;_ci)until gbn journal. _ • ~•• c...1‘ • _ AtitlO : S.; 16143 - 1.1.11 AM BREWSTER, EDITORS. • M. G. WHITTAKER. lednesday Morning, August 20, 1856. Forever float that standard sheet, Where breathes the foe but fallsbefore us, With Freedom's soil beneath our feet, And Freedom's banner streaming oierusl" FOR PRESIDENT, JOHN C. FREMONT, OF CALIFORNIA. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, WM. L. DAYTON, FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER. TZOICAS E. COWMAN, OF YORK COUNTY. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL, DARWIN PELIIIRS, Missocat.—ln this State three candidates were run for Governor—Benton, anti-Benton, and American. The contest was between the two latter, and Polk, the anti-Benton Democrat is elected. F. P. Blair, Jr., Republican, has been elected to Congress from the St. Louis dis trict. The Democrats have a majority of the other offices. ARICANSAS.—The Democrats have carried , this State by 5000 majority, and both Congress- Jean MeCoLLoon, Chairman. I men Isaac Neff, I Wm. Rothrock, OP ARMSTRONG COUNTY. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL. EARTEOLdrgEW LAPORTE, OF BRADFORD COUNTY. LICAN REPUBLICAN MIRITTEE. FREMONT AMERI COUNTY CO James Morrow, Peter Swoope, E. B. Wilson, Ralph Crotsley, Robert Baird, Charles Mickley, S. Wigton, John Grafflust J. A. Hall, John Laport, Wm. Brewster, David Stever, Joseph Curiman, Henry Hudson, Isaac Taylor, Jonathan McWilliams Wm. M. Lloyd, Peter Shaver, Jr. Robert R. Andrews, Benjamin F. Glasgow, Daniel Neff, Sen., ' Lorenzo Tate, Bike X. Blair, John Bare, Tease Smith, Wm. Smith, George Wilson, S. Miles Green, Andrew Myton, I John Baker. '..Mmuel Thompson, John A. Doyle, S. L. Disavow, lior v Robinson, 1 .7ir.. Wl,toll, m rtnner, 1 Shade, !attern, J. V.'. Aaron Alex.hri OS, bt..;LEGATE MEETING. Th tkik•gate meetings will be held in he d ffere ut places of holding the same on Saturday the 30th day of August. COUNTY CONVENTION The County Convention tvill be held in this borough, at o'clock, P.M., of Tuesday, the 2d day of September. CALL FOR A REPUBLICAN COUNTY CONVENTION. At a meeting of the members of the Repuhli . ‘n County Committee, Laid in Huntingdon ah Augu, •;esuonee of the pub . ,• ',ration the tuition •1 m of 'lir pre• r the course o f title it to re• t Fremont and Fre., . ;;; al the October :ie. following preamble and resolutions were unanimously adopted: returns, Notwithstanding the declaration .•tado at the former alerting of this Committee, that it was not the design nor the wish of the friends of free Kansas and Fremont in our comity to build up an exclusive party at the expense of distracting and dividing the forces of the opposition to Buchanan, unless forced to that course by the friends of Mr. Fillmore ; ac companied by the humble request that in its deliberations the American Convention should pursue a conciliatory course and agreeably to the call published for the election of delegates to that Convention addressed to "all the oppo• aition of the present National Administration," should not attempt rattily to preclude any in dividual belonging to that "eppoeition" from liking part either in the delegate elections or .in the salon of the Convention, by reason of any difference of opinion existing amongst us ! on the great national question ; it appears that an entire different course than we Race, for and had a right to expect, was pursued by tire American party, and not only were the friends ; of Mr. Fremont excluded from participating in the election of delegates in the several die. tricts where Mr. Fillinore's friends seemed to axe in the majority, but where delegates were elected by Fremout men, and they were known to be such, they were ejected from the Conven• tion, and the declaration openly made and car- I tied out, that no candidate should be put on nomination by the Convention unless pledged to support Mr. Fillmore. Not content with this gross and open insult to a large portion of the citizens of the county, who were willing to act as heretofore with them on the State elec tion, the adherents of Mr. Fillmore, in their asperation over the waning cause of their can didate, on the adjournment of their Convention, to show their feelings in reference to free speech and free discussion, even carried out opposition so far as to interrupt and disturb the peaceable meeting of our friends assembled in the public square by previous notice, by en• deavonng to drown the voices of our speakers in boisterous shouting and music from a hired band. Truly was it well said "That whom the gods wish to destroy they first make mad." We held the olive branch out to them, and al most too humbly asked for a conciliating feel ing in reference to the fusion on the national question, and no otherconrse now remains, but to organize in every township in the county and furor a distinct and separate party, and form a ticket to be supported by the (needs of free. Kansas, free speech and Fremont. nevelore be it Resolved, Thatour friends be .