THE COMPILER. "I,JUEELTr, THE ENITIN77 I .-X.P THE CONSTITVTIUN." GETTISI3UI?G, PENS'A Friday Evening, Oct. 01., 1858, Democratic National Nominations. JAMES BUCHAN.AN, of Pennsylvania. JOHN' C. TiRECK IN RIDGE, of Kentucky. Democratic Electoral Ticket. ELECTORS AT LARGE. Charles R. Buckslevr, of Coldrabia county, Wilson McCandless, - of Alleghany county. bISTRICT ELECTORS. 1. Gee. W. ,Isiebingar,,,l3, Abraham Edinger, 2. Pierce Butler, Reubtn Wilber, 3. Edward Wartman, 'l5. Geo. A. Crawford, 4. William H. Witte, It. James Black, S. John McNair, • - 17..11enry J. Stahle, 6. John 11. Brinton, 18. John 1). Ruddy, 7 . David Laury, 19. Jacob Turnov, 8. Charles Kessler, 20. J. A. J. Buchanan, 9. James Patterson, 21. William Wilkint*, 10. Isaac Slenker, 22. Jas. U. Campbell, 11.-Frs.-W. Hughes, -23. Thos.Cunningliam, 12. Thus. Osterhout, 24. John Keatloy, 25. Vincent Phelps, Cfc" TH E FEAIiFUL ISSUE to be decided oN TUESDAY NEXT!— Shall the Constitution and the Union STAND. or PALL? FRE MONT—the sectional candidate of the advocates - of Dissolution - ! BUC EI ANAN = the candidate of those who advocate ONE COLIN- TaY ! ONE UNION! ONE CON STITUTION! ONE DESTINY ! DEMOCRATS OF ADAMS ! © You fOught a good fight on the 14th inst. Ou TUESDAY NEXT the great Presidential battle takes . l'ilttao. Are you elrioady ? We have said that Xdatns wilt give nu inoreased majority for J.istrs 131;en.ix.tx. - Rim for you, fellow-Democrats—for you, Union-loving men of all- parties—to -make-gee Let every voter who lot es his country, turn out on Tuesday, and help to swell the inajori ty fur "Pennsylvania's favorite son." IIE - BEADY' IN ANY MAIER it lleniocrat ! net .taken by surprise and -unprepared for ineletuent weather on Tnesilay . next conveyances, if neeefontrY, fur the aged atid the feeble. Th t e :yenng end strong will of coarse not be kept beck. But let theta help those to the polls who need help ! sei-Vote, Rain or Shine ! BEWARE OF MEM We are reliably' informed that the Know; Nothing managers of this Borough have their tools at, work in various parts or the county, circulating the mint outrageouuly lying ports in reference to Mr. Buchanan - and the Democratic Party. One of their leading lies i., this:. They - sity that if "tiachanan is elect -ed. l?enaSylvania NilHieFOrne a - shire State!" -' lot h - er is, that "the Democratic , party is in . slavery !"—::and more of that kind of iille trash, which they knoto.to :be UNTRUE from beginning to end. - - If onest voter, whottever you am upprOtteb- . eil by one of these unprincipkfl hireling, turn your back upon Nita, tll4 uuwurtiiy the euunteuanee ofa•deeeatutan.. • Kansas has Quit Bleeding. The IVasl - 4tigtou Uniuu publ6lle§ a letter Jeary, w - 10 vernur BM that peace is.restored in Icausas ; that in two weeks nu outrages 'hail Leen reported; that many of the most notorious agitat'irs of nil parties had loft the ttTrritury ; that he 'will permanently keep a force . of troops on the Nebra-ka frontier, and that he NIrt)111li ShOrtly proceed with a smnll . foree in puirniit of it yang of thieves in the southern plat of the territov. The Right Side and the Strong Side. How gratifying it is to be on the right side stud the strong side 101 nt ouoe. This gratifi cation the friends of Mr,.Buelianati-nse-now- , experiencing. They always knew they were un tha right silty, and the late elections show Vouclugively that hey are on the strong side too. Lie books are open, though they will be cl ,sed before long. Come in at once and, join ill t'ie hurrah fur the right side and the strcng ME Will It "Pay ?" it pay our opponents in the country to travel five or six miles to the polls and spend . v - ti 01 e day there, only to go hone at night Pat , !4l, with the shouts of the victorious De ringing in their ears ? —p A yin u , to much for the whistle," this thing of s i lend ing a day in a bad cause and getting, lA:)atea 'sorter all. Sen,-ible men will hard:f IJu caught cluing so foolish a thing: A Vreat Yield. The Buck•wheat crop this .a:1 is thought to be the heaviest ever raised in. the United ; States. It will he measnred on the 4th of N ivember. A. tremendous •‘:uru-out" is ex puts& Siireol, Fremont's bills !Or supplies while he, was in California, amounted to upward:: {if TWENTY DOLLARS PELII)AY FOR E,1( . 