_~ fpultikgbzu 3oitrual. \\\ .•47F" • • - ‘‘,,v WILLIAM IMIEWSTEn, EDITORS, SAM. G. WHITTAKER. Wednesday Morning, August 13, 1856, Forever float that standard sheet Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom's soil beneath our feet, And Freedom's banner streaming o'erusl" FOR PRESIDENT, JOHN C. FREMONT, OF CALIFORNIA. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, WM. L. DAYTON, FOR OAN.II, 10 NER. eNOIVIAS M. COCHRAN, OF' YORI, COUSTY. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL, DARWIN DIIELPSI, OF AILMTRONG COUNTY. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL. EARTEOLOATEW LAPORTE, FREMONT AMERI COUNTY CO LICAN REPUBLICAN ITTEE. Jolty McCuLi, Isaac Nelf, J. A. Hall, John Laport, Wm. Brewster, David Stever, Joseph Curfman, Henry Hudson, Isaac Taylor, Jonathan McWilliams Samuel Thompson, John A. Doyle, S. L. Glasgow, Henry Robinson, Wm. Wigton, Abraham Renner, wir, Chairman. Wm. Rothrack, James Morrow, Peter Swoope, E. B. Wilson, Ralph Crotsley, Robert Baird, Charles Mickley, S. Wigton, John Graffins, Wm. M. Lloyd, Peter Shaver, Jr. Robert R. Andrews, Benjamin P. Glasgow, Daniel Neff, Sen., I Lorenzo Tate. KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE That the Democratic party is doing everything in its power to dissolve the Union ; That it is endeavoring to make a sectional institution national ; That it recognizes polygamy as consistent with our laws and institutions; That it encourages and incites to civil war; And that it employs the ruffians of Missouri to take the lives and destroy the property of the Free State men in Kansas. Ambrotypes. _ - We earnestly advise our fellow•citiaens to Auxer'4 Ambrotype Gallery, and take a at his specimens. Mr. Auxer, is decided the best Ambrotypist ever in this plrite. His pictures are faultless, without blemish, and we are patisfied must give perfect satisfaction.— his rooms arc in the Court House, and he in. vines everybody to walk up and examine. Pictures can be taken in any kind of weather. Don't forget the Court House ; up stairs. Brooks and Beitt Be Elected. eta was expected, the constituents of Brooke and Keitt havafe•elect9d them as their repre• scntatives in (‘:,oti,ress by a unanimous vote thus expressing their approval of the cowardly ' , assassin-like act of which they were guilty.— this endorsement of their constituents does :.ot altar the record that they hare both been censured by their peers. That stigma still rests on them and will follow them to their graves. 'Keep it before all Northern Democrats. That the Richmond Inquirer, representing the controlling nod only reliable wing of the present so.called Democratic party, honestly affirms that they "Seek not only to retain it (slavery) where it is, but to extend it into re gions where it is unknown," and they declare that Northern Democrats do "agree to its ex tension as a matter of right." 'this is the very language, and frankly expresses the real and known purpose of the governing minds of the present Democratic party. Who among Dem ocrats will not spurn this count upon their baseness ? THROUGH. Yielding to the request of friends, and our own inclination, we shall forego any further en pose of the publisher of the Globe, feeling with oar friends, that it is unnecessary and needless where he is known. We therefore shall take no further notice dins defamations, his black guardism, or any of the vile libels against us which has or shall neonate from his foul brain or his co•worker's in evil. We scorn his insin uations and leave him to that punishment which the acorn of a virtuous community is so justly inflioting on him; believing that it is degrading .to ourselvee, our paper, and the community we represent to Indulge in personal warfare with such an individual. Here, where the character of the man is known, our motive will he duly appr cciated. Terrorism in Kansas. A letter from Lawrence to the Boston Trait. script, says that from the Missouri border to within two miles of that city, the reign of ter ror is complete, men being waylaid by guerilla bands every night, and sometimes in broad day light, shot at, beaten, and left for dead.— Houses are horned and horses stolen. The writer gives this as what he has himself seen. Ilia own house was plundered in his absence of almost every thing of any value, except books. Three horses of his neighbors were taken, and one of his own, all laden with his own goods. Several of his friends lost spans of valuable horses, with carriages, harness, etc. i Such is the boasted tranquility of Kansas.