..........-....-..YDBLII3BBD BY D. N. WLILTB--.. PITTSBURGH: TRIIRSDAY MOWING, SEPT. 27, 1855 Boom inthe Gazette Buildings for Rent. AWELL LIGHTED BOOM, on the wand floor. and ann.( memo. lu tkoGasettn Buildings. on .0.4. boo rent ea oim, or • arm or revs. 13 Wjarl[ll Bookbinder. iturareir, Or Lit.boirenblior or • NONSTOW 0111ce. snit& • 1131.1 . is A d r •e r st.—N ter r the Edlttdial Roam ai Printinarytabliahmontof tlio Daily Onntk.a.re opened " synaLT. Anyzynosanho desire their stA:.l:lcos to annaz :1 11 Mhel*Par on Monday mondnihwiliMosin hand them in .don to o dock. onßatonlay. : - . .tel-Plu.b.grab Weekly' Gazette -Tye es:tenor, olseuistkrti alone eftskisi Owns esti. to our business !hen • most desirable medium of =thus their tonibeens bacons Our cbcollatknabbitmenftranell five tbaussnO. resetting ahnostenrymersbant, ninnufeetures ant anosekeeper In Askant Pointileunto. nal Eastern Ohio. 4a!ance Parjanti.--iteronftar no eab eaistienimillt to taken Sr the Dally at Weekly Gazette. Alden .pancent la mute in advance. Whenerer the thin Is no to which the enbecription i laid, the paw tin be invoinly stashed, =den the nbctriotion Ls re &Ind br Innen payment. All transient advertiAtur. or errerr &emotion. .111 be repaired to be paid to ad noes The otdr erdepticate will he where awls/ month lybr only contracts are made. esolvlk• Otir Prospects. We continue to receive the most cheering ac counts from our friends throughout the coun try. At first it was thought that there was no °Banco for our county ticket, and a feeling of saPinenees came over Its friends, which has only Dyson to disappear within the poet week or two. Late events, however, and the general favorable feeling among the people to our movement, have encouraged all who are mn imax:lt with current indications; and our pros pects are brightening with every day's develop ements.- We believe that the people are with . raclead we are cenfilent that the undercurrent of popular opinion is all on our aide. It needs but a generous ocadeoce in the masses to stimulate active effortei and a general rally of its friends will, we fell well assured, result in the triumph of the Republican ticket.' Total; the vote of last year as the basis of Plantations, it will be seen that we start even in the race, with oar democratic competitors.— Our chances are at least equal to theirs. Then, wahave no such load to carry as they hare, in the Administration and Nebraska Bill, hut profit by all the discontent in their ranks growing out of the Kansas troubles; and whatever &watts. faction and &affection has resulted from the Sao* Nothing nominations and frauds must all Work in cur favor. The extent of this disaffection is doubtless underrated everywhere. In almost every district of the ootmty we hear of men who cannot be in drided to vote the E. N. ticket, and most of whom trill vote ours. La some of these districts they can be counted by scores, and in all they are composed of men who have been prominent in the Order. It is impoesible, we are told on all hatch, and by men who know, to rally the Or der to the support of the ticket ; and what with the stay-at-homes, and the rebellious who will vote against the' ticket, the aggregate vote of the S. N. party promises to he lees than that of either the Republicans or demoorata. As an evidence of the truth of this, we cite the leek of °cadence manifested by the Know Nothing can didates generally, scarcely one of whom ventures to think his chances of election at all sure. There are numbers of Whigs in the city whose fears of Lei:afoot= are so great •hat they may be tempted to vote the R. N. ticket _ . . to defeat their old enemic; and there is ono _ .ther large class of Whigs whose detmitetion of the corrupt practices of the Know Nothing leaders is so strong that they feel somewhat inclined to vote the Democratic ticket to defeat - men in whom they and the community have no . confidence. To both of these classes we say, • - .votertie Republican ticket, and yen will defeat both the Democrats and the Know Nothings. li Oorchanoes are as good as either; and It needs but a concentration upon our ticket of all the elements ad-war with the other tickets, to give `lt a triumphant majority. Backing Ont. We have men it Intimated in the Nebraska prints of New