111 Clakli:,.-11).tr.a.lb'. . w: , ,T, • : T I NW . Y .4 7 '.. . 0, 16 . , Mi4l 011.1t.taSIAXI, PA. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 20, 1864. fiErifiCElT AND 'CHEAPEST. NEWSPAPER IN CUMNFIRLANII COUNTS' • Terrns± Two Dollars a year, or One Dollar and .Fifty Cents, if paid pin:elm:lly in Advance. $1 75 paid rrithiu the yea, WECIG iiTATE . FOR GOVERNOR, JAMES FOR CANAL COMAIISSIONER, GEORGE DARSIE, FOR JurtpE OF THE SUPREME COURT, DANIEL M. SMYSER, WHIG counTirr =CHET. Aisenfhly, MONTGOMERY .DONALDSON, Newton GEORGE W. CRISWELL, Enst Penuebnro Prothonotary, WILLIAM D. SHOOP, Lower Allen. Clerk of Courts. iikANILTEL S SNYDEIt, Register, WILLIAM SKlLESirCarlisle Consmiasioner. - WILLIAM BAUGHMAN, Shippensburg. Auditors, • JOSEPH WEIBLEY. Carlisle, (1 yenr.) WILLIAM W. FRAZER, Hopewell, ( 3yeara) .pirector of the Poor. • GEORGE V. COOVEIi, Silver Spring comp RESS To the rotersof Cumberland, Perry and Yprk_ Connties:—Felli - ni , -CitizensAt the request of very many friends, I offer myself to you as an Independent Candidate for elec tion to Congress, and most respectfully so licit your supportand suffrages. Should Ibe elected, I promise to the best of my ability, a faithful and fearless discharge of my duty in advocating and sustaining the intrests, the freedom, the honor and integrity of our Common Country against the encroachments of both foreign and domestic enemies. On principle, I am utterly opposed to that policy which sacrifices home interests to flircign in fluence, and that would darken our National escutcheon by permitting and aiding in the extension of slavery over teritory now free,and that would overthrow those principles of free dom, which the fathers of the country so ably promulgated and enforced and which rest at the basis of all true liberty, Very respectfully, your obt. servant, LEMUEL TODD. Carlisle, September 8,1854. WESTERN SUBSC R I li liRS. —The labor of pack up a large number of single papers to-subsirrjbers at a distance, principally in the Western States. is no small Ph every week, but would cheerfully be gone through with if those remote friends only paid their subscrip tions promptly. We now give fair notice that our paper will not hereafter be sent to any subscribers at distant ss UNLESS PAID IN ADVANce Or the payment assumed me person in Cumberland county. On a number o rs now sent to Western• subscribers there are ono. three and some cases lair' years subscription duo, If these are not soon paid wo shall publisktho names t. mac delinquents and then strike them from 'our list.—. OM largely increased expenses require, as they say Is, arty theatres, the free list to be suspended," and prong li pument from all. , • "UNDER KINO, BENZONI ? 'SPEAK OR DIE !"—We understand tha' ; at the meeting of the:Democratic county Committee on Saturday, ) the case of th 9 refractory Know Nothings on the Count:i Ticket was dulY considered, and 'after a warm discuAsion it was resolved 'tha illessre. Gregg and Lytle shoWd.publiel . ; repudiate Know Nothingism or be strick 'en from the ticket. A ' few days mot gracu.was allowed them to speak or be pc. litically- executed. The resolution di.; not pass unanimously, however, there bc ing some Know Nothings even in , Committee ! = Portirutrry.---The -Volunteer's allu sion to Todd's personal pOpularity is rr,• ther unfortunate. It will cause people look at old election returns to see ho- Bonham has . run,' when it will be foul; that when Bonham was last before tl people 118 a candidate for the Legislatu: howdy beat Dr, T," - L, Cathcart, the wh• ; candidate, about thirty yob's! This in.l eoutttly where Bonham's friends claim a majority of over two himdred ! pop-alaritylas x yiq7leen tested but we think 'will be established on the second TuuSday of October of Northumborlaud of Allegheny of 'Montgomery 112 II MR. BONHAM'S LAST ADDRESS. The last Volunteer and • Democrat con tain an address to the voters of this Con gressional district from J: Ellis Benham, the locofoco candidate for Congress, which frOut its cringing tone may be - regarded as, an appeal to the whig party for help. But in the very same papers which print this cry of agonythere is from the pen of the same J. Ellis