11 AN UNDER HIS COMNIA.NII: Wo , i!!ln't tie make an economical President? fle•This uumber of the -" - ConlisolA,..' is ix 61,eff it adfance of our usual puLlietrzfon day, iLi order tbut it may-reach its i,osAie,:4 before tho d : a. i y of cletqion, Poi—President, Nee President„ =I ) TO YOUR'GUNS! rTM II-I÷ ni r iliArrV ingrawarititian - 4 - 13 a e red a glorinum victory eystoto State, over the combined effortsil all the factions array- A. This is glory enough for one days,"and should itiSpire us with hope fir the perpetuity of the Union ; but Flu noh for one moment forget that the great battle i.r ya tf , be Aughl—ON TUESDAY NEXT. Bear in mini! that the cohorts of Niggerim and Knu►v Nothingism, in the face of the fact that they openly admitted that a defeat . c,f the Fusion ticket in October, would secure the State to Mr. Burn AN IN, will resort to the most despe ta'e measures to carry the State on the Fourth of November. The MONEY POWEIt will be exercised, and the MARIPOSA D will be stretched to 'its utmost capacity.— Gird on your armor for the great battle, Peat cratm -Stand to your guns: and keep_ your powder dry ! Faithful sentinels on the watch towers of Liberty, do not close your eyes U) the danger, or forget your duty for a single moment, .or. the enemy may steal a march upon you.: FIGHT ON, FIGHT EVER. ie the noble eause of the UNION and the CON STITUTION A few days mere of hard work and unsleeping vigilance, and a glori ous triumph awaits you. Again we urge you to STAND TO YOUR GUNS ! TILL LANGUAGE OF A PATRIOT, §O-"If I kkow myself, I am a politician neither of the East, nor of the West, of the North nor of the South—l therefore shall for ever• avoid any expressions, the direct tendency of which must he to create sectional jealousies, sec. tional divisions, and at length dis union, that worst of all political calamities."—BucnANAN. Such, follow-citizons, is the language of a PATRIOT and a STATESMAN-ORO whom a ma jority of the freemen of this great Common wealth hare just, virtually, decided as their choice fur tho highest post in their gitt, a post which he will fill with honor to himself, and credit ty the country over which he will pre aide, With what pride can the Pennsylvania free ! Malt —no matter what his polities are--..g0 ' 1 _ forward to the_palls i _ott 'ft:Est/Ay_ snx!r, and_ cast his vote for,so distinguished a Statesman —so cherished a son' of the "Old Keystone!" The vote given for his friends, on the 1 ith ' last.,was a r 4 od one—one of will I we"r• , 1 5. ) . 0 I U tainly feel proud ; but the one about to be cast.) , DIRECTO" FOR JAMES BUCHANAN, will ha much greater, us an earnest appreciation of his great abilities, as well as of the sagacity and pride of his friends and neighbors. In him, tot , ' Prvsidont, we - will - 11nvo no t:agentlering of strife and heart burning, nor jealousies, of the North against the South—the East against the \Vest. lie is no sectional man—no dis 'n-nioni.yt ; and a happy people we will be when the sun goes down, on Tuesday next, and JAm Es BuctfANAN declared- to - he- 2 - the- I choice of this great nation—this glorious old ''Union"—its our Chief Magisn:ate . As /''semen—as Uniciu-locing patriots—both in the County and State—you have done no bly—gloriously. Osa to.A:v atone:, fellow-citi seinft for our Country, and you will have achieved the greatest political victory known in the annals of our nation's existence! Let every man who has the least pride for his no ble old State turn out, on TUESDAY NEXT, and earn that pride by depositing his vote for his fellow-citizen .1 ANI i.:S BITCH IN . - BE NOT TIIIIOWX OFF 101,11 GLU{I), DEMOCRATS ! Whatever may be the indication of disagree ment among your t.pponents; 11N) not rely, Democrats of Adams, upon any division of 11.4r—stre WORE ON—as though yon knew you were to have the consolidated oppsition again to meet and conquer ht the ballot box ! The. national Union portion of the Fillmore men, it is. true, now repudiattnaWassociation with the abolition. branch- of the orposition. But the kremonters are boasting loudly quit the friends of Fillmore wilt be forced to surrender their Union sentiments and join tit& fanat ics as camp-followers. Every where they are proclaiming that the whole of the opposition voters in Pennsylvania arc fur Fremont and his disunion party. Sreekl Dimpatell to the Pentoybaei,e PENISILVAXiI BE BOLGIIII Nmv Tom:. Oct. 21.