— The United States troops, meantime, mi ce no effort to stop this pillage and never pretend to interfere with the pro•slavery ruffians. Col. Sumner's polioy seems to have been entirely ended by the arrival of Gee. Smith, who thus far has done nothing at all. POLITICIANS, NOT STATESMEN. N nhing marks the decline in the character of our political men better than some traits which the men at present figuring on the pat. ical stage are constantly exhibiting. These arc traits of folly; and they are to be met with in the conduct and language of the political leaders of every party at present before the pub lic—democrat, republican, American, nigger worshipper,. nigger driver, Know Nothing— without any.exceptions. For instance, it is not many weeks since Mr. Fillmore declared in New York, on more than one occasion, that in the event of the election of Mr. Fremont the Sonth would not submit; in other words that there would be a revolution. and an immediate dissolution of the Union. Mr. Buchanan has declared that "the very existence of the Union has been threatened" by the slavery discussion, and intimated that Fremont's success would amount tc a sentence of outlawry on one half the confederacy. Mr. Toombs says that "the election of Fre mont would be the end of the Union and ought to be." On the other hand, Mr. Wendell Phillips is opposed to the Republicans and Fremont be cause "they will retard the dissolution of the Union," the most desirable consummation that in his views can be hoped for. Meanwhile the leading Southern journals— not the obscure ones—but such journals as the Charleston Mercury, rejoice over the Sumner outrage, as "it will be likely to convince the North of the impossibility of remaining a mil. ted country." From the ravings of these infuriate madmen it is quite refreshing to turn to Col. Fremont, who really seems to be the only sensible man in the Presidential party, for he has said noth ing sod written but one short letter, very mod est and plain spoken in favor of the Union— the whole Union. We should . really like to see how some of these firemiting disunionists would set to work to dissolve the Union, and bring about their revolution. Pshaw ! This sort of thing may do well enough for ignorant red republicans from Europe, but the idea of expecting semi. ble Americans to swallow it is absurd, and the idea of Mr. Fillmore, Mr. Buchanan and Mr. Toombs pretending to believe it is melancholy, One may expect such rhodomontade from Col• one W-, whose preceptions were never clear, and who has always been a fighting man; but from statesmen, it is pitiful. How Shall the Whigs Vote? Three paths are open to the Whigs, but by the adoption of either one of two they will turn their backs upon the principles they deliberate. ly expressed and endorsed. If they support Buchanan and Breckenridge,' they support the Cincinnati platform, which utterly repu diates all power on the part of Congress to prohibit slavery in the territories, and leaves them opetrto a fierce and sanguinary struggle for supremacy between Slavery and Freedom. If they adoptthe 'Fillmore ticket, they take with it not a single principle which they as Whigs have supported in years past. Mr. Fillmore has acknowledged that he is no longer a Whig, and less formerly announced the dissolution of Whig party. Donolson, who is associated with Fillmore on the ticket, is a Democrat, who has only obtained a national notoriety as the editor of the leading organ of the Democratic party during the administration of Fillmore when his paper was conspicuous for its virulent and unscrupulous shacks upon the Whig adminis tration 1 In Col. Fremont we have a candi date who, though professing in least years to be a Democrat, has never been known as a political partisan. Associated with him upon the ticket is a sound and tried Whig. These candidates have been placed upon a platform which is Wbig in all its essential features, and which would have been considered in perfect keeping with the past principles of the party had it bees-put fourth by a Whig Convention. It embraces besides the doctrine of hostility to the extension of slavery, a declaration in favor of the maintenance of the principles of the Declaration of Independence and of the Con stitution. It arraigns the present Democratic adminis• tration, for its subversion of the principles of freedom and free speech. It declares against fillibusterisrn, and in favor of a railroad to the Pacific Ocean, a plank which, by the way, is to be found in the resolutions of the Massachusetts Whig State Convention in 1853. It also affirms in the most positive language the broad doc trine so long contended for by the Whig party, that Congress has power and in justified in ma. king appropriations for the improvement of ri• vers and harbors. These are all Whig doctrines and if there is a single vital and practical issue now contended for by the Whig party, which is not embraced in the Fremont and Dayton plat form, we should like to have it pointed out. Bteam Melodies. It has been stated that some inventor in Worcester has succeeded in turning the unear thly screech of the steam whistle into harmoni ous music. The new invention was attached to one of the locomotives on the Worcestiw and Nashua railroad, ou Thursday, and the editor of the Western Transcript, who was one of the party who "faced the music," thus speaks of the sensation created as the engine left Wor carter, to t he tune of "Old Dan Tucker."