Bonham, the address No. 4 of -the Democratic State Central Committee, a complete rehash of the State slanders and misrepresentations which have constituted his political capi tal for years past, and with which he seeks now to stigmatize and render odious the whig pithy. In address No. 4' the Whig Party is denounced as "a mere truckler for office' 2 —as "endeavOring.to-craivl in to power by exciting the sympathies and prejudices of portions of our citizens"--, as " denying the, right as. well as the ca pacity of . the 'people to govern them, selves"—as "adherents of-the British" —as "a party without an exception, stren nous in their - endeavors to Clothe the government with strong, if not with ar bitrary power to keenthe people in check" —as "endeavoring ~ to excite the people to violate the constitution of the country" =-as__'__fomenting __difficulties betiveen_our native-born and naturalized citizens," and "being in this close imitators of the fed eralists—of 179S"—as - having in 1-798 been " aroused to one tremendous exer tion to erush-the-spirit_of the , -people and_ destroy their liberties," 'and that "thr mhiggerry of the present dog is the frier : (Win! of 1799 grown more running." Vet whilst giving ; publicity to these and many otfit'fr miserable falsehoods and slim ders jn address No. 4, their author, terri lied at the prospect of defeat which awaits him; now appeals in a special address, in sidiously directed to Whigs, asking them with cool-effrontery—to disregard party ties, to forget, his ultraisms, his abuse and his detractionsto sanction his Free Trade and ultra Slavery views—and help him, their defanier and avowed foe; to a seat in Congress, ,so that his facilities for accomplishing further and greater mis chief may be. increased) We feel satis fied that this appeal will .be rejected by every Whig in the district with undis guised feelings or contempt for the man whose lust for office leads him to fawn now upon those whom lie has so perseve ringly maligned and defamed. This last address of Mr. Bonham is a strange.compound of bravado and syco phancy. While boasting defiance he is the.same time evidently shaking with . fear and dread. Such an appeal is made to deceive and is dictated by no sentiment of sincerity towards the whig party, but' simply because he: dreads defeat. .When Mr. Bonham thought himself Aecure, in the stronghold of his own making,.he mocked at the Whigs 'and defied their power. Now when large masses of his own party repudiate him and his princi ples, lie 'seeks to save himself by truck ling. But the effort will not sireeced : — ilis• appeal will only receive, as it,,de serves, the sr and rebuke•of the whig party. `Why, let us ask, should any Whig - vote for Mr. Bonham ? Is he not the expo nent of every political iniquity that ren ders locofocoism dtingerous and 'odious? Is he not exerting pll ,his capacities to in jure, and defeat every Oinciple and meas ure dna is dear to the' whig party, and will he not, if elected, unite with his. co- thinkers in in icting upon tie country those very measures which the "Whigs regard as destructive.and- unconstitution al? True, the whit; party has no distinc tive candidate o£ its own in this contest, but they can and will cheerful .vote for LEMUEL TOM), the Independent can didate, whose hostility to the infamous Kansas-Nebraska bill and frisnuiship for Pennsylvania interests, are well known and entitle him to the support of- every Whig. • AsEYot- AssEssC.U: , --Iti. order to vote it is neeessary that strangers and new eonwrs should'be as'siissed in the district which they have taken up their residence at least /,!n days' bclbre Priemls or follicle, see to it that Slut are 'all rigid: ; and ready t vilhont, let or hinderance to doposite y tir ballots on the socond Tujsday or,Oetober. tEarlisle Acta. WHIG COUNTY TICKET. We have said hitt little in relation lo our County Ticket since its nomination, as the candidates are generally well known to the people of the county and beciause. we feel assured from every account which reaches us that, the ticket gives entire satisfaction. It is an excellent Ticket, composed of good men throughout, and is entitled to, as we arecofident it will re