THE JOURNAL. [CORRECT PRIINCIPI.GS-SI'PPORTED BY TRUTH.] HUNTINGDON, TI I;,SDAY. Al - GUST 22, 1818. - - - --- Democratic Whig Nominations. FOR PRESIDENT: GEN. ZACHARY TAYLOR. FOR VICE PRESIDENT : MILLARD FILLMORE. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER: NER MIDDLESWARTH. COUNTY TICKET, ASSEMBLY Augustus K. Cornyn, of H.tioploo, PROTHONOTARY Theo. H. Cremer, of Huntingdon. REGISTER AN,Di RECORDER. Matthew F. Campbell, of Healerson COMMISSIONER William Hutchinson, of Warriormark. AUDITOR : Thos• W. Neely, of Dublin. CORONER : Henry Grath's, of Alexandria. Ug'" V. B. PALMER, rvo. 1' our anthor isted agent for receiving adrertivements and sllbgeriptions ill the cities al' Philadelphia, Bal timore and Nen. York, and fur caller:lag (nod reeelpting for the Rani, " CIRCULATE THE DOCUMENTS." Extra Copies of C7ayton•s Great Speech. We have still militia' a large number of extra copies of the Journal containing Senator CLAY TON'S GREAT SPEECH IN DEFENCE OF GEN. TAYLOR, which we will furnish at the low price of $2.00 per b undred. Clubs and indi viduals,an§,ious to advance the cause of the glori ous old her,o 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 TIMES CENTS. “A Little more Grape!” A Special Meeting of the Rough and Ready Club willbe held next WEDNESDAY evening, AvorsT '23, at the. House of Alex. Carmon. WM. H. PEIGHTAL, President. H. K. NErY ' Secretaries, E. SUMMERS, Taylor Men I Don't forget the meeting at the house of Z. Pheasant, in Union township, on Saturday next. It is desirable that all would attend early, so that ample time can be afforded those from a distance to return to their homes without en croaching upon the Sabbath. Tits MAsstrs.—There has been but little change in the markets since our last. The news brought by the Acadia has caused a slight advance. APPOINTMENT I:YTIIE ATTORNEY GENERAL.- T. Stewart, Esq., of this place, has been appointed Deputy Attorney General for Hunt ingdon county. This is a good appointment, and one that will be universally well received by the No*. Awful Fire in Albany. A fire broke out in the city of Albany, on Fri day last, and before the flames could be arrested five hundred houses were destroyed—the loss estimated at too millionx of dollar, Two lives were lost. Who Doubtg It I One of the Cass orators stated the other night that General Cass, while in France, stood very high with the members of the French Court, Foreign Ministers, and nobility generally. No one doubts this. Commodore Elliott's letter, ptiolished on our first page, will explain the cause. Presents of gold snuff boxes, diamond rings, &c., &c., with a plentiful supply of supe rior wines, could not fail to secure him the fa vor of the aristocracy of France. 07' The Locofocos of this county have nom• inat,d the following ticket : Assembly—Robert F. Haslett. Prothonotary—John B. O:ven. Register and Recorder—Jacob Miller. Commissioner—A. P. Owens. Auditor—James Neely. Coroner—Thomas Adams, The sense of the Convention was taken for Governor and resulted Col. Bigler 21—Judge Black 2t. Major J. P. Anderson was appoint ed delegate to State Convention. The Globe says tremendous cheers" for Cass and Butler were given at the close of the Taylor meeting at Roxberry. We mention this to show the citizens of Brady township the true character of the Locofoco organ here.— Such bare-faced falsehoods need no refutation. Conferee Meeting. Mifflin County has recommended Saturday next, the 26th inst., as the time and Brown's Mills as the place, for the meeting of the Con gressional Conferees of this district, to nomi nate a candidate for Congress. If the counties have all appointed, we are entirely favorable to meeting at the time and place suggested. CO" Since the above was in typo, we learn that Centre county will not appoint Conferees until Wednesday, the 30th inst. We therefore respectfully suggest, that the Conferees meet at Brown's Mills on Friday, the tst of September. Q7' The Hata thurg Telegraph states that Dr. LUTHER REMY, probably the most influen tial Locofoco in Dauphin County, and formerly the locofoco Representative in Congess from that District has with a number of his political friends, abandoned Cass and declared in favor of Van Buren ! WHIG COUNTY TICKET. The Convention which met in this place on Wednesday last, was highly respectable, and represented every township and borough in Huntingdon county. The utmost harmony and good order prevailed throughout its proceedings. The ticket formed for the support of the People of the county, will be found at the head of our paper. We are truly gratified to find that it meets with 'universal favor. A. K. CORNYN, Esq., the candidate for the Legislature, is entirely deserving the distin- guished honor conferred upon him. He is de servedly popular with the People. His popular ity not being confined entirely to one party.