A lrlftr- 'WE GO WHEEE DEMOCEATIC PRINCIPLES TOINT THE WAY WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW.' VOLUME VIII. EBEiXSBURG, THURSDAY, JULY 22, 18-52. MOIBER 40. 4 J II II f IE! It If- I L l II v . .JUV gpKfiCII OP HON". It. T003I11S, OF CEORUIA, On the Presidency ; delivered in the House of Rep resentatives July 3, 1S2. The House being iu Committee of the Whole oa the state of the Union, and having under consideration the deficiency bill Mr. TOOMBS said : But I mast pass on from this branch of the subject and hasten to a brief examination of the constituent elements and the action of the two late conventions. The Democratic convention asseuiuieu mv. xuc j rrospect was not favorable to its unity or Lar- j mony ; the preservation of either was impossi- ! tie, except upon the principles I have already ! tjplaincl. The political convulsions which ra- pcJ so violently smee its previous session nau divided it into three parts. One portion had wandered off to Buffalo, and struggled lustily to j bring the great democratic family into disrepute j i:i the ortn, ly cnargnig n mm "-ajiu6 n. lo the South Another portion wandered off to ' . , , . , lT o i i been here when it passed the House. I was not tence that it had betrayed the South to the , i-i here at that time. "orth. And yet another portion, which embra- ! ced the majority of the party in Congress, stood j Cries of "Go on !" "Go on !" f.naly by the compromiso measures, and voted i In Pennsylvania, the candidate of that party for their passage. Thejtwo sectional wing3 of , was a gentlemen who was known to be decided this party stood in extreme opposition an a- j ly hostile to these measures. At both conven greement between them in principle was impos- j tions which nominated for the presidency, and tilde. The southern wing had denounced evory ' the candidates had the full benefit of the associ r.uV.ic nau North, whig and democratic, as un- ation. These elections resulted disastrously to wo-thr cf southern su- port. The southern men j w supported the compromise measures were ; f luai:yuenounceuuyiueu.. iuc-" .B tcraratedthemselvs from the organization upon ( .hat they called great questions of -human ; liberty." The condition of success was, that j liirnam wooa snouia ue uniugui this moral miracle must ue periormea. n ; J.ine. The huge magnet ot patronage was ; waived over the disaffected regions, and by its j p'wtr oi attraction iunaiu uni .iuiuuhc nm. "tutio invu iwii- uui..0 tnught in council together at Baltimore. Free i friends of Mr. Fillmore and Mr. Webster na soilers and hunkers, secessionists and Union j tional whigs who have upon all occasions since men. compromise and anti-compromise men their passage avowed their determination to ac J3 ?ha;a of opinio- goiUuvo.I tncether under j cept these measures as a peace offering, without the power of democrats to select a candidate for j reference to their votes upon them. This was the presidency. The result of their labors was i all we asked. : preside better than could have been fair expected. It is true they threw overboard all those statesman to whom public expectation and the, public mind had been directed, and selected a candidate of their own ; but the candidate selected is a fair exponent of the compromise clement of the con-u-ntiun. From my small knowledge of his his t.iy, I take him to be capable, honest, and faith ful to the constitution, and au early, consistent-, oud energetic opponent of anti-slavery fanati cism in all its forms, and a firm and decided friend of the Compromise. His associate on the ticket is entitled to equal commendation. Th? resolutions which were adopted by this body were numerous, and not creditable even to them. I took occasion, about four years ago, to review some of the most important of them to which I refer for a fuller understanding of my opinions thereon. But the convention did, fullv and fivirlv. endorse and pie-ige tnemseives . , . . i ' - i aoiue oy ana aut i fares The southern-rights division ot the con- , , r ,,,. T umion surrendered fully, if not gracefully. Ihe , .-.i" e-r. nnt n that it was done ! o-ivcu icuauit 1 w 1 - 1 in obedience to the voice of people of the South. The reason was not discreditable, if sincere. ti j '-1 1 . I ..vikTtilY-k.l in ctilluri Ki ll!? iree-bOll umaiuu DUUVHUI.H.U 1 oui.ii ... Itrncc, and not a blow was struck by either of those divisions in defence of its peculiar teuets. The compromise resolution which was adop ted meets (he question fully ; the candidates tominated have put themselves fully, and dis tinctly upon it. Therefore the requisition of the Union party of Georgia is fully complied with, and these candidates are open to the sup port of the members of that party, wiUiout any surrender of its principles. It is true there were many in that convention 'ho had uniformly opposed the Compromise heretofore, and some who do now oppose it ; but this class is neither numerous nor formidable. The compromise division of the party succeeded I bfilh in ita vM.A:rvlAa mvwI ita natnlnlarna I lioil & A triumph was complete, and promise to be endu ring. It is deeply to be regretted that the same re ult did not happen in the whig convention. There were but two grand divisions in the latter lody the friends and enemies of the conipro lie measures. The former wero divided be tween Mr. Fillmore and Mr. Webster, and the fetter concentrated on General Scott. The re sult of their labors was, that the Compromise is adopted, and General Scott was nominated. Jie free-soil whigs of the Noith have complete cutrol of the whig organization in all of the lon-slaveholding States, and Scott's success will their triumph, and a triumph fatal to the fr"iciples of the Union whigs, both. North and South. The whigs who supported General Scott or lke nomination were the men who had been a6t active, by speech and pen, from the be ginning f this excitement, in promoting acc rual strife and discord. The men who stood here in 1850 were, from e beginning to the end of this great slavery 'fltation, opposing the settlement of it, and are 0 this hour deadly hostile to the principles up- kica it was made. In their party conven- i IU I'l 1 ill. 1 I Ml. U 1 1VA 11J vuli'Hi'.'' - tions at home, throughout the whole North, du ring the last year, not one of them, to my knowl edge, has conformed to those principles. In their elections last year in the two great States of Ohio and Pennsyluauia that party ran candi dates who were known to be averse to them in this House, who voted against them in the Bal timore Convention, and who, I believe, is now chairman of the whig general committee of the i United States. I Mr. CAMPBELL, of Ohio. Will the gentle- maa aUow me tQ ask hira & que8ti(m , j dtfsire t0 know if the gentleman di(J not Limself vote aglin9t a portion of tuat series 0f measures ? Mf TOOMBS. I did. I Toted against the bm aJmitti California into the Union. Mr. CAMPBELL. Did not the gentleman al so vote against that abolishing the slave trade -n th(J Digtrict of ColumLia ? l not but I will give the gentleman the full benefit of his question. j I should have voted against that bill if I had the Scott free-soil whigs ; and at the opening of this session it was announced to the country that j - 0 - ... Compromise. It was very soon though that no friend of General Scott could j be found among its supporters. The question - . --V bi - a nuia "' i.ivj "'-" -v a " i against ine compromise; uieru were uui twelve northern whigs who voted fur it ; and I We do not wish to go behind the passage of : history of the men who offer them to me to af these measures for objections to public men. ) f01-j me anv reasonable security that these pria We were willing that this settlement should j cve5 would be honestly maintained. When I stand as a pacification what we approved, and ; l00k to the record, when I look to their votes, and what we did not approve. We wer vr-:" ig v,.ju.,, j t thc-ir individual action, when j to do it for the sake of giving tr.tn pil'it , , re pose, peace to the country and all scction-i of the country. We were willing that tlr-s adjust ment should be considered an act of amnesty for past differences of opinion upou the gener al question of slavery, and to support in good faith any and all who were ready to stand by and maintain it. There are many in this House who voted against some and even all of these measures, but who arc still willing to stand up on that ground, and who do stand there ; who had opposed them as, in their ju Jgnient, iujuri- ous to the rights of their own sections of coun. , ! try, but, for the sake of the peace and quiet of ; - ' . , ,. , , . .1 ine rcpuouc, and inasmuch as they were acqui- j esccd in by a large majority of the American ! c 4, ., . , , people North and South they accept and ... T .nr , .. , . T , , I ' " ' , none such among the friends of Gen. Scott. j They have endeavored in every way to stifle those principles when presented, and they en deavored to prevent their affirmance whenever and wherever they could. To prevent their af firmance, both northern and southern suppor ters of Gen. Scott made speeches on this floor, advocating the policy of going into the next presidency without the enunciation - of any principles whatever. Some gentle men from the South who had been supporters, but, I admit, reluctant supporters, of the Com- promise, were willing to accept Gca. Scott with- j out any pledge of his fidelity to these great 1 principles, while they knew hisfrienl3 were op" j posed to them. But the voice which came up from the people, even through the imperfect . medium of the delegates to their convention, compelled them to pause, to tremble, to yield. They did wisely to heed that voice in demanding the resolutions ; but they will hear its thunders again, for not heeding it and giving it true ut terance in the selection of the candidate ; they will not, they ought not, to submit to have their principles put into the keeping of their enemies. They will demand principles and men, and make that demand effectual at the ballot-box in No Tember. The friends of the Compromise demanded no sectional candidate. They were content to ac cept the present Chief Magistrate, whose name and fame have been identified with these niea sures. They were willing to accept the great ; New England statesman, notwithstanding their j manv noints of disasreement with him in tho S ' J I w past. He had thrown tue weigni 01 nis nuguiy intellect into the scales