I ii ' r ' 1 i ' : . .. . . . . " . - - ""-v ' " ----- - . . . ... . " 1 1 11 .ii.. M iA i. , . BY S. B. EOW. CLEARFIELD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2i, 1850, VOL. 3-m G. 1 - i . THE WOBLD WOULD BE THE BETTER If men cared less for wealth and fame, ' rt ,SS for batt,e-ficlds and glory ; ift writ in human hearts, a name - Seemed better than in song and story; ?en' insteai f nursing pride. Would learn to hate and abhor it; If more relied On lore to guide. " The world would be the better for it. If men dealt less in stocks and lands. YAn more n DOnds and deeds fraternal ; ' Jove " WOfk "ad more williug handj To link this world to the supernal ; If men stored up Lore's oil and wine. And on braised human hearts would pour it; If '-yours" and '-mino'' Would once combine, - ' ' Th world would bo the better for it. . A FUR TRADE ADVENTURE. BY WASHINGTON IRVING. Colter, with the hardihood of a regular tra iler, had cast himself loose from the party of Lewis and Clark, in the very heart of the wil derness,and had remained to trap beaver alone, on the head waters of the Missouri. Here he fell in with another lonely trapper, like him self, named Potts, and they agreed to keep to gether. They were in the very region of the terrible Blackfeet, at that lime thirsting to re venge the death of their companions, and knew they had to expect no mercy at their hands. Thty were obliged to keep concealed all day in the woody margins of the rivers, setting their traps at nightfall, and taking them up before daybreak. It was a tearful risk for the sake of a few beaver s&ias, but such is the life of a trapper. - They were on a branch of the Missouri call- cu jenerson's r ork, and had set their traps at night, about six miles from a small river that emptied itself into the forks. Early in the morning they ascended the river in a canoe, U examine the traps. The banks on each side were high and perpendicular, and cast a shade over the stream. As they were softly paddltug along, they heard the tramping of many feet upon the banks. Colter immedi ately gave the alarm of "Indians !" and was for instant retreat. Potts scoffed at him for being frightened at the trampling of a herd of buffaloes. Colter checked his uneasiness and paddled forward. They had tot gone much farther when frightful whoops and yelis burst forth from each side of the river, and several hundred Indians appeared on cither bank. Signs were made to the unfortunate trarpcr3 to come on shore. They were oMiged to com ply. Before they could get out of their c.i noe, a savage seized the rifie of Potts. Colter Kprang on shore, wrested the weapon from the hand of the Indian, and restored it f o his com panion, who was still in the eruioe and imme diately pushed into the stream. There was a 8harp twang of a bow, and Potts cried out that "lie was wounded. Colter urged him to ccme on shcre and submit, as his only chance of life. But the other knew that theic was no prospect of merer, and determined to die game. Levelling his rifle, he shot one of the Bivagcs dead on the spot. The naxt moment he fell himself, pierced with numerous arrows. The vengeance of the savages was now turn ed upon Colter. He was stripped naked, and having somo knowledge of the Blackfeet lan- guage, overheard a consultation as to the mode cf dispatching him, so as to derive the great est amusement from his death. Some were for setting him up as a mark, and having a trial of skill at his expense. The chief, how ever was for nobler sport. lie seized Colter by the collar, and demanded if he could run fast. The unfortunate trapper was too well acquainted with the Indian customs not to comprehend the drift cf the question. lie was to run for life, to furnish a kind of human hunt for his persecutors. Though in reality he was noted by his brother huuters for swift ness on foot, he assured the chief he was a very had runner. His stratagem gained some vantage ground. IIo was led by the chief in to the prairie, about four hundred yards from the main body of savages, and turned loose, to save himself if he could. A tremendous yell let him know that the whole pack of bloodhounds were in full cry. Colter flew rather than run ; he was astonished at his own speed ; but ho ha I six miles to tra vel before he could reach Jefferson Fork of the Missouri ; how could he hope to hold out such a distance with tho odds of seven hundred to one against him 1 The plain, too, abounded rvj.th prickly pear, which wounded his naked feet. Still he fled on, dreading each moment J.'o hear the twang of a how, and feel an arrow quivering at his heart. He did not even dare 'to look round, lest he thould lose an inch of that distance on which his life depended, lie had run nearly across the plain,when the sound of