TilE GLOTE. Circulation—the largestii*the County, H U 413 - 6 f? A viredn'es* **ch. 0,;;;;113p6. REar*abitiiiixt—ThEi.fir-s-I,pag'of-to day's paper is unusually interesting. Among the contents will be found an extract from the memorial of a committee of the Trustees of the-Faritters? Big,h§chool o 4 Pea,nxivania, ( triht tapcinfi n fc every}feu n• 1 van ian -4, r _, a ragil,fee,..i,iuterested),..l/i / e.aer4iments of : Avl*.h . canpot..fa4, to; kTtrn s llEßt - Oy approved -int4wni4ed6g.4 b.Y..teiffer. tight/grklsiPZl ir.nAßvr - It wall ropay-leitesnealin7,--.4l,Ylataksis of the atevir!-I'mvprll - 13i1,1Atti'PlY Pr~}se ,fty 7th Mate Se - nate,A trinfidrtiolo froniaheMishirrt ttOtArikii4ia, Isay,Okh!fi s ':s ,401 F 4y, A9 d the assuranc&that-Affn.Ameriean-(overnynent :t43"traifiltniril - the'lhon Or and • ity 'if the Tb.TlAjia" 4 "from r 5) Raiiyflp.e r le„ grai),4 7 ,, fpro a smile from every vinegar countenance--,-it may,16.1544Ve :the effeir:Of . rousing the ia ;?Telittity;-of .the''countty,lO, - ;(1 . 6 - vW'?1,;:ki,s,,' :coxtir}gcp,Jghl u 11; —in the event of a fight—that there are m6re thinks iiicArrerVisee i'hilOso - phY'thin" 41:4- has prey 4yeampi._of. 7 , 7 7- 7 Propeedirgs of; bolt ers ftorri - the . r k o it! ! 143' . ..I,"'iat i . ‘P . 4P.te c9 11 7;e 1 4 6 ni., •• . The Democratic. , State' Ceonvima ti it east at Haceiabnrg es erala ;'to =dirt fit catfdlcl4 te's' for.ttie.'O f .f4e'S da t ti COirirft Is •• sioner, Auditor. G.e4erili-ata4l *tr. trey!? •den eral=-,to elect. delegate:s'l.o 411.6,,Natietiap.tron eiitiiini'-which-fne'eteat bit ) the 2a: 116 for 'pa ( ri;oie,:cif niz; ieat.i caagislate.for i the IP,rgsidency. l ., The •botrfpn-: Sian has TElist of Tooci:iineck-to select fro ni for' State officers: l'hiegeleatioff will 'be 'niade to- MEM BEE fI4Y- ,~r~ ~ •, p er . CasS artuared'iri'his.'S'ilkirf the ScriatW;Ori ; from... severe. injuxy. there ',was much gratification 'manifested by' the Sena. in - riitpon seeitig - this* venerable. statesman actairi at his „, 111 i Awful' Sowl Under the caption Of ; ,;c4_,Noble . P.eply: to the I?ostmaster. General,'?' - the .:13ix.r. - :Poor, E papers are •pu'bliShing,'a:letter written by 'a fellow, who vas :the, "OiTiee.of POstmaster _at.:llenderson,_ in Texas, by Hon. JAMES CA ItIP BELT, - T hivfellow, whose name is RA.Drpoix, the ,Valley fßirit says,'entered'a KnoW Nothing Couneii.arkdsivoret6dp every thing in his pow.er.to prevent certain citizens of • the United' States froth holdingleffice.— 114:Po . stma`iiii General,, thinking that a:nan 'ibe Would take an oath to exclude others fieaa ofifice:was himself 'unfit to' hold an' Of fice,: very properly cut Rkw.oo.r.F'sOfficial ana set - hirii. does th Ex-Postma.ster take his decapitation? He lakes:it An 'a way 'that ihows - how.. little stomach' he bai'for his, oWnpoliticaL"reine& jar acrent."" Inst.ead'Of quietly siiibroittiOg his fate—a:fate ,which...has .befallen, thousands of better men - who less deserved it,- 'ander various administiatAnS be'''breats - oti,t • 'in print, and, all unconsciously : to himself,furn ishes a full justification of removal by sliowing that he is a. bigot-andiblacliguard of the 'fir'et . Watei. , .:'` • . 'Some.one, of . ,the beauty (of the French Empress. EtromtlE, - sayslhat - "it com bines all styles." The "noble reply" of the decapitated Texas Know Nothing is like the Empress' beauty iriits.combination of styles. It_rans froth, the pite'op.l whine of, a whipped spapie:L. up, through.. the ; startling howl of a hungry wolf to the hoirft.growl , of "a bear *itka'Wore HENRY GLAY ON" •--:-Th • FusroN.e .following . is an extract from a speech delivered by Hen ry'Clay, of'Reiireleatatives, in Kentucky i :Nov. 19, 185 D, and• now applica, ble to - this ings ittCertgress ;I anti "-should a:44666 '6f iffiLirination,b kept* before' the country ~as beaOrip•ii;ht that - the. peopie way see awl ,avoidc!,the.;.quielisands of -the • "i3ot"if it {We Whig party}) Js'le"-br3rmei-; ged •ntoicr coNte4tible abai l tiOn'party, 'area if aliolitionisnris to be enifafted upqn`thec-Whig creed, from: that- moment Trehtitince tlie - pcirty dna cease bel'a Whig: ' 1 '1 1, 03-* step further if I am alive, I will'giveziny horrible stippfort to thanman for the'Presidetcoy . vilid;:tcfr what eVer - party he may belon; - --is not ilotrtarnina ted by-:fa:naticiim; ,,-- fathe t ;•thrinlie:olle": tvto; crying out- 'time - that he itsa 'Whig:. maintains .dootrin es - utterly subversiv.e.or-th4 Constitution atut the ITniori."