•IfFiNkrf .1. S'I'AIILE • , s In in and 1 ) v the Aet of the Cell i( 0 er, i t As. p:: 1 1 ortitiz Sta:e, _entitled, "Au aet ttl re Goner/11 Hc.etion , , o f teolete 1 on the 241 of .1111 y, it is enjoined 'on fl to give Public :Notice of, hu..,11 illen•Lion to I.e 11.6 , 1, and .to eituuter4te in ...twit not:ce are to 101 oie.tred 4 111.0)1.AS, Sin:riff of l'oo County of do, dierel , fre, liereLy 01101)41)RO 11;itice to the Elev.turs, of the v,Co.i'tiounty of Adams, Iliat a GENERAL ELECTION will 'he heft in said C.,n»tv.' on the Second Oe•Mber next, (111-.• Mk.) in the several .1 - Yistriets composed of the following TOwnship4, - In tho - First - di•ltrict - compoSed-of-the-Bor-- (Orh of Gettysburg and the township of Cum betiand, at the Conrt-house, in Gettyshtwg. In the Scowl district, composed of tho township of Germany, at the house how oc vitpiel by Levi Kreps, in the town of Littles town, in tho township of Germany. In the Thir4 district, composed of the town ship of Oxford. at the house of Widow in, die town of New Oxford. in the • Fourth .district, composed. of the townships 'of Latimore and Huntington, at the hone of Caleb B. Hildebrand, in the township of Huntington. In the Fifth 41i , strict, composed of the tolk-n -.s. hip,iiffi,gniltoahan and Liberty, at the Pub -11.: S.:hool-house in 'Millerstown. In tho Mi r th district, composed . of the town --ship of l klntiiton, at the house now occupied Lc David N ewcotuvw, in the torn of F.ast Ber;in. In tlic : Stn - enth district, composed of the town-itip Monallen, in the Public School . boo-.e in - the town of Bentlersville. :In Ole district, composed of the ffiwnsi:ip of at the house of L. eftra , 4. ill ifunterstou - u. Ih 11,c N loth district, comnosed of the of Frankli:t. _ir the house fOrtuPrl , ,. or: /tied Jacrdi Stallswitb, in said town- t•-.1;'; ) :1:1 the Tenth district, eotnpoe3 of th e town -Bh-4) orl:ionowit?..o, at the of John Bus- M . :-S herrr qown. n the rateventh • disfriet, crimposed of the of-TVl'ol3e, at the itkru4e of Saint:el . - 1:t" the '1 welfth district, composed of the towiF,?tip of ninift . loy, at the I.l(juse of Lieu. 6 . „,,,„1„ ; - , toWl:Ship. tree Thirteenth diFtriet i composed. of the town hip o f NFintitpieasitrit, -- at the — puhl - ie - Si.hoori-liote in sail towasilin, situate at the cross r05..(1.. rite. one le,:i•Aing from 07,furd to - the Two Taverns, the other from Hunters . 'ln the Fourteenth district, composed of the t it—lding,..at the 'lanai!' School 11et.e I o' dktriet. etitnnosed of the anti town••liip of ..I.3,rvt -^ io-k, at the ri;;C:.• in Anii-iott,itown. I :) ti.:„Nre,r•oth ei rue Frced:nu. at the huu , ,e ,Titz.iti said towo,ltili.. th'.'? Seventeen; h of t',e towii r diip ~ f Union, ai the 1.161 . ."! Uf 'Enoch Le::>rer tl t,n town:iitip, c!cmpo,ed of the o , ii in (.f Llut Ter, at the pubfic ;•,chool-Loze , e in sail wilic.f.t;com 1)e ( .11( .4.1 . 1 .A • ()14. : ' . . 111 ' 1 + 74 r (7 ro! fizz talie. , J ft ; 0 Jim , a.O re ,Ni' 'Oar. !: ill:// Or tilt to represpilt th, Dis tl-4,°! OM Itt ()AS Rct la, II 'fluid,Fit/ 14,1 d ~ an : ..lf vide?' /!! Neilot , !. represent tikr a itd Frattl.litt ; Otte-i iI &lei:- fir Adams ..c . citztd ; J , ; , ;44-I,de ; • (ire Audi/or ; 014 e. rfrclor tlll- l'oor ; hte Did ...1/ . loruey ; aud Orie. County Surveyor. ,PiertieuLtr attention Is ireo e pa , se:l the 27th day of February, eatitle.l "Am art relative to votiog. at is Adativz. 1);. York - , Lareeas ter, Cazdoer;aa(l,, Brath'ord, Ceatfe, Urceuc, Faie.." viz : St. :tins: I, ISst it enacted hr the &mate and Hone of ~r the Cananonw..llth of Ikenn:vlranitt in oil Ate,-...tdv met. and it is hi rebv ;tnactted by the au. thorax of toe 53...4 , it «hai I Ile for tli.• Qu.ilitird vot.- , of tho ntie,-,f A 1 1).4 opt,' .11' - im'4lin. Cu .nht•rland. iSr•uiferl, theat re. G reeu,!.. and Erie, from and after the 11.0 , ,tia!le of this art. to vote for ail caret i. d iteei for the ve rioue „Hire, to he fille , l at an eketiou on one ; dip or tie t -..-Provilit 1. TL'. ofilee for which every eandi• d ito is vot e l tor. -hall be dcyic'n dot, ati required by the I IRi o - th!, •Cornmona eal k SIL , 71 , 0 i 711 it any fr en 1 ro,ll.l3itto Iby any person voile in t In tatter above pre , eribed, hall be pa tiishedby the exiatirg Itiwo of the: Co.:involve ilth tat by virtue of the 14th q , ttiou ~f• the vt ni,,rt 61. evoi y pzr•ton., elceptlog .111‘tirev..f the Peace, 1 , i v . •hall'hillit tiny office, or &prelate teat 4,f profit or treat on Iv; tIo:G aye rain.tet of the United States, ..r of any City In",,rpqrs.t.• I .11,rr4f.t. ckl,l , •ther a coova' ,, to:kd oflieer or GCherC i-P, a •aiteirdinate officer or agent, 'oho is, or 'shill he ertptnti en ter the legislative, eLectitive or Jo liciary 40.