• sioesuel to meet iu their several townships asel districts, at the usual places of electing t,:, , gatee and at the usual hour on Saturday, tie 30th day of Aupuut inst., and elect two detrTatee each, who will meet at the Court il ese, in the borough of Huntingdon, on Tues. th.e 3d day of September next, and proceed vs .nrm a county ticket composed of our friends to be supported at our next October election, and elect Heoatorial and Congressional conferees to meet the Republican Conferees of Blair and Cambria counties at Altoona and Johnstown, at such time es may be hereafter fixed on, ay.:laminate a Senator and Member of Congress, gid 11. spit ether tiiiags as way es required. Resolved, That we earnestly request the friends of our cause in Blair and Cambria counties to have Senatorial Conferees appoin• ted in their respective counties, on or before the meeting of our Convention, that no delay may be had in forming a ticket. Resolved, Mat in starting out with a new and distinct Republican organization, it is ne• cessury that one ticket should he formed of the best of material, and our friends are requested to select their best men as delegates. . _ Itesolred, That it is the du't'y of the friends of our cause to organize clubs in the different townships and boroughs in the county, whose duty it shell be to distribute proper information amongst the people and see that every friend of free Kansas attends the polls in October and November, armed with the proper ballot. Signed by the Committee, and two hundred citizens of the county. SifirWe omit the names for want of room. al SIGNS,'PORTENTIOUS SIGNS, THE RECENT ELECTIONS. Elections have been held this month in Ken- tucky, Missouri, Arkansas, North Carolina, Al abama and lowa. The following is the result: KENTUCIEY.—We have returns from sixty nine counties of the State, and they show a De mocratic gain of about 10,000. The remaining counties will show additional gains for the same party. Last year the Americans carried the State by 4,500 majority. NORM CAROLINA. --There is a Democratic majority _of 8000 for Governor, and the Legis lature is also strongly the same way. This inn gain of about 6000 from the last year. ALAnams.—The returns received indicate that this State has gone largely Democratic. lowa.—The Republican majority will reach 8000. Every county going for the Republicans but one. All the Congressmen and members of the Legislature are Republicans. Before the election, the Fillmore men confi dently claimed that they would carry Kentucky, Arkansas, North Carolina, and perhaps Alaba ma. In each of them they have been routed "horse, foot and dragoons," and we cannot see where they have a foothold left to stand upon. In this faith they appealed to the voters of the North to stand by their candidate, and hun dreds of them did so in the belief of the repro sentations thus made. The result is now before them, and instead of success, they have been overwhelmed by a crushing defeat. There is no use shutting our eyes to this thing. The fact is, Mr. Fillmore is no where as a candidate, and his continuance in the field can only inure Ito the benefit of Buchanan. Thousands of vo ters regard his position in this light, and as Itheir first purpose is to defeat Buchanan, they will rally to the standard of FREE KANSAS end FREMONT. Every day witnesses such accessions as these, and before the election day comes round we will see a universal popular sentiment going up from the whole North in support ofthe People's Candidates, and in con demnation of the aggressive policy of the Slave Power of the country. The contest in the na tion is between Freedom and Slavery, as rep resented by Fremont and Buchanan, and the vcters of the country must choose between the two. There is no neutral ground in the con test—no halfway house where the timid may take their ease and temporise upon the subject. We want MEN and we want ACTION.—Men who have warm blood in their veins, and such Action es still lead to results. Be wise in time • and heed the portentious signs that are before us. FIRST GUN FOR FREEDOM HUZZA FOR lOWA ! The little State of lowa held her elections for members of Congress and Legislature, on the sth inst. In 1852, General Pierce had the electoral vqte of the State over General Scott, by something like a thousand majority. Now the tables are turned—the flood has bro• ken loose, and the administration party aro swept away completely. The majority for the Republicans in the State will be near 800011 lowa elects but two members of Congress,— this is equal to fifty thousand majority in Pennsylvania! The State of lowa adjoins Nebraska Terri. tory, and is the nearest free State to Kansas. Buchanan men have claimed the states nearer to "Kansas outrages." If this be true, the ad. vocates of Slavery Extension and "Missouri Sovereignty," will make but a poor show in Pennsylvania and New England. •' How brightly breaks the Morn.