m lit I Si -- a 1 ;"! '5l ? 1 1 A fi I 1. B. ROW, KTUTOK A5D PROPRIETOR. CLEARFIELD. PA., MARCH 7,1860. FOR PRESIDENT, GEN. SIMON CAMERON, Subject to the decision of the Chicago Convention. FOR GOVERNOR, nON. ANDRE W G. CURTIN. OUR CANDIDATES. The People's State Convention having pas Bed a resolution declaring Hon. Simon Cams box tho choice of the party in this Stato for the Presidential nomination, and knowing that tie is a avorite of the masses in this region, we place his namo at our mast-bead, subject to the action ol the National Convention which meets at Chicago on the 16th of May next. , Mr. Cameron's devotion to the advancement of American industry in general, and the in terests of Pennsylvania in particular, has be come almost proverbial, and if nominated at Chicago, his majority in this State will be larger than that of any former candidate for tho Presidency. Of lion. Andrew G. Ccrtin, our candidate for Governor, it is almost needless for us to say anything. He is too well known here to require any commendation at our hands; but we cannot refrain from copying a few para graphs from some of our exchanges to show how his nomination is received in other parts of the State. The Delaware County Republican says : Mr. Curtin was Secretary of State during the administration of Gov. Pollock, and, at the same time, held the office of Superinten dent of Common Schools, in both of which ca pacities he exhibited that comprehensiveness and scope of mind which attracted public at tention, and which has since led to his selec tion as a candidate for Executive honors, and which will end in his triumphant election to the Gubernatorial chair. Mr. Curtin is a sound reasoner, an able and eloquent speaker, and kind and affable in his intercourse with bis fellow-men. The time-serving policy of the -demagogue he knows nothing of,and the doc trine of expediency, at a sacrifice of princi ple, is his aversion. Thoroughly acquainted with the resources of Pennsylvania, and con versant with all her requirements, he will see that her interests are . developed, her welfare advanced, and the rights of her people pro perly guaided. Never before have we enter ed into a political contest with brighter pros pects of success. With a candidate for Gov ernor whom we all honor for his many admira ble qualities, we are nerved to labor for vic tory. Let us, therefore, make the lest fight possible in the coming campaign, and acquit ourselves in a manner whioh will show our devotion, not only to our State, but to the candidate of our choice. The Allentown Register says : The nomination was expected,and the wish es of the People of Lehigh county have been gratified. The strength of Col. Curtin in the Convention is conclusive of his strength with the People. No name would have rallied to its support a host of warmer friends, and no candidate could mere have strengthened the party in all sections ol toe state. The Pittsburgh Gazette, after remarking that all branches of the opposition are gratifi ed with the nomination, and that no dissatis faction or complaints are heard in any quar ter, speaks thus : Wo have known Col. Curtin for some years, and know him to be a high-minded, upright gentleman, whose talents, manly bearing and geniality of character attach to him all who come within the sphere of his personal influ ence. Wherever he goes, he will have troops of friends : and his powerful advocacy of the principles of our party will be a welcome as sistance, wherever rendered. jie win prove a gallant leader of a gallant host, in a struggle in which victory is as certain as any future e vent can be. The Philadelphia Daily Neves says : There are few men in Pennsylvania who have more or warmer personal and joIiticaI friends than Col. Curtin. The Bedford Inquirer says : Col. Curtin has always been a favorite of the people of Pennsylvania. He has always sup ported a Tariff for the Protection of our man ufacturers, mechanics, farmers and laboring men; he is in favor of the Homestead law, for the purpose of securing to the poor man gov ernment land when he settles upon it, instead of its being given to land-jobbers ; and he is in favor of keeping slavery out of all Territory that was made free by the Missouri Compro mise. Col. Curtin is one of the best stump speakers in the State, will thoroughly canvass it, and be elected, beyong a doubt, by from 30,000 to 50,000 majority. The Philadelphia PrcM,Forney'spaper,says: The Opposition Convention have put in nom ination Andrew G. Curtin, of Centre' county, for Governor of the State of Pennsylvania. It gives us great pleasure to speak of this selec tion in terms of high praiso. . Col. Curtin is a man of irreproachable character, and more than ordinary abilities ; a fine speaker, a thor ough bred Pennsylvanian, and a national man. He yields' a great and just influence in the re- gion in which he lives, and comes of a family that has entitled itself to the confidence of the ' people of Middle Pennsylvania. His fine pres ence, generous character, and noble nature, will attract to his standard many voters. Mr. Curtin, while Secretary of tho Commonwealth ' under Gov. Pollock, made numerous friends ' by the liberality of his coursu and the upright ness of his action. . The Speech of Mr. Seward delivered