THE GLOIE. Circnlation---the largest in the County. HUNTINGDON, PA. Wednesday, *arab 26, 1856. Democratic State Nominations CANAL COMMISSIONER, GEORGE SCOTT, of Columbia COUrlty - • AUDITOR GENER4.L - JACOB FRY, Jr., of Mon tgornerr county. SURVEYOR GENERAL, TIMOTHY IVES, of Potter county See New Adsrertisements [Spring and Sumnier Goods, by Ben. Jacobs. ()-Removal, by J. Bellman. (Umbrellas and Parasols, by H. B. Fus sell. ['Notice to Creditors, by John Miller. [l'Hardware, by J. Brown & co. [}i•Art Union, by Wm. G. Murray.. [}'Best Collection of Glees, by Lee and Walker. Irf'Female Seminary, by Mr. & Mrs. Rid . der. [lNotice, by John T. Green LT 'We ark: happy to announce to the, citizens of Huntingdon, that Mr. 0. B. Carter will visit his place during the and 3rd weeks of April, with a large and elegant assortment of Pianos, Melodeons, Sheet Music &c., &c., from the Extensive Warcrooms of J. E. Gould, 164 Chesnut St., Philadelphia. He is now in Hol. lidaysburg, where his instruments, by their brilliant tone 'and beautiful finish have given universal satisfaction. He will exhibit , his val. uable lot for examination and sale in the room formerly occupied as the "Engineer's Office" of the "Broad Top R.R." adjoining "George Hart- ley's variety Store," and mniediately opposite ; "Graffius Miller's Rail Road Hotel..", The peo.. pie may expect some fine music from Mr. John Pta,szyk, who accompanies him. 'We can assure the ladies and gentlemen of Huntingdon, that Mr Carter's instruments arc of the first quality , being from the best manufacturers in the coun tr y. He will be happy to see all and will not charge them for "a look." • 44. IlZi'The "History of the Juniata Valley . ," to which we have alluded on several occasions will in a few days be issued from the press, and ready for distribution among subscribers. Our esteemed friend and fellow'citizerr, Mr. Graffus Miller, has been appointed agent for this borough and vicinity. To every resident . of the Valley, and of the county, this will prove an interesting work—an eloquent and truthful account of the aborigines of the Val ley, their habits and customs, as well as the hardships endured and difficulties encounter ed by the early pioneers. call upon Mr. Mil ler, and if you have the money to spare, pay him $2, and secure a copy of the work. 'tiLAIR COUNTY ART UNION.--We invite attention to the advertisement under this head in. another column. We are not in the habit of .publishing in our pa pet advertisements of this kind much less are we in the habit of cal_ ling attention to them. By ~many persons They are considered as money making schemes for the. projectors, while matters are so ar_ ranged that their ,intimate friends shall draw the highest prizes. But from our persona! knowledge of the,affair alluded to, and of Mr. Murray, the projector, we are =willing to say that in our opinion, it will be conducted with the most scrupulous honesty and. fairness.— Our friends who may take chances in this scheme may win, or they may lose. In eith er case we' claim neither thanks nor censure. The 33.novir Nothings Defeated in the tAn cient; Borongh 1" • . Judge—John Whittaker, • 118 Christian Conts, :115 Inspectors—Grafts Miller,• 123 Job Morris, . . 114 Assessor—John Coleslock, .124 Wm. K. Rohm. . 114 School Directors—Thomas Fisher, . -108 Samuel T. -Brown, 106 *Wm. Africa,- • 13 *Jacob Snyder, 13 • A. W. Benedict, • 113 Wm. Rothrock, -115 • Auditor-4. L. Grim, • 120 David •Blair, . • 110 Constable—Wm. H. King, . 1.19 S. S. Smith, • • 100 - G. A. Nash - 10 • *Supposed by some to be the-candidates . of the ' fusionists—these votes • thrown away would have defeated the Know Nothings. Fusionists in italic—Know Nothings in Ro man. How. they like it. No Know-Nothing paper' in Maine supports the Philadelphia nomination§. No Know ,Nothing.paper in New Hampshire supports them. None in Vermont.- None in Connec ticut.. None in Rhode Island. Ex . -Gov . ernor Colby, of New Hainpshire,,who was falsely reported to. have acquiesced, repudiates the whole thing.