=; THE _ CO:111)1LIM. ,W;RTI", TIIE UNION, AND TIIE CONSTITUTION," i"; F.: TT ISB G, l'E NA" Monday 00.-27,1856, Damocr4tic National Nominations. For President, JAMES RIT II A NAN, of Pennsytromi a 17,e President, JOHN C. TMECKINRIDG, of Kent-ucky, De or Tar lc 1:71 ertoral T lac( - ELECTORS AT lARCP. Charles R. tuck:dew, of- Columbia -county, Wilsun 3l e c ani lies.s, of Allegheny county. - DISTRICT ELF,CTM2S. nen.W. Nel bra ham I.,lflinger, Pierce "Butler, 14. Real mil Edward TV rtman. 15.4 u. A. Crawford, t. William IL Witte, 16. James Black, r). John McNair, 17. r}••1. Stable, John IL 13rinton, 'toddy, • 7. Pavid. Lam v, 19. Jacob Turley, - 5.4 . 114 ries Knsslcr, 20. J.. 1. J. Buchanan, 9. James Paz , Ler:=on, 21. Willi an t , Wilkins, 0. I. , laite . Campbell, 31. Frs. W. Hu:Ylies, 23. Tlios.ennningliam, Thos. Osterhout, 24:John Kealty, 25. Vincent Ploolns. r • vo. r • •et S. • • • 40.*:. Ei:111 FRIENDS Or THE 'MOM AGAIN TO WORK!! Democratic Meetings at Littlestown, McSherrystown, Hampton, Hun ' terstown, and Gettysburg, RonEnT TYLER, Esq., of Philndejphia; (son. f Ex-President Tyler,) and lion, WM. If. WEl,sti, of York, among the foremost in the ranks of able and, o?l,tinent champions of 111 - 01I.V,'N.TA.N and • 131-ICCKINRIDGE, will .addr , .;s theTwo* of Adams county, LITTLESTOWN, on -WED:NESDIN Or r.'elokk,"l) itt'NT, at ... f (1 ' 600 C, M., and at SL. IIYSTOWN in the s evening; of that day. At HAMPTON, on THURSDAY next, at 1.1 o'clock, P. M., and at ITUNTERSTOWN in the evening of that day, At CA FTTY,'S BU 110 oa FRIDAY EVEN ING next, at tiff o'clock ; 4E3 - Tally, Freamen of Adams, to each and all of these meetings. You will not regret travelling, many miles to hear Tyhmt and 117Ehsn. - '7•A - Tie - inocrati - cMeefing I.riTT be - herd ai 3,anc Psnbinson's, in FAtinowl.n, on SATUIi- PAY EVEN 'NG 'next, at (it o'clock. Several :speeches may be expected. . A, Democratic Meeting will come off at -Nnr *beA's School house, in 3lountjoy township, uu _Monday eveni rty next, (Nov. ,:3d,) at 6 Groot! speaking !pay be anticipated. Let us KEEP l/P FIRE ! A lbw more days, and the battle will be upon lid, \viten ,Ivt.; must be prepared to do our whole duty. o,:t. 27, WC), CLUB Mr.ETING. The Democratic Clot) of Gettysburg will plea WattleteN, To , moßaols , (TtEso.“ - ) EVENING, 8t 113- o'clock - . (iIiORGE 13E1lin, Jr., Pre.'/. Oct. 27, 1836. Torch-Light Procession and - Illumination.. A grand torch light pro - cession and ilium': ration came off m this place on Thursday evening last, in honor of the glorious Demu , er:itie victory achieved in the 0 j1 ( 1 K o pt . „ fle . )ar Denfocratic citizens, appreciating the ; .;randeur of the event to . be celebrated, er4or ed into the preparations with much spirit, and tin rt”; asAlte_mus Lmagnifieen.t_tllutteitia flint the town lots ever had. The proeessi .passed from Wattles's througb . Cliambersburg street, then Middle, York, more, Breclrinridge, Washington, High, Varlisle' and other stree'ls—omtained any number of transparencies, flags, torches, fag gots, pine knots, the whole constituting a brilliant picture . . Most prominent in the line vas an. immense transparency, nearly till) Size of a wagon body, eight feet high, with a paint ing of a monster Buck on one side, a 81“ituti of tVe Woolly Ifurse on the other, the arch of the l'nion On one end, and old Independence Bell on the other. The Buck and 114rse were the work of Hicknr, near Emmitsburg, and were much admired, as they duserved to be. He is an accomplished artist. Of 'that we make no question. . There was a large transparency represent ing the (hurt-house, another the Alms-horse, a • • ' " a Thq.- were also well gotten up, and attwted large share of .attention. Some of the Know Is;othings pretended that they couldn't see the "'tit" they ennvcyed--but as everybody knew they felt it, expl4Nctions were not orife):6i Early ir. tho coning, we had note"- of sonic of the more n•,tn-Avor.... t'iy points iu the illumination. but npon pass ing through 1 1. 1 e town, and foiling all the I.,,uses so well, so tastefully li , 'lted up, and .10, - tked out with f.owers. wr(':011q, Ate "voted" it un'ust to sin , 1 , ! out C., 1“..., a A• ..