last f week in the U. S. Senate, has been published in pamphlet form by the N. Y. Tribune office, . and -will be Bold at 25 cents per dozen copies, $1,25 per hundred, or $10 per thousand. . : j ; Minnesota has chosen eight delegates to the ; Republican National Convention at Chicago, and instructed them to support Wm. H. Sew. ard for President. Hon. Chapin 'Hall -will please accept our thanks for a copy of the Report of the Board .of Regents of the Smithsonion Institution. TJEM0CBATI0 STATE CONTENTION. This body met at Reading on the 29th Feb ruary, and nominated on the third ballot Hon. Henry D. Foster, of Westmoreland county, es their candidate for Governor. It is boasted that Mr. Foster did not want to be a candi date, and that his nomination was a spontane ous outburst of popular feeling and enthusiasm for a man pre-eminently qualified for the po sition. This is not the case. We know Mr. Foster well, 'and w ill give him all the credit he deserves. As a citizen, be enjoys a good reputation ;" as a lawyer, he has gained somo celebrity ; as a politician, he is wishy-washy ; as a busiuess man he has never displayed suf ficient tact to keep his financial affairs in a healthy condition. He is a good speaker, and yet, last fall, when he ran for Congress against John Covode, who stumped the district with him, he was beaten 1092 votes in a district which, six years ago, gave over 2,500 Demo cratic majority. When Col. Forney was a candidate for U. S. Senator, be voted against him ; but as soon as the result was declared adverse to Forney, he asked leave to change his vote for him, w hich request, as a matter of course, was not granted. It was a happy hit ol the Convention to place such a candidate on the Cincinnati platform, for when he meets a Lecnmptonite, he can say he adopts the plat form according to Buchanan's construction, and to the Douglas men he can declare that he adopts it as the "little giant" defines it. The nomination of Mr. Foster was doubtless a pre-arranged matter. Tho Administration cared little what became of Mr. Witte or any other aspirant, so that it secured a delegation to Charleston, after its own heart. This ac complished, and regarding the coming contest as hopeless to them, the wire-pullers of the Convention had nothing to lose by sacrificing the Administration candidate, and nominating another who may possibly unite most of the shattered fragments of the party. The fallow ing extract of a letter from Reading to the Philadelphia Bulletin, will give our readers some idea of how the affair was managed : "It is well understood here that Witte was sold out-and-out ; no one is so verdant as to believe that the nomination of Foster was the sudden inspiration that is pretended not ex actly. There were parties in Reading ten days ago, who knew of the dodge, and who told their friends, privately, that Foster would be tho man. It is true, that a large portion of the delegates were outsiders as to the mea sure ; but there was a party fully posted up large enough, with the help of the outside hur rah, to carry the hurrah and rush tho vote through. 1 hose w ho watched the proceedings of the Convention closely, were aware that some plot was forming. Thus although cer tain, members took every occasion to speak of the popularity of Foster, and to express their regret that ho would not consent to have his name used, and w hen he was proposed for a delegate at large, he got but 20 votes next ballot, none. For Senatorial elector he re ceived but four votes, when it was said that he was not a candidate, and it was asked that his name and votes be withdrawn. Nothing was said about withdrawing the names and votes of some others. Why was Fosters vote, on these occasions, so small, and why the pa rade about his being before the Convention ? Why did not his friends voto for him 1 They were keeping him back for Governor, and ready to vote for him when the time came. Those not in the ring voted for him. Had I time I could give you many incidents all point ing the same way. Mr. Witte, when, alter somo considerable trouble, was induced to come into and address the Convention,evident ly felt that he had been victimized, and re marked that the time would come, perhaps, when tho secret history of the last three days would be written. If so, it will be a curious chapter on the subject of political Conventions. Tho coup d'etat was bold but successful. " THE READING PLATFORM. The first resolution of the platform adopted, declares an urshaken confidence in the princi ples of the Democratic party as proclaimed at the Convention? held at Baltimore and Cincin nati. The second deprecates the agitation of slavery in and out of Congress as tending to weaken the bonds of union, excite animosi ty, and thus create heart-burnings, and accom plish no possible good. The third declares that Congress has no power to legislate on the subject of slavery in tho territories. The fourth says the question of the right of citizens to hold slaves in territories is a judicial ques tion and not a legislative one. Its decision is committed exclusively to the courts. The fifth declares that the whole power belongs to Congress to legislate and enact laws and exe cute them. It belongs to the Judiciary to in terpret them, and their decision is final and conclusive, and sbould be cheerfully acquies ced in. Sixth, the doctrines of irrepressible conflict between the North and South is fraught with danger to the best interests and dearest rights of the people of the confederacy. : Sev enth,th Union of the States is above and be yond all price, and the dty of patriots to frown indignantly on any attempt to alienate oue portion of the Union from the rest. Eighth.tbat treason is deprecated as an attempt of sectional parties. Every effort of such parties is to be resisted. Formed as the gov ernment is for the common good of the whole country, all sovereignty rests with the people, who hold power to conduct the government through their representatives, lhe govern ment only exists as a Union of the States, sovereign and independent within their own limits, in their own domestic concerns, but bound together as a people by the general gov eminent. Ninth, in the adoption of the Fed eral Conststution, the States acted generally as free and independent sovereignties, dele gating a portion of their powers to the Feder al Government as security against dangers, domestic or foreign, and any intermeddling of one or more States with the domestic institu tions of another, is a subversion and violation of the constitution, serving to weaken and de stroy the Union. The acts of State legisla tures to defeat the purposes ot the fugitive slave law are subversive of the Constitution and revolutionary, in effect. Eleventh,the do mestic and foreign policy of Mr. Buchanan has been eminently pure, patriotic, conservative and just, and wo look upon the success crown ing his labors as the proudest vindication of its propriety and wisdom. Twelfth, we con cur in the views and recommendations in mat ters of State policy of Gov. Packer, and in his prompt and patriotic action in delivering to the authorities of Virginia the fugitives from justice who participated in the Harper's Ferry outrage. Thirteenth, The convictions of the Democratic party of Pennsylvania re main nnshaken in the wisdom and justice of adequate protection to coal. iron, wool and the great staples of the country. The views of Mr- Buchanan on the subject or specific duties are approved, and the representatives in Congress are desired to procure sucn modification ot the laws as the unwise legislation of the Repubu can party in 1857 renders necessary to tho prosperity of toe Industrial interests of renn sylvania. Fourteenth endorses the nomina tion of Henry D. Foster ; it also pledges the Democracy oi' Pennsylvania to the nominee of the Charleston Convention. . Wm. Bigler, Wm. Montgomery, John L Dawson and Joseph B. Baker were appointed Delegates at large to the Charleston Conven tion. We have no idea that the people can be humbugged by the position this Convention assumed on the tariff question. ANOTHER SPEECH FROM ME. SEWAED. Last Wednesday, Hon. Wm. H. Seward de livered a speech in the U. S. Senate, which will give tho Democrats trouble again for at least a twelvemonth to come. Its main points are as follows : - - "After reviewing the history of the question of slavery as a conflict between Southern cap ital and Northern labor, he referred to the coming Presidential campaign.and to the Re publicans holding to the principle of prevent ing the Territories, by constitutional means, from becoming houses for slavery and polyg amy. He said the policy of the Republican party was to stand by the freedom of speech and of the press, the speedy improvement of the public domain by homestead laws, and to encourage mining, manufactures and internal commerce, with needful connections between the Atlantic and Pacific States. He alluded to the fact that many Southern men are not willing to seo the inauguration of a Republi can President, becausd it is a sectional party, and passed on to prove that the Republican is not a sectional organization. He asked, is it easier for us to bear your sway than for you to bear ours? Is it unreasonable that for once we should alternate ? He said the real princi ples of tho Republican party were national. He was no assailant of States. It was well and wisely arranged that the States were sov ereign on the subject of slavery within their own borders. He said John Brown and his as sociates" acted on earnest, though fatally erro neous convictions. He pronouueed fclie act an act of sedition and treason, and criminal to just the extent that it affected the public peace and was destructive of human life. He did not think anything serious would grow out of the oft-repeated threats to dissolve the U nion." In every sense, the speech was conservative and national, realizing the anticipations of his friends and compelling the respect of his ene mies. His designation of "Capital States and Labor States," is not at all relished by the Democracy. Mr. Douglas attempted an an swer, in which he misrepresented the posi tions taken, by assuming that Mr. Seward had advocated an equality of the white and black races a falsehood that Mr. Trumbull threw back into the teeth of the "little giant" in the presence of the Senate and the immense crowd that had collected to hear Mr. Seward. Is the Millenium at Hand. The Rev. Dr. Cumming,the noted London preacher.believes that we are on the eve of the Millenium. In