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Terms of Advertising 1 ins. 2 ins. 3 ins 25. 377 1 50 Six lidos or lose, 1 scidate, 16 lines, brevier, 50 75 100 2 " - • " . 100 150 205 3 • ti IL 1 50 2 25 300 3m. Gm. 12m. $3 00 65 00 8800 " 500 800 12 00 " 7 50 10 00 15 00 1 square i 2 " 3 4' 4 " 5 AA 10 " Professional and Business Cards not sicced ing 6 lines, oneyear, 4 00 From the Washington Union. The Duty and. the Destiny of the Dem ocratic Party.---No. 1. After the great speech of Mr. Hayne, in the United States Senate, in reply to Mr. Web ster in .1830, the latter, before proceeding to respond to his antagonist, made use of the following memorable language : "When the mariner has been tossed for many days, in thick weather, and on an unknown sea, he naturally avails himself of the first pause in the storm, the earliest glance of the sun, to Lake his latitude, and ascertain how-far the el ements have driven him from his true course." And now that the whirlwind of fanaticism, which hag so far driven the public opinion of this country from its accustomed and its so ber channels, has partially ~,subsided, it is well that we should take a look-out upon the still boisterous ocean of politics, and-as certain not only the extent of the damage which has been inflicted, but, so far as we may, the present condition and future pros pect of our country.• It is too early to write Ahe history of recent and of passing events, novel and extraordinary as they ate ; but there is an existing necessity for practical ob . servation and preparation which we cannot deny, and which it is impossible to evade. Not to go back to ascertain the cause of popular tumults, or of popular changes, it is enough for us to say that, in the general wreck of experiments, one great party has been wholly broken up, and byn strange in fatuation, many of its numbers have sought what they supposed to' be a refuge in the caves and carriers of the factions of the day. • By a strange coinr,idence the two chiefs of this party passed from the stage of life a few years ago, and almost at the same time, after rendering unequalled services to their coon try ; and - their departure seemed to leave their followers not only without guides, but • almost without hope. Even those who had "!';:,. echoed the opinions and worshipped the ex ample of these champions appear to have hn ried their energies in the graves of Webster and of Clay. The vacum thus left remained an "aching void;" and nothing could be found of the vitality and vigor of past days brit the unconquerable aversion to their for mer adversaries on the part of some of those leaders who should have boldly presei ved the old whig organization. A party thus de prived by an act of Providence of its most brilliant lights, and thus deserted by Ili o A• c _. Who should have kept it in the field, was al ready, half demoralized. It was this condi tion that made it an easy prey for sectional adventurers—that absorbed most of its rnern : bers in the abolition factions of the North and in the secret lodges of the South.— Doubting and fearing this now state of thing's, those who . yielded to it could not honestly or heartily co-operate with their new associates; and the final catastrophe, following so inev itably on the heels of a sudden and extended ' success, was as much the consequence of the want of faith in the majority of the com bination as in the fatal seeds of politjtical • decay which bad been deeply planted in its bosom by its inventors and its authors. And this is the present condition of all the sev eral divisions and difference's distinguished under the general title of TIIE OPPOSITION TO THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY. The only homogeneous. and truly national organization that has maintained itself through all these snuggles and changes is the democratic party. Refusing to disband like _ the whig party—impelled, indeed, by every consideration of fidelity to pledges and devo tion to principle, to opposition to the new order of things—thd first effort of the com bined factions was to remove such an obsta cle from their pathway. To this end they invoked the prejudices 'of section against section, and for the moment, at least in the northern States, they sunk _their noisy na tionality.and rallied under the banner of the abolitionists. But this very concentration made the democracy more resolute and firm for future conflicts. It disclosed the tactics of the secret party. And although the north ern States, misled and excited in the firSt onset of a new party with old heresies, al lowed that democracy to ennunter a series of defeats, such was the vigilence, ability, and courage of the latter in the midst of its. tlis- asters, that when the desolation of proscrip ;•, lion and intolerance had devastated the the South was armed to the teeth for the in vader and re-asserted, in aseries of brilliant victories, not alone its own_rights, but at the • same time reanimated and strengthened the constitutional men of the North. The tide that rushed so fiercely for the first few months, threatening to overwhelm the most sacred covenants, and to prostrate the most monuments of patriotism, has be •,-,ogun to ebb with fearful rapidity, leaving • •,2.more than one reckless leader stranded, and ~ n istrewirfg the shore with the broken hopes , :,emend eleventh hour regrets of those who were • eager to float into power upon any and ev :',:,7:.;4.ery wave of fanaticism. 