- Ditto, theother delegates Tv:sm New Hatnpsb . ire at Philadelphia: The Know - Nothings of ,New HaVen have repudiated the Philadelphia doings by a formal resolution. Near one half of the Know Nothing _press es of Pennsylvania repudiate the nominees mid ihe,doings of the Convention. The Indi ana-Register, one of the rankest K. N. papers in the State, says , "We_ proteSt against ; condemn, reject, ignore, repudiate, spit upon and spurn the whole affair." . [C7 - Next week_ we will giv'eThe:resuits in each township of the SpringF.letions. _ _ An Admirable Letter from an Old - Line Whig. We have read with great pleasure the let ter of }lons SAMUEL'CAR UTHERS, a Whig member of-Congress from Missouri, to ;his Onstituerits; explaining his past actioil_:and: defining his preaent2 position. Mr. CAtty THEns 'having voted - for the Democratie'..can diclates for ,Speaker and been chargecrivitilf be; traying the Whig party and abandoning the principles upon which he was elected, he re plies as follows : And who is it that makes these charges'! Is it the old line whips? I have not heard of an old line whig, either in my district or elsewhere, who does•not'endorse my course. These charges are made by the ,knew-nothing press of my State, and by anonYrrious know, nothing scribblers, the latter of whom, never having had an honest motive themselves, have no conception of the thing in others. TREY charge errs with betraying the whig party ! They who decoyed it into their councils, and assassinated it in the dark—they who come forth 'from their conclaves with their hands dripping with its blood—they who met at Philadelphia in convention, and vauntingly proclaimed its death—with a pharisaical af fectation ,of party,. declare that they are not Icresponsiblefot its obnoxious acts and viola ted pledges;" that it has "elevated sectional hostility into a positive clement of political power, and bi ought our institutions into per il." Yes; while I stand a mourner at the grave of the whig party, they are rejoicing at, its death and • calumniating its life ! Yet' these men have the unblushing hardihood to twit me with abandonment of that once no ble party ! Was ever impEdence - rriore gt: gantic and more absurd? But it is sometimes softly and gently whis pered that the American party is the 'Whig party in disguise. If this is so, they have solemnly declared a lie in their conventions, : and it is a cheat and a fraud upon the demo crats•in the order. So they have elater aban doned their party, and have no right to•abuse, or are-engaged in a fraud which makes their •,Luse a compliment. I tell these gentlemen say have slain my first love; ' and left me a political widower; and I have a perfect right to marry another party if f see proper ! 1 We would like to see a reply to this extract, from some:admirer of the political hybrid called " Sam. "• - - It appears that Mr. CARUTHERS was cen sured by'some of his enemies at home for not supporting Mr. Fuller, of this State, for Speaker. After showing up Mr. F.'s chan ges of frOnt on - the slavery question—and wonderful changes they are, truly,—Mr. C. says: But it is said that Mr. Fuller is a know nothing, and therefore I should have giver. him my. vote. The contest for the speak ership -developed the fact that there are now three parties in the country—the _northern know nothing. and abolition party, fused under s the name of black republican, the (so-called) "national Americans," and the democratic -party. This know 'noth ing party „was. born amidst the factitious excitement manufactured by abolitionists, and disunionists out of-the passage of the -Kansas , .Nebraska bill. It sprung at once, "like IVIi-h nerva from the. brain of Jovei" full armed, and entered the political arena. In :the, morning of its existence it was full of prom-- I _ It declared that it would say to the :an gry.waves, "Peace. be - !" - that ,it was the only broad, national, conservative party.; -that its great,- paramount mission v.as -to-save the Union, which was imperiled by agitation.-s -del} ing upotn•these promises,. confiding its these assurances, man y,geod men every where —many in my district—went into this orga nization. I •went twice (and but twice) . into their councils:. 1 c csgw Sare." It ; Wok two' Visits - to see him all over. I made them ; I 'saw enough, and determined to never look' on his face again ! in dealing frankly With you,'it is due that.: I should, make this acknowledgment. I would not have the vote of an:anti-know-, nOthing.in-my district without his knowledge that I had been in ,their councils ;.