“,••.•• ~ . tait /Fet. 0 , 1 - 11, rice , , -- - • ' ..1 tie Denim:rale par t\ 18 (le"'4l- 1 r 1)---- ing efflivnision! Come in- the name of i h,, : eontly defeated the enemy in two battles, and speech and Fremont" rowdies th ere , w h, d i d 1 •xclusion of others—and to inebutu :di would , , ~, i t r ,',,A l , : " —lkon, s e , i iTt o ,• li oreinor Hi,,iiiliat constitution and of the Union, now subjected his troops . are a , •:iin in the highest spirits. have Leen a task of more ma; , ,•iiitu•le than we •, , 1,,,,,,,i,L , 4 sio,cch, a the areal F ronvid ifictl i„ l to imminent peril ', (2%)nie in memory , if the i -........-- sug . , est, to tinnov our party (luring, its stay. I usually make" Knew ..,Ncithillf-c Pitlier'• If had time fur. Muci2 praise is due to all our commin g l e ,' lA.,' of the North zind the South, ? p f dy - : •.Tiidge, Lewis, of Pa., denies that he has It is duo to respretable men, of all could i Fretliont'..rille'h:risgir•ool-13i:I'll,soutUa'sql;:it:Itiaes":•thi7;;- fl, 1/,e Court-I(ouse in. York. „ nour,sl out on the battle fields Of the lievoln- ' eorne out fur Fremont. Ile says he will veto h 1 iel Connecticut gave her's at party friends for the part taken in the demOn, - Intim) '. Come in the name of- the liborties Well, then, it certainly is the //ticlie.sl • for Buchanan. _ duct of these know Icotiiin ,, . blackguards. iu_t -- . a j e is ' 1 the town, to say that. they i l enoune , i i i 'L t r i t l i e e :: ol l , f : s ti f t ,n e ,e re , t h urns fur . Fremont s , liall all lie in the 1 , 2 .,. cattle ' tlie — late election. the "ilistitigniSl I stration. "Penelope inn" was fi red during; wri , se we ever, , , • u'iu' see :—.1%.1/4. Gazelle. of tile wqrld, NV Iliell N.l 0111,1 ho crushed by the fall of the American Unien ! Come with the ! ---..i- proper terms. ? he afternoon with ege...dlent effect. . `lfo . ', 1 1 C111001 - ZIIS I 110 \V for BUCHANAN —we e• Lirrac ..ipp.'o.—Our friend ARCHIBALD CUR- , The notice which the .S7ar takes of ~the de- Kass lifeeting at Hagerstown, farewell warning's of Washin.rtkui on -our ; lip- and imprinted On 'our h7l•rts___•„ - t i n and DR F.CKI N RIDGE ! A clear field and a l in a thousand milos of the White n' s ec t i,,ina i array ,t4onstration is too outrageolAy vio]tttive of I The Democracy ut Washington coupty; 'ALL '. , ,„. :`, , .•- •• , i ~ . , (if the Aortic ngainst the youth , TIES placed upon our table, the other diiy, at ! They are the kind that will put OLD BUCK dealer” will never "find U path" leadin: ,- with . i„he truth to require reioin.dc:r. I intend to have a. !Vass Meeting and Barbeelie --lint in the glorious panoply of our whole ,: tali. tight ! --- ---- SW- most beautiful Apple., measuring 13 inches in i there, certain—sure. ------...-- Dem... for lat Hagerstown, on Wedni.‘sday next, :Our country, from North to South, from East to Pir'A Democratic Meeting will take place circumference, and weighing 14 ounces. 'We ; Rejoicings. - weit : Let the thirty-one columns wheel in- lut .Eininithburg on Friday evening. nest. rs 1 3 '1 1 1 , i i s:s , the h: 1 friends across the line know how to ;rex. up , -have seen nothing like it this season. i e• DsrlVe have tel by the. score, daily, i , • t „ I' ;ne , a nd with the saint! inspiring Ladle _ .....0..- ..-- ---- -.......-_—___ , Mayor T uf ile Ne m w a a i ;:. itY toings of this kind, and ice are sure the itp.tpt- , . if the rejoicings of the Democracy, from one 4 • •. i , , (-1.3, pealing fr..ni rank, re-eelioing f r o m s tate , _I Iraq , ' ar , 'n.—.l.ll oven has recently been Thait,',:viviny Ddll.—G,)rornor Pollock has for Di ,, elow, first time the hist,..ry of parties, it is said, iii' WM 1)e a brilliant demonstration. to St,tte, the ['idiot ( . 4) the rescue t lot u, t , ,- • ' • ' • 13 . 1 - y 1 , , pod of the niion to the other, over the result i ' I put in at in cool, ti, N. ~ calm. ~,e . ~ set apart the 2iitli of November to be Olsen-- ; ; }Gelber march to - trio polk, as our fathers did. of turilin , out a h u ndr e d thoutami 'caves 01 . . - 2f the election in Pennsylv4ai. Truly, the 1 10-0 - 9'l t i ; wi l lio 31.)nuta,us iii New Maori- ,i n th e hour of peril, to the uw,ic and llag of bre.l.l per ?. 