'i-;;k. There is a large class of conservative men this free country, many of whom ern barked in the enterprise of know-nothingism pm honest motives. They had been whigs 7 der'Clay and Webster, and fell into the '. - ands of 'the" new movement—first, becauee their-antagonism-to the democracy; arid, I&‘.-4 00 23 00 " 9 00 14 00 38 00 " 15 00 -25 " 25 00 40 secondly, because they could not conceive that a surrender of what they had been taught was a mere name would produce evil consequences. These men have now dis covered their mistake, and find that they have been misled into an intolerance, which, in its insatiate pursuit of is victims, would break up all the foundations of society and of law, and substitute for the peaceful system of a government of opinion an oligarchy compo sed of bigots in religion, fanatics in politics, desperadoes in morals, and incapables in statesmanship. It is easy to see how the unsealing of such men's eyes must advance and strengthen the only, existing and nation al party, which opposes violence and error in every State of the Union, and stands up on truth fortified by experience and trial, wherever the constitution of our country is acknowledged and obeyed. 60 00 ' The Duty and the Destiny of the Dem ocratic Party.---No. 2. The advantage of the democratic party in_ -the present crisis of political affairs is to be found in this : that that party is immovably flied upon the unchanging rock of principle. In the midst of the ever-varying scenes of the day—.when the crude theories of fanati cism and, of intolerance are enabled to assume substance and shape—and when the public mind is beset with every imaginable scheme, andbewildered by every dazzling idea—it is impossible to over-estimate the grateful anti healthy influences of the demo crotiecreed, standing, as it does, upon those philosophical truths which are so necessary to the solid interests and constitutional rights of all sections of the country. the progress of liberal principles cannot be aided by the ill-digested suggestions of inexperien ced and selfish demagogues. "Men change but principles live forever:" and no eat, whether of legislation or of statesmanship, will stand the test of tithe, and survive the investigating spirit of the age, which is not rooted in the unalterable and eternal jus tice of things. Stability is vitally essen tial in such a government as ours—not, in deed, in the sense-in which it is understood by the governments of the Old World, butin that meaning of the term which decides every new issue.by the inexorable standard of the right, and rejects those dangerous and treas onable designs which, disguised-in the robes of expediency, too often supersede the meas ures of consciencions and I xperienced patriot ism. We find, in proof of this. that every ques tion of finance, of revenue, of territory, and of public policy, has in succession been adjust ed by the demoratic party, upon principles which, tried by the trial of years, have at last overthrown allobjections, and are now acquiesced in by a united, if not by a grate ful public sentiment. same remedies, if applied to the new troubles of the times, must produce the same wholesome and en during fr ruts ; and we , have already entered upon the realization of this last ti tumph.— That this ti it - Imph should not be allowed to fail in the smallest particular, however, is a pi incipal duty" of the democratic party. But is it not humiliating that, when the whole people are so profoundly and immediately in terested in the success of a perrnarnent pub lie policy—when every material institution of society, every department of industry and trade, every political and moral right, is con cerned in the establisment of such a policy— that a wild and wanton proscription, stimula ted by the roost ignorant prejudices, and de fended by the most dangerous malcontents, should be permitted to run its course of fraud and force, of bigotry and bloodshed, in dell- I ance of the sober judgment of the country, land too often assisted by the guilty indiffer !Klee of the people' ! It is a course of the times that a few i able and unscrupulous men are often able to I carry off their partisans and friends upon the most absurd and insubstantial theories. .Call it what we may, it is by- no means a compli merit to our national intelligence to see a great body of American voters one day advo eating the rights of the Catholics, (as in the case of the whigs of 1852,) almost to the exclusion of all other persuasions, and yet the I next day (as in the case of the great body Of the same party in 1855) turning about and practically denyingthe Catholic his guaran tied privileges at the polls, and his equality be fore the laws in many other respects. Alexan der Hamilton speaks in one of his letters of the incalculable value of an honest and patriotic public man; and we are often impressed with the force of his observation when we see how much injury a single dishonest public mart can inflict, not only upon the national char acter, but upon