,~,..:~r . .tti. ..~ ~ .. ...r, , ~:. ;:~:.: 4c.g: (.4.111, 1-:.ld 'ip,il":4l - .. , :' ,. . , i1 1 ,,. I t;;;:t. •. , ..vii:f-t7,*, i.: .:"%cf l• • ~.,-...i : .:4-,,,... - •--,:..* ,4::,:-.?j:::•,t1f,f. '1n .. ...;1:?.!, ~ . ; , i i: „,? 2 ,•: , ..: . ..44,, .--- ~;•„:I ;r_ 1 :.. 7 .•: , : ,, ... , ,-,Tf.i , , i A: •.r41,i?.::.:i,;:t.,:i...!t:. V 1 ..il 4x ?!..f. i ;:,,,..,. '.,::1 ',:•;,,'i:l-• ~..*.,.:i'. ,;.4.-4.;:z, --.-.4•-,-.....!-....,•:- —'' „..,,, • ..„.....,-,,,..-., :. . A.- ~.c . i_.:;---;% ;: 1 ; 4 4-:. - - I, ....i. ii ..,:t . 1 4 , 4 i:-=•,..l't''-•:..! :i. ~_ , 1 . ,...L.' - : - . ..i`ti.,ii t ztj .4x.4 Pzi,;:--,:.,3::;-,it: I'4 ~ 42 -1. itt•.:l'"i, ;41 !..-.•:•,„ .......;,...:A4 ~-...-,-,....-1(..;,._„,,,:•-•:,,,"-iv..40 P• -; aizillijlilir!-,,.., i.k...2*. li•'.ll' -441`t' C.A. •-*.k.T,., .:";, : . 1 / 4 4 *..k‘t,."11 .'.' ,, !:4%, - -,„,' 1 4 ft ea tP 1:....1'tk.• • .„. iti• • 'tf. i .4 ,-..!.., "s• - .. ',..: ,4, ,Aiii,,,..... ~,,•,:.k:i:•:''‘` •:;..;:',; 41,, e;:, tiff ` :4 ‘..1.:. 'f,..4-.. ~,...:•.,,::Z:,-;1N.,,, !..5-.:.:4-:,..:i7..,%'N''.i:i. ~ ., ,. .1; • 44:, 5':1t......'f.;T:',,- t.,.,7,,•,:?,:,T, l i .: ; ,I . 4.' ' ' ' '- ':;:: l '.s' ;V ; 1 ,i,,,,.!..,!';. ;5:-... latr.:".,, I , , .:I.;'"':'',A?,,'*.. i:), I 1 .2 . i , s•-f.'''l..'.ei: ,- ' • !:; , :j.'it,4 .:.. [ i „ ,,,, , .. : -,- P:t ''ll ?K1gt.44:.-4 ' ,..,.,.4;;...2,- ;' , ..f4 , 0 . t . 44(4, i 4 . ...• ; ,- - 1!...-,; .Vi.'-'14,i., '2.--;:,,, ~..,:-.';':../. ~' •.: ~._ .. i,, .;.i i :.:-..,,.. .: ''• ';:'.. ?' 4 '-':',:-:; ' '7 * %," C t ' . l4 .• 1 t " Prrrsiluitiiß GAZETTE . :WEDNESDAY 110aN12G, JUNE 10. 1852 Antiniaande and Whig County Ticket. Ica.lisaus-112r, vurrincr. DAVID AMID& hittobanch. son iongss.-42, tanAlcr. THOMAS M. HOWE. Allubsay. roa saran. AILOACIE DAUM AlWholly. UM:MGM IL APPLIITON, Birstiothsm ;lOM*W' PEMMllT.KeKsesport. 1110 GARD GOWAN Pittsburgh. if. S. SYSTAR.O Taruship. JO DI PON Targutuut. nun WILLIAM MAGILL. Pittsburgh. ZDWARD 0111PBIL4 Jr. Plitoburib. .wants arnica or come or wungs moon. N. ORBIIAt.T. Altrebmir. WILLI#II ALGIO, Plllaburgb. ]W[9 LOWRY. Pala.,"h. . magmas. FRANpIR I. OAILDNEII. Vkl - READENG MATTER WHZ,OR FOUND OX RACII PAGE OF THIS fAPRR. We give pike Cody to s highly intareatin letter from ;distinguished gentlemen of Fort Wayne, Indiino, to Oen. Robinson, on the, sib; ject connections with our rood to Chicago, tisiipo and Lasalle. We hove hereto fore noticed the progress of the Ohio and Indi ana scat, from Crestline. the terminus of our road; to Fort Wayne, and we would be greatly gratified to sea the suggestions 'of_the writer with regard to "material old," in the promotion of these neW enterprises carried eta by the com posites interested on this end of the line. utia namatOus Tasr There is an article la the Post of yesterday, on this eubjenl, which seem. to require a pulling notice. It abounds is talutstemeutt6 some of Whiob - wisltall notice. ' The Post lisps that the Catholic. are escisied from attain civil rights by a law, (aging lb. word in thii 'culinary sense) If this were true, it would mat. tha matter worse for the demo crats, - who are aliays in a majority in the Leg . isistare of that State. If tbsp, it is simply a law, why. If they were not favorabhe to it, did they not repeat it long ago. But In tiffs OA Post . d.uhibits iii usual want of information- The re- - 1 / lieipus test isa part of the 6'onsfitution, and not a statute. , To alter the •oonetitntion in that State require. a vote of two-thirds of all the po- Puler votes given thi two occasions utiericessa .6ll attempts have been made to abolish this odi ouspest. IThe last wan in 1851. At the election - at which the question was submitted to the peo ple 57,644 votes were cast forl)overnor, and on ly 26,994 votes were given for and against the • .o.nhtion of the religious test, which at least elmiref`a - yemaskohle degree of indifference op . • . n Abut luentiosi. For (taverner the vain wee— , . For Dittimore, (Dem.) 27,1'2 Atwood; (Prima Dem. ) 12 OS T.)tal Demoerttic vote Fur Sawyer (Whig) Doinaraticinajority Now let ye see how the vote stood on the reli ;dolts tent . questioa. Ae we said hrfare, only 211,084 retell were riven, which were divided as follows - _.