pursuit grew fainter, and he ventured to turn his head. The main body of his pnrsucrs wero a considerable distance behim him ; sev eral of tho fasteit runners were scattered in the distance, while a swift-footed warrior, armed with a spear, was not more than a hun dred yards behind him. Inspired with new hope, Colter redoubled his exertions, but strained himself to sucli a degree that the blood gushed from hia mouth and nostrils, and streamed down bis breast. He arrived within a mile of the river. Tho Bound .r footsteps gathered upon him. A glance behind him showed his pursuer within twenty yards, and preparing to launch his apear. Stopping short, he turucd round and pread ont his arms. The savojre, confounded y the sodden action, attempted to stop and nun ms spear, but fell in the very act. His spear stuck in the ground, and the shaft broke in his hand. Colter picked up the pointed part, pinned the savage to the earth, and con tinued his flight. The Indians, as they arrived at their slaughtered companion, stopped to howl over him. Colter made the most of (his precious delay, gained the skirts of the Cot tonwood bordering the river, dashed through it, and plunged into the stream. He swam to the neighboring island, against the end of Which the drift-wood had lodged in such quan tities as to form a natural raft ; under this he dived, and swam below water until he succeed- ed in getting a breathing place between the a : - floating trunks of trees, whose bushes and WI3e and good who intimately knew him ; and branches formed a covert several feet above this win preclude all necessity for paying at the level of the water. The Indians as they tention t0 the Ptty-larceny slanders with came up, plunged into the river and swam to the raft, passing and re-passing him in all di rections. They at length gave np the search. and he then swam silently down the river, and made his escape. Cibiocs Historical Fact. The wife of the celebrated Lord Clarendon, the author of the History of the Rebellion, was a Welsh pot-girl t - who being extremely poor in her own conn try, journeyed to London to better her fortune. and became a servant to a brewer. While she was in this humble capacity, the w ife of her master died, and he happening to fix his aflec- tions on her she became his wife. Himself dyig soon after, left her heir to his property, w.ncn is said to have amounted to between X20T000 and 30,000. Amongst those who frequented the tap at the brewery was a Mr. 1 1.. i . .i ii ne, men a poor barrister, who conceived the pn-ject of forming a matrimonial alliance with her. He succeeded, and soon led the brewer's widow to the altar. Mr. Hyde being endowed with great talent, and now at thu command of a large fortune, quickly rose in his profession, becoming head of the Chance- ry bench, and was afterwards tho celebrated ilyue, .arl of Clarendon. The eldest daugh ter, the offspring of this union, won the heart of James, Duke or York, and was married to him. Charles II. sent immediately for his brother, and having first plied him with some very sharp raillery on the subject, finished bv saying "James as you have brewn, so you must drink, and forthwith commanded that tin marriage should bo legally ratified and pro mulgated. tJpon the death of Charles, James the II. mounted the throne, but a premature death frustrated this enviable consummation in I . J. 1 1 , , , me person 01 ins amiaoic uucness. ller daughters, however, were Queen Mary, the wife of Willian III. and Queen Anne, both grandchildren of the cidtvant pot-girl from Wales, and wearing in succession the crowu of England. Disriptio.v cf niE Uxiox. The outrages .n jvaiisasimemore s15n1Ucar.ce than would at first attract the attention. They are brutal "-,,uu" Knows, out mere is a master cloud behind all which may not have been con sidered. The St. Louis Democrat alluding to the course ot the border ruffians, says the mir- pose 01 trie leaders in the movement is to brine uoouia uissoiuiion ot the Union, and the crea- uonoi a confederacy of sjave States. We irom me journal reierrcd to : -iiie majority 01 tnose citizens in Missouri . T" l- s . ... - I who have become enlisted in the present con- test, which is now waging to secure the occti- pat ion or Kansas to the South are sincere and earnest tn tlieir partisanship, we fully believe; out mat t.icrc are otucrs, and those high in command tho Atchisons, the Stringfellows rnd their disciples who have been imported m companies from the southern States, who are inflicted with no such hallucinations who care nothing or very little for the minor ques tion ot slavery or freedom in the territories- and who havo their eyes fixed upon graver is- sues and more revolutionary results. With tuem 111? present forays are but skirmishes preparatory to the great battle, in which they nope 10 see tins Union dissolved at a blow, . ....... 