-nor would I have the vote of a know nothing without his knowing that I arrynot of his order. I, may prove wanting in ability to serve; I-shall tiev. • er prove wanting jp candor totords.yozi,' It; bas been the habit .of my. life to defend my . c ourse against all odds when I believe it 'is i right, and to acknoydeclge errors -.when I. believe I have sane wrong', I - freely adreit* to you that fraught' never to have gone ir. to a secret political society of.aity. kind whate'ver; that they are wrong-in principle, against the very genies of our institutions, dangerous in practice, and should be avoided . by all men of all parties.. I , objecte'd• titer?, and object now,! to the whole machinery of its organization; I objected then, and object now, to an in discriminate proscription of naturalized citi zens from etbee ; I objected' then, and object -r now, to anything that even looks - like making a religious test. Protestant by birth,, a I Protestant ; by education, 'by- prejudice ; - by reason,:by faith ;.,a Protestant in all,' (I regret to say except the pl'actice;) was a catholic or ganization formed td brand me as- unworthy of public trust because of my religious opig ions, I would call upon every honest-Catholic in the larld to aid . the in'striking it down.— As would "have them do unto me I will do unto them." • The Catholic and Protestant have. fought side by side on those battle-fields where our I liberties were won ; and when "pestilence has stalked at noonday" through Our cities, leaving a track of 'desolation and death, we have seen the Protestant and the•CalhOlic ministry again laboring side by side to stay its awful ravages—to administer balm to the I sick, consolation to the dying, and - decent in terment to the dead ! If we kneel not at the same altars, under the same forms, we wor ship the same God ; we are pointed to the same accountability for sin, arid to the same Heaven as a reward for piety ! Why should not , we leave controverted points ent theology to the ministry of 'the churches ? Why should not we laymen go on--as we should go On—in brotherly love and confidence?— , As I have opposed the dragging of politics up into' the - pulpit,-I. oppose drawing religion down into politics:. Why should Protestants agitate this sub ject? Why should they en - deavor to build up a political party upon a subject on which they can have no political - action ? You are forbidden to . -act by the constitution of the United States. The constitution says that "Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of ieligion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Take this case:— Suppose a President, having sworn in know nothing councils that he will appoint no Ro man Catholic to office, is elected. He takes an oath to support the constitution of the United States. That constitution says that "no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust un der the United States." Suppose, then, a man is presented for office; does he not have -to inquire, inder' hie first oath, if the man is a Catholic he'• is, then he 'must refuse him ori that -atcount: lie does, so refuse him, he rviolates his last oath,:.because he then sWore hi- w Oirld , make onti . religious test." Is comment As to the great catch-words„ "Airiericans shall rule America !" lam in favor"of Amer icans rulin g America. They do, they always have, and they always will rule America. But who are Americans Your laws de clare: that when, a man has .been here five years--when he ivill under 'oath,. renounce all - allegiance to any foreign prince, potentate, or power—when he will prove that he is of hood moral cliaracterattached , to the insti tutions of the United States—he may be de clared an Arnerica.ni and your law makes him a citizen. - It is a fraud upon him if you do not give him all the rights,of citizenship. I have always understood that three grand leading ideas run -through our institutions, giving them all of their vitality, their beauty, and their power—first, that the people are ca pable of self-government. • This is the doe-• trine of the Kansas Nebraska bill.. Second, that• we had made an asylum to which the oppressed of every land might come as a refuge; that here they might worship as equal at the altar of our- liberty, that here they might, lift up their hearts to their God according to the dictates ofitheir consciences, and there should be none to molest them.— Third, that_there should be no aristocracy of birth. I. have regarded, and do regard; these as the pecu:ier pride and boast of my coun try." I regard them as the three grand and massive pillars upon, which the whole mag nificent structure of our government rests.