'dtty, e4eu-ii tv supply-the 1111,11, ed. 111 this Stiite a., 4 day of than4t.ziving awl 1 Newark. The common c,•uneil sttinds 13 Dern _ 0 , X,eiotett heart is glad . ipilire are coveryl wi;11 suns, -, i the cuiou," • population. ',raps. A crats, 7 .I.Lue-Pi•zaas aa.: ...; Ropublicalas, that the Der.tocrat iN s -. j ha " v iB e I I; 2ad39:he THE PENXSI Ult. , FEELING. We were much struck the other ( ay at, ayor igiatv-old-rn.+lttienl-opponentle,i-vt.--hroaii-- hy he intended suppvting James Buchanan, n November, and mhy he bnd ,yoted the Dem rativ State tigickt iat 0ct0h64.„. - Ile said, "I have .lieen :a 'Whig 411 my over I'f NVelister 41,04. Clay, 41 1 14 a fleeted partizan. i live 13een willing even to help the Anti-Slasons rather than 'Vote fur the Democrats, to help . the Know Nothings, rath er than support the Deniccratic party, and I I i Jtm ~ iiecidedlyopPosetl to the Institution of sla very, and to its extension, but i am a Penn sylvanian, and although James Buchanan has not been a favorite of mine because of his pe hidliar upiniyus, still lain his enthusiastic sup porter, both because I am a Pennsylvanian, and because the man who is his principal cmnpetitor has nothing in his history or his Old raccer to excite any admiration in me or to render me as a Pennsylvanian anxious to give him . my *tt pport." Il There is, remarks the Pennsylvanian, in this frank ren :son ing a volume, and it is what thousands of men in Penn.-yi‘;:mi.i. think at the present day if they do not speak it out. The Pennsylvania feeling has never bcfinT had a. fair 'Tim wtunity, and this is tite time to give it a trial. It seems as if every circum stance conspired to open a faiir field to its ex ercise. The ~4 n ditltttes opposed to us, both Fillmore and Fremont, are citizens of other Skot.els. The best of them, Mr: Filtniore, has no possible chance of election, and the worst of them, John C. Fremont, has nothing about him either in his limit - or in his present posi tion,*either in what ho has done or what is left undone, to attract intelligent and porse \Trial.; advocates to his flag. Indeed, if there is anything in him at all moro marked than another it is that he f s iia th,e hands of 4 set of mon whir, pre anti-Republicans, a set of men who in Congress and in the press: traduce our people and attack our institutions, a set of men whose organs ore the New York fic,r,o/d and the New York 'Tribune, both of which lire the known representatives of the peculiar an ti-Pennsylvania feeling, and both of which have onstantly ;Wet - Opted 1.1) drag down and depreciate the glorious city of Philadelphia, and our other metropolis on the - Ohio river, the great ,city of Pittsburg, The very fact hat the•ie men are so ignorant of our people as to fiend 1%) otoong us a i,et of 411;otitio kces,i,how how htne they deserve our confi dence or respect. 111 r, Buchanan has been the associate and friend of nearly every dis tinguished Pennsylvanian, of either party, *at has lived, in our State for the last for ty years, There is scarcely leading mer chant, or lawyer, or mechanic in our'State, who does not know Mr. Buchanan intiniately; and there is none who, looking over all his his -tory w Mr. Bnehanan's opinions may be, his bearing and his chi rizeter reflect credit up on our St4te, aped I am proud to See that lie has passed through his long career without the smell of smoke Ripon h 4 garments : iii other words, that he has occupied high and de 'served positions, and stands, after a fiery trial of persecution and of fouptatiou, the same_ir reproachable and upright-citizen." This is the feeling which is doing its work; and when we itdd to it that our principles Itre pure, liar foundation the Constitution, inn' our flag a flag emblazoned with all the stars of the raion, and- that the invocations that stir us onward, the great duty of maintainitc , and ob.