• FREMONT, We have received many lists of names, from different parts of the county, approving of the call for a Republican county convention. We have only room to give a few. From Cass township, a call with 40 names attached. From Cromwell, a call with 30 names head ed by R. B. Wigton, Daniel Teague, J. E. Thompson, T. Anderson, F. Herman, &c. From Mt. Union, 20, headed by John Baker, J. A. Doyle, P. S. Shaver, Wm. Morrison, &c. Shade Gap, 15 names, headed by 13. X. Blair, Dr. Shade, r. Todhunter, Rev. W. li. Woods, (3.ll,Rouse, James Shoop, D. Jeffries, &c. Shirley, 35 names, headed by P. Myers, S.L. Glasgow, John Brewster, John Lutz, &e. A Fremont club has been formed in Caw Slur!eyebolt, lee. Communication. We have received a copy of a very excellent address delivered ou the occasion of a Sabbath School celebration on the 7th inst., at Blair's Mille, Tell tp., by Col. Geo. Nose. We are so, ry that our apace will not permit tie to publish it at preeent. The communication accompany lay it appear in our neat. MASS MEETING, Of the Friends of FREMONT & DAYTON. Our flag was there I—the starry flag Our•stout forefathers gave, O'er Freedom's home—Free soil—Free men, In triumph long to wave. One of the largest and most enthusiastic meetings ever'held in Huntingdon, convened in the public square on Tuesday, the 12th inst. The meeting organized by the appointment of Judge McWilliams as President, and Dr. John Shade, B. X. Blair, Alex. Steel, Wm. E. Me. Murtrie , Major James Steel, John Laport, Gen. S. Miles Green, S.L. Glasgow, Vice Presidents and John Matters, J.'A. Hall, and E. Wilson, Secretaries. John G. Miles, E sq., being loudly called for mounted the stand and delivered a telling ad dress. He said it was now for us to say wheth er our country should stand or we should drift ' away without chart or compass. The Fremont party presented a platform that no exceptions could be taken by any northern men. He was greeted with great applause, and on concluding introduced Goy. Thomas Ford of Ohio, who was greeted with three hearty cheers. Gov. Ford, made an eloquent speech. He denied that the Republican party was sectional or attempted to abolish slavery where it now exists. He wanted to stop the hole up, and confine the "peculiar institution," to its pres ent limits. He denied the allegation that John C. Fremont was a Catholic. He said the talk of secession was all nonsense, for in the event of the election of Mr, Fremont, lie would dons General Jackson had done, put his foot down and say you shall not secede. Gov. Ford was so frequently interrupted by a pfocession of Americans, with %Brass Band, that be was compelled to close his remarks, be ing unable to have his voice heard. 11. N. McAlister, Esq., of Centre Co., next followed 3 he told those before him they had an equal right to migrate to Kansas with any er man in the country, but could they do so if the blighting curse of slavery existed there ? The poor Northern man must go to the \Vest and take up a quarter section of land, but the Southerner could go and take up his 1000 a ems, and feed his negroes on corn, which the Pennsylvanian would starve on. Mr. McAlis ter's address was listened to with great atten tion, andilicited great applause. Alex. King, Esq., of Bedford, next spoke, he endorsed all that had been said, and concluded by proposing three cheers for FREMONT & DAYTON, which were given with the "spirit and understanding," and MAO the enemies of Free Speech, Free Tress and Free Kansas "shake in their boots." Mr. Hall, from the Committee, then offered the following preamble and resolutions which were rapturously received and itnanimonst, a dopted by the vast assemblage, after which the l i meeting adjourned: WIIEREAS, Negro Slavery. a n anomaly in our system of free government, a reproach on our professions of "liberty and equality" as a pro. pie, and a foul stain on our otherwise glorious civil and religious institutions, has of late years Lecome a peculiar and alartning softer, of po• litieal powerand corruption ; And whereas this power, always insidious, has become insolent and arrogant, and is no longer satisfied with the perfect immunity it enjoys in the slave states, but seeks unlimited extension over free territo ry, thus trampling on every past compromise of national legislation on the subject, violating the plain letter of the Declaration of Independence and the obvious spirit of the Constitution ; spurning the most sacred rights of free labor ; despising the solemn teaehingsof Washington, Jefferson, Franklin, Randolph, Mason and oth er early patriots ; and defying the combined ex• ecration and loathing of the whole civilized world ; And whereas one of the great political parties of the country, yielding its patriotism to a love of public plunder, is freely lending the prestige of its much abused raw and the power of its Jesuistical organization to crush liberty and enthrone slavery; And whereas an• other party, originally organized to oppose op. pression civil and religious, has been bullied from its proper position and betrayed into the ranks of the oppressor ; And whereas a large portion of the Christian Church has ignobly , "bowed the knee to the dark spirit of slavery.' transforming its ministers, once a terror to evil doers, into "dumb dugs" who dare not open their mouths against the roost daring "wicked- IiCS9 in high places," Therefore Resolved, That n crisis has arisen in the pol itics of our country which should arrest the se rious attention, and call forth the most deter mined ACTION of every patriot and freeman in the land. Resolved, That the great issue now before the American people—the question which ab sorbs all other questions, is—shall slavery or freedom triumph in the comingpresidential contest ? Shall the fair plains of KANSAS, and the millions of acres once dedicated tofreedoin by solemn compact, be ruthlesslytorn from the WRITE LABORERS of the North and West, nod covered with the curse of Negro bondage ? Shall our kindred and brethren of the present generation and our posterity hereafter, lee per mitted to plant in the western wilderness, the Church and School, nod other appliances of christian civilisation, to enjoy a virtuous life and rear virtuous offspring, under the genial light of free thought, free speech, free labor, and free institutions, or shall they be surrounded by the blighting moral and social curse, and blasted by the burning shame of ignorance and serf. dom ? Shall we, our sons, our wives and daughters labor side by side with our EQUALS, 1 or shall wo and they be compelled to compete with the unpaid, unpitied, uneducated and de graded bondman ? Thin is the question. Let freemen answer. Resolved, That evcr7 feel in g of humanity, ev ery sentiment of religion, and instinct of self preservation, prompts end impels us to oppose the extension of human bondage and to strike for freedom while freedoth yet has hope. Resolved, That we hold slavery to be section al and freedom national; that we seek no inter ference with the "Institution" where it is ; but that we will resist with all the energies of our nature and all the talents which God has given us, its tyranical aggressions upon the unpollut ed soil of our free territories—the blood-bought birthright of freemen I Resolved, That in this righteous contest for LIBERTY, our chosen leaders aro JOHN a FREMONT,' ot California, and WILLIAM L. DAYTON of New Jersey, patriote true and tried, statesmen who have neverbowed the knee to the tyrannical Oligarchy of the South, free. men who have no sympathy with the "border ruffians" of Missouri and Washington, or their supporters or apologists of any name, party or creed. Resolved, That the friends of freedom in the several election districts of Huntingdon county are hereby requested to meet at their usual pla ces of holding township elections, on Saturday the 30Ia inst,at 4 o'clock, r. sr., and elect in each district, two delegates, pledged to Fre• mont and Freedom, to meet in county conven tion in the borough of Huntingdon, ttt2 o'clock P. M., on Tuesday the 2d day of September, to nominate a county Republican ticket, and trans act such othw business us the exigencies of the times and the interests of the cuuse may re quire. "DEMOCRATIC" MEETING. On Wednesday evening of last week, the "unterrified" held a "Buck and Brock" demon stration in the Court House. After a great deal of "noise and confusion" Mojor Tom Campbell was called upon, and addressed the meeting at some length. He epolce of his re cent trip through the West, of the grandeur and sublimity of the granite hills of the Key stone State, but neglected to tell his Democra tic brethren of the "strong" avalanche of pub lic opinion which he declared on his arrival home, was sweeping the great West in favor of free speech, free press, Fremont & Dayton.