— As an orator, Mr. C. has no superior, and but few equals in the county, or Congressional dis trict. His speeches are always marked by a chastity and beauty of language which commends them to the favor of the People, and by a force of argument which invariably carries conviction to their hearts. His nomination will be of im mense importance to the Whig party, in main taining and advancing their cause in the cam paign in which we are engaged ; and his election will be an advantage and an honor to every cit izen of the county. Ilk triumphant election is beyond all doubt THEO. H. CREMF.R, the candidate for Pro thonotary, is a man peculiarly fitted for that office. No man in the county is better qualified to fill the place of the present popular and com petent incumbent. Mr. C. started in the world as a mechanic—a Printer—and by close applica tion and untiring industry, qualified himself for the Practice of the Law. He is known to the People of this county as our predecessor as ed itor of the Huntingdon Journal; in which cape- city he took a high rank among country editors. lie is in short, an upright, moral man, a good Whig, and will make an obliging, competent officer. Nothing more is wanted. MATTHEW F. CAMPBELL, the candidate for Register and Recorder is an honest and in telligent farmer of Henderson township. He has never been an office voiker, but always a devo ted, ardent Whig, from principle. He is exceed ingly popular among his neighbors, and all who enjoy his acquaintance. We think we can safe ly say that he is without an enemy. Mr. C. de serves, and will no doubt receive, the entire Whig vote of the county. WILLIAM HUTCHINSON of Warriorsmark township, is the choice for county Commission er. A better selection could not have been made. It was, however, impossible for the Convention to make a bad choice from the materiel presen ted. Either of the gentlemen named to the Con vention would make a good officer. Mr. H. is the Atlantic, and from the Gulf of Mexico to a farmer, an honest man, and universally esteem- the Bay of Fundy I In short, was not the whole ml in his neighborhood. He was on the Whig country rising in her majesty and might for the ticket in 1816 for Auditor, and run thirty-two Hero who " NEVER STAMP: XIIETIS 7" How then votes ahead of the ticket in his own township, could the London Times but foreknow the ful and was the highest man on the ticket in the fillment of the whole of its prophecy 7 county. But we want to call the attention of the THOS. W. NEELY, Esq., of Dublin town- I Whigs of this county to the argument which ship is the candidate for Auditor. W e h a ve no Mr. Parker made on what he was pleased to personal acquaintance with Mr. N., but learn terns " this remarkable prophecy.". He said in that lie is a man every way qualified not only substance, that there was a great sympathy ex for a good Auditor, lint for any other office in I isting between the London Times and the . Whig the gift of the People of the county. papers of the United States, and between the HENRY GRAFIUS, of Alexandria, is the two parties which they represent—that their candidate for Coroner. He is an active, intelli- views, their feelings, their desires and their de signs were closely allied, and that they combi- Whig,gent mechanic, and a very efficient, zealous nett in their efforts to defeat Gen. Cass and elect with the . requisite energy and ability to fill any office with credit. I Taylor ! ! Now, fellow Whigs, what is this else t Such, Whigs and Taylor men of Huntingdonhan calling us all TontEs—BRITISH TORIES? county, is but a feeble and inadequate descrip- I Such is the virtual charge of one of the emmi tion of the very excellent ticket presented to series of Locofocoism while on an electioneering your consideration. That it will Upon examine- 1 tour after the nomination for Congress. Bear . . . . . . tion receive your undivided support we cannot doubt. There is not an incompetent or unwor- thy man upon it. Rally, then, one and all to its support, and let us roll up such a majority in October as will cheer the hearts of our friends in other parts of the State, and nerve them up forthe great battle in November, under the ban ner of glorious old Rough and Ready. sible for them. Such a charge, coining from a party who destroyed the American Tariff of 1812, and enacted in place of it a Tariff which was applauded in, and ordered to be re-printed by, the British House of Lords—a Tariff that sold