-;erving t,he libcrtibs achieved by our lath, ,era, where is the true-hearted Pennsylvanian that will peruse to come for Ward aui support the candidate ofTennsylvania and of the-Union, JAMES BUCILININ The Fremont Oracle eivas It Up. The purchased tool of the Fremont . Aboli tionists, the editor of. the New York "braid, ilpiresitatingly ntlin4s that the Presidential contest is virtually decided in fa yor of Mr. Bu chanan. In his paper of :Nloinlay inorning, 13ennett has the following "The moral effect of the r;icent cleetions will tell in favor of Mr, Buchanan and the .I)emoeraey ; inn' it will lie felt inure especial ly in the central States—New York, New Jer spy, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Illinois—all, per haps,except Ohio. If, :it the grotonset of next month, the administration and the .Deinocra cy can follow up the advantage they have al ready , i;airied. and bring their whole forces to bear with vigor upon these central States, they may probably carry them all, and thus )wt enly elect 13nehamtn triumphantly, but also fkle . .tta majority of Congress, pleilge , ! in sup port of the views and_ principles_embrneed. l)y the Democracy in. the presmn contest," WILL THEY UNITE 1 To the Democratic party it is a mattor of perfect indifference whet her the opposition nnite or not. It is utterly impossible for them to forma more perfect union than that which t—o erth rown. "IVe — beat — th - en badly cut the 14th of October, . and do what they will, we shall beat them worse on the 4th of .Novemher. .suelt- upbn our banner, (~o) more ,slaN e states,' k ) gee shall go through Pennsylvania, and our progress will be a trnnuplial march l"—ltock/aud, .1 - .) Heetild, Octoher 1. . IL- A y-Went through, sure enough. Saw him do it, tzt.s. Tuesday. Can't say we 'Oll W airy thing of the "triumphal un !'' that they have little or no hope of carrying Fremont into the Prosidency,"but are calculi.- , ting upon and ~reparing to get in this county a majority for the "eminent- cattle specula tor," so that they may not be without hope of f oarrying it hereafter—particularly next fall, when the "county74ces" are to be again filled.• Democrats and all who are opposed to the bigotry And proscription of sworn Know NothingisM, 13E ON- YOUR GUARD against those desperate men and their infaonOus ma chinations. Talk to y,o,a as they may, and deny what they will, tliey. it KSOWS, and their doings for the last two years, secret and dark us they buret been, ARE KNOWN TOO! Watch thein—follow them up--=and see to it that they do . not impose upon the, weak and ere!)tilous. B U,c,11 N.% ti" and Itur.eKiNitnipa; dw ertia the votes of all lovers of their country. Shall these platting dark lantern tri,,:kstc, , rs take one from them ? We hope r t, but know that they must be closely watched. - The opj)osition papers, says the York, Ga zette, in their "entuzzhnuzzy,", when they supposed the people:of Pennsylvania had been duped into the election of Ow Fre,inont State Ticket, said amne queer things—queer and straw r, for them we mean, bemuse frig. "In Pennylviinia," HILVS the -llarilL:lagv, Telegraph, "a defeat in October ih getwritiii the procnno i r of IL worse defeat In Novkinbga. TB IS-14 ,the majority bf r Francit;ll. Shrunk over General Markle was 4,:;79 at the .oetober eleetion. The majority of Col. Polk (,‘ 41enry Clay v.as 6,3:12 in November. In 184 S the majority of Johnsto t rover Longstr o th was 211 the Iptober election. The majority of General Taylor over Lewis Cass. was 1:1. - :158, and over the combined vote of Cass awl' Van Buren his majority was 2.,'74 in Novemlief. These hlieol demom,trate that the vote (d•l'enn sylvania-ean be thrown against James Ba ch anall by a hugely increased urtjiiritv. We have woti One glorious vieniry. The nil:lkon' of Buchanan is stormed in our pusses shin. With harmony among the allies. s"- bastopol must fall on the 4th Of November." Sre'Yes --but silts it Wens /14.1 t that . ).“41 have nol "won one glorious victory," and that it is /hi; who have stormed and are in posses sion of the Malakoff, and are about to storm "yw Sebastopol, bow is it? Is it not slit/ true, as it 4vat when you wrote the above, 'that ''a defeat in October is generally the pri, cursor of A WOUSE DEFEAT IN SOVEM.