--The Fremont Commit tge. at theit , laeeting to-day, agreed to raise ONE 111;N 1.)11ED TIioUSA DoLLA to carry the-State of Ponnsvhania at the com ing Pre-iidentW election in No‘:einher. This is the Wall street valuation or the old Key stone State. Is she in the market ? Will she dispose of her political integrity for.one hun dred thousand dollars ? Let your incorrupti ble yeomanry give their answer at the pills. -barlf any body is to be so/d next Tuesday, It will be the knaves and fools who contribut (Pi the funds TO BUY PENNSYLVANIA Too bare Attempt will cost them thousands of votes. Look out for an awful majority for J MES BUCIIANAN ! Pennsylvania 'will not sell him. THE WORLD has not wealth enough to pay for him—he is above all price. imc:== The Odds Makes the Difference. The New York Evening Post, a leading_Fre wont Abolition journal, when the news first rf..itched that city that the Democrats 1110. car ries' Pennsylvania, heralded it to the world as a Fillmore defeat. lieu the bogus returns made it probable that the fusion ticket ha mieceeded, it made a grand flourish over "the great Republican .victory." It was all Fill more when defeated, all Frcal iut when sup posed to be victoriou4. ,B The true Fillmore mon of Lancaster city and county aro not Willing to be t-o: I to Bepublitxus, JIM WIEA FOR RCM - ;aptirer recent y . an rum c ed that Hon.:John McLean' had declared him soli in favor of .the,,eloction of her, Bnehanon to the PresideneY. N 'This announatement fully confirmed by the Daily Commercial, a rampant Frcinont paper of CinOinnati, which attacks Judge McLean bitterly for thim prefer ence, It is one of the inost:gratifying signs of the times to see nearly, if nut ull, of the really great and patriotic men of the nation rallying around the . , standard-of the Democratic piny in the pre:wilt erisis. The accession of Judge McLean is another great proof of the fact that in timer of real danger ,to the: Confollerae!,- those who desire • the perpetuation of the Union, the preservation of . the Oonstiiution and the maintenance of the prosperity of the country will array themselves in the ranks which alone can preserve them, despite all former political predilections and prejudices. The idea of entrusting the destinies of this Great Republic at a crisis like the present in the hands of such a weak, inexperieneei and un safe man as John C. 'Fremont is one from which every conservative and prudent man in tbe•country recoils with _horror. The fruitless, SPWIOI36, and dangerous see lienal war, so long, and se bitterly waged by the Abolition agitators of the North, is becom ing clearly understood. Thinking men are fully awakened to the. fact that, while it is im potent and powerless for the attainment of gond and beneficial endfi, it is a prolific, source of the worst species of evil. The sentiment is spreading wider and wider with each new day, that sectionalism should, must, and will be crashed in Pennsylvania, and other North ern states, by such an overwileb»ing ,nmjeri ty that from very shame it will never show its hideous face again. In the midst of the peril whiCh threatened to involve the whole fabric of our government. minor difference,4 have been swept into obliv ion, and those• heartm which are true to the Union and ihe Constitution, recosnimilho par amount importance of a perfect union to main tain them. Although Judge McLean has 'long heoi‘ supposed to entertain strong anti-slavery pro clivities, she had too deep a reverence for the" Constitution to lend himself to an infringe men t of its plain provisions, noir was therefOre rejected as a candidate by the Black . Rep O'N eal's. Tlannonneenonit of the fa, .1, that he is favorable :lir. 