- 1 "‘- LF.casr,.A.TaxtE:-.7—The.,prckeeadings wiry nothing of 'importance.' Tife , rnerabeis Still' engaged - id - disposing' , . ziess. FA on Sehati authorizing coit§4uc.Aii::!rt ten s sloolss-of-war:._, ~ • • • The deinociacy Of 'the third nongrissionalAis, trict of Vermont met lately, at Iky,de Park, and cidcted . L:B..BOwclish; of Swantod,, and P. S. Bajamizi f ; cif IVOcott,' delegateS" to "th National' Convention. The. following resolve was passed` after nn ible: and 'spirited ' ' ' , ‘"Teesolveci, - Thitt' the tiffnainistrit.tion lin"P ieree, both :in 'its- , f4eigii! fin if dOrile 'WC poi: icy—in its strict adherente The*rfstibition- - - in its, fearless disregard of all sectional , excite m entisrin mainferiimee-oftli :of all Lportions of the-Uilibri,l of - :otir }rational honor in reference to the conflicts now Waging among the despOts..i3f-Et ropereni inentlY . tom. mends itself to all trtw. dcmcrerats: and '4l otl3 who love the-Union, and the advancement and. gldry : - .0.1 otirleountry,lsciter thiin-factiO .; • • I IMRE MEI =Ell MEE =Nil "The Franciscan Brothers." kbill incorporating the Franciscan Brothers of Ca s ulbria county- ,caniis up before and was pasSifd by thEtiower,ligitse;lif our State Jegis ; have2be* ' ' expected, some of thp Kub*-Nothing latora;4ctuated more than a se* 1341,,duty., , seized the ,ppOitiinity to dist. - thelf:accUlnui - atetilrfite - gri, imbibed, doubtless, from the foul air of a Council room. And, forsooth, because the Franciscan Brothers were of the Catholic faith, they must needs be stigmatized as "a den of vipers"—the catholic community insulted, and their prayer - refuidd,"alt he - n ga - tirrs asked 3 ror; " - et het 'l3 s,ffitiVei fed c•lnla The;..lialeneSs '.of.fea - mtli • thwiblizithlbigotryi an the conteirpfible ° gnstills ,'of' Bose' 14tis-! lo!to •dessei've,Viiairrirm _•. enough fa crimsgnikhe. cheh - of every .rninded: . .kroeuiron :with .the blogh of ishame -"JrA•'deit'l6'f, the' eis'jtii6t 'of 'l,Vlr:'Metam spnf 'of 'Veriiii:lo'COunti,'...lder -tAihiy,a gross i•grkhrahp,9- plittraptor., of .the: Franciscan- Brothers, dictated this' unwar- :tistrnpable tin Manic! theg,fn *Mon Enlist 'be a ICiiiitfaht' and attentive, reader of Btlook-Joyz?, stories -be- a. worthy:co-laborer •vvith ai :Boito - n-cc in;estigatitigi'Cihrlinitte trin Cis Ca ri ro t h di's do not: Si stin o," ; i'rpmpet. before. them,"., their character and mission ' , Maynot:be generally, known beyond , tbofield of their; operations Will'speak of 'thein. 144.readeri must: noi,seek Chem in anadatk nem of, night, in hollows, - craves; anti secluded 'Perits;:bitt upon otie"of the highest [ peaki'or - the: legl! an whose 't ul4* re,,ng, air,' like _ate "fat!eiitehannte : of the party which •Mr.,lVicCalmonfig :a• sivorn•leadei, irripartp -nought but oda - dr:ad:lit' jot; aii / ci'dei , oliOti:ie the purify • an 4. - i l iOliriegg which ipakk:the,spot. ..13e130.41.141q4tagnifteent• sc_enety.t There ; • . r, cif -rayed brighterl &ride itt tit ari the OfriCarrieUt iif"kirlg:sl; iS L *&: j OVefieethe d-Od i Of'N'ainf,e; Look over those fertile fields, penetrate those oartuntain_fastnesses, see.,•those hard*, thrifty farmers,----k in cl, good•neighborsiand christians, oyerjeady•to.reliei , e poverty :and distress-:-= " to visit the sick and bury The dead,' , ? -and ask ,•y ourself, .is ,that thehome of : traitors' does theloul breath of a:traitor pollute that fair porticinfGiid'Searth ‘ , 'll you''sak yes, it -is a' 'and r a. libel, and : you know, it. , .tu the language, of:Mr.. Smith, of: Cambria,-" Repub. licanism and congittitiOnal liberty' etier ft:1(12:116Mb in'their noble and the treof their character will brighten withe.yery nezr occasion that may call. their loyalty - and chivalry a'r s 'op"le . thus situated, and holding, such principles, is :St. Franeis',..4cademy-- r an institution-of learning where youth are instructed from the - English alphabet to the Greek 'and .Latin Classics:— Andamong a hundred or more of its inmates your eyes would fall upon the happy counterr ances.Ol'many a fatherless•child, and : Many for„ the, friendly, hand;Of the good 'Brothers, :would have been, left. to wander through the, world•uneducated and undisciplined:to encounter its temptations and • .. • to fall into itsSnareS.:-But,thei were snatch : ;•- , • . "ilk° • brands from •the. burningfire;' and are; being. reserved for bright and: Shining lights in thecommunity-- 7 good',citizerts:—pil= tars of-the Republic. "'They Laity:leave their protectors and benefactors imbued with the principles of- virtue and as high 'sense Of their duty 'to their God,, their country, ;and- - their fello**-then..These, : and, not " dangerous anti-republican doctrines" are " instilled into the minds 'of• our American -youth.'" - Such are the Brdthers,:stich their mission, and such Will every uniirejudiced