the very people whom he hypocritically affects to serve. There is no safety in that condition of things which per mits a shrewd manager to sway the public sentiment of his party as his hopes or ha treds may dictate. Every right or guarantee I must be unsettled if this danger should be- come general enough to be national. Hence Vitis that all parties who take position upon the securities and covenantsi of the con )'stitution are those alone who are fit to be trusted by a free people. If the democratic party was not always ready to suffer defeat by tenaciously holding on to what was right, (however odious the measure might be at the moment,) it would become an object of de served contempt, because it must then be a mere corrupt and selfish conspiracy, intent alone upon power, and ready to sacrifice character and consistency at all times for a miserable temporary advantage. There is not a - State in this broad Union -there is not a Territory—which is not now affected by some, local mischief, aided by some 'revengeful politician, and directed against the democratic party. Co'ild -all these elements be lastingly combined—if by any principle of political chemistry ingredi ents so repulsive to each other could be held together—not only the democracy, .but the federal compact itself, would totter to its base, a mass of undistinguishable ruin. It is for tunate that such a coalition is apolitical im possibility. It is more than fortunate—it is almost providential—that for every one of these'rnischiefs a drastic and unfailing cure may be found in the undying creed of the democratic Party. The Albany Argus, in the HUNTINGDON, SEPTEMBER 5. 1855. course of a recent article on this subject, ex presses this whole idea in the following brief and striking passage: - "On the other hand, the I.leincieratic party has a national existence. It is organized on the theory of embracing in its creed only such principles as concern the conduct of our nation al affairs, and of leaving to loc,d action those which relate to State matters only. Its princi ples, its affections, and its exertions, compre had within their scopc'the whole country, and frown upon everything like disunion, Upnn the slavery qustion it will seek to stand where the constitution stands,'and where patriotic men of the North and Oftlic :-.•:outh can stand togcth. er and labor in harmony. It will not be a sla very partv. Upon the prohibition question, so lin- as any principles affecting. that enter -its Creed, it will oppose laws which- violate. con stitutional safeguards, or trample upon the well recognised rights of person and of property, while will by no means stand in the way of such wholesome legislation, within the range of well-established principles, as will promote the cause of morals and virtue. It will not be a li3:zor party.. Sn, too, while resisting the attacks of misguided men upon the rights, political and social, of their equals, the democracy can not he called a Catholic party or a foreign party. The duty of the democracy and of all parties in all these issues could not be more clearly defined if it were written on the arches of the sky. This duty is the in destructible instinct that combines and con centrates the friends of liberal principles on the American continent. If the adopted cit izen is sought to ba robbed or cheated out of his tights, we are invoked to resistance to his oppressors by the laws that have made him our brother and our equal. If the ,furies of theological bitterness and intolerance are let loose at the throat of the Catholic, who sees his God through his own forms of worship, we find our 'course marked out, as by a sun beam, in the familiar history of our forefath ers, who came hither, pursued by the oppres sor, to found a republic upon the broad basis of religious and political equality. The con stitution we are sworn to obey obliterates, by. the very sanctity of the holy obligation that binds us to it, all subsequent pledges that fac tion may exact in, order to violate it. Those who created that instrument, suffering the while the initial pangs of the internal feuds that have since beleagured our whole politi cal fabric, made it strong enough to resist all its futute enemies, come in what shape they might, whether as the foreign agitator who seeker to sow the seeds of division among a family' of unrivalled republics, or as the do mestic traitor who would plunge a free peo ple into.intestine war in order -to liberate from servitude those who would next be lost in an irretrieveable social degradation, or as the advocate of extravagant expenditures and centralizing legislation, by which the general government is gradually to ignore or to destroy the sovereignty of the States. Ho conspicuously these truths appear, now that the last attempt of the factions of the day bids fair to be overwhelmingly de feated, and- now that we are. about to enter upon a new contest for the presidency! But the snake is "only scotched, not killed:" and we shall next proceed to speak of the duty which the democracy owes to itself, in order that the inspiring indications of the presrent may be abundantly realized. The Duty and the Destiny of the Dem- ocratic Party---No. 3 The unanimity of sentiment and action which