THE JOtRNAL. 1 [CORRECT PRINCIPLES..-S['rPORTED By TRUTH.] HUNTINGDON, TUESDAY, Al; UST 0, 1818, Democratic Whig Nominations. • FOR PRESIDENT : GEN. ZACHARY TAYLOR FOR VICE PRESIDENT: MILLARD FILLMORE. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER : NER MIDDLESWARTII 0 .7- V. B. PALMER, Esq. is oar anther ised agent for reeeiring aelredisements and arebseeiptions in the cities of Philadelphia, Bal timore and Net' York, and for collecting and reeeipting for the same. Taylor State Convention We are requested by the Chairman of the County Committee to state, that it Will be the duty of the coming Whig County Convention, to choose a delegate to represent this county in the State Convention, to assemble in Harrisburg on the 31st Mat, for the purpose of nominating a Whig candidate for Governor. Delegate Meetings. Taylor men, do not neglect the delegate meet ings on Saturday next. It is important that these primary meetings should be largely atten ded. Turn out, then, one and all, and elect honest, intelligent delegates, who will faithfully carry out the wishes of the People in the forma tion of a County Ticket. We are requested to say that the Taylor men of this borough will meet at the House of A. CA RNION, on Saturday evening next, at early candle lighting, for the purpose of choosing two delegates to the County Convention. Let all attend. COUNTY MEETING. We hope to see a liberal turn out of our friends from the different townships of this county, at the Taylor County Meeting, to be held on WED NESDAY EVENING of the first week of the Court. The County Ticket will then be formed, and it will become the duty of the Taylor men of the county to make preparations to open the cam paign with spirit. Let there be then a general Taylor rutty. " SPONTANEOI:B COMBUSTION VI The Rough and Ready Club of this borough held a meeting on Saturday evening last, at Car mon's. And, notwithstanding no efforts had I been made to get out the People, it was one of the largest and best town meetings of the sea son. Had we been so disposed, we could have turned out as large a procession as the Cass men, who had all the forces they could muster in a week from the surrounding country. After organizing, and a song by the Glee Club, A. W. Benedict, Esq. was called for and made one of his very happiest efforts, which was'listened to with great attention. Our friend Was. T. Wm- SON, a returned volunteer was then loudly call ed for, and responded in a brief speech filled with the Most effective kind of " Grape."— Among other things, Mr. W. alluded to General Cass' Clothing Bill, which took one dollar a month out of the pockets of the volunteers, and the effect produced on the army when the news of the passage of that bill reached it. He said he had seen Gen. Cass at San Angel, for the first time in his life, and that when there he was hung up by the soldiers, cut down, kicked around the town, and then burnt. And what was his surprise, on returning to the United• States, to find that the fat man of Michigan was again on his feet and the candidate of the .Locofoco party for the Presidency ! ! This allusion to the hang ing of Gen. Cass in effigy, by the volunteers, produced great merriment among the Rough and Ready boys, and a general scatterment of the Cassites present—all rememberingthat the Gloite had pronounced the whole story a " Whig Lie." DAVID BLniii, Esq. was next called for, and ap peared on the stand. It would be doing Mr. B. injustice to attempt, from memory, to give even an abstract of his truly able and effective speech. We desire, however, to endorse every word he said, and to say that he presented the position of the friends of Gen. Taylor, in the true light. All were highly delighted with his remarks.— At the conclusion of Mr. Blair's speech, the meeting adjourned with three times three for old ZACK, FILLMORE and MIDDLES 'WARM. The songs and spirit-stirring mar tial music, still retaining a large crowd, Major RAYMOND and TItON. TODITI:NYER were success ively called and responded in brief but spirited addresses. The crowd then dispersed in good order, and fine spirits. The work goes bravely OD. NORTH CAROLLNA, 0. K. The Baltimore Sun received last evening, brings us the gratifying intelligence that the Whigs of North Carolina have elected their Governor and a majority of the Legislature. This is the first gun of the campaign. Its re• port is highly cheering. We will be able to give particulars in our next. MR. WEBST. .13 0.. Tairt.oa.—The N. Y. Commercial is "authorized to say that in no particular, throughout the coming canvass, will Mr. Webster be found wanting to the Whig party, or to the expression of its will, put forth at Philadelphia in the month of June." The same paper adds, that Mr. W's “opinion of Gen. Taylor has often been expressed : he regards him us an upright, intelligent and honest man, a true Whig, and determined if elected President, to put forth his best efforts for the good of the country." ATTORNEY GENERAL-We learn that the Hon. JAMES Coop., has accepted the appointment of Attorney General, tendered him by Governor JOHNISTON. We are pleased to hear this, as no better selection could have been made. The ap pointment le exceedingly popular with the peo ple. Grand Cain Failure ! From the vast preparations made, and the eon- I stant boasting of the Cass men, we looked for nothing short of a great demonstration at Mill Creek on Saturday afternoon lest. Ever since the Pole Raising at Alexandria, nothing has been heard in our streets but the note of prepa ration for (as they said) " the mighty Cass Me , :ting at Mill Creek." Large hand bills were sent to all quarters of the county. Riders were sent out in every direction to stir out the faith ful, and every body employed on the canal, far and near, were drummed up and brought M Hun tingdon on State Flats, to swell the crowd. Af ter all this drilling, and after getting every Cass man in the borough into their ranks, old and young, and all the office holders from a Judge of the Court down to the mud-boss, they num , bered, as they passed the last point on their way to the boat, 132. We give the highest count. Well, as the sequel will show, it was very necessary for them to take their whole force from this place. A very short time be fore the hour appointed for the meeting, a Tay lor man passed Col. Buchanan's, where the meeting was to be held, and inquired of a Cass man from this place where the meeting was I— " 0 !" replied he, "it is coming . down the canal !!" Yes, and if it had not " come down the canal," there would have been no meeting 1 at Mill Creek on Saturday last, notwithstand ing the announcement in the Globe that the Cass men " would be at Mill Creek IN ALL THEIR STRENGTH !!" Well, neighbor, if they were there "in all their strength," We have only to say, huzza for Old ZACK in Brady township ! In the evenine, about dusk, almost the entire Mill Creek Cass meeting returned to Hunting don, and after parading the streets with about the same number they started with, but in very /ow spirit*, adjourned at Cools'. A few more such Cass demonstrations would not be unpleasant to us. COWARDLY. [Correspondence of the Journal.] MILL CREEK, Aug. 7, 1818. Mr. CLARK desire to inform you and your numerous readers of the magnanimon., conduct of the Cass men who assembled in this place 011 Saturday afternoon last. It. is well known that the Taylor men had been invited to attend the meeting and hear what would be said; indeed, they were pressed to do so. Accordingly, one friend of old Zack accepted the invitation and went. And when there imprudently remarked, (in reply to something that was said) that "Gen. Taylor was a better man than Cass." Where upon, four or five Cass men fell upon him, and beat and kicked him in a most shameful manner. Several others evinced a disposition to take a hand, but there was not room for any more to get at one man I ~O , shame, where is thy blush I" Such conduct is only worthy the skulk ing Guerillas of Mexico. It is disgraceful to men claiming to be American freemen. I sup pose, however, the Cassites, on this occasion, acted on the principle a certain man did who I whipped his wife—with sixty or seventy to back them, they were able to do it." Yours, &c. • • • The Effect. One person who attended the Casa meeting at Mill Creek on Saturday last, came home utterly disgusted with the proceedings, attended the Taylor meeting in the evening, and is now a firm friend of old Rough and Ready. This fact has produced great sensation in the Cass ranks here. By the way of consolation we can inform them, that we know of two more, residing in Brady township, upon whom a like effect was produced. At this rate, we hope the Cass men may hold meetings in every township in the county. Another Bare-Faced Falsehood ! The Huntingdon Globe of last week porpe trates the following [From the Globe.] No Go.—At the Federal County meeting at Hollidaysburg, on Tuesday evening last, Captain LEOSEIt, of the Reading Artillerists who was on his return from Mexico and who happened to be present, was called on to make a speech. He rose and stated, that in 1810 he was a Whig and supported Harrison, and in 1844 he was a Whig and exerted all his influence for the election of Henry Clay; "but" said the gallant Captain, as I am a Whig no longer." Of course the Feds let the brave Captain off without any further desire to hear him." The above is a sheer fabrication from begin ning to end. Capt. Lo.su did not say one word attributed to him by the Globe. On the other hand, he entertained the Taylor Meeting at Hollidaysburg in a speech highly eulogistic of both Taylor and Scott, and is a warm friend of Gen. Taylor for the Presidency. We say this on the authority of every gentleman from this place who heard the gallant Captain's speech. A cause that requires such bare-faced lying to sustain it, must be in a truly desperate condi tion. Another Taylor Bally in Brady ! The Rough and Ready Club of Brady town ship held a meeting at the Roxberry School House on Saturday evening last. Upwards of seventy persons were present, several of whom have heretofore acted with the Locofoco party. Capt. Joux W. WATSON of Mill Creek, and Col. A. K. CORNYN, of this place, addressed the meeting. Their speeches were listened to with attention, and the sentiments expressed highly approved by all. The gallant Taylor men of Brady are doing up their business in the right spirit. A good report from them in October and November, may be expected. Free Soil Meeting. A meeting of those friendly to the Free Soil movement was held in the Court House on Fri day evening last. A long string of resolutions were read, and the following gentlemen appoin ted delegates to the Buffalo Convention, viz : John Dougherty, Jacob Hoffman, Samuel Mifflin, Isaac Fisher and Major Samuel Caldwell. 07 - We learn that an immense Taylor Meet ing was held at Brown's Mills, Mifflin county, on Saturday last. 7 Hon. Daniel Webster is very ill at his residence, Marshfield, Mass., and too feeble to undertake a journey to Washington. o.f" Both Houses of Congress have resolved to adjourn sine die on the 1 lth of August, next Monday. [From the Daily News.] LOCOFOCOISM vs. THE MEXICAN CHURCH. We have demonstrated the bitter hostility of James K. Polk, tcivilird the peace/ acid unity of the Church of Mexico, as exhibited in the letter of instructions of the War Department to Gen. Taylor, under date July oth, 1816. No Loco. foco paper, so far as our knowledge extends, has ever dared to utter one syllable of condemna tion against the vile doctrines. put forth in the infamous " letter" referred to. In addition to the hostility manifested by Polk and his Cabinent ministers against the church of Mexico, we shall proceed to quote additional evidence of the malignant hostility of the Loco foco party, against the rights and property of the Mexican church. The " Fincastle Demo crat," a prominent Polk and Cass paper, pub lished in Virginia during the spring of 1817, openly and boldly advocated the plunder of the churches in Mexico, as the following paragraph will show: "That we seize the silver and gold stow ed in the Mexican churches, as on INDEM NITY for the expenses of the war. There is more than enough there—it is our's by conquest. Where it is, it is doing no part of the human family or God any service, and it would be religiously right to return out of these treasures the mo ney which their act has forced our Gov ernment to expend.—Fincastle Demo crat. The Washington Union, edited by Ritchie, the recognized organ of James K. Polk and Lewis Cass, openly and impudently advised the seizure and sequestration of the revemies of the Mexi can Church, a measure directly designed and ea:ciliated to reduce the Catholic Clergy of Mexico to absolute poverty. The 4g Union," in recommending the seizure of the revenues of the Church, said : " It is not as a religious body, but as an engine of State, that the Catholics of Mexico look upon us with a hostile eye. It is for their own special politi cal purposes—to retain their vast pos sessions which impoverish the nation— to sustain their own hierarchy, which lords it . over the people—to preserve their power, which weighs down the rest of the community into the slough of ig norance and slavery—that they are soli citous and active. It is a .zeal for the mammon of unrighteousness—not for the welfare of souls—which inspires and animates the Catholics of ✓Mexico. "In this aspect of the case, it may be come a matter of grave consideration, if the church continues to oppose a peace, and furnish the fuel of war, whether the immense revenues of the church in Mexico shall be left untouched—whether they shall be suffered to remain at the disposal of the enemy, and be applied to sustain the war against us—whether justice anti policy do not equally dictate that they should at least be SQUES TERED during the continuance of the war as a legitimate means of cutting off the enemy's seppli4."—Wo.shington Union. The « Union" not only advised the seizure of the revenues of the Church, but this organ of Locofocoism falsely charged the Clergy of Mex ico with keeping the people down in the "slough of ignorance and slavery," than which a baser slander was never uttered. The Compromise Bill to establish territorial governments in Oregon, New Mexico, and California, in such a way as to shuffle the responsibility of determining the limits of Slavery from the shoulders of the Peo ple's representatives, and place it in the hands of the Judiciary, was laid on the table in the House by a vote of 112 to 97. This kills the Bill. On Wednesday last the House of Represen tatives passed the Oregon territorial bill, with the Wilmot Proviso in it, by a vote of 120 