- p irtint rit of thin St ite, or of the I.Tniled States. or of any city or itcorporatetl district, and also that every member of C ing7eAs .111,1 of the State I.oislatuee. ant of the Select or C'oin•n*.n Conneil o f any City, or Cioniniasioner of coy in corporated iiivtnet. ix by law incapable of holding or exer cisititg at tile stile time, the oi!I'-v or appointment of Jul,, InApec4tr, or Clerk of any election of Ulla Corntriony ealtb, an I that no dodge. Inspector. or other officer of any such election, shill be eligible to any - office to he then vote I for, ' ALso—That in the, fourth- section of the Act of entitle 1 ^Ati Aet relating to et eentions, and for otter pur po'ses'.'' approved April 16th. lti4o. it is enaetod that the aforesaid 13th section —4llllll'ot be con , kued, a, to prevent an v miltti,t , iffrcer or borough offreer. from nervintr a judge, ' ire.peetor or clerk.. at any general or special election in this Cointroorvealth.lt And in by an Act of the Cleneral Assembly of this State. p.osed the 2't day of July, 183:1. it is directed that the inspectors ant Judges be at the pl ices of their districts on the d it of the General I:!ecti. u afore , suds nt 9 o'cl,,ek in the forenoon. to do and perform the several duties required ant on - odued on them in ;oil by the seine act. At't be it further directed. in and by the Act of the Gene ral of this I.:tete, a'ores eel, that one of the .In izes °Leach ()Nile different districts aforesaid. who .ball have the vh.trge of the certificate; of the number of rote s which -hall have been given for each candidate for the different offices then and there 'voted for at their respective districts, shall meet no the third der after the election, which shall be On IR;DAr rite 171 • 11,11 - 1 17 , 24i113.1t afoheiald. at the Court-11411 , e, in the Borough of lietty,,burg. there - and there to make a fair statement and certificate of the number of votes, which t-b ill have been given at the different districts in thaeouuty of Alarns for any persons for the offices aforesaid. lIENRY THOMAS, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Gettysburg, Sopt, ie. Teachers Wanted. rp 11E Dire,:tors of lierrnany town wiih to ernplov_gis glaal Teneller , — in., others ii , zst. , l apply. Liberal « - a r.es will be paid. Tile I)ireeturt, will hi e et on the :',Ol/e of in one of the publie I L' , usint Littlestuwn, to atteu,l , 4o appli cunt4. • LEWIS NORBECIi, 5..-ptewber r, le3;. td . : ~.), ~.,,,- . i „, ,41—f c./, 4:.:. - . it,12,44 - - - - + - . ••••141%.,,,.. x ..„ . • . "4,,0r • ..v“ - ;,' , . 41:4 • OP . • • er. 1 1 111 . . , ...; 4, „,: t . )) '17 4,, t. _ 0 V ~. , tit ~,,,, . Irt., $ . ...01 •,” ..r I‘. K ~. 4.' t,_ . . rii; . ,;•A•;''' .1. 4. ~),.. ..,.ii ; •' , ,:, . 4 , . ~ 4 : - 4!. ‘;,• •,, ~q !I f , y . , \; ~• , & .' '1 44. il• ie.' 'X ik, , fik p,, ,i,' 14 . er r: V , :.,' • I ' ..•.‘, •- . •`• ••) •••• X r .. ' ..V. V . ~ 1: t r , . 11 0 ... 7,- , (fit* ..j .t ...is; ~ j ?,,,. /. .. ...A x-,... , . 4. S' , ~... ~ C• o, `, , . , \ 1 % e '., :1, 3 , , i . . '7'. ;I' R 4 • i',.4. 4 ' k * ..,.. S. ,0, „,. Fl ~,.; • .• ,i• ~ r .- ' ) , . 1 v: tt . . ..4 .I ,T : i t • 1., '• I 11„. " S I • 4 ' i ‘ • .‘.• ~ i ; ' .' ~ ~ . ^ •II ••, ' i•'• V •{ V . •4 , '''•• I' :.• ~ . _ ~ / _ :4 , . .'' 7 , ,1•!: e.. . , ' f .1.-7 4 :, • (;,.. r,' , '.... ..... ••'•: : 4. 0, ,:, :.. i., .-I • •... -riN 4 .•`r /..::: • ) .., *., " e .* , . •.% + • . . _ ... . . - • - , _ . . 31j4iakets, ?LoaIS INO Terms of tho "Compiler." tizZ - Tite Th,pnblican Compiler is puldished every ..\londny morning, l,c ILESitt J. S 1%111 LE, :7•::1 - ,7; - ) per 'annum if paid in w i r , rar ,•_,i . ..2,o‘) per annum if not paid in advance. hub soription di,eoutinued, unless at the option 14 the puhlisher, until ali arrearages are paid. ii;erted at the- usual rates. Job Printing done, neatly, ellearly, and with dinateh. South Baltimore ' , greet, direct ly opreisite Wampler's Establishment, on alid a half squares front the Court-innise, "ON PMER" tau the sivn. COMMUNICATION. Enrroin — lt ---- hits --- now come' to t with -the editor of the Star of your place, that he has name for his party, or rather for •his conglomeration of ; and the imblic signal which' he employs in calling his faigefur to gether, is the abstract term, of "all that arc opposed to the election of James Buchanan." Ile no doubt still retains his private, his se cret sign, by which the initiated are enabled. by the heip of their dark laid( )uB, to explore the lower reg;ons of Know Nothing ism, whore they can, "solitary and alone," continue and improve the plaits of Catholic and foreign proscriltion, and perfect like scheme of decoy Lion, by returning from their midnight with the cry of "union State and County ticket" on their lying and vascillating, lips, while malice and deceit are rankling in their heaxts; fr.' it cannot be denied that their very test - otthsinoulcate hatred towards everybody I that does not subscribe to their intolerant „-der, or that has manliness enough to ex ore,,,s their elisapnrobation in regard to its f.