= _ For its abolition, 9,8G2 Against • •• 17,12`d Aletority against abolishing the !eligious teat, 7.11G0. 'these flares are official, and ere cord led from the leading doffiocratio paper of New Hampshire.: Yet in the face of_theee forts the Fast has the effroytery to use the following lan- "If earth 'elatila Operative in deg Name - Wee, whit bad Oen. Norse to do with its to o:Amaral Nothing! Bat, op the 'contrary, he ins 'shored by the side of the !assented Wood • bury to hove the foul stole wiped out. Bat their Ward to shollatt this odious test, did not foil through the lakewarmness of democratic sup . port, but the determined resolution of the whip', abolitionists, and free-vollers, to retails it. No man could do more than Piero, and Woodbury did to Owlish It, but they were-overpowered .by a malignant sad proscriptive opposition, sad if IL 4 curled out let the 'tags and abolitionists, the &linear porents of soak unnatural vaessame Xin our repot bola government be held respell , hie for it", Here theignorauce of the. Poet displays itself in the Snit lenience. "If such a law is opera. i tire in Nil Hampshire, whit had' Gee. Pierce to do with Ile nmeneent?" it asks. 'ltis almost absurd 'to argue spinet such stuff is this: but as the religious test was inexistence before Gee. Pierce was born, we shall clear him of all agen cy in Its "enactment," es the Past terms it. The Poet sore he has labored "to kayo the foal stain wiped oat." If this be so, his influence must . hare been feeble indeed, when he could, with . the aid Of "the lamented Woodbury," induce less than 10,000 voters to aid him in his ef forts. Shah a story is too ridiculous to excite any thing but mirth. Bat the Post says the Whip and Abolitionists defeated the Democrat+ in their efforts to wipe out the "foul stain."— This is piling alisurdity upon abeunlity. The Whip In that State are greatly At the minority, and could net, seen if they wished, defeat their opponents.= this or nay thing-else. Bat the ratan= show that the effort to abolish this test wee a Whig _measure, and failed because they ' were in a minority. to fifteen ntrengly Demo'- engin towns the vote stood,' For For abolishing the Catholic test, 360 Against:" 44 3.186 Almeet ten to one to the strong holds of the "Democracy" against wiping out this "foul stale while in fifteen towns where the Whigs were the majority, the rote was,, , For abolishing the Catholic test. '2.612 " 674 These flptimars taken from the New. Hamp shire leading Democratic paper of thit State, and they show us how the matter really Meads. -In the town of Concord. Mr. Pieree's residence, the vote on that OCClllitil laced 122 Irk toter of wiping oat this "foal aim.," and 609 against doing Go 1 We leave t reader to Judge upon which side his vote and ..ffaence.were probably cut. OM readers will bear al witness that we bevel inner glittered the Catholic', ar endeavored to , cajole thrincvd of their votes ; bat we think It is but .sittipti - Nstlec both t+ them and to the Whig perry; to set before them the facts in' eels- I don to the intolerance of the constitutional' New flatopstdri, and the conduct of the Locofoeos rof that Slate in the attempt which was made to wipe -. out what we cordially agree to denominating • " foul stain." The weight of evidence is yet against Oen. Plena, and 11/C tell the Foot that It will require something more than bold and tin , pidebt assertion to remove the well founded im pressiaii, that he went with bin party in oppori. tine to the proposed amendment of the Causti =dont ‘, tdemo.. 