1 and upon its ruins to emerge the chiefs of a southern empire." &ale op Kansas Lands. The President of the United States has issued a proclamation ordering a sale of public lands in Kansas Ter titory, the salo to take place at Fort Leaven worth, commencing on Monday, the 20th of October. Thcso lands havo been classified and appraised, and will not bo sold for less than the appraised value. The towns and cit ies laid out on these lands will be sold in lots and blocks. Tho number of acres to be offer ed for sale is about two hundred and eight thousand eight hundred and thirty-three, and the quality of land unsurpassed, perhaps, by any other equal body of . land in the L'nitcd States; and the location of the tract, lying and being around Fort Leavenworth, is very eligible, and most desirable for a residence. Hos. Jons MoonE, of Warren county, New Jersey, has written a letter announcing his in tention to support and vote for Col. Fremont. Judge Moore has always been identified with tho Hunker Democratic party in his State, en joying an influence in local and county poli tics amounting almost to a dictatorship. The present announcement of his purpose will pro duce important results in that part of New Jersey, where the Administration party has I .1 ... ,.;t.in.d a Urtrn numerical scindn. .; I 4 . THE CATTLE STORY. . Another Vile Slander Hefuted ! COL. FEEMONT VINDICATED ! ; When honest, well-meaning persons write us that such and such absurd libels on Colonel Fremont are circulating in their locality, and that they want documents wherewith to refute them, we cannot help answering that they take hold of the business at the wrong end. What they have really to do is to make their neigh bors acquainted with the true character of Col Fremont, his career, his services, and the es- t-n,at,on Jn which he has ever been held by the . ser adv"ea'es seek to blacken his reputation, unly let the People see and know him as he is, and tho vipers will find them selves biting a little the sharpest files that cv- erjiws were worn upon. Let us illustrate the character of these li bels by a few ready illustrations : Tho conquest of California from Mexico was eflected bY rel7 moderate forces, yet with ve I fwl 1 1 - ry little bloodshed. Col. Fremont bore a most distinguished part in that conquest at least, all tho cotemporary accounts cave him the credit of so doing Secretary Marcy's among the rest. We believe "Mr. Buchanan did tint conmit himself in any public document ; but wo assured that, when Col. Fremont's Beef contract was under investigation before the- Indian Committee of the House, Mr. Buchan an appeared as. a Witness for Col. Fremont he fore that Committee, and testified strongly in his favor. If they were not now rival candi dates, we believe Mr. Buchanan would now gladly appear as a conclusive witness against Colonel Fremont's slanderers. Of course, so large a country as California was not conquered, and could not have been helJ' hy a force so innense!y inferior in nuro- bers as were its American conquerors to the hostile Mexican authorities, soldiers and peo ple, but by the manifestation cf extraordinary activity as well as courage. Our little force there in 1815-7 had to be multiplied many-fold by rapid movements from point to point, and by suddenly appearing when and where it was least expected. Thus Colonel Frcmont.whom Cora. Stockton, after the conquest, appointed its Governor, wa3 at one time obliged to ride, at the bea t of one hundred mounted men.over ..uuunu nines IIIU113, 1IOIU lOS -XllgCIOS to Monterey in four days, to meet an appre hended attack, and hack again in tho same time a feat which old Californians pronounc ed uneqalled in that country, where horseman snip lias been carried to Its perfection. But this march could never have been made with out repeatedly changing horses, which was cf- fected by driving into a ranche or cattle estate, unsaddling and turning loose the tired and panting beasts, putting their equipments in. star.tlv on as many fresh animals, and spurring headlong forward. Of course, the owners of the horses in due time presented claims against the Government, which a Military Commis. sion scrutinized and either allowed, rnt. fWn , or rejected ; and some of these Gen. Valle- jo's for one have since been paid by Con cress, while others have not. But thev all fi- gure not merely the amounts aid or nllnw. od, but the amounts merely claimed in the newspaper demonstrations of Col. Fremont's prodigality or dishonesty as Governor of Cal ifornia ! Take for instance : Col. Tremont deemed it necessary to head a party of his force and cross the bay of San Francisco to canturc a Movi- can fort and spike the heavy cannon mounted thereon ; for, though the fort proved at tho time to be scircely occupied, it would have become exceedingly formidable and annoyin; if a hundred or more Mexicans, who had not then been dispossessed of the country, had seen fit to throw themselves into it. But Col. F. had no boats in which to make the nassa-p ' and was obliged to borrow those of an Ameri- can merchant ship then lying in the bay. The captain lent and manned his boat or boat,. himself steering and bis men rowing; andCol F., who had no money wherewith to pay, cer tiGed that tho service was rendered, and that it was valuable, but set no price on it. The captain claimed ten thoumind dollars ; theCom mission allowed him fifty dollars ; mid even this, we are confident, has never been paid. No matter tho $10,000 figure, largo as life, in various statements afloat intended to con vict Colonel Fremont of prodigality or dishon esty in California ! 1 rohahly most of our readers havo seen or heard something about the "six hundred cows" which Col. F. is said to have purchased on Government account in California, but to have turned over to a ranchcro to breed on shares for his own profit." We have met this libel in some dozen or more Tro-slavery journals, not one of which gives the least hint of the fact that the Federal Government nerer paid, and is not required to pay, one (ent for trust coics. The facts in the case are briefly these Col. Fremont, while Governor of California, did contract with a stock-grower for six hun dred cows at $10 per head, lor the public ser vice. As thoy were not immediately needed, they were left with a ranchcro or herdsman till they should bo wanted on the usual terms halt the increase to the owner and tha balance o the herdsman. Col. F. gave an order or obligation as Governor for the price C,000 But ho was soon superceded hy a personal en emy who repudiated tho contract, and the sel ler took his cows hack again and was doubt less glad enough to do so, as the discovery of the mines about this time sent up the price of cattle in California at least two hundred per cent. Had Col. Fremont's contract been rati- neu oy jus successor, aud the cows left to breed on the shares and only taken for the pub lic service as required, we have no doubt the Treasury would have been $15,000 better for it this day. . The Hon. Willis A. Gorman, M. C. from In diana, now Democratic Governor of Minneso ta Territory, was in Congress in 1833, and, as Chairman or the House Committee on Milita ry Aflairs, reported (Feb. 14) in favor of pay ing the claim of Col. Fremont for S 19,500, borrowed and spent by him in the public ser vice while Governor of California. In this debate Mr. Gorman says : "The vouchers which hr.ve been and copies of which I have here, are clear and satisfactory. It is satisfactorily shown that the sum of $808 88, for which there are 110 vouchers at hand, has been paid. The Com mittee on Military Aflairs called before them an oiliccr of the army who was with Col. Fre mont, and testifies to the facts which niin-l.t tn satisfy the House that every dollar has been accounted lor." 'It is said that Colonel Fremont had got this Siy.5t)0 and honjrht the Marinosa. land with it; and a distinsuished eentleman of this House told me he had heard that he had pur chased a lar.se amount of cattle with it. 1:1,1m which he h id made larse iirofits. Now tli Mariposa land cost only S5.000. thoinrh it turn ed out to be exceedinzlr valuable, and worth forty or fifty times what he paid for it. . But the date of that purchase was anterior to the transaction. . . . . "As. to the alleged purchase of a lanro a- mount of cattle and the grand speculation out of the operation! how did we act as to that charge ? Did we believo it blindlv J No, sir. we went into an investigation of it, and what was the result ? We found that he had pur chased a certain amount of cattle for the use of the army, but because he had not the fueano of paying for them, he . left the cattle in the possession of the vender, who had finallv to take them back for non-payment; so that trans action ended in smoke, as does the charge." Mr. Gorman then proceeded to vidicate Co lonel Fremont thus : "I will say for Col. Fremont, that when I went into the investigation of this transaction I had some prejudices which I thought per haps might be unfounded, and which 1 am now satisfied were unfounded. The prejudices which had been impressed upon my mind have oeen uispeueu lythe investigation of all h conduct in California, and I am nrcnared to bear testimony upon this occasion to the cor rectness of his whole line of conduct as an of ficer aud as a disbursing asent. Not one dol lar cau be traced to his hands ; no property can be traced to his hands for which