discourses recently delivered in Leeds, he gare interpretations of passages in the Book of Daniel and the Apocalypse, which are nov el if not convincing. We quote from a brief report in an Lnghsn paper : He said the year 1867 seemed to end G.000 years of the world's history, and from the ear liest periods onward it had been the almost universal belief that the six days of creation were typical of these 6,000 years and that sev enth day of creation, or the Sabbath, was ty pical of the millennial rest of 1,000 years. But he would say that, supposing this were so, they were at this moment 140 years short of the 6,000 years. It was a remarkable fact, however, that the ablest chronologists, irres pective of all phrophetic theories, had shown that a mistake of upwards of 100 years had been made in calculating the chronology of the world, and that the year I860 of the Christian era began not from the year 4004 of the world's history but in the year 4138, and that the year of Christ's' birth was five years before that, or in 4132. If his premises were just, then they were at that moment within seven year3 of the exhaustion of tho b,U0l years; so that if 1807 was to be the termina tion of this economy, they had arrived at the Saturday evening of the world's long and drea ry week. If this were so, it was a magnificent thought that there were some in that assembly who would never die. They were just plung ing into days such as they had never before seen ; an European war was looming, more dreadful than that through which they had re cently passed, and when these things happen ed it would be seen that the sentiments he had uttered were not the dreams of lanaticism, but the words of soberness and truth. He was convinced that England would emerge from the midst of these vials of wrath ; she was separated from the great apostacy at the era of the Reformation, and had never again join ed her; and he believed there was now more living vital evangelical Christianity in this country than there had been 500 years before. His study of prophecy did not make him a gloomy, a desponding, or a sad man ; but whilst God's precepts taught him his duties, His providence lighted up his heart with the sunshine of Heaven, and gave him. a hope that brightened more and more to the perfect day. . A Plunder Scheme. There is a project on foot at Harrisburg, says the Reading Press, to release the Sunbury and Erie Railroad Com pany, lor a number of years, from the pay ment of the interest on the purchase money for the canals sold to that company, or in oth er words, to mako a gift of said canals to the company, and that too, in the taco of a pur chase offered by responsible parties, who ten dered a higher price and were able to comply, fully, with the terms ol sale. This proposi tion is to release the Sunbury and Erie com pany from the payment into the State Treasu ry, of the sura of one hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars, per annum, which sum, was to be applied to the Sinking Fnnd for the re duction of the State debt. The Company bought the canals at a price many millions be low their actual value ; but, finding itself em barrassed, the Company asks for a donation of the whole purchase. Fortt-nine Children Drowned. From the Quincy (111.) Herald we learn that a most ter rible calamity, rivaling that of Pemberton Mills, occurred on Thursday last, near the town of Hardin, Illinois, on the Illinois river, and about twenty-five miles above Alton. Fifty school children in attendance at a uni versity in that place, went out upon the ice to play. The ice gave way, and with one excep tion, all were lost. Our informant was una ble to give further particulars, but he repre sents that the village was the scene of univer sal mourning, almost every family in it hav ing lost one or more of its members. Senator Prall, of Kentucky, in a speech a gainst repealing the law forbidding the impor tation of slaves, says : There is no place in this broad Commonweath in which the profes sional negro trader is not held in utter abhor rence and detestation ; thank God, there is no spot where his accursed trade is not regarded as a necessary evil -rather than a thing to be Bought after, lauded, courted, pampered, as some gentlemen seem inclined to do. Ken tuckians use them as the Almighty uses the crows, the buzzards, and other foul birds, to remove the carrion which would otherwise work injury to the body politic. THIBTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. , Eeb. 27 In the Senate, Mr. Davis, Dem., Miss., presented a memorial from the L'egis. lature of New Mexico, asking for the organi zation of the Territory of Arizona. Mr. Sew ard, Rep., N. Y- presented petitions asking that pensions be granted to the soldiers of the war of 1812. Mr. Hale, Rep., N. H., presen ted a memorial from Frank Sanburn, protest ing against the order for his arrest and asking that it be rescinded. Mr. Collamer, Rep. Vt., moved an inquiry into the expediency of hav ing letters remaining in "a Post-Oflice thirty days uncalled for returned to their writers. Adopted. Mr. Wilson, Rep., Mass., gave no tice of a bill to reduce the rates now paid for. the public printing twenty-five per cent. Mr. Brown's resolution relative to the Territories was then