-1:111mery and proscription. What a change, or rather what changes, have coine over the editor of the Star in the last two vears! re , apitulitt;ott of them att,t eN 1-, , urpi illeatittit, let alivlle , 4 "the rest 412.1atlkind. It, is not - quite two years since, wizen he stood fair an./ spittre -on the Whig aLd ii. , sce4 his mandates as though he wits the sole pivot on which the party tit ru ed, and as if fie could “ello s itye grou,o t " a a nod . ,.and make it come out openly and-free ly against thu e that it had always cherished, and against the Constitutional principl , 2s that it had always proclaimed. And \Oily did he assume this .authority, and proclaim these startling and novel doctrines, - us the exponent and champion of the' Whig party ? For the very and sole purpose of deception, as a few plain facts will fully illustrate.- A few weeks before the election of he seemed t o have imagined that their then secret oppoSition and hostility to Catholics was found out, and con --eunoutly that, the Catholic Whigs xcuuld sup port none, but pled,ed candidate.;. Jr order :o l'ire.eut this state of the editor of work and c•Anposed an article du tile. two e,OlinatiS of the, iZI VLIOI.I use,: every titn ice that he conceive w prevent the: Illtagined fusion . t t the with the Dtinnicratis -,vere, pledged as bei3g hosi„i:e to tt,e pr o , scriptive tloctrines and ptactices attrlhutt„lto . iirst. ilw.aled. (A, eiy ,LEU'it)tl,4:l/ ei:i4ens, a; being slyest reli : e.:oit in-to, the polit;c4.l arena.--the l l 4: -eat euto•ervative leraig party" had always upon the heir •t ati.cairt to mix reli:i•nt and pot,li e s to get)ier—then came the "tug of war - -hat, the event (.4" their refusal to hear and o:tev great conslrva,tive .partY, which it would seem-he had at Isiscoutauaruf, imii lit h,, fort;!e± to change its ground, and Mare out .t.yettly, fearlessly and firmly a;zealust those ;h at would- desert: in' in the hour ornee,L— Woll, the great battle day arrived, the elec. ion crane oft; and the result proved that the Star was not mistaken iit its tears, re'rardin. , the • , 14 ._!,"ti e ____ w of ti,A then t% pari.v for it openly, fearlessly akal hrtniy wheeic,l int I srlf-fi',:fi:ttoe, and cast izs vote for the pet , - ,0n.4 th . at were pledged to not proscribe, tlicto for con:-Tience saL:e—and therefore tbe whole army tliat .NiE3tieliaT",thought tr.Te, wo.g com "lnvading, 'was scattered and thrown into the titnlost disorder. Amid the noihe and eon- fusion' dins created, where do you think this saa t e Cllllitnaueler - iu - Chief,:Mr. Buehler, was found after the battle was over ? Of coursi a .you would say, in the vamps of the Whig party, tuitvisteriwr to the wounds and wants ! ot . lns valiant but discointitted soldier, ! No such thing lie ha , { not only jic,,erted his , post awl taken reiuge in a Kiitlw N o thi ng hiding place. hot his voice could tie I v heard isiiuingfrotn dicer . ) pts and caverusof his midnight retreat, (lowa fill the bowls and hearts of hi , late Catholic friends, all sorts of vewe:.nce because-they did not stick to the Whig ticket, vi 111 the same ri fliihrrlnt es.-e , wlnititlieatiun, he and for the first time, mititiel all whoa it might concern, that the great mass of" the Whig votes pa-,se.l over to Wilson ceirTy in the ram vcrism, -berau . -e it was e‘ ideut that Cui. Neely woubl nut run. It is evident from this that Mr. Baehler's two columns or in„tructi,,n,, to hli—cattk,,l:o Norms," v.-,•1„; dited for die very yurpose s,l de , el itio a—for the purp!)Ke ef retaining, dn. , Cath-lic vote „`k, rely, f hile Capt. Buehler and hi, Kn o w N o thing a-Nociates., wa l let he termed the great ina— of the Whig •,.ote, had passed over (thi , ldej t i Wi . k ,, u early in the carn!iiiign but which fact he took good care to concoal from his Catholic friends until they had ca.-1 mfrs. But on summing, up the rote of the county, it appeared that his "Catholic friends" were not caught napr,iog : and be cause they proved trick for the Know N 'things, in genera!, and Faiir:r riaehler in particular, the latter sent on, front his mid night eel!, a string of iinr,r.frad•inie r 7: lost his Catholic friends that was per!l?Clly a!al Tll - which he contnues , to die presont Ilay, with some variation„ Mq. 11)n-ever, lately, with the yiew of again rishing fur audobtaini;:g Caiholic Totes :fir it is rut- ' ready rtported tirtt expe .' t. "num herjboth die Yet ••• a seppurt of his present K. `;,Count7- ; and to that end, I wcni:3, not -c.Tr.iscni if he rp-elf trirt, ao gy /,,.;; , -, 0 2 t r dr:or • over, ;7,:i.th , 4i0 f:rci f zr,or4ll..th. To pre pare the-e fur the ititPri‘itv embrue , ... I :r.ll- - ! r tat s t:! - Itrt. ir sub lC ints i A little ~ver . the el' the Star gave pulilieitz t., ariit•le on f;lrei , .:tii.r4 frf,rn which 1 ha:c cut the and clirihtia.rilike sentiments :—"l,,rci r ,, n v‘ i ter S il 1 our general eleetious, make Presidentb for u.s., take up our public domain that should he resented fur the ntztire born citizens of our land, and take meat and bread from the mouths of the At mechanics and labor ere." if ;titer this flame are any Threigners in the county that can styport the ticket of his st‘inip and choice, they, I am sure, are patriotic than I would take them to he, and consequently, love their enetnie• in a mainver rot