of concord in the dark est and most perilous houi'of the conflict ; and southern compromise whifts, at least, .would have struggled with pride and energy to have seen the greatest intellect of the age preside over and direct the affairs of the great republic in the world These men were defeated in the convention by the enemies of the compromise measures because they were its friendi. This was the true reason of their exclusion. And it is a sufficient reason for the friends of that mea sure, North and South, to oppose and defeat this nomination. My actions shall respond to my convictions. Shall we select between these two candidates? My preference would be for some citizen known to the people for his public services and civil life some citizen disconnected from these or ganizations some citizen devoted to his coun try, and not to faction one whose wisdom and virtue have been tested by experience in public affairs. If such a name shall be presented to the American people, without reference to re sults, I would give him my support. I will affirm the principle, and maintain the truth, and though I may not be able to succeed against this combination ; yet, though all else may be lost in such a contest, honor will be sa ved, duty will be performed, and a great princi ple will be asserted. We must leave the rest to time and truth. But whai are the Union whigs to do if that contingency does not happen ? This question would not be at all embarrassing if the majority in the convention which nominated General Scott had put him before the country on their ) own principles. The difficulty arises from the I fact that the resolutions passed by that body i annouce sound principles principles which we I approve. I object to but one resolution in the ! series, and that one is at ljast equal to, if not j better, tli'in the resolution upon the same sub- democratic ,atfurm. x laC:U1 tho one relating to internal improvements. The vl,5g resoklion assers the con8lUutional power ia . m mentg lMtr -t -t, -t, ;f w,stlr ftdhcreJ to TM!jjtr:p oir IR0St of the objec- t -t The other nlatform denies the con stitutional power to make such improvements in a particular manner, and, in mv iu l-rmcnt, in ' the very way in which it ought to ba done. Therefore, upon the question, I prefer the whig ; to the democratic resolution, though approving i of neither. But while the compromises resclu j tion of the whig party is all I desired, and the other principles announced are m the mam sound and republican, I have seen nothing in the past look it tliii struggle through which we recently prtss-ji! in relation to the most important of these resolutions, I cannot believe these principles will be safe in such hands They are my prin ciples, and I intend to maintain them now, here after, and at all times here and wherever I may be. . 1 have already shown that General Scott'g friends arc not to be trusted with these princi ples, and has given no assurance that the' re- ceive his approval, or will be maintained by him- jJotll p:irt;es having auirmed the Compromise, it is important to examine how the candidates 0f each stand in relation to it. The four candidates nominated by the two parties have all answered : and lest I might be 1 ' r charged with being hypocritical, I will give the : , ?, m re:auoii .0 epiauorras 01 inc par- ties, of'all four. The fact we wish to know is, whether the candidates approve and will main tain the principles declared by their respective parties. Every party has the right to demand this of its candidates, and without it no party man is under the least obligations to sustain his party's nominee. General Pierce says : "I accept the nomination upon the platform adopted by the convention, not because it is ex pected of me as a candidate, but because the principles it embraces command' the approba- 0f my judgment." That is explicit. That is what General Scott ought to have'done, especially as he was afraid of disgusting the people by writing anything before his nomination. Laughter. Colonel King replies : "The platform, as made by the convention, meets my cordial approbation. It is national in all its parts, and I am content not only to stand upon it, but upon all occasions to defend it." That is fair, open, and honest. These candi dates stand pledged to the American people that they approve and will maintain these principles and they are both honorable men. We have from them all tho pledges we had a right to ex pect or demand, and their uuiform action an! declarations consistent therewith, before as well as after their nomination. We then come to the whigs. Mr. Graham, the caudidate for the vice presidency, says "he cordially aitroves of the declarations made in the resolutions," and that "should the people of the United States give their sanction to the nominations of the Baltimore Convention, so far as I shall be invested with authority, a faith ful adherence to those .doctrines may be expec ted." That is equally full, and explicit, and satisfactory. These men did not intend to con ceal their opinions. They did not take counsel of the enemies to their principles, and their lan guage needs no Expounding. But what does Gen. Scott say,? He said he trrote no letters to secure the nomination. That is true. Ka. he declined to write any because it was conformable to the policy, cf those who sought to ic it to him. Laughter. Tbey wanted silena, and he gave it to them. Wc demanded to enow his opinions upon those great questions of public policy which we intended to make parSx.-r vu.it to all others in the election. We could not get them. My friend from Ten nessee, Mr. Gentry, and from Florida, Mr. Caeeto., and, according to Scott's own state ment, aiany others, were clamorous before the nomination, demanding to know whathe thought about them what were his opinions upon them did he approve them and would he carry them out in good faith. They heard no voice from him, sir; and it could not be brought out, an 1 there was but one reason why it was not got. We were told that when he should obtain the nomination we should receive it. lie would not write letters to secure the nomination, but it would be fair, open sailing when it should be made. How has he answered those questions ? "I accept the nomination, with the resolutions annexed." I take it cum onerc. Laughter. Thi-rc is not a single line iu the whole letter which expresses his approval of the Compro mise, or commits him to its faithful maintenance. It does not require much writing for a man to say whether he likes the platform or whether he would carry out its principles or not. But he took a great deal of writing to get around it. lie s;-ys, I accept it. There is no declara tion here that it should be the policy of Lis a l. ministration ; but, on the contrary, he says he docs not intend ''to reduce This Tiartvl ly- prescription to exact conformity to" hisprin- L A - -I ciples, whatever they are. Mr. CAMPBELL, of Ohio, (interrupting.) I desire to know of thz gentleman from Georgia, Mr. Toomes, inasmuch as he is assailing the letter of General Scott, whether he did not cend a telegraphic despatch to the State of Georgia caljng upon his friends taere to oppose the nom- present me a system which would solve it wise ination before that letter of General Scott ap- ! ly and well. But Gen. Scott has not done so. peared ? ) lie has no undertaken to' grapple with it. He Mr. TCOME3. Certainly, sir; I did. Laughter. My dear sir, I ttouIJ give vou my whola history if I had time. Laughter. I do not carry my principles in my pocket. I shall shun n question whenever 1 am asked, vjsu.v'" iwivuv 11 1 uiu tAwr..ji and no man has ever to hunt for my position in j politics. I deem it to be the high duty of every public man tj declare his sentiments, and my rule has been, that whoever is a voter Las a right to my opinions, and he can get them when- ever it suits his convenience. This 13 what I tenance nor tolerate any sedition, disorder, fac understand to be the true principles of repres- j tion, or resistance to the law or the Union, on entative government, and I would scorn to rep- any pretext, in any part of the land." The resent men upon this floor, or in the highest State of Georgia has solemnly declared that she office in the world, by a concealment of my opin- ions upon questions of public policy. I did not intend to support General Scott in any event. I thiukhim unfit for the office un der any circumstances, and dangerous to the country, in the hichest degree, in Lis rreseut ' position. I am now offering additional reasons, ' t''a- an Webster both affirm her right in ! furnished by himself, why he should not be elec- j onc of tliCse contingencies to resort to those ex ; ted to the office which he seeks. The reluctant trenic measures. General Scott does not seem members cf the convention r.re told. -Y0U ; to be able to discriminate between lawless mobs, went to Baltimore, and vou are bound bv the ! Christiana mnrdcrs, and the action of the sovcr- action of the convention. " Butlv. ish to show them that this is not a sound principle of party action, and that you have the right to demand of your candidate to stand up to general rules cf honor and good faith. Whenever parties de clare their principles, they have a right to have a candidate to carry them out. They have a right to know whether the candidate approves of those principles or not. If he ssj s he will net, then nobody is bound by the nomination. Those are my opinions of party nominations. General Scott has not done it. He has not declared his approbation of these principles in any part of this letter; but, on the contrary, he has declared that principles shall make no dif ference when it comes to the important business of becoming the almoner of fifty millions of dol lars of the public money. It was very easy for him to say whether or not he agreed with those principles and approv ed of them, as Fierce, and King, and Graham have done. He is painfully obscure where it was Lis duty to be plain, but sufficiently certain where obscurity would at least have been pru dent. His additions to the platform are cer tainly not to my taste. Ho has put two addi tional planks to it. Laughter. That is a lit tle singular, as his friends seemed so much op posed to this kind of political structure. Gen. Scott is for enlarging and making the platform broad enough, not only for you and me, and this country, but also to cover Lis own past errors, and get himself out of his past committals. It became neossary to him to rc-write a part of his own political history. He Lad certain com mittals to the tenets of an exploded party. His former opinions of our naturalization laws were not agreeable to a large class of our countrymen. He therefore proposes to alter them. He pro poses to give "to all foreigners the right of citi zenship who shall faithfully serve, in time of war, one year on board of our public ships or in our land forces, regulur or volunteer, on their receiving an honorable discharge." I am opposed to that positiou, and I think he will find the great body of the people aro oppo sed to it. I do not think he cares much about it, and probably if he Lad not been trammelled by part errors we might probably never have had the suggestion. This new mode of Link in" citizens is liable to many and grave objections. There is a great question lying under it, and 1 wish I had time to consider it in all its bear ings before this Ifoi'se and before tLe American people. The polT -j of this government, from its beginning, has been, that the ag of this repub lic hhull be upheld and defended by American citizens those who are citizens either by birth or naturalization and none others ; and I hope never to see the day when it will become neces sary for this mighty nation to have that flag de fended by any body else. When you need mer cenaries, owing you no allegiance, to fight your battles, you will be ready for a master, and you will soon find one. When you arc not willing to defend yourselves, either from internal com motions or foreign aggressions when you trust that flag to other hands than those of citizens, either native-born or fully adopted you betray the cause of liberty and your country. I want the ffr.g of my country to be defended enly by those who are entitled to demand and receive her protection. Thc-y are able to do it, they are willing to do it ; and I trust they ever will be both able and willing. Let those w ho come among us assume the obligations of citizenship voluntarily, according to the constitution and laws ; then they have an interest in that flag, and have the right to join in its defence. It is a bad plan, if it agreed with the constitution cf your country, which is a matter of more than j doubt. 1 I have but a few moments more, and I shall ', not be able to review all of this letter of Gentr- S &! S-3". j ! He has another plank in relation to the public ! j Lands. Well, this is a vexed question. It is a j question I should have been gratified to have ; I seen any great statesman attempt to solve to ' j wants it solved, so as to bci:et actual settlers. of ! irj-arc nobody upou tue fuce of the earth. That is 6afe, but, it is not definite. I do not know whether I agree with him or cot. I can not tell until he shall have submitted some plan fur effecting his object. There is auother clause in General Scott's let ter especially offensive to my own and the decla red opinions of the great body of the people of ! Georgia. He says: "I should neither coun i holds the Union secondary in importance "to the rights and principles it was designed to per petuate," and has pointed out certain principles settled by the Compromise, for the reversal of which she "will and ought to resist, even (as a last resort) to a disruption ofrihe Union." Mr. eigTi States of this Union. lie seems not to have studied to advantage the republican fath ers. These opinions of Gen. Scott make it still more important to know what he thinks of these great pi;ff 'pies settled by the Compromise, and whether h will abide by and maintain them. Wc can get. aeither the one nor the other from him. He ttl'.s us. "Finally, for my strict ad herence to the principles of the whig party, &c, I can offer r.o other pleJgc or guarantee than the 1: nown incidents of a Ic'itg life now under going the severest examination." Laughter. That life has been a long and brilliant one. No man now living cn this continent, certainly, has added more to the military reputation of thss country than Gen. Scott. I Lave been very wil ling to award to him freely tLis justice. That he is a great general nobody denies, but he has shown no aptitudes for civil life. And we have had too recent experience that a great military genius may be wholly without fitness for civil life, to repeat the experiment. Laughter. Let us be admonished by our late almost fatal experience. General Scott's brilliant military history gives me no. clue to his opinions upon these controverted questions of public policy. His civil history is to be found chiefly iu half a dozen letters, and they offer me no satisfactory pledge for Lis future. General Scott would have acted wisely and well not to have invited scrutiny into his past opinions on slavery. There are no known inci dents iu that life which commends itself upon these great questions to the approbation of a southern man. I'oint to it. He is a faithful soldier and an honerable roan, I know. That he will do what ho says, I believe. I object that he has not said -what we require ; that he has not piedged hiuibclf to stand by and firmly carry out these great principles, and, therefore, as I believe him to be true to Lis own princi ples, and honest in holding them. I will not trust him where it is not clear that they agree with mine. My hour, I am informed, is near its termina tion ; and 1 shall, therefore, be compelled to pass by his Canada letter, to which I intended to make reference. I intended to examine Ida likiDson letter, and to show that every one of the incidents of that history to which he Las so unwisely invited the scrutiny of the people i against Lim, and speaks trumpet tongud -gainst his being trusted upon this great ques tion. I do not know of a single sentiment,ever uttered by Gen. Scott in relation to the princi ples settled by the Compromise, or in relation to the subjec of slavery in general, thrt ii i unison with l.f own or the convictionf f t th slaveholding Sties of th:s Unieu. ll 7 J .id stood upon these great questions wfcere h ought to have stood, there would have been no need for his friend, the senator from New York, Mr. Sewakd, attempting to relieve him by letter to the public from 6omewhat of the odium of his alliance. But he did not stand there. For more than a year Gen. Scott has been tha known candidate of the free-soil wiDg of th whig party. Even his friends in the South co operations with them to strangle all acknowl edgement of the Compromise in Congress or th convention. They finally gave him the nomina tion ; to them he must look for his election ; to them he must mainly look, if elected, for aid and advice in carrying on the government. His election would reopen the sectional strife which we have just terminated, and imperil all that was gained to the country by the Adjust ment. Under these circumstances he can never receive my support. Let the compromise men everywhere Ur.ion'v.higs in the North and th South rally once more ia support of their prin ciples. Let them make an cpeu and manly re-fcisti-uee to the election -f General Scott; use all Icccrable ways and means to defeat him. If we succeed, we shall Lave "conquered peace" a lasting, enduring pes .-; and what ever may be the result, we shall have done our duty to ourselves, our principles, and our coon-trv. Xattoiialities lit Politic. Another protest against the attempt to bring Irishmen as a body into politics, distinctly from the general community of the citizens, is con tained in the Democratic liifle, edited by an Irishman : "There is an effort being made by the leaders of tho whig party (says the Democratic RifleJ to gain over the support cf the Irish democra cy. So far as these efforts are made on the ground of rnixcirLE, we do not object : but w do object to this sycophantic demagoguery prac tised by the federal leaders towards the Irish men of the country. "We have a deep interest in the welfare of the Irishmen and Ireland ; we have suffered for our devotion, and feel proud of it ; we shall ever defend either when assailed by merciless, heartless politicians ; and we ask no furthtr recompense than to see Irishmen united and free. We do n-.it believe that Irishmen are so devoid cf natural sense as to be the weathercock for either of the political parties of the day. Irishmen know full well where their natural rights are best maintained, and we mistake the character of our race if they can be divided in. their political support. : Some few of the whig papers are lavishing their encomiums upon th Irish character : 'The serpent covers with its slir. e the object it intends to devour I "Let Irishmen select either of the parties, taking principles for their guide, and then show to the world that they know their righU and w ill exercise them." Murder. A shocking outrage occurred at Tittsburg on Monday last, the particulars of which aro thu given in the American of that city. "It seems that David Jewell, jr., and Jame Cochran hai been for some time trying to pick a quarrel with Samuel Mitchell a. peaceable, quiet laboring man, at that time employed as a deck hand on board of one of tho steamboats. Mitchell appears to have been sober, and trying to get out of the way of the ether two, who fol lowed him up Water street, about o o'clock ia the'evening, when onc of them knocked him down, and Jewell stabbed him with a large knifa striking him three different times to the heart The poor man, as may be supposed, fell dead when this demon, Jewell, cut him across the thigh with the knife nearly severing the flesh. Jewell, who is a desperate and well known rowdy, with Cochran, have been secured, and at this writing undergoing an examination be fore the Mayor. Mitchell resided in Allegheny City, where he has left a family to mourn tii untimely and cruel taking off." g5""The New YorkJ Herald, an independant paper, after noticing the signs of the times relat ing to the Presidency, saysj: "It is evident, from these indications of public opinion, both, frdm the newspapers and the assemblies of the people, that the nomination of Gen. Scott has by no means been received, in the different sect ions of the country,with the same unanimity tm the nomination of Gen.rierce by the Democra cy." A bill authorising the President of the United States to call into service five hundred Texan Rangers for2the protection of the Ilio Grand frontier has been repoted from the Committ on Military Affairs in the Senate, with. & report earnestly pressing the passage of the bill. 1