sleeper, Ewan. These gen denten are_ammerst the most prominent IVIt4 leaders and eloquent speakers of the State. They have already addressed Demeciati meetings and will do good service in th cause Those are the, gentlemen who secured over 2000 votes for the Whig candidate in the Spring and defeated the Administration candi date, Mr. Wells. The rank and file will fol low their leaders, and the signs of the times indicate that the Granite State will vindicate her honor . by casting, her electoral vote for Buchanan and Breekinridge in November next. The course of the Whigs of CoNNErTict - T is similar to that of their brethren of N. H., and the Democrats here are certain of victory.— Their candidate for Governor last Spring came very near hat jug a majority. of the votes cast in the State, and since that tit e the good cause las Levu cot tuantly gaining strength. But for the oil line Whigs, who execrate the negro party and will never vote for the "romantic mountaineer," .the State would have been triumphantly carried by the Democrats. In this State there will he a Fillmore ticket, and the New York Tribu nn mits that it is one of the most doubtful States in the North. Few here doubt that the State will declare for the Democratic nominees.— Thus the probabilities are that we shall carry at least threeof the New England States.— We will "heard the lion in his den," and teach these fanatics that there is still virtue and pa triotism in the hearts of the people. In the remaining three States our prospects are riot so bright. It is true the Democrats of Ver mont are a noble little band, hut tflis is one of Gen. Scott's States, and the opposition ever has been and I presume still is greatly in the ascendancy. In Rhode Island we made great gains at the last election, but it is doubtful whether our friends there will soon recover from the temporary defeat which affects them. And now we conic to Massachusetts, the head quarters of fanaticism. It is here that the Fugitive Slave law was resisted, and those en gaged in exercising the laws of the country cruelly murdered. This is the 'hot bed of Know Nothingism, so famous fur its 11iss nun nery investigating committee, and this is the State with a treason law upon her statute book, which is called the Personal Liberty Act, and which puts Massachusetts Out of the Union in the opinion of all constitutional men. 'l'llo' foulblot her legislature last winter endeavor ed to wipe from her escutcheon, but failed in their attempt, and it still stands a monument of the treason and fanaticism of the Fremont party of this State. Here they have their political harangues in the pulpit—their Kansas aid meetings, and the highest ambi tion of the Fremonters seems to he to effect the freedom of the negro, regardless of consequen ces and degrade our naturalized citizens whom they deprtve from voting fur twenty-one years, front ever holding any office of trust, and even of forming military companies for the defence of their adopted - country. I lore they clamor for freedom of speech, and hiss in Fennell Hall, on the dth of .1 uly. when the national toast of "The Pre-ident of the Ui,ited States," is offered and responded to and loudly . prate about "free torn," whilst they dis francinse a man because he is a Catholic— thus enslaving the mind of man by the Ino-t abject slavery, and place him upon an e , iastlity of the negro who occupies so largi• a p!a , c in their affections. They do all this, and vet 17T-Tt- the'itarallence to M:Tiit the same in:11- - vhluals whom they a few months a4o pro-. .scrilied by a,kitis; them ti, vote f , ,r their camii dates. This party eloswi the doors hf Mall againbt Dauiel. Webster because he loved GETTYSBURG, PEXNSYLVANIA: MONDAY, AUG. 18, 1856. the Union, 'and how rink his friends and fol lowers to aid them in their erusade against the people of (melba of the , Union. Parker, Philips and Garrison are artiongst their lead ers, and openly advocate disunion, whilst Sumner and Wilson and. the gallant Burlin game go rise Cl "anti-darery conxtitution, en anti-mtarrry tilde, and an anti-slavery God!" These are the principles of the supporters of Fremont in the "old bay State," and .1 am sorry to say they are numerous. There are still considerable will of the Fillmore Americans who will not -be sold to these "Union sliders." and - will vote for their favor ite candidate. The respectable portion of the Whigs, which are yet quite numerous, will support Batehalm, We yet have s',tme hon orable Whigs in Massachusetts. Winthrop, Eyerettand_Choate._stand aloof and will never . join with the - enemies of the Constitution ! So do the"respertable papers, the Courier and Adrertiacr. They scorn the destestable prin ciples of this sectional party. Many of the \', big leaders - of the State have• joined the l'emocratie party ; more than a dozen in the classic city of Cambridge. We will have three tickets iu the