he cannot give to the Government satisfactory vouchers that it has been appropriately and properly op- pneu. ioee cong. uiooe, vol. p. o'JO. Feb. 12, 1853, Mr. Campbell of 111., asked "Were claims for articles fraudulently char god several times, presented by Col. Fremont. or were they presented bv other persons ire- tunning 10 noju mem against tueuovernuient V Ir. liorman those claims were not presen ted by Col. Fremont, bnt by other individuals. Mr. Price (Democrat) of New Jersey He certifies that certain property belonging to tnose individuals was taken by the military of ficers of the United States, for the purpose of carrying on me war. lie does not state the valuation, but he states ns his belief that those articles were taken. There is no reference whatever to valuation. Mr. Disney I understand that all these mat ters which have been discussed here to day are not matters of claim upon the part of Col. Fremont, but upon the part of various individ uals now in the State of California, for mate rials and property furnished to him, tho evi deuce of which is his acknowledgment, in the lorm ot certincates, ueioro vou." Mr. McLanahan, of Pennsylvania, in some remarks on the subject,, said : "Upwards of $200,000 of claims were pre- " scnted 10 the commissioners, lhcv allow- " cd and passed favorably on some $31,000 ; " the balance, about 5170,000, were not pus " tained by evidence, and were consequently " rejected. Of the $31,000 allowed, the claim " ot $19.-300, on which Col. Fremont was im ' prisoned in London, was unanimously allow- ed, and placed first on the list submitted to " us by the Commissioners. This is the only " demand against tho Government in which Colonel Fremont appears to have the slight- " est personal Interest." This debate shows that Col. Fremont had no interest In any other claim than that for $19, 500, w hich the Board of Commissioners unan imously allowed. As Mr. Gorman remarked : "The claims which are there stated origina ted in this wise ! Col. Fremont, when there. w hen necessary, sent a guard of men to take tho property of the citizens mules, horses nnd cattle lor the public use. The owners came and made claim to Col. Fremont, as civil and military Governor of California, for com pensation for their property. Col. Fremont laid all the claims presented to him before the Board. The case was precisely similar to that of the army of tfiV United States in Mexico. I have done the same thing myself on a march. I have forced men to give me mules when those on w hich the soldiers rode gave out. I have seen tho same thing often done by the o ther officers of the army. The owners of the property taken would follow to the next town, aud there would receive a certificate that such and such properly had been taken for the pub lic service, which they presented to the Quarter-master, who sometimes paid for it. If these charges were made by Mexicans I would not bo amazed if the same articles had been charged for one hundred times." The reader who wishes to pursue this inves tigation farther can doubtless find a Gongrei sional Globe, VoL XXVI, and trace the debate throughout. The claims were very properly scrutinized, hut no ono questioned the" Integ rity snd good conduct of Col. Fremont, Th I Hon. David K. Cnrtter, of Ohio, (then as now a prominent Democrat, bat then n' Pierce Dem ocrat, now for Fremont.) said : "': 'Personally, I know Col. Fremont but very slightly. I have had the honor of an introduc tion to him. He is a small man, but he is as gallant as any mass of stuiT of the same size that ever was wrapped in a coat that would fit him. And, Sir, he met a combination of ene mies such as very few of the public servants of this Bepublic have ever met. Both enemies that man presents and enemies that God pre sents mountain enemies, ravine enemies, en emies of frost and of heat and of fasting. Now I do not think that a man who has mar ched for a week feeding on green hides and on the skeletons of Worn-out and diseased mules, would cheat his Government out of twenty or forty thousand dollars. - My own o piniou is, that when a man has garnered up a reputation by deeds of almost unparalleled peril, he would want to transmit it undefined to his posterity, and that twenty thousand dol lars would have no more influence unon him than twenty c-;nts. That is my appreciation of such serv ice as Fremont s. It is not like sitting cross-Ie?ged up hero in one of those bureaus. It was enough for him to know that that part of this continent belonged to the U nited States; that they put upon him the per il of exploring it ; that 1e-was desired by his Government to make the way open to the Thou sands who were to follow it to fortune, and to define a State that in magic time would be come an empire. Sir, vow mteht as well un dertake to separate Fremont's soul from his body by your action here he heincr three thousand miles distant as to seperate Fre mont s lame iroin the fame of the Pacific side of the Republic.