AL J. SONJA, =Ma Aso raoriurroa PETVVIOWAD,PAI • 11001119AY NOILION-0, JUNE 20, 115:.9 liteattic ,state (hie, For Auditor arso-rai. piestorms L. 8; ROUT. of rbilsdolph,io. For Borreyor pentra, APAinf 110W11, of friapi t ti4 ioouty. /laws, etc. The letter Crow &trope, oe our first pa® r, grfll be fuui4 Yen - hainutiog• John Wine paste A bliiiaQA ASCenAkat &Qin 114 4 11 14 17 0; 1 4 TlLiciAaLf. Riee_Pftebee alma nu* their appearance in Visreaaab. They *rep rodeo! in isurke corm s`, Gs- Dr, Messner sari---"Nevor chase a He. Let it aka*, and it will run itself tp death.' he port/mouth Tratorripl says President .Beekanan trilldialt Old Point doing the saw ster. A chili* . Peter Reigew, (eliding in Allegheny "nasty, Pa., If al bite by a rat in two place(, .oe the 24 gnat., while i) jag in Ow matte, and ,died ftenn tAte Alexis ,on the sae Adv. .Rear in mind that white " eternal vigilance Is the piles .of liberty," the price of The Com pslir Is only $1,75, if paid in advance. While you enjoy the liberty of which all Americans are sisjustlf proud, why deny yourselves the : privilege of reading the Compiler. Os the 6th ult., Dr. Irwin, U. S. A., of Fort Buchman, killed two antelopes at a single shot, with*. Cokt's carbine, the distance being over -three hundred yards. The bad passed through She be:* at en* animal and the liver of the other. A ease of this sort is very rare in the Assails of sporting. Two barrels of cucumbers, the first of the sasses, were sold at Portsmouth, on Tuesday, for $2O pee barrel, and shipped to / Baltimore. The irieksbarg Whig says that on the pianist- Om of Mr. Samuel Garvin, near that city, a stalk At sees siity be seen over 11 feet high. Goo) Amen, OM, for the 274 h of liar. 111. Loafs, June the sale a prouiwn • Tobacco el the Planters' warehouse to-day, the Ong ppottoloss of 575 fur manufacturing Ilifwas siwardied to Milisoe Fiasley, of Pita county. Missouri. This tobacco was purchased by B. W. Lewis k Brothers, of Clascow, 3i0., at 512.5 per 100 lbs., which is the highest price on re tail. Last +trset an elderly man was bronglit: as a ..cturrie,t .to the Kentucky State penitentiary, whose six sonewere already in that institution Ai condets, Is mid dist there are several young Lint rims. is Paris—mere buys---who Pperk SiOu A day in fast lisisg. it Is thought to be quite creditable to the dlseipks of Faust that:there is not a printer in the New Jersey Penitentiary, and only one in the Legislature. She attest steamboat la the world is said to be the "Commonwealth," of ths.Norwich and Worcester line from New Y or kto Boston and White Mountains. Iler main niloon cants/is two hundred superb state rooms, and her cabins Are fitted with sleeping acconumogiatioes rue twelve )Imnd:a yss s ease ILL wad that common table salt and pulver daed ainta will drive the tooth-ache out of the months of men, women and well behaved chil dren. Mix equal quantities of alum and salt, and ill the cavity of the tooth with them. One of our exchanges says, "It isa popular ides that courtship was the consequence of original Ida," We don't know bow that may be, but it Is pilau &watch that • good deal of peisiont gals the consequence of courtship. It arcs a smart boy trite owned up that be liked everything good, but a, goad whipping. Tim same boy liked a good rainy day, too raiar 40 golf school, and just abeat rally enough to gtrfiii . Some YAW says marriage is like eating an .onion—you shed tears and eat again. A yelling lady was recently refused a teacher's cerdileate by the New York Commissioners be causeshe.declined to pledge herself not to dance while she taught school. She appealed to the .13tato Etapariatendest, who decided that she bad • rhrba to .dance aad teach school too. AL Mreeasbaeg,, liaises., a few dais ago, a ..child diet, apparently, sad its coffin was older .ed, but by some accident was delayed a few hours, during which time the child revived and is wow entirely well. It is a siogukt fad, that the lumber of esai igrants now going from the Eastern States to California is, by actual count, greater than it was deems the height of the gold fever. According to the provisions of as act of the last Legislator*, °fills State, persons who may _desire to have their names changed, can do so by applying to the Court of Common Pleas. liclU7 Ward Beecher sir, "an impudent clerk rake do almost as much injury to his store -as the et/elect of *Jae proprietor to advertise his -goals." Two undoubted and significant facts. which everj owe interested will please bear in Wirt. A young maa,while undergoing an examina tion for the purpose of being admitted to the bar, was asked, "What are the constitutional regains -meats which render a man eligible to the office of President of the United States?" anawaced, "He must be thirty-five years sad a morn good Demoerat 1" dart disolitsr Siar.--Thirtythree Stars moat be ad tha ixiktional flag, from and after the ttlit dimly asst. This is in compliance mitik Uts oat of Congress, passed April, 1848, which declares that oa the admission of Autry now State one etar shall be added, and thrtlUa ad is shall take place on the 4th .of Jaly flat saceoadnig its admission. Ore son was admitted at the last session of Con gress *est State of the confederacy, Zook OtWfor 4 Grew lialik.