- 11 Eli ?" llow now ? BM Tlie reJoubta - ble James Watson Webb made as *bet the ON ening before the election that PeUusylvauia would go, for fusimi by 40,000 majority. "n Ni_tw 11 . % the mo bef o re our State election had the following prediction: "We halve good reason to believe. that if there should be only- tol e rably fair play', the ildehanan candidates will he defeat ed by At Jeast 25,000 majority, and tw6-thirds of the Republican candidates for Congress cho sen." The impressions of both are material ly altered since the returns are in. Philadelphia .Vcir.v, which behin7 , 3 to the party that ettrr;e:d the election in MOO n;nro, is tatlcit about FRAUD . ; in the late elec tion in Pennsylvania::: /I has the eirronterv. to prate about •itlw purity of the, batiot-hox!" May as well be quiet, ye Itme.lt peu plt intend to elect Ituehanan, fairly and lionorit, without ON aid of "blood tubs, ,, ••plug uglies," "ballot-Lox stuffers," or any of the scoundrel gang ilium Whom you so much rely. THE SoVEREI“S PEOPLE will take care of you- and them, and all your villainous appli psices. Tossess your souls in patience, or f`shrielf." away, just as you prefer—it can make no difference row. You have done overy thing that your lase—i.Kitincfs eouhlsug- . ';‘est ',l t v (1 e-y4)u ParillSVllaili4 against thy friends , jthe Union. That all your rascality has been jierpetrotoil for nothing, is proya)king enough, to he sure -L4.-liHt you cannot help it, you know ! Instead of lamenting - over the past, prepare yourselves to swallow, with as little grimace as possible, the BITTERER In)SEI, / tat is to et4P; lOU iit2f:ll have it, darlings !—l'orle Gazelle. Elocitient Appeal for the Union. Th e following e to quen t, appeal of tin, lion. Robert J. Walker, for the ion, is taken from his recent letter to the Demt;eratic.Con nii itt c e, _ o f Pittsburg.. _ Let it he read by men of all 1 parifi.a in the spirit that it is Written, and . it vannot fail to carry conviet , ion to the true I lovers of our glorious and -induce them to rally around the standard bearer whose great soul burns with love fur "his country—his wholecountry",,—.TANtEs BucuAN, Ruttd it, fellow citizens of York county, and then go forth and battle in its spirit for the election of one of your brothers to that post who will reflect pride upon your State : t Cone Denwerats. come Whig', etuno friends of the Union of every party, come to the resole of that Fnion which ;lames Bu chanan loves so wull, and to preserve which tho patriot statesman of Pennsylvania has giv en a lung life of devoted sell lee. Come my brother, give me your hand ; let us save the country first and thou sottle, at SoWe future elcotion, the administrative measures about wl : i c h we now differ. Come in the name of our cu o r - now in the WATCH THEM The Know Nothing managers- in'our Boromgh. judging From their mameuvres, Rye monie ( ttrk }gumless. 1 W AGREE TO ALL THAT! xiEronz AND AFTT.,M, 11:111C=Eill IM3 - Fu6ioo---COUPASiOn Tha bpp(mition Pa-cps 41.4! at present in ,4 conditivn, growing out of tip.: tact that a number of the Fillmore kaders will not agree to merge themselves and [wo). of thtir party as sup port them onto Wooilydikal FremontisuL— The state of the is about this : Some. months a; ~•a Know Nothing State C , 4nvil assembled at Ilarrisburg, and s e lo e t, ed a Fillmore Electoral Ticket. The Fre- InOlit Know Nothings did not like the move, and hence set themselves to work to get up a •- " union I.:lei:torn" Ticket," intending, orf vourse, to have all the "union" on their own side, as they had in the late :State ticket, which was Fremont out and out. Ten days ormore ago the Fillmore Committee in Phila delphia, J o h n P. sawitsnion, of the Daily News, - as.chairman, was solicited to /itsc with the ,Fremonterm on one Electoral Ticket, but by a vote of 14 to 7 refused to coalesee—and subsequently, by a vote of 20 to 2, resolved that it was inexpedient to make any alteration in the Fillmore and Donelion ttc tin this :;:ta • This at once put-P-41:0es Thadde.