— I will' not, by any action of mine, deface or mar these pillars. There is food for reflectionlii the foregoing extract, which we trust the reader has care fully, perused. Many good 'men in our,own county have, like Mr. CARUTHERS, "seen enough of Sam" in the course of a few visits to his'hidiag After contrasting the consistent course of the Democratic. party on all - at public ques liens,- with the vascillating action of the KnoWnothing party, Mr. CARUTHERS appeals to all the honest men still remaining in the bogus cfAmerican" organization to.leave it: And now—l do not ask the aspirants for my placel . do not ask those whowant' to go as 'know nothings 'to the legislature—those who want to be the sheriffs, county judges, squires, or constables ; &c.—but I ask the true men of me districtthe real people, where I have always founilmy friends—the men who have no object but the good of their country at heart-4o do as I have done—abandon this - organization ! if it 'has not failed, utterly, completely, entirely failed, as a sound,ina tional, conservative party=?—if every intelli aent-mari does not know that it has so'failecl? —and if'everylionest man_ will not acknowl edge-the-fact ? Mr. CARUTHERS nex: discasses the practi-. - cability of reorganizing the Whig party.. The Know Nothings have utterly-tlestroyel it, and have not built up a.respectable : patty to take its place. Mr. CARUTHERS has, therefore wisely •deterrnined to connect himself with the only political organization which gives promise oTh u'seftiln'eSs to the country. He SaYs : • ' ' • I have se - blithe democracy come down from the, Ncutti . aild - tip from the South,, and Bath-, ering in 'sell,' column around the constitution, declare that the rights Of' the South, the just equality of:.the,rBtates, the capaCity, of man for self-government, are their bondspf, broth : erhoOd ; that they will protect that constitu tion against ali:the assaults of all the isms of thalami. While - they continue to occupy this them position' am with them and of them ! . Then, Mr. CARUTHERS, you are "with us and-of us" for'all time, -for we will "occupy this proud position" the gound . Oltlre. last trump. And rightcordially. do we welcome you to our ranks, for we know that the fire of true Americanism glows in your breast. Let 'every honest Whig tvii, _would ,pre serve, the high plaCes of his country, from defilement by political adventurers who have neither fixed principles nor capacity to ad tniniiter yu - blic trusts, follow-the example of CAICUTIIERS . Let them connect them .selves .with the Democratic , party, which is willing to receive them 'without 'the mum mery of an "iriitiation" or the mockery of an oath. Its future progress will beta grand triumphal march to the music of the Union, and every lover of his country ought to en roll himself in its tanks.. . "I used to be. a Whig:", .." "I- used to be a Whig," is' the language of thouiands Of :the Most intellizent . and influ ential , men of our country who were once -honorable opponents of the democratic party, but who are now enrollino• themselves in. its 'ranks, .as the only true-Constitutional and Na tional party.. A' writer of the class alludedto •in a letter to the Hollidaysburg Standard, of the 19th inst, says :"I used to be a Whig, and would be one yet had I the opportunity of ex pressing my sentiments-at the polls as-of yore; but- the absence of .the old standard-bearers from the fields and fights of their former glo ry has thrown many an• honest. fellow• like _myself out of rank, and •sent us wandering through the fray either, to fight prOmiseuous ly or surrender ourselves prisoners of war in the hands of ,onr old enemy, who in times past, ere the army of political cormorants, under the ,guise of 'Union-Savers,' had grown so strong, were often compelled to leave a well-contested -field in • the possession of an honorable - oppenent, in whose ranks I was pleased to be reckoned a trustworthy private; Whether thoSe good old times will ever-return we cannot tell, while in the inaantime we have to deplore the absence of anything like an equivalent for their loss. You may not feel' on this subject, Mr. Editor, as I do ; but I can imagine no healthier state of the politi cal world than when public sentiment was fairly divided between the old Whig and Democratic parties. A few "spavined" and windbroken hacks have benefitted 15v the dissensions and sub divisions of the past few years, : but it has been at the sacrifice of honor on their 'part, and to:the shame;of those who elevated them. '.'Sayings and:Doings of Our'Neighbors. We learn from' the Hollidaysburg papers that the citizens of that place are moving in the matter of procuring and erecting gas works, for the, purpose of lighting the streets, residences: shops, -&c. Mr. J. N. Burt, of New.,Sersey, proposes erecting the works and piping the town with mains at_ an expense of 4' 20,000, and should there be any doubt as to the value of stock in the proposed works, he agrees to take one half of it—say, $lO,OOO, leaving a like amount to be subscribed for by the citizens. R. M. Lemon Sr, Co's Line for the carrying of freight from Philadelphia to Pittsburg and the• West, by railroad and canal; is fully equipped and ready for" operations.