pervades the democratic party in all the States and Territories of the Union was never more signally manifested than in the position of that party on the question presen ted to the country by the new secret organi zation. The patriotic duty of opposition to this conspiracy seems to have animated the democracy everywhere as by an irresistible instinct. In the midst of the misrepresen tations and the clamor of the whi t s and the abolitionists on the subject of Nebraska, the project of proscription came in as a new element of political controversy, and was gladly seized upon by the latter as the sure and only way of effectually destroying the democratic party. With equal promptitude, and with a much more general acquiescence, the democratic party took the other side; and the contest commenced. Thousands of whigs saw the progress of this anti-Christian, anti-republican crusade, and refused to sec ond it; and many who had followed the va rying fortunes of the old Clay and Webster leaders painfully realized the utter humilia tion of their new condition, and preferred neu trally or open opposition to the responsibili ty of any longer connexion with a-party which had proved itself only too willing to seize upon every fanaticism that might help it into power. As long, however, as the know nothings and abolitionists Could use their kindred excitements in the northern States, particularly in the impulsive and ex nocrerated condition of the public mind, few Whigs could be found actively to oppose the combination'; and the first fruits of the coali tion were so many disastrons• defeati to the democratic'party. It was only when Virgin ia threw herself into the arena that the torrent was arrested; and reflection led to a healthy and a rapid reaction. The victors in the North became the victims in the South; and, as they recoiled before the onset of a triumphant de mocracy, thousands whom they had first de luded saw their error and abandoned their connexion with the know nothing conspira tors. All that is now required to complete the work, so happily begun in the South is a fair opportunity and an open field to the democratic party in the free States. Such is the reward of adherence to principles; such the issue of a duty well and fearlessly per formed; such the realization of the prophecy of, the. Washington Union when fife know nothing epidemic first broke out, and when this Journal declared that, let the storm -rage as it might—let the batteries of intolerance and of prosription mow down' their thousands —yet that success, would, be sure to come soon, if only the democrats planted them selves upon the right, and refused to compro mise with the wrong. They did so; and the Consequences are before us. This duty well discharged,' another and .a weighty obligation remains to be adhered to. This is the duty of purging the ranks of the democracy from all who persist in cling ing to the know nothing order. it is because the leaders "of the old whig party did not at once take - this course that thousands of whigs have fallen into the toiis of the proscriptionists. In many States, where the whits were at. first doubtful what to do, the know-nothings silently usurped the machinery of the whig organization; -and-now when a whig meeting is called, the -know-nothings quietly take possession, vote in their own officers under the pretext'of being whigs, and quietly select their own friends for the offices. This has become so favorite a practice with the • honorable' and high-minded conspirators against toleration And equality, that in many places it is not safe for the - whigs to call a meeting. Such is one of the injurious results of having for party leaders men whose aspirations are all selfish, and whose whole idea of principle is resolved into opposition to the democratic party. The ern ocracy, on the other hand, pursue an -entirely different course—the course at once of duty and of principle; and they are saved from a host of afflictions by it. The moment they find themselves betrayed by any one who professes to be a democrat, af ter he has put on the chains of the inquisi t ion they repudiate _him with indignation.-1 - Every State, every county, almost every elec tion district throughout the - Union, can fur -nish examples of this kind. We have yet to find the first instance in which the demo crats have failed to reject and eject those who have thus outraged all honor and truth. It has been the same in the North and in the -South—in the East and in the West. No, matter how the offender might prevaricate, he was compelled to disgorge his dark secret, and to go but with "the scarlet letter" bran ded upon his brow. If he contrived to get upon a democratic ticket, his name was ta ken off, and sent forth as the synonym of treason to truth and to manhood. if he crept into a nominating convention, he was avoid ed and expelled. At every democratic meet ing that is held the pledge of relentless and unceasing war upon the proscriptive con spiracy is renewed and adopted by accla mation. Every convention to select candi dates for place is installed by a rigid exam ination of every delegate on the question of know-nothingism. And while this is the tone of the masses of the democratic party, the nominees