- Stevens, at-rd other Black Republican Know Nothings,. in their trumps ; rru getting a few persons who lima previously avowed them selves as Fillmore men, they wended . tlkeir way to I,larrisbunx, and there e.vrcuro to getbAr-n, I :uttion Electoral Ticket," to lit , V 4 A (14 1 l o ( h i , roment and-Fill inure men, the for wet. to hive} Fremont at the head to. an „Gec for, u.rid the. latter Dilin,wei in that position! Think of it, both to be Elc t)rs, and 1)(44 re sidiog: out V the .Slatv! It looks like one of Simoffi Varneron's sharp tricks. The opposition, then, Lava . two Elo : inral Tickets in the field—one straight-out Fill more, find :the other a fusion of Woolly-he:o - and Know N , ;thingism. Whether both will remain in thii field until the election, is yet to he soon. But the fight is ivarming up betivezm the. commander:; of the respective forces, Oharles Gibbons o r, the oni; side, and 'Jan P. Sander:on on the other ; and the strong prod ability is that—we shall see what WO shall sre! "Thera were over 4;7,600 votes p died in Jinst. Tnes4ay, which is sonic brr(re 14,,u5e , a , / ti); - I.n thfo vote ;It thV 1+Ie; gory in , The eolonizing business a:Tr, ',cars .ta have been practiced tv an enormous extont."..,--Mar. ThurN ! But instead. of it loving Been don: fur the Democratic sido, tIS you would hare your reathrshelieve, the "collar is on the other(the woolly) horse," As part proof, we quote one of your _ (mu' party' papers, wide!) is for Preno,ot in particular, and fur any Ludy who will bent Buchanan in gen eral. 'WA. 1)1Na the ,fylapt.l Oh last trundler of which sav6 : • ".. hott-t-1;8,01'0 N (!i - i'S — Nt'eff" - 141 - 1 - 1 - 111 11011)111:1 un Tne,dav; Lein ,, nearly 12,000 Inure than \VITO vv:yr ionlioll'iwfore. Sin:a; Hui )1:1:vor'.;; elet•tion in INlay •tilo Dontooratic vtito haq inerotv(ti ovt , r 5,01i1), awl. t h li typo (iveP-6,1)110 What say vial to the veracity of the Sim pow, hunest reader ! •BifreWiing, islet it? reiyDef•MH/ Couoty.—We have the Ai vial vote by districts in lierkscounty. and-we cl a d, oil looking at tiff , figures, that in the fif ty districts which compose the county, Otero is a Democratic majopity in every one, • We doubt whether there is another county in the State which shows so deeideflly tt onc-sided „ins.—Phitailiiphia Ledger. Tho bei7ger is sl ig !dill wrong—only slightly, One district—Mheson—gives an opposition majority. but it is so muelt reduced • as tri be scarcely xv . orth taking into account. The oth , er flow distrietK—Uaernarvon, Otitelaunee and Union—which- NvEre usually 'against us, have this year wheeled into the Democratic line, where we believe they will rouniiii in all time to come. There is only one county that can compare with Berks in* showing a solid front fin. the Democratic -ticket, and that -is little ',11 4 04. She gives a liemocratio ma or, ity iu errry district, and in some ten or twelve, throws a u ! lanimous'Democratic vote.—Reud- GazclE , ' The "War" in Kansas. "',fi r e are out day and night, seeutin (Ivor a country where al/ is rce. W e h a ve no thing to tight but rumor. I►„ .•.,u real the - paper„.!? It' you do, don't believe the stories published in them," Thus wrote an officer in the army, in a private letter to his friends in Conneeti ont, front the camp Dour Leeontrtun, Kansas, on Ow ',29"th of Aug,-ust. Fremont's claims on the govern ment fur services in California maounted to 5989,1:5 '29 the government- allowed only -,:zl47,Sllo'.—leaving a balance of•" 8-11- 385 which still remains mulcted upon!—and which Mr. Fremont and the other partieb iu terescod, dare nat pres.; f , 'The New York Commercial, one of the. mlst - reliable Whig journals of that city; iu reviewing the re4ult of the election in Penn nes oleetion is re sylvania, says "Col. Fmtno and without controversy, entiroly hope less." 1;z7. - ifllon. John Zincing, of VineenneS, Indi ana, formerly a Whig member Congress. nonneos his determination to vote for Buchan- ISM W-Gen. Walkor, in Nit%ragint, has re- =:111 I=l Fremont .;Corruption Fund-- Frauds ! 