christian man • : find them : who seeks the information. - - - But they'veritcred far enough into the world to ask thelegislature of .the State for an act of incorporation. By att ,/toti,c,irab/o, member they and the catholic community are grossly insulted. And Why ? Wasit'fbeeause *they asked anything inconsistent with our consti-, tiltion' or. our Jaws any, uridue'privileges? No ! _Truly the opposition and the insult were:" inspired by °nit - of , thebaseSt`,.o.4l4l6n Whibh:e:yerdisgraced the of. political. r )igiot}s,biggtry—=the sanie:spirit which:claniored around 'Pilate's , I altY Of'Catholics cease—this'. unjust .persecu;l, tion? What generation will accord to them r'iju§ - 1 need frit' And iinloliln) . ;eil every; throughout the.,long.and blood.yetrugglecflheßeVolution down - :to the present sail: of h'undseAll,battle-ftelde : with, their bleed 'f?-L Did , they ,not in -the darkest - hon'is'of ic !g ve 'co insineSt . •,` and "bu fOr'their aid ~might we riot, Lie at this - day the loyal .subjects of a petticoat government?-- , No, their. loyalty and fidelitycanriot be a mat- r . ter of , doubt.' But thy . hav'e, rV;hts . .se - citred to 'them by the constitution, not as Catholics, but as citizens, and to the maintenance of thete,tights,:all are= equally botiriii. - ken of gotiti:jciignieni suffer''efients on in a erusade:a i gainst,the cavil .loci, re ligio'nsiights , Of theirateighbors by the. soft' impeachments' Of time-seriint:pa,liticartriCk steri-'ii-xfor wilt they anffer - the merciless rripli Upon theirilives,and erty l without iinterposingliheir resiitaiteeancl ' affording tit env - 041e1 tee,' "-,ttia holy, have I:i6en . Vii,'Ve4u all,theYrhatie done,' fok thekcpuntry 7; have.been repaid by the sword and the fire-brand. Th - Cirbhurehils," ita . ve been burn f--to conventa — arlT ,the ground—their ecclesiastics have been mobbed, and contumely and in9lt are now being added at every step, ki,44 - 10 pave the wax. Joy grfa . ter outkagegiiirita,vou_l4 , seem tb4t;4*.tittPiet -to 6T:-,46fe.4.,in tiiAa t it . ;t4l,l we're OiecediMalstgijp MI Piole shOie 014! skabhes wi'.. - 6se battle-cry in the coiiiing4o6l . 4 4 aitil contest is to be " War to the hilt dittAlltiar:' isrn." Innocent and unoffending men, wo men and children, as in Louisville, must be offered s4psipce fp; KnOw- NothindiAiri , But We ha 3 v,i-faititlirt i - thi? f jvir-' Silferk - We . have not so fae . ileseeiteir tfle scale of moral arid politt el in gifen cy, these base attettiti iiadoUcemcdly , ,—to. s. ee the;COAsti upon: of Ow ei g hbors i v dect,aid without.vvagingarizopen, urianly , and 'fearless , resistance:—Withetit • 'Setidirig' forth - the giant/ate - of:freeinen,to,tha.oppressois -S 4 iftiisfar shalt.thou ge atiatnukifarther."r,h-: • - - ,:penweratal : remerribay ydur party itati ai 11p crii brdad'plaildrrri '111"' `luti9l„,an4 . l9.va- 7 - 7 ?f ,ackup.l,,..apq . :4apt,juatipe, ,tp, hopes. of eountry. rest '2a - Pon The `downfall of thatr"-platfdoii 12,6 :the drlw' • - country. ; . Cavil and religious was,,. anarchy .and.bloodshect,..will:follavvinits wake!'' The pl'otainetign •or Fillmore, ,The Pittsburg Gazette,. formerly Whig now Republican tirg,dtt of Aligheny &minty, eole incriif"ihe nomination of Millard Fillanore by,.; tie JCnovir !says: .•• • - • "'P obablT there• is nO, titan inthe' NOidi and therp.i's the sligiffes`tliinb - it?iiitY'tlint' 'can Car : a. - hi*ie . .Ffee•Stat6.' 'region ) . hi's reeeived'yvith'icy,nOidnesS by the'rlietitt6l-A•••of the, party Which' n'orninated him; and/live 'do not Abelieve :they Will The Re'pliplidan . party can, ii,rider rf6" - eifeumtsariaes unifier in his snpporti,.;so there' is a okii' 'end to the douht to the nurribeiiiif ealididale's.':Thei•e will cer tainly _field if, 'Fillin'Ore'does not•dechne." • - The Philadelphia coryespondent undei date of Feb.. ..?6, apeakinvof the aetion.of- the Phila. Conven tion.; and the'ball issued' by the. "bolters" foi a Convention in New ri:irk on'the i2th of • - '.‘This.l2th of. June Convention voill'Atinlit less ..contain full: representations frOm' every Northerru.State,. and another American ,Na tional ticket.willbethe result. Add• to the.4e tivvo-Arnerican tiekets-another . :frOm: the Re= publicans, and_we.i.vill have threetickets for the Presidential struggle,. to contend againit a United :and 'power-tut . foe. Could madness go:fartber 'And yet, but for the•unexpeeted action of,the Philadelphia Conventionf it -is naore•tharr probable 3 that-a. successfuLAlnion could have - been effected. Now_ we shall have sectionalismlin.itsiery :worst aspect . in the. coming cannpaign, , . and* in . all 'hurried probability -another- Dernecratic President:, The Telegraph,: ha't.?' Harrisburg opposed to:the .b,eiriocre:ey,,,,refU. see •to support. the , Fillmore faction.. '.. Mr. , rk. Tha.t.portion,ofsthe New, York ;delegates who -oeceded from- the . .. Philadelphia knoW 7 notling'converifion haie - signed and issued the following protest: We copy from the Nevi YorkT mere . . , •• ,• • .