—Ex. However proper it may be to whistle "Get out the way Ole Dan Tucker" at crossings we respectfully suggest that many of our engines start with a Dead March in order that passes. gees may be fully prepared for what is before them. Another Bolt. Tho Democratic Freeman published in Co• lumbia county, N. Y. takes down the Buchan an flag, which had been flying at the head of its columns and commends to its readers the address of the Democratic Republican State Convention, held recently at Syracuse, in which the party resolves to support Fremont and Dayton. From the following it would seem that the bolt of the Freeman had been prece. ded by that of its readers: "The step to which we are now driven is one of absolute necessity. As an organ of tho Radical Democracy of the county, which it has assumed to be, it cannot longer support the platform and nominees which is receiving the almost unanimous opposition of that class in the county." OUR JESSIE. There are many of our political papers who object to the introduction of Mrs. Fremont's name into the Presidential canvass on a varie ty of grounds. One opposes dragging the name of a lady into the filthy arena of politics, a remark not highly complimentary to the sex whose business and duty is in the aforesaid arena. Another, a rural cotemporary, says that a wife is not a qualification for the office of President, and, therefore, implores his read• ers not to electioneer against Jerrie! What an error ! A President can have no more important aid in his government than a wife. For who could more appropriately head the Kitchen Cabinet than one, who all her life, had superintended domestic affairs ? Who shall manage the Presidential receptions, if note woman and a wife? Kings have tapestries in commemora• Lion of their great deeds; shall not the Presi• dential Mansion have its worsted work, and the Chair of State its Anti-Macassar? And is the President's linen to be at the mercy of a mere hired laundress ? If so, how can he over he expected to show a bold front to the enemies of his country? Who shall take care that he does not plunge the nation into a war in con• sequence of a bad dinner? Are there not White House spoons to be looked after, and White House carpets to be carefully attended to ? Can these things be entrusted to a housekee. per or to, friend ? Never I If the President were n single man—there would be swarms of the creatures known as Belle setting out for Washington, plotting and counterplotting his destruction—we beg pardon—his marriage.— Why there would be pulling caps for the head of the Nation I In the meantime, Members of Congress would be lurking around the back doors of the Presidential Mansion, and gradu ally the spoons would be gone. Some morn. ing after an unpleasant breakfast, the Presi. dent might dismiss the President of sonic coun try, which we should be at the trouble and ex pense of whipping. He might oversleep him self and let a bad bill pass, or in a rage at a missing shirt button, ho might veto a law which would save us from a revolution I And all this because he had no wife 1 A wife is decidedly a great merit in a nominee, and we shouldn't wonder if the Mustang colt were elected on the strength of that alone. Charges against Fremont. Between the Democratic and Fillmore or gnus, Col. Fremont is made out the moat ex traordinary man in the world. Taking them as they come, it appears that he is a Catholic, but he has lately turned Protestant; but is still a Catholic, and believes in the transubstantia tion, and in the bones of St. Quietus—that he is a slaveholder, and an abolitionist—that he is rich enough to buy up conventions and newspaper presses, and still so poor that he can't raise five dollars in his pocket in Wall street—that he never did anything for the con q nest of California, whatever may be recorded in the official praise of Mr. Marcy when Secre tary of War—that this same Fremont who is a Catholic, is also a Know Nothing, and has pledged himself to their cause. In a word, he is represented as this thing, that thing, as everything, and as nothing at all. It is evident, however, that it will require hard riding to run down, for he gathers wind, speed, and strength as he goes. The splendid run of "old Tippecanoe and Tyler too" did not open .more auspiciously. No use to chafer about it. Fremont is ahead and is just beginning to let out. When the popular tide sets in a parti cular direction, who shall turn it away 1 "It never rains but it pours.' Another Omen. The political prophets are most indefatigable in seeking out omens favorable to their.respee. tive candidates. The last of these we find in a "Buck and Breck Exch." It says, "the names of six of the Presidents of the United States ended in N—nearly half, and the next N will unquestionably be Buchanan l" Certainly some people can extract a great deal of comfort from a very small matter.— What are the prophets going to do with the im. portent fact that Buchanan has eight letters iu his name, while Fillmore has precisely the same number, and Fremont has but seven.