7 2/c Faso , Pa a--Composed . and iirsigo foe the Plano Forte, by N. Kumla, c Pittahnrgb. - -We ate indebte.l to the authiii - for s copy of this piece, whlch is bsatifulli caste tat WI 11 UO doubt good; butsu editor's sanc tum is Do plane to test its merits. The Springfield Republic ilburtratee the m end and notional reputation of Mr. Pierce, by relating the' following conversation that trims piled in Madly: "Fitutklin Pierce, of New Hampeldre, nom inated for the Wresideney." Thit announcement WIIII mado to our citizens by Mr: Miller, the tel. egtaphla operator here :about the middle of the afternoon on Saturday., lain. A few minutes thetwifter„ and *MU nil were in hourly expec tation of hearing ot the nomination, • Whig met one pf the meiCiatelligent Democrats of the county, In thi4treet, and inquired, "why don't you hurrah for Sietraf" "For 'Pierce ! Who's Planet" naked the Democrab 'Tierce, of Now flmopeldne," tisposnled the MSc but you ,needn't shout for him, as - l's jolting." "I thought so," eald.lba Llenmenst, "for he's, a Whiy awyeetr." • ' The Balton of Tuntry has decreed s largo dangles of Toils in Arable and Turkish print to the American Oflllala Boolety: The gotten mho thin donation partly la consideration of the poems many it aid& Ando LSI vas re. celled la Anossion. Oka. Fiala:um Pantos, sooordiag to • *tato matt in the Bostos J05:124 la s Mont doialad• sat of las Lally of 'Penis sad ths Doti of liorthusiberisad, tba deb Wag acrw sabot. . minim Raz DzitocincT. Our apology for insertlag the following abom inable extracts from a speed; made at the Westin meetlag of the "Democracy" in Tam many 11,11, New York, is, that we wish to show some reevectable men, who still adhere to the locator° party in this region, whet looofoooism to in that central: wigwam, that great heart of loomfooolma, the brutal and savage potations of which give life sad vigor to the party through out the country. We - tare not to make say oom ments, farther than to remark that the gross in sult to the illusirleas dead, with whiob the speaker closes, is in perfect keeping with every pert of his speech. We copy from the New York Herald, a paper friendly to the election of The chant= introduced to the meeting the Hon. kir. Willard, Lieutenant Governor of Indi ana, who was enthusiastically received. After. speaking some time of the result of the Bain; EOM Convention, he went on to say—.l love the nomination because I like that democratic platform most; and I say to you here, tonight, you most rivet the Iron heel of the democratic party to that platform, and never abandon It.— (Tumultuous applause, In the course of which the speaker took .of_ his coat, vest and necker chief—an action renered advisable by the in tense heat of the room, and In which ha was Im itated by many of those present.) We most , now try the great question, whether fanaticism or reason is to guide, the. destiny of this empire. (Good, good, sod gmit applause.) I say to you here, to-night, that the toner-stone of lids plat , form is the Fugitive Slave law, and by it audit alone we will stud 1 (Vehement applause.) I am a stranger In your city. (No, no, from the body of the , house) As l.wander along your great thoroughfares, and I look on the majestic buildings, mad see all thitigas of wealth, 1 be come impreued with tba greatness of your poe• aesoions. Bat how -do jog owe this procsrtyt Who gave to man the right to hold that which is his? Who gives you the right to wear your nap on your head? The law, and the law alone, glees man the power to hold the property which l is his. If a man comas and takes your cap off your head, he is called • villain, and he is seised, sent MI to prison, and told that he snail not dwell among men, for he is a thief and a villain. (Cheers.) Now, I want to know if the fathers of this country who came together end formed the soutitution of the Bolted States, if the great and good Into The were there, with clean bands and pore hearts, did B o solemnly declare that Southern men may hold properly In the eons of Africa? (Cheers.) Now they hold that property by law. Ido not mean a law so high that you cannot are it. (Laughter.) I mean a law as high as the constitution of the Baited I.orates, and that is as high as my political quer els shall ever get. Now, by the sew and by the coutitetion, there is the right of property in man, and I imjihet if • man is guilty of • vitt. tattoo of lair who taken,' 'this