of that party are alike bold and uncompromising. Whether it be Wise, of Virginia ; Medill, of Ohio ; Johnson, of Tennessee ; Johnson, Of Geotgia ; Wickliffe, of Louisiana ; Winston, of-Alama ; Pease, of Texas ;.Clarke, of Kentucky, Or any oth er democratic candidates for governors in other States or any of the candidates for any other stations, the tone of opposition to the know-nothings is emphatic and unequivocal. And it is only by maintaining this stand, and discharging this high duty with courage, that the democrats will be able to meet the-ex pectations of the country. Consistent with this inexorable rule of ac tion, however, is that other duty of the dem ocratic party, to rescue, as "Crands from the burning," all such as have been deceived in to the midnight inquisition. Some of the very best men of both the great parries have been thus deceived ; and such as these, daily breaking out from the dens into which they were entrapped, are gladly welcomed back to their old principles. There is a wide and deep difference between men in this catego ry, and those who enter . the order with the deliberate purpose of defrauding and betray ing their friends. When these duties are well and energeti cally fulfilled; the hearts of patriotic men palpitate in sympathy with the party capa ble of ,such intrepidity ; and a dazzling des tiny is sure to crown the exertions of those who are not afraid to be true to their princi ples and themselves. The Duty and the destiny of the Dem- ocratic Party.---No. 4. tlre arenot disposed to deny that the orga nized proscription, under the name of know nothings, has done good. There is a saga cious and an elevating philosophy in the the ory of Friar Laurence when he says: "For nought so vile that on the earth doth live But to the earth some special good cloth give." We are, therefore, indebted to the know nothings, not because they have ushered up on the public stage a brood of evils, social and political, but because they have -exposed to us the weak places in our system, and have thus unconsciously admonished us of the necessity of adhering to the'sacred prin ciples of our constitution. Their advocacy of dangerous doctrines has compelled the people to look for an antidote to the bane.— Thus, in the combat with evil thoughts and evil deeds, men nre prone to resort to those high principles of public and private virtue without which no government could stand and no 'community thrive. We are apt to forget these elements of national and individ ual safety, and we are often painfully recal led to a keen sense of their value by some sudden convulsion of. popular feeling, or some successful demonsttation of fanatical violence. But a more immediate benefit has been conferred upon the democratic party by the recret conspiracy. Tt has been a sort of res ervoir which has received such unsound members of our organization as have for years dung to it, simply to corrupt and to weaken it. In every State of the - pion the democratic party has.suffered from these in fectious influences. Affecting to adhere to its usages, and falsely professing its princi ples, they were enabled to wound it by their secret treachery, and to bring it into discred it by their odious association with it. But the know-nothing organization was a temp tation they could not withstand. They were at first attracted by its well-whited sepulchre, and afterwards captured by its rapid though temporary accession to power. .The conse quence'was, that they deserted in numbers, and that in every State of the Union the de mocracy seemed to grow stronger, as they certainly did grow purer arid better, after a onmimatiOn so' long and devoutly prayed for. ; • For every loss thus gained, moreover, we ; have been enabled to record honest accessions Ina late letter on the subject of Know from the ranks of our former opponents. leothingisni, Gen. BUSre, -- United States Sen- The organization and the usages of the de- ator from Texas, says: mocracy have, however, played a conspicue "Their secrecy is highly objectionable.-- ous part in the recent struggle with the fac- No party can be safely trusted with power tions of the day. Unaided by the machinery who do not openly and distinctly avow their of oaths, which constitutes the strength of ' principles. The oaths which it is understood the know-nothing conspiracy, and scorning - they take are illegal, tyrannical and at open the practice of binding a great party in the 1 war with the fundamental principles of our chains of a bribed or terrified majority, it ; government. They are a direct encroach has fairly and publicly nominated its candi- j merit upon that personal liberty and individ dates for office, and voted for them at the I ual responsibility , which is the very ground polls. In some cases unexpected treachery, I work of our free institutions. It is the high the spawn of the proscriptive lodges, contri- , est privilege as -well as the sacred duty of ev ved to defeat the democratic candidates; but ; cry American' e eitizen to vote for measures in others—in those contests more especially and men under the guidance of his own best , - of a later date--the expedients and the frauds judgment. How .can he surrender that right of the enemy having been exposed, the dem- to a midnight council, and bind himself by ocratic nominees have been triumphantly oath to carry out wh e at they may dictate, and carried. 