ceive, the support of every Whig as well as . -many democrats. Our candidates for Legislature, Messrs. DONALDSON and CRISWRIA. are both men of intelligence, good judgment and unim peachable integrity, and calculated if e lected to make discreet and useful legis lators. Our candidates for the county Shoup, fur Prothonotary— Mr. S.Nxior.p., for Clerk of Courts and Mr. SKILEs, : for, 'Register, are each of them well qualified to fill those places, each Of them capable, honest and worthy. If they are elected,,whiclr we are confident they will be, the people may rely upon their duties being performed with integ rity and faithfulness. The Whig candi dates fur the other offices—Mr.' 13 MAN for Commissioner—Mr. Com - 1m for Director of the Poor—Messrs. FRAZER and W MAY - for A uditors—arc well known in their respective neighborhoods as men of high - perso - nal worth and re spectability—men of prudence - Indjudg- - ment, to whom the interests of the coun ty- may - he safely - confided. Such is the Whig Ticket and' a more unexceptionable ticket in every respect has seldom if ever been nominated. Tt is Worthy thxsupport of 'every Whig and if our friends throughout the county exf ert themselves as they should it will be triumphantly elected. Whigs ! the signs are auspicious of success I Be united, be vigilant, be energetic and Your ticket w i ill triumph! THE POPULAR REVOLUTIONI Since Franklin Pierce's election by a majority in every State butfourj-the-peo— ple have become so utterly disgusted with the man, that they are now more anxious to overthrow than they were to set pp his abominable administration. II is own na tive State, New Hampshire, has condemn ed hitn-Maine has condemned him---- lowa has condemned him—NcW York has condemned him—Connecticut - has con demned him,and Michigan,Wisconsin,ln diana and Illinois are ready to folio* their example, But rising above all Will be heard the pealing thunder of PENNSYL VANIA'S condemnation on the • second Tuesday of October ! LIBERALITY. We do not se ~.Mr. Todd's card in the Volunteer, though we learn its publication was requested in that paper, as in others, as an advertisement. The Vo/unteer has been loud in its de nunciations of intolerance and liberality, as utterly at variance with the spirit of our institutions, and yet shows such an abject subserviency' to party itself, and such a want of liberality as to refuse to publish Mr. Todd's 'card even 'in its a& vertising , columns. Surely such a stick ler for the rights of, the people Jo-govern'• themselves, should not have refused' to submit to their decision Mr. Todd'S peal. : 'The.' Volunteer's course in thiS Matter is a' sorry commentary.,. upon its own professions of tolerance and liberali ty. After this it ought to cease its Mat- Fmnraitraima Mrrfq=llll Y3IOLER AND STATE PEBT.—The loco foco papers are exulting over Gov. Bigler's proclamation showing that through the operation of the Sinking Fund establish ed by (ov. Johnson, some nine hundred thousand dallars of State Debt has appa rently becu paid during his adminiStra:2 don: If true, Johnson is entitled to the credit instead. of Bigler. But the fact is that while the Funded Debt of the State has been thus ITtittectr,i'lligkr has tiOtuttl-•' ly made over a milliou of 'dollars of new (1,.14 ! a• sut t ,r(i.y, st v t.. 2d, 250 rants, on their way to Nebraska, pas, ,,, d througlt•St. BONHAM AND DIRECT TAXATION. An k tong the heresies advocated by J. Ellis Bonham, is that of raising by di red titxution a revenue for the support of the General Government. This theory involves, of course, th'e repeal of all' im post duties'andtthe ronsequent admission of every species of products into_the country free from all charges. Indepen dent of the death-blow which such—t . sui cidal 'policy would inflict upon alI the in dustrial 'interests of the country, in bring ing them into direct competition with the pauper labor of Europe; it would vastly increase the hurthens of the tax-payers. The amount of money now raised for gov ernmental- pu-rposes, from-Anti-es -im posed - on foreign products; is about sixty-five millions of dollars, which is paid by all who consume these products in exact pro postion to the ittantity used by each.