'Buchanan's election. cannot . but exercise a deep influence, Aotonly in Ohio, but in ninny other quarters, among those who hale been accustomed to attach great weight to his opinion.--Petoomtranion, 4Q I -I;en. Scutt will void fur Buchanan and Breekinridge.. VOTERS. OF ADAMS! 'D o es nut Pennsylvania deserve to have the President? Andsdoes she nut present a must -worthy Statesman its her candidate in the per son of our cherished - BUCHANAN ? Who is there hardy enough to deny either of these propositions? No one possessi ng.self-respeet. And yet you are asked by the Know Nothing Black lie' publican of .Por.ition to pass I'y Penn sylvania's chosen son; and' vot?for a new and untried onto, without experience, Without qualification. without any of the attainments which should. be pßowssed by a Chief Magis trate of this great Itepublie But, as Penn x?/!rupiahs. you cannot' conseicutionsly follow the advice of the "hold bad men" who would , deceiv e you now, r as they !love for the last two years incessantly- attempted to do. VOTE Full TII 1.1 NA N ELECTORA TicK ET ! It is til4` I 5' SAFE cJurs for pa triotic citici' V to purzAle. There is DANGER in Any other! Mr. Buchanan in-the War of 1812. In tins w..r to — the .4 meric•in Regider, pub lished at Towsuntuwa. Md., we have to state that .1 .tugs 13ucii.o;A:4; who served' AL 13A111- more 11$ U privato, in the I ',unplug Of Velar tears commanded by thipt. Shippen, is the reedo hie .1 .AN ES It L'ell 1N AN now the I)0 mocratie candidate for the Presidency---and, further more, that. he 'w/t.v the . peat ntu u tie volunteer his services in the company. These facts are known to ail our eitizens old enough to recol lect the event , : 4 f Lq4, :l A gEs BuctiANAS L t neaster t o re side i n t h e yea r 1,11;), when little more than e i g h teen ye a rs of age, and has el er since re sided here, except when e4ttledaway by public business. Ile never was a member of u Rifle or any other corps in Moreersburg, as falsely olloged hy the Rtwister---but (luring tho late war with Grelt, Britain, was a pritcfising• lawyer in this city. and immediately Mier big return from Baltimore, in OcT4_ ber, 1814, was elected a member of the Legislature of Penn sylvaLi a, from this County.—Lanenster , bad. c"Detnocrats—fOends of the Union and the Constitution—GO TO THE'POLLS EARLY, and devote the whole day to the ser vice of your country. A Total Failure. The California, Wild Oats sown all over the Northern States iu JUDO, last, ha* proved a total, failure. The crop did not ripen any where, and in some }dupes the seed did not even' germinate. "Paul" Giddings planted and' Greeley watered, but 13urlin gamo'.= — Auti-Slavery iiod" could give 110 in ; crea s e. I'rltry Spirit. t - - - ' awl Nhrered.—A gentleman suggests the following distinction. lie says there are honest men and shrewd men among the Black Republicans—but the shrewd men are not honest, and the lamest men are not•shrewd. Minnesota.—The St, Pauls Pioneer gives further returns of the election in that Territo ' TV for members of the legislature, Le. ,They are favorable to tlfe Democrats. IT-r 7 "BeWare trliV.'ll ticke.ts ! Know Nothing Outrages in Thn murders committed in Baltimore by Know Nothing bullies - are almost of_daily oc currence. On Sunday last, one of the mot outrageous and cold-blooded everrecorued Was perpetrated. A Know Nothing rowdy; pan ed Briscoe, deliberately shot and killed, in a public street, nod in day-light, an inoirelsive 'HUM, hahled Kenney, of Irish birth, who WAY ut the time engagel in collecting . :L luau dollars for the relief of a poor widow, whose husband was murdered but a few day' before, under ahnost IU4 agtoritVaing eireUlThittlhees, The blood runs cold at the mere thought of such a deed —but the picture does not stop here.— The Suter of Thursday has the following : ~Wcatarb-...5m Outray,..