the prosperity of the American industrial classes to the nobility and the subjects of Eng land, is too much for any American Patriot to bear. Has it come to this, that the descendants of the heroes of the Revolution—the descend ants of those who fought and bled and died in ' the war of American liberty against British r tyranny—and those who in 1811 drove the Bri tish from our land and our waters, must be stig matized as enemies to their country—as TORIES, by a sleek young gentleman who is aspiring to a seat in the Congress of the United States ? and all because they think proper to go for General ZACHARY TAYLOR, who has sustained our honor and our flag in many a battle at home and abroad, and against Lewis Cass, the Treasury Leech, and the eulogist of 5' France, her King and Court !" All true patriots,to whatever party they may belong, will spurn this outrageous in sult. Room fails us to follow the gentleman through his whole speech. But we must allude ! to one or two other remarks that fell from him. He asserted that Gen. Taylor was a " FALSI FIER," and attempted to prove it by garbling one of Gen. Taylor's letters. He said that Gen. Taylor declared in his Richmond letter that he would not " withdraw if Mr. Clay should re ' ceive the nomination at Philadelphia." We are nutter the necessity of informing Mr. Parker that his assertion is not true ; no such sentence appears in the letter to which he alluded. Gen. , Taylor said in that letter that he had never au ' thorized any one to say that he would withdraw in the event of Mr. Clay's nomination. He also ' reiterated the old stale charge of "bargain and sale" against Mr. CLAY and the lamented JOHN QVINCY ADAMS ; and in effect charged Mr. Adams, one of the purest Patriots of his age, A Taylor Slanderer's Pay, I with having gone down to the grave with a An authentic statement in the Battery, pub- falsehood in his month ! For it is well known fished at Wpshington, D. C., sums up the items that Mr. Adams, in 1841, solemnly denied, over paid Messrs. Ritchie & Heim for public print- his own signature, that any such bargain and jag, which amounts to upwards of $277,000. sale had taken place between Mr. Clay and him- Not much wonder Mr. Ritchie can defame such self ! We ask the People of Huntingdon county Whigs as ZACHARY TAYLOR, when he is paid ,to remember this also. One thing is worthy of nearly $lOO,OOO extra per annum fur it. remark, that during Mr. Parker's speech, the A Slander. Inasmuch as the two fellows who published affidavits that Gen. Taylor swore, acknowledges! themselves chicken thieves, the Globe, in order to place all on the same footing in point of char acter, says the volunteers all done so ; and that we have placed ourself in an unenviable posi tion with the volunteers and their friends of this county, by alluding to it. This is a vile slan der upon the volunteers from this county, and we believe a great majority from the State. The volunteers with whom we are acquainted would as much scorn the robbing of a hen roost, as they would the signing of an affidavit grossly libellous of one of the most distinguished heroes of the war in which they have been engaged. If, however, they were compelled to do either, they would consider the former offence vastly less humbling to them as soldiers than the latter. The Globe is perfectly welcome to all the capital it can make by defending and applauding chicken thieves and slanderers of the brave old hero who “never surrenders." 11 -- Parson Brownlow's paper, the Jonesbor ough (Tenn.) Whig, refuses to support General Taylor for the Presidency, and still keeps the name of its old favorite, Henry Clay, flying from its mast head.—Huntingdon Globe. Well, let us see what this same Parson Brown low, who, according to the above is opposed to Gen. Taylor, says in relation to the election. The following is an extract from a recent letter of Mr. Brownlow's on the subject “You can say to your friends that Tennessee will go for Taylor and Fillmore by a majority of five or ten thoesand votes—that this District, heretofore Democratic, will give them a major ity—and last, though not least, that this county, always Democratic, will go for Taylor and Fill more. Very respectfully, your ob't servant, W. C. BUOWNLOW The Case Meeting. The Cass men held a small County Meeting in this borough on Tuesday evening last. After parading around the town with a procession numbering not quite fifty men used bop, prece ded with drum and fife, and a transparency on which are emblazoned their "principles," viz 1 "No National Bank," No Native American ism," they organized in the Court House by ap- pointing John