-- The Major, no doubt is a good man, in the Locofoco cense, but he evidently feels that he has the wrong side of the question ; hence his effort was a complete failure. Major Campbell was followed by John Scott, Esq., a gentleman not unknown to our renders as a strenuous politician. He endeavored to inculcate the doctrine that slavery was a blessing, which ought to be extended wherever slave-owners desired to take it, and that upon the election of Buchanan depended the salvation of the Union. The conduct of the Missouri ruffians, sent into Kansas by the slave.holders of the South, to subdue and overawe those who desire to pre• serve that territory from the curse of slavery, found a ready apologist in the speaker. He labored hard to convince his listeners that the' advocates of Fremont wore abolitionists, who desired the dissolution of the Union; and dealt in many similar and extravagant charges a gainst the opponents of the present Adminis tration. The speaker evidently felt that he was advocating a forlorn cause, but tried to make the best of it. Next followed the polthrek, John Ashman, of Clay tp. Mr. Ashman's speech was a .oar• castle one, and the Squire convinced his hear. ers that he was laboring under an aberrated mind, by denouncing Methodism and Meth°. dints in general. A great effort was made to get the old man to sit down, but, like Banquo's Ghost, he "would not down." There was much cheering at the close of the meeting for Buchanan, Breckenridge, as• sisted by heavy blows on wind instruments, to keep the spirit up. When the Democratic thunder had eubsided, three hearty cheers were also given by the outsiders for Fremont and . Freedom, which most have convinced eve. ry one that at least one half of the people pro. sent did not coincide with the views advanced by the speakers. The Excelsior Brass Band performed on the occasion and assisted much to stir up'the necessary enthusiasm by their en livening music. On the whole, we do not think they 4ad u many converts on the sees. sion. American County Convention This Convention has placed in nomination the following ticket : Assembly, Dr. Wintrode ; Associate Judges, B. F. Patton, Benedict Stevens; Sheriff, Nath. Lytle ; Pros. Attorney, T. H. Cremer ; Com missioner, John Planner; Director of the Poor, Henry Hudson ; Auditor, .1. Gibboney. The Congressional Conferees appointed were instructed to support David Blair, Esq., for Congress. This convention was the most "lame and im• potent" one ever convened here. It was nut the expression of untrammeled voters, but the offspring of designing politicians, which has in its turn, given birth to an illegitimate. Notwithstanding the assertion of the Amer. ican party, as proclaimed in the resolutions aa• naninfouoly adopted by its executive committee a month ago, that it wan to be a union conven tion, no sooner had it met than every man who would not consent to endorse the Philadelphia Platform, and Millard Fillmore, was expelled from the Convention, and other delegates ap. pointed instead Thus they have basely tram pled on the vital sentiment of Americanism, and proved recreant to their protestations of a desire fur union. Surely, "they whom the Gods wish to destroy they first make mad." This being the elute of affairs, the Republicans have issued a call fur another Convention, to meet in Huntingdon on the 2d day of September.— We call upon every free•boru American citizen of Huntingdon county, who loves his freedom, his God, his Country and-her Institutions, to rally. Elect delegates in every township, and let no as a hand of freemen, as brethren in the great cause of itu manity, use our every effort • to deliver our country and our county from time slave-driver and his ally. Locofooo Convention. The I, o eoibeo County Convention which met iu this place on Wednesday last placed in nomination thu following ticket Assemldg—Nicholas Croswell, of Porter. Asso Judge—John Creswell of West. John Lung of Shirley. Sherfy—Graffius Miller, Huntingdon. County Commissioner—Henry Zimmerman, Hopewell. . . . . Auditor—A. L. Grim, Huntingdon. Mr. Nicholas Creswell, le a gentleman of weight. We refrain from any comments. He will understand our motive after the election. Mr. John Creswell it—well we dont know anything about John, except that he is a dyed. in.the.wool Locofoco, and wears gold epee's. clew. Mr. John Long, will lire a long time before he is elected to a Judgeship. His recommen• dation is Locofocoism. Mr. Graff. Miller is a very tall man, and would no doubt be very happy to be elected. Mr. Henry Zimniernian.--This gentleman's had health, would no doubt be a serious obsta cle towards a proper discharge of his duties. Mr. Au walla Grim, is favorably known as the "learned blacksmith." stir For a large, neatly bound volume of the Kansas Investigating Committee's Report we are indebted to somebody in Washington; who, we can't tell, as our postmaster here has had the impudence to tear off the wrapper,— A mighty small way of venting spite, that. READ THE FACfS! Sltffl, VHI DEMOGRACT4B TREASON '56, 1 Read the following Resolution adopted by the Democratic State Convention which met at Pittsburg, in 1848. Resolved, That the Democratic party adheres now, as it ever has done. to the Constitution of the country. Its letter , and spirit they will neither weaken or ,! destroy, and they re-declare that Sla very is a domestic local institution of the South, subject to State legislation alone, and with which the general gov e7iiment has nothing to do. Wherever I the State law extends its jurisdiction, the local institution