1 , ,t, (if the political deqpert.tioeß who ME had the "Union" or Know: Nothing ticket in charge at the late election in this ;.State, are now,leoking onf, Bennett, of the New York Herald, (Fremont.) sacs himself that ONE. H N D THOUS.% ND DO L RS wyitE SENT INTO THIS STATE, from the State of Ntw York, to carry the October el.lxtion for his party ; and Iliad, (here's a rich joke,) of Ilecn/y thopipt,u/ dollar 3 sent to Philadel phia alone, only (4.0/cot thou:gnu/ have been accounted for, blaming the Fillmore leaders I;ir pocketing, the rest ! When rogues fall out, honest men often—learn a thing or two'. The opposition presses in the interier .talk of frauds ot., the part of the Democrat , in Phila— delphia, &e. These conscienceless scribblers sliould- know that their own side is the guil ty party in the frauds and illegal voting which occurred at the late election. Th.; Courts will show it to the satisfaction of all men, if the returns have not alreinly served tii - do so. The;/ talk of frauds 1 1 Safan reproving sin ! XITENT;OI--TIIE 11110 LE - Democrats—you- have enlisted during the : tvAr. There can he no suspension of hostili ties until 0111' already raropiii,hea foeA; are com pletely swept from the field, Not one must, be left. Charge upon their broken squadrons from every qnarter. Let there be no sleeping at me out posts. No laying off our armor. We have another battle yet to tight—let it be a oath te: pqrt to that of tlw eighth ofJanuary,- 11,1, at New Orly:lmi. Let it he 3 Waterloo overthrow. h‘ljp tjuar(h, and at thew." BE Maet,hester (N. 1.) Inirm publis:ies roqu!,:t of a. correqoAident, the folltywing: FredupiA s:0 "We learn from a gentleman in the town of Stockton, in this eounty, who sp.att some years in California, that ho saw 0,1, „;,,h ii 'Charles Fremont stake and lose in one !tight at a gamhling tuhle in San Fl;lncisco, .the Mint of lon- thousand dollars, Our inform:ln t a man of veracity, and has for many years residod in Stoektc n." This is nOthing new to many people of our city. There area numlior of gentlemen in :11i3 city Ivho suen Feconont g%ttuhle, ly, largely and recklessly. It is a fact NMI taisA.,ed fr, that Br ant, the keeper of the largest gambliug—lntl-1-In San - Fraltrisco - , - who was. thi• warm Rirsonal and p ilitical friond of Vol, Fro.nont—that Bryant had a:. many as bin faro-lumks in his establishment, Witt Fremont has been known to gqinble at them freely, largely and recklessly.—The fact of his thus g,anibling can he substantiated by many wino respectable, witnesses of this city. yet :inch a man re..i:! , ivcs the support of many o'F 7 tlie clergymen of oit,. erLy, and'other wen Will) set themselves up as exaat phis in morals, MIMMEO!ffIffI;NE Revolting Case of Amalgamation. The New York. Tribune still - insists—and in the face of accumulating proofs—that the old-line Abolitionists, those who believe in tint perfect social equality of the black and white races, have DO sv i pathieH with Black It: publican Thu following- 7 from a ('raw (Indiana) paper, we feel quite sure will never !Anti its way ititu the colnntu , i of the Tribune; "The doctrine that has l i nen 30h''1'1ad vocated by the leaders of:the -abolition party during the ear, Vi,,at N, ai.wro was. as. , rood f ix f: (44 ,' 1111:4 h t leoine with a nnijority of th e m o m hers of that party a l tixed-fact. No longer than Iwo; week a man residing in the vicinity of Oberlin College, in the State of Ohio, gavo his only datif.*prin , Marriage to a sooty . : fricar who h 4 4111 41 '{ t 2th-dawn institute. This man, we under stand, is State elector on the rremont tick et, And 'ward): the negro as his canal, Tho young holy described as being extremely iwantifill, and but sixteen years of ago;while her dusky lord is blacker • than the darkest midnight.' A_CARD h'elifor refihr Compikr understand that a report pro\ aiD: in some quarters that I have tie•erted the Democratic party and intend ,o it for Fremont. I tako this occasion to say thiit fie report is untrue, and that if I live t.n til the Notenil,er election I will deposit, Illy ballot , :1;1.1 13:4,zeicoNKI1)GE, • JESS E jOIINS. Peterslairg, (Y. 8.) Oct. '2l, 185 G. -- DEMOCRATIC POLE RAISING. Tho Pole Raising on the premises of Mr. Adam Weigle, in lluntington towitship, on Saturday afternoon _last, was a - spiritetl gath ering. The Pile, a boautiful hiekurr, with - .