--On Tti(oday tiftern I ion the remains of the late -lames Kenney, killed on Sunday last IN George Briscoe, were Con veyed to the tomb, attended - by a number of his fellow workmen, employees of Mr. Ross Winans. On the return of the funeral pro cession it was attacked by a band of despera does near the intersection of Franklin and Fremont -streets, and scattered under a shower of' mholes hurled amongst them. Pis tols were also fired, and one of the -number in hie flight received two shots in his legs, while others were more or leas inkirod.—Surely this outlawry must be near that culminating -point when public indignation will demand the suppression of it, The Know 'Nothing authorities must surely soon become awake to the true state of things in their , city. If they do not, a "riyilamie committee" will become necessary. The Trap is Set, Gentlemen ! Walk In: Xter , Thaddeus Stevens and his cunning co adjutors 'have, got, the thing very handsomely arrangoi• Ni friend of Fillmore can vote the partnership electoral tickot, without con tributitigthrottly to the election of John C. Fremont ! However detestable the doctrine, ,, of Black Republicanism niav be to the honest supporters of Mr. Fillmore, it is just so arrang ed. that he cannot give his favorite the sinall est aid, without, by the same act, helping in a Much greater degree, the candidate. of Aboli tion and Disunion Whu will put his linger into a-orack like that? BRING OUT EVERY ctf. r -IU • They may out all he needed. BO i 1 they should be, it will be quite convenient to hit‘e them to wont—amid shtmld you discover u. k le ficiimcy when the returns from - tho counties are'suumied up, IT WI Li, THEN LIE TOO LATE 10 REMEDY THE NEGLECTI BRING THEM ALL OUT—,IIeirTHEY MAY BE WANT ED TO TERN TUX SCALE. A hundred votes—rimy votes—ONE VOTE too few, would be ratal—a hundred thousand more than. the opposition, could do no harm. and would be no inure than JAMES BUCHANAN de- se ry es Come nut—man for man ! Come. I Cia — Our reports ef* Demucratie victories achieved in A.N A, CONN ECTICCT, . DELA WA RE, • FLORIDA, SOUTII CAROLINA, all stand ! They do not turn out to be falai eationh for the hour, like so many of the re portedlriumphs of our (pponents—but sober, solid facts, pointing unerringly to the trium phant efeetilm, NEXT TUESDAY, remember ! of BUCHANAN Sz. BRECKINRIDGE!. A CLMLN RECORD. . There is one fak that should be noted rela tive to the result in Pennsylvania, on Tuesday fast—and that is, that whilst at the election of 1855, as well as at several previous elections, the Dernocracy,although successful, only car ried the State by a plurality, there being three tickets in the field—at the recent election in the largest pH every trade (and with only two tickets in - the field) we beat all the com bined- forces of the opposition, by a majority ()lover l REF: TIIOUSAN D VOTES This is the cleanest and must triumphant victory ever achieved by the Democracy of Pennsyl vania, and the moral influenee, it will exert all over the country must have a tremendon effect in.settling the Union and the Constitu tion upon a firm and enduring basis.—Laac Gael. What Can It Say Now. The New York Tribune in sneaking of the election in Pennsylvania before it took place. made the following acknowledgment : "Tile Slate of — l r ennsitivania now occupies the . most interesting, and hcuee imperative pgisition in regard to national polities of any o f this It may reasonably be affirmed that without her .co-operation in the Republi can canse the result is eimrbtfill, if success be not impossible altoyether." %V hat is now the universal sentiment—what is the decree of public opinion ? In the Trib. ttne ' S own words it may be summed up—Re publican success "impossible altogether." gir-At the late Agricultural Fair in York. 'Mr. Geo. W. McClellan, of this borough, re ceived a diploma and a premium. of $4, for "a horse of great beauty and style in harness or Paddle ;" and Mr. John liarfley, of East Ber lin, n diploma and a premium of $2, for the "best Fanning-Mill." zkr-A patent wawa issued at Washington a few days ago, to Mr. Joseph H. Shirernau. of Eust Berlin, this county, fur an improvement iu Seed-phuiters. 1=11121=111121 Se - WILLIAM ' C►ucntxu.►rcti, L.q., former ly Sheriff of this county, has been elected Clerk of Blackford ,!ounty, Indiana, (for the third time,) by 45G totes to 4t for his oppon ent. and Recorder by 158 majority. A ..Itwt.vier.—Mr. ADAM Mel:l.nm-, of this pface, brought to our office, the ()titer (lay, Raddish tueacuring 131 inchos in ei renal forenee, and: weighing pounds. 113. rd t.) b-;►t. ONE FIRE MORE. BOYS-AND THE DAY IS OUR OWN ! I==l WATCH FIRES STILL RUNG TIIL DEMOCRATIC MEETING AT LITTLES TOWN.--A large and r-piritell meeting of the friendo of the rnion took 'dace at the house of Lori Kreps, in Lit.tlestown, on Wednesday nfternoon last, which was organized as follows: A tlm LErEvEtt, fire Pre...ride/11s. Jo,eph Short, Esq., Wary Spalding, William I/littera, Levi Krep4l, Jesse. P. Nolvonta, .I.)lin Bowers, George Gon dol-, 11. D. Wottle., Henry Miller, Jacob Fisher, Moses Hartman. s.rretiirie.y. Dr. L. It. Stanesif,r, David Weikert, I,ane Uegruft. Ephraim lUddlemo scr, Simon Bishop, Ephraim Menchy. E. If. Buehler, E.q., of Gettysburg, and Wet. F. Boone, l:?•4 1 ., of Philadelphia, made ef fective speeches, Arbon. after a few remarks by IL .1. Stahl , , the meeting adjourned with hearty cheers tor Burk and ('reek. Ell NG AT 11cS1 I ERR The meeting at neSlterrptown, in the even ing of the :4ame day, was a highly-encouraging one, the attendance iwing much larger than was antiripated, f , -)ni the short notice given. The follqwing gentleman 'were unanimously ehos,n PM; iVeid, II E %liV REILY, Esq. Vier I'rrYi<lel4l.V Joseph L. Shorb, Esq., Nathaniel W. Glu t Michael Geiselma,n, U. W. Wel.h, George Lawrence, Cul. James Lilly, Jaci;b Culp. Sc.wretaeies. John Busbey, Jr., Esq., Michael Reily, Ih. Charles llombach, Samuel Geisel- Mattitius Ginter. The meeting Nr.iis addressed by Win. F. 'Boone, Esq., IL Stable, Henry Reily, 'and Charles Wilk when it adjourned, in the highest spirits, amidst hearty cheers for the standard-bearers of the Democracy of the Union. MEETIN(I AT HA MPTON.—The friends of Buchanai'i and Breckinridge turned out to the meeting at John A. Dicks's, in Ihunpten, on Thursday afternoon, in goodly numbers, and an earnest enthusiasm. characterized the p roceedi ngs throughout. The following. gen tlemen were the-ollivem: PrPsidPid, Col. Josnrn .T. KruN. Vice Presidentx, Hon. Daniel Sheffor, Dr. H. M. C. White. John Miller, Enninuel Chron ister, Peter Fidler, Jacob B. Miller, Michael Deßone, Jacob Bushey - , Esq., AndreW Brown, corge Mundorif. Sertetarie.v, Jacob C. Pittenturf, 11. L. Mil ler, Emanuel Smith. Able qpeveheK were made by IL C. Stro maw, 4d. lurk. Wm. F. Bootle, I.;sq., Phi!adv . ') and Simator WeLsla, of lurk, xtud we are pure with happy effect. MEETING AT• HUN I.IIIISTOW notwithstanding the unpropitiousness of the evening, NV :Vi a largo and spirited gathering. The meeting was held at Jacob L. Grass's:— The officers were: • President, COI. JNO. N. GRA FT. rice Presidents, Col. .lanivs ,L. Neely?, Simon Melhorn, Grass, Cain_ P. J. John Taugoinbaugh, Henry Pottorr. Henry Dei,k-e,r, Relay Mulli- Jacob L. I; rums, John Ycatt&_ Secretaries, John - reliy „ lisq., John G. Brill kering, Theodore Taughinbaugh, Wil liam Thomas, J. C. Pittenturi. Senator Weisll tend Mr. Boone addressed the meeting, and their Npftches were received with the,Ligl,►est satisttetion. At tive'elose of the speaking, a procession. VMS. formed, ‘s11.11:11 marched to the east end of the town, (where the young Dtanuerats h 4 that day erected a beautiful Hickory Pule,) laid back to the lee of meeting. llEta IT IX 1111 D, That while the Abolitionists rire:"sbriaing foe freedom" and claiming to L' it; pet:kat:4r friends, they, at the lute_>eai'n in tie Ilinise of Represen titiives 1ey14141- 4arery into the Territories of .V.Nraska . litztams for 111 . '0 z parg, clad mod. all childr , in: Ivo-n. itt the inra !dime q,/t . .vjgrr . mulhelv, furever: This pro-slavery measure intrtrd tinned into the Iliuse by Mr, Duna, of and pas4sed that body- by a strict _part; The Black Itepublimns vitted, all in the affirm ative, save one, Leittsr, of Ohio.—Every Dein aerat. from the ,N,flrth Mid South vote,' against the extension of. slavery into Kansas. feel should he rememlpered by the people. Is Col. Pcernont. an Infidel 1 Horace lireely has Home to the trouble of issuing -a paniphlet to refute the eharge that his - Presidential cnndhlate is or ever was a Roman Catholic. lie HMV turns to a still ,g..,ravur charge, hut is content to state it and the authority on which it is made. The Tri bum. of Tuesday says : . . "There is still further evidanee that Cot. Fremont is not a Raman Cathulie?_ STOCKTON' ASSERTS POSITIVELY IN SPED'IIES - TnAT HE KNOWS HIM TO BE AN INFIDEL" S.), 11orace ilreely is willing to atlinit that Col. Fremont is an Infidel, because that proves that he is not a Catholic. He gives Cum, Stockton as the witness who assorts the fact of Col. Frernont's infidelity, and virtually con cedes its 4. , orreetne , s by quoti-ng it as proof that he is not a Catholic. The conclusion is legitimate that Mr, timely thinks an Infidel for President would be better than a Catholic. We have heretofore insisnsl that the tendency of Abolitionism is to infidelity. We did nut expect the Tribune to zidmit it quite so early. —Lauc. Ldelligeticer. Examine Your Tickets. Friends of the Union, examine your elector al tickets carefully - before you rote! See that every name on it' corresponds with that published in our paper of to-day. There are "wolves in sheep's clothing" who will attempt to cheat the Democrats by means of false tick ets. Look out thr them. Fire at York, Pa, - VonK, Pa., Oct. 2.8.—A large barn, owned by James Holland, in the rear of the Baptist church in this town, took fire about 7 o'clock t hi s ovoning. Supposed to be tho work of an incendiary. The recent rains and promptness of our firemen sawed us from another very Sc- rious A Palpable Hit. .tmone the mottoe.; displayed by a Demo. German torchlight procession hi Boston, on 'rhuNday evening, iv;ii the followin-• "Iwontv-unt. vf.:irm f“:.• tlt•lt ; 0-1.1:.'•fi1.0 =:111 HOW'S THAT ! STAII1,11:-74 would by all means recurs. mend the perusal of,the last Star and Sentinel oryotar plaTe to all such as have the least faith in the trite saying of, "!sigh and grove fat." These two luminaries seem to look uzie op themselves as Having the peculiar mission of attending to every bedy's business, in con junction with their own selfish interests, and to denounce and suspect . all Such ns. do trot keep pace with their inconsistencies and fa natical follies and political changes, The Star, through the alasin6,:of the - ever "wide awake", Sentindl, calls-on his "brother, of the goose quill" to place him "right on the record," and at the same time. cautions the faithful against an • electoral ticket which has been put in circulation, with his beautiful and reliable name as one of the Electors. He of course declines the honor thus impliedly con ferred on him—for fear. of ,fraud, as he des- Glares. You may well say that, nay boy," Mr. Buehler, for Ala have nut yet forgotten the manner in which you helped to serve up your quondam friend Col. Neely. So long as your memory is refreshed:by the pleasant re collections of the campaign of 1854, your ,yratefu/ heart must eonfinue to warn you from accepting any political post that requires an tin compromising and a candid, Jfitaight-oug spirit and nerve to act and vote aocording-te the record and professions of the Star, your own paper, ,and the official, and for ought, to bej authorised organ of your own political sentiments. you know very well two years ago you gave the enemies''of the Whig party . secret "aid and•comfort" by placing yibur name "right on the record" of the order of the "dark lantern," at ai time when you had promised . to give your and irided ,upport to. the "pure unadulterated Whig Ticket," and to Col. Neely, whose Mime was at the head of the ticket that graced the - columns of the Star. • Perhaps it was in view of these facts that '-your -tu•uther Ihrrpelr, in - the Sentinel - of last week, so emphatically asks the citizens of Adams county as to the tchrwalotrl.l of the, 7-18 majority that Henry Clay received in this county in 1844? Cau - you WM: Ask the Know Nothing "record," and it is More, than likely that it will "place you right".in regard to "this new tricky". on the part of the hidden* and ' , unscrupulous foe" of the Whig party, as well as of Henry flay. But why did not tir;tinel Harper ask this- cluestign sooner?. Winn sayest thou. Gond.:- luw,:in reply? Wilere wait thou in ISS-1,. when "it became evident early-in the cauvaii that Neely would not run," and when . nt , is of the Whig vote went over tn Wilson ?" W liere was thou when, on counting the ballot, at Gettysburg, on the evening of the second, Tuesday of October, 185-4, it appeared. that the Whig standard bearer,Col. Ntely, re ceived hut 11 vot6 in all that Whig "Burg?" 17- ere_was—thou_t h on, -t hat -thou heNle , t thy peace, and meekly:submitted tv the prism nrer. of Whiggery to Know Nothingism ? Why did yon not then recount the majorny that the gallant Ilcury Clay received in Get tysburg and in Ada m.- in 18-44? Does not this long silence in 2 0. •ni, look like if you. were nut placed "right on the reeord?," :k s k yourself this question, while bearing in mind these facts, in connection with the-position of yoarsell and that <lf the Stnr since 1,85.1, and methinks you cc.n sani.factorily --10,5. e. the problem with regard to the 7 iintif,-tity that the (rallarAt henry Clay riveived county .7 1 2daat s,. and if yiai cal.t continue alovsinl the , Detnocrats,fasi;n9 with the- Know -iVAit ings and `-tVoolly Heads," silentlV a,- s c ; i i , A tai flit. yO•ciseriplice eOndilet 11.0.(1 e(lllrge' 4 f the Star, toemtrils numerous Cray and Catho lic Whigs, 1i will then give -up th:.l- last lo;po- Sin- you. auk-T-' 4.espainngly eunclinie , that you are-23. than. I had lanic,i-ivcd you to- -- zZ7.1 1 .11e- Know - N -, .thing always r calculate that if they can hook (rr crook ; " Dens ocrait..* in each nAinslii.l3 to remain aNsvzzy front; the polls on Tcesany res..t„ their party will carry the- county.. we- have' that Denisi.era.ts- and Unki.la, men:generally will not be' quite- ;.ran eiakaglt. to acct ”nza If e • our adversaries ita this manpor,lit will all go. th ECM e e ection ail Tote- ul LL, .*. a linr.cK.lN RI DGE They Give It trp The New Yi)rk stfi•rattl iaf ;'!•'•und.ty rises the• following, language in speakin4; of the resti,t, iu Pennsylvvadiv: '.The late result in PianisAvania, i'nn liPetilin with tloi unexpected sueoes4.,4' the Democracy in Indiana, iutlicato protty clearl' the election of James Buchan:tn.-444 our next President, by a handsome majority, u.. 4 the Electoral Colleges." Row are You Going to Cast Your First Vote ? nd--the-f, dlow season able advice -in one of our Democratic exchanges : "Young man, how are you going to cast your first vote ? 11w begin. rhurpolitical life? Will you a nnience a ri/cord that will haunt von the rest of your days , ?. Will you vote with a party that has but Nie idea. and that a false one? Will you identify yourself with a sectional party which can exist kit a sin 4rle year and then be blown out like a. Whero will you he next year? Look t.o this, Young man. There is no event of your life of more iraportane than this. Begin right_ Thisis everything to you." What Of It ? - nut suppose we aro defeated, what of it.— N. 1: Tribune. - Why, it is the .end of - our mongrel party— thAt's all. You will have to invent a new 'dune, new pAneiple-;. awl then be beaten over again—that's all.—Rat th/a Courier. • OfV'"That Country is most prosperous when! labor commands the greatest rewardt_" —Ja,,zc:s Bisehanim 11sit to _lbw. lattils K. foth.—A number of military companies iu Nashville, Tenn., visit,- ed a few days tgt the residence of the estima ble relict of the late President James K. Polk. The Union 'of that city says The companies approached the grounds by the main maritime Olt Church street, and tiled, through the yard, with marked precison and decorum, paying their respects and passing out in the same order iu which they entered. Such manifestations of respect were no less appropriate uu the part of the military than they were gratifying to the distinguished lady. Carlisle Volunteo . prup) , (!. , lA . that }time, Cilltrtd d."` :-..'1.:L1.11i,ur For the Compiler I=l
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