hat, he who helps the fugitive to escape, be whe"ttegis stud robs the master, he is a thief and a robber. I repeat it here to night. I say that he who violates the constitution and the law, and asserts his right to defy the law, and with ruthless hand robs the master of that which the constitution has nude hie property, is a thief and a robber. (Great *huts and enthusiasm) * • • The speaker related a ludicrous story of the nigger to whom medicine yeas Om for hie wife,. with directions to shake her well after each dose. Ile shook her once, twioe and at the tithd abate the kicked the bucket: and be applied it to the loses given by the democracy to General Harri son, General Taylor, and to produce its great re. suit of annihilation in the person of Gen. Scott. Great thoghter and applause, amid: which the speaker se• down." 0810 AID Illnit/LIF4 FOR W11,111F;114 31, 1811 . . Gas. Wm. Borates—Dear Sir—The enoin. end paragraphs will show a gratifying resplt es to the extension of our "BoolrboUr" Railroad. Its completion to this point may be considered ,certain, and we are now turning oar attention to an early connection with Chicago, or Lasalle, cr bath. Under our general Railroad law just coasted, wp ere no louger compelled to follow our charter congeoting with Michigan Southern company at Lsporteo„st guy take an indepen dent route -ton:kap or resswhare And it is o fortunate circumstance that a tiny. .N.ue to Chicago will pass through four conoty Bests, thus accommodating the business and Securing the active support of the entire district The whole di:dance to Chicago will be about 148 miles.— Should not the AtiSuainary steps be taken - ii, construct thin roluellting between Pitts: burgh and the illimitable Northwest? pen there be any doubt, alter the eplendid eo ce 3 0 1 the two Michigan Railroads, that another through route, posesealag lethal advantages with either, would be spaying road? sut,our ultimate elms should embrace also a brush 'slivery/Aug perhaps at Warsaw and run ning to 14040. This is to be a point of OZWIL. else Railined Na'syction, betides being the' head of steamboat herigsgen on the Illinois river. TbsWestem branch:4 the plinois cen tral road passes from. Lasalle to Reims, skiing, in connection with our road; a route pm from Galena more direct then by Chicago. With Wee two azterudoes oryour Pittsburgh road, the following would be the comparative distances: Front Liealle to liatTorle by Chicago, Toledo and Dunkirk, 1087 From Lasalle to New York, by Fort Wayne, Pittaborgh and Philadelphia, 9Gb From Chicago to New York, by Toledo end Itunkirk, , From Chimige to New York, by Fort Wayne and Pittsburgh, 906 In these distances it la *Flouted that the "air line" road. from Toledo to Gown, ;Oil be made, shortening that route 12 milts. From Galena to New York by Chicago end Toledo, 1142 From Galatia to New York by Lasalle, Fort Wayne ad Pittsburg, 1094 The country West pf us is new and without much wealth. To accompitth these great ob jects, will require a liberal support from the two companies Fast of Crestline. Hating ctor plated your negotiations for your entire work, and the Pennsylvania central road being to the same alvenced position, may we not hope that the time leaser ethand when these two compa nies wilt few' pre tired to give such efficient aid rosy at once settle the construction of these extensions in the public tubui as a fixed fact. That such a demonstration would metgrially ad canoe your stook there can be no doubt. While the Chicago branch should perhaps be the Ant to engage your , alerts in the way of lm. mediatecoaturuction, I think the one to Lasalle shield be embraced in the fine terms and re ports that may be .a add. A decided demon stration in that direction in the first instance, may be the means of securing p deeper Interest end more pecuniary aid at Chicago. Fe Impor tance, ultimately, to our through route. 00 La salle emmexion may indeed corpses the other. You will notice that this is the direct, route to Beek Island , Council Bleb end the Southern 'Peru. Yet 7 respectfoily. 