Porter, Esq., President, assisted by the usual allowance of Vice Presidents and Secretaries. The President made a short speech on taking the chair, after which the meeting was addressed by H. N. McAllister, Esq., of Bellefonte, AndreW Parker, Esq., of Mifflin town, and Maj. T. P. Campbell, Esq., of this place. Mr. McAllister opposed Gen. Taylor because he is "IGNORANT" and , g UNFIT" for the Presidency, having lived in the camp all his life, and been educated there, and never studied the science, the art, or trade of politics, as General Cass did. And lie advocated the election of Cass because he was luminous as a lard Lamp in the science of Government, and served his country with distinction under that brave and patriotic General whom the Locofocos, eight years ago, stigmatized as " Granny Harrison!" Mr. McAllister represented himself as one who is unaccustomed to public political speaking.— Judging from his speech, we presume that such is the fact. Mr. Parker raised his pompous person upon the stand, and throwing his head around to attract the attention of the audience to his fine, fat, slick, handsome person, commenced by say ing, in a tone of voice very much resembling the muttering of far distant thunder, that the London Times," a Tory paper, put forth a prophecy some time in advance of the Whig Convention in the United States. The prophecy consisted in stating what all the world seemed to know, namely, that the Whigs of the United States would nominate Gen. Taylor, as it was known that he was the only man who could de feat Gen. Cass. Now, whether such a predic tion was made by the London Times or not, we consider a matter of no consequence—it is pos- sible it was made, and there was certainly suffi cient ground for it. Had not the Legislatures of many of our States then already nominated Gen. Taylor ? Had he not been nominated by a public meeting on the Trenton Battle Ground ? Was he not recommended and nominated by the Democracy of Pennsylvania in a State Conven- tion at Harrisburg, and by another in the Dem ocratic State of Herbs county, and in almost ev ery village and county from the Rio Grande to in mind that this is the charge of Col. ANDREW PARKER, the heir apparent to the Locofoco nomination for Congress in this district. It is not necessary to repeat it—you will remember the INSULT on the elertioit day, and •for all time to come. And we hold those who applau ded and thereby adopted the sentiments respon- Court House thinned out considerably, many honest democrats being doubtless utterly dis gusted with his remarks, . We did not stay to hear the speech of Major Campbell, but we are informed that he eclipsed the " big guns" from abroad. THE ELECTIONS. NORTH CAROLINA,O. K.--Notwitlistand ing the blustering of the Locofocos to the con trary, it is now conceded that Manly, Whig. is elected by a majority ranging from 300 to !ion. The Whigs will have a majority of at least tiro on joint nallott. In KENTUCKY Crittenden's majority will be from S to 10,000! INDIANA is stilt in. doubt. The Indianap olis Journal says the pdpular vote is largely Whig, thus showing that the State is good for Old Zack. In ILLINOIS the Whip gain probably two or three members of Congress. Missouri and lowa have been carried by the Locofocos. MIFFLIN COUNTY.—The Whigs of Mif flin county have recommended J. J. CUNNINO. lIAM for Senator. Their ticket is as follows Assembly—D. S. Elliott. Sheriff—Wm. T. Bell. Register and Recorder—R. TL Smith. Coinmissioner—Wm. Creighton, Samuel Hopper was appointed Represent. tive, and Maj. N. Buoy recommended for Sena. torial Delegate to the State Convention. Shem Zook, J. F. Cottrell and Wm. Ross, ar. appointed Congressional Conferees, without in. structions. Juniata County. A friend at Mitilintown informs us that the Whigs of that county have nominated the fol lowing ticket. Assembly—John McLaughlin. Prothonatory—J. M. Sellers. Register and Recorder—Wm. Reader. C. P. Thompson, Samuel Laird and A. K. McClure are appointed Congressional Conferees, without instructions. The Cass Party Going, The New Orleans Bulletin tells the following story good in itself and admirable in its appli cation : " The present position of the Cass party re minds us of a story we once heard of a farmer, who, one morning let his sheep out of the pen. Having put down the bars, the old man stood by to count them as they hopped over, and be gan, " There goes one,"—" there goes two," " there goes three,"—" there goes old Ewe,"— " there goes a black one,"—" there goes a whole heap,"—" and curse them, there they all go•" "So it is with the Cass party. At first we could count the deserters—one, two, three; but it was soon ascertained that the bounds were broken that the Imre were down, and the " old ewes" and the " black ones" began hop ping out very fast, followed so rapidly by whole heaps, as to bid defiance to any attempts to count, and soon poor Cass will have to exclaim, Curse them, there they all go." MICHIGAN Vs. CASS, The Boston Atlas publishes the following ex tract from a letter from Isaac L. Toby, M. D., of Jackson, Michigan, to E. H. Porter, Esq., of Charlemont, a Whig. Dr. Toby was former ly located in Hampshire County, well known as a radical Democrat.