taken up. and Mr. Toombs, Dem., Ga., addressed the Senate. The subject was then postponed, and the Senate went into ex ecutive session. In the House, the bills for the payment of Invalid and other Pensions, and for the support of the Military Academy were passed. Mr. Conkling, R., N. Y., sought but failed to obtain consent to introduce a res olution of inquiry whether any further legis lation is necessary ' to secure the liberty of speech or person in the District of Columbia, and also the rights of free persons in said dis trict. On motion of Mr. Fcnton, Rep., N. Y., a resolution was adopted calling for informa tion as to the condition of the trust lands west of the Missouri set apart for the New York Indians; and if the same have been brought into market, by what authority. The printing of extra copies of the President's Annual mes sage, and Reports of the Heads of Depart ments, as ordered, as reported by the Com mittee, a saving of some $16,000 being secu red. The House proceeded to vote for Printer, Mr. Colfax, Rep.. Ind., withdrawing the name of Mr. Defrees. Three votes were had. The third ballot stood : Mr. Glossbrenner, 74 ; Mr. Ball, 7 ; Mr. Ford, 88 ; Mr. Seaton, 17 ; Scat tering 3. There having teen no choice, sev eral ineffectual attempts were then made to adjourn, when another vote was had. as fol lows : Necessary to a choice, 93 ; for Mr. T. II. Ford, of Ohio, 93 ; Mr. Glossbrenner, 71 ; Mr. Seaton, 18 ; Mr. Ball, 2 ; Mr. Winton, 1 ; Mr. Ford was declared elected. Mr. Blake, Rep., Ohio, announced the death of the Hon. Cyrus Spink of the XlVth District of Ohio, in an appropriate eulogy. Messrs. Curtis and Mr. Sherman each also paid a tribute of res pect to the deceased, when the customary res olutions were adopted. Feb. 28 In the Senate, Mr. Mason, Dem., Ya., moved a resolution, calling upon the President to furnish a copy of any reprrt es tablishing the boundaries between the United States and Great .Britain. Mr. Foot, Rep., Vt., submitted a report and bill explanatory of the carrying into effect the IXth article of the Treaty "of 1819 with Spain. The bill au thorizing the sale of arms to States and regu lating the appointments of Superintendents of Public Armories, was taken up and debated. The Senate then went into executive session. In the House, Mr. Sherman, Rep., Ohio, re ported from the Committee on Ways and Means a bill providing that the President's message and Executive dcuments shall be printed in time for distribution at the com mencement of each session of Congress. Mr. S. also reported a bill providing that members of Congress shall be allowed twenty cents per mile instead of forty, the present mileage, to be computed by a straight geograpical line, and repealing all existing acts upon tho sub ject. Mr. S. explained the inequality of the present system.- Some debate was had, when the bill, which had been reported as a substi tute for one referred to the Committee, was adopted. Mr. Sherman then moved the pre vious question upon the final passage of the bill, but further proceedings were interrupted by Mr. Ruflin, Dem., N. C, rising to a ques tion of privilege, declaring that his name was not recorded as voting on the election of Prin ter yesterday. Mr. Sherman insisted upon his motion being put first, and Mr. Rnffin said he would move to correct the record hereaftei. The House then adjourned without taking the question on Mr. Sherman's motion. . Feb. 29. In Senate, on motion of Mr. Sew ard, Rep., the bill lor the admission of Kansas was put on its second reading. On motion of Mr. Mason, D., the President was called upon to trausmit whatever communication he had received from the Governor of Texas relative to the disturbances on the Rio Grande. Mr. Seward presented tho memorial of the Legis lature of Kansas, praying for admission into the Union, and theu proceeded to address the Senate at length. A long debate ensued. In the House, Mr. Parrott, Rep. Kansas, present ed the resolutions of the Kansas Legislature asking admission as a State under the Wyan dot Constitution. Mr. Rufhn,.Dem. N. C. cal led up his motion to amend the journal by're cording his vote for Mr. Glossbrenner for Prin ter. - Mr. R's statement that he had voted was confirmed by other members who had heard him, and after some discussion, the House or dered th6 journal to be corrected. The Spea ker then declared the election of Mr. Ford a nullity. A vote was then takn, when Mr. Ford had 87 votes, Glossbrenner 78, Scatter ing 15, necessary to a choice 91. Postponed to March 1st. Mr. Grow. Rep., addressed the House on the subject of the public lands, and Mr. Junkln, Rep. Pa., also spoke, advocating protection to American industry. March 1. Mr. Davis, Dem. Miss., of the Senate, submitted a modified series of his res olutions (the Democratic Platform) and they were ordered printed. The bill amending the act regulating the collection of duties on im ports, &c, was taken up and passed. The Military Academy Appropriation bill was ta ken up and passed, and Mr. Wigfall, Dem., Texas, moved an amendment appropriating $1,100,000 for the support of a regiment of mounted volunteers to defend the frontiers of Texas, in pursuance of the act of 1858. After a long debate the matter was referred to the Committee on Military