- ' The hill passed Yeas, SSj Nays, 49 the latter being about the usual number who vote against every private claim, uo matter how obviously just. Nobody then questioned Col. Fremont's honesty even Mr.Toombs express ly disclaimed any , such intention. ' Congress found a sum justly due to Col. F., and ordered it to be paid, as it did a larger sum on a differ ent account two years later. And now. if the Pro-Slavery advocates think fhey can make anything out of ripping up these scrutinized and settled accounts, they are welcome to go ahead. St. Paul, Minnesota, is now-said to have a population of ten-thousand souls. In the year 1849 it did not contain five hundred. During the present season twenty-eight thousand per sons stopped at three of the principal hotels. Thus this town is rapidly becoming the lead ing city north and w est of Chicago, while oth er points, mere centres of speculation, figure ten times more conspicuously' in "the "newspa pers. It occupies an admirable position, at the head of steamboat navigation on the Mis sissippi, and in the course of ten years hence bids fair to become one of the second class cities of the Union. - On the 3d inst., a large meeting of Ameri cans of the 13th ward, Philadelphia, was held, at which resolutions wero adopted declaring that, as the contest was narrowed down to Fre mont and Buchanan, "the election of Mr. Fill more being entirely out of the question," they would support Fremont and Dayton, and invi ted the Americans of the other wards to co operate with them, holding that fidelity to A merican principles did not require them to vote for Fillmore and Donclson, nor did they place themselves in conflict with true Ameri canism by supporting Fremont and Dayton. The Wheat Crop, of the present year, is es timated by the Cincinnati Price Current at ten per cent, increase upon any former years, and it makes an estimate of the quantity raised in the several States, omitting those not worth counting. With a crop like this, and wc see no reason to doubt tho calculation, and with a largo surplus of last year's crop on hand, we may, we should think, defy famine for this year. Grasshoppers in immense swarms are mak ing fearful havoc among the grain on the Up per Mississippi. At Little Falls, Minnesota, they destroyed all tho crnps. At Elk river they appeared in a swarm that seemed like a cloud, and lighting upon a twenty acre corn field, destroyed the w hole crop in a short time. At Crow Wing they alighted upon a farm and destroyed 5000 bushels of oats. Bccuaxax's SoiTiitns SrrronTcas. The Charleston Mcrcvry, the chief organ of the Democracy in South Carolina, lately said : "We hope our sentinels in Washington will keep bright watch in the coming night, and with a spirit kindling to the contest. Let the Government perish, but let tho South be pre served." " Df.mocratic Taolbles in New Yoek. The Mayoralty Convention at Tammany Hall, on Monday evening, the' 15th inst. was split, ono section re-nominated Major Wood, and tho other James S. Libby, both denouncing each other in the most approved style of modem locofocoisnii , A Bloodt Year There were seventy three battles during the year 1855, with an average los? of a thousand men in each, more than 300, 000 soldiers aro estimated to have perisdicd by disease and battle. The battles average more .than one a week. It is ono of the bloodiest years in modern history. Marcus Morton, upon whom the Democratic party of Massachusetts havo been conferring honors for the Ust twenty years, has joined tiic Fremont ranks, and is now doinz cood aervie in tht cus of FrstdoM,' KXCITING MEETING. -Jff m; to create a diversion in favor of the Lo-' cofoco State ticket Racy Proceeding's the U Vion State ticket endorsed, and Ike traitor de nounced '. Lewis C. Levin, of Philadelphia, called meeting of Americans to assemble at National Hall, in that city, on Tuesday evening the 16th inst., "to take up a pare, unadulterated Amer ican Fillmore State ticket, for the coming e lecfion, and to call on the friends ia the inte rior to support it.". A large number of per sons were in attendance, and the proceedings were decidedly "rich, rare and spicy." After the band in attendance had played ''Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean," Mr. Levin, tho "bright, particular star" of the occasion, was about opening out, when some one iu the body of the meeting proposed three cheers for tho Union State ticket. This call was loudly re sponded to. We copy the sul joined account of w hat followed from the Daily JVctr : Three groans were