—Tandy last eras the 611th wanisressaxy of the baUlo of llisamago. and as Louis Napoleon is fond of sumbrerearies, it will of marmot as to karrt Malapropos time from Europe that he sought Tuesday fora conflict with the Austrians. &am Stores rd Niagara Fall•.—The iag 07$ Tina Gazette we that snow fell is great haat et the faile oa Friday Wt. " reluirlan sae at Ora winter yawn." /111resLint is made of s long prama skssdik in serials districts of Slississippi, c • rues sad Illelieataiftg Jima an natoolla carried i60111610011-Cdobrase of Aiororaii,Como., dar k. tiptil at 'MN, lotok Sad onspisiebri *eat Wining its eMidia• • Opposttion Bolting In Ohio! Lall./:t.. The chances of the mongrel QyPositioro are heooming P . smaller by degree. *lO belkitifiml-, aly leas." Whilst the Democracy of gas old Keystone are harmonizing and mitaag rank/ for a vigorcws campaign ands brilliant sic tory in October nest, thee cireatly disappoint ing the hopes and dampening the ardor of the Opposition, we bare the cheering fact that area in our neighboring politically benighted State of Obio Opposition ascendency is seri cently simaten.ect. The recent Black Repute /icon - Wirention of that Commonwelash has dons a world of mischief to its party, which there is no prospect of WON repairing. Do Thursday evening week, an iinmense meeting of the dissath.fied A k eld at Pia ci/snag, whitsb was 3A:dressed by Hon. (Asa IS D. CANTRELL. former Opposition member of Congrels from the Sutler district, and at which a resonation was passed virtunidy re- Audiating the Rapultlican nominations, and preparing fur an iiidereildent inurement.— It was resolved to hold a links convention on the 6th of July tort, to notaioatAz a State ticket " which shall reflect the opinions °fall who are in favor of sustaining an honest ja. diciary and a faithful epplicatioarof the doc trine p( non-intervention by Congress in the local affairs of our Territories." NI r. Camp bell said in his speed) that Hon. Ttiocts Cones did pot sitopathise with tdm lions of the Col um hut. Repuld i can Convention. This looks like it ,g,ouuine break in the liore tofore aniiJ calunme of the Oppoinion in Ohio, tad it is not nurealionable to predict the menses of the liesnoe,ratie ticket in October in couse9uence. xno prospoet is nut, lad even fur . 1.e,C4, The Oppositiouists, alias Abolitioaists Dahl K now Nothings, don't appear to have had a very harmonious time of it in their State Con vention at Ilarrisberg, on the Sat inst. In the Committee on Revolutions there was con siderable trouble. Much tinge was spent in getting tip a Report that might be acceptable to all the uses of which the Opp,sitinn is composed, and some of the snem hers wore disposed ,to be rather rebellious ou several points. The Eariot and Union's report of She pro ceedings says an "-excited and angry discus sion was elicited by a motion for the appoint ment by the Chair of a State Ceara Com mittee." The portosponcteat of tbo Aierr York ifervint writes; . The Convention thee adfonrned half an boar. to give the Committee time to report platform. The contest in the Committee is whether they shall recommend the Opposi tion members in the next Congress to call e National Convention at the time and place they may agree upon. Thia was a move of Mr. Cameron's friends, under the lead of Morton Me3lichael, who introduced the reso lution in the Committee, but after three hours' contest upon it were compelled to with draw it on ocoxint of bitter opposition.— Those that opposed the resolution openly boast that they have knocked one of Caine.. run's plans in the head. At .5 o'clock the committee reported a series o resoletions, which were adopted amid gteat confusion, sumo of the delegstes objet•t ing to the tenor of them on the shivery T ies. tiou ; but all who objected were itenasliately choked off, Mr. Smith, of Philadelphia, oppos'ed the resolution on extending alai ery ; but the Con vention paid DO attention to him, and adopt ed the resoletimes es reported. and adjourned amidst great uprair and contusion, stud go this evening to partake of a strawberry feast at Cameron% resideuce. The Unnatural Parent. The Black Republican party, ears tine Doylestown Standard, since the adoption of the two years proscription act in Massachu setts, remind us in their treatment of their own enactment of a young girl, who having made a misstep, becomes a mother without being made a wife. She naturally regards the result of her criminality in the-tight of a disgrace, and sometimes endeavors to relieve herself of the responsibility and shame by dropping the miserable Infant et the door of another; thus transferring the care of mater nity from her own shoulders to tho4e of another. The Black Republicans have been flirting with the Know Nothings, and the result of the connection has been the birth of the illiberal and proscriptive act against foreign born