York that at least twelve of the N. N. Congressmen from New York will desert the North in the treat Congress when the hour of trial comes on the repeal of the Nebraska bill, and - that four or five more would follow from Penneybank. Who the four or five aro from thiaState, whose treachery is counted on, we have hadrui means of learning; but we have ventured to guess quietly that Jacob Brom, Henry IL Fuller and J. H. Edie were three of the number. We had not imagined, however, that John C. Kunkel rou!d by any possibility, be one of them. We had set him down as one of the reliable mon, coder all Circnnnstances; and now that he. is paving the way 'for a retreat, we shall not be surprised at anything that may fol low. An "American"meeting was held in the borough ,orfork on the 19th East., which was addressed by lion. John C. Kunkel, of Harrisburgb, mem ber elute(' the next Congress. The following . „cur actfrom the York Advocate will show the po . titian he took on the EADMIS question: "On the Kensas-Nebreeks issue the orstsr began Very eloquently. Ilia denveciation of the iniquity of the measure was very strong ; . but when the paatical - question of, what is to be done/ came up. ••-treat a- falling off was there!" "The audience were informed that In all probe bility Kansas would be a slave" state. It wee told, to be tan, that the northern aentimeot mould require a bows fide effort to be made in - thermal. Congress toy restore the Missouri Com proud:le—that snob a' bill would pus the /loose, . but be defeated In the Senate. TM speaker visa • coortnihisasej to be beta faraftiCOmprnMiling again and agers-campromising which must be done ; with tbelleroth which had shown its readiness to notate any eomprimise to promote its own into ' reatte meaning and result of which would be necessarily, Use admission of Samoa as a dare alato.-a further violence dove to northern prin ciples and interests, and a complete fizee of all this agitation on the Kansaa-Nebraska question. After the vain waate of Public time and money on the passage of a bill by the House to be de feated by the Senati, and there atop, then com promising is to be resorted to, and a national -- “Arnerican" organisation, sr agreement between Northern and Southern sentiment on the Slavery „Aviation; it to be effected to elect a President, - .and all history shows that such a result aan only _tieratched by a total enrremder of the North to I . :leathern Tho declarations 'of Mr. limmas on this question show bow mush the ...Beading•Platform amounts to, and the special code which it was intended to promote. it is a enough Morgan" to lut until after the alectioniand -then iterilibe thrown aside for the WU of the compromising system. What a great thanes be left for the North to enjoy that • ' 'splendid inheritance in Kansas which the orator BO eloquently described"' This Position of Mr. Kunkel atnounts,...in fact, to a surrender - at discretion - to the &nth on the Saone question. The Polk borustsand .en the Oregon question, in 1844, was not a more Jamennd Impotent conclesiott than this. . Mr. Kunkel, our readers - must understand, when to mu! II Whig, stood In the front rank of tb~antielawtry notion of that party; and his ' election to Concuss last year, was hailed as a point seined In the cholas-of The right kind of Material for the - nut House. Tbe tact that he thee going off, is, therefore, a suggestive ono. It shone that the Know Nothing leaders of the State are opening the way for a more cordial l emon with the. South, end that to accomplish this the Nosed Freedom will be betrayed. Let antichwery men beware I We Bnd that . a number • of reePeetable gentle men hare !Opted a Card to bolster up, the char acter of Pamtmor , Williamson, and assert that Judge Kase be, 'hemmed" that Williamson did •^Cot mike a full and correct return. Now tbe bulb of; the matter!. the/act war _proved before w 7.. Midge Ksna,andthere was ncoLmsetunption about' "It."—Paussytoirsdan . The PeenrytraMan is drawing its fancy ,:for' its beta. The evidence before Judge Bane, When Winiasesto was condemned, b a matter of 'reoori t , and there ir lot the least proof to be ;Mind in it that WilliaMson Made a false re. leon "The - return vie pie ennead by the Judge end - llinsive," not false; • and thin was dais upon an fo:ferotes of WS, instead of collate& • ;lAN eoritts' ititisitt;ltairtfver, sets teeth, tna anon lr tiii,pdtteA—eot , far making •Yi ar 1gr 11 4 1. 