10 MID ISITIAIIk iiIIII.IIOMIL- 4 / 1 11 whole of the grubbing did grading of this work bu been, »let, to sub contractors, and is to be ptithed foriamilto completion es tepidly as pal. ale. The lath% of the 'Nemeth Division, from Port Wayne to Tin Wert, took place here l on Tuesday last; the work, we undantsad, wee let at fair rates, to energetic and responsible mutilators. The work is po be ell completed by the first of June; 1853; the repentruotare, sills, cram-ties, do.; will be laid down in the cairn of the summer, and If the company mai ceed in raga:listing for the iron, rail' will be laid and the can, running by the close of the year 1853. It l the litigation of the directors riod the contractors that this shall be the case,. and we see nothing to prevent it unless an no. favorable change la the money market should place :it out of the polar of the directors to raise the money as foal it could be adrantsgr Italy expended in the prosecution of the work. Tho. Allen County. Ohio,:,bond' have been aid far 80 coots, and our county bonds could be sold at tbe same rite; but as it Ia hoped that • larger sum might be realized, the, offer was not accepted, and the President, Judie Hamm.will proceed to New York In • few days, to Cu.'l dearer to erect a more favorable wan Thlr ComParly has berm 'organised lea than two years; and now has the whole work under contract to contractors, ready to commence spa. rations Immediately; the eight of way nearly all secured, at • marl nominal expense; • stook *a • pita of $737,000 subscribed, afficlent to com plete the whole line ready for the Iron,. and a fair prospect of having it finished and oars run ning within 18 month.. No other company ever commenad under suck favorable asep. The early completion of the work is now a fixed fact; the route is emphatically a 'thick-bons" route, the most direct east and vast ens in the Miths; in • short time it will be sartected with tribu• tory blanche* ramifying every direction, and thus securing a large Asa of the Immense Iran sit trade between the fettle Rat and the At lantic, It , mist become one of the best paying routes In the country. The amount of Oak take* by the countles bag the line, is • - Co. 152245. lodlirid. Stook. Crawford, 0510, $lOO,OOO $60,000 Wysadot, " 60,000 25,000 Allan, " 'lOO,OOO 60,000 Visa Wort, " 60,000 6,000 Allen, balsas, 100,000 67,000 Stook tabu by ooatnotors, ' 160,000 ' 400,000 387,000 400,000 • 'total, $787,000 1 . 466t10a of ON Depot ads la plus causal eouthignal witesat, awl so lat' yaw, estedeeat was shown bytriton:et- paftlen - ii -be half of their faverite locations.: Alter.• patient exentiaation of the differeet site. preposedi" the Directors Sully located the Freight and Passen ger Depot end Watering Elation on the pumds of Allen Hamilton, Esq., between Clinton and Calhoun streets, a few rode south of hie rest fence—he donating 6 acres 'for the purpose.' The Engine House, Cars, Ba.,_ at the north-west corner of Judge Haines land,.adjoining tire city plat, at the toot of Hamm street.—he giving 6 acres for that purpose. It the company should hereafter erect machine shops, work shops, ha, they will probably also be placed here. These locations are probably as good for the joint In. West of the company and the city as any that could have been adopted; Individuals might have preferred other sites, and may perhaps feel disappointed—bat we think one citizens generally will be perfectly satiated. The road being now certainly provided for to thL•Point with a certainty of its immediate tom pletition, the next consideration is, in what di . notion shall it be extended? It most ultimately, 'Arid at no diatant day be oontinned west to Chi-, cage or some other point in Illinois, to connect with the chain of railroads extending west thro' that Elate. The Directors have ordered a sur rey to be mule immediately to Warsaw, in Kay chum° Co., to be afterwards extended to Chit:atm or Peru, Wools, as may be found most expedi. ent. The engineers will commence the work la about two weeks. The althorns of Whitley and KOllOlllllOO