— The cars are standing upon the sidelingS, and the boats are ready. Considerable freight is ready, and the firm is only awaiting the open ing of navigation to go into business with a rush. It is to be hoped that this line will be extensively patronized, for the projectors of it certainly deserve some recompense for the yen tdre they have made.--For several weeks past a religiOusrevival 'has been progressing in the LUtheran church at Duncansville, which has resulted in the conversion of some sixty persons, 'forty of whom have connected-them selves with the church. The congregation is under the charge of Rev. Mr. Baker, of Al toona.—A. friend writing to us from Holli daysburg under date of March 21, 185 G, says : " They (the opposition) had a grand farce enacted in this place on Wednesday last. A few of the old broken down politicians assem bled at the Court House and held what they called a'"Union Meeting." Their object was to unite all the factions oppoSed to the Nation al admiaistration in one party. But alas ! for the frailty of human foresight—they for got that such a thing was utterly imfrossible. They had not proceeded far when Mt. Jolly of Altoona, full of 'his own importance, moved a resolutiOn that "the delegates bo instructed to vote for Kimber Cleaver for Canal Commis sioner, because he was a true and unflinching advocate of American principles." This was _a firebrand cast into the magazine of "isms" and an explosion folldwed immediately. Mr. 131whet:line, the High Priest of political chi canery, moved to amend the resolution by striking out the name of 'Klaiber Cleaver' and inserting ' Wm. M. Lloyd,' and striking put all after the word ' Commissioner.' This motion knocked the K. N. stilts right from tinder the " Jolly" fellow, who swelled, and stuttered, arid growled and gnashed his teeth, exclaiming, _" I, Mr. President, am one-9f the .arosT PROMINENT Americans in Blair county. I protest - against the action of this Conven tion, and will not support any man of its se lection." 'When . the "Jolly fellow". ei-orked off his excess gas, .Mr. Dysart, who every body knows to bea sensible man, very blandly •said " he thought therwere some men pres eat ' . who had been in the habit of meeting at midnight and maturing-their diabolical .plans by the aid of dark lanters a and now, embold ened by their utter loss'of all shame, had come , here to force tneir 'obnoxious 'theories down the thr . oals of,freemen in broad day light. If theeteeting .was to be ruled by such nonde script patriots as tney, he wished to know it ; he for one tseuldnot agree to compromise his character for decency and respectability by making associates of,. much , less acting with, or for 'them.'' 'Maj. Ray-mond Of the gave 4.l"\v hoine.thrusts to the "dark lanterns" ,an the other. side of the house, when Judge Jones moved an 'adjournment, which motion prevailed,,aYes 17,'na:ye 15 ! amidst the most bequtiftil confusion arid cries of the ". Union is Dissolved." The. " most PROMINENT AMERICAN,4I 816.ir county," stru tted' from the hall- With all the signs, of unappreciated irn poi Lance, visibly stamped upon his piginy brow, 'and-the it domparably handsome'ihoe brusii on his upper lip•gave ev ident - sy mptems • of having failed to charm so effectually as such foreign appendages o generally do. Oh t it's sad indeed that." Jolly" • • Should ever change to melancholy. This, I think, beats your "intensely Amer can" meeting in Huntingdon, the proceedings . of which were daguerreotypedin the "Globe," and is only another lesson of . the importance of having more than one idea wherewith to construct a national political party. • The- evening of the same day (last Wednes day-) on whichthe aforesaid "comedy-of er rors" was enacted, Thos. D'Arcy. McGee ; Editor of the "American Celt," delivered a lecture in the Court House, on "Napoleon and his policy," to a large audience:' He showed a thorough knowledge of his Subject, and his ability as an • orator even surpassed the expectation of friends. I am free to say that-1 was agreeably disappointed. I knew well