to 71. A motion to strike out the Anti-Slavery clause had previously failed—the vote being 88 to 111. Riot in Allegheny City. A serious riot has broken out in Allegheny City, on account of some difficulty between the Factory operatives and their employers. The Daily News, under date of August 4, says “The mob spirit in Allegheny city has bro ken out in renewed vigor. A great mob assem bled about one of the principal factories, and several men attempted to make speeches. The police interfered and prevented them from ad dressing the mob. Six of the factory girls who were most violent in these riotous demonstra tions, and four of the principal men in the mob were arrested this evening. There is a great excitement in the city on the subject. A FALSEHOOD NAILED. MR. C LARK : Sir—ln the “linntingdon Globe" of August Ist, 1848, I find the following: " HEAR IT IRISHMEN AND GERMANS." " You were called idle and ignorant . 1 foreigners because you oppose Gen. "Taylor and his Native atnerican allies "by one of the most prominent Federal "speakers, Mr. A. W. Benedict, on Sat urday evening last." If the character of that paper were as well known abroad as at home, a denial would be un necessary. Printers and editors, us a general rule, are worthy of belief; I have therefore deemed a denial of the above, due to the credit attached to the profession: supposing that all might not know this print to be an exceptien to the general rule. Every word in regard to what I Bald Is not only untrue, but I believe, wilfully and intentionally false. Nor do I believe that it will be asserted or believed by one honest man, of either party who knows me. Yours, &c. A. W. BENEDICT. Aug. 9, 1818. Tug MARKETS. -There is very little doing in the produce markets. No change ig prices since our last. Gen. Taylor's Letter Accepting the Whig Nomination. BATON Rouse, July 13th, 1818. HON. J. M. MoontmeAn, Greensboro', Guilford County, N. C. Sir :—I had the honor to receive your corn- munication of June 10th, announcing that the Whig Convention, which assembled at Philadel phia on the 7th of that month, and of which you were the presiding officer, has nominated me for the office of President of the United States. Looking to the composition of the Convention and its numerous and patriotic constituents, I feel duly grateful for the honor bestowed upon me for the distinguished confidence implied in my nomination to the highest office in the gift ' of the American people. I cordially accept that nomination, but with the sincere distrust of my fitness to fulfil the duties of an office which demands for its exer cise the most exalted abilities and patriotism, and which has been rendered illustrious by the, greatest names in our history; but should the selection of the Whig Convention be confirmed by the people, I shall endeavor to discharge the new duties then devolving upon me so as to meet the expectations of my fellow citizens, and pre serve undiminished the prosperity and reputa tion of our common country. I have the honor to remain, with the highest respect, your obedient servant. Z. TAYLOR. A PROCLAMATION. WHEREAS, on the 26th day of July, A. D. 1818, WILLIAM F. JoHNSToN, df the county of Armstrong, Speaker of the Senate of this State, took the oath of office as Governor of this Com monwealth, in confdrmity with the provisions of the Conetitution. Now, in pursuance of the power and trust to the Governor of this Commonwealth, by the Constitution and laws granted and confided, and fat preventing all failures in the administration of justice, I, the said WILLIAM F. JOIINSTON, have deemed it expedient to issue this Procla mation, hereby confirming and continuing all appointments made, and all commissions hereto fore lawfully issued for the term or six months, from the date of these presents, unless the said appointments and commissions shall be superse ded and annulled. And Ido further direct and enjoin all Public Officers engaged in the several departments of the Government, to proceed with diligence and fidelity in the performance and execution of their respective stations, so as most effectually to promote and secure the inter est, peace and safety of the Commonwealth. Given under my hand and the Great Seal of the State at Harrisburg, this first day of August, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hun dred and. forty-eight, and of the Commonwealth the seventy-third. By thi Gore rnor. TOWNSEND HAINES, Secretary of Commonwealth THE BRITISH TARIFF OF 1846. We say the British Tariff, for it is deserving of oo other name. As another evidence of its destructive effects upon the interests of the labor ing men .of our country, we need but refer them to the following table of the exports of plain calicoes and cotton thread, from England to the United States : 10,640,215 yards in 1816 41,510,241 a as 1817 _ An increase of nearly three hundred per cent. in one short year. Under the Tariff of 1812, which made plain calicoes pay a specific duty, things were other wise, as the following figures show : 9,661,820 yards in 1811 12,412,081 u u 1815 10,610,211 c 4 « 1846 Now let .us examine the export of cotton thread : 422,462 pounds in 1818 812,107 1817. Here we have another increase of one hun dred per cent. Such was not the case under the operation of the Tariff of 1842, as the following figures show; 388,779 pounds in 1813 ' 509,069 1841 423,999 « « 1815 422,462 1816 . . These plain 'figures afford the most conclusive evidence of the fact, that the Tariff of 181'3 reg- elated the imports, prevented excesses, and kept our home labor comparatively harmless from the pauper labor of Europe. Let the laboring men examine the above table, and they will see that the British Free Trade policy of Sir Rob ert Walker has robbed them in one brief year of the labor of making 30,879,020 yards of cal ico, and of 419 0 915 pounds of thread. Let them but give the subject a fair examination, and if they do not then rouse to a sense of their true interests, and join in hurling from power those who have deceived and betrayed them, we shall be much mistaken.—Doily News. KEEP IT BEFORE TOE PEOPLE, that Hon. An drew Stewart, one of the representatives in Con gress from Pennsylvania, by documentary evi dence, read on the floor of the House, proved /hat for thirty years Cass's receipts from Gov ernment, for double salaries and extra allowan ces, amounted to more than TWENTY DOL LARS EVERY DAY, SUNDAY INCLUDED, and that the aggregate of his mere EXTRA PAY is oven SIXTY THOUSAND DOLLARS ! ! These astounding and irrefutable disclosures are making the fire fly thick and fast, and the Cass men wince in a way which shows they are driv en into close quarters. A great patriot, this Extra-Allowance Cass ! F. P. Blair. Last week we stated that Francis P. Blair had deserted the Baltimore nominations. The Locofocos have been denying the truth of the statement. We therefore give Mr. Blair's own declaration on the subject, and if the Cass men are satisfied with it, we can as sure them we are. SILVER SPRMS, July 27, 1848. To the Editor of the Evening Poet Sir—l find from an editorial article in your pa per, that a friend has drawn inferences from a letter of mine, which its context w,ill not war rant. I think that the wrong done to New York by the chicane which silenced the voice of the democracy of that state in the Baltimore Con vention, takes from the nomination of that con vention all authority save with those individual members of it who were present, and did not then renounce it. It was my intention to have abandoned it, but the circumstances to which you have adverted in your editorial notice pre vented. I became particeps criminis, by parti cipation in the proceedings to the close, and I cannot now plead my own wrong to exonerate myself. I shall vote the nomination simply upon punctilio ; my heart is with Mr. Van Bu ren and his principles, and I shall not hesitate to say of him and them what I think, not with standing my inveiglement in the Baltimore Con vention. Your a, F. P. BLAIR, Wayne Guards—Reception at New. Naturalized Citizens Beware. ton Hamilton. The Washington correspondent of the Balti- Onjuesday evening last, Capt. WlCA:nrv, more Patriot says, Limit. MaosoN and twelve members of the cum- " pony, and a number of citizens of Williamsburg, The six lives of Gen. Cass, issued, some for the South, showing him to be arrived in our town on their way to Newton , a great Southren man, utterly opposed Ito the Wil trot Proviso, and others for and A w. ve e re c h i n it d lit t i i s ie ias ig tic e a n l . l u y re re a c f eiv ta m k l i b n : the North, concealing with studied care his Anti-Wilmotism, are getting so men by the hand, and it gave us great pleasure t jt h hia e em g ci a ilt E e n n tC . Captain and a number of his brave scarce that the Whigs cannot now ob i thin them for money or love! It will r to em se a e in h iii i g m w an it c h l u t s li f e o rn r a lo s o h k or in t g tim so o a N n v d el pa l. rt A ak f i t n e g r , not do for the Whigs to reprint them, to show the rascality perpetrated by the o r a e t f . res p h i n ev en io t i , is th t e o y a l g e a n, in ing we t n h t e on .w b i o . a r r ;. ! locofoco managers, for . the cry of Folt othfesiormbe as it was four years ago, when am. BLAIR, Esq. made a brief and uPPr.Pri- . only would at once be rained ag4inst , ate address to the company, on behalf of the t h em, ; citizens of Huntin g don, w hi c h was re pli e d to by , they re-printed and circulated nt the Capt. 141'Kamey in a handsome speech, and they North, Mr. Robert J. Walker's disrep then took their leave amid the c h eers o f a ll pres- ! utable pamphlet headed " 7h. South eat. On the following slay the Ladies and Gen- lin danger," which he franked all over I tlemen of Newton Hamilton gave the wirviving . the South ! members of the company a grand reception an i But the six lives - of CUSS are not all account of which we extract from a communica- the electioneering stuff gotten up here tion in the Lewistown Gazette. A large number to deceive and cheat the people. - I of people from the surrounding country were have a tract printed in German head present. led "Nativeism and Gat. Tayl o r." lo " d . _ • r- itn ... ~ The streets were atldrned with beautiful am informed that 50,0u0 copies have , arches of flowers and evergreen, and the fronts been printed for distribution anon the of the houses brilliant with pretty faces of ladies g German people. It is written with dressed in their holiday smiles and neatest op- . rairel. About eleven o'clock clock a large procession much ingenuity and tact. It says the of both sexes Was formed, under the direction Germans are honest and industrious— of Got. JosSeu Bow., Chief Marshall, and that they love their adopted country and her institutions, and are ready to fight and die for them—that the Ger with drums beating and banners waving, they marched through the principle streets, amidst the cheers and acclamations of the croWd. The , whole assemblage then met before the residence man and Irish 'migrants fought under of Dr. CHARLES BOWER, where a spacious Gen. Taylor and won his victories for stand, covered with an awning and beautifully him—and that they do not profess to decorated with flowers, evergreen, engravings, ane sweet girls, was erected for the speakers parties of the day. But that Generals belong to either of the great political and officers of the meeting. Our friend, ',n As PoicriArrnw.tir, was chosen President, and Taylor has lent himself to the Native Americans, headed by n Jew named Levin, and has been nominated by took the chair, when T. P. CA M EDELL, Esq., of Huntingdon, WEIS introduced, .d entertained the audience with a speech replete with senti ments of merit and patriotism. A. K. CORN ' Y N them for President--that they proscribe Esq., was then called for and responded in an all foreigners—all honest Dutchman , address, doing honor to the head and heart of and Gen. Taylor accepts their nomi: that Gentleman. The remarks of Col. C. were nation—and that he is their candidate unusually eloquent, and were listened to with , the utmost attention, except when interrupted —and therefore the German people by the cheers of the multitude. Ile paid a beau- cannot support him, but will feel bound tiful tribute to the memory of the gallant Capt. ' to oppose and vote 'against him. CA MIWELL, and from more than one eye the 1 , tear of sorrow stole silently down during his i And this is the work not of the liiiii address. Then followed Gen. A. P. Wit.sox eat Germans, but of artful locofoco in that gentleman's usual happy and eloquent demagogues in this city!" style. Gen. W. was succeeded by Jonx Wii,- I LIA)ISON, Esq., who began. by paying a hand- I It has frequently been asserted, and is by He Writes his own Letters. some compliment to the beauty and patriotism of the ladies, and finished by an eloquent pan- some believed, that the letters and despatches egyric on the spirit of American Liberty. of Gen. Taylor during the Mexican War were written by his private' secretary, Maj. Blks. S. D. ELLIOT, of Lewistown, then. made a Ihe following, stated to. be the substance al a few brief and Pertinent remarks on the occasion, , , when the. thanks of the Wayne Guards were re- , turned by Capt. M'K. inn and Lieut. Kiesox recent conversation between' Maj. Bliss and a in appropriate terms. ' . . respectable citizen of Massachusetts, fufght to The procession then reformed,' the Ladies in front, and proceeded to the table erected. far ; settle the question to universal satisfaction: the occasion in front of the Hotel of that prince " Well, major Bliss, they say that of good fellows, C. CAI7IIIILI Nrr, mine host of General (Taylor) don't write his own the Inn at Newton. Hire was furnished in letters, but that you du it for him." profusion every delicacy di the season, in the w : now . B.__ ~I suppose I h ums . a , most elegant and sumptuous style, and then it . J about that ns any other mon, and was that was evinced the good tae of all. The much dinner was partakM of by about four hundred ; all I can say is, that every despatch du persons, and not one but will not unite in away- ring the campaign has been written by cling to the committee of arrangement, and to the General himself—the most 1 ventiir- Mr. Caughling, all the credit so jiistlyilne them ,to do was to dot nn ior cross at, and _ for their elegant repast and unremitting exertion, to make all comfortable.' ea 11 should like to see the man that would 1. TAYLOR MEN, AROUSE! The Pa. Inquirer, in a late number holds the I following language : A friend who. has returned from the interior of this State, says that the Lo cofocos are making strenuous exertions to behnlf of the Baltimore notninations. Agents are travelling through the vari- • ous counties, disseminating dtscourn ging rumors among the Whigs and scat- ; tering the Northern edition of the Life • of Cass. Everywhere he has seen evi dences of a movement, supported by I large expenditures of money. The Lo- I coforo executive committee at Wash ington is actively engaged in franking pamphlets and speeches throughout the State. • The time has now come for action.— Our Whig friends must go to work. It needs but activity, mid a general organ ization, to carry Pennsylvania by twen ty thousand majority for Taylor and Fillmore. A thorough and spirited can vass will kindle nn enthusiasm for Gen. Taylor in the old Keystone such as has never been exhibited in any political struggle. TN most momentous results depend upon the Presidential election. It will be the test struggle between the con servative doctrines of the Whig party, and the destructive principles of the opposition. Neither time nor expense must be calculated in such a contest.— The active working men of the party must look to future honors, as indemni fication for services and sacrifices, just ly entitling them to the gratitude of ev ery true hearted Whig. Cass at Home. The editor of the Adrian Watchtower, a Lo cofoco paper, thus speaks of the rebellion that has broken out among the Locofocos of Wash tenaw and Lenawee counties, Michigan. The fellow is evidently alarmed at the numerous and important changes that are taking place : "In looking over the call for a pub lic meeting,' we see the names of those who not only advised, and expressed a wish for the nomination of Gen. Cass, but as delegates in the convention, ac tually instructed our representatives in the National Convention, to use all hon orable means to secure thnt result. Fur ther, we see the names of those who united with others of General Caps' friends in getting up, four weeks ago, a meeting to ratify the Baltimore nom inations, and to organize a "Young Men's Democratic Association." Still further, we see the names of those who made speeches at that meeting, and who called upon their friends to stand firm and unyielding in the present con test." Does this look much like Michipti going for Cuss ? Aare to do snore." Blair County Awake. We are glad to perceive that the Taylor men of Blair county are up and doing in theliood work of aiding the election of Honest Rough and Ready. The Register thus speaks of the Coun ty meeting held on Tuesday evening of Court Week The Ratification meeting at the Court House on Tuesday evening of last week was one of the largest and most enthu siastic political meetings ever held in Blair county. It was, indeed, a glori ous affair. The PEOPLE—Vie hard fisted honest yeomanry of- the country, had come up to join in the response in such numbers and such spirit as gave unmis 'takenble evidence that they were awake to the importance of the contest, and thnt their hearts were warm for OLD ZACHARY AND THE WHIG CAUSE. The speeches on the occasion were all capital efforts ' and went home to Lo ! cofocoisin as hot shot into the locker. The Resolutions, it will be seen, breathe the right spirit, and place the Whigs of Blair in right position. Affidavits of the Hen Roost Robbers. The Imeofoeo papers and among them the Washington Union, are publishing the affidavits of two men, said to have been volunteers from Ohio, proving Gen. Taylor to be profane. The story is that two fellows stole some chickens nt n ranchero and Old Zack swore at them, and said " they were thieves, who had come to Mexico to steal and not to fight." Their own statement proves that Gen. Taylor judg ed them rightly. Men, says the Bos. ton Atlas, who would sign such an affi eavit, would rob hen roosts. We have no doubt these atlleavits will be published in the Huntingdon Globe, with an ad ditional one, proving that old LACK gets drunk. FOREIGN NEWS. The Philadelphia papers of last evening bring us one weeks later news from Europe, brought by the Steamship America. The news is not highly important. Public attention seemed to be united to Ire land, and every post was expected to bring in telligence of the commencement of the ultimate struggle. Arrests confirmed to be made on the charge of sedition, and among others Messrs. Varian, Bourke, Lane, and John O'Brien. Clubs had been formed in Liverpool to pre vent troops being sent to Ireland. A Government steamer had been sent to Wat erford, with a body of two hundred of the coun ty Dublin constabulary, and Government had chartered a steamer from the City of Dublin Company to convey troops from Belfast toCork. M. Marres, has been elected President of the National Assembly of France. The Corn Market had become more firm, and an improvement had set in which it was hoped would be permanent. Indian Corn being scarce had advanced to 35 a 37s per qr. The accounts from Manchester wear an im proved complexion.