Affairs. During the debate, the hour for the special order being Mr. Brown's resolutions arrived when they were postponed till Tuesday. The Homestead bill was made the special order for Wednes day. The bill authorizing the sale of arms to the States, and requiring the Superintendents of Armories to be appointed from the Ord nance Corps, was taken up, eliciting a long and somewhat heated debate, when the Senate adjourned. In the House, the St. Louis As say Office bill was reported with amendments On motion of Mr. Washburn, Rep., Me., an inquiry was ordered into the expediency of a bollshing a portion of the land offices, or redu cing their expenses. Mr. W. also reported a bill amendatory of the act providing for the safety of passengers on steamboats. Postpo ned for three weeks. , The resolutions which Mr. Curtis, Rep., Iowa, attempted to offei yesterday, calling upon the President for cop ies of whatever communications had been re ceived from Gov. Houston, of Texas, relative to the troubles on the frontier,, was adopted. The bill to carry into effect the treaties with the Indians of Oregon and Washington was taken up, but no action was taken The elec tion of printer, being the special order was an nounced, but it was finally agreed to postpone the -matter until to-morrow. March 2. In Senate, Mr. Wilson, Rep., in troduced a Dili amendatory to the act provid ing for the execution of the public printing A large number ot private bills were passed Adjourned till Monday. In the nouse, the bill carrying into effect treaty stipulations with tlie Indians In Oregon and Washington Terri tories, was passed. The House then proceed ed to vote for Printer.witb this result : Whole number of votes 187,' necessary to a choice 94, Ford had 96 votes, Glossbrenner 72, Seaton 9, remainder scattering. Mr. Ford was declared elected. Mr. Colfax, Rep., reported a bill au thorizing publishers to print on their papers the date when a subscription expires, and it was passed. A large number of private bills were reported. Adjourned till Monday. PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS. prepared for the ''RAFTSMAN'S journal." Lawrence County. On the 22d Feb., New Castle and its vicinity was visited with a se vere gale of wind. The roof on the steam mill of Messrs. Pearson & Co., was blown off one half of tbo roof was taken over the ma chine shop and thrown on the roof of the Lawrence Foundry, knocking a hole in the roof, and capsizing things generally. The roof was also blown from the barn of John L. Em ery, in Croton. At the time of the storm the protracted meeting was in session in the Meth odist Episcopal Church. The spire on the steeple was blown down a general smash was expected, and the meeting broke up with great excitement. No very serious injury was done to the building and jiu one hurt. . . . Ou Mon day evening, 20th Feb., an explosion occurred at the Alladin Oil Works, two miles above Freeport, by which one of the men employed at tbo works lost his life. The mac, named William Semple, was engaged in examining a part of the machinery which had got out of order, with a lamp in his hand, and carelessly approached one of tho oil refining tanks, the vapor from which exploded with a loud noise, shattering the building, ribd dreadfully burn ing Semple. lie was conveyed to a house near by, but he only lived through the night, expiring in great agoDy on Tuesday morning. Armstrong Countt. Tho Commissioners are about making some "internal improve ments" iu tne jail. . . . Another meeting has been held in one of the townships, to depre cate the proposed extra payment of the con tractors of the new Court House. ... A young man from the vicinity of Brookville, with a team of horses in a ferry boat, crossing the Mahoning, on his way to Kitlanning for goods, met with what might have been a very serious accident. A treo was blown down, and killed one of his horses instantly. . . . Two prisoners escaped from the jail the other night, and a third attempted an escape, but was unfortu nately for him, and, perhaps, fortunately for justice too corpulent, and stuck in the apperture, where he bad to remain until he was relesed next morning. The Free Press says the jail i3 by no means a safe one, it being entirely optional with the prison ers whether they remain or not. . . . The local papers publish an account of the recent tem perance movements in Kittanning, and signed by "all the ministers of the borough,except Rev. Dr. Painter,of the Presbyterian Church." Cambria County. A woman named Letitia Bennett, residing at Johnstown, died on the 24th Feb., of mania polu ! She bad been in the habit of drinking fceely of intoxicating li-quors-fot several years past, and had an attack of mania potu once before. She was the moth er of nine children, at least four of whom are a helpless charge upon their father the young est being under two years old. ... A man named John Lewis, carter, had his collarbone fractured in one of the company's coal drifts, on the 23d Feb., by thc.'falling upon him of a quantity of slate. He narrowly escaped with his life. ... A child of David D. Williams, of Millville, aged about two years, was badly scal ded about the face, neck, shoulder and arm, on the 21st r eb., by pulling a cup ol tea off the table. , Blair County. On the 24th Feb., two hor ses attached to a carriage, the property of Col. E. Baker of Allegheny Furnace, in front of a store in Altoona, became frightened and ran away, broke a wheel and the tongue of the carriage, snd threw the driver out, who. how ever, escaped with light injuries. . . . iiolli- daysburg is beginning to awaken from her lethargy. The erection of a rolling mill has just been commenced, and an extensive boot and shoe manufactory is to be established. . Clarion County.- Levi Henwood,whiIe cut ting down a tree in Farmington township, last Friday, was struck by a falling limb and re ceived an injury from which he died on Sun day following A heavy storm of wind passed over the borough of Clarion and vicin ity last week. Nearly every house was shaken and several out-buildings blown down. A barn of Samuel Duff, near the borough, had its roof blown off, besides several barns in Limestone township. . . ' . . , Crawford County. Joseph M 'Arthur has been chosen President of the County Agricul tural Society. . . . Herman, the third son of Edgar Huidekoper, was seriously injured on the 21st Feb. by the premature discbarge of a gun, the contents of which entered his body near the arm-pit. Mercer County. A terrific stcrm passed over portions of the county on the 22d roofs were blown off, trees, fences, and chimneys blown down. The roof of the Methodist Church in Mercer was entirely blown off. Clinton County. John Dunfree, who was convicted of manslaughter at the last term of Court, was sentenced to five years in the Penitentiary. . . . The late Grand Jury,of this county, returned the jail as a nuisance. The counterfeit gold coin recently offered in New York, and which answered every test of the get nine, sadly puzzles those familiar with counterfeiting processes.to account for it. A writer in tho Philadelphia Ledger gives the following respecting its origin s "The white metal is known only to the Chinese. and work manship on the genuine, to render them of less value, is done by them, and if the United States officers will trace back, or examine fu ture coins they will And them emanating from the Chinese quarters of San Francisco, Cal., where I have seen many $20s and one $50 gold coin, or slug, all of which were well ex ecuted,and were taken in the California Branch Mint. This metal, like the gong metal, and the manner of soldering the lead paper in tea cnests,'is still, and 1 believe, ever will remain a secret with the Celestials, unless Chemists may hereafter make tho discovery cf those in valuable secrets." A dispatch from Halifax states that it is now ascertained beyond a doubt that there are no survivors of the disaster to the Hungarian. Only three bodies have been found those of a woman, a man, and a child two years' old. Three buildings have been obtained at Bar- rington in which to store the goods which are constantly drifting ashore. The ship's arti cles, which have been found, show that the crew numbered, seventy-four. The passenger list nad not yet been found. The only pas sengers known to nave been aboard ate Wm, Boultenbouse, of Sackville, N. B.; and Dr Barrett f New York. Besides a box belong ing to the latter, three trunks were found, one belonging to Margaret Robertson, of Montreal, one to Konert Martin ot Toronto, and one to W. K. CrocKer ot Norwich, Conn. It is to be presumed these parties were also aboard. No appropriation has been made this year by Congress lor Seeds for distribution, the lunds having been used up for the tea plant, with the cultivation of which experiments are being made in this country." FROM THE STATE CAPITAL. Correspondence of the "Raftsman's Journal." Harrisburg, March 3, 1860. Mr. Editor : There has been a great deap ot excitement among the Democracy during the past week relative to the Democratic nom ination at Reading. The delegates from the west and north passed through here both go ing to and returning from the Convention. On the way thither, they were like seekers af ter office, anxiously expectant ; upon their re turn they professed to be joyously jubilant. The nomination of Foster was to be regarded as the panacea for all Democratic Ills a per fect king-cure-all. Ho has been nominated spontaneously, they say. Did you ever hear of spontaneous brick hou ses, spontaneous railroads, spontaneous tele graphs, spontaneous cities, spontaneous pretty women, spontaneous fat babies, spontaneous big feet, spontaneous consumption, or sponta neous penitentiaries ? If you have, then you have some idea of the spontaniety of Foster's -nomination. Welsh, the President, declared tho nomina tion of Foster carried unanimously ere th third ballot, in which, votes were cast for Witte to the number of 54, for Fry 32, etc., bad been announced. This announcmcnt was the pending order of business beforo the Con vention. What right had the President, a practiced parliamentarian, to announce that Foster was unanimously nominated during tha pendency of other business, unless he was determined to force the nomination 1 Why did Lafayette Baker, the brother of tho col lector of the Pdrt of Philadelphia, so soon change his vote from Witto to Foster T He was among the very foremost in the stam pede which followed Dietrich's motion to nominate Foster ? Why did Dietrich, a Bu chanan democrat, make it ? Because the nomination of Foster had been ' resolved upon at Washington during the last days of the preceding week. Witte had mado himself personally obnoxious to Buchanan, Black & Co.; Fry was the recognized candi date of Gov. Packer's administration, and could not therefore receive the support of tho National Administration ; Dawson's availabil ity, although the real favorite of "old Buck,"' was destroyed by "Davy" Lynch's card, pub lisbed in Pittsburgh some weeks ago. Tim contest was then narrowed to Foster and Frr. Buchanan determined to take the former of these two. Hence all the prominent confiden tial friends of tho administration and their trusted satelites were ready to spring the Fos ter spontaneous (?) combustion movement up on the convention whenever it was evident that tho time had arrived to give it the sem blance of an "inspiration!" And such an in spiration as the wire-puller gives to the figures . in a puppet s how. lie makes them move, but not spontaneously. To such poor subterfuges . do tjie leaders ol the once proud Democracy resort to bolster up their waning fortunes. They are vain, useless, idle, futile. Well, so be it. The people at last have to . settle with this spontaneous bubble ot enthu siasm, and that w ill determine the genuine ness of the inspiration. It is said that Curtin will soon challenge Foster to take the "stump." This challenge,. if Foster accepts, (which I doubt very much) will make the campaign a most interesting one. Should the candidates begin at Erie and travel the State together from county to coun ty, as they do in Indiana. Kentucky, Tennes see, etc., it would rouse the masses into a per fect furor. No campaign like it would havo ever been witnessed in the political history of this State. The whole strength of both par ties would be brought to the polls. ' This tact alone would give an e'minent victory to tha People's Party. Rumor assigns to A. K. McCIure of r rank- lin, the Chairmanship of the State Central Committee. It would be. a most excellent choice, as he is experienced in politics, an able, keen, shrewd leader. One of the Representatives from yonr dis trict, Mr. Gordon, has during the last two or three days taken a leading part in the discus sion upon two important bills. These were the Insurance bill and the bill to tax Brokers, lie advocated tho passage of both bills. Tht first named, designed as it is to put the bogus Insurance companies ot the cities of Pittsburg and Philadelphia upon trial and send them, on an aeronautic expedition, bas passed the lower House. It owes its passage to Mr. Gotdon as much as to any other man. Had he opposed: it, he could have killed it. He is regarded as one of the ablest debaters in the body of which he is a member, and suspicion has not dared to breathe upon the purity of his motives and. actions. Feb. 27th, Mr. Gordon read in place a bill" declaring Medic's Run, in Clearfield County, o public highway. Also an act to incorporate. the Clearfield Insurance Company. March 2d, an act declaring Kersey Run la the county of Elk, Lanrel Run in Clearfield, and Elk counties, and Lick Run in the connty of Clearfield, public highways, passed the- House. Also, a-supplement to an act to in corporate a company for making an artificial road by the best and nearest route from WaN erford to (he Susquehanna, and an act decla ring Roaring Run in Clearfield county a pub lic highway. Tours, Anon. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Advertisements set irv with larsre tvve or out of itsttat sttflewill be charged double price for space occupied. SHIPP1MJ FCRS '.The highest CASH pri ces paid for Mink, Coon, Red Fox, Grey Fox, Otters, Muikrats, Ac, Ac., at WOMRATUS' 415 & 417 Arch Street, Philadelphia. Philadelphia, March 7, 1860-2m D KIED APPLES for sale at the Store of Wm. F. Irwin, Market street. Clearfield. Pa. WHEAT Flour, of good quality, in barrel and 100-lb. sacks, for sale at the store of Jan. 25. Wm. Irvin. Curwtiwville. RAFTING HOPES, for sale as cheap as they can be bad at any other store in town, by Feb. 29. GKAIIAM, BOYXTON i. CO, N AILS, GLASS, Oils, Paint3, Ac, to be had at the most reasonable prices, at the store of Feb. 20. GRAHAM, BOYNTOX A CO. B ACON". 11 am s, Sides and Shoulders, for s&I at the corner store of WM. IK YIN. Fobmary 29, 1S60. Curwengvillo. FISH, BACON AND SALT, just received and for sale at moderate prioes at the store of Feb. 29. GRAHAM, BOYXTOX A CO, PULLEY Blocks, RaftRope, SottsLeatherand Patent Leather, for sale cheap at the store of' Jan. 25. Wm. Ibvix. Cuncr.nsvtlle. WANTED Dry Pine Lumber and Shinglei at D. J. McCAXX'S new store in Philip? burg, Centre co. February 22., lS60-3a. CORN, RYE, OATS, SALT, FLQUK. FISH aJ Ground Plaster, for sale at the cheap Cash store of D. J. McCANX, February 22, 1860-Sm. ' Philipsbnrg. HWARD, Manufacturer and Dealer in Straw Goods, Nos. 103, 105 and 107. North Second Street, Philadelphia. Having just received oar Spring Stock, which comprises a large and desira ble assortment of all kinds of Straw and Lace Goods. Our stock of Flowers and Ruches is una sualiy large this season, and we would invito oar special attention to that department Please calt and examine them before making your pur chases. !Feb.29-4t.J if. WAKI