-; PROTEST: '• • ; '• - - We, a portion of the delegates•to the: na tional American- convention Iron the State of New, York, protest-against 'the -nomination by that: convention: 4on. the 'following (=rounds: • ••• • • . First. The nominee is noti.a member of the American_ party.; he:has never been- in side of.d:council rooni r and no-act of hie-life; no word spoken or•line - written by him, which we have any knowledge of, indicates that he has any, sympathy.with the party,- or would carryoutits principles. •'• Second.. His nomination we regard as an utter _betrayilof :the ,American -movement— a traitorous Attempt. to wrest it from its prii pos,e, and make it minister to the selfish am bition _of, the leaders:and demagogues •of the dead,organizations of the - past: ' ..kle was '.,forced upon: the State of New York:by southern votes against :the-wish of our .State ,delegates, and.f rom , those States which no man pretends, span carry , •their vote for anzArnerican :President:- .E.our h,. .He wits:forced 'upon Ale State Of • N r eviri.Y.orit against-the e;press: wish:of a large rnajority,:of-. the. rhembers.of!--the legislature; against theexpressiwish• of aniajority of the Stow repeat; againat the express wish of two-thirds of our delegates 4-the,q9n vflquAon-,. . Fit4lb . He was not:notuinatellby a.rnajori !ycpt Stales, : -or r by t t,_ ,e delegates of a mai. • cif.theStates. ~; Several States were perL: ratted ."to,cstst,their ,votes.,thrbugh a. single delegate witce number 'of the Whole numbeof votes which-his State would have entitled him had, fhedelegation.been,fnll.. 41, several ce,s,s9ch-voteswere•sast by,.-parties who_ had previgusly Protested against ,the proceedings,: ansfrepref,.l from the convention DAINTYTOO STRONG t FOR,TRE , PALATE OF, Tn,llowing . volun tee/ inapt 'was offered the know-nothing. festiValin'Worcester, Massachusetts,',but not aceepted ',the president; who declined read-* ing it , : • a g4alayety and.Benediat Arnold—The one a:foreigncrand, the other,a native rz,The • acts andhis!.ory.ofhoth.are a last ingorefutation of the proscriptive doctrines' , of know-riothing; . Ir rOls. to the Stateria'ent.Of the Wash ington oorrespondent, of the 'Philadelphia - . In qtgrer,,-{hat: the,"President's health was so shatte:red,:and his lo.Oks'so _ghastly and corpse like .thOrieltsburg:genti:nel says : '=From the stir. his late,ritessago 44'madc among some of the 'dry,;botteiilof fanaticism -in the North,. it"*Ould Seem - that Presideiit Pierce is about the livest corpse that has startled ,abolifion isrri;for 'a. long! time. It would not require many •subh 'corpses'- to put to flight a - whole' armyOltraltiire apjwitere.”'„ ' iste :2 Ot.Gree,iey it .may the.Corin-, tbian's'A - ai4, Of tanl': . Ti'iUtteror,e,vypiihtyi ptiiverfut'c his speech": is s ble'— : in -sand. action ,on any'rostrum_ biog . 'l3ui tligrn or i , : elegant; and he ciraVvis:opt - his:l;:i - oras in • ' a • gingscn'g'whilfing'so4,_ ) 9f. fofeeand.g44!y, ecjiii i ses'o"Ap o;feikg(h . .and tiehneis'ao.bea.oy.'of. his sentenCeS. Ne,ithe,r, can he read Vi''ell: fie ds most "persorlai appearance Voteil:oy• o . llr ,fleoP4cdtke `.`--Oteetloolcfri 6Y7 . ;than. than they expected to §e.' The .drab` ebat.:*e; so, eqen . `tead oomfoi - table :look hzmeyctl' ; not' much' the worse . ' for wear.' ,I is' hair,,lwliat•there is* p f it,:andfit is precious little,) faded.,caroty ; dolor, and tkiserderlyseeinsto,hang around - the skirts of'his eraniprAlUst as nature or o giff• eumitaricei ' dispeks is benign and .gentlq;rerrjniling ti's . ti}e ante Hon. John..giatichard."l. • I.wriier,ilt the, zzg says .:j, ;,: IMII • , our _notions of :Mir. Greeley,'physically, wey as wellas-others, - -were . agoodideal 'Mis taken, owing, perhaps, to: the.zxhibition Of a :reputed portrait oftthat_gentleman,-bpa UV .eling Phrenologist, •in town; , some , years ago, from which we:inferred.. he must be;a bust ling, little.oldi roan.- 'But; in the living Gree ley, :we: found: avell,formed persohage ; in complexion, a blonde•j . .43l . regular features ; fine esos-; and countenance expressive of4en uine,philanthropy; • Excepting .the ,un timely disappearance of. b is, ha ir, Mrs; Greeley shows few marks of age, and they would.bdtewer; we, opine, if-hislefnrming spirit- multi inace him-to doff, that antige coat.:of drab;:and Ven erablefhat, 0. 