—The italicising is done by the Doctor. JACKSON, Michigan, June 29th, 1848 Dear Sir : * * * * The people of this State are wide awake on politica. There are a great many 4nti Cass Democrats. Should or could the election come off this week, he would be defeated in his own State. The Whigs arc much bet ter united on their candidate, and feel confident of success. You know that I am a radical demo crat, but I cannot support Gen. Cass for the Presidency He plays a double grime which I despise in any man, and he has no sympathy for the Barnburn ers. If you have any democrats in your State, reckoning upon the election of Cass you tell them he cannot be elected. Tell this for me—that he cannot carry his own State. Yours Truly, J. L. TOBEY. E. H. PORTER, Esq., Charlennont, Mass. 01110. The Germans of Cincinatti have organized a Free Soil or Barnburners Club. The Signal says it is already 800 strong. Hitherto the Cincinatti Germans have nearly all voted for the regular Locofoco candidates. The forma tion of this club will make tremendous inroads upon the strength of Locofocoism in the Queen city and in Ohio. The Cincinatti Signal expresses the convic tion that the counties of Butler, Clermont and Hamilton can be carried for Mr. Van Buren, if nominated by the Butliiloe Convention. These Counties gave a majority of 3,608, for James K. Polk in 18.11. VAN BUREN IN BRADFORD, Pa.—The Bradford Reporter, the organ of Mr. Wilmot, publishes a call for a Van Buren Meeting at Towanda, signed by over six hundred persons. Congress. Congress adjourned on Monday, nth inst.— The few last days of the session were quite stormy. The bills of a public character gen erally were passed, amongst them the Oregon Territory bill, with a clause emhracing the principle of the Wilmot Proviso incorporated. The President has signed the bill, and appoin ted Gen. Shields Governor of the Territory.— It is since understood that the General will not accept. Taylor Volunteers Proscribed. An advertisement appears in the N. 0. Delta, with a responsible name signed thereto, stating that about 116 men, out of 110,et work at the Barracks, in that city, were discharged Iceanar they would vote for Gen. Tay ! Do you hear that, Volunteers I OUTPOURING OF TIIR PEOPLE ! ! ••• ~,, ,V T . '" 34; - 1 ,,. • i,.--- - kt , L , ~:.,,,, - ..-‘: t,, 6., __-_.\, i, -- ,•AK '. • ---'‘/ N GREAT TA11.41111 AND 1111.1LIIODE COUNTY MEETING, The County meeting or the friends of TAY LOR, FILLMORE and AllltDt ESWARTII, held in thin borough on Wednesday evening last, was an immense uffiuir. Little or no effort was used to get it up. .No hand-bills had been cir culated. The only nolire given Was through the coimmis of the Journal. Yet, all a eree, that it was the' largest and most claim. io tic Comity Meeting ever held in this comity. At an early hour in the evening, the beautiful tran sparencies belonging to the Rough and Ready Club were lit up, the Taylor martial 'tau,. commenced playing, :mil a procession, as if by magic, numbering between TWO and HR Et: HUNDRED commenced moving in the street,. se ndi ng up the most deafening cheers for (11l %rich, Fillmore and Middleswarth. It was soon discovered front the size of the procession, and the large number of Taylor earn who did not join in it, that it would be utterlyimpracticable to go into the Court House. A rough staging wa's therefore erected in the Diamond, where the procession, after inarching around the town, halted. The meeting was then organized, by appoint ing Gen. S. MILES GREEN, President ; Geo. HUDSON, Esq., JAs. Moo., Jourg MARRS, DAN. Tam:re, Esq., JOHN CONRAN .Esq., Baler X. 111.Ata, Col. JOHN Srevea, NATHANIEL, Esq., SAMUEL COEN, JOHN K. MCCAHAN, JOHN SHAVER, Esq., JOHN WHITTAKER, Sr., and DAN EL AFRICA, Esq., Vice Presidents ; Major Geo. Raymond, John W. Watson, J. IV. Nat tern and John .11/. Leech, Secretaries. On taking the chair, the President staled the object of the meeting in a few pertinent re marks. On motion, the chair appointed David Blair, Jas. Clark, Henry Lee, Henry Brewster, and N. Lytle, a committee to draft resolutions. SAMUEL Cntvrx, Esq., of