citizens. It proves, however, that the offspring is nndeni.4bly a clog upon the parent, and she at once drops it, and an emia that it is no child of hers. What are the f.zctsl The following extract sets the matter at rest, and shows beyond all doubt that whoever may be the putative father, the Black Republicans are unquestionably re sponsible for the birth and existence of this most illiberal and odious offspring of fansti , eism and religious bil , vtry—fit child of /such progenitors: " The Legislature which recommended this amendment to the peoplo of that State., con sisted as follows: Senate—l L-publicans, ; Democrats, 3; Americans, 0. llouso—Re publicans, 197 ; Democrats, _9: Americans, 10. h was curried by a two thirds vote in each House—ull the beeincruts toting against it. And when it sane before the people it VMS Noted for by the great mass of the Repub licans, and by them made a part of the Con stitution of Jlassachusetts." What is Black Republicanism? Those who may desire an answer to the above interrogatory are referred to Massachu setts, the blackest of the Black Republican States—the State which in IS:iG gave Fremont nearly double as many votes as Buchanan and Fillmore together. In Massachusetts a negro slave who escapes firom the South is permitted to vote after one year's residence ; but a while man, who comes from Europe or Canada, is not allowed to vote until two years rigs he has become legally, by natu ralization, a citizen of the United States. lieV•lt is an old true saying that no one knows who is Governor till after election-- and th;s has been realized pretty effectually in the case of the Virginia election, Mr. Coggin was the " Opposition" canditate, and his political friends were so conSdent of his election, thatlhey gave him an oration the night before, in which he was saluted and addressed as "Gov. Goggin," and the Rich- Meng Ifliy closed with Raying: At the depot, Gov. Goggin parted from his friends. but told them in Loner of ounfi doace. that be expected to-be elected, and would therefore meet them all again, on the pat of dsenary next. when ho would come to Richmond to be installed in °Mee." Young (thickens should never be coasted before-they Are butebed l.. The cold eseitement has received a fifth impetus, given to it by recent amount. front Pike's Peak. It is said that immense qammaties sf the precious ors bsve been die °newel on the teorth SA* of:Nangstes creek, and dna misers were zeskini trim MO to POO per daj 1 Not Harmonious, Young Man, Alpsoh Yourself to the Democracy. it in important for every young an to lotted right in politics as well as otbeamat ; term. Those 'who jute the Democracy. eon* I net themselves with * peranumut organiza ,tion. Thu party is to,existeot - with the fon ndatiinrof our republican inati Cations, and three-quarters of a century has so entwined it with the institutions of our connubial." its ettieteure is fixed and irrercoestlAs so tool as our government exists. it bus been oppose.l by aerials parties its their turn, sotee of which hays had Lesopurarr Iri.ioPbs, hut they tati, mately fell under the conquering march of , the invincible Democracy. The wars of Is ' natieisal have beaten against, and lt‘e ;sometimes almost seerneelto engulpti it, lint aui,castad b 5. Ow eternal principle of ju.nice w all classes and conditions of men, it has ever risen in majesty above the raging; bil lows. jt has beau opposed by the eloquence ; of Clay and Webster and others of ices note, i but it ban withstood /ha assaults of all, and the very last act of these great statesmen was to commend the democracy. We may oeeesbmaily be ontimniberal fur a time, but triumph will stxto follow. Wo have shaped the institutions of our country from its foun -1 dation, and point wit& pride to onr handi ; work, and it is the destiny of the party to !guard, protect and upheld the nation until the last line of liLerty has been written upon ;Diu reoord of time. Union of tho Party. The fippositiost may croak and rejoice as notch as they please, which is only a prelude of keeping their courage up above Pressing point--Nme thing is now pretty certain, and that id, the success of the Democratic ticket next (all. We see mideoce in ill sections of a determination on the part of the Dowers .,y to heal their dissensions, and settle all were personal difficulties, unite once pure Abe groat party of the Union. bind it together ae witb hooks of steel, and make early prepar ation for tin great °cutest of 1860.—Clinton Democrat Plablib Opinion. Public indignation meetings are being held in different parts of Ohio, to pass opinion up on the repudiation of Chief Justice Swann by the Republican State Convention. on account of his decision in the Oberlin Rescue case.