7 1a-loa:fer,• for coveringhecething - a geod look ingonan4, hut itseerns; never without k its peculiarities Ohespi--hdir ever'• we soon forgot ; ;whilst • listening lo•al. Greeleps-sterling remarks, - The style-of this lecture forcihly, reminded us .of the' eminent writers of 7 7.6 : --the vigor,.entn-prettensi - Veness and.,unarnbiguity of .itS . lam:nine , savored of the;masterly :pen of the sage-of, Mantic:elle. Compared with our ,Allegheny ..oratary, • Mr. G reeley's,delivery; : in the outsety: seemed• to contain. a large element of .the...New-,England drawl; but -•hen ; he :: ,waxed warm with the subject, the fell from. his: lifri . Alike newly impressed coins from the mint," in e u ucps on,. and o clea , p.Ktieu ihat we consider hino, 7 -in these respects, a model reader,. for, not a„single word, / in. the whdle disedUrse, was laSt hi" its 'owli sound, or strangled 1h! its birth:" • • Tiibune'says lei f still Wearkhat :gide — king- bad hat and old drab coat." ), • •.::!.: • -:OssmtvEg.. -71 ME OUR NEIGHBORS. HoLLlDArssulto.We barn from the Hol- lidaysburg papers lititriheci.6p. Horace Gree ley in..t(teiconrt House at tli'at:Vtice:.*Vdtiy - 410_41; ► • V - 4.4 •rl • 2 «oz. His:leeture as wyl pttentiii:di the nntnber - laf • t-r. , .! „, ticl444 sol4;:being otil t vardek`four . .1"111114>Pei1434 Nir*-Vte,4l4jotpitts---:countzw ki „ *eying, as es'intimates, gon a goo ways to arrive at very little." But there is a slight difference of opinion, it seems, among the editors of Hollidaysburg, as to how Gree- - 30y read, lcitik#Titi4 l lll, - sed." - , - . The Standard Igliti Went" titi — h - Fai'a" rlloiVeff ope.ech:were:semov,hat-disappolatelo :While it is conceded that Greeley is.,-az:terse,and ofous; Wtitetfi;who• ca,a , enabotly:, the:Brie-et of poetic:flights in tiry logic,. all must agree that • , he is 'Tolerator, amithat.his Oration* however beauliful they may appear -in'itprint,trate i bat - silly flagon, the ear when• be reads-, thein to an.audience..Y: i fp — At -the late _election iii Fjollidaysbarg,,, the KnoWnOthitigs were "liclied clea'r'--out of Conn te.nancV?!.- 7 7 life fusionists electing.- their whole tieketlinloth :wards, excepting consta ble in the' 'e'ast - Ward:• :The - .lCtinwhdibing vote' there is-fast'beeciming 4 beantifillfYless" —there' reMaiiis' but a, me a gre,d,iinOrit'y :in ..., • • of •.1 ..• • • . :in steed.l44 •CoFmer •.large, majority. : Oar democratic friends in that lo'calitylba.ve - made a good beginnii,gl - Or 'Xeep-the ing.. The 1?; ecata4Oti scbject of Railroads. , -him spout.;--"We have I - lois , in actual operation•_ two: Railroads running into Hollidaysbnig—lbe t'ar foie; and the Branch of the great Central•, ,Resides these.we haye oneproposed from Lock,Haven to this place viaTyrorie City ; one rrom'Leiv- isburg• =ta this place via Spince Creck Oho . . float COlotribia to. tbis place, (connecting the Columbia `with the 'Portage ;) and• one froM Moriisoti's-Cove to this Vace : When these are all constructed our `town will 'pock. Rail t_e:ad caqiiitiCa,altoge.ther coq meosurate with its;demarids; -•It istiliThe-Underground Railroad to "that place" . Was aband o ned by a veiy:leSpe'Cl'ale Vote L ot 'ite-slooliliolderS..ii i,lloao n.rt. aa . ool. WIAGEITAN of the Tyrone Deirt6ckdf: in- his - peregrittatiOni, got 'our baili:w bk In givinig:the.facts relative te,a railroad dent atiNVilrnore Station, by,-which alyornan. Walkingrdiv'the track - was oyertakdn;•bf the' ' 16deritiotiVii tirild'tp — riiwn . 'a. cone' era 'di e sr. tancereaving Jier.ippepsible, and-several other narrow:eiscapea•from death-by-persons -urine; cesaafilY , '-andreckless - track, he,sayl.3,: . . !f. The ofricersion the Central - railroadihavei repeatedly,,.complained to us abtrna:the ren in Huntingdon, especially, and in other places, running across and bc,iirg _on,,the. rail rdialrack: . 'We' ha.ye repeatedly. savy this ,at Hsititincgdon,, Where wo have saw liSys.. leap arid 'Catch to the railings Of, the, cars, and hang ; bp. Mein ;kir. a considerable, distance.. We would not be at all astonished._o hear of some .htirri,ble accident haPPerting, some rlay,,at„. Ittintingdon, with Aorne of the youths. .who. appear, as it were, to 'court death in its most . trightful ,asPeCt ‘ LbesideS thi, people : ought: to: talre. into 7considefatiori that. this. thing ,of : haiingtO - Stop the'cars, tinie and; :again ; be-- tween P,hiladelphia. and Pittsburg, and •uicei versa, is an iniolerable nutsance, not only .10,- the Officers r bdt to the passengers going , East. and We'st. There is no railroad in the„United Stats better.,offiCered and managed thin • the Central railroad.' An Angel.frp,m Aleaven could scarcely guard against runningoverpeo..