0 11 j 4 , 1 1 31 /1 1 C 1 ../P i r 4 " resew to nth ti• the Pm14444 ' 11 " 1174, fal'e " 4 ". w hy VU be aoiamdtted for Wait to make a re- Aro Yon Astessed ? Saturday next, September 89, is the Mat day on which Totem not assessed can have their names registered. Let those interested ace to it. Thu snow Nothings of Indiana county, desparing of electing their candidate for Assem bly prevailed upon acme democrats to bring out Mr. John Mallen as a candidate, hoping thereby to take votes enough away from the Republican nominee to defeat him. Mr. Mullen at first consented, but finally declined. The prominent candidate for Associate Judge in Montgomery county is Mr. Mehelm Mot/lath ery. If names are things, what sort of a thing is this? Gieat Battle with the loamle, -Gen. Harney haesignelized his advent into the Sioux country by one of the most gallant and complete victories ever obtained over an Indian enemy. The victory is so thorough, an to strike terror Into the whole of the savage tribes occu pying that extended section of country. Still; there may be bard fighting to do before they are completely subdued. As yet,•we are without de tails, our °centime's not having come to hand. But other letters, immediately from the battle ground, have been received in this city, from which we gather some of the details of the battle. The engagement took place on the 9d instant, at the Suet Hills, on the North fork of the Platte. The entire farce of the United States troops who participated in the engagement is statnd at four hundre deed fifty moo. Major .Cady was in command of five companies off' the fish Infantry. Col. Cooke bad command of two companies of the Sect•ed Dragoons, one company of Infantry, mounted, and a company of Artil lery. The whole force under the command of Gen. Harney. The battle commenced early in the morning, and lasted several hours. Gen. Harney ordered Col. Cooke'a command to place themselves in positions-omo distance in advance of tee infantry, and eo as to come down with full force upon the enemy. Tnis tnovement was successfully performed about three o'clock in the morning. the engagement was then brought on by the infantry, who attacked and drove the Indiana in the.direction of Col. Cooke's command. They' were of course ready and eager for tfivi fray, and commenced a desperate attack upon the enemy. They soon routed them, and a running fight fol lowed for some ten miles. At a point of rocks, a portion of the Indians are said to Lave made a stand, and to have fought with great despera , don. Bat they were completely routed—having seventy or eighty men killed, and fifty women ' and children taken prisoners. They suffered also the loss of all their camp plunder—a large amount of dried buffalo meat, their lodges, end fifty horses. The Indian women, it is said, fought furiously. On the part of Gen. Harney's force, live or six were killed, and as many wounded. No offi cers were among the killed. . • The Indians who were concerned in this bat tle were the Bride Sioux of the Platte—the name who were concerned in the ma•eacro of Lieut. Grattan's command, near Fort Laramie, and the murder of the mail party, and who have frequently defied the hailed States to meet them in battle. Among the papers found with them, were the way-bilis of the mail which they had captured. The lettere speak of the engagement as a very gallant and well conducted affair, as it undoubt edly was, to be successful in killing no many of the enemy wad the Capture of their women and children. This war will not end here. The Indians will not be satisfied with a single engagement, though the result has been most disastrous to them. It is not probable that they will again risk a general engagement, but their policy will be to annoy and harass oar troops, by inviting pursuit into distant and inaccessible portions of the country, and there giving them battle. But they will find Gen. Harney, and the forces under his command, ready to meet and chastise them at any point and under all circramstances.--St. Louis RrFublican, 24tA nor the Pittabarhh Daily llarrate. THE PRESENT CAMPAIGN. Hr. Editor.