cau continue to exist. Esteeming it a violation of State Rights to carry it beyond State limits, we deny the power of any citizen to extend the area of bondage beyond its present dominion, NOR 1)0 WE CONSI DER IT A PART OF THE COMPROMISE OF TIIE CONSTITUTION THAT SLAVE , 11 V SHOULD FOREVER TRAVEL WITH THE ADVANCING COLUMNS OF OUR TERRITORIAL PROGRESS In 1848-9 this was Democracy, but the very suite principle now advocated by the great Re publican party is denDunced by thesovery same men no treasonable. In 1848-9 it was good Democracy to exclude Slavery in the Territo ries by direct enactment of Congress, but now, alas, the advocates of the same principle aro de. nounced as traitors, sectionalists, and dissolu• 1 thinists I i elll this, and the outrages committed in Kansasptaken in wintiection with the fact that the Democratic Party in Congress almost unanimously repealed the law prohibiting Sla very in Kansas and Nebraska, shows clearly the true position of that party—that it is a sla very extension party. Comment is not needed; fitets are stubborn things and speak in tones of terror to the political gamblers. Will our fel low-citizens, the Jeffersonian Democrats of the District who supported these measures of Free. dem in 1848-9, turn the somerset with their leaders and vote for the extension of this in. fernal institution over the Free Territories?— You will answer at the ballot box. HEAR A MAN SPEAK. 1 Fur the .7mirstal. • AVGIIWICK MILLS, Aug. 11, 185(1 Messrs. Editors of the Journal:-1 wish you to place my flume on your books as a subscri• her. I hare discontinued my subscription to the paper called the Huntingdon American, because it is utteilly void of all the principles of the true American school. I have been a mem. her of the Pennsylvania American neuter; and have had the honor of being Chairman of the Council to which I belonged and yet belong.— In 1855, whets the whole north seceded in the general Council at Philadelphia,' on act% tint of the disgraceful pro-shivery platform which the Southern slave•holders forced upm the Council, the action of the members of the Or der from the free States who so seceded, met my entire approbation, and I adhered the more closely to the principles of the American Order, as I believed that the Order was founded to support and sustain Freedom and not Slavery. But when I saw at the close of the miscalled Nittional Xonlistatiug Convention, which met its Philadelphia, in February 1856, that the slave power of all the Southern States voted to exclude from the sitting of the Convention, the entire delegation of Pennsylvania, because it was believed to be hostile to Slit/cry, and nt the same time voted to admit and did admit the entire delegatiop of Louisiana, composed altogether of Roman Catholics, I no longer doubted and no sensible mats could doubt, that the Convention was wholly controlled by the interests of Slavery, and that all the hustle mental landmarks of the American Party were to be sacrificed to gratify the 'slave-holders, and secure the ascendancy of slavery. And when I further saw that the representatives of the Slave States had chosen fur their candidate for the Presidency, Millufd Fillmore, a man odious to every friend of Liberty ; a man who had be trayed and sold Isis friends to the slaveocracy, when he was accidentally invested with the power of President of the United Staten, I cea sed to have any respect for the action of that Convention. When I perceived that the true friends of freedom, and 'antagonists of slavery, who were in that Convention from the Free States, felt thetoselves bound to retire from the Convention, I no longer had the slightest con. Hence in the doings of the Convention. I be. lieved then and I believe now, that Millard Fillmore, having long before that time, satin• fled the slaveocracy that he was morally and politically their slave, they had come from the cotton, sugar, hemp, tobacco, or rice fields of the far South, to net up their slave to lie voted for in Pennsylvania, hoping thereby to divide tho'Notes of friends of freedom in Kansas, and secure the election of a man ready to aid in the murders, ravages and ruin of the free set. tiers in Kansus—l believe Buchanan to be as had as Fillmore, and Fillmore, if possible, worse than Pierce. I shall therefore support John Charles Fremont, of California, and William L. Dayton, of New Jersey, as candi dates for the Presidency and Vice Presidency of the United States. JOHN BAKER. Outrageous Conduct. Let it be remembered that whilst Gov. Ford of Ohio, a stranger iu our midst and a perfect gentleman, was addressing the Republicans in the public square of this place, a procession of Americans headed by some respectable gentle. men of this borough and the editors of the Hnutingt.on Ameriran newspaper, James B. Barr nod John A. Nash, three times marched by and with drums, and