Hollidaysburg was then called for, and addressed the meeting for one hour and a half in a speech of great power. He showed, to the satisfaction of every unpre judiced mind, that Gen. Taylor occupied the trne American "platform," and that to adminis ter the government according to the true intent and meaning of the Constitution, unswayed by factions or cliques, was all that the interests of the country required. On the other hand he demonstrated as clearly, that the Baltimore "platform," about which the Cass men prate so much, is in the main but a bundle of nega tions, affirminf, nothing, save that the WILL OF THE PEOPLE shall be subservient to the ONE MAN POWER ! We have not room to properly notice Mr. Calvin's truly able effort. Suffice it to say, that he took up and utterly de molished the positions assumed by Mr. Parker on the previous evening, and presented the po sition and principles of Gen. Taylor, in a light highly satisfactory to all. The meeting was further ably addressed by A. K. COIINEN, T. H. CRENIER, DAVID Brain, A. W. BENEDICT, arid J. G. Mii.cs, Esqrs. The latter gentleman took his position in the middle of the street, and for ten or fifteen minutes fired a volley of "grape" into Extra-allowance Cass, which caused the friends of that gentleman to scatter in confusion, and elicited fromthe friends Old Rough and Ready most tremendous ap plause. Mr. BLAIR, from the committee appointed for the purpose, reported the following preamble and resolutions which were unanimously adop ted, and the meeting adjourned amidst the most unbounded enthusiasm. WHEREAS ' it has always been the fundamental doctrine of the Whig party that pow, is a trust for the people, that it is given to Magistrates, not for their own, but for the public advantage; Therefore 1:1,01red, That ,4 the power given by the Constitution to the Executive to inter pose his Veto, is a high conservative power, which should never be exercised except in cases of clear violation of the Constitution or mani fest haste and want of consideration by Con gri. us " "- That rrsonal opinions of the individual who 1110 y happen to occupy the Exec utive chair, ought not to emitrol the action of Congress upon questions cdf domestic policy, nor ought his objections to be interposed when questions of Constitutional power have been settled by the various departments of Govern ment and acquiesced in by the people." Resolved, That " upon the subjects of the tariff, the currency, the improvement of our great highways, rivers, lakes and harbors, the WILL OF THE rEo Eai expressed through their representatives in Congress ought to be respected and carried ought by the Executive." Rewired, That "war at all times and under all circumstances is a national calamity, to be avoided, if compatible with national honor ; that the principles of our government, an well as its true policy, are opposed to the subjugation of other nations, and the dismemberment of other countries by conquest; for in the language of the great Washington, why should we quit our own to stand on foreign ground.' " Resolved, That 6, this meeting of Democratic Whigs, recognizing the omnipotence of the will of the people upon such a subje,tond deeply im pressed with the peculiar qualifications of Gen. ZACHARY TA YLOR for the Presidency, do hereby present him to the people of this State and Union, us the Democratic Whig candidate, and the real candidate of the People for the office of President of the United States at the ensuing Presidential election." Resi;leed, That In the attachment of General Taylor to Washington, Jefferson and the early Presidents of the United States, 4, his known patriotism, and the whole course of his lit. , we have the best warrant for our firm belief that he will administer the government upon those prin ciples which have formed the policy of every Repthlienn administration, and whose object is the greatestgood of the greatest number.. Rcsetecd, That in the character of MILLA RD FILLMORE, the Whig candidate the Vice President, the builder of his own fortunes, from the 'Prentice in a Clothier's shopto the President of the Senate of the United States, we have a beautiful and glorious illustration of American character and American institutions. li , o/red, That in the Civil and political lily and vontlnel of our candidate for Canal etopmh, NER MIDDLESWARTH, we have a ~noble specimen of the honest, intelligent Penn sylvania farmer—the incompetency, negligence and corruption on our public works, calls loudly for the economy and honesty of old Ncr. Resolrroi, That the Whig Ticket nominated this day, by the Comity Convention, meets our hearty approbation and shall receive our heat ,uppor t. After the adjournment a large concourse of People still being present, and anxious, notwith standing the lateness of the hour, to hear more about Old Zech and the glorious cause in which we are engaged, B. C. Lyme, the Penn Town ship Tailor was called for, and responded in a brief, but animated and effective speech, which was most rapturously applauded. We hope to hear front Mr. Lytle again before the campaign elos,S, for in the language of Many whb were present, he "talks like a book." A Threatened Duel. A flare-up occurred in the U. S. Sen ate on Saturday the 12th inst. between Senators Butler of South Carolina and Benton of Missouri, in which Mr. But ler charged Benton with dishonorubfe conduct in giving publicity to the action of the Senate in Exeeutive session, in the case of Gen. Kearney. Benton re torted by giving Butler the lie! Butler challenged and Benton accepted, but the parties were arrested and held to bail in the sum of $5,000 each to keep the peace. The matter is likely to be ami cably settled. THE EXAMPLE OF HENRY CLAY. In ,- The Philadelphia Inquirer. says: --We have already announced that the Hon. Henry Clay travelled fifty miles in order to reach Lexington in time to vote, and that he voted the entire Whig ticket- This was conduct every way worthy of the sage of Ashland—the great expounder of Whig principles. The example should not be lost upon our Wh:,g brethren throughout • the U nion. 1-leery Clay regarded it as his duty to vote, and therefore, in discharge of that duty, and in unfaltering devo tion to the Whig cause, and to Whig principles, he• subjected himself to the inconvenienceof a journey of fifty miles with the object of- at once exercising his right as a freeman, and of affording an example to his countrymen through out the republic. All honor to the great Statesman.-1-hs heart is with the Whig cause now ns ever,and all who love and admire Henry Clay, will, influenced by his patriotic course, remember his ex ample at the election in Kentucky, and endeavor to profit thereby. PENNSII.TAMA.—The Delegates from this State to the Buffalo Convention held a meeting at Buffalo on the 10th and resolved to call a Free Soil State Convention, to assemble at Reading, Berits County, on the 13th of Septem ber, and nominate an electoral ticket in favor of Van Buren, Adams and the Buffalo Platform. Joseph Neide, of Montgomery, was Chairman, and Dr. E. D. Gazzam, of Pittsburg, was Sec retary of the meeting. GRAND MASS STATE CONVEN TION. The citizens of Pennsylvania, friendly to the election of GEN. ZACHARY TAYLOR MILLARD FILLMORF.. are requested to assemble in Mass Meeting at HARRISBURG, on THURSDAY, the 31st of AUGUST, at t o'clock, P. M. Farmers, Mechanics, and Workingmen : Manufacturers, Traders and Merchants : Alen ot all pursuits, occupations and profes sions : All vt;ho regard purity, inregrity, fidelity, and capacity as essential elements of a just National Administration : All who ore opposed to hypocricy, fraud, cor ruption, false dealing and violence in the con duct of public utTairs : All who are in favor of legislation by the representatives of the people, unchecked by a tyranous exercise of the VETO power : All who would rescue the country from the evils which now paralyze its industry and defeat its enterprize : All who would give adequate protection to American labor, and thus increase the means, extend the enjoyments and elevate the condition of the American laborer : All who would promote, by judicious encour agement, the development of our own great re sources, Agriculture, Manufacturing and Min eral : All who are true friends of those who dig in the lields, and delve in the mines, and ply at the loom, and toil in the workshops and on the high ways All of all classes, creeds and conditions, who desire to secure REFORM AND BETTER TIMES, are invited to be present Come, Pennsylvanians ! come from farm, and forge, and furnace, and coalpit, and factory ; from village, and town, and city: come and show that you have not forgotten, and that you will not forgive, the base deception of which yen have been made the victims: come and show that you are grateful to the hero 4 , who never surrenders" and that you appreci ate the man who " asks far na firrors and shrinks front no responsibility." Distinguished orator form all rmats of the Union will be there to address you : your friends from all sections of the State will ho there to greet you: and you, and they, and we, knowing that" tee eat'', he beat when lee all pull togeth er," will rejoice in the assurance of certain vie- - ALEXANDER RAMSEY, Chairman of the State Central Committee.