— Were the system of raising the revenue altered, the basis of taxation would be property instead of consumption, and the onus or weight of paying thin revenue would rest, mainly, on the farmers or landholders, becauSe the I description of property owned by them is tangible and apparent, and,.unlike money, stock, &c., incapable of concealment. Under a/sys tem of direct taxation Pennsylvania's share of the revenue to be raised would be about six millions of dollars annually ; 1111 1111101111 t Cl . l/11,1 to more than three times our present State Tax, which in itselfls . scarcely endurable. So that a man who, now patis a State Tax of 'thirty dollars, would have to pay in addition thereto, for the use of the general government, , at least ninety dollars; when perhaps under the present system of tariff duties his pro portion would not amount to one tenth of that sum. -Farmers, property-holders, 'taxpayers ! what think you of this'scheme and of the man who favors and advocates it ? It ° may suit the trading politician, and such ipen as' Mr. Bonham, who have nothing to lose, and who wish to throw something off the prices of their broad-cloths acid - other litxuries on the brawny shoulders of the farmer, who is stisfied with home made articles. - But we may imagine that those who compose the producing classes, and are interested as tax-payers, will reject any such attempts to increase their already - oppressive burthens, and oppose any man who exhibits his hostili-: ty to their interests by falirhig any-such unegnal thid unjust schemes. fterThe two democratic papers of Per iy, the Advocate and Democrat are en-• gaged in hot discussion of the merits of .the Pope of Rome, in connexion with the Congressional nomination. Vin. a fi6rce onslaught upon our neighbor of the Vol unteer, the Advocate stroll Its editor John Bedint Bratton. Keep '661, gen tlemen. OUT AT LAS'V The Lager Beer bill as it is called, has at last been brought out. of the breeches pocket of Coy. Bumfat, as we learn from the Wilkes barre Record (4( the Times, of the 6th inst., which says—speaking of his speach at that placer-_ "The G'ov. cant out boldly on Thursday -and said, the lager beer hill was not in his bretiches' pocket, but that he hud al}•cad • retor We sirould think all classes now ought to vote for .Bigler—since he is in favor of all sides of R,Nery question. In fife first place, his organ at Ilarriaburgdeclares him oppos-' ed to the Prohibitory Ftii - v, and his letter to the Prohibito , ry 'Convention lends to the same conclusion. Thixt the Rev. John Chambers assures the TeMperance men that his friend Bigler will sign a constitutional Prohibitory Law. Now he vetoes a hill requirina '' retailers of malt liquors to have a license from the Court. And in March and April last he sign ed. two bills of a precisely similar character, applying only to the county of Chester, and parts oldie county ofTioga. Thus favoring local laws ,and opposing general Ones for the souse object. I;id ever a tiovernor involve himself in such a maze of ..inconsistencies and contradictions? • 1413ut Of what importance is itovhat he does liow? "1' he' people are th6ronglilv disgusted with his course, and arc waiting,. with as much patience as possible . for . the, 10th of October, when they will bury. him under stick •4 load of paper pellets that. he will no more 'bi - ' heard or. •• igkir Attention is inVittul to the advertise ment of the Cumberland Valley Institute, in anotla r t ou tinu of this Impey,tlw winter ses sion. of n•hii will open oi:1 the first ot',No vonber. This 601001 is fast gaiiiing reptita titß. JEDGE POLLOCK. The-tour of this distinguished gentleman in the border counties, of this State, says the, North American, has been eminently sue eessful. At all the points designated for his meeting &citizens the assemblages ha 4 been unusually large, and composed of members of all parties, and he has been listened to with the most marked attention and with the most gratifying results. Judge Pollock is, indeed a speaker of very superior abilities. He has been thoroughly educated; and has all the fiilish which scholastic acquirements can bestow upon natura& fine powers of dee imitation. But his great merit lies in the thoroughness and earnestness with which he discusses topics he presents, and the largo amount of information he bears upon them. His speech at Pittsburg, which we had the good fortune to hear, was most impressive. It was clear in its method and forcible in ris expression throughout; and, when the accts. sion admitted of it, it was marked by passa ges of great beauty and eloquence. During this week Judge Pollock has the 'following appointments: Coudersport . . Wellsboro', . , Troy, . . . Towanda, . . Montrose, . . At the close of the present, or the begin ning of the next month, lie will be in Eastern Pennsylvania, and about that period' will ad dress the people of Philadelphia.. PERRY COUNTY The Whigs of Perry held their couventiont on Monday of last week and nominated a full ticket with the acception of associate Judge, whieli'Was left open 'to an independent can didate to be voted for by the people at large. The following persons were settled f'or the other officers, viz : For Assembly, Dr. A. C. Styes; PrOthonotary, Gen Joseph D. Situp son; Register and Recorder, John Camphel) Commissioner, Wm. Power, of Tyrdne; 1 i• rector of the Poor, Samuel Milligen Audi tor, Wm."Bosserman ; Coroner, John Bretz. The wings will unanimously suppOit Todd for Congress. Hox. ClEounE DA ESIE.—The garrisburg Telegraph says that the Locofoco papers, with their usual reckless disregard of truth, charged that Mr. Iltrsit some weeks since sent to the Whig State committee a letter tf declination; 'the wish is father to the thought' with these Locotheu editors. They know him to be a good man and a " popular Man, and would prefer to have him out of die way.— Mr. I)arsie has not and will not decline; and the •whigs of the Old Keystone, true to their party, their principles and their candidate., will rally -to.hig - `Tupport, en ,masse, on the • second Tuesday of October. We trust that our Locofoco friends will give themselves'no further trouble on this score, for they may rest assured that Mr:Thirsie will not dechu.e. POLITICS IN LANCASTER.—Thu, Locofocos of Lancaster held their County Convention last week, and nominated a full ticket, head ed by Wm. B. Fordnev, of the City, tbr Con gress, who has since declined. A portion of the Convention was in favor of an Open-/u -sine with the Know Nothings, but after a strong conn ( st the motion to settle a full tick et prevailed by a vote of 32 to 11. The Ex am i ner says 'it is an undoubted fact that at least two of the candidates on the Loco tick 'ef'are Know . Nothings."fhe Examiner fur ther states that the Know Nothing party in that county has formed an entire ticket for Congresq, Senate, Assembly, and County Of and publishes a list of names saki to be so nominated. For Congress the name given is A. E. Roberts, of New Holland, who -since the diclination of Fprdner will un doubtedly receive the support of the Locos. Isaac E. lliester, is the regular Whig nominee and the indications are Sat the.enti+ Loco ftico and Know Nothing parties alltiTd agfffiTi - St him, there will be a close run. The Whig county Committee of IVMetk.lter county, have nominated Joshua of Mtintour county, for Associate Law Judge of that district in . place of Mr. BroWn declin ed. . _ has been seriously ill, at Waverly,,etholine of the New • York anti Erie biailrthul. The Harrisburg Union,' however states that the fever has been broken, anti all that is,fteetled to restore him to his usual health is a few days rest. The Union thinks not, probably be able to athlress the people again for some time. • , WON'T WRITE ANY '-‘1010: LurrEns,—Tho Pottstown Ledger, a LocotOco journal sav:.; "A doubting Democrat, who don't appear to have much faith in Mutts denial of his Lein.; in the Ninow-INToilting ring; h:u• wrilteUini another letter, making the queries More di : rest and senrching. Mott however rofutieS to ansper. lie won't write any more letters on 'that sulljet.A.” F.+vAt, A 1-1 , 11.11" AT SANTAFF..---A letter yo ;viswell at St. 1.Un19 front Santa 1° . ; ., announ,, ; 'tltat :51r. F. X. Anlavv, thy mi•sr.oll - 1 aml.inirvpid• travidier, was stabbod in, a I.o v with Majny Weight:onn, that phuo, about tSept. I'B 20 " 21 " •22 " 23