- In common witn you 1 think the masses of the so-called "American" party are honest, or at least that many honest men we inveigled e into its Councils. They went there from a love of Protestantism and a desire to es cape from political corruption; and they little thought, either that they were expected to do the dirty work of demagogues, or violate the great principles of Proteetaistisin through a sys tem of secret and vile Jeiminem. The defeat of these Jesuits, and the vicious political eyetem which they arc etriving to build up, Is a public necessity, and is felt to be each, as tench by the honest members of the Order an by no who are outside. But; citizens, it is not enough to defeat the piebald ticket put forward by the demagogues who control that Order.— Ton should defeat them by such a majority that they will never again conspire against the parity of the ballot box, never again combine to deceive and betray the people. That this ought to be done, thousands are ready to admit, and that it roe be done at the coming election Kis not difficult to show. Last fail there were in round members five thousand Democratic votes, which number, by the contin ued aggressions of the slave power in Kansas and out of it—at Washington by the plots of the Pierce ndministration, gild In Pennsylvania by the usurpations of Locafoco Federal Judges, has been reduced within the last twelvemonths prob ably fifteen hundred votes. Allowing the Dem ocrats then thirty-five hundred votes in Allegh coy county—let us see how the remaining eleven thousand five hundred votes are to be divided. Or admitting that of this number only ten thou sand should go to the polls, how will they prob. I bly be divided between the two parties, Repub lican sod Know Nothings t What are the facts? The Republican organization sprung into 'axis , tenet Atli grown from the popular imprusea it was • =stay response to that universal outcry for a party movement which should defend the rights of the north against the proelavery doctrines and practices of the democratic party, and at the same time defend individual rights against proscriptive Intolerance. Alter a public notice of only ton or fifteen days a County Convention assembled in which fifty-three out of fifty-eight districts were repre sented, by thoughtful, prudent and determined men who haditcted heretofore In the old parties. This Convention tiotmembled, plated in nomine a ticket acknowledged by all to be one of the bast ever offered in this cougty. Where in the history of our politics has any new party just organized shown such strength and harmony of action? Look too at tbo patriotic end truly Democratic principles of the party. Opposition to the aggressions of the Slave power—oppovition to the usurpation of Federal jadgee—a strict aditerince•to State Rights, and a defence of State Sovereignty now prostrated in Pennsylva nia by the pliant tools of the very party which I clamors en loudly for Spatter Sovereignty. With suettprinelplee, and with a ticket cote, posed of men whose qualifications are acknowl edged, and with harmony and good will lei the body of the party, and with no disappointed candidates for nomination in their ranks,:the Re. publicans have reason to expect a large proper tion of the ten thousand anti-locofoco votes, ray six thousand, or perhaps six thousand five band: rod. Such at least would seem to be the pros pect, looking only at their position. But if we tarn to the evidence of Know Nothing weakness and decay, even a larger vote f r the Republican ticket might be anticipated. Now what is the picture presented by the Know Nothings of this county. Before the organization of the Repub lican party they were considered and con ceded to have a majority over the locofocoa.