contempl a ted o r comma titled by the "good be to- in keeping with the pr,e•perity and lrl v of their country. Ile is equally or more seie-c and illiberal t‘Py% . :Ltds Catholics, as every - One 1:1101VS Who re ads. his sentitrents. The present Postmaster General is .saliamrai to Ire a Catholic, and it would seem that the editor of the Star attri h ales' every evil that may happen in colinee tion-witb-tlic Post-ofiiee lipp:trtment, to this nn-Anwricaa and .sapper. -ii tact. - I [ear what Ito says on this sultfect. a < -t':ei.eit from the Star of Aug. , :;d, 11 , 55, a little more than a your ago: -zit a ,,, , t;--Postwaster (*general Camp.: 1, 0 11 h as al-pointed Abraham Bushey Plistulas -1,10 :at AlibottStUNVll, iii rc,utu of George Jordv, rentot ed. Jortly is a Dettiot•rat, having been appointed at the incoming of the present Administration. Ile is, inoreoi or, a foreign- - or by birth, hat has ilte misfortune to hate a son-in-Ittw suspected of flat ing sonto affinity for *Sam.' Mr. /los/icy is a Ca oi' 'Mc Natinttal prufv peculiar love for both fire'gners and Catholics hut Mr. Postmaster Caniphcll's preferenCes seem tube very decided for the latterover the !Omit et. Was 31onsiet' rwilini consulted?"' Per haps some of those that the editor id the Star Haw expects - to fuse -trill/ hitn, ciatld answer the question Just asked, as well as the Or (lives tt l Q.at Mr. Jor.dy *vas removed because lie was a, Pritestont, and that Mr. Busbey was appointvd f o r the mile reason that he was Catholic? la a later issue, Mr. Buehler de livers himself' as f o llows, on Catholie postal \‘hich must greatly teal to !strengthen the bond of union' that he now to 101111 With his Catholic friends : "Have Postmas ter Gem! al Compliell and. his fovai! advisers ronverted_ the Post-office Departmeat into a system of espionage? Matters are (*Wiling to a pretty puss, when the minims (('athnlic - s) of a corruljt Athninistration undertake to peer 1 into - the mails, and .ahstraCt private, letters. * desuitista is gniwing -bold in this Republie!" Aren't these pretty charges and seittiments, and tri . // cab-aisle;; to superinduce Catholics to fuse with hint, to Unite with him in electing to Office nien that are in the haltit -- of -- assisti the dark- toiluttch-outrtind piepare ft,r .ptiblication sneh enli•lfitened, charitalde and ye)Eerons cl arges—clutvges that say ill other words - , that ('atholic,. la in;aas Ito, and are frt.))) to pccr 111.'0, and rob the mails with impunity, bet.ause the Post-office Department is heated . by a man that is "sus peeted to have some ivfii nit c" for Catholicism. Honest men of 011 cia'sses; Protestant Cothidics, must abhor setqinients of this kind, - and, thero.fire, retase the proffered hand, however guiltled with 'the sPaibtaiwe of friend -ship and sincerity. that now sei'k4 to lutry the . t elict.ard fi,r'o the past, alter having fail ed in its attempt to thus politically de , tr'soy and then:, .{ . 6r destroy the right's or the Carh.dies, i. also to destroy- the, truly intr,pny and patriotic boast of the Prote-tatit. -vvwAi he thanks his (hot, from the bottom of his heart, that •‘»tti,,Cloaniel fr No, nu, .04 cal holics van never bereafcer case with the editor of the Star, until 1 - i; gives "indemnity fur the past :out security fir the future," beoatige he has shainet'uily betrayed even some of his hest Protes(a ti au‘l poi Ica friends it: !,ruler to strengthen and assist a p'i't y that was secret , solemnly sworn ta proscribe Catholics ou account of their faith, well - as fitreigners on account of the accidental placeof their birth —t leey cannot fuse with hint because he weekly insults their persons anti relimion through tint o 'lie it..,. For the Compitor- eatuniaA of a sheet that equae4 .aitiworti Cl:nper iu In.itre , i and alatse tow-al.& ei,-ery thing Catholic—a sheet that has laboretl to destroy the of conscience, that Nvotil(l ritt — ••liise - ply ()pillion) to nn roW ; if it could, for worslnpptn;?„:, hips Maker according to the dictates of conscience—that latte.and abuses and revile; the I)einouratie party the more, heyau,e it•inymfully and ally euntioue , : to llel'ettil all eitt,sc-; ilitd creeds, without •.;e:ting un,ll,tiliction4 tin ftcCoUilt, of the tlecide,....t of hirth, tt.e.egraphical pu.sition, ur the mode' in w'uirn they seelt•to sevure their eternal t,alvation—that ha.; Itchored itoltistri utt,ly to eti,la.ve tile white titan, while uoiting w ith the rutting Abulltiot t ist, ill •.,Itriel,:ing" fur thy freedom ,ird',/./1•1,:,—t lett let, declared the -‘breath ot t.rk .le,uit to lie p0i5 , c1., and touch detLi."—rtiat "Ilutitanii•un i, inimical tt, , .I„mericatt i,herty"—tlmt cant; It e u e::- or other sitti.l/ "It ,:natti-un hut I.eltig (Tit, and ti,/./ ,e in it, very nature, in the I:OW/a/ire al.rl .)//pr.r.sliliOli• Of the .nia,S•t- f ' ' 42. , . . . 1 1..11 this and ratire of the skune sort, lia• 101 1 1 rowkateil lky• tlic, fk.litor of tlic Star.wititin the la , t two vn,l,-, ;;;i(I not (It,- oknutc:k ;t,(., ntimc in a firovtivl of iik -3,erp , l ran , - 111 , `rte'. 