— The Columbus Stateistaa says that, by this attempt to punish a just judge for doing his duty, the Republican party has cut its own throat. It predicts the defeat of the Republi can nominee for Judge to fill Judge Swann's place. at the coming election. There is no question but that the action of the convention has the disapproval of a large portion of the Republicans of Ohio. and that' sooner than appear to sustain it by Toting for its candi date. minty of them will cast their ballots for tho Democratiti nominee. lerThe Republicans claim to have a ma jority of three in the Constitutional CUM ca tion in Kansas. If that is all they can bort•A of. after all the tribulation about the poor "bleeding" citizens • of that Territory, who were so anxious for freedom, but whom the government was so ready to consign to the horrors of a slave State, wo must say they bate a very small victory. But wo shall not be surprised to learn that this riclory is in reality a defeat. The official returns may tell a different talc. Possibly Gaxst.cr may be able to account, in one of his letters, for the failure (lithe Republicans to sweep everything before them. If they are not able to control Kansas, after all the men, money and Ammu nition they Lave poured into it, the prospect of the party in the West west indeed be gloomy. A Ifitatbeig.—kums envious, sour-faced old bachelor, says there is a great deal of humbug in this world—more in fact than it is credit ed with—and the most onursgeene humbug is to Sae two pretty women kissing on the doorstep. We do not see why they could nut *swell call up a fellow to do the job for them. For our part we like to see ladies kiss. It keeps them in practice, and not unfroquently puts them in the notion of trying it on with a masculine friend. ltiirA few days ago a girl only seven years of age fell into a well in Buffalo. The well is sixteen feet deep, and contains fire feet of water. The child went to the bottom, strik ing her head with some force upon the stones. She at once threw out her hands, and felt the pail resting on the bottom, and raising one hand, grasped the pole which rested against the wall of the well. fly this she raised her self to the surf Ace of the water, and then climbeAl up the well to the top. le—lt is statisl lutely, but should we think be received with some grains of allow ance, that a bull raised near l'almyrn, in Sew York, was so very ugly that it was de cided to kill him. So the neighbors assent• bled and shot him full of balls, which only infuriated the beast. After a long time he was penned up and tied securely with ropes, with a two inch augur hole bored in his head; a pound of Dupont's best rifle powder was put in and rammed down, and his hoed blown :o pieces. Tbirty-five minutes after this his tail was in actito motion, whisking flies off hie hide. Ilta-Lauer's Artesian Well, at Reading, atter attaining a depth of 750 feet, has struck upon a vein of carbonate of lime mixed with sand. The result is a supply of pure soda inakr, which is now being arotlyxed and may prove a valuable discovery. The operations for the present will be suspended until the medicinal properties of the water, which may be important. are definitely ascertained. Ifiiir The entire city of Philadelphin—that is the whole population, including members of the press--is at work with a ll it s i nven ti ve genius, trying to get a name for a new hotel located on Chestnut street. The prevailing idea seems to be that unless properly massed the enterprise will prove a failure. What a piece of nonsense. aThe Senior of the Bellefonte Watchman has donned it new tile, which the junior de /it-111mm u a bluish. boll-crowned, store-pipe article--an excellent institution in which to now away ground nuts and gingerbread.— IV hat a hat t serA boy employed u a mail carrier in the northern part of Indiana has boon sen tenced at Indianapolis to two years' imprison ment in the penitentiary for •alastruting one dollar from a letter shish ha opened without 'authority. forTraperiod of fknroring is considered the beet time to make netting; of phials. as Ustifillgegay 16 fora nuts is thra stressful rad inset aetive. Trouble in the OW* Opposition Camp. Thews was anything but barmen; in there cent Opposition State tharaltilon in 0144 and great difficulty was experienced is bringing about even a moderated/woe of good feeling and antmlinity,either on the resolutions adapt ed or candidates nominated. We state this not oo Democratic aetbority, but nn revela tions made by Opposition journals, from one of st Wet), the Cincianati Tunes, we quote : A' A series of resolutions RIM then intr./sto re.' bitterly condemning the Fugitive Slave Law, ,heisting it unconsititutional. an d cen suring., indirectly, the Supreme Court for its bite decision, and in the Fame tunruier nphol din.re,4•Lonce to the elm:olio/I of that taw. •• These resolutioni were warmly opposed by Mr. Campbell. De said the people ul 411641 were not prepared to endorse that duct ri tie. lie would go as far ns any man in condemn ing the law. and it ert.s a low rititested by the tree people of Ohio. hut tiouth , rit Ohio at least, toil not prepared to raise the standard revolt againat, the Federal Got ernmetit.— lie declared the adoption of this ultraism as certainly fatal to the Republican party in Ohio, and urged those of the Northern coun ties not to persist in forcing it ou tbeConven tion. "thin. Thoma