field, and of course a tri angular fight. Ift he Whigs are true to their profession., which there is nc reason to doubt, Buck and Bawl: may get at plurality here in degenerate Massachusetts. It - .is true, the Democracy cannot hope for much in such a State. but our opponents are greatly divided. We shall labor to restore-tire State to her an, &ern honer, and leave the rest to the Ruler of the destinies of nations. These facts will give you some idea of parties and their chances of success in the extreme North, where it re tiitires a great soul and a brave heart to be a Democrat: I cannot doubt that we shall emetge from the contest with victory in the first three States I have mentioned, and the people of the Union Win has e cause to rejoice that our sturdy yeomanry still love the whole country, whether NPrth or SOuth. I speak of these States going fer our nominees, nut be cause I 'believe . them necessary elect them, but only , to cheer, you on to renewed vigor in the good old Keystone State, the great battle ground : and to give you some idea of how overwhelming will be the defeat of our politi cal enemie's. I consider Pennsylvania, New York with her united Democracy,.New Jersey, Indiana, Illinois and California,. just as sure for us as any'of the Southern States, every one of which our opponents here concede to us without a doubt. Who can for a moment doubt the final result? Everywhere patriots of all parties are rallying under our banner, on which is inscribed in letters of living light, the Union and - the Constitution; and ,joining the party which knows no North, no South, no East, no West, but the whole country. The party which has for its principles those of the framers of the Constitution, and which lies at the very foundation of our gOVertiment; the right of the people to govern themselves and regulate their own domestic institutions ; the party w ibuounees the ro scription 'of men on account of birth place and religious belief; and thus stands forth the art-at advorate of civil and religious freedom. I hivr diVrelit are theTrinciples of the Black EATtiblican Know Nothing coalition ? They knew only one half of our Ilepublie. The convention which nominated the "romantic traveller" was almost without a representative front the South, and he received the nomination for his hostility to the rights of our - southern brethren. Fremont accepts tiro nominations, one from the proscriptive Know Nothiug, Con vention of New York, the other from the Aboli tionists of Philadelphia, and now stands lie fore the couhtry as their -common candidate and the repre.amtative of their prilicipleS.— Thev form a happy bretherhood., The fin•ni en Seek.:{ to degrade the white Man, the latter labors to elevate the negro in his stead. Om trary to the counsels of the Father of - his Coe latl.y they lime formed a party on ii pure- SVCt1“1111 eXpe - et ef't remont, if at all, by a purely sectional vote, and thus ignore the whole „southern portion of the-con federacy. Who can fail to chose bet \Veen the principles of the two parties? On the one hand is Union, peace and continued prosperi ty, on the other anarchy, disunion and civil - war. A still greater contrast is presented when we compare the camlidates_of the two prominent parties. Buchanan has served his country in a public capacity for more than forty years. Fremont's public services did notlast so many days. The tOrMer has graced our national councils at home, and added hon or to her name at two foreign courts ; the lat ter was Senator for a few weeks, and when his short term expired his California friends in her legislature gave him Seri /1, votes for a re-election as a nmyk of their high app'recia tion of his public career ; and this is the only Ace of any importune° lie has ever filled.— Thus Buchanan has had ample experience as a statesman in our„• national couuc►ls, in her abinet, and as her representative at different foreili,l courts. Fremont is devoid of any ex perience as a statesman and politician, and is known only as a romantic exolorer, with 14reater qualification, f,ir exploring the head waters of River," than piloting the ship of state, which doinands experieneedhands and a patriotic heart capable of respecting the ri! , :hts id' all section, of the Uniffii. Buchanan tress the bosom friet:d of the immortal Jack -4/11 and the lamented Poll:, the great compeer of Webster, Clay and Calhoun : has the wis dom and,Aliguity of age ; trill command the respect of the people, and will allay domestic strife. Fremont is the compeer of Kit Carson, the hardy, energetic explorer, fbr which we respect him, but consider this no qualification f o r the Presidential chair. Ile is voting, am bitious ' and reckless, as his whirl:; life prates, aryl if elected, he must in carryim; out tho principles of his party, open anew the dan gerous agitation of the slavery question more violent than ever, which would assuredly wove disastrous to the country. The eondi- tion Of affairs demands a great and giu man to fill the l're.idential chair and destiny points oat Buchanan the man. .I,sociateil with him on the ti:.ket is theeloquent and 1.44 1 .1 ant .13reekitiridge (Jf Kentucky. Ile lion()red his country in her halls of-leglslation and gall...lit lv niarel.( , l to -her deface (ei the ulain , Slexieo. A young man honored ,rent hnnocrat of native State, he -,vorthz ... nee e,-or to the lament..: , lClar,NVllo“: irL•tril't Ire refire-ented. To the wi;d.,m, exle•rien._:e :Lod con , ervati.m of Buchanan, ho all. tho Ti - ,7 - f7T - 17 ,- i or and prt . • Such is the catt , e and Such are the men whom we have .-electe.l to carry out our great prin ciples. and pure as the eleetitin take.; place on the 4th of Susi:tither, su sun; will they fill ‘ 9 TRUTII IS MIGHTY, AND'WILL PREVAIL." the honorable positions for which they are named. Under. these circumstances what will be the course of the Democrats and honorable Whigs of little Adams ? They performed their duty like MEN last year and their efforts were crown ed with victory. Let them again array them selves in solid column and speak out for,the Union and the Constitution—for civil and re ligious liberty—and march on to triumph.— There is no man who voted the Democratic ticket last fall who is not now bound by ev irl r . • interest and principle of honor to repeat his act of honorable duty.. I know the proscrip tive leaders of the - Know Nothing faction pro= fess an abandonment of their midnight Coun cils and their,bizoted, , and disgraceful princi ples, but they do this only , in their desperation. They via!, have laid them aside for the time being for political effect, hut as soon as the dertion is over they will be if possible more proscriptive than ever. Trust them not, hott est voters: they wont the County offices.— They are now "11/Tll/Worms," and soliciting you who scorned their Know Nothingism to join them. Shun this new vant f , el party :it is even more corrupt than the LATTER. It now becomes all good men who have been. led astray from their former maitical associations to leave the faction which has basely' deceived theta with professions Irfpnrity, honesty and reform, They surely no,yr see that the vulgar soubriquet of" Sam,!," the fear of "Popery and foreign influence" have lost their charm, and that these - same deceptive leaders are determ ined to ride into office on the hack of the -poor negro. llonest men of Adams, stand firm. (live a good account. of yourselves in October and November and 'help to swell the majority of Pennsylvania's great Statesman. B. HON. W.. 8. RE El)'S LETTER. To the Chambershiirg Committee. Hon. Wm. 11. 11EED, ono of the old Whig leaders, lint now an active: Democrat, of Phil adelphia, being. unable to attend the Chain berl.,lurg Alas . s Meeting, has written a strung letter in reply to the Committee of Invitation, in which he uses this striking language: It should go home to the heart of - every citizen of Adams county I remember, years ago, on a 'bright, sum mer's afternimn, toiling up the turnpike road on the Cove Mountain, in your county, and when I reached the summit, turnip! , to gaze on as.beautiful a scene as ever gladdened my eye—the valley of peaceful beauty which stretches off to Maryland and towards the Po tomac. It is a familiar scene to most of you. Cu me it was new, and its impression has never faded from nay Mind. As far as the eye could reach there was fertility—the signs of tranquil industry ; all was beautiful—all was peaceful—it looked, its it was, like the abode of a happy anti uniiiirffTple. - 2 - 1 - I{o -- ptilitical line, separating Pennsylvania from Maryland, traced by those old fashioned surveyors, Charles I Slason and Jeremiah Dixon, was vis ible to no eye. The trees on which they mark ed it had ling been felled or disappeared. Many a farm was separated by it, but, except in the eye of the law, no one knew it or cared about it. I have often—for painful thoughts are thrusting themselvi,s upon me—recalled that scene of actual beanty and united interest, and realised what it would he—what your efai- ditioll )a -- What )1111St be till' !!Ondli ion oi every county of this Commonwealth lying on the Maryland line : Chester, Lancaster, York, Adams, T.ranklin, Fulton, Bedford, Somerset, Fayette and Green ; if disunion be fiirced on us, and the rupture he, as it would be. be tween what arl; popularly but falsely called the,fute and the sht e States, between, ns awl gtrylnitel. I wish every' mancould be made to understand what a frontier is, even that of civilized life, Its daily, hourly vexations and dangers—its line of custom-houses to keep the smuggler in and out—the crowds of fugitives from justice and labor, infesting every a ve n ue and 'concealed in every thicket—the murderer striking down his victim to-day and flying with the fresh blood on his hand to .a foreign territory to-morrow—the bickering, the strife, the hot blood of toterminTium dispute—all this, would be the daily doom of every South ern county of this State ; and across the ,beau tiff!! valley I have spoken of would be distress ingly visible, the actual, broad, perhaps bloody line which disunion must trace. This is true, though hard to conceive. Pennsyl vanbt, and you, citizens of Franklin county, have so long reposed in the very' centre of the Union, that you cannot understand how you can become a frontier and how you will suffer when you do. Mr. Reed further says : The danger ire before us and around us. :1„, a citizen of the North, I have sought to conceal it from myself, but it will nut. down at my bidding,. Ido not draw this inference from the language of extreme men but when I hear a ;Senator from Kentucky—•a Whig Scriator—a moderate and conservative man, within this month, in his place in the Senate, say—"l have never paid much attention to the talk about the dissolution of the Union : Jut I have often thought on the sulject, and my conviction is that the dertiou (or Fremont or any min of that party. is the knell (!f* the U n i 6 , l "—(sppe e lj of Thomson, 2S'utional; Iu lrlli;/rrrwcr,_.July, 17.) When such words as these are uttered, not by the heated South, but by the temperate and loyal Wet, we have a right to say there is danger all very - great danger too. The South on this subject of the Presidency, is not violent or loud, butt it s silence is very ominous and most impressive. Mr. Buchanan stands before the nation—and this is the ground upon which conservative men 811001 , 1 come to his support—as the rep resentatw•s of the principles which alone can avert their evils, that of repression and extir paticn of all agitation on this sulj,,,ct of sla very, let it come front what gotater it may. He has said in simple and canwst language that this will be his aim. It mu ~ t , fur the good Of the nation, come to an end. It can only he pot an and to, by the Strung moral p“wer which a national man can exerei.ie, and at a time when the relations of the Union are not iii-turbe . d but harmonized and reconciled by the expres!lion of the popular will, rebuk . .• - this rchuke the Northern and )liildle States are 11111111t1 to gi VP. \VWD Hat this co-oper ation, 111 r. Ruch:man lnat 'trice and .trive unsuece-,sfully to - stay this noisy current 111:11=61 of political agitation. With it, his tIlle• CeSl is' easy and the peace of the country is secured. It is the conviction of this—aside 'altogether from personal regard—that has brought me and thousands like me to his sup- port. For a Pennsylvania, man—for one 'whose earliest lesson was reverence for the great principle which Venn enunciated, and whose habit's of tfiougnt and education make him adverse to, secret or intolerant po litical organization, there was no other path open. That into - which some inconsiderate people are lam seduced, of what is known as the "American" organization ; can have no at traction lOr me or any eonservative man. lieving,-, as I do, that Mr. Fillmore took more than one initiatory oath in a Know Nothing Lodge, by which he hound himself to proscribe politically his fellow citizens who professed one form of Christian faith,- and those who happened to have been born abroad, and to confinnu his opinions and regulate his polit ical action by the decision of a secret, oath bound political club, I cannot vote for him. fly antipathy to this secret and ttnconstitu al organization is no new feeling; I spoke it out long. ago ; I shall. never change it. As line of the leaders of this party of intolerance, 'as one who gave to it the authority of his name and past position, I hold Mr. Fillmore respon sible fur a deep wound to the cause of politi cal morality. If there is one thing about which the people of this country are and ought to be sensitive; it is - their right to worship -God as they-please: -They claim to,wership Gal under such forms of ecclesiastical disci pline as they choose to enforce upon them selves,—with such ceremonial, simple or elab orate, as they, please, on suck days and in sucb plact!s as they choose for themselves, And this great privilege of religious duty the Con stitution guards and proteets. It is equally the privilege of all. There is not a Protestant who is not as nuich interested in guarding this constitutional right as the Catholic Christians whom Mr. Fillmore, and his secret confeder ates, have sworn to proscribe.- •It was, Ire heat, the worst wound ever inflicted on polit ical morality in this country when these se cret associations of religious intol erance were created. It was IL sad spectacle when a statesman like Mr. Fillmore joined them. Regretting once more that I am unable to he with you, and to say what I have thus written, - lam very respectfully, your friend, B. REED. Vote for Fremont or be Discharged. . We clip the following item from an ex ",Ve quote from the Staten Islander how (lovernor Clark's health officer goes in lift Whoever is einployed to work on vessels at quarantine must solemnly promise' to vote liar Fremont. Last week two poor iernmus were diTsulairgod - for - the-tenormons- 1 crime of attending a Democratic meeting l" As Good as a Nigger. "Arc you for Fremont?" asked a dark party hack, As he tniped a IC. N., with a smile, on the hack, With a smile that soon spread to a snigger "No, sir," he replied, "for -Fillmore I go ; A little, reflection has taught we to know That a white main's as good as a nigger:" llr It is a favorite trick of the Disunionists to take votes in the ears packed with men going. home from Freer nit meetings, to make a show of strength. Not long since much a vote ta nk place, and the Fremonters had a de cided maturity. honest old farmer of German descent thereupon remarked: "Volt it vas shmtst so in Jackson's time. 1 (travelled in de stages and de wotes vas all against him. And ven I ►travelled in 1852 i►t_ite steamboats and de cant de wotes vas - all for Scott,—but yen ye got to de polls ve had 'em." EirA good story is told of an officer in the American army, during the war of 1812—'14, who was and is still, more accutinnucii to the use of the sword than the pen., While sta tioned on the Lake frontier, two of his soldiers, by the name of Kennedy, and usually called KannadY, deserted. The officer of whom we arc speaking, wrote an order i , and issued it to a subaltern, to take a file of men, and proceed to a place named, and take the two CanadaB. The order was peremptory, and not to be trifled with. The officer locket at his instructions, and prepared to Obey them, hut he remarked that he did not believe lie could take more than one of the provinces without a reinforcement I le"A grand international Fair is in con templation in Buffalo, N. Y., to be held early in September. - "It is proposed," hays the Bo pu "to ,offer prizes to the amount of be tween $15,000 and $20,000, for which all the citizens of the United States and Canada wilt be alloWed to compete, in all the varied and extensive departments of agricultural - and mechanitad industry." Aibrnon Hnsbandx.—One of the Mormon women 1019 wits is the coinpany of the late crowd which passed through our town for Salt Lake we learn had no less thun four hus bands. She is said to have been an intelligent looking individual. She contended that WO WWI have as good a - riglit to have a number of husbands as a man has to hare as many wives as he provided the men were all mem bers of the Mormon Church. There is noth ing like making circumstances suit occasions, fnd these Mormons appear to have a peculiar aculty for Such transactions.—//ock Islander. SThe editor of a paper in Schenectady, in describing the effects of a squall upon canal boat, says that "when the gale was at its highest, the unfortunate craft heeled to larboard, and the captain and another cask of whiske rolled overboard." Impertinent.—Lady (in fashionable dress) —"Little buy, can I go through this gate to the ril er ?" Boy--,"Perhaps. A load of hay went thro' this morning." W ag gery wag in New York, seeing a man driving a tack into a card; through the . word "110 , 4 ton" printed on it, seized the latter and exclaimed: "Why, what are you about? Jhn't you know that laying tax on tea in. Thlstaa raised a thundering inu.sti there ?" TWO. 130 L tS A-YEAR. HON. JOSIAH RANDALL'S Speech before the Democratic State-Convention, Held at ChatUbersburg, Aug.. 6, 1856. In obedience to the request of the Demo cratic . Stote Convention of Pennsylvania, .I claim the attention of my fellows-citizens fir a short time. lam aware that I have received this courtesy because I have heretofore been *a member of the Old Line Whig party.- ' In 1824-5, the Democratic and Whig par ties were Separated by no question of prlnci ple, but were. divided upon the question, whether Gen. JACKSON was entitled to be elect ed President of the United States. In ,tho progress of time, during the thirty years of the- existence of the Whig party, several itn , portant principles were presented, and the two parties became distinct and independent' of each other upon questions of public policy. Those were: 1. The ienewal of the charter of the Bank of the United States. 2. The Sub-Treasury. 3; The Distribution of the Proceeds of the Public Lauds. 4. -The Tariff. - A "National Bank" was abandoned by the Democratic party, under the veto of Gen. JaercsoS, in 1832, and by the Whig party in 1844. ','The Sub-Treasury," the cardinal measure of Mr. VAN BUREN, was opposed by the Whig party, but has fought itself into-public favor, and no one now wishes to disturb it. "The Distribution of the proceeds of the Pnblic Lands" has been superceded by the debt created by the Mexican war. "The Tariff" no longer remains either a political or geographical question• the- last Congress exhibited the spectacle of the "Statb Rights" men of the South and the Republican Abolitionists of the North, : united against Pennsylvania, without distinction of party,- to reduce the tariff below its present standard. If there remain any practical disputable principle, which constituted an issue between the Democratic hnd the old Whig parties, I do not know it. The Whig party has performed its duty, and has had its day. It has been prostrated- by the organization of the American party, or the I(Now NOTIIINd ORDER.-, They and. not the Old Line Whigs have been the Executioners.. They have renounced their old cognomen, laid aside their old principles, and substituted in their place a new name and a new creed, never heretoforerecognized byClav, WESSTER, SEW. GRANT or their noble Compeers. I know there are many intelligent - and pa triotic men who cherish the hope - that the Whig party can again be resuscitated, but the hope is delusive, and it is pernicious, because it deprives the country of a large • portion of intellect and worth, which ought to be brought into the public service. • In the history of our Republic, no party broken down has 'everyet been re-organized. .The fate of the Federal ATiti-Mitsonie pities eatillilishes thin fret. There is not at this time a Whig member of the popular branch of. Congress elected by a Whig vote. There is not a member of the Legislature of Pennsylvania elected by a Whig vote. There is not a member,of the Copneilst of the City of Philadelphia elected by a.,Whig vote. For the last two yearsovith but two exceptions,- wherever the scattered members of the Whig party met in council, they have felt their position, and have, therefore, wisely abstained from, forming a Ticket to be voted for at the Tolls. In - New HampOire and Massachusetts they at the polls, and the result was paucity of numbers and total defeat. But, I ask, what good would be deriv ed from the re-organization and triumph, of the Old Whig Party ?—They do not Want, a National Bank., They do not desire the re peal of the Sub-Treasury. -The most ardent friends of the Tariff do not ask for the re-es- triblishment of the High Tariff of 1828, or oven of 1842 ; but all they ask is, that the Tariff shall stand - where it was placed in 1846 by the casting vote of the' Vice President, Mr. IfAtt.As. All the old issues haVe been settled, and as a natural consequence, now parties have sprung up, and new issues have been formed. The Order of Know Nothings have violated the letter and spirit of the VI Arti cle of the Constitution of the United States, which declares that "No religion's test shall ev er be required as a Qualification to any Ice or Public Trust under the United States; , they have established secret societies, secret oaths and obligations. With these principles the Whig party in its days of power and numeri cal strength, had no sympathy nor affiliation, and there is no part of the Union where the Whigs were more inflexible in opposing those political heresies than in the State of Pennsyl vania.- In 1845, when the Whig party met in the City of Philadelphia, after the defeat of Mr. CLAY, the duty of opening the, meeting and setting forth their principles was committed to me. I held in my hand at that meeting, the charter .of Rhode Island, granted to Roger Williams,. which contains the broadest and most comprehensive declaration of religions LIBERTY AND EQUALITY Over yet penned. I read its eloquent and energetic platform and said, "Tills IS VIE DOCTRINE OF TILE WHIG PAR TY," and pointing to the ruins of the Roman Catholic Church of St. Augustine, burnt dur ing the disgraceful riots of 18 , 44, and which lay within a few yards of the place of meet ing, I added, "THERE IS ITS DESECRATION." There is not a nook nor corner in the vast-re gion of. our country which 'does not contain Old Line Whigs who are willing to stand by the Constitution and the Union. But their numerical strength is far exceeded by_ their patriotism, talents, and public spirit. This is the body to which I have been attached, and I feel the deepest interest in thmourse they shall pursue. The Republican party is SECTIONAL, and its success must, in my judgment, lead to a sev erance of the Union. I do not believe that the great mass of that party anticipale this re sult; but if it should be _consummated, their regret will be no equivtdent for the damning; injury thereby inflicted upon this great Re public. I appeal to every Old Line Whig in the Union to avert this calamity. The South cannot and will not remain in the 'Union, un less their rights are guaranteed b them. If we were in the same situation, we would de mand our rights in tones as imperative and mandatory as those which are nov used b our Southern bret ren. How i 3 this great evil to avoitleil? I an swer. hy`tlie election 01 - I‘tr.. Buchanan. -Eve ry vote given to him is a check to the progres DM ''NO. 47.