counties must seethe advantages offer ed them by a connection with this Ilue,and lf,thej feel able to raise such an amount of stock so would justify the undertaking, they could 111011te• rail road in a shirt time. We have no space to dwell on the advantages which will scone to Fort Wayne from the con struction of the Ohio and Indians Railroad. We look upon It as mere commencement of our railroad career. Other roads must amnia with it at this point, branching off to every direction. A glance at a map of the western Mateo, and the great chain of railroad, nor popstructing, aUI sathly-any onp of this faM. Fort Wayne Is 'destined to - bosome dpe centre of one of the beet and :mist profitable chains of railroads to be found I. the Uoiop. }'or Mt Pittsburgh Gar Site, Mr. EDITOI:—An application was roade some time ago, by the Pennsylvania Railroad Comia ay, to have the city vacate Eighth street and • part of Plumb Alley, in order to afford the Com piny a better opportunity to construct • Passen ger Depot. I hope inc city Councils will meet the request in • manner that the desired object may be obtained. Yet it will be well for the ci ty :ethos' to (=udder well, before they • cede poblio ground, that already one atrtets are very contracted An equivalent in money for the change will not be aatisfectory to the public. There is no open space within the city limit, to accommodate omnibueses and carriages suffi ciently epaoiona for the present time, and how much more shall be required when our Railroads centre here? Would it not be well to have a foil compensation in ground from the Company, fronting en pberty street, approprilted to the pablio. Ctrislo. 72011 WeiralSOTOr Carrespoadre• of ths Maly Plusbare. Garet. WAIIIIIINOTON, JIM 12.185 Tho Whig Fllllbl:uteri, who have eo hag Dein beating about the frontiers, threatening all aorta or enti r e upon their own party, and now and then preparing far a For m , ct eterppe4e iVe the territarier of the opposite, pr. thought to be caring In. We shall probably be able to nomi nate Boott without a platform involving elavery, without degrading pledges or unmanly submis sions. Large numbers of delegates went on last night, and many remain here'. There la a risible softening of feeling on the part of lb. genuine whig eapporters of Mr. Fillmore from fhe Soßtb. ri . enlly in:lnfernos. with Northutt whige base 40P0 mach to ;twine', teem that it would be the extremity of folly to sactifeelbe Whig party far the purpose of enterolinit to Mt. Fillmore 101 amply lib,4 Linder fires eat circumstances his nomination could he uoth• in more. la those States of the North where the ltnaller,, pnritlavery, .compromise element predominates, Fierce is certainly stronger than Fillmore, and in the Smith where that mu Lent to I.l4ppe,aning.and end of politieUl prin. civil, he will be preferred to th,,, pissynt execu tive, because they have conildmioe to his person- al inclinations toward the policy of that section, and becalms they know that they can depend upon the discipline of his 'party. Gen. Scott, on the ojityr livid, will get all the' Northern 'Whig States becamebe is 104 P , a l /11 41 e4 them, and his prodigious personal popity , will cenorentrate L ppm% him all the floating vote .of that part" ofrttetnreelpitry, and will secure h' ',every relhchlei leihig State South. That Boating vote is larger than many people suppose, and has never felled to decide the contest in fa- yore of any candidate who could call it oat. It elected lactic:ll. Harrison sal Taylor, it will elect Scott, if It pe not repelied by sitlPPill pptin his shooldere tht'hardent of an odious fan; atician—if the Inightneas of his Attie te not !alien tram the pulls by {be black face shivery. F. The Webster vote, from twenty to thirty in ; member, will never be thrown for Mr. ifillotom, ; though the larger part of the FiUlsterman might I be induced to go for Webster. But there are many Southern men who couldnot sustain them ',glees at below after voting for the gigs/HMS*. cretary of State. There are lumnereble pee cagee la hip fuller