'And now, in the midst of the teas- fulfill his obligations to himself, his country lion that , always succeeds the detection of and his God as a freeman ? The thing is ab-• dishonest practices, especially in politics, the surd ! lie must, in the very nature of things, democratic party look forward to coming frequently go against either his judgement or contests, proud and strong not only in the his oath:, and that too where the most vital basis of their organization—the enduring interests of his country may be involved." principles of equality and of justice—but This is well and forcibly put. If there confident and invincible in the binding force were no other objection to Know-Nothing of their organization and the sanctity of their ism, this one" f secrecy Would be sufficient regular nominations. to secure our earnest and zealous opposition. The wrecks which are scattered along the Its characteristics are slavery and proserip; tracks of political history are not the wrecks tion—slavery of its own members and pro alone of the men who have attempted to tear scription of all others. A man does not even' down the monuments of principle and of law, become a member by his own free choice,- but of those who, false to the obligations of but must be admitted at the will of others honor, have attempted to maintain the dou- who; having got in themselves, have the pow ble attitude of attachment to a party anti of er of keeping others out. If a person choo bestility to its organization. Wilfully for- ses to unite with any open political party, getting that it is in vain to talk of union up• has only to consult his own inclinations and: on doctrines, if this union is to be impaired opinions !—No one has a right toe or can by personal contests between those who as- keep him out, or prevent his erijoymentof all pire to represent these doctrines, such men the rights and privileges of a freeman and at have rio hesitation in binding themselves to party man. But if a citizen wishes to unite abide the decision of the fairly-ascertained with one of these secret parties he must be majority, and afterwards violating this cove- admitted by the votes of others sitting in see cant with their party friends. There is no cret, where his character is canvassed with moral difference between such faithlessness as out any opportunity of defence or reply. He this and the deliberate infraction of plighted is not admitted, either, by a majority. The honor by an individual in private life; and revelations published in the Chambefsburg although the law may sometimes punish an Whig showed that it only took five black:: offence like the last, yet it is certain that the balls to nullify five hundred affirmative votes,• man reckless enough to forfeit his-character thus giving to a few personal enemies, or and to betray his political associates, is no persons interested in keeping another out, a less worthy of reprobation and of contempt. power unknown to the whole spirit and na- Strange to.say, that after a series of the tare of our government. Thus is the very most violent denunciations of the democratic entrance to the secret party rendered humili party on account of the fidelity which that ating to the last degree to a man of spirit' party exacts to the fairly-ascertained wishes and self-respect. of the majority, the very men most profuse If he gets in he is in no better condition. in these denunciations have adopted a series Ue is required to take an oath to keep secrets, -of despotic rules for the protection of their before he knows what he will have to keep, secret nominations, before which even the and is rendered amenable to' a code of laws hired t) rants of the Star Chamber would have or rules, irksome and offensive and wholly recoiled. Their selections are first made by useless to enable him to discharge his duties packed and oath-bound combinations, and as a citizen. Until lately he was not permit then their followers are compelled to support ted to acknowledge his membership in the these selections at the polls, or to stand be- Order, or the place of its meeting, or'admit fore the world as "perjured to their country even its very existence. If he, was an up and their God !" And why is it that the right man this led to, confinuardifficulties nominations of the democratic party, made in and disagreeable evasions, as; disagreeable as; the face of the public, and after the fullest disgraceful. That it led tctea, , wine-spread` and most searching investigation, are sus- and systematic course of falsehood and de- tained, while those of the know-nothings in ception cannot be denied. Even now a mern most cases have recently failed to command ber is not permitted to tell who else are respect? Because the democracy are uni- members, even when the question is direct ted upon a common creed in every part of ly put. His only resort is silence or (ilia the Union, and because they feel that a party sion. which is a unit upon principle cannot afford In fact, in every aspect in which it can be to di'bide upon the subordinate essential of the surveyed, a member of a