— Now, an odd number is for luck, consequently the eighthJetter is fatal to the prospects of ei ther, if there is any truth in tradition. Then there is another thing—the fact that Filnore has an i and double / in his name. Why, we don't knOw—we base our assertion on the same grounds as the prophecy founded on the letter N. We are prepared to see all sorts of banners given to the breeze except this N sign of folly. The Election of Mr. Buchanan to Baden Slavery in Kansas. The Gettysburg Star calls attention to the fact that after Buchanan was nominated, the Locofocos of Richmond, Va., had a ratification meeting at which Henry A. Wise made speech. In this speech he urged as a main reason why Buchanan should be elected. that his election would result in the admission of Kansas as a Slave State, which would open a new market fur Virginia negroee and largely increase the profits of the traffic and the value of the arti. cle. Under this view, we expect the south to go for Buchanan. But will virtuous, respects. ble, humane, Christian people in the North vote for a man whose election is to give a new impetus to the abominable and unholy trade in human beings, as good before God, as James Buchanan or Henry A. Wise? Let no man who votes for Buchanan, with this fact before him, ever dare to talk to his neighbor about Christianity, a love of freedom or regard to the Declaration of Independence. Buchanan's Love. The authenticity of tho account of Buchan. au's early love•adventure, published in Harper's Magazine, is vehemently denied. This is mere folly; for it came through only three persons from Buchanan himself to the pages of the Ma. gazine. The Herald publishes au appendix to it : viz, that upon the young lady's death he cut his throat, and that only early discovery saved his life. This also is undoubtedly true. Vottil Betz. "Bobbin' Rounet."—We .will publish that next week, Katz. Mir Hon. Chas. Sumner spent a few days at Cresson, last week. War If honest teen are the snit of the earth, pretty girls may be said to be the sugar. What vegetable is the wearer of a tight boot like? A toe•martyr to be sure. An Old Advertisement of 1758.—Wanted, stout, active man, who fears the Lord, and can carry two hundred weight. Sear "We in company with some capitalists from Philadelphia."—Globe. How we apples swim. We Hope—That the genius of the Ironheud Democrat may not use so many greens as to have use for that pitcher again. re' The beauty of the Globe writhes under our plain facts. "Rogues never felt the halter draw With good opinion of the law." Certainly ./Vid.—ls it at all strange that when you indulge considerably in old Bourbon whiskey that external nature should look all awry? Vie-We advise the visible green genius of the Tyrone lrowbead Democrat, to become a little more ripe, ere he ventures into the chair editorial. Mir The young lady who "was taken by surprise" tits escaped and was seen in our town several days since sporting hoops and high heeled boots. ie. A murder was committed at Kettle C,elr, Clinton county, on the 9th ult., by Jacob W. Pfoutz who during a quarrel shot Wm. Hall with his rifle. A corresdondent of "The Lady's Daily Companion" wants to know whether "the steep thorny path" can be travelled in hoops ? Not by a barrel full ler"ltoPan IN."—A man in Troy made a skirt for a lady lately, which used up one hun dred and twenty-eight feet of rope., So says the New York Mirror. * Owners of shade trees are boxing them up for fear they may receive injury from corn. ing in contact with the numerous hoops that go ballooning the streets. "Withering—Tho sarcasm of the Funny Man of tho Huntingdon Journal."—fron•head Democrat. Still "Onsen"—The animnle what frightened the Broad Top babies. An Essay on Man. "At ten, a child ; at twenty, wild At thirty, tame, if ever; At forty, wise ; at fifty, rich ; At sixty, good, or never." The Running Brooks.—lt is said the reason why Mr. Brooks did not go to Canada was not that the distance was too long, but that after he gottbere the distance between him and Mr. Burlingame would be too short. One of the Toasts.—We think this sentiment and think it better even than the standard "day we celebrate," toast "The Women of the Revolution—mothers of men and patriots; The Women of to•tlay—Hoop I hoop t hurrah I" 86r C. M. Johnston, of Lancaster county, one of the most celebrated Democratic stump. speakers iu the State, is out in a card in a Lancaster paper, declaring his intention of sup porting Fremont. Hurrah for the Woolly Horse t The Union "Step."—According to the Bos. ton Post, to keep step to the music of the Union, you must wear Southern Buck-shin, and use the Cincinnati platform for a promenade ground; a style of goods that will not sell at all in this market. Moustaches.—Fromont while crossing the desert ate a fried mule. The tail is still sticking out of his mouth.—lron•head Democrat. We presume it is the tail of a donkey "stick. out" (about a feel) of the mouth of the genius of the Iron-head. How to make a Hal Tratelproof.—Tuke a pound of glue. Melt it. Give your hat a thick coating of this and let it stand a week. Then give it a good boiling in a copper of tar. After this take it to a tinsmith's and get it covered with good stout sheet tin. Paint as your taste directs. say- Drop an iceberg into the crater of Po pocatapetl, Gil up with claret, add one of the West India Islands to sweeten and flavor; then hand us the tower at Pisa to suck the liquid through, and you will oblige us considerably. Nothing less than this can cool our cracking throat, we do assure you. Signal' you realize the truth of the saying that 'Music bath power to soothe the savage, to rend a rock and split a cabbage.—Hunling• don Journal. "Is that the rock on which they :TEL"— /ron•liead Democrat. Yes. It had not the same peculiarities of the genius of the Iron•head,—green. Stir Last week there wasa tremendous out pouring of tilt people of Mifflin county, Ameri. cans and Republicans to a Union Meeting.— The Gazelle nays it was the largest meeting ever held in Lewistown. Fremont and Dayton were unanimou* endorsed. Huzza I huzza I for Mifflin county. Three times three fur noble little Mifflin SOP A New Orleans lady refusing to pay for an artificial log she had bought for her own use, the seller sued out a writ, requiring the sheriff to take it into his possession. The high sheriff—as ho does sometimes in ugly capital cases—turned the business over to a deputy, who succeeded in serving the writ and getting the limb into his possession—how, the editors down there have forgotten to say. More Amateur Voling.—At the infant school of Mine Cruet, a vote wasyesterd” taken upon the Presidential candidates. There were twos tyfour children present, and the vote stood as follows : Fremont .. 24 Buchanan 22 Fillmore l9 Miss Cruet 25 Even babes and sucklings are aware of the importance of the coming contest. gly Setu lowa Eleotion. WsstutroTox August 8. A despatch reeeived here from Burlington, Towa, states that the Republicans have,carried everything—State ticket, Congress and Legis• luture. . _ Dounous, Aug. 7. Returns from the following °mimics show Republican majorites: Scott county, 360 Henry, 870 Desmonies, 80 Louisa, 360 Jefferson, 300 Van Buren, 200 Worthington, 600 Buchanan, 230 Delaware, 120 Clayton, 4000 lowa, Black Hawk, 250 Johnson, 300 Cedar, (one town) 150 Total Republican majorities received, 4360 Dubuque gives 800, and Lee county 250 Democratic majorities. Timothy Davis and Samuel R. Curtiss, Re publicans are elected to Cocgress. The State is claimed by the Republicans to be carried by 5000 majority. From the North American. FROM WASHINGTON. WASHINGTON ? August 7. The Hon. Percy Walker, of Alabama, who was among the most conspicuous members of the Americar. Convention in Philadelphia, and who led that wing of the opposition in the pro tracted coaest for Speaker, openly recanted last night, and made a clean breast of his pre ference for Mr. Buchanan. But ho was not content with this length. When interrogated by Mr. Allison as to his course in case Colonel Fremont should be elected, and the Missouri Compromise restored, he was free to say, that a "dissolution of the Union" was his remedy.— This is the common cant of the day, and ever since Mr. Fillmore's speech at Albany, encour aging sectional resistance, it has become even more cheap, as an element of political warfare. Mr. Walker's abandonment now, is only impor tant or significant,inasmuch as it tends to show the same sort of indication, as when the South ern Americans receded from their candidate for speaker, and without hesitation adopted the Democratic nominee. The motive which in spired in the one ease, is quite likely to animate them in the other. And now that Kentucky, after all the protes tations, has gone over to the Democracy, the country may be prepared for a pretty general stampede in that section. The fact cannot be disguised now, from the blindest partizanship or the most perverse understanding, that Mr. Fillmore's only power as a candidate, is to con tribute strength to Buchanan. He is not seri ously in the field, except as a means of diver sion. There are, to be sure, certain localities in which he still exercises some influence, and might command more if he were less identified wit:, the proscriptions of a secret order. But under the best circumstances he can attain no practical results, not even so much now as to throw the election into the House. The con test is substantially narrowed down between Mr. Buchanan and Col. Fremont, and to vote for any other candidate is to throw away sup port. INDEPENDENT. Is Col. Fremont a Catholic. All persons who are interested in the solu tion of this question, which at tho present time trouble's politicians so much, will find it defi nitely answered in the following leßer,of a New York correspondent. We have the state ment here from Col. Fremont himself that he is not, neither has be ever been n Roman Cath olic. Will this satisfy the croakers ? New YORK, July 29. In conversation with Col. Fremont this morniug, I asked him explicitly, that I might authoritatively deny the story concerning his religion, "Col., are RA a Reins!' Catolic ?" To which he replied,wf ass not, nor have I ev er been ; and but twice during my natural lite do I remember to have been inside of a Homan Catholic church." Can the most of us say more? C..n many say as much? A letter pow before me from a gentleman' in Washing ton to his correspondent in this city says t "1 have examined the books kept at Brown's Ho tel in which the names of boarders are kept, and in the registry of the years 1852 and 1853 no such name as Fulmer appears!" and yet the Irpress states that Mr. Fulmer was there at that time. You will notice, however, that Mr. Fulmer makes no statements by letter, and that he says the Express misunderstood him. Neither does the Express state atrywhere lee belief that Fermont is a Roman Catholic. The whole matter is in process of shilling, and will soon ho made clear to the dullest compre hension. In the meantime you hove the state ment as made to mo personally, this morning, and of which you aro at liberty to make any use you may see fit. I had intended writing more fully concerning recent developements in Pennsylvania, but the mail closes, and I must. Yours truly, "Help He Canine or I Sink." The Buchaneers are calling. loudly fur 'help. , Hence the call for money, as embodied in the following circular, which we find published in the Albany Evening Journal, forwarded to that journal by a Postmaster who received it : [entvATE.] To the Postmaster of - Dear ,Sir:—At a private consultation of the leading Democrats of the Union, held in this city, immediately upon the adjournment of the Cincinnati Convention, it was recommended that each Postmaster be requested to contribute an amount proportionate to the receipts of their offices. Upon examining the returns of the Post Office Department, it is found that your proportion will be three dollars, which you will confer a favor by reinittirg by return mail. The principal object in making these collec tions is to throw into the doubtful States an immense quantity of documents is favor of the policy of the Democratic party, and also to as sist in defraying the expenses of speakers who will be employed during the coming canvass. You will therefore _perceive that every Past. toaster WHO WISHES A CONTINUANCE OF HIS OFFICIAL POSITION will God it for his interest to use every effort to bring about so desirable a result. g Postmasters are appealed to because they are considered the representatives of the party in their respective localities and being the recipients of the patronage of the Adminis tration, it is butjust that they should comply with its DEMANDS. Please send us the name of some reliable leading Democrat in your town, whom we can confer with hereafter. Address PERRIN M. 13IiOWN, JUN. Washington City, D. C., 1856. Ear Franklin Pierce was elected to the Pre. sidency by an oferwhelming majority of the nation because he was not known. Ile has boon dropped by general consent because ho is. Sir The Pottsville Miners' Journal, a paper of great influence among the miners of fichuyl• kill county, Pa., takes down the Filltnore flag and hoists Fremont. Another Chapter in Blood. The Dayton (Ohio) Gazette publishes a letter signed by three individuals at Blue Spring near Tecumseh, K. T., giving an account of the fiendish way in which'the border ruilians dispo sed of a Free State man "Yesterday morning we were going to Te eutnseh, but when abouteloven miles from that place, we were appaled by the eight of the body of a murdered man tied firmly to a tree, near the road side. He was tied with his hands and feet partially around it. Ho had been shot just above the left eye with—ns we sup pose—a rifle ball. A huge hunting knife was sticking in his breast. If had been driven clear through him, and the point was two or three inches in the tree. He was evidently murdered yesterday or day before." There was a toadstool tied to the knife haw dle, on which the following inscription was written t "Lot all those who are going to vote against slavery in Kansas—take warning I" The name of the man was Lab. Parker, and he was from Cleaveland. Read This, The Atlanta Sentinel published at Blifflintown Pa., has the names of Fillmorg . and Donelson floating at its masthead, but its editor is in dined to the opinion that Fremont will be the next President. In the last number of that paper, the editor says : The "Signs of the Times" are not to bombs taken ; they point emphatically to the election of JOHN C. Focuoser as our next President. Here is one of the "signs," which it will be well that the Democrats "make a note of."— Since the retiring of Andrew Jackson, no pulit• teal party has had control of the Government more than one term ! Jackson was Emcee. sled by Van Buren, in 1836 ; then the Whigs came into power and elected Harrison in 1840; then the Democrats were victorious and Polk was chosen over Clay in 1844; next Taylor, Whig, was elected over Cass in 1848 ; and in 1852 Pierce defeated Scott. In the natural order of things the Democrats must now retire before the avalanche of popular sentiment which is sweeping the county for "Fremont and Free dom." They will shako in their shoes before the ides of November, for we are bound to "give 'em Jessie." OUR BOOR TABLE. The Republican Pocket Pistol is a neat little volume to be had at Dayton & Burdick's, N. Y., at 5 cts. per copy. The Inventor for August is before us. This is just the work for mechanics and scientific men. The next No. begins a new volume, and now is the time to subscribe. $1 per year. Low A, Y. United Stairs ilfagazine.—This valuable pe riodical for August, is befbre us. It is a splen did No. Published by Emerson & Co., No. 1, Spruce St., N. Y., at $2 per year. Peterson's Magazine for September has been received. If you want the magazine, send $2 to T. B. Peterson, Philadelphia. Life of Freniont.—Wa have received from the publishers, Messrs. Miller, Orton & Mulli gan, N. Y., a copy of the above work. It in the best work out, as it contains the most com. piste record of the life and doings of the Stan dard.bearer of Freedom ! . It gives Col. Fre mont's principal Reports, unabridged, thus en abling the public to judge of him not only by his works but by his words. rhe reports are in themselves replete with striking Incident.— They are written with the enthusiasm of an ex plorer, yet with the modesty of a man of science . It refutes the slanders of his political enemies, and is thus very acceptable to Republic...— Single Copies sent by mail, postage, paid, on receipt of $l. GRATIAMB MAcszrxx--For September is be fore us. Watson & Co. Publishers, Phil., $2 per year. It is the best No. ever published, and is a star magazine. For the Journal. SIIIRLEYSBURC, August 9, 1850. Dear Sire :—John Brewster's Factcry in Hill Valley, three miles from this place, was burnt down on Thursday, the 7th inst. The bark shed containing about 300 cords of bark, the Engine house and everything about it, and about 600 hides, were entirely consumed, near ly 300 of which were ready for market. The factory, at this time, was in the occupancy of J. W. & B. h'. Glasgow, whomere tanning for Jacob Singnmster of New York, on commis sion. Their loss is very heavy, losing all their bark, liquors, &c, John Brewster bud three thousand on the tannery building, nothing else. Glasgows were also insured to a certain extent, but not sufficient to cover everything—this in mimeo was $7OOO, Singmaster was also in. eared, but it is not known to whet extent. How the fire caught no one knows ; it took place at 21 o'clock and was consumed in 15 minutes. ..... Since writing the above John G. told me their loss is about $lO,OOO, their insurance on on stock $5OOO, on bark, &c., 2000. John Brewster's insurance does not cover his loss.— The aggregate loss will amount to from $50,- 000 to $BO,OOO. S. L. G. Peter Myers, Esq. MESSRS. EDITORS :—Permit me through the columns of that sterling friend of freedom, the Huntingdon Journal, to present the name of Peter Myers, of Shirleysburg, to the A merican Republicans of Huntingdon County, as a suitable person for the office of Sheriff.— Mr. Myers is a man of sterling integrity, and eminently fitted for that office. If elected, be would discharge the duties of his office with a• bility. I hope the Republicans of the county will place Mr. Myers is nomination, na he can be elected. TITUS. Shirley tp., Aug. 9, 1856. Fremont. The Globe still asserts that Fremont is a Catholic. As no editor who receives any ex changes at all could be ignorant that this charge against Col. Fremont was proved by the unsought testimony of an Episcopalian minis ter, we are almost bound to believe that the statement is uow published in that paper with a full knowledge that it is false. Tits UNION QuEsTiox,"Elect our candi. date," cry the Buchanatrincu, "or we will dis• solve the Union." "Elea me," says Mr. Fill. more, "or the South eon% submit, and;will dis solve the Union." "Whether Col. Fremont is elected or not," say the Republicans "this Uoi• on must and shall be preserved!" war There will he Wen Ching in the Protes. taut Episcopal Church on Sunday next the 17th inst. Vir As we go to press before the American County Convention assembles, we cannot give auy.of the proceedings until our next number. Ntemo. lf:ir Gov. Anthony, of Rhode Island, is President of a Fremont CluL in Providence.' e -The York, (Pa.) Advocate hoisted the Fremont and Dayton Banner on the 29th all, le - The Richmond Whig says its only fear is that the Republicans and Democrats in tho North may unite. air John C. Kunkel, Republican has been renominated for gongress by the Dauphin County Convention. Tho Ogle County, (III.) 'Reporter, here. tofore a neutral journal, comes out in its last issue for Fremont and Dayton. ser The Fremont men of New Haven have organized themselves into an association, on. der the title of "The Pathfinders." der The Plymouth, La., Banner has haded off fronPßuchanan, and hoisted Fremont and Dayton at thelead of its colum s n. se- The Meadville Spirit an independent paper the editor of whirl has always been Democrat, hoists Fremont and Dayton. FIIEMONT IN GEOIVIIA.—We see it stated that the Wilkes County IGa.) Republican has run up the names of Fremont and Dayton. Kentucky Eleetbm.—Returus from forty-nine counties give an aggregate American majority of 2,676, being a Democratic gain of 4,477. ,l{ Republican and American State Con. ventions ure in session at Hartford, Connecti cut, to nominate a Union Fremont electoral ticket. nerd correspondent in Maine writes— " Yon will see Maine give the Fremont ball a start which will astonish the wild cats and frighten the wolves. North Carolina Election.—Returns all favor the election of Bragg, Dem., as Govenor. The Americans have gained three members of the Legislature and lost one. ler A Fremont ratifieatior. meeting, held at Dubuque, lowa, on the lith ult., is repro. rented to have been the largest meeting ever held west of the Mississippi. FREEMAN'S CRAINS.—The chains which J.t. sox Bnows, of Kansas, a Free Staieman, wore four weekF, are now on exhibition at the headquarters of u Republican Club in Wash ington. i6;r•New London, in Connecticut, at the char. ter election on Monday, carriedF. N. HARRIS, the Fretnont candidate for Mayor, by a very larr majority, over A. C. LIITETT, the Buch anan nominee. ger We have before us a list of all the pa pers in the State which oppose the present Na. tional Administration. Of these, eiglsiyJirc support Fremont for President, and thirty support Fillmoro. Star There is a monthly publication in' Pat. terson, N. J., called Our Gatherings, edited by the girls of the Grammar school in that city, which has entered the political contest under the banner of Fremont and Dayton. SW - Gov. Wise at the late Buchanan cation meeting at Richmond said "the election of Buchauan would enhance the value of ne groes from one thousand to five thousand dol lars." But what will it make white men worth ? Ten cents a day? gar The Massachusetts American State Council has met again, and by a veto of ayes 81/, noes 52, substituted an endorsement of Fre mont and Johnston for that of Fillmore and Donelson, as first proposed. The charter of the Council has bees revoked. star The St. Louis Republican has learned from a source which admits of no question, that immediately after the August election a Fremont ticket is to be brought out in that State. The Anxeiger is to take the lead, the Democrat is expected to follow and the ticket will be supported by the Black Republicans in the State. The .Premonters.—So far as we are able to judge, the Fremonters in Washington have quite divided the Know Nothing or Whig ranks and we shall not be surprised if as many votes are cast by the Republican. party in this city and in Mill Creels Hundred for Fremont as are given to Fillmore.—Delaware Gazelle. KO"' Hon. Mark Delahay, a delegate to the Cincinnati Convention from a Fremont and Dayton meeting, at Montezuma, Pike county, on the 18th ult. He said he attended the Cin cinnati Convention, and was in favor of Mr. Buchanan, but, when he saw him swallow the platform, he bolted, and now advocated the election of Fremont. Arorin Beaver county the opposition aro united on Fremont. Among the officers of the Beaver Fremont Club, are Benjamin Wilde late Democratic candidate for Senate; B. Bush Bradford, late American candidate for Cove. nor; A Robertson, late Whig Senator; Silas Merrick, formerly a Democrat. The Fremont men claim front 1000 to 1500 majority in Bea. ver. * The New Haven Journal says that no less than 200 democrats, heretofore for Buch anan, have subacibed to the new Fillmore pa per to be started at Hartford ; and it is further intimated the democratic paper is Waterbury is about to declare for Fillmore. And the New Haven Register (Such.) says the Fillmore men aro making a formidable front in that State, farming clubs in every town Ac. tliir It should not be overlooked that no ono of the Doughface journals which have charged that Col. Fremont is a Roman Catholic, has yet had the manliness to publish the certificate of the Rev. Mr. French, of Washington, that all the Colonel's children were baptised in the Episcopal church of that place. They refuse because the publication of this fact would to p published rovetothe is false. ir readers that all they have hither- 'ray-. Simon Cameron, of Penn., has taken stump for Fremont and Dayton. He is the best canvasser in the State, and his revolt from the pro•slavery ranks will reduce their strength in Pennsylvania thousands of votes. The voice of this veteran, raised for Fremont and Freedom, will send a thrill through the hearts of young Democrats of the Keystone State whose sires have walked and acted by kin counsels in the days which are gone.