Mr. McGee was a bold, vigorous writer, but from reading of him I . had no idea that he combined all the qualities essential in a first rate orator. The character of Napoleon as delineated by him differs widely from that we have of him from the London press, and which has been accepted by the American , public without stopping to enquire into its " characterfor truth and veracity." He spoke for one and three-fourth hours and the only regret visible throughout the entire audience was that he ended so soon. He has a clear fine voice, with an Irish-Yankee accent, not vociferous, but sufficiently loud to be heard distinctly throughout the largist Hall. His language is chaste—his: periods well-rounded—inflective above criticism—metaphors well timed and logical in:the extreme. . : He makes a fine ap peatance, :on the: rostrum, : mEidium in size— high, broad forehead—dark . eye, restless as the aspen, and glistening ,with intelligence, and a ~e nuine milesian nose and mouth. He lec tures again to-night. Subject, "Political re lations between the United States and Eu. rope." Yours, WATCHMAN. Speaker Wright's Letter. We subjoin, with our entire approbation, the following reply of RICHARDSON L. WRIGHT ) Esq., Speaker of the House of Rep resentatives, to a letter addressed to him, through the Philadelphia Sun, by the Rev. JOHN CHAMBERS. This Reverend gentleman (?) has taken upon his own shoulders the principal task of defending the Jug Law, and abusing, in his own rough, peculiar style, every prominent public man who favors its repeal. His language is always personal, ill-chosen and harsh. If used by men of low er degree, it would be pronounced vulgar : at all events no one, with truth, can "deny that it savors more of the savage than the christain gentleman, and we are glad, there fore, to see him so sharply and deservedly rebuked. We commend Mr. WEIGHT'S let ter to public attention : HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, March 11, 1856. Respected Friends :---In the Sun of to-day, find a characteristic letter from the Rev. John Chambers, to the Speaker of the House of Rep resentatives. The letter abounds in charges and statements which have no foundation in truth. While the amendments to the License Bill were under discussion in the House, I was , constraine4, by a seuse of duty, es a consis tent friend of Temperance, to express my views thereon, and advocate such measures as I thought best calculated to remedy exis ting evils, without infringing on the rights of Ow people, or defiling the - statute book with laws "too grievous tO be borne"—laws which their authors and advocates are consci ous cannot be enforced. I did so in language pertinent, proper, and truthful. Whether my arguments were sound or otherwise, I will leave the unbiased judgment of the honest and unprejudiced por tion of my audience to determine. I diti not then associate, nor haVe I ever on the floor of the- House; or in private conversation asso ciated the Temperance movement or the Li cense question with the Democratic party in any way, shape, or form; the Rev. John Chambers and those who supply him with his facts to the contrary not-withstanding. In my course of action on this or any oth er question, I will not be intimidate;] by the shallow sophistry of a time serving politi cian, or the Billingsgate of a notoriety hun ting moral desperado, even though he :as sume the clerical garb, and desecrate the pul pit with his - uncharitable ravings. I have never been the advocate of the doc trine that men cart be made sober, temperate ; or honest bfit mere legistative enactment.— Yet I have, by precept and example, endea vorod to persuade them to' practice in their daily walk•those virtues which tend to "exalt a nation.” I confess I arri not enthusiastic enough to believe for a moment, that by an act of As sembly, I could compel even John Chambers to adhere to the' "dead le2ter of honesty", in his statements, or from the pnlpit, or through the press exhibit the propriety of langunge and deportment which should adorn the Chris tian gentleman. • Trtily your friend, RICHARDSON L. Warcwr. Remarkable Murder Trial. The Corrigan murder trial, in Westmore land county, Pa., is one of the most remar k-able that has . occurred in this country since the celebrated Professor Webster and Park man case, at Boston. • Corregan is an old man, some sixty or sev enty years of age. His wife disappeared on the 29th of September last, and 'has never been heard from since. Four or five days af ter, some ',Ones .and, part of. a skull, declared by Professional men to be those of a human being, were found by some neighbors in a large fire which had been burning near Cor ,rigan's residence, in the open field. Corrigan had been observed stirring it, at unusual hours. 