secret political par selection of the representatives of that princi- ty such as the Know Nothings is in a slate plc. On the other hand, even the fear of be- of constraint near akin to moral and mental ing denounced as "perjurers" cannot longer slavery on the subject of politics, which; to bind the Whigs or know-nothings to a nom- an American citizen, should be the freest Of ,nation, because there is no national platform all other subjects., We cannot see how any or common belief upon which they can stand voter posseseed ofproper sell-respect cansub and challenge the support of their intelligent jest himself to such ,in tolerable constraint, countrymen. whiclegoverns tied controls his whole polite Hence it is that never before have the rise-, Reif condnet, arid even compels him -to vote ges and tho organization of the democratic ' for certain iuclividuals however obnoxious, or party been more rigidly adhered to and more not vote at all, and all this too, under the re generally respected than at the present mo- sponsibilities of - an extra-judicial oath. It is merit. In the selection of candidates for all utterly impossible that such a party can long the offices in the gift of the people these usa- exist.—Pittsburg (Whig) Gazette. ges are consistently applied.. A:11 our late triumphs in the South are the triumphs of democratic principles and regular nomina tions ; and it is clear that the democracy of the North are rapidly settling their dissen sions, and uniting their energies upon the un derstanding of union upon principle and eon- cert in action And these preparations are necessary to our future success. It is right that we should lay the foundations of our organization deep and strong. It is necessary that the exam ple of the dernocratic people in choosing their representatives to the State and nation- al legislatures, and to their national con ven- tions ; should be zealously followed by those The democratic people are representatives a unit upon democratic principles and dem ocratic usages, and those who have been elected to speak and act for them cannot too often consult the sentiment and obey the wishes of their constituents. A WHOLE FAMILY POISON En.—We learn' ,from a reliable source, that a family by the name of Dinsmore, residing near Cookstown, in this county, were poisoned one day last week, in the following manner :—The eldest daughter was sent by her mother to make up the bread, and mistaking a bottle of arsnic for saleratus,- mixed the former in the dough.— The family, consisting of Mr Dinsmore, 'his wife, motherin-law, and three children, eat of the bread, and at the last account, all had died except Mr. Dinsmore, who is not ex pected to recover. When first seized, it was thought to be cholera but fhe true cause was afterwards discovered.—Brownsville (Pa.) Clipper, 15th. Q :7' Francis Carr, who has taught school in Indiana for several years, spas driven from Moorsville a few evenings ago, by a gang of seven or eight Know Nothings, who shouted "kill him, knock his brains out," Sze. The New Albany Ledger says he is a peaceable, quiet man, and had commit ted no, offence under heaven except being born in 'lreland, and having a good ed ucation. Lazy rich girls make rich men poor, and industrious poor girls make poor rr.en rich. VOL. 11, NO. 12. Secret Political Rirtles. sear Henry Clay; —An old line whit of Tennessee lately han ded to the Editor of the Nashville Union the following extract from a speech delivered by Henry Clay at a barbaeue near Lexington, Kentucky, on the 13th of November, 1847 : "What other rule can there be than to leave the followers of each religion to their own solemn convictions of censcientious du ty- towards God? Who but the Great Author of the Universe can judge in such a Vestiont For my part, 1 sincerely believe and hope that those who belong to all the depdaments of the great church of, Christ, if in trath and purity they conform to the cioctrines — which the y.profess, will ultimately secure an abode in those regions of bliss which - all aim final ly to reach. 10 - Kossuth has written a recent letter to the N. Y. Times, in which he argues with much force that the know.nothingS, by them selves adopting the governing priLciple,Of *the Jesuit order, to wit secret emnbination, to accomplish ends by means the most ques tionable, morally considered,—will, - instead of suppressing Jesuitism,' really be instru mental in spreading its pernicious influences into all our social and political movements. He concludes with the following words of advice and warning, which-:--albeit they come from a foreigner—are worthy to be weigh ed and remembered: "If the old issues are gone, raise new ones; but raise them on a principle. If the old parties are worn out, form new parties, but always on a principle. Of one . thing however, I would warn America to beware, and that is the introduction of race, tongue, religion into the arena of political contest. Centuries may have to atone for the error of one generation. 13:7- The Know Nothit=s of the Ashland di s t r ict, Kentucky, have elected to Congress the man who publicly declared that 'in his "heart of heat ts he hated Henry Clay," over the bosom friend of the great statesman and the executor of his will.