then proposed for Levin and as vigorously givtm. - Again three groans wero given for every friend of Levin. At this period, L. C. L. arose, walked to tho front of the platform, and said in the blandest manner possible, one word oue word only one word. Three groans for Levin wcrn now called, and the groaning was more general than before. By this time mot of the audience had got up on the benches and the coufusion was becom ing delightfully exciting. - One individual, with a short ami a Kossuth hat, mounted the tdatfonn and proposed three cheers for Fillmore and Don vlson. The assemblage caneht in t! p rrv nn.l the Hall rang again with enthusiastic cheering. Levin Gentlemen, I ask but to sav ono word to vou. . . . . : A i oice Three groans. They were given. Levin now walked over to the Reporter's ta ble and whispered, The room is packed with, black Republicans. - Aain Lcviu proceeded to the front of ""the p.atl'oiiu and tried to calm the laging tempest, but in vain. - Finding Col. John S. Warner among the au dience, he begged him to come on the stand, which the Colonel was loth to do. Levin and his friend fin illy got hold of the Colonel's hand and pulled him on the platform. Throe cheers were now given for Col. War ner and three groans for Levin. Levin, in great irritation begged Col. War ner to take the chair, saying that he wished to he heard. Col. Warner They will not hear von.- Levin-r-Yes they will if j-ou say so. Col. Warner (To the audience)My coun trymen, 1 came here as an American. An A mcrican inside, outside and all around. I hav battled for yonr cause for years, and I have never deserted it. Now. mv friends. horA wa h ive an American Union ticket in the field. A oice Three cheers lor the Urnion tick et. (They were given.) Col. Warner I approve of that ticket. -(Cheers.) Mr. Levin desires me to take th chair. Veiccs No! no!! Yes! yes!! Col. Warner Mr. Levin desires 'me " to say to you that he wishes to be heard. A voice Three groans for Levin. Col. Warner I am not in this movement to nightI am of the Old Guard. ' " A voice Three cheers for the Old Guard. At this time there was indesc ribable confusion. Col Warner I wish to say c-ne wordi A Voice Three ehe:-rs for tho Union Tick et. (They were given.) At this time. Levin was moving from placo to plice, on the platform, and exclaiming, "Are you afraid of the truth 1 If von Art nnt afriid of being converted, let me say a few words to yon. (Grortns.) Let me say ono word. (Hisses, groans.) Will you hear me, one word" rCries of No ! no J J) A Voice Three cheers for the Union tick et. (They wore given.) Mr. ii. W. Reed was now observed anions the audience and was loudly called for. At this period there was a rush made for tho stage, and Levin made a retrograde movement, first seizing his hat and cane. He was groan ed oft" the stage, and fried to escape out tho back door, hut it was fastened, and he was compelled to face tho enemy, which he did with fear and trembling. As he left the Hall the groans were deafening, and he was follow ed to the street hy the excited crowd. An effort was made to organize the meeting but there was a disposition to go in a body to. tho Spring Garden meeting. The following resolutions were offered and adopted, with great enthusiasm : Resolved, That we as the friends and sup porters of Millard Fillmore and Andrew J. Donclson, do heartily endorse the Union Stati 1 icket, and will gire it our earnest and undi vided support at the coming election. Resolved, That wo denounce Lewis C. La. vin as a traitor to our cause. Tho crowd then adjourned to Spring Gar den, where the friends of Fillmore were hold ing a meeting, which also denounced Levia, repudiated his movement as "a Locofoco trick," and cordially pledged their united sup port to the Union State Ticket. . Calvix Edsox, and all the fat women, dwarfs and giants are eclipsed by a man now on exhi bition at Havana, who was born without either legs or arms, but who having tenaciously set himself to work to conquer the inconveniences naturally consequent upon such deprivation, has made himself a wonder by - the variety 0f his feats. Among other things, he announces that he is able to spin a top with such perfec tion that it will hit any tpot- named, to spin a dollar over a table, to throw a sling, to take a sixpence from a table and put it in his left ear and take it out again, to make a knot with a halter, to thread a needle, to ascend and de scend a ladder ; to uncork a bottle with a cork screw, to load a fowling piece and kill anylhlg designated, or put out a candle with simpls wad quite wonders enough for a man with out either legs or arms. . Judge Rupp, of Cumberland county .decllSM tho Democratic nomination for 'Associate Jodg, stating tkt k gs ft f MHMt. f I ! v :yti