111:t1: Pri /i/1, a-aink-4 thik kt:,ii pro , criiition, nail thi• tos.;!tio of chunkily zknii that lotkcni joired iviti:e.it.nie of its hest per , oroil and fri . er,l's, wad most faithful tool :iatror.s, wore pointel out on account of haw .voted a', "their rotra-ionce and jadg r.;-,nt tipproved," aryl reviled 01l ac. ntni of their religion or the. "Forel:to ex trnotion". Of thetn , el‘ek; or their parents—that tieriptps saw fwrry ire the' roppgign (eke no Se./a.:/e.l) tl . e ni a s's of the Li. , vote pit...s over _'rota his regularly nc:uinat , l friend Neely,- to ti vv.:,s 01,:a bound to the Le part7. Ivy the bowl. , of a Lot.ofoco Without ':meat the alarm, and tlo after the elf rtmmined neutral awl while ta.e returns proved that Col. N.!•*• received but dereft vote 4 in all Gettp litirg, and tint.; t!le editor of the Star that had ;der : profr.s.v.i.l to be his frier. - il, now be travo,? and duplicity, a... , as. hi- 1, ic,uv tail e and. bigotry . , by 1;4,1:0! ,:111,r pr,J=a.;l)in- the ;'atliolic that 1 ;: , ,t staiol t't the ti, it, t vritile he him- Felf, )Acti.iiiiig and waitityr ()le: the: at of declared that the great ma.. , ? .if the Wili:2; vote had left Neely early in the and pa..ed over to Wirsori. This k 11,e Cilia now 1. , 11.11v calk on all 11 lcir• (iiirin , liti4.of course. Catipilies,) (ti...atling, e(ture, Ktww N - othirpg.s) and Ile pulilictmeq, (embracing, of cuurse, Amalgatua- ;V 4". "TRUTH IS MIGHTY, AND WILL ficIEVAIL." _ • "About one hundred of Lane's party, in cluding 1)r. Caner's, Weft on hand, and slanll - to glory in an opportunity to lip,tit So soon for Pt ioeiple. ore a line-looking sot of men, and are of the fight stamp to make Kan gas free—t hot they hare the 'term awl the will, to hell.' (nd h.^ OU.'n 10w! and 60hl/ T o-ulurroW Our camp movei into town,. to aw. Lit fort her orders., The eaninoi:r.n seems hegun. • The'third, last moister invas ion of I..atigas is • at, haad, ma the cry -1.1, 'SPARE ,NOT l" . "SPA111;,1);(44".". Herd not the supplica tions of the female, the tdiriele.s of the 'oat kill, -mid spate not. Pay no si.“.ention ,to gray: hairs or palsied liuibs, to the,lielpless iie.ss sielzness tlr old ; - I;ut kill, and "SPAP,E NuT "i irf at com, cuutributors pay for the "Job:" Mil We trill, says the endeavor to trace the pab i mifle line of distinction be tween Democracy and Know - Not The two parties are built upon two entirely opposite pri acipie6 s of CI overumen t : Hot RC E OF POWER.. 80V RUE or PoWEll. 2. 1,1,0 I,cvl,iU 6hall, 2. 'fbe , ) 1' the rule. 1 " Order" shall rule, ithimgh agaLamt ! pre :10.7.'11.r." ~ ~, itzuolos. . . 3. Ili giu iiiipartittil- ~. Itt.:ll;:,,(iith warfare ty towards :di. 1,(.(:t.,:, fit oilatioll'e. 1.. , ,L.e. a k at ) o, l „iticall:,- connect etllvitli ttwii.. oFyik.T. 4. The fir,t yoat 4. Wiwi t. was he ro l uisize—ls Ilc fillllll - ii(lni ? I,V 'oat, ir, Li - s Ic lied ? i' ci,io ? nll hat is the -. trungion of his Icife ? 110.. r ikl‘, hi.f.. , ,i) hunt: ll•e;tati BPP, it. Froni ,, tit ottper, reirat-i a 1110 ,, t i iig ~f t h„ ritiznln, or Bunton-, the timuwnn.r,: iff!,,o/r. (1, 'l'lli -a wo, the colore;', xvii? -;tiliport v;itit our voie, t .4 alk .l rre 11 , 111 t, , 11 ' Calif ti !kin., P..e.iletit "1' the I".ilte.l Statv., allot L. Day ton, of Nov.' •Jer-ev.a4 Vice Pre•ittent. A I,',•einieit hell(a tt.r.v u e , ettity, '.vas by .if' the a‘tilien , ,e ss'aS it rather to o strua:4 I v y titi,!)ll. (7,!rg11in, ; 11.-1 . (1t; li.‘;v. J. a plinth-al ijerg:,acti, of the 1da,.: , .;-fusihi, par ty, an d %%14 signe I that //la proffd to C.,n 4 res-s, has recently se duced and ah , conded with a givi of sixteen, the oni.y ;poor leaving his wk ., : and two rhildreu iu destiriite eircutu stance-. i , the twelfth ea•-e. of seduction :old ruin of you:v.4 or runiiin4 away with other inch', i,y tfc,se ho sigoed that Ilrote,t.—.Vc4r r. 0 . 1 .14 , 1:je Sept.' I.S.—TM! 11 , m. W. W. Irwin, a prominent lawt-er, formerly ..11arn-of Pnt , ,l,urg. a Xlem her of from tilk 1./istrin,t, and U. S. l)enn‘.rk, under the ad mini:-trati.,l. of Pre- i , !,nit Taylor, died in city ti iS morning. Tie"' Fiff;i.—.lt a gepuhErati Lion h,)41 at Chillicatite, wot4c, tl.r 711+,'t coa , pivu.)as thing in Ow prt,- v.as a in );1-T1' , )1.1. bearing .Amori,•an bot dar.y. Is the Ire:went party truists as well as A 14441, ilMiSts) to arouse tbem- SclVes for the (Ictoher, election and to unite on the:Know Nothing ticket that was placed in nomination h' IlVowed Know Nothings, afterwards ,contirmed 11y a sprinkling of all the 1,1114 of the day-,--yes,-, to unite in the Numo political camp, in order to destroy the party that received and protected the foreigner and Catholic, when not only their fortunes and lilh et ties. Let their very lives were threatened and placed in jeopardy by the sworn enmities of the Constitution of the United States and of their salvation and creed. - Yes, this is th'e .Sentinel that. would it scents, afford the Star another opportunity of sacrificing the Whig party in this County, of