•Buchanan, Breekinridge and the ( 7 nioh," upon its flag, was oven raised, an.l greeted with many hearty uheors, when the assem blage organized by stalling PFTt;R Mt 1.1. EU to the chair, & selueting a ntlllllln.lr Of Vice Presidents and Secretaries, which we give from memory as correctly as wo can, the list having been mislaid. Vice Presidents, James N. •Pitten'- turf, ;drum iglu. Jamb Bream, Fred erick Pillard, John Butt, Sr„ Jacob Sheafer, Jonas Johns, Eli S, Myers, George Shields, Rattan C, Kennedy, Secretaries, Josiah Fiekes,- Jacob B. Miller, tieorge F. Ecken rode, Win. E. Myers. Marks Bream. Dr. John A.-...;wipo addressed the meeting at some length in an effective manner, and was followed by 11. J. Stable, wlich it adjourned, with three cheers for Buck and Bre,..k, and three more for Mr. Weigle and his good lair. The tilettvsburg delegation then took their leave, and went through Petersburg en the way home. When We it to that place, drum anal fife were of coll.:NO struck up, and th e street kept lively for a few moments, however. was too much f)-- 12:=:m THE GLSIOES DEMOCRATIC ORM IN PENNSYLVANIA ! us k t. ate, SW. Adams . , Allegheny., A mist rung. Bed ord, Berfts. - _ uek9, Beaver,. Butler, Blair, Bradford, (l int bria i , Carbon, Centre, Clarion, Clearfield, Clinton, Columbia, Cumberland, Chrsilrf. Crawford, Dauphin Delaware, Elk. Erie, • Fayette. Fulton, Franklin, Fine,,l„ C; reene, I hint ing.t on, 1 um, • J viferscon, uniata, .()%rrhe, i.a licAster, i.awrrrcce, Lt.thui.)ll, eri•er, :11 ,, litg9tnery, Monroe, Northuiiiherland, Norlhapivt.un, Per. y, Philadelphia, Poilet, h uy Sullivan, .. S4 , u-nuet, SU:gnhllanna, U n inn, Venaiwo, V ;men, Way ne, aNhintring t . y i Ir, 11; (-4tapurelanci2 York, The •counties are alLtlgicial exerpt Elk, Gyeene, Juniata, Sullivan, Wyoming, Craw ford, Forest, Huntington, Imliana., Jefferson, Lebanon, riqe.Kean, Potter, Sustiuplumna, and Warren. . . I,I.TEII.—ITARRTstxita, October ‘2', —They foliiiwing are the fisotings up of the re turn.: of all - the cunittics in this Stsite v.cint Elk ailitMoKean utwaties I)eup•i•rat ; •212,1-10; Union, .I.)enw erzitiemajilrity • . 'THE LECT'ISLATURE. The next Legislature et' reen.ylvania will. sta,ml P-Illows: Sedat% 11.tftw, DOTI. mai.. TT /ei~te sernres , a Democratic United State& ,Senatar ! REILLY AIR BREWER! Lsos- 1,.41-, tho Democratic( can t • ' qur____Cang,4uxis,_ll.3,4-.ds-rnajtmiV----1-n-ev-ery oountsin : Adams 41. Frnnk-. Ain 43. Pultlm 262, Bk:o,fordl23. Juniata making 5Q9 in all. CEo. Nr..llar.wEa, E,q.; for Senator, has 51 imAilani: an-11.42 maji rity in rrankiin, making 03. Prelty -wt , ll done for districts clainnsll. , the opposition. ALL HAIL MUNI ! The Democrats have vleAl-.ii'their (I.‘vernor and Lieutenant (,:ovirnor majo:ity of over 7.000. have t , (l 7 of the 11 members of C,,ngrez,,,.,(being a gain nf five,) and a majority in both bra:win:l6 of tinl -0 , 1;;Izit tii•c; OHIO LOOIIENG UPI Although our friends lost the state, they novortbeless succoodo4l in electing wren mum— hors of Congress. This is a cleargain, the present Congress the whole twenty-ona. members aro either Black Republicans or- Know Nothings. Reported returns from all the connties in the State 'show that tha Republican majority in the State will Le about IS,tuitl, not 30,000 ur -10,000, a, at firn reported. N,,t so bad after all, and Ohio will d much Letter on the 4th of Novell; i)or. Indri-d our friends there arp confident of earryin! , tlu.) State for BUCHANAN AND BlUrIC1:11\.:- .RIDtiE. n 5 6,061 656 ,22.7 663 3:21 907 .660 131 L 699 251 200 183 25t; 1,089 0211 861 1 ,001. „.40:3 1.913 1.519 361 1178 2.320 151 3.134 561 1,738 I 60 MEI 611. 1,419 ' K. N•e -15 EMI 4,235 395 643 495 596 :3,975 446 1,200 5:25 411.0 2,088 116 .50 '2OO 1,700 50 2.lft 1,5;8 5.3 i) 191) 19 47 - 250 bk.; 1.108 2,578 410 350 109 EiNIM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers