Dtmpfrut nitbJmtinrl RicniHD wotts." :t:t:::::;:::nxxaT o. drvixb - WHITE DKYHTK, Editata'aiid Freprietors. ; ; EEEIJSSTOtJ. : , ; ,'wKbNKSbAY MORNING::?:::;:AUGUST 32. . FOB CANAL COMMISSION EB. HON.: ARNOLD PLU".ER, Of VETfANGO COUNTY. FOR ASSFJf EL V, ' " TJ EOIM3 E N. SM ITU, of Johnstow n. FOB sheriff,. , JAMES MY KRS. of Ebenshurg.' it ISAAC TEETER, of Conemaugh. . CUARLES D. MUKKAY,of Cambria. - FOB AUI'lTOK. v. , - ..." ROBERT. McCOMBIE, of, Carroll. . FOB FOOB norSB DIRECTOR, - JACOB FR0N1IEISER, of Johnstown. ft ':- -jcj-Geo. A. Crofut. No. 73 South Fourth Street, i above Walnut, -".Philadelphia, is our . authorized agent to rocej re subscriptions a. id ad vertisenieuts for tliU paper. - -,.-' , ' "". : " , : Hotice- : . ' . The members of the Democratic County Com .J hiittee, are requested to meet at the Court House, 'in the borough of Ebensburg, on Tuesday the 4 th day-of September, at 2 o'clock P. M. A general attendance is requested, business of im ; portance will be transacted. - C. D. MURRAY, Chairman. ; 1 , Conferee Meeting. - 'We , would suggest that the Conferees for Bed ford, Cambria and Fulton, meet in Bedford, ou i Thursday, Sept. 13th; it would be inconvenient for the Conferees from Cambria to attend before - that time. The Cambria county court begins on - Monday Sept. 3d, and continues two weeks. What says the Bedford Gazette and Fulton Democrat. ; Q. D. Prentice. Read tie scathing notice of this infamous ftfoundre!, copied from the Celt. We think that Mr. Prentice it .damned to everlasting fame. . We know an editor or two not a thousand miles , from Lere who deserve a similar gibbetting. .. J-",.- Whig Conyention. . ;Ihc proceedings of the .Whig Convention held n the lClh lost., will appear in our next. We have only room to say, that the - Whigs hold to ilieir position, and that they arc entitled to credit or their courage and honesty. . , , Anti-Xnow-Nothing Mass Meeting- ; It has been suggested to u, by men of all par ties, men of the people, who understand the pop ular sentiment in Cambria county, that a Mass : Meeting of citizens, without distinction of party, . who t are opposed to the horrors and outrages of Know-Nothingisni, be held in Ebensburg ou Tues !tUy evening of our next court, being September -4th. - ' V . . - ' " '-' We think that the suggestion ought to be car ried out. If there is an anti-Know-Nothing coun ty in Pennsylvania, it certainly is Cambria coun ty. We say then, let the real people of the coun ty come together on Tuesday September 4th, and Jet there go forth an expression of opinion, thai must have its influence in the State one that will bo worthy of our county and people. We hope " that this matter will be agitated during the next iweek. We may have more to say in relation to (tin our next issue. Louisville Massacres- - Our exchanges still continue to be filled with notices of the horrible excesses committed by the monsters calling themselves men, at the Louisville election. ? , ... . . - ' . .We have carefully examined all tho accounts, as published in the Journals of both parties; we . have paid especial attention to the remarks of the Louisville Journal," the paper published by the infamous Prentice, both before and after the elec tion, and it is our calm, deliberate conclusion, that history cannot show a transaction more disgrace ful to humanity, more calculated to stagger the faith of the Republican in tho capacity of the pco- rple for self government, more iuexcusable on every 'ground of justice and right U is evident from the articles published in the . Know-nothing organs, that there was a precon- .ecrted Arrangement, that tho Know-Nothings in Louisville should take possession of tho polls, es pecially in this strong Democratic WArdV, and "prevent the polling of the anti Know-Nothiug tote. It : is evideut from the KnoW-Nothing or gans, that this arrangemeut was carried out; there Is no doubt, and it is no dentee,- eveir by the most "black oea'rteiT jfchotf-oiuin'gi tnat the arrange ment was carried out',- not only that armed bands .of bullies took possession of. the phrces of voting and the approaches thereto, but also that tbreat- -ening notice were distributed during the week 'receding the election, among tho nataralized citJ izeus, warning them not to appear at the pofls ; tirciUeuiug personal violence in case that flify should attempt to cast their votes. ., - , ' It is further evideut from the Know-Noihing organs, that unoffending citizens were attacked without provocation ; that among others, the lion Vmi Thomassoa, who is American by birth and - who formerly represented tlie Louisville district in ;f Congress, was ktbded5 down and abused, while rrWaroring to y rerV'order arill peace.-- : i ; 5 lu the face of these facs;-and against tbeir own showing, the Kuow-Nothing Cfgans endeavor to ' s1nft4lie sin of blood guiltiuess f ronV flirt r shoulders Tonio those cf the citizens of foreign birth. They know" "that they hire been guilty iof . a JMu" wn'mg, one whiehr k sure to call down the Ven 5 Ijeance of a ju God, and they are uuoeaing in their 1 elfortk to give their own coloring to these daiiluable transactions. " ' ' ' '" Bwause'tbat, 4fter the4 uU-Kbw35tf3 ivrVrt4 beVn i'lttult ueaOiIc ttie itcilqis of pcrsonaf "viliucsbisd "tsca ' to'iiaduci they turnol in self, Hefonee upon thr assailuits and defended tlifmaelvcswe arc sorry to say-not half as' well as they could and should have done, because that ther made a stand in defcuce of their lives and rt'perty, the Know-Nothing organs at tempt to say that tlie citizen of foreign birth slied the first blood, and therefore justify the murders in cold blood, the burning of houses f unoffending citizens, the attacks upon defenceless women, the roasting of men, women and children in the burn ing houses, and all the unutterable horrors, which has made the Louisville election one of the black est pages in tlie history of the human race. Wc consider that the character of our nation is disganced forever. The single word " Louisville' will hereafter be sufficient to stop the proudest boasting of tlmse who love all that is good and glorious in America. 'The " hellish .figure of that monster, who at the Louisville election, followed the Stars and Stripes with the pitchfork on his shoulder from whose prongs . dripped the blood of an unofterxling citizen, will . ca&t a dark shadow upon the brightest pages of the history of a peo ple whom the world had fondly imagined to be tlie favored of Heaven.' ' A thunderbolt' from an unclouded skyconld not have inspired'morv amazement than 'the Louisville massacre.v Had any man, one year ago, predicted that citizens would be massacred in Louisville or in any other town in tho .Union, for no other rea son, than an attempt to exercise their lawful right of suffrage, he would have been piuiMmd alj : and-madman. Were any man now to predict that the polls in any district in Pennsylvania would be disgraced by similar scenes, his predic tion would not meet with much' credence. But yet' are we "safe even inj our own county, where there is a decided anti-Know-Nothing majority ? We have evidence before our eyes, that there are individuals among us who justify the Louisville massacre, in spite of reason -and truth ; have we any evidence that they would not be found back ing the men who might be guilty of similar crimes here? Let any unprejudiced man read the arti cles which have appeared in the two Know-Nothing organs published in this county during the last week, and he must acknowledge that there is a corrupt state of feeling in this county that there are men hero who are desperate and reckless enough to hesitate at nothing. , . The " AllcgbanianV article is a piece of soph istry that is worthy of the infamous Prentice. He pays but a poor compliment to the Intelligence of his readers, however, if he thinks that they can not see through the thin veil he attempts to throw over his Know-Nothing feat ores. It would be far more to his credit if he woidd come out bold ly, and strike good manly blows for the doctrines which in his heart he cherishes. He can deceive nobody with his pretensions to immaculate whig gery, The Whig party of Cambria couuty stand boldly in opposition to Know-Nothingism- and the '. AHeghanian" editor can very easily be con victed of shirking and dodging. - I ' His Know-Nothing contemporary at the south ern end of the county, of course talks in a differ ent tone. There can be no mistaking his hyena how1, and there can be no mistaking the course that he would pursue, had he opportunity. , We intend to take notes of the course of these gentlemen. ' : . . . .. .,. ,-,. ."-. 1 To Volunteer Candidates.; '.The cards of some gentlemen who are volnntecr caudidates fvr different offices, have been handed to us for publication. One was last week inadvert ently published, that of Mr. Luckett, who it seems is a volunteer candidate for Assembly. , . ; ,h-We must respectfully decline to publish any of these notices. .Thowe gentlemen wliosc cards were accompanied by money to pay for their insertion are hereby informed that tho funds await their orders. !' 'v We can state n few words our reasons for thus acting. Wc inteud to devote all our energies to the election of the Democratic tickets we publish that ticket and none other we intend to defend that ticket and none other. . That ticket was fair ly made, as much so as any ticket that ever , was made in this county. So far as we can see there is but one question, and that is Democracy or Know- Nothingism, and we think that all personal feel ing, all petty ambition should be "merged in tht: momentous issue. A Any Democrat who, since the Louisville massacre, ran coolly endeavor to defeat the ticket selected by bis party, and thus bring about the triumph of Know-Npthingism, is" in our view a mutineer, and no better than a Know Nothing ; all such individuals can receive no aid and comfort, countenance or encouragement from us. 1 : .. - ; -' Those gentlemen, who belonging to neither of the acknowledged ' political organizations of the county come juking out as Independent candidates, cannot come any of their gum garnet over us. Their high sounding names' of Ittdependent Amer ican &e., can not charm- us.' We know exactly where to put them they are Know-Nothings, and nothing else, and wc will avoid them as we would the Pestilence. . - , : Another, Fledge. : Below will be found Mr. M'Combie's Pledge. We expect to liave tlie Pledges of the rest of the Candidates and Conferees next week. , We will then have soma , remarks to make in relation to our ticket. ' n V-1 w.t . .u.yt ; ' llavihjt been nominated bv the Deirtocratic 'County Convention as a candidate for Auditor, In compliance with a resolution adopted by said Convention, I do hereby- pledge myself , tq the County Committee, that I have not been," am not now, and do not intend to become a member of any "secret political organizat ion, whether known by the name of Anow-Aotinngs or tuat ot any other ; and tlit I wfll not -vote for, or support any person- who is known or even suspected, of being a member of such secret political organization. Further, that I have not been the advocate of tlie election of Siinon Cameron .to the United States Senate, since the publication lof the Kirk pat rick letter," and I give ray aubesion to the reso lutions adopted by the Convention. : ; - ROBERT McC03fBl - ""'... - -, ' - -J Latest from lyxnisrilleV :f- -'4 The knowing is the latest - from LouiviHe; it is heart acLeing. Tlie blood of these slaughtered iuhorent crie aloud for vengeance. """ A Hunt Offering to ReHm'oH.Tl.e LoniitriUt, 7?t4 the 9th ingtV; Staffs that about fRir ' o-'cloik on tbe previous eveninz a woman and terrcliildreti were found in the ruina of Qu inn's bowse, on Main street, iu that city, burned into ciudcrs. s ; , . -. j; " Yellow Feteb at Nrw Orleans. Tore were two buud"red and ninety-one deaths friTni -yellow fvyer in Sew Orleans during the week '(&: -Cot Freslon.' .. - We feel it to be our duty to make some obser rations vpon the course pursue 1 by. Col. Preston, the.: anti-Know-Nothing candMate in the Louis, ville district, upon the day of Oe election. ' I , AVe believe it to be tlie case, that. CoL Preston, and many of his Democratic friends, when they found that armed bands of ruffians had taken pos session of the polls, advised their friends to abstain from voting, i Their, motives undoubtedly were good : they believed that by so doing they would prevent the effusion of blood. They undoubtedly believed that they were acting the part of Chris tians and Patriots, w The result shows how sadly they were mistaken, and we say it with a bitter pang, we believe that the action of Col. Preston and his friend contributed much to bring about the very state of things they most deprecated, i Wo believeand we have the recent example of Cincinnati to sustain us, that had the anti-Know-Nothings made the proper exertion to bring out their force to poll every vote, that the bullies and ruffians would have cowed and have left the field to freemen who knew their rights, and were de termined to maintain them. Assassins are Dever men of true courage: the men who slaughtered and burned unoffending men, women and children, would not haveced the music ; the fellow with the pitchfork wou. not for teB seconds hive stood his ground aJainsta determined man, upon his feet and ready to defend himself. . ' This is a country oi tree institutions ; mere is no armed force to protect them ; their defence is i is committed to the mass of tlie citizens. - Should those institutions be assailed,, it is the right, it is the duty of every citizen to sustain and defend them. It is the design of our country to protect every citizen alike : in return she expects of them to give their time, their energies, and if heed be, their lives to protect and sustain her. Of all our institutions, the right of suffrage, is beyond ques tion, the most sacred and the most valuable. . It is the one which most peculiarly constitutes us the nation that we are. - It is this right of every citi zen to have an uncontrolled, equal voice in the selection of our rulers that give us our proudest distinction as Americans. 1 ' : - -- Yet it was upon this right that the Louisville Know-Nothings made, by their own showing, a direct and open attack. " They announced before hand their intention to prevent a portion of thei" fellow citizens, from exercising a right conceded to them by the laws of our common country. ,' This intention was carried out to the letter. : From the display of force which thi-y made, the anti Know Nothings were induced to think that to avoid bloodshed, they had better absent : themselves from the polls. ' ' -' -' ' ' Here, we" think; was the wrong and two min utes reflection should have convinced Col. Preston and his friemls of it. Is our country or its insti tutions iu danger from enemies whether foreign or domestic., every citizen must rally .to the rescue ; the honor, the safety of the country is in the keep ing of every citizen ; he belongs to her for the time being ; (he has the right to dispose of -his every thought and action, until the danger is past. ''; No matter how great the apparent odds against them, , it was the bounden, duty of the genuino friends of American; institutions, , in . Louisville, when sacrilegious hands were laid upon this very palladium of our liberties, to fight to the last man, in defence of it 9 they should never have stopped to count numbers ; it was the duty of every true American to commence the fight upon the spot; it was his duty to spill the last drop of his blood in - defence of the freedom of the ballot box, and the purity of American institutions. life is but a poor boon when compared with the loss of the privileges which make life glorious and valuable to the - American citizen. Take away from him that equality which constitutes him a sovereign, reduce him to the level of the slave, would not death in its most terrific form be a thousand times more welcome ? Better that the lives of all Amer ican citizens be taken away, than that American liberty be lost. . r . ' ' ; . " ' Tliereforo we think that the F res ton men in Louisville were wrong, In the vain hope of pre venting the waste of human life, they sacrificed all that life is worth living for. , . , The men of the Revolution, under a full and solemn conviction of the awful responsibility which had devolved upon them, upon a far slighter pre text, took one of the most momentous steps ever taken by mortal men. A tyrannical government proposed to levy a trifling tax, ""but without the consent of those to be taxed being first had and obtained. The men of the- Revolution knew how to resist the beginnings of eviL They had sagaci ty And courage far beyond the men of the time the cloud was but small, but it was darkening, and in time the storm wouldoverwhelm the whole land. They knew that the right to take ton pence implied the right to take thousands they knew that if a Tyrant had the right to dispose at will, of their substance, they must of necessity become his slaves ; they resolved upon resistance ; but a handful of colonists; they bid defiance to the most powerful empire on the globe; they exposed their beloved land to the horrors of an eight years war against all odds they calmly resolved to sacrifice . their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred hon or," rather than submit to what were but trifling exactions compared to (hose required by the Lou isville Know-Nofhings. : Whither has the spirit of the Revolution fled ? Tlie men of the Revolution resisted unto the death the payment of a trifling tax, unjustly levied. The; men of Louisville were asked to give up the price less blessing of 'personal liberty ; of the right of man to govern himself; and they yielded.',. Oh shame! shame! This alone was wanting to com plete the deep and damning disgrace of the Louis- villa election. ' . . v. . So far as Col. Freston'did not desire an election at the cost of human life, so far wc give him credit. But there were other things to be considered, lie and" his friends should not have forgotten that it was their first and last duty to defend the institu tions of theif country which were openly attacked They should not have forgotten that the right of suffrage had been won By the men of the Revolu tion thni it was sanctified by their blood ; it was their most sacred legacy to us, and we are account able for the preservation and transmLBHicn of it. To 'this trust they did not prove faithful ; they gave Jup at tbftr first summons, that which they should have defended with their lives; better that Whwr- rtver should haTe ran blood, and their city beeu ? educed to an ash lieap; than they should live to v jtnes aiiu connive at this out) age upon Amer u.an Cbcff': Henry Eajer... . Below will be found the card of this gentleman declining the nomination for County Commission er tendered to lam by the late Democratic Con vention. - .v . -'. i We re'irot that Mr. Refunds himself obliecd to decline the nomination. " It was a compliment that he deserved, from his unwavering Democra cy and Patriotism. Being a sound practical man, fcne well acquainted with the wants and withes of the Pwple, he would have made an excellent offi cer. We commend his letter' to our DemnrmtiA Brethren in the county it breathes the right spirit. vaatrman oj me jJemoeraltc Uounty Com mittee. r. Dear Sir. Having received information that I have received the nomination fur 4he office of County Commissioner, by tlie Democrtic County" Convention, assembled at Ebensburg. on the 31st ult, I beg leave to state that while I feel g-.ateful to the part jr for the confidence they repose in me, still I feel it a duty that I owe to- myself to de cline accepting tlie, nomination. .The" principles of the party I stil) hold sacred, and will always be found, in the front rank, battling for Tree and religious liberty, and " opposed to every form of Tyranny over the mind of man." You will there fore please have the vacancy filled by Rome good and true Democrat. HENRY RAGER. August 17, 1855. . , Prevektios Betteb tua a CtTtEDr. Key- scr. Wholesale Druggist, of 1 40 Wood Street, in inviting attention to hia Pectoral Syrup, does not r.tn-a wl ; :h wuvk. OT .i.. u tiw lungs, or heal over a half wasted lung ? but in the incipiency of the disease it will allay inflamma tion,' cure the " cough, and effectually arrest the progress of the. disease.: One or two spoonsful of this medicine has often cured a violent cough of several weeks duration. What has beeu done can be done again. Cure your cough with half a dol lar by biiying a pottle of Pectoral Syrup, for sale at James al'Dermil's. v ' . - Toowi Ache. Persons ara not mnrnl1v that Dr. Keyser's Tooth Ache remedy, for sale at James McDermitt s, In this place .will stop nn metliately an aching tooth. Whoever tries it will be convinced. .- . , . The LonisTille Inquiry. WILL PRENTICE BE PROSECUTED? The ' LouitrUie Journal of, Miday, August Cth, the day of the pretended election arid inten ted massacre, contained the following sentences : " The Sag-nichts of Louisville will think there is a terrible srorm ofvthunder and lightiing to night. Tlie flashes of the Know-Notniiig trans, parencies will be the lightning, and the shouts the thunder. " ; ' " People living at the north of us will be likely to think, to night, that the Aurora Borcalis has got around to the south, -r -:i Perhaps Sam mar get on a mrfie to night. At any rate, he will cut up a thine.' " This LouiviUe Journal is edited by George D. Prentice, a well-known and responsible citizen. He is still in Louisville, and the law surely can be made to reach him, as chief accomplice in in citing to a riot, the like of which in barbarity. has never before disgraced this continent.' 'The sound of that riot will go through the earth. Its horrid details will bo familiar in a month over all Europe, and in three months, they w ill bo read with execration, in Australia. and farther India. Every enemy of republicanism will repeat the tale, every hater of social wrong will treasure it up in his memory, every American abroad will hang bis head for shame when the name of Louis ville is mentioned. ' And for this cruel, cold blooded, open resort to murder and arson, who is to blame ? For this national shame, who is to blame ? We answer primarily and principally, George D. rreniice, the publisher of the programme of bloodshed, which we have taken from bis Journal and set at the head of this column. " .... ; V .: .. Never talk to us of the river rowdies, always to bo found primed and loaded for any outrage along the levees of the Ohio. " Never speak to us of those nurseries of arson, the voluntary fire core panics. ' Indict not so much the Mayor, who refused to take precautions, and the city oftiCSals, who headed the pillage and slaughter. 1 Who was their orean 1 their oracle ? their prompter ? Who' is their defender now, as he was their accompiice throughout ? A man of education, and of pretcn ted respectability. Thattnau. upon whom we invoke the sword of justice, if there be such ;A thing as justice left in the land, is tlie Editor of tho IximwQl Jottrnal.' ; - If anything could deepen tlie homicidal guilti ness of this man, it is the total absence of human feeling with which he chronicles the results of his own incendiary appeals," and the diabolical assurance with which he would make . its victims the authors of their own destruction. A viler web of special pleading, a more satanic show of seif-comphtcency than he has exhibited in his re port upon his own work, has never reached the public eye in any community. We ak the press of the Uni-m will they longer suffer their profession to be degraded by acknowl edging fraternity with this oracle of arson, this organ of mid-day, murder ? ' We ask the officers of the law in Kentucky, what steps, if any, have been taken to hold the Editor who suggested the riot in advance, accountable for its consequeuces ? We ask our exchanges,., every where, abroad as welt "as at home, to mark the answer, and if George D. Prentice escapes tlie proper penalty of his malice afore-thought, to join us in holding up his name to everlasting infamy.- ' i s: . - This man has been all his life striving for fame,' and he shall have it. While the Ohio runs by Louisville, the events he has wrought there will never be forgotten. His puling poetry, and his pinckbeok prose will go down like tho bubble and the mud, but the cruel massacre of August 6th 1855, will be borno in perpetual remem brance.- It will be seen afar off, from every point of the compass, a pyramid of fire and blood., and traced along its base, and crowning its flickering summit, . will stand the name: and the effigy of Gkorgk D. Prektice. ' ' On behalf of our murdered countrymen and women, we call for justico upon the arch-instiga tor of . their destruction. Ca& Kentucky still soul to be roused at a tale of massacre worse a thousand times than any its dark and bloody eround" has ever known',' in 'Indian days T If she has. Prkotick will be punished -Not as he has done' by others shall he be done by, but ac cording to the law. and the fact, . if there still is law left iu that generous State, now so degraded before the world, by the conspiracy of which he has been both head-piece and mouth-piece. Ammeau Celt. For the Democrat 8? Sentinel. v ;:;v' - . Th Exit of Bam-. . ' Wo. do not mean 'the vile and unmigated po litical scoundrel, who has recently received such a terrible drubbing at the hands of the Southern Democracy t but his namesake f an .able bodied,, civil and intelligent Newfoundland dog, the property of John lenlon Esq. of this place. Sam the dog, was the very antipodes of Sam the bigoted disciple of Ned Buntline. We know noth ing of Saw's pedigree, but presume it was respec table, lie was certain! jr well bred dog, and on that account, we have right to, iConcJude, f ha; his paternal ancestor, unlike that of the. other Sam, did not belong to that class of ncouudrels, " Who never felt the baiter draw With good opinion of the law," and who once upon a time tried the virtues of a Nashville rope. - He was never known, when all decent dogs should be in bed, to prowl around the narrow lanes and alleys of the town, to meet certain of his fellow dogs in midnight conclave and concoct a scheme f r the oppression of the balance of the town dogs, who saw fit to bay at the moonj which was regarded by the other Sam and his unchari table followers as anti-canine and decidedly vulgar, although perfectly harmless in its own way. What he did was done in broad day light and was seen of all men. Sam had a goodly hare of the milk of human kindness in his heart and if per chance a dog arrived iu town, who was not " to tlie manor born," and who had just mtide his es cape from the blood hounds and bull dogs of a neighboring village, (Sunt never vexed him ; he never called together, by a midnight howl, Tray, Blanche and Sweetheart and all the other-ctlrs of low degree, to proscribe and persecute him ; but be generouFly admitted hiiu nt th kennel tud treated him like a brother. Unlike the dark lan tern Sam, his countenance was never lit up with a benevolent smile, when he met another dog, whilst his heart was as black as Erebus and meditated treachery. His face was always the true index of his feelings ; nor was bis face a dxnible one one for tlie North and another for the South of the town, but always a genuine black faced, woolly headed dog. under all circumstances and iu all localities. The most striking contrast however between the two Sams was this. Our dog Sam manifested no hypocritical loathing and disgust for the " wild hunt after meat'" as the other Sam does for the wild hunt after office." when every person knew, that they both rolled the rpective objects of their daily pursuit under their tougues aa a sweet morsel. " But enough of the contrast. It is reduced to a fixed fact, that Sam has disap peared, much to the regret of the boys and girls of our town with whom he was a favorite, and for each of whom his broad and manly face always were a kindly greeting. Tlie manner of his ta king off" was most foul. He was enticed or rath er stolen away on la.t Monday-moruing, while his owner was attending divine service in the Catholic Church, and in' our opinion this fact alone, offers comfirmation strong as proof of Holy Writ, that the thief was a rabid Know-Nothing and was fearful that Sain might become the inno cent victim of a had example. In all civilized communities the stealing of a sheep is regarded as the meanest act that a man can perpetrate and bv comm4i consent the stealing of a dog is conceded to be the. next lowest degree in the order of base ness ; : but to. steal a dog whilst bis master is at church, sinks the act below the very zero of mean ness. We, Lope flvat the perpetrator of this vil lainous outrage, farfd. he is well known) will speedily repent of his crime and restore Sam to his afflicted owner and to his many youthful and sorrowing friends! ; . . . EREBUS. A Strong Articlei . . The article following has a particular value from the fact that it is from' a paper which has been, until within the la.s two or three weeks, the strongest and moht inflC'efitiv Know-Nothing paper in the est. It is from the Louisville Courier : . Whither Are weTksdixq? Never since the organization of this government has the political horizon been so overcast with dark and lowering clouds as at the present time. When wo compare the questions that were discussed and decided during the earliest days of the republic with those which now stir the feelings, and awaken the apprehensions of all true patriots, of whatever name or creed, we sometimes arc led to tremble for the destiny of our couutry : and were it not for the confi dence which we feel in the overruling care of a Divine Providence, we should despair of ever seeing a bolutiou of the political problems now before tlie people of the United states. The present is the first time in the history of this country in Which a political party, having any claim to nationality has dared to make a man's religious creed the test of qual ification for office ; the first time that any effort has been made of political Jesuitism, and secret cspiouare two-fold more obnoxious than that of Koine ; the first time that the 1'rotett- auts of the United States have endeavored to proscribe llomanism by political disabilities, while at the same time Uiey have engraitcu in a professed Protestant organization tho most obnoxious features of the thing they would proscribe and destroy. But, as we have faith in me intelligence oi tne masses ui iucpcpiv, and as heretofore their ' 'sober Bceond thought" has been in the main about right, so we be lieve that. the seal of their condemnation will most emphatically be placed upon tho prcsept . ?t amwiinericau, anu-xvepuoucau, pronvnpuve, and Jesuitical policy of the Know-Not hing organization. . . . r . , t - We repeat that we have confidence in the great body of the American people, and that they will ultimately stand by the principles and practices of Washington, Jefferson, Mad ison, Adams, and Jackson, to the utter dis comfiture, and overthrow of Know-Nothing-iam. as now constituted, with the herd of polit ical loafers that follow in it wake. Already do we discover signs of a most decisive reaction. In every quarter, calm and reflecting men who, at first, sympathized with what they be lieved to be the objects of the Know-nothing TtaHv. are now ramrin? themselves in ODDOsi- l a tj - ( i tion to its anti-republican principles. Patri otic men of all parties are protesting against the policy of adding the fuel of religious hale- to tne name ot political uiscord. Christian men are askms whether it ac cords with the spirit of the Master that they should link themselves with a secret, oath bound political party that is rousing all . the evil passions of human nature in order to ar rav man against man. brother against brother, and father against son. In the North and the South, in the East and the West, . the feeling is rapidly pervadiug the minds of all good men, regardless of religious creed or political party, that 'all free-born American citizens should, on no condition whatever. surrender their freedom of speech 'or their freedom of political or religious power, te any foreign prince or.potntate, on the face of tne eana. oo matin urn country, nercaiter, political Jesuitism is to be simply an impossi bility. We hope that all of our numerous readers will act with firmness and decision at the present important crisis, r and that every true man will vote upon the issue now tender ed bv Know-NothiniKui" to the DCOPle of Kentucky in accordance with the honcat dic tates of aa unbiased judgement. r. ' Kr. XTttminer'i Acceptance. :The Hon. Arnold Plumcr has addressed the fol hihg letter to the Democratic State Central G .remittee, accepting the nomination for Canal Commissioner. The letter is characteristically frank and manly : - Sl&fl : Having received the nomination for tho office of Canal Commissioner, from the Democrat ic State Convention, assembled at Harrisburg on the 4th inst., and said Convention having passed the following resolution :. -.- , .. . . ItciUveJ. That the candidates for nomination for Canal Commissioner be severally pledged that they are u'ot at the. present time, member of, or in any.way connected with; KnV secret political association ; that they wilt not, become Connected With such association, if .nominated, at any time prior to the election, nor, if elected, during their continuance in office ; and that -the nominee of the Conveutiou shall ve to tbq State Central Com mittee a pledge, which .they shall prescribe, in relation to the subject of Kaow-Nothingism, and that if be decline to take such pledge, the State Central Committee is authorized to make a nomi nation iu hU stead. - - . . It affords me pleasure hereby " to pledge myself to tlie State Central Committee, that I am not at the present time, nor have I len at any time, connected with any secret political organization or association nor will I become connected with any such association or organization at. any, time prior to the election, nor, if elected, during iny cbntin ance in office. , This pledge j given in the language of the res olution of the State Convention, and in tlie form prescribed by the State Central Committee; but X dc- ire further to state to that Committee, and through them to the voters of tlie'Coiuinon wealth, that 1 reject iu tho most unqualified terms tbo doctrines of the Know- Jfothiug party, so far a they have not been taken from, and do not coaf form to, the avowed principles of the DeuiOeratio party, they being otherwise anti-Republican ati-il auti- American. As a citizen of the Urdtcd States as a Penns.vlvauian, professing to be governed b the Constitutions of, my .country, and liberal Christian principles, I could not subscriLe and solemnly take the oath required of me assuming the office of Canal Commissioner, to support the Constitution of Pennsylvania and the Consti tution of the United States," if I had taken an oath or other obligation binding myself to reject tlie claims of any American citizen for office, ou account of his religious belief or the place of his birtfi, such tests being expressly forbidden by both of those sacred instruments. , . From the principles involved in the approach ing election. 1 deem it the mot inportant which the Democracy have been called upon to partici pate in for many years. To be the chosen stand ard bearer of the party in such a content, is a high honor, for which I shall ever be grateful. .. Truly yours, Abkolr Plcmukk. , To Jas F. Johnston, Ch'n State Central Com'ttee.' From the New Orleans Picayune, August 8 " Invasion of Mexico. The Texas mails of this morning bring us accounts of an organization of a military force withiu the United States, in aid of the revolu tion in northern Mexico. The San Antonio Ledger of the 28th contains a letter from its correspondent, dated at Leone r,iver, on the 19th of July, detailing V the movements of the auxiliary force intended for the overthrow of the Santa Anna government in Mexico, and the establishment of a government favor able to the interests of Texas. " The first part of the expedition arrived at that place on the 15th ult. , and men were said to be coming in hourly in jjreat numbers; and to be ex pee-, ted with great anxiety, on the other side of the river. The. party was expected to cross in five day.1 that is to say, about the 24th ult. They are under the aomniand of Capt. W. Ji. ifenfy, late of the Texan volunteers." Acitfnifianyine this correspondence is an ad-' dress by Capt. Henry to the people of Texas,' and a proclamation addressed to the Mexicans. . The address to the people of Texas announ ces the purpose of himself and his companions "to engage in ,tlte. revolution now existing irt the Mexican republic, to displace the far-famed Santa Anna, and establish a new republican form of government, a government more favor- able to the interests of Texas, enlightened in its views, and irt'Oi thr.jxnal intention of exten ding the proutl American' eagle over its protec tion. - " . lie appeals to Texas, in the strength of her revolutionary experience and example, and in- oites them by representing the bordering coun try of Mexico as the refuge of Indian roarau-I derp, who perpetrate crimes, robberies andj murders within Texas,, which distress "all lovers of peace and order. It is on the ac count of " peace and order" - that Mexico is invadod. . Tlie proclamation to the Mexicans, publish ed alongside of the other in tho emc paper. taits mucn more mnuiy toau uiat intenueu tor tbe Texans. . It does not have a word about extending the American eagle over Mexico, but declares the wish to see the Mexicans gov-" ern themselves. ' - - i .:- Our onlv wish, the onlr ' reward we seek fnr and with wliie.h we shall return hanov to) - - , ' ---- ous firesides, is to see re-e.-tablisbed the feder al system, and to secure treaties by which the interests of both countries shall be protected. and which will allow us to exchange our pro ducts with yours, without fear of molestation, under the protection of just and equitable tar iffs, Ihlis citing a new lmpuLsc to the prosper ity of both countries. . Nothing is stated in this paper to give u an idea ot tne number collected for this foray across the borders. . The Austin Stat Times. ftbe.'iSth ult.. un that within a few weeks more than twenty Knhaway negToc3 have passed at no great dis tance- from that city, on tneir way w .w. and adds : m . - "Hie number of negroes fleeing from their masters, and endcavaring to reach Mexico, makes it Imperiously, necessary .something should be done to arrest the evil. e can see no more feasible plan than the one long since suggested. By aiding the liberal party in Mexico, we can accomplish an arrangement which will make slavery as secure in Texas, as any State in the Union. " The New Orleans Delta regards the success of the revolution it U in Mexico as already ex tain, and witkl reference to the result, says, that next to the removal of all restrictions oa commercial intercourse between Mexico nd this country, the most important bouefit to both nationalities will be the opening of the, former to emigration from fie United States :. ' The statesmen who lead the present revo lution are thoroughly aware of the fact to which we allude, and nave pledged themselves not only"to overthrow Santa Ann himself, but his policy also. We cannot regard their suc cess, therefore, as a mere change of dynasties, to which Mexico is somewhat accustomed. We believe it will mark the opening of a new and piopitious era in the history f the conn try. - In free commercial intercourse and:xm restricted emigration we pereeive her tjnly chances ofrecwstroctfoo'.'aod on that account we sympathize 'warmly with the'caiLa of Al vaic and hia friuads. Lct'thctn'go ahead."