betraying anoth er Neely, and of anus iii the confidence that, Catholics might place to him once mitre, Ir . \ Virtue of his longfaced mot ality, and of aftor wards deriding their religion because the) openly left the IV hig party, Nvhile b e .s., T e c ti, / sold and betrayed it, in passing over to Wil son so early in - the canvass. Yes, these are the men and editors that. now cell on Catholics and foreigners t o ,Jiang with them, after haNing'countenancoll and fused with aparty that they ly hoped would Leconte and remain dominant through pro scription—through religious and nathinal pre dileetions nod pre . itoli,ps. Rut thanks to the sefier second thita 4 l;t, and the intelligence of the eonnitunity at large, and the fidelity of the com,ervative and Denmeratic party, they bare been signally disk..omiltto,l and d:sappointed ; and I trust. the !...aine success, the same fate attend their new sclichte of deception, in the efforts that tIMY are now maklig t i tilift-j -all the cla n gs, oil inr• isms, likwe‘ or dilleritsr iu local and secondary matters, for the-com mon purpose of distracting and disuniting that party that really - mid prat 'wally' knows no refigtous sect; reiptires iii reli, , ,mus twit oath, and has the Cahlit to ion of 11.4. confed eracy for the basis la its, plttforto ; and that doe , nut ainru to diet :II toaway Ipt)rijoli or the tjujon, tilt 1110 writing- 1 . SharerV, lull COWsLit 141140, -z -a _Lito--*Kr‘v Stak: 4 , in whining that kind of (!ow , litutititi, that to theta may seem expedient. providing they come up to th e ce, j oiremonts 4)1 the Cott stitution, the aaa.uae as the older totes have dune. I'. - From the Troy Time.; "Great - God I Has it Coine to This I'' Response : the _following from the hallray correspondence of the New • York Times : Tho Whole Thing in a Nutshell. Dr, \lOritArr. OF CITIZENS. 1. a u d 1. ii,,i,ino• ( , oll l w _ )riviley.i to a!! t stud V(11- II 11 4:1.1"/C.iti7.c•tJ;-- hii- nPt;GTo4 Colored itepublieaus. WA KNOW NciTIIINCV4S! =I rzaza From the Wa%bingtort MR. FREMONT MAKES A CONFES SION-HE MUST SECURE THE VOTES OP ALL. With one single txception, anel in that ex ception no : expression Clf opittiutt was given, not the slightest allusion has ever been made in these columns to the reli , 4ions faith or sen timents of the Blaek Repuld'icau eandi‘late for the Presii4;ney.. Tice only qualification for the (+thee President called tOr by the Ccon stitution arc age and nativity; and the co party have earnestly, stetulfastly, and sueeesstlillv ()prilsea' the etrorts of bigots and proseriptionists to establish tests wholly for eign to theNpirit of our pc plc and their free institutions. It is not for us to question the, right ()I'Col. Fremont to place hiniselfin com munion wrtth either the,Catholie or the Prot estant, Chute ; for WC would be reereantto our duty mid lake to the principles of our par ty, it' our oppositiou to bun was intluonced in the most remote degree by a knowledge of hid 11e make these remarks in order that our ,p)sition may Hot be ninflaken, or our motives misconstrued, in giving place to the subjoin ed extraordinary statement, \Odell we find in at bite num her of the New York Commercial Advertiser. The htuteitiont Was knadii at u Public moetilig recently held at :Staten Island, ny Ilr. 13, 1-. Cook. and is in the following w o rds. 11 , :4 reported in the Advertiser : "..11r. L 3. F. Cook made swat) intOresting toot i, o portnot, statements rot ecting am interview hr Intit with C.d. Fremont cart the subject tit ins alleged Wits htTlitkitallet, this : IV wilds havin. , desired to enlist the -pother ill titc Call' 4 o ni so-celled Ilepubli eitnisia, be r.N.pros,kni a desire to hare all chnitits rettiot : e;l oil this mooted question, but said ttiat, nothing Alert of an assurance front Col. Fit:mulles own lips would satisfy hint. An interview was arranged Kir. The object ol the Wing- understood by the Colonel, ile avowed itinweif ready to ansWer any ques toms proposed. kr. Cook proposed the fol lowing, awl receked to each the answer au ? ttexed: • %% . :21:0 yen married by it Roman i •Cath. olke pLiest;:' teas,' the Colonel's lip link.- ying, as he spoke. 'Did you at the State be {,live in, or profess tobeneve - initlreltuntan Catholic religion ?"1: did `Have you lad Ore or since, or at uny time, professed the , ...,ationic 'religion ?' jutee. not. Here Mr. Cook bowed, to signify that lie volunteered some remarks, to the- following effect: That while in Calilernia he attended no church, and that he ecoupied Ills Sundays in reading and writing, and lu attending to Such matters oi,husitlCSs lie-thought of unportance. Mr. Prement further said: 'I ant frequently inter-I rogated by all parties on this sttliject. I pre-1 thedelegation now waiting for me up*' stairs wish to interrogate utu on this point.) 