career which when *walled, as they would be In •thoustag forum dining the MMUS, multi restore, its its pristine vigor, Me intensity of Southern prejudice against hit% Thus I hold it certain that neither of the chief antagonista of Gen. Scott could be nominated, ehould Memo withdraw from the field. . ' A dew or flu perhaps will be required to set tie the questions' of aontel{iel omits. Whether • local meeting in South Cuolien;repreatiodeg pouibly three more and ten kited voters, 'Mail be ceilidh State Conventioe, ma be taloned die privilege of eight votes, in a national conclave, is one of the questions to be settled.. Then *lett or ten worthies, redolent with the perfume of eilecr•gfgitm and teapot:lability, will pre sent themselves from /OW York, and dencooce the regolar delegation therefrom as islaird with freeselliem, fanaticieni,:Ac., and upon the strength of that aocuntion will ask leave to poke their fastidious noses Into the Convention. From the beginning of the Convention whim the New yor} delegation Um exercised the sight of paultignpeo the oredentials of its membcra precisely as has beets gone In this case. No con section bas undertaken to overrule them ItM said that the delegapaa on Friday last rejeOteg the claim of do persons to lie admitted u meow htre who were loner duly cleated by any dis trict. Whether them clahaanie were Batt or Fillmore men has and was allowed to have noth ieg to do with the question at their right to *UM is the Convention: The antl.l3cott delegates, It is supposed, will demand the erection of it platform before the nomination Is made. tiv have the dlcldpd majority which Is claimed foi them, they will go on and make the said platform. Dot that little particle if is an impotent void hers; they hare no eneh majority. Ido not venture to pre dint, however. that there will be no malaisee upon slavery; I do not even deny the Fallibility of pasting s set es extreme sod bigoted se those adopted by the Democrat.; bat I feel ?ninth. tale that If the nomicetion be tendered to Gad. Scott . , clogged with snob conditions, he will lase it. Should he accept it upon those ter* . he would be u be ought to be iguominionsly deflated. The best Informed men of the libitsi wing of the Dentoorstio party believed up to the boar of the aiteembling of their Convection, that the compromise would not be tonal:4, nor the fugitive slays law me/ toned. How they I were demand and ciefenied In &Wrier/ yet to be erplained. c Ont. Piero nos nominated upon the Mundt of a private letter, Olds* published. It was ad dressed to Lieut.:Col. Lally, of Maine, wh000m; tossided • battalion of Pierces bripde in Mex ico. Pierce unsaid to reply to the impertinent circular of Soot; of Richmond, but, instead thereof he entrusted to Col. Lally • letter to be, used as comics should require, eulogizing *I compromise, and going oir into a eleidtetnitlfri": 'wad gibOis the rights of pis Rtaissi.lenifol . bot American republielalsos were _degraded inpr nume appendage uf siggenlooo" *toylike' slue bean published. It amounts to nothing. bat shows the mono of the man. This Wei vie dbmamedi at a eadennosheterevs theobali , men of delegations of Virghtis, Nati CeroPele And Illmissind, • New Hampabere and MAUI the night before the nomination was made, and the thing vu settled for.the following day • • All DemoomMicrim doatet the bleeding snot of Out Ostrom will inert to that yob, sent therein And than that thi 'tamarind's - and sheset-uslor of their candidates' used Is the ' - - .;, • • . . , dalfiry..the coniiromin sad tip loiritive . law. The Whigswfi thibetifit of the cattle , committed by their opponent', and if they bre the virtue and the pmdence to steer clear of the error, the victory Is theirs. itanos. rm., tb. Lofting Deily 1f... MAT `4 , THE HZW BOLT A.LLILICH The Emperor of Austria is all the world barn, hake the kingdom of Hangary, not jun dmino, but by the dxaoe of the Czar. Ruaohm, I not Austrian armies, subdued the eople of Hun gary, and recommitted them to t elr hereditary Jailor of the Hones of Hapsbur g.. The Czar hes Just