- ple, especially, in rounding curv.es". ; We are under the impreSsion that our, Sol:cops at .Har t risburg ' 'instead of hatching.o,ver an imprac n ticable bill to fence - in -railroads, had ,better put their noggins together and construct a law placing a heavy,-ffiii) Viiiin,persons found walking upon any raiirbatttealek.. What think you reader Are we'lloC:rhe#lN' - u z rz , he„;j4kwlst , o.ttp.- .uentocrat says that Vi Col,air) 43 e efitrve i had his legl rkh. I - B 1 broken,iwg_ile'on IfiLWay iot tick Haven, two week4,::ag46":;.Vhilerigkpej. : _lik fastening a 4 tracev . i:hiehliaa'beecline iiiihookeil, the horse ' jumped to one side,i•Ocking-llare Blair down; and tramping upon his - rey, broke it off close to the ankle. An Eloquent Letter The following letter from President Pierce was receive by theMp --- ' - er a744le7AssoCieiron of Bolsinn i ' - I.6oLS t elt& OA ,!PP, (1 2,.4 , 9q sPaq.l92,P tull-14C,Ce1e, 1 ?, 1 3 ,11 9ni - in Itt t yi• he-11?irthday - ,:iff Washirrgt cm Ne:htve nevet•rdak.i:rniihytdt more tynthftilt anal , elo4uent'viii?ule"?6` 'the'PlthitY' • Country;Countryr.,aWFPft•?Pd ,19 sPi , Pr'esideat ,. Pierce,' in the•!power , :•tv theyY,e - the patrietic';heart' of - 15:dgpaivie has, cpr,toiely. few, : eqp,als:.• • t+,; Mil GENTLEMEN: - I duly received your: 'letter •crfthe3lst irrvitirig%rne;•in the' :Hanle of -the membersiof the; Mereitntile Library EAs suciation of Boston, to join with them in cele hratiizg approaching bi r h-t 1 il . of , .flkArs . ash-' _initon. - - It would lie.most , •grateful tome ttr -listen to the instructive thoughts and eloquerit •words;:which 'will on' this'oecusien be addres -sed to' the association; but course, will not. be in -, my- power.:: . .• I honor thepurpose ofiTenclering, ,- ..t he tri bute of- your • affectionate -idve'rence to' the .memory binr , who ' was. the ihero.A;:if atir -indepeudence-=-the'StatesnialfnfitiltaeVolti.- tionthe- foremost •atnang - the founders , of the Amer ican • lived• the „leader an 4 .the, ; gnitle, of 'iour• fathersj_hedied,t r o, ; become tlw-type-,olgreat. •ness to, usArid, to oor postilriky, ulyus glorY... ; whicit ;; s4AFroundsq. •tiarne; , r -his-arg r , no Aoub,qui,:lineanients,-;:dglusiVely .rnagpifie4. X 0 the, /abscu I ity - 9f;_antiquity.i , sta_niglffi l; abef , Are lus:in, the ;clear,. light :Of ji§ . .tP1'5 7 1 ,, 1v014 - ;.a. 11 ;-1 3 4' :10:ultioss proportions of mind as of person 'tlistinetly visible. Wileiber)n_ Prat• at - tfte - ,hod of„,'armies,,pr in e b the eiefelso'cif PubliC authortt% 2 calm scenes,'of'Coveted,rotirernent4bii„ea9o,ll, mili,fary an,d { 'eivjl; ;public and:: prirtte,, #s. one long esson' ~ .vioacnand to 'his" county- ,;:' flip • carper possesses a, corn liletetAs's; character a di - gtsitypl - StYje i ,jiis fame a noble . symmetry Wi I cAirSe . al I r tirrrelii stand f t ertlll6 . the representative mart of IhiS:republip; of thei:worlil:. "`' -:%1-f`the:peOpfeefiverlY gfafe'arld'ATiritory of Ithe --- Con feileeatiith-t-fatlieri"and". mailers; sots-and Febetirirj-; citieSit OvVris',. and; tia.Wilets4ii lis,teii•'.th the Farewell Address' oft he Father ofhiS'''Coun tryot • Vp)tlid; .rrit .judgirieny - aCcornplisli more wafloc.'aWakening a deep . 'sense, of cbtistitutionall-daty;= . .of ,Sett irneit inns cif - Moral , obligation- in relation thereo, bf eradicating sectional pi ejudice, of diSsiiiating errors of senti,rneut andopiniollond of insu ring security and perpetb ify ro the blessings Whictrivie enjnyi 'than 'aely other inStrinni en tality, Which.ernan?s wisdorn:ban,deviise. In pausing for a day, as you propose, to. dwell upon the °Teat . life of Washington, and to call to;inina ;7.11 the inculcated; by act' findr•by'speeeh, he ineulCated; yO'u carrot fail t to refresh the of: ctiuntry: in , "Y : Ciir 'S•Crell as his; throuitilife;'nevercea.ia fe:'dZ;;; •de'votoii' to the coni`Mori nairovilY confined . tO 'Place ,or section; but ' - ',e6;exterisive wiiii'tlie-briSklimiiS the W 11& irt3•'liest'vi es fot t 'die fa I n ess And enjoyment of };our` gathering; I arn p gentle men, your 9 1- 41ige11' friend . - ana . servant, -•. • - FELANK:LIN' PfgRCE. I Messrs/ Charles'' ' Cha'se;',CailoS PiOce; W. R.: Learned, Jr.,. Sise, - Ed ward Fos ter, 'Committee. ' ' „ • ;.. • ••• : . • • -- - -One of:thernostYintereeting -eight's 'Might have been NVitnesSed 'yesterday morning, •at the - railtifad , depoti There 'atriver-cirt the Lake Shore train two passenger c . ars.oflittle children -bet Ween the age's' of 'five and "ten years. They numbered about- eighty,' and were'branghtfrom , thedestittlte'and misera ble precincts of New York city, like the Five Pointeabil iladbeen rescued 'froth beggary arida. life of: pen'tify and crime tbiOugh the efforts of kind and charitable . Teeple. - -Who had gathered'thein up, clothed and were rim sent - lint , them 'to the great West,-where plen ty of aeaii and - Comfortable hoMea Will be found for them.'''