4\ hue they do I shall put the men fitrokablo cooltruetion on the matter that I eau. 1 wish to offend none, hut to secure the votes ()full. Only this vet y morning, I have a letter from Name, saying that unless I - make a personal denial or liouittnisni, and that I ant or have been a RannanCathoth., Ain't :State will be lost LO the Iteimolicans ; and another, letter front Indiana, telling me teat if 1 will antliorize'my iritinds there' to say that fain a Roman Cath olic, they can secure me a large lilertnan and Irisit vote. I hate to frame lay replies so us to r•nOttre the Votes of all. There Is now a deputation waiting fur me, whose errand 1 nimbi out is t t he sumo. It is host to say as lit- Lie about this matter as possible, and We Ines" manage the thing as well as we call, so aS to get Witt YVICS Here the inter % iew terminated. Mr. Cook's statement was 3 . o,‘,teni , d to, with profound ilittrCst." The nintrauler of Mr. Cook are thus spoken of by the Advertiser: "We give elsewhere in to-day's Commercial• an illteieStitig account of ail . interview with Colonel Fremont, on the subject of hissalleged l':,pat lin Ole/10MS, by a gentlema liflOW n well it aS a Wifillesalll Atii toner Lu this City, and a reonnutt, at I..'aeturyvilte, Staten . I.fland, No one with knows we inieral Ur Will question the a re -"i- and moderation of his state meet. We have been 'Mr some time mint or ati the circumstances of the. inter view, and of the causes also that led to it.' Atter reading the. above Statement of 'Mr. Coof., the emiciusion izs irresistible that Mr. Fretam Cs religion, if he has any, sits as light ly n i giit him as nis political principles. To 'toe Protestants of Maine he says: no credit in the stories that are eircutated in. re ,ard to olv reli ,, ious faith. lam rio Catholic, never hat e been, and never will be." To the Catholics of Indiana he says: "flow can you refuse to vote li: me? Ain I not of your re ligions faittt ?" To the indifferent in religious alai I ers lit; says : K rwp quiet ; say nothing. I out a Proicsian/ feint 1/t( Prtdegkuis, awl a wil lhe ertilwlics—ail !hi ityf ludo all men.. .1 tau.ll so shape my matlact awl answers 05 to secure the cotes of WO" ' '.1 . 1w school of ethics in which Mr. Fremont, i, e en tau: ; .iit i s riot the School which has sent forth pore patriots and genuine Chris tians ; and although. hi now-able to turn ilk doable lace with remarkable dexterity-z-- tirst to one religious loeality and then to an other--he nia!,t, in the end, awaken it feeling indignation in the breast of every Curistian,-whether of the Catholic or Protestaat faith. Fremont's Religion. 31u(di h:i, been Said and being-paid con cerning; F rein , frn religion. Probably the 1.,11:yx ng prayer by a Frentont preacher IntlY tlnuly SimlC ii:rht ()I1 t. 11(.! SUltitiet : "1 prall doily (it'd Uiix arr•ar..serl Z ieion -may rose if 1)1,,,, , 1 hare to F spilt." This is the "anti-sia , , - ery prayer sent up front an avid-slavery - I:blind' 1.,1 :Lnti-Nlavery Goa!' 1,1, - e al .e not infortaed 11 it, be the e( Frutuout church, but we atrollgly sus IPQ , it it 18 Ja , lrp; 11,)ayla.y awl file 0.110n.5. Kansas Laws. l'Aaek Itopublicani are circulating a garbled report of a ;:peech of .lall4e Douglas, in 'A-hi:di he is repre , ented us advocating; the enf;ir e ernent of tile odl o ui laws o f ‘ . a .„ sas , such a 4 roquire , , a te4 oath, and uhridgos the f ri ,ed,an 01 , Beech, (to., which Judge Douglas, i n c,o i nn , al with ;iii the Denva;ratie Senators, t.pre , sly e•aidennle , l, hut he said there were laws in Kansas a:4;6[lst the critnes of murder, arson, robbery, burglary, larceny, &••., such a. , are in force in all the States, that ought to ent';rc4..l, and which could not he, if' the lb•publio.nt \i,u should pass. He fur the Senate bill, which repeals those saw° odious laws. =2:= a==IMEM 63L. FREMONT'S CERTIFICATES. The Syracuse (Now York) Standard pub lishes certificates from (;en. Dix, Daniel Wel , - ster, John C. Calhoun, and Senators A ilen and Rusk, in regard to the talents and integ— rity of Colonel Fremont, anti then adds : "Those testimonials of merit from filen of the highest reputation for statesmanshiNao honor are sufficient Ao brand as calumniators the small-fry politicians who are luaklng as saults upon tf , e - personal and profestdonal character of Col. Fremont." It may do very well for housewives to re quire from the applicant for chamber-work, or the honors of the kitchen, a certificate el character from the last place, as' necessity it; a measure has sanctified the custom ; .hat the candidate fur the highest office in the repoltlic should ' have no other certificates than the grateful recollections of the people for high and patriotic services rendered—no other !to dorsement fur integrity of character, purify of conduct, and exalted administrative talcut, than the unbouttlit, unsolicited, and sponta neous aeknowQgnient of the masses. In furnishing these certificates, our eotemportnty of the Standard made what many will he dis posed to regard itl3 a fatal omission. Tim rer-. tflicales from the lad place* held by Col. .1%,.r -mold do not appear, Not one word is said about the • great and' unnecessary sacrifice of life and property in Oil. F.'s last 11;,.:ky expedition.' Not the slightest aaltu hiutr Made te stapetidouS eattle-tratles' and sharp financial operations in California. Time most ominous silence is preserved in' is 4yard to the challenge sent to (lA, Mason nod the passage-of-arins wan ex-Stmator 'l i t Fitt We 1 ok iu vain for the honored names of Pal mer, .Cook, & Co. The Mariposa grant is not, onee mentioned. By some strange neglett, the Secretary 'of the Senate of the United States has not been called upon to state la Fremont voted on the bill to abolish sla very in the District of - Coluudkia. 'The certificates ttrodueed by the'Standard are unquestionahl,y genuine; and their distiti guished,WritOrti felt no doubt at the - they were fully warranted in speaking in 1411- 1y complimentary terms of the yount. Li,taii ant 'of the topographical-corps. ICfl,rt. ti e 'trdaBon of - Arnold was discovered would Wasli ington have hesitated to - testify to his capaci ty, integrity, and-valor ? What kind of a cer-' tificate.' would Messrs. Dix, 'Allen, and .1-tut,k now furnish to the Black RepubliCan candi date for the Presidency, . if brought hack to life, what would-be the testimony of Webster and Calhoun ? A Fab3e Issue. The Reading Gazette and Democrat, in re marking ou the attempt of the Republicans to Make it out that the Nebraska bill and. the Cincinnati platforni tarry slavery into the territories, says as to this dogma and the Dem oeratio party— " Where is the northern man that holds it or utters it ? Ircit-the Van . Ilurens:, the Sey mows. the Dickiixsoas,theesses, the Ilright,-? Wo . defy anyone to produce The resolution if any Democratic meeting, the utterance of. any leading Democratic- newspaper,- r any - lead tog Democratic - statesthan, or -politician that expresses- this monstrous doctrine, which the Republicans falsely attribute to the Democra cy. It is astonishing how. coolly and boldly the Democratic party is misrepresented as to this dogma. It is downright calumny and lying to assort that the Democratic .party have de clared in favor of extending shivery itito free territory Even Southern advocates in its ran k s constantly declare it to be such. The Democratic party as a national party, neither defends slavery nor goes out into a crusade against slavery. It-lets- it alone. It favors the policy,of allowing it to be settled by the people of states and territories; and of bicet hOth, in this_respect, to the - provisions of the constitution. Thu assertion that the Democratic party has declared, in the terms a the Cincinnati plat form, iu favor of earryint=oey into free -e r-r-it-ory, is a monstrousa . sh-ouki be constantly branded' as such. • - The following statement of this question was fairly made in Hon. 13. Ora -6011 at Keene, N. 1I.; on the 4th of Juiy last : The Democratic, party takes w t pasitroa ira ,fizeorqrstavery, Itdoes net impose, nor does the South ask for any legislation fi.uru Con ,,;resis to establish or extend . hlav cry. . The Democratic party mean to take care of the Lest interests of these twenty-five millions of whi; e meu at honie; -- and keep the country open Z. 4 an asylum for the oppressed of other lands. They leave the slave population Jost whe2o God and the. Constitution placed tlwin, in tile hands of the people of the states, the sole responsibility . of the evil or good that results from the instaution,and must auswer in the day of judgment for that gl'eat respon sibility. There the Demoeraer, with an abid ing trust in Providence to Wo out the desti ny of the race, leave slavery, with non-intec vention by Congress, pro or con tir mr.tttT on the other hand 'foohi' (in political ceonotuy and fanatics in party politics) under- take to 'rush in where angels' (ftud state:4- men) 'fear to tread,' and break up the whole Union, by sectional agitation. without evea the, probable chance, or the senNanee of a practical • plan or policy by whie)i they can free a single slave in this broad land. They have not done it by twenty-five years of bittjr clamor and vituperation of the South, and thoy will not do it if God should permit then to go on in their 'railing accusation' ft& another twenty-five years." Republican Plunder. No more convincing argument of the profli gacy of the Republican party can be four d. than the simple filet that the moment "they get power they go to plundering the • nation's treasury. The members of the proent Re publican Congress have inerea , ed their owu pay from eight to about sixteen dollars per day, or in otuer words hare doubled their pay from what it was when they were 1 - • -dies -hey refused - to vote suppes our army, but tue dear souls took good care of h"✓rtsas.—The civil war in Kaasas tr) put down. The authorities arc autnorize,i the Pre6ident to emplily for thoi, pArpi)so wit only the U. S. troueS 113 NV there, hat also Ct ! of the Territory,- and to call for two regiments of troops from I.lliniiis aro ' lie•.- tueky - . The main s•atrce of 131a,ik can iiolitical capital will therefore soon Le Cur, uff. TWO DOLLARS A-YEA MI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers