floe . ; in that spirit we hold that slatery should be protected, where it exists un der the regis of the Constitution, but ought not be carried .by us where it nev er existed. But, I repeat, am nitit pre pared to call that a political question, and I deny that you can call either this or the opposite doctriimmere Whig doc trine. No man has a.right to say that the Wilmot proviso is a Whig principle, or that its opposite is a Whig principle. We repudiate the question altogether as a political question ; and I say that, whenever the members of the great Taylor Republican party, which I hold at this moment to be the great majority of the country, shall descend so low as to make a geographical party out of this Wilmot proviso, with a view to Presi dent-making or getting offices and pow er in the country, they will ;use my res pect, and I think that of every honest man. An attempt is now being made to force this upon us as a party question tty -the extreme partizans of the North and the South. But neither the one side or the other of the question forms any part of our platform ; and I hope there will be patriotism enough among the American people to keep the question apart from party politics forever. For myself, I am free to say that, although I voted in obedience to the request of the State I in part represent, yet so dear is the Union of these States to me and mine, that if this become a geographi cal question, 1 shall resort to the remedy adopted by the men of Delaware in an other crisis and in other days—l shall art in the spirit of the men who made the Constitution, and compromise the question if I can, on terms equally fair and honorable, both for the North and the South. . . Mr. FOOTE.-150 I understand the sen atoras saying that he is not prepared to inform us wiether Gen. Taylor would veto the Wilmot proviso, as every Whig • print in New England has said he would? Mr. CLAYTON.—The letter of General Taylor speaks for itself, and the gentle man from Mississippi, has precisely the , same means that I or the Whigs of New. England have of forming an opinion up-' on this subject. If Gen. Taylor will write to me and tell me what he intend@ to do, I will be able to inform the g ticman. But for me to intrude my in i vidual opinions on the Senator, the • lic, or this august body, would be The Senator will please now in his rn take the stand, and inform me what' Gen. Cass will do with respect to the Wilmot proviso. Mr FOOTE.—No doubt he will veto it. He has announced his opinion that the Wilmot proviso is unconstitutional, and , declared that lie will exercise the veto power in all cases of unconstitutional laws. Mr. CLAYTON. --If the Senator is t ight, then Gen. Cass stands before the coun try as a sectional candidate—the head of a geographical party. I hope Gen. Taylor . will decline that honor. My hope is that he will never lend his great name• to either of these geographical parties, but retain the power to settle the question without taking part with eititer. To judge of the propriety of General Taylor's position, let us inquire how the Baltimore convention met this question. They positively refused to adopt any resolution denouncing the Wilmot pro viso. Other democrats, besides the Barnburners, when a resolution to repu diate the principle contained in it was offered, threatened to dissolve the party; the resolution was stiPed, and the con vention silent. The party expressed no opinion on the dangerous subject—they dared not do it. The . platform they adopted did not recognize this gograph ical question as a party question, and this is in precise accordance with Gen. Taylor's position. The anti-proviso platform of Gen. Cass was manufactur ed by himself, and he is welcome to the position of chief of one of those geo graphical factions, with which Washing ton warned every American to have no connexion. Among the proceedings of the Balti more convention I observe that Messrs. Yancey, of Alabama, McGehee, of Flor ida, and Commander, of South Carolina, reported the following resolution : .Re,•oteed, That the doctrine of non-interfer ence with the rights of property of any portion of the people of this country, be it in the States or in the Territories, by any others than the parties interested in them, is the true Republi can doctrine recognized by this body." Mr. Yancey desiredthis principle to be incorporated in the Baltimore plat form. Now will the Senator from Mis sissippi tell me whether Gen. Cass con curred in that report or not 1 Mr. FooTE.---I have no knowledge on the subject. I have have stated what must be evident to the Senator, that Gen. Cass discussed the Wilmot provi so in every aspect of it, in the plainest manner, and my impression is that his views will be sustained by the democra cy in every part of the country. As to Mr. Yancey, I havo not particularly no ticed his views, but I think that his course will meet the general reprobation of his party. Mr. CLAYTON.—Gen. Cass, then, repo• diates Mr. Yancey's sentiments 1 • Mr. FOOTE.-I do not know. Mr. CLAYTON.-1 supposed that the Senator thoroughly understood all the opinions of Gen. Cass. The honorable gentleman has travelled with the candi date, and was said to be a part of his body-guard. Mr. — Fool E.—That particular point was not warted. (4 laugh.) Mr. CLAYTON.—Then here is another subject about which Gen. Cass has no platform. Now all these doubts and ambiguities, and, irreconcileable incon sistencies come from the party which daily assails Ge4i. Taylor, because, as they say, "he does not speak out." "He has no platform." So they spoke of Gen. Harrison, until he beat them 146,- 000 votes. They called him "General Mum ;" and now, as then, the complaint is made that those who nominated the Whig candidate had made "no plat'Orm." Sir, they knew that Washington had no platform, and they had more respect for Gen. Taylor, & for the intelligence of the people, than to put their candidate in a straight-jacket, or seek, by manfactur ing professions of political faith for him, 'to deceive the voters of the country. They intended he should be free and untrammelled, as the President of the whole people. But who is there among its that has not long since felt, and, pub licly or privately, expressed his con tempt for these "platforms ?" Look back to your democratic platform of 1844. Then, the democratic conven tion passed a resolution to re-annex all Oregon, avowing that the title to it was "clear and unquestionable up to 54 40." At the sound of the party bugle the partizan editors of the democratic press throughout the country shouted "clear and unquestionable." A thousand dem ocratic meetings echoed back the sound. "Oregon and 54 40" were painted on party banners and party walls, and printed on party handbills. Mr. Polk's Inaugural Address also declared the ti tle "clear and unquestionable." His message, in December, 1845, repeated the same folly, and threatened war to the knife', and the knife to the hilt, against the English claim above 49, all the little, and nearly all the great politi cians of the party, standing ready to make fight on this platform. The par ty leaders afterwards occupied the atten tion of Congress for six months with this Oregon question, disturbing and distracting the nation, embarrassing trade and commerce, alarming the busi ness men with the apprehension of a war with the most powerful nation on earth, with which we have more corn mercial relations than with all the world beside. The price of insurance rose so high at one time that no shipying mer chant could venture on any distant voy age. Gen. Cass stood in front of the whole riot. He declared war to be ine vitable. His belligerent propensities, displayed on this as well as on all other subjects, covered the whole platform. I , never believed that this cry for war was sincere on the part of the wire-workers behind the screen, though I never doubt ed that the worthy General was perfect ly sincere, and was completely duped by them. I advised my friends here to vote for the amicable notice to England —to "pay out rope," and test their sin , cerity about this platform. The result ' precisely answered my expectations. When we refused to hold them, they refused to fight, and the result was, that the whole pretentious to fifty-four forty were abandoned by themselves, and they fell back to the British line of forty nine upon which a settlement could, at any moment, have been made without a word of all this unjust and insolent bra vado. The platform was abandoned ; those who had adhered to it moat vio lently, among whom was Gen. Cass, were prostrated in the dust. The chairman of the committee on Foreign Relations, (Mr. ALLEN,) under a deep sense of his humiliation, instantly re signed, and the present Chairman, (Mr. HANNP.GAN,) declared in his place, that Mr. Polk had, by surrendering the plat form and his own pledges to adhere to it, " sunk himself so low that the hand of resurrection could never reach him." When put to the the test, Mr. Polk' treated the whole platform of 54 40 with contempt, and gave up the whole country above 49. Mr. FOOTE, (in his seat.)—He was wise, and acted by the advice of the Senate. Mr. CLAYTON.—Oh ! yes he was wise. The folly was in having a plat form ! In this case, an irresponsible cabal, called a convention, like the last one at Baltimore, many of the members of which were appointed at a tavern or a cross road meeting, assembled and as sumed the • duty of directing and con trolling the whole legislation of Con gress on questions of peace and war. They did not devote ten minutes to the title of Oregon, which they decided, and not one out of fifty of them had ever read or known any thing about it. The platform thus formed deeply endan gered the peace of fifty millions of hu man beings. We were at one time, by all the blundering and blustering of the Administration, driven within an inch of a war with England. There was another platform—that made by the famous Kane letter. In that precious document, your President, according to the construction of some, avowed himself to be in favor of the Tariff; and according to that of others, opposed to it. Unquestionably the mass . of the people in the Northern Statep be lieved that in that letter, he avowed himself to be a friend of the tariff. It is as true as scripture, that in the State of Pennsylvania .and other States at the North, the were flying with the inscrip tion, "Polk, Dallas, and the tariff of '42," and when we assailed those who prac tised these impositions on the people, as we repeatedly did, and accused them of duplicity, the reply was, on all occa sions, "we are the true champions of the tariff of 42," and in proof of the as sertion we were referred to the Demo cratic vote in the other House, without which the bill of 1842 could not have passed, and -told that, therefore, the Democrats were entitled to the whole merit of the measure. Now again the politicians have published one life of Gcn. Cass to suit the North, and anoth er to suit the South, in regard to the Wilmot Proviso. Thus, by platforms, they ever palter with us in a double sense—" keep the word of promise to the ear but break it to the hope"—at one time deluding our honest people in to a vote for Mr. Polk, which he never could have received had he then avow ed himself to be what he has since pro ved to be, the champion of free trade; and at another, representing Gen. Cass as a man of Northern principles in the Mirth; end a man of Southern princi ples in the South. There is another platform : It is that of an honest man, who says he is a Whig, but that if elected to the Presi dency he will not be the tool of a party —that he will be the President of the people—that he has no enemies to pun ish, no friends to reward—that while ho will do his duty in removing corrupt, incompetent, or unfaithful men from of fice, he will not be the supporter of that infamous system of proscription which distributes the public offices of the coun try as the spoils of a victory—that he will, on this and all other subjects, en deaver to restore the Government of the country to the principles of the Consti tution. His PLATFORM IS THE CONSTITU TION; all others are utterly unworthy of respect. The patriotism of mere politi cians which explodes in deceptive par ty pledges, is understood to be, as Dr. Johnson defines it, "the last refuge of a scoundrel." There is little difficulty in finding mottoes and illustrations to suit the title page of the whole volume of political platforms. In the action of some of the Presidents of the United States we can find enough to remind us of the old saw— " The Devil was siekthe Devil a monk would be-- The Devil got well, the Devil a monk leas he The honorable gentleman also attacks Gen. Taylor on the ground that he lacks qualifications. In justice, however, to his own noble heart, the Senator admits that Gen. Taylor is a pure, honorable, high minded, and patriotic man. But he finds fault with Gen. Taylor' on ac count of what he supposes to evince a 'want of great learning. He reasons from Gen. Taylor's confession that he was not a pnlitician, that he is not com petent for the Presidency. That is, I think, his chief objection. The gentle man certainly did also. find much fault with one or two of Gen. Taylor's letters. I shall not deny that his letters,lke thoie of other great military command ers, written in the hurry of a camp, and on a barrel, a box, or a drumhead, have not the beauty of finish and the rotun dity of period which the gentlethan so well 'knows how to give his own letters. But for strong sense and appropriate language to convey it, no man can ex cel those letters of Taylor in which he found it important to attend to the man ner as well as.the matter of his compo sition. On every court martial on which he has served for the last twenty- years, the other members of the court, al though often scholars of high character, have generally seleeted Taylor to draw up the sentence of the court, on account of his superior