been paying a obit to his mperial vassal; of whom he is said to have tak leave with • patronizing promise of the co Umlaute of hie countenance and support. Of ours/ the prom ise was qualified by the until) ding that it was obligatory only so loog as ~ e imperial us ed so cooducted himself as to Merit therpretec- Wu of the Czar. From Vienna the Cur has proceeded to Ber lin to visit another of his modem dependents. The King of Prussia has done something very like homage • fat the territories he holds---and 'with more of ostentatious pnbileity than the Emperlor of Austria. At a salmi banquet-- from the time of T/11111113 It haibeen the German custom to transact important public! business Ones drunk sail once saber—tile King of Prue- els pledged his ceerdetd, adding the proper, "God pi serve him to that portion of the world which helots given Aim for on inheritance, sod to our epoch, to which is indispeneitble." The monarch - whose anowitor, by assuming propth mote the kingly title, commenced that rebellion ageing the German emperor: which has ended by extinguishing both emperor and enk pire, about the same time that the parlisguents of, England and ficollaod transferred the Width crowns from fatties It to WiNiam 111 .did not blush to prooligta to public' that the territories and peoples subject to the RIMINI sceptre are the property of the Czar, and that to the king. of Europe he is "dispensable " To Ire Prussia the natural leader of uorthern and Protestant Germaup—boh , hobldng With the Cr,te !lOW Very painful feetege. The triumvirate of the northeatt of Europe do not confine their attention to their own domin lone. They usert a tight to dictate to the rest of linear... They :assert, in a correspondence recentlytude public, a right to dictate to France its form of government, and to Impose ■serer elgn on it. They maintain that the treaties of 1024 and 1816 aro still in fall vigor; stathst by them Austria, Great Britain, Pruesia, , vmd 800- eil, are pledged to maintain the divine heredi tary rights of the home of Douthott - .. , In the 4rej plate. they tleclero- -- thlt theme crowns "pledged themielves," on the • - 2,oth of November, 11315; "to maintalu in fall vigor the perpetual exclusion of the Bonaparte; - family from the throne of Emmet" In the second place, they intimate that they have connived at what has happened of late years in Franco simply on the unaerstandingthit it was a transient inter ruption of '-legitimate" sway, to which France itself would in time put an ea and, leistly, they Proclaim APO , "there otrostiT e•iau a Fecund dynastyt and ao long as • Bourbon is found, whenever 1 French crown is shaken off, to him it appert►loa" The would-bo rciauctotore of the Holy Alii ante forget, or affect to forget, a few facts that are of come Importance. They forget that Mr. Canning, with the approbation of every party in this country, foully and unequlvoca;ly withdrew Great Britain from the entangling alliance con• muted in 1815, when oho called the new vorl4 into enielente to retinae the balance of tht old' They forget that Bulimia, by delitrojlog the nu- I rioullity of Poland, hat of its own act eat aside r the treatlre of 1815, and dimmable itself to lulu upon thifulfliment of any of their etipuletione. They forget that the leading eovereigos of. Ott German cOnfederillou, by failing to 81811 their, promises to confer representative constituffeili. on their rubjectit,, or by rescinding anclaitni etitritlons grantedor treating them ab dead lettere—have equally forfeited all title td Insist upon the' enforcement of tkikbh treaties. They forget that by the' recogniffen of the CU• pine of Arizirend the republics of tooth Amer. lea—by the recgoition of Louis Phillippe—by the erection of : the kingdoms of Belgium and I Greece—and by actiniuMne in the pew critic- I Meats' onlii troccei of gp.in and r.tcuest— they have boon parties in the iutraiaatioa of a new apitem of intertitffonal liw throughout the states of the European ciallitatiott, that has pealed and °upbraided the earvile doctrines upon which the treaties