— But why ? Because the people approved of secret organitetions ? No. Bat because they disapproved of locofoeo subserrieney to the slave-power, and there was no other large party in opposition. Hence, greedy 'apt :rants for office, to the number of eighty-three, put forth their names as candidates for Know Nothing nominations, and having thus Commit ted themselves could not withdrew and joiti the Republicans on the formation of their party. These eighty-three aspirants and their friends were able to hold the party together until the nominations were made; but with all their in *wiry and pertinacity, they were unable to drum up ae the recent Know Nothing election more than liana-four hundred voter, including minors, outsiders andpeeezirs. But their election Is now over, and testae id .14thty-three (88) candidates nu/ their friends, there only fourths nomi nated candidates to rally tke-Axecoeying and de spairing Know Nothing!, for. the general election; • while the remaining sixty.nine diaappdteted can didates will either secretly and efficiently . apposo the party which bra disowned their better olalais or will stay at home and let the fourteen favor ites work for themselves and their dickot. If eighty-three men could drum up only thirty-four hundred votes, proxies, minors and all, how many votes think you can fourteen men bringallitv when eixty-tiltie reindidates of their own party, with their friends ; are either thieving cold water on them, or heaping - ea their heeds coals of Are, by charging than with frauds and perjuries of the blackest die? Next, what is the evidence of the etrongth of the jthew Nothings gun their nominations, ea e i tabitad by their ticket and Its reception.— The Imputation of frauds made against the friends' or Wilson by the friends of Moods, and the humbug luveglgatiOn, and the farcical letter of Woods,:who does:not retract a tittle of the 'citirgatif l and,> are ieoent end notorious; but a few.. wards - respecting -the nomination and linteent:poiltlotrof 'Mr. - Flanesin, the .head of the ticket, will mtilhaertei show how 'fatal : to the Know Frothing enneethe-ticket and the mode- of its nomination-mail prone krMr. zlianegin polio:Cat:the, ittnitt-liothint election leas than one arthej thirty-four hundred votes, while the combined vote of Cm& and Kirkpatrick shown that a lame majority .___ _ w -a ~.` i his own party were opposed nomination, . But how woo his email plurality obtained! I An understanding was esid to exist that tete- I ' , cranes and anti-temperance should be kept out of view in the contest for nomination, but notwithstanding this, Mr. Fhinegin got the &o the support of alt the Liquor men In the,Order and thus obtained o few more votes than his highest competitor, and to the public charge that to effect this be "carried Liquor on one shoulder and cold water en the other," he has made no reply. But having thus become iden tified with the Liquor interest, and his nomina tion secured over a temperance candidate it was to be expected that the Liquor League e would ratify the hard won victory, and that Plantain's friends, having defied and defeated the Temperance men in the Order, the League should have thrown at least the whole liquor interest in his favor to give him asp show of etreogUi. But have they done so! Their more recent nomination of Judge Wilkins tinawer4 no. Where, then, is the strength of Mr. Flanegin to come from. Row stands the case with the Know l Nothing candidates for Sheriff and for Treastiterdtadsuch Legislative candidates as Gen. Moorhead and Mr. Smith! Will not the friends of the defea ted candidates who feel they - were defrauded and bamboozled answer at the,general election by voting the Republican ticket? If additional evi dence of the weakness and despandercy of the Know Nothings is wanting it is afforded by their Ratification Rally on Saturday night. Their Handbill notices, their splendid music, their boasted roll of eight thousand members, their re cent triumph over the temperance men by the nomination of Flanegin and Jones, their boasted accession of strength gained from the Derucerete by the nomination of Ward and Moorhead, ought surely to have brought two or three thousand together; but when the hour arrived and the meeting organized about Tao hundred and tam tyvire persons sadly and slowly came to listen to the apologies made by two - or three speakers for the slim attendance and to admire the down-cast looks and modest demeanor of Gen. Moorhead, who, though himself a candidate, was the hest material they could get for Chairman. Is this the party, are these the men to out-vote the pro- Slavery, Anti-Temperance Cements in Alle gheny county! Aehamod of their past nets-- ashamed of their cause, and (Rehm .sned by their own dissensons, the Know Nothings have al ready defeated themselves; and it becomes the duty of every lover of Liberty, every friend of State rights, every Whig who desires the defeat of Loccfocolsm and every friend of temperance to rally to the Republican cause and support that which is the best and strongest ticket In the field and give thereby, an overwhelming defeat to the cohorts of Rum and Slavery. Tho contest now being between the Republican and Locofo co parties the result must prove a triumph for Liberty tied the Right, A RZPrtILICAN. SPECIAL NOTICES. Dr. NE'Latte's Vermifage.