qualifications. We laugh at the story that he cannot write his own letters. That from his enemies is a new tribute to their excellence! Gen. Cass is, we shall admit, a knowing and a learned man ; but Gen. Taylor is a wise man. I agree with the poet, that "Knowledge and wisdom fur from being one, Have oftimes no connection. Knowledge dwells In heads replete with thoughts of other men— Wisdom in minds attentive to their own." Gen. Cass has great erudition, and has written books. But in the great es sential qualities of wisdom, justise, in tegrity, humanity, and moral as well as physical courage, Taylor approaches nearer to the character of Washington than any man who has occupied ..the Presidential chair since his day. And with regard to the champion of the gen , tleman from Connecticut, (Mr. NILES ' ) who has indulged himself in a sly fling gt Gen. Taylor, I will give my opin ion with equal frankness. Mr. Van Bu ren is a cunning man and it has often been observed; that no cunning man was ever yet a wise one. Exception is taken to Taylor's qualifications, because he has been compelled, in his country's service, to pay more attention to the cartridge than the ballot box; and in his letters has modestly expressed his own diffidence of his ability to discharge the duties of th President of the United States. But let me call the attention of the Senate to what Gen. Washington said of himself in his inaugural address. He says to Congress : "The magnitude and difficulty of the trust to which the voice of my country called me, be ing sufficient to awaken in the wisest and most experienced of her citizens a distrustful scruti ny into his qualifications, could not but over whelm with despondency one, who, in inherit ing inferior endowments from nature, and un practised in the duties of civil administration, ought to be peculiarly conscious of his own de ies;" Taylor is the man of modern times who has rivalled this admirable modes. ty, and his friends so far as regarding it as a fault, view it as one of the bright est among the features which adorn his heroic character. if Taylor has stulti fied himself by that confession, to which the honorable Senator has referred, the wisest, the purest, and the greatest of all American Presidents, had taught him by his example. Mr. President, a paper is put into my hands, which I am requested to read to the Senate. In 1840 Gen. Harrison was charged by our opponents with the high crime of having signed a law, about fif ty years ago, while Governor of the Northwest Territory, for selling poor whitemen into bondage. That, if I un derstood it, was a law to punish crime. It is a fair reprisal on an enemy that could make such a charge, to refer them now to a law signed by their present candidate while Governor of Michigan, of so late a date as the 27th of July, 1818. The law, which the Senator from Michigan (Mr. FaLcii) will acknowledge to be an authentic copy from the terri torial statutes of Michigan, is in the following words: "AN ACT. for the punishment of idle and disorderly persons. “SECTION I. Be it enacted ho! the GOVerllOr and Judges of the Territory of Michigan, That any Justice of the Peace, on conviction, may sentence any vagrant, lewd, idle, or disorderly persons, stubborn servants, common drunkards, common night-walkers, pilferers, or any persons wanton or licention, iu syeerh, indecent beha viour, common railers or brawlers, such as ne glect their calling and employment, mispend what they earn and do not provide for them selves or families, to Le se/ripped not exceeding ten "tripes, or to be delivered over to any con stable, to be employed in labor not exceeding three months, by such constable to be hired out for the best wages that can be procured : the proceeds of which to be applied to the use of the poor of the county. "Made, adopted, and published at Detroit, the 27th day of July, 1818. • "LEWIS CASS, Governor. "A. B. WOODWA RD, Presiding jeer/gr. " " T ' IVIT " EnA "'t lodges of the Territory.'" 1 "TOWN GRIFFIN, This act was passed by the authority given in the ordinance of 1787. It pro vides that "the Governor and Judges shall adopt and publish in the district such laws of the original States, crim nal and civil, as may be necessary and best suited to the circumstances of the district, and report them to Congress, from time to time." In the year 1818, Gavernor Casa adopted and passed this act, as one of the Legislators over the Territory. By it a "common night walker,"or any " idle person," or any "stubborn servant," or any "person li centious in speech," or any "person of indecent behaviour," or any person who should " mispend what lie had earned, and not provide for himself or family," might at the discretion of a justice of the peace, be whipsed ten lashes or de livered over to a constable, to be hired' out for the best wages that could be procured! (Laughter.) If the General should remain of that mind hereafter, what a prospect of whipping and hiring out does it present to all who may have a fancy for night walking, for all idlers, such as may, in the judgment of a jus. tice of the pence, be " stubborn ser vants," or "licentious in speech," or happen not to spend their money as the justice shall approve ! (Great Laugh ter.) There is nothing in the old sedi tion law,_ or in the blue laws of any of the old States, to exceed this precious specimen of the , Governors' legislation in 1818. I commend it to the especial consideration of the modern Democracy in their future progress. Sir, I have done. Let me only say in conclusion, that I hope that my friends on the other side now have enough of plarforms ; and that in future all genu ine Republicans may rally together un der the standard of Taylor, which is wide enough to protect and shelter ev ery true friend of his country, whether a native or a Naturalized citizen, no matter what may be his party designa tion. Let all such men stand up boldly together in the battle for the Rights of Man, as secured to us by the great char ter of American freedom, the Constiti . tion of our country, and the REPUB LICAN PARTY of the country may triumph over all opposition from the self styled Democracy, to the end of time. Gen. Taylor—Another Slander Ite- fitted. Some time ago, a story was fabricated and set afloat, that Gen. Taylor was the owner of •a large tract of land in the disputed territory be tween the nieces and the Rio Grande, and that an agent of his had recently been in Washing ton City purChasing negroes to stock it! Col. Mitchell, of Cincinnati, wrote to Gen. Taylor refrring to the allegation, and enquiring as to its truth. We annex the reply. It puts this vile slander at rest, as an unmitigated falsehood. Read and judge BATON BOUM, La., July 14, 1848. MY DEAR COLONEL :-Your kind letter of the 13th ultimo has been duly received. In reply to your inquiries, I have to inform you that I have no land on the Rio Grande; nor have I sent $lO,OOO, or any other sum, to the District of Columbia to purchase slaves ; and I trust that if I had such a sum in my possession, I could put it to a better use than buying hinds on the Rio Grande, or slaves in Washington. Among the many accusations brought against me by my op ponents, I should be much gratified to learn that they have succeeded in substantiating the chtirge that I have in my possession so large a sum for any purpose as the one above mentioned. I beg that you will not put yourself to any trouble to meet the objections urged against me by those opposed to me, if they are as ground less as the one in question, for when they see fit thus to disregard the obligations of truth, it is useless to contend with them. With my best wishes for your health and sue eess, I remain sir, very respectfully, Your obedient servant, Z. TAYLOR. Col. A. . 1. Minnna:LL, Cincinnati, 0. THE JOURNAL. [CORRECT CRINCIPLES-SCITORTED BY •rnr•rH.] -. 2 4111 4:-A • , lIINTINGDON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, MB, --- Democratic Whig Nominations. FOR PRESIDENT : GEN. ZACHARY TAYLOR. FOR VICE PRESIDENT : MILLARD FILLMORE. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER : NEIL MIDDLESWARTII. D7' V. B. PALMER, Esq. i.v onr author ized agent far receiving adrertisrments and subscriptions in the chic, Philadelgia, Bal timore and Nem York, and for roll Ping and reeripting for thr same. “ CIRCULATE TIRE DOCIJMENTS.” Extra Copies of Clayton's Great Speech. We have, at considerable expense, inserted at length, the great Speech of Senator Clayton, in this number of the Journal. As it is the most important political document of the season, and one that should be read by every citizen of the country, before depositing his vote, we have printed a large number of extra copies, which we will furnish at the low price of TWO DOL LARS PER HUNDRED. Clubs and individ uals, anxious to advance the cause of the glori ous old hero of Buena Vista, and thus do their country some service, can more effectually do so by circulating this speech among the People, than in almost any other way. Single copies at THREE e.rs. COUNTY MEETING. Taylor Men! don't forget the County Meet ing on Wednesday, (to-morrow) evening. Let there be a general rally. Take a Paper. To every body we would say, take a Newspa per. And above all, take your own county pa per. The benefits resulting to a family from having the privilege of weekly perusing a well rhgulated paper, so far out-weigh the paltry sum necessary to secure it, as to make the latter consideration sink into utter insignficance in com parison with the former. The county paper should be first patronized, and then, if persons can afford to do so, it is all right and proper to get a paper from abroad. We will furnish the "HUNTINGDON JOURNAL" until oiler the Presi dential election for the low price of FIFTY CENTS per copy ; and to clubs of six or more, at $1,50 per year. Single copies, $1,75 per year ih advance. $2,00 if paid during the year. County COnyentlon. This body assembles to-morrow. From the sentiments of the delegates, so far as we have heard them expressed, we have no doubt the in terests of the party of the county will be care fully attended to. All are properly impressed with the importance of the political campaign in which we are engaged, and all appear deter mined so to act as will best advance the com mon cause in good old Huntingdon. Let this spirit be carried out and all will be well. Organize. We must again impress upon the Taylor men of tbis county, the necessity of immediate and effective organization, by forming Rough and Ready Clubs in every township, and frequently meeting together for consultation. This matter is important. Let the Taylor men of every township engage in the work at once. The good results which will flow to the country from the election of honest old Rough and Ready, will more than compensate you for all the exertion made in his behalf. PENNSYLVANIA CULTIVATOR. -The first num ber of a new Monthly Agricultural paper, with the above title, published at Harrisburg, Pa., by Fosrmt & Co. , has been received. It is em bellished with numerous appropriate engravings, and is tilled with a large quantity of highly in teresting and useful matter to agriculturalists, mechanics and others. We have the pleasure of a personal acquaintance with the enterprising publishers and have no hesitation in commend ing the work to the patronage of the Public generally—to whose interests it will be devoted. The price is 11,00 per Annum. The Slander Admitted. The following wilful slander t;;;;; private itizen appeared in the Huntingdon Globe of the Let mat : "HEAR IT IRISHMEN AND GERMANS." , 6 You were culled idle and ignorant foreign ers because you oppose Gen. Taylor and his Native American allies by one of the most prominent Federal speakers, Mr. A. W. Bene dict, on Saturday evening last." Mr. Benedict having given the above a public denial, the editor of the Globe thus admits in his last paper, that he above was a wilful and deliberate slander. He says : _ _ A. W. Benedict, Esq., has denied in a pub lic speech in the Diamond, that he denounced the foreigner, as idle and ignorant. Will he be kind enough to explain, in his next speech or otherwise, what portion of mankind he had ref erence to in the following sentence; The Loco-focos, for the purpose of ent rap ing the idle and ignorant, are endeavoring to connect Gen. Taylor with the Native American party." Now, we ask every honest reader, to compare the first charge of the Globe with the last, and honestly answer, whether the editor is not guilty of just what Mr. B. charged him with—delib erate falsehood and slander 1 If Mr. B. used the words " idle" and " ignorant" in any con nection whatever, we presume he meant any body verdant enough to believe the silly and idle stories weekly published by the Globe. ALEX. L. Russtu, of Bedford county, has been appointed Deputy Secretary of the Com inonwealth. The Taylor Platform. We give in to-day's Journal, to the exclusion of much of attr usual variety, the masterly and unanswerable Speech of the Hon. JOHN M. CLAYTON, U. S. Senator from Delaware, in vindication of Gen: TAYLOR. We call the especial attention of otir readers to the unan swerable argument embodied in this speech=--it is a faithful exhibition of the Taylor Platform. Those who like 'this broad and well founded platform are invited to come and stand upon it in safety. The principles of Gen. Taylor are not like those of 4, Progressive" Locofocoism, which are rapidly tending to MONARCHY and TYRANNY ; but they shine forth as the pure and primitive principles of our Government and Constitution. Upon this platform Gen. Taylor stands, not as the candidate of a mere party— not trammelled by party schemes—but as a. else great champion of the right of man to 4elf.gor. rrnment." He maintains that the majority have a right to govern. Upon the subject of the Tariff, the Currency, the Improvement of Rivers, Lakes and Harbors, he holds that the WILL OF THE PEOPLE, as expressed through their representatives, ought not to be DEFEATED by the ONE DIAN POWER—the. Executive VETO. All who are in favor of these principles, get you upon the Taylor Platform. And how do these principles compare with those of Lewes Cass I Mr. Cass stands pledged to carry out the principles of a mere party— the COUNTRY is to him nothing—Paarr in ev erything ! Instead of letting the will of the Peo ple pass into the form of Laws, Iris own will must rise up as an insuperable barrier. Upon all questions, as well of expediency as of con: stitutionality, the ONE MAN POWER may rise superior to the POWER OF THE MAJOR ITY of his constituents, and defeat the will of the People. This was not.. the design of the Veto Power, but such is its operation in the hands of a mere party President. It was clearly not the intention of the Fra mers of the Constitution to give the Executive the Power to Legislate ; but in modern times the Executive does inreality exercise a powei of legislation equal to two-thirds of both branches of Congress. He recommends laws and dictates terms, and whenever Congress pas ses laws differing from those prose ribed by him, he defeats them by his VETO !! It matters not by what name a government is called if the power to make laws and to execute Mont . ,. r•esNd is the ware roan, it is MONARCHY and TYR ANNY in its worst form. This is therefore a question of the most vital importance to the American People, and one that rises far above all others. The name and the form of a Re public may be retained, but Locofocoism, if not arrested in its course, will end in MONARCHY. We have not room to notice the great speech of Mr. Clayton any further at this titne ; but we hope that the speech itself will be read by every one who feels an interest in the welfare of his country. READ IT yourselves, friends, and then hand it to your neighbors. By all means get the honest portion of the Locofocoe to read it—it is high time that they should get their eyes open. And whenever a Cass man asks, what are Gen. Taylor's principles 1 invite him to read Senator Clayton's speech. That "Screw." We suppose the editor of the Globe observed in our last, that we gave to our renders the " Screw drive," of Mr. FrtaNcis P. BLA/li, fur nished by himself. If so, how do you like the way in which he "screws" up his position in relation to the nomination of Gen. Cass, and the part he intends taking in sustaining that nomina tion, neighbowl We are satisfied with it, and if you are, it is more than some of those who sent him a delegate to the Baltimore Conven tion appear to be. For, we observe that - at a meeting of district delegates of Anne Arundel county, Maryland, recently held, they unani mously absolved Francis P. Blair from any ob ligation incurred by attending, as a delegate, the National Democratic Convention, and recom mended that the other district delegates of the Congressional district do the same. This was done in consequence of the recent avowal of Mr. Blair that his sympathies are with Mr. Van Buren, and that lie will vote for Gen. Cass as a matter of "ptinctillio." Can the Globe give the "screw" another turn 7 COMPS Patent Galvanic Battery. It affords us much pleasure to inform our readers, that Mr. P. Coso, of Philadelphia, is now in our town, and will stay a few days only,. at his rooms, at the house of Mrs. Bampson, to operate on patients for the cure of all nervous and various other diseases, with his patented graduated Galvanic Battery, and to sell patent rights of this highly valuable apparatus. Mr. Coact has the highest testimony that the world can produce, with respect to the great import ance of this instrument. We believe it will be highly the interest of Physicians and patient* to avail themselves of the use of this instru ment, which is said by the best authority, to he the most powerful remedial agent that God has given to man. We have seen the testimonials of Rev. Wm. J. Clark, Rector of the Episcopal Church of Williamsport, Lycoming county ; Rev. John Tonner of Bellefonte, of the Methodist Episco pal Church, and several others in our own vicin ity, testifying to the powerfully beneficial re sults from the use of Mr. Coad's patent Galvan ic Battery. HENRY CLAY. All reports to the contrary notwithstanding, HENRY CLAY, is now as ever, on the side of the Whig party and the country. It appears that he was absent from home previous to the late election in Kentucky, and a despatch from Lou isville dated the 9th instant, says : Mr. Clay travelled fifty miles for the par pose of voting for Mr. Crittenden, which, it is said, increased the vote in Fayette county con siderably, some say upwards of 200 votes. re Gen : Scott is now at his residence