'A smell came from the fire like that of an animal carcass burning. A button similar to those -worn upon a woman's dress was found in the fire, and also one belonging to a man. Considerable blood was found in different parts of Corrigan's' beuse, although evident attempts had been made to conceal it. All of the woman's dresses that she was known to have were at home, in their usual place. This indicated that she had not gone away voluntarily.. A person passing Corrigan's house, on the night she was last seen, heard screams com ing from that quarter. A sled, having marks of blood,' was found near the. house, with tracks showing that it had been evidently dragged in the night time, by a horse, near to the fire where the bones were found. Corri gan and his: wife, who _lived alone, were known to quarrel. He gives no satisfactory explanation of any of these circumstances. He pretends , that he gave his wife money to go to Philadelphia' with, and that the bones found in the fire were old bones, scraped up in rubbish which he was burning on his farm. But this is rendered improbable by the strong animal smell which came from the fire. After - a trial' of several days, and speeches both for . and against the prisoner by able council, he was convicted for murder in the first degree and sentenced to be hung. No body was ever found or identified as that of his wife. The circumstances are such as we have stated. The supposition of the jury was from the evidence, that Corrigan had murdered his wife, then conveyed her body to the fire in which .the bones were found, upon the sled that was lying near his residence. The cir cumstances seem to be strong in that -direc tion.- The disposition the murderer made,of the body is the most horrible almost as much so as 'Professor Webster, who, it will be re collected, cut up the body of his victim into pieces, and then burnt them in a grate in his room. But in that case Paikman's body was identified, which was not the fact here in this trial,, which . has created great sensation in western Pennsylvania. [From the Washington Union.] The Contest of 1856. A. Contest for Prin ciple. Since the days of. John Adams, when the opponents of the Democratic party boldly avowed their principles, and boldly set forth their aristocratic doctrines in favor of cloth. ing the Senate and the President with almost unlimited power, and of declaring the alien and sedition laws necessary to maintain that power unimpaired in the hands of those who should be the servants of the people, there has not been one instance in which the ad versaries of the Democratic pasty have been as frank and as courageous in setting forth their principles as during the memorable era to which we have referred. At last, how. ever, we are promised an exception to the general rule. The sectional - party; the rep. resentatives and successors of .those 'who in 4 augurated their policy in the midst of the earliest days of the Republic, have through their immediate organs, Messrs. Seward and others, formally proclaimed their principles for the public eye; and this fact will add un• usual interest to the contest to be decided in November nest. The doctrine prominently brought forward by Mr. Seward, and by his adherents, is this: that the people of the Territories of the United States shall not be permitted to man age their own affairs in their own way, and that this power belongs to, and shall be ex ercised by, the members of Congress repre senting other communities, and having no direct interest whatever in the concerns of the Territories. Proceeding from this theory, in natural order, is the assumption, that in. asmuch as the people of the Territories shall not control their own affairs in their own way, so when they demand admission into the Union as a State, the Congress of the United States may and must refuse to admit them unless their State constitution conform to the abolition ideas of Mr. Seward and his coadjutors. We thank our opponents for the boldness with which they set forward these doctrines, and we are glad to know that the Democratic party throughout the country is as ready to accept the issue thus tendered as Mr. Seward and his friends sewn to be sin cere in presenting it. The Democracy take the broad ground that to the people of the Territories should be confided the regulation of their municipal concerns, and that as they are closely and constantly interested in their own local, social, and political concerns, so are they the proper authority by which these concerns shall be managed and decided; and, on the other hand, the Democrats assume the equally distinct position that the people of the Territories, when they have formed a State Constitution in accordance with the pro visions of the federal compact, and in like manner as has been done by those who have preceeded them, they shall then be admitted into the confederacy of American States.