-' • Most of thetrivreid.orphartS, er'children of people so destitute as'ito be imableto proiide for them, and they were. fitiW•tinder 'the care of gentleman-and three kind heatted exchanging the fOril itinos'phere and misera ble quarters of pent up attics, ansi cellars of Ne* `far tbe- beg iily• na: bra g of the prairies and foreSiti "West." - The Sight .dr tbe'el'ean' arid: ecnrifottable clOthes, and bright fadei of' four score'boys is a pTeaiant seene;buVihe hinnanity,'whielf has 'sedated fertliein• a / Change which may re ? suit aija i tilieful•liVeS''eicites Our,' onqiialified Mt.' Philip's, the, superinteridentlof the'Toledo' road, gaVe party a' fr - ee'pasage;:and I tbey'ivent' onto' Oberlin 'last 'evening, intending - to' stop,' there to recupetateby.i good'night's fest front the: fatigues, of a long railroad journey. They will be placed in familieS at the' West, Yand their education and `coizirort" duly 'ptlrivided for. 'Tney Will not be exemptirbm..the tisti 7 al. vidisSitticieS of the world, but - they 'be rescued froni that itinost inevitable Certainty, of vagrandy, misery, crime - and 'pro'stitniion which are so rife in .the poverty dt"The crreat "nietrOpolis.',4-Cle"vOind• Plarn _Dealer. How DEMOCRATSIikiPON'D-I•OI:64W.NOtHING On the verktlatheknew-nothing:cenvetv' thin nciminated , ;Fillmotelori:the presidency the idemacrats . 'the city.-of Geotgetown showed that,the Union and the constitution were as dear to the calizens•of the•District , of, Columbia . es to the: citizenirol.any otherPOr don o'r the catintry;hy . defeating , the entire' municipal ticket placed in:Tiomjnation.by the: know-nothings. On the same. day, :and An! thei 'same way:, ' was the'. Tiotnination ratified by: the citizens.: ofi;Fredetick ; I .llla.ryland.--:• Virginia led 'ofFin the successfnl tepudiatioti of know-Nothing nomination. • The egent.;* pie of: the Old Daminion,will. not -be forgot ten in the corning presidential canvass! 'Westward-- Ho N'CiMINiTrONS". , The Three Conventions. The followitlecoMmentelatths New York Commercial .AclvertiseV yvilLbeAllll, appre. ciated,by d all with whohi : Tadjotiim is 'not eceit,rioaker s 'svafial and Who, amid the war -of factiops,and:thr fierce - strife of fanaticism, , • ; are7nct insensible , to the digs c ty,of.the Amer -and.3,ll?' deiceliciii;::'6f political may rbtlia'ißie --" oiplace to add that the 6;nrilzercial Advertiser is an old lir.e Whig paper, of the Clay and Webster school: "Let ti and bichlly it/Oahu miliating Ipidture -Whibh these couireheions -now present.—Pass--we-to Pittsburgh-, ,The Repu,blickkurzeoTrnet,?9o,4-EtpyPo/911,1,„ there •-yesterilay. "We have` a irejiort orits, m let - este, 1-.1.11n4 ~,,dutiitt • tile first gle new idea was byoached apparentlit ;net 1, 1 4 n add ess- ••was • ,made -worthy Of, A 6tWard I.meeting; anti-:some- were: clelistergd 'that nug4t never to have passed•thelipe;or been,cenceiv. ed in the heart - snit:those:. who...uttered them. l•All That was done ''was the keeping up of es !'eitement:to the fever point. ,Sotnething Was ''S'aid at ihecohimencietriehi aboht"Uautioni , lnit fell 1.41 y, up,nn ! ..the hearers, and agitdtidn 'a4o disconi t ent add. angry feeling were - the !.matte. There the speeoh i es that were !.tridde. 'There Was neither 014 h, I:not; kran . lein nor ; permanency in anythipg ,thal:„was, ; sattl or;„anne. "„;;Come back t tq linladelphia r and if i Posi , 1:1,le the picture ; is, even more disheartening, for IthPre, was a national,-entt,v.eutionnv4lich ',must be LOoked at ati, the sarnejltrie.,,,ft,he - c - onnellornet; and.whai..iilicl , they-7., .-Drothing. ihut overturn, overturn,-, Pverturri:; , ..They f overturned , orie-of - their•cardirtal pritiviples-by adrnittina- the Romanist ttelegation frgrix.Lou isiAnaliAncl- (Af!Flci - P-A( l 9-, "P9e49 4 3f.f1,c-7 111 .4.,.f. by admitting alsp.,„a „Proestartt,dejegaiit - ,on direct ly oppt4sed to, 'the Romanist ,They overturned "peiricitie • agiiiii`bY :the - way in hibh ilfey'adinltt the ;PertrititylVit ;mere coontlif head tipon tu, o..hptrant,...qttA ment respecting slayer r y.,._apf not upon • the 'real 'merit' or the t eitit.l&ergy". - 'Arid they overturned their whole pidiforrn 'acipptett, ,not,; a.. year. „ago, and: yeted anather,into which isjust as ,liahle to'be - ,overtitined by the conientiori now rePa r diat'etrbv'lhe :separate eiititteite, as •theene