—Anothe r med !cal witness.—lt is no small evidence of the Intrinsic value of this mot Vermin:ma. when even Phfclrians. who am generally prejudiced against patent medjelnehrelentatili come forward and testify to its tritannhunt mamma in a. palling worms. Road the following: ilvartssawmus, Shelby Co. ELT, April 2,1822. J. Kidd & am a rractlelog physicist.. raeldiea perm•nentif In thin pls.. In the fear 1813. ate.. eenr. dent of the State of Illmoorl. I beta,. mw painted with the enperlor virtuoe of Dr. IrLane's Verndfoca. At enure more I•Leare moment I will mend you Ike es It °ran ex moirnetit I made with one vial, estwilinawpwarle of vr bOO nrri, L. CAILTER, It. IFlL.Purrhsoermrill hoo rah! to ask Ihr DR. SPLAtirS CELEBRATED ViERMIYUCIE, and take bone else. All other rernalfuitea, in prtaparlson, are werthleas. Dr. ll' Imda Vermiftwe, alio his celebrated Liver Pll4 can now he had at a/1 teopectabia Druz Stores In the Bolted States. and from the seder proprietor. - • Alpo for !We he the We premiere., FIRMING 'BROS mow.. to J. BLOB CO., No 00 Weed st. pue.R.direS Who has not heard of - Bcerhavea Hol- LAN'D DlTTElls.l—Simplo In It. oemporiti on, yr.gett to that tasto, toed truly wonderful to Its effwet. It. postu'arity abr. In wondowed at. To Invalid. heat recovering glrength. It to !unlash. saw:rising thnt .nothing Intha And Over Um IlerrOUS IMAM. and hapatt.taa that hal th and tong to the etornseb. so longed for by the conning nent."—Doily En:minim 14.1.4norts•nownt Imao.tbnonitunn. Cough Remedies Dr. Key Ecr's Pectorn cum T.. Dr. norm. Drotorol Syrup will cars DraucliDU. Dr. Reeds Protocol Syrup will coal LorrugMa. Dr. Harare. Pectoral Spam wIU care Dr. Hoerr'. Pretest Syrup w W cure •roldlu tlarbrad Dr. Kam's Doctoral St-rap will cum Tutltr/rot Cru. rutoption. A runs la for trona .1:r. .7. W. Vista,. of Lokeby, Mao, Mr, want you to twud me two bottles of your NoUral Ft-rap by malt Then Is • lady luny who hos •.00gb and Ow &vim ain't cunt bd. I was it Ob. SAMS .Wll7. and tr/sdowerythlog without bola:, until I got • bottle or rut. Poctoral Ornate I took It but turluo. and It eared nut Ask Sr Dr. iterates Ass: =l4 Syrup awl WI, no Genes. Pries, Men. Bold at, Dr. arrszsra. N.. an Wood 'wt. Ind St J. P. PLENUM:PP, Allogb.y. •+".044.9 and Contineatal Exenange. 810117 BILLS DR.AWN Bi DUNCAN, ORESIIIAN k CO., oN TUE UNION BANK, LONDON IN 150)L1 07 it AND , PL74t ADA. These Drafts aro available at all the prin. clyal Tonna ofEogaol. Enstland and !Matti: and tba Otattnent. we alnl dr alr am Err Bru.9 nn M. A. 6runebaum & Bailin, FRAIMPORT A MAIN. Whl.b sem ag. a R.talttaacn to tq Latta Of illamsany Enrltaniand and ErallanAL Penotio Into ding to trays' abroad may Ilercti . r. through Utters anktit, on yr bleb /inner an be obtained, rmoled,ln .7 put of E.r.P. Collections of BMA Note% and other orearitim to En rol" trill receive prompt attention. WI& IL WILLIAMS Oft. istan Woad. corner Third inert. Liver Disease.--Crirtoes Spanish !di:- tan...it remedy for liver disease, the moiler of for mittatile evils connected .nit a dleorgeniaed otnte of that. wpm. Is nazi, @Mod. • • • Unades. oreartnizataa. tram U.; bighast won of fer .one nein; ID U. efts of Illehmand. pa., mtzbt be AY*a creams effected be Caster's haaalall Mixture. We hare only 09091 to refer to the ettrasinnessi erne of Puma If Drinker. Ens, of the (inn of Drinker h limit. ➢ookeatkr, niehinead. To.. wha .as sung by two 'With" er Carters Dram/A Metre.. after Melo yam eafferLog from Ifisega ad near. U. se7s Us salon an the blood la wonderful, better than all the aseileina he had. ♦es taken. sad shear fully nearrunands it to an. Es s adrstWmea t. .4.ltralawlf WELCH & GRIFFITH'S PATENT GROUND SAWS. 17.AVING purchased from Mr. Wm. Souch aeu bin Patent Itleht, ler grinding