— These ate the principles at issue in the cam paign of 1856. There is no evading them— there is no concealing them. The opposition cannot retreat from the attitude they have boldly taken, They have already abandoned their ground in favor of the restoration of the Missouri line, and in so doing have been ut terly demoralized. But in taking the step to which we allude, in declaring for the inter vention of Congress in the Territories, in set ting up as judges upon these Territories ask ing admission into the Union as States, tle abolition majority in the House have clearly made up their mind to pursue these theories to their alarming conclusions: On the other side, the Democracy, having beforehand an nounced principles precisely antagonistic to those proclaimed by the Abolitionists or Black Republicans of the day, the issue is fairly made up between the parties. . We shall, therefore, not have a conflict as we had in 1840, when there were no princi ples proclaimed for the public eye, or as we nad in 1848, when the Presidential candi date of our adversaries confided his case to a committee. Two rival doctrines are in the field, each surrounded by its own devotees, and each advocated by the ablest men in the respective organizations. We repeat, that we greet the occasion when these two doctrines shall meet in opposition with great satisfac tion, no matter olio may be the candidate of the Democratic party in the Presidential can vass. It is the principles here asserted by one party and denied by the other that will constitute, during the canvass soon to open, the great attraction the American masses. The Latest Foreign News. The steamship Persia, with LiVerpool dates to the Bth inst., arrived at New York on the 20th. She brings no tidings of the lost Pacific. • • THE PEACE CONFERENCE.—The Times Paris correspondent writes / on Wednesday evening, the sth inst:—"No secret has been Setter kept than the proceedings of Confer ence up to the present moment, as far as de tails are concerned. All that can be safely affirmed is, that matters are going on "well enough;'% hut it would be an error to suppose that there is not 'yet a'good deal of work to be got through. I believe that France and England have not been since the commence ment more firmly united than at the present moment. Of Austria's firmness, 1 doubt whether as much can bp-said. At all events, I again hear whispering of Count Buol real izing all that, was'expected of him. It is stated positively that no prolongation of the armistice beyond the 31st of March will be listened to, and that everything must be ar ranged in ten or twelve days from this date.'" SUSPENSION OF HOSTILITIES IN THE CRI MEA.—The IVloniteur of this morning says that Marshall Pelissier has informed th Min ister of War 'that the resolution passed by the Plenipotentiaries on the 25th of February, relative to the armistice, which is to extend to the 3 ist of March,•was known - in the Cri mea on the 28th of February. On the 29th February,--at a conference held at the Trac tir Bridge - between the chiefs of the Allied armies and General Tutohimenf, delegated by the Commander in Chief of the Russiamarmy, it was decided that there should be a com plete suspension of hostilities. BREADSTUPFS.—The Brokers' Circular quotes Breadstuffs as having considerably de clined. Flour: has declined 2s. 9d. White Wheat has declined 6d; White Corn ls.— Other circulars state that Flour on Friday opened dull, but improved at the close; also Wheat and Corn. Western Canal Flour, 31 a 325; Philadelphia and Baltimore, 34 a 355; Ohio, 365. Red Wheat, 9s. 3d.. a 9s 9d ; White, 10s. 6d. a l is. Ohio . Repudiates Fillmore. CINCINNATI, March 2.l.—The IC. N. State Connell at Columbis last night, of a stormy session, adopted majority report, repudiating the nomination of Fillmore and Dona son, and endorsing seceders from the Philadelphia. Cou. ven t ion.