that:was . t lcus unceremeriiousiyab rogated foe what steadfastness pan ; there, •he. in any • platfoirn that rests upon p'uch,a dation '"We' siiiP intoit'e - KiiiiWlNOthing hating Cotivetition;'• and': find only ceafusion wosse,confounded. ,:.From,tert o'clock in.the morning to two, o'clock the following morn ing, the time was spent upon the 'same ques tion of the -Pennsylvania:- delegation; and it was treated in : the ',same way --not on- • its merits, but upon:a, mere numerical supremar cy of one sentiment on. the slavery 'question over another: And "so bolus were spent in -angry =excitement 7 a.nd:rin , rude. at tempts to triumph 'over - each ;"•q)th - eri vvhi6h no fitting preparation lot the 'monientolus duty of deciding lu Eion- a proper--Can:d :for the Presidency Of this -great ' And where and:when•iili this to end When 'are Atnerican citiZeri4-to go 111) . 16' stich-:in — im;- portant - assemblage es 'a conveintiOn•::to nate a President 'w ith a due sense' of `the lemirity•and the pregnant•Co§equenee.4 of the decision the they are empowered to make. "Our hearts sicken at the scenes new be ing, enacted and avttieJuture to. 'vvitich .ffiey point, and' rAore•ilian ever do-'vie feSolve . : to eschevv.all political association that •does , labt look beyond such petty considerationS,-) and, take the' high , 'ground . that Americans •a - e ito livelfor their` countryjr!and net:in:level) , " for theivparty, aticA'for theit!‘Vbaler eciuntry, and not -on Iv . fora section whether: that •isee, - -- tidn be - North, or •Scioth, or East,:'ot:Wetitl". , , The, , K4,gsas ,Questic,n, - - The opposition are hard to 'please. 'Whew the first distinbances occurred . in ICads f as, they blamed the - President fOi,not sending S. troops there. .Now, he. has issued his.proc= lamation; and directed Col's, Stimner'arrd took, to act id ceriaiiierhera" ericies they blame him , for doing 50... New York Journal:of Com merce thus states'the , case : 'Tar - weeks and 'motithe past, the'Abolitiolt Republican's 'iiaire been maligning the Presi , . dent id' the United Bt'ats becauss'he did not order troops to Kansas, to protect 'the sett)* in there legal ad privileges,' and' 'to put a" stop to,"tin lavilul interference from abroad. ',AI - length' the Prtiiident has issued, tiffs prodlamation, pririouncing his,puipose do exactly' thii and a 'little more, viz :' , press insurrection in Kansas against thelaws• of that State and of the United Statei._ last is more than the preachers of 'peadoa.b4 good'Vrill rnen, through7the rhnizles of Sharp's . rifi4,, bargained for.'"They like to have the national force employed to repel 'the -" border'iffi.a.nS'' of Missouri, 'but not at all to repel the Abolition " ruffia:nS`f Vi-ho enter the ter'fik'ciy with arms and-anarnu nit Idn them, 'for, the'exPrdsS purpose of resisting 'riuttsettireg its officers at defiance; The nation' nia . y, well he ItiatikfUl'that it hie avits• head'a man whose eye and initioie hea rt' embrace the" whore' cotiotry; and' who wilt ii'ot lend himielf: t o pr6mote the sChenieS Secticmai SelfiShriess anbition. ' ' The troops that he' Will. send I,viltrepreize'n' the• - natidn, and' - Under the !ead of judicious.and intelligent officers `will doubtless" aim to correct:ip,'.!ciutrakeouS within the territdry',l',w i hethi;r imported from Missouri or Massachtiseits:.', The presence of such a force is apparently, the' drily :rinean, df;preveneing, an'armed collision, at no distant day ? P i et w_eert; the territeiial:Authorities of Kansas ariklYthe reveluiionlita:, - 13 0 d'the Republicansof tlie Eastdeiire to prevent such collisior - o.' We - ,doubt it i.and:hence, perhaps; their` ireat r est 'ol3j'ection tolhainterpo'sitiOri 'tl-:e government.. ,They ,h,ave ,predidreil bloodshed; and furnenied it—and' their labor be lost? Vet:lloi meta •rthey . tell their dupes . that'theway'io prevent bkidifshed in Kansas is, in Send on - a , plenty i -ef - ha;r,p's rifies„ . and emigrant's competetAio use : them. The way to preyent: explosion is 't O' 'buy a. keiOf powder, light; a rnatch, and 'place., it, within -an incher,the bung hole! •No;,,in) opinion; if Massachusetts and ether,Last-' ern people had not attempted to fore - stall op' 'queStion,',of ih.kansas; '.Misseti.ri .Wdbld not - have attempted it: tiopists.a.nd ahettors,,;commeneeirthe eime,'and if' they were ° person / ally:there play out we sh'duld"not he'rrincir disppsed to 'complain: But to .put-forWardCo4pari liielylinnoPent conflict; while the'Chief inStilga.toes skulk:be.: ?rind pine' boards ; is neither fair nor honniible. It is,' howeier,'3usi like AbblitiOrtisrri'.'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers