-v 1 y ; Jit .1 r i My TV THE BLESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE SEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALIKE UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THE RICH AND THE POOR, "NEW- SERIES. EBE NSBURG, SEPTEMBER 21, 1854. VOL. 1. IVO. 52. M P: ' 1 1 I W 1 I I T BUM 8 : THE DEMOCRAT & SENTINEL, is publish ed every Thursday morning, in Ebenshurg, Cambria Co., Pa;, at $1 50 per annum, ir paid is advance, if not $2 will be charged. ADVERTISEMENTS will be conspicuously in acrtod at the following rates, viz: square 3 insertions, Every subsequent insertion, 1 square 3 months, " 6 " ' " 1 year, " col'n " 1 year, $1 00 25 00 00 00 00 00 12 25 60 Business CarJs with one copy of the Democrat & Sentinel, per year, 5 00 EXILED. My brighter hours, like pleasant dreams, have fled. And left me here an exile, and nl ne; I hear no welce me sound of bunion tread, No voice except tl e echo of my own. lily life has pnss'd its ncon of si'nny light, And entered twilight shades: my hopes are gone; I wntch'd thni till they vanish'd fr m my sight. Like stars that fade, and mingle with the tints of dawn. And this I know, that when when on wood and void The setting sun his bright embroidery weaves, And when tl e latest of his darts of geld Is shivered m the brazen shield of leaves, And. bke kind visi ns at the step of night, Up n the thankless world the star-le:inis fall, I know that all those mingled hues of light Are onty Nature's paintings on my prison-wall. I roam at will on wooded hill and plain. Their leafy folds by gentlest browses stirr'd But I would glaf'lr give this wide domain To hear a single kindly-spoken word. I count the waves, they are my enly fritnds; All day I watch them perish on the shore : Hut I woul 1 1 se the charm their music lends To tec a form aa;n that I have seen before. Or in the wood I wait, when: with soft tread, The shades of twilight glide among ti e trees, Stirring no leaf, like spirits of the dead. Whose oi.ly voice is in the midnight breeze ; When nil the pomp and glory of the day. Like a bright p:d ice, not composed of stone, Put built by sp-rits, has I ng sunk away. And darkened its sola ruin, stays on earth alone. A melancholy joy my bosom fills When the bright moon, with perfect calm en dued, Bunds her fti!l hefeht upon the misty hills, Which are but pedestals for solitude, And stretching o'er tl.ewoill her arms of light. She. scatters llessiugs from the sky's broad dome ; For then I know that in the cheerless night The same pile moon falls light upon the hills home. From the San Francisco (Cal.) Golden Era. The Lament of the Irish Gold Hunter. BT JAMES TIFF.S, OF FirKSVILLK. I'm sitting on a rock, Mary, Away up in the mine.-., A looking out fr lump of g-ld And pockets a!l I finds But the lamps I find is precious small And very few at that. And I feel that I have Wcu, Mary, A most almighty flat ! There's lata o' changa up here, Mary, Tho' you'll find none in me; For I spent the whole that I was worth In ctming o'er the sea : And tho' they says you're roily got To take your pan and pick A po;ket full of gold. You'll find it isn't quite so thick! I bl jss you for that nice hung lecf You put into my trunk, For when I g t it 'tween my teeth I felt that I was hunk. I bless you for the sasxages That 1 isted me so long ; Tho' I'm thankful they are g me, Mary, For they smelt a little strong ! I am very dirty now, Mary, For water's hard to get Unless it rains, and then you're sure Of getting pretty wet ; For there are no umbrellas here, An 1 the rain comes thro' the roof. And then you'll catch a cold or corf Unless you're water-proof. I Hess you for the bottled beer That yon put in my head, To keep my spirits up. Though I found it "very dead.'' I bleMS you for the friendly cheese You. put into my Ix-ker, But 'twas filled chock full of And one a perfect whopper ! I'm bidding you to keep quito well - Until the time arrive That I return again to you, If I should be alive. For tho' there' bread and work for all, I would a great deal rather Die in 'Ou!d Ireland' once a week Than live here all the year ! And often n'ghts into the woods I'd go If I coidd get For here it is so awful hot I'm always in a sweat ; For, there is neither trees or shade. And I find but little gold. And so, upon the whole I think I'm regularly sold ! TRANcnNDKVTALisM Trancende ntalism is that spiritual cognoscence of psychological ir.!"i-:?i ';i:fy, connected with corscientent ad emp -.;.. oT i:K-"'!i:nb!eiit spirituality and ethe ria V.-al cojnt'oj. : which is derived from a ;rc:j-rji co o:p'.a:;ori of the inegability of! fees? :r.cc7:-T. . .:! :o divisions of the more r.:r.--? pr.-iio.".Y o? fiVivMel particles rf I invisible' a'"-::-', tiii Wco'rta nnatamieally tr.2aIUV? in the i'inran arc sola :i:jr eot;:rfto- ; tion of cr; ternol in tuu tecu a da. pMoijijjtoa v: lmed identity. trAJU r-.Mv p:-rti tus 1,1 ror. ' - ernj vis"'..',, cnTultv VrationaUo cn in- t-.'nsest inir;.:-:T-c? of l?nvriDtboti'n! tion. palerr.orJal s----t Alliiv on i coo,p Governor Bigler in Montrose One of the largest assemblages ever con vened in this county met at Montrose on Tues day, the 29th ult. At three o'clock in the afternoon the multitude convened in front of the Academy, where a platform had previous ly been prepared for the occasion. The meeting was called to order by G. A. Grow, whereupon Hon. M. G Tyler was chosen pre sident, Amherst, Carpenter, Calvin Letts, Lewis Brush, Isaac lleckhow, Thomas John son, Torrey Whitney chosen Vice Presidents, and A. J. Davis chosen Secretary The President then introduced his Excel lency, Wm. Jisrler, who spoke upon the to pics of the day in his usual able and states manlike luanner, being frequently interrupt- f ed by cheers front' the crowd; '- - V The substance of his remarks upon seme of the topics touched upon by him were as follows: "He first gav a general review of State af fairs spoke of the prosperous condition of the Commonwealth of the condition of her fi nances, showing jr.ost clearly that but for pro jects of expenditure commenced before his in duction into office, over two millions of the public debt might havo been paid within the the last three 3-ears. He declared himself unqualifiedly against the construction of any additional improvements by the State that individual enterprise and capital were equal to the accomplishment of all feasible schemes of this kind, and the people should be no longer lurthcncd with taxation for such pur poses He next alluded to the monetary con dition of the country to the bank failures whjch were daily heralded through the news papers, and said that it should not be forgot ten when he came into office,. a project was on foot tinder the auspices of his predecessor, a Whig Governor, to introduce into our State the Free or to use the classic language of the New York papers, the Wild Cat System of Banking. He showed that had this measure of Whig policy lecn adopted, Pennsylvania, and especially her commercial Metropolis, would now be the scene of these commercial disasters that even had he yielded to the de mands of the Legislature for an extension of our present sjsteni we should' now Ve in the condition of some of the surrounding States. He defined his views and the Democratic po licy on the subject generally. lie spoke of the loose S3-stem of granting corporate privi leges in practice when he came into office a S3tem which gave undue rghts and advan tages to capital, in its- relations labor that enabled the shrewd and designing to impose upon the honest and unwary. He spoke most feelingly and cloquenibj- of our Common School System. Said he had not supposed that it would ever be necessary for him to define his position on subject, or repel the accusa tion, that tlic Uenioeracy desired to make in roads upon the sj-stem, but he had mistaken, for there were those who had shown themselves bold and reckless enough to make the charge. He repelled it with feeling and manifest in dignation, and declared that he always had been, was now, and ever should be the devot ed friend of our Common School system that it should be his pride and pleasure to labor to perfect and extend it, and he looked forward to the day when the Commonwealth should be prepared to provide for public edu cation of all grades. lie next alluded to the temperance cause to the cfi'ort that had been made to turn it to political or partizan account, He said his po sition was defined in his letter to the State Temperance Conventiou. He deplored the evils of intemperance, and was willing to sanction any reasonable measure to mitigate, and if possible to exterminate the vice. But he could not pledge himself to sanction a law which he had never seen. lie could not, under the obligation of an oath, saj that a statute was just and constitutional, not one word of which he had ever seen, and for this he had been abused by certain politicians and pretended temperauce men. He said the question had been feferred to the people, and their voice would decide so far as related to the policy of the measure. Should tho3' demand the law, and the representatives j of the people put it in a constitutional torm, neither he nor his opponent wouiu nave tue moral courage to reject it. He next alluded to the strange political dogmas promulgated by the Whig, Native American and Know Nothing Mayor of Phi ladelphia to the effect that no citizen, not born in the country, should be permitted to hold office, no matter how pure his character, how strong his love of country', how valuable his services. The accident of birth was to decide the civil rights of the citizen. We shall Dot attempt to give an idea of the biting sarcasm and burning eloquence of this part of his speech. It was truly great. He ex hibited the flagrant injustice of the idea, de nounced it as immoral, as unjust, as a propo sition to disgrace our country, by breaking the faith of. our fathers as plighted in the constitution. The secret order of "Know Nothings," who embrace the doctrine of Mayor Conrad, together with another dogma that seeks to proscribe citizens from civil rights, because of their religious belief, was next reviewed and rejected as a most insidious, dangerous and unjust measure. He inquired why a secret and oath bound association was necessary in this country, and argued that if there be "political or moral evils amongst us which needs correction, that it should be a day-light business, that the end should be ac complished in a manner consistent with, the American character, that they were out spoken, and gloried in the liberty of speech and the freedom of the press. He invoked all denominations andall classes of people to .-l ew Vy t'le constitution, that thev hadaner- iim'-nt Trmp niv .i ' "-r tl- r !'::?' i -.'i viiS c;t cr class, x. larrs orsfciziiijr tac ten :'-:ie; t Wiiala and Kam-as we nxt ret'iired the Governor. He said he was well tware that this was the absorbing topic in theSor them part of the State. He said thaCoffi cially he had no connection with the subject, ft was not part of the stewardship for which he must account, that he had not covenanted with the people to organize territories,"' nor to control the action of Congress on i any questisn. He should not claim for himself any of the honor that might flow from Con-' gressional action on this or any subject, and he did not intend to bear the responsibly, for this was the work of members of Con gress and they must account for it to their constituents that he should not ask theni r the President to bear the responsibility j.iis errors of State"poliey".' II did his duty with out consulting them, and they certainly, did not and ought not to take his word as a rule of action on any subject. . He said he never had or probably never could have an3 official connection with this subject, and that it was scarcely possible that the election of a Gover vernor, whoever might succeed, could have any influence whatever upon the future polic3' of those territoiies. This much he thought it right to say as to his. official relation to the question, but as a citizen and a member of the Democratic part3", aniongst whom a diver sity of opinion exists on this subject, he should most cheerfully say what h? tho't about the question. He did not think his views of spe cial importance, for he made no pretensions to experience in national politics, that from 1848 to 1850, however, he had given the j slavery question some consideration. That the national controversy growing out of the at tempt to adjust the question of slavery in the territories acquired from Mexico, absorbed all other topics, and seemed for a while to threaten the stability of our national Union. It was at that time that .Gen Cass, the patriot and statesman, proposed the doctrine of non intervention that Congress should forbear to act on the subject of slavery in the terri tories, and that the whole question should be referred to the people accup3'ing the territo ries that such territories at the proper time should be admitted as States with or without slaver3 as the people might decide. He said that he thought this doctrine wise and safe. He became its advocate that he had so said to the people in 1851, when travelling the State as a candidate. All, however, re member that he endorsed the Compromise measures of 1850 That he was still the ad vocate of the doctrine of non-intervention that he was willing to trust the people with a question of morals or politics that he had more confidence in their judgment, patriotism and love of freedom than he had in that of Congress. Indeed, if we were to believe half that is said of the impressible character of that bod3', we should be compelled to regard it as unsafe on any question. He thought the reference of this vexed and dangerous question to the people well calculated to allay the excitement, and give greater stabili- to our national confederacy. 'And as to the extension of slavery, he did not embrace the doctrine of non-intervention, believing that it would extend the institution he be lieved just the reverse, that the tendency- would be to restrict, to drive it south of the Missouri line. That such was his estima tion of the -value of the Union, such his ideas of the blessings which it has bestow- ed on the American people such-the bless ed influence which our institutions were exercising in other parts of the world, that for one he was willing to lalxr for its pre servation, and be sacrificed, if needs be, to secure its perpetuity. Its dissolution, in his opinion, would be the most horrible calami-13- that could befal both races it would be a sad calamity to the North and the South, to the master and to the slave. He next wect on to say that had it been his business to organize the territories of Ne braska and Kansas, he shauld have done so in terms of the Compromise acts of 1850, without, disturbing the act of 1820, fixing the Missouri line. Whilst he said this he was also bound in candor to declare, that he did not believe that the policy of the territo ries would bediffereut from what it will be under the present law that he firm!y believ ed that sJaver3" could not extend there that nine-tenths of the people would decide against it that the laws of Nature were not congenial to the institution that some of the wisest opponents of the measure held this opinion. lie said he never had and never should ask to strengthen the institution of slavery that he regretted the existence of the institution as sincerity as any man, but he had .and he should maintain the clear constitutional rights of Southern as well as those of Northern States. He should not ''acknowledge the overshadowing influence talked about so much whether that influence came from ' the South or the North To the question by some one in the crowd, whether slavery did not exist in the territo ries at this time, he replied that it did not that . individual slaves might be there doing what white men directed them to do, but the institution was not there in anj- legal form, and could not be without express local law, that it had no legal existence there that the Constitution of the Tinted "States, in his opinion, did not -carry it there that Congress had not and could not establish it there that it could only derive a legal existence from the local law-making power that it was the crea ture of law that when the people of the ter ritories constituted a law-making power in the shape of a local legislature, that power, and that only could give the institution legal existancc in the territories that he sincerely believed and hoped that when that power act ed for those territories the institution would pc rejected. stum ue desirous of "oi-in? sustained '..U f.wa .T - Vi 4.r.i tit . "Vi:;.-; .a.-1 ..- .' i- I.!- . 1 I':.! ' "; Si- . 1 i 1 ii l-- Sitd urge it ta o'ojecii'1?! to all; but not so amongst members of the same party within the family each should de held responsible for his own acts.- If . Democratic members of Congress had voted wrong, that is no reason: why Democrats should strike down a Democratic Governor if he has done right. Difference on great National questions is very common. We have differed about the Tariff, and now about the Homestead bill, but that is no reason why we should reject the State administration if it be a good one. This argument might do for the Whigs, but it will not answer for the Democrals. If the Demo cratic party arc defeated, it will be claimed all over the Union as a Wnig triumph, and nothing raore or lessr"cxcrptihat the Whigs, Natives and Know-Nothings may dispute as to who produced the result. lie said he had not been an agent in the repeal of the Mis souri Compromise, and those who cast their votes for him did not therefore, by any fair construction, endorse it. He would have or ganized the territories could he have control led it, uuder the act of 1850, and not dis turbed the Missouri line.-" The Germans. The people of Pennsylvania take pride in a bold and manly avowal of principle. To be honest is a part of German character, and this class cf our citizcn3 look for it in jolitics, as well as in the common and ordinary pur suits of life. A large portiou of our citizens arc Germans, and who expects their suffrages must not screen himself behind.the nn'sterious operations of an association whose principles would strike them down without cause. We do not speak of Germans of foreign birth merely, but also those whose native ancestry date back to a period antecedent to the Revo lution Our National Independence brought with it the right of emigration the right to worship God according to the dictates of con science the right of free speech, f c., and to say that the descendant of a German "who had assisted in producing this result, would stand b3T the grave of his ancestor and declare he had fought for principles which are a curse to the. country, would be a libel apon the German character To sever the ties which bind a man to his native land to break up the associations of his early life, is not so eas3' as some imagine. . There must be some powerful iuducement, and when this induce- ment is the enjoyment of the freedom of our i institutions, it is a base traud to suppose that the3 would contribute aught to their destruc tion At this day, no one sees so well and clear ly' the value of our institutions, as he whose lot has been cast in a country less favored. Bound down by the galling yoke of tyrann3, he sighs for the freedom which we enjoy and longs to be a citizen where he can exercise the rights of a human beiug. Instances are rare of slaves released from slavery, returning again to a state of boudage. - It is so with ninet3--nine to this country, lleleased from the control of governments which mke the poor classes worse than the slaves of our own Southern States, thc3' would not willingty re turn again to that bondage, nor would thev lend their aid in so changing the institutions of this country as to destroy tire liberties of the masses. The- understand well the value of American liberty, and they would die in its defence as soon as a native born. The history of our Revolution the war of 1812 '13, and the war with Mexico proves this. The fear therefore expressed by some, of fo reign influence is unfounded, and is only made use of for the benefit of a political part 3'. We have said that the German character was that of honesty. It is true and will de mand at the hands of Mr. Pollock, the Whig, candidate for Governor, a candid avowal of his sentiments in regard to the Knew Nothing order. If they and their children are to be excluded from all participation in the offices of the Government if the Constitution of this State and the United States are to le violated to their serious injury, and to gratify the disappointment of men, whose principle is "rule or ruin," they wish to know it, in order that when the election conies, they will also know how to vote It may be a principle with Whigs to call the Germans "dumb Dutch," but a short time will tell, that they know how to treat those who join secret political associations, to put them down. Let X r. l'olloek, like an honest man, come out and tell the people what he is, and in what le believes. Nay, t if Whigs were honest, they would call their candidate out, and de mand from him au honest avowal of political sentiment. Trickery will no longer do. Such a game has been played too often. It has lost its virtue, and politicians to aueceed must be honest. Platform. The Religious Press and the Know-Nothings. We notice that several of the leading reli gious Protestant journals are "defining their positions" in relation to the new political ele ment, st3'led know-uothingism. We have already staled th t the Churchman, published in New York, had declared his ojten opposi tion to all such combinations, and now we find a communication in the New York Christian Inqnirrr, styled "a letter to the know nothings," taking similar ground, from which we make the following brief extracts : "The idea of ignoring a man's individuals ty and of giving him a badge in the society according to the accident of hut birth, was one of the mail results, as it is one of the chief props, of arrogance in man and of des potism in governments. "A man is born a Christian, and he has all the characteristics ot a Jew. , A man is horn a Jew, and he has all the impulses of the Christian. A man is born a Roman Ca- I'hv'ie. v.ho dotfots Pc r.e and JsguitLsni. . A uuru a i'rue.-.iauf, 'uiu .taio'is v;aturo cl ' ii. to t'." f.t u ' '.. u.? rci A I f-a;i ? ' in M'.uopu witii ail t.e H-ii::i;ts Oi . a r-pubiieau. A man is born in America with proclivities to exclusiveuets and aristo cracies. ; "Don't you see 3-our short-sightedness? Vou cannot judgi men from what they pro fess to be. You must judge them from what they are. If 30U wage war against all who are corrupt, whether born here or abroad, whether Catholic or Protestant, yn will suc ceed, because there is justice and common sense in your war. From the moment you descend from that comprehensiv j platform, and single out one or the other accidents of birth, as your special enemy. -ou will not only fail in 3'our endeavar to reform, but j'ou uuiy uu in 3-uur euueavar 10 reionu, oui vou will destroy the republic which you wUh" to save, by destroving the principles of religious liberty and political equality upon which it sav liberty and political equality is tounded. " You argue further, that they cannot bear allegiance to two powers to the Pope of Rome and the constitution of the United States. The Animal principle of Gavazzi has mate- j rialized your understanding Your senses j are fascinated by the gesticulations of the i Italian, and your reason does not pay homage : to the genius of the American. Your reason ! does not pay homage to the innumerable J agencies of enlightenment which the pulpit, the school-house, the pro s, the forum, the whole atmosphere of American life provide ! for defeat ing the most tortuobs machinations ! of the Jesuit, as well as the most God-defying j ravages of the infidel. Like all that is di vine, those influences are silent, and you -do not see how they work. But, like all that is ungod 3', resentment and intolerance are bois terous and noisy, and thus have for champions all those whose minds's c-es ' are shut, who are blind, and who do not hear unless tbc3' hear a noise. " The talk about the oath of allegiance to the Pope is sheer nonsense. If the old man himself had the slightest notion of the validi ty of that oath, the first thing he would have done when he fled in 1849 would have been to call to his assistance all his subjects, or, if they had cared a straw about him, they would have rushed e 7na.sne to Rome to his rescue. You libel 3-our American intellectuality 03' repeating the trash of Italian quack-eloquence. "Uf course, popular passion is blind al ways. Mobs follow those who are most suc cessful Crowds of needy politicians who now declaim against you will soon crouch at 3-our feet. But there is a God in Heaven ; and as sure as He, in His coodness. never deviates from His divine principles, and sends everr day his sun to illuminate this wicked world, lest darkness might make wickeduess more wicked, just as sure will those with Christ in their heart andWashington in their mind never deviate from their divinely in spired principles ; and long hence, when 3-ou and our efforts are forgotten history will speak with emotion of the national men who, b3' waging war against all corrupting influen ces, and by shunning invidious distinction created by accident of birth, brought the county- back to the practical Christianity of our Saviour, and to the dignified and modest virtues of the republican Washington " James Pollock a Know-Nothing. There is scarcely a Democratic pajter in the State that does not charge James Pollock with being a member of the Know-Xothing order. We have said we would give the most ineontestible proof of this allegation, if he would dare deny the charge, and have waited for some time for that denial. It has not vet been made. Tha leading Whig papers of this city have kept a studied silence on the subject. Why do they not speak out? We are anxious to serve up for thus piebald candidate one of the nicest jolit ical dishes he has ever tasted ; but before do ing this we desire to have him in a position to convict him of a most gross moral perjury. We have been told from various quarters that the intention of Pollock is to deny this charge in each count3' a few dajs before the election, so as to prevent the possibility of getting the proof before the people. Against such an attempt we caution our friends Pollock has now been charged with this crime against the Constitution, more than six weeks. He has had more than ample time to den3' it. Again we-sa3' to him, deny the charge, if it is not true. We are aware that the rules of the order permit a member to de ny his membership and count it no falsehood. Still we sa3' deny it but do it in time to per mit the evidence of the falsehood to be dis seminated. An eleventh hour denial will not do. It will not satisfy the voters of this State. . - Farms Burning Up. The pine swamp west of Hud on has been burning for several weeks, and within a few days lias done an immense amount damage. Whole meadows to the amount of several hun dred acres have burnt out four feet deep, and will of course, when the swamp fids up w ith waiter, become a lake. The fire would com mence eating uuder, till whole acres were un dermined, when a vent would occur, through w hich the flames would rush out for many feet in height, and the whole ground, timber and all would be consumed. Large trees would fall in a mass, and be burned to ashes. President Pierce, of the Hudson college, was in the vi cinity when he saw some trees apparently on solid ground, but a short distance from him, commence trumbling, when he started to run They continued to fall behind him. and so near was he at one time to the danger, that the limbs of a falling tree brushed him. The in habitants arc in the utmost consternation, not knowing where or when this terrible state of things will end. Like calamities never before visited this county, and unless we soon have rain, the situation of many neighborho(ds will ho worse tliaa if tiiey lived ia tho lui lst of c.u -t:-. uakt-ri. Gou gr-ut rjlu iaay mxu couu. Oicuvciukd Pluiu Dcslr-r. iTsh'ii ran bcxj. il not their expenu ir kne vb-d-e. 0UB, PARTY. The Democratic part3" has been from, tho begining, and must always be, the irty of equal rights. The broad doctrine of equality is the foundation ou which Democrac3' rests. How is it at the present crisis? What party except the . Democratic at this time upho!ds j the cause of equal rights and impartial pro- lection, and bids defiance to the secret as well j as open enemies of the Constitution? Not the j Whigs not the AboHtiouists-sliJl less tho j Natives All these parties or factions are cog j inzant of an organization among us, a grand oath-bound cc i)hpirc3' to disfranchise and proscribe a iarg portion of oar fellow-citizens i ., j Pfosc'r,be.i i Yt.ause i tU.e,r ,?nce they will not abjure the religion of stors. or were not born within cer tain lines of latitude ahd longitude And do these factious denounce it? Do the3 oppose it! Not one of them. On the contrary, thcy are at this moment engaged in abetting the villany, and bargaining with the conspirators for their votes and influence. If we cculd sup pose for a moment the success at the polls of these combiued factions we should find them proscribing ever3- Democrat within their reach in cver' possiy le manner, socially as well as politieallv. Every adopted citizen, whether native born cr not, no matter though he had always been an adherent to the Whig partv would be as completely, deprived of all share in the enacting of laws, and the administra tion of public affairs, 11s if he were a tuljcct of the most absolute Depotism on earth It is duty of every true republican to reflect for himself, and to urge upon his neighbor a consideration of this matter. If the cause of corruption, ignorance and bigotry is to tri umph? if the Democratic banner is to be al lowed to be struck down, and the principle of republican equality torn from" the Constitu tion, or even tampered with without reLuke from the people, no man living, can forsee the consequences? but it is clear that civil war might readily be one of them. The American people will fight, if need be, in defence of the equal and inalienable rights of man. Yes, it might, in the contingency suppored, cost the present generation as severe a struggle to re store liberty as it did our ancestors originally to establish it. Let every good citizen remember that in the Democratic parry talo!ie is safety. In it alone is hope. The anti-Democratic party, composed as it at present, of every discordant faction, is entirely corrupt, and cannot be trusted Devyou want proof of this? Look at the Whigs. Mark their conduct toward Mr. Chandler, a man who has efficiently served them in various ways for a quarter of a cen tury. It so happens that Mr Chandler, some years since, become a Catholic, or married a lady who belonged to that commuuion. This, we venture to presume, he had a perfect ri ht to do; and for this the bigoted "Know-Nothing'' conspirators have decided that he shall not again be nominated for Congress; and the Whig delegates did not dare to pive him a single vote. Their masters, the "Know-Nothings," cracked the whip, and they crouched in obedience. What base corruption or cow ardice, or both, was this on the part of the Wh:gs! The Democratic part- has never been guil ty of such baseness. It neither buys nor sells. It shows its color openly, and always stand b3' them; and it is the only party in our coun try that docs so. The Democratic majority is unquestionably a large majority of the Ameri can people. When united, it is always vieto ious; but the danger His in division or supi iieness. Let divisions, if they exist, be heal ed, and supineness be shaken off. It is, at this crisis of political affairs, the especial duty of every man to give the Democratic ticket a hearty support. Let all minor consideration be set aside The Democratic part3' can alwa-s be relied upoa in times of danger It is the nation's right hand in war. and her refuge of safety in peace. Democrats! contem j lcte the his tory of the past. Think of the Alien and Sedition Laws, and the immortal Jeffesson of the Uuited States Bank, and the glorious Jackson. Then think of the proscriptive, vulgar "Know-Nothing" tyrants, and resolve as one man to crush them into nothingness But we must cast off all lethargy, and pre pare in earnest for the conflict. Remember the momentous consequences that are stake-d upon the contest, and doubt not the victory. Be resolved; above all, be united ! We shall then plaen our Leol up ,n the head of the foul I monster, religious intolerance ; crush in the egg of an ignorant and vulgar aristocrac3', ami scatter to the winds one of the most odi ous conspiracies that ever disgrace! a free country, fallen f" Awake ! arise ! or bo forever Before a Jury. We should liko to kuow what kind of a chance'a Catholic will have before an Alleghe ny county Know-Nothing jur3" hereafter The ' oath they take in their dens w ill prevent their doing justice to their neighbors. What a couditiou for honest men to contemplate? .. , l'ittsbunj ChronuU.- The Sultan and his Warriors. In a French paper we read : Some one lately asked a squadron of Turkish lancers if they duly received their rations? "Yes," they answered. "Are vou contented ?" "s." "What food do yea get?" "Bread." "And what elsa V "Nothing but bread the Sultau cannot do an3"tu;ug more for us." . : "Ar.rvou paid ?" "Y?s.'" "How much''" T ?ntv-cijLt piastres (is. 8d.) per li)C:i;..;. "Arj "oa p: M rrgul-.rty V tVe huff ha i ivjpuy for nine months, tha i?a!'c. is 0: e' ' ;.- ui ' Wit r. r i-.j.J tv-a-jl-:g than thw patriotic ref ci&iaai ?