horns, and shouting, and yelling, endeavored to break up the Fre• moat meeting. But this is not all ; although the Republicans gave up to them the Court House, and held their meeting in the strcet,yet these men wore so ungenerous as to organize another meeting not one hundred yards from the spot where Gov. Ford was speaking, after adjourning at the Court House I • American citizens, is FREE SPEECH to he muzzled in Huntingdon County? Speak. Blair County Court. The case of Docker, indicted for the mur der of Davis, of Williamsburg, bee:Tied al most the entire second week of Court. On Friday afternoon it was submitted to the jury who, in a few minutes returned a verdict of "murder in the second degree." A motion was made for a new trial, which the Court held over sntil Saturday morning the counsel foathe prisoner waved their objections to the verdict of the jury, end the Court sentenced !locker to undergo imprisonment in the Wes. tern Penitenti:try fur the term of ten years. The Court then proceeded to sentence those who had previously been tried and found gull ty of the charges on which they were indict. ed : James Daniel Davis, convicted of the mur• der of James R. Johnston—sentenced to inn. wisonment in the Western Penitentiary for the term of eleven years. John Finney, convicted of Larceny—sen tenced to imprisonment in the Western Peal tentiary for the term of one year. Alexander Murdock, colored, convicted of Larceny—sentenced to imprisonment in The Western Penitentiary for the term of one year. The Altoona Tribune says "the five prison• ers above named, and Josh. Dennis, the color. ed barber of this place, who was previously acentencA to four• years in tine penitentiary passed through this place on Monday morning last, in charge of the Sheriff of the county, on their way to Westerns Penitentiary at Pittsburgh." Blair County Ticket. The American County Convention which met in Hollidaysburg on lust week nominated the following ticket : Assembly—John M. Gibbony. Register and Reem:der—H. A. Caldwell. Tr'iusurer—Samuel Hoover. Commissioner—David Confer. County Surveyor—,l ames (7w inn. Directors ol Poor—Samuel Shiver, 3 yens, Miehnel \Vika, 1 " Audilor—Samuel Morrow. The committee on Resolutions reported John K. NOY, J. Peon Jones and Jan. Hutchison, as Congressional Conferees instructed to recom• mend John Brotherline for emigre., nod J. Walters, fns. Burleigh and Jus. Beldridge Senatorial Conferees. American Ratification Meeting, The Americans held a ratification meeting in the Cowl House on Tuesday eat, 12th inst. The principal proceeding was the singing of Fillmore adage by one Bell. They formed a procession alter the meeting and with music and shouting, ekeee times mar ched by the Republican meeting, and done ev erything in their power to disturb Hov. Ford when speaking. This, to say the ls , st of it, was outrageous, and we have heard honest A merienns say it disgusted them with Wit. par ty and will add scores of votes to Fremont, of those who raver FRREDOM OF SPEECH. . To the credit of the Republican party be it remetnbncd, that net a single disrespectful word was retread to them. It is not the pur pose of the Republicans to carry on the cam. paign by btfllying blacliguardism, but by solid argument.; and honest appeals to Christian pa riots. Samuel Coon. This gentleman of Barre° tp., states through the lost Huntingdon Globe that he has paid for the Journal until next April, and that although ho ordered it otherwise we "still keep his name in our paper as an agent." Nuw this latter assertion is a consnmmate falsehood and Mr. Coen has established his reputation as' a fulii fter in proclaiming it. Believing it to add noth ing to the character of the Journal to have his Immo appear in its columns as its agent, we weeks atm struck his name out of our columns. Mr. Coen must certainly have had a great de. sire to see his name in print that ho could thus unblushingly assort so positively a downright falsehood. .Shame on him. Poor Old Man. The last alas piu•ades the name of one John Ashman, of Clay tp., before its• renders, as a converted Whig who now supports Such. anon. This is cruel to Mr. Ashman, who is now as Shakespere says in "second childhood." 'Besides this, Mr. Ashman is a native of n Slave ,Slate and his proclivities therefore would naturally be for the "peculiar institutions" of his native State. The Globe's party is wet• come to all such accessions. On the other hand, scores of the honest Democrats of this county have avowed their determination to support Fremont for President. Bully Brooks in Huntingdon. Mr. Lewis, publisher of the fruntingdon Globe, in his last issue, intimates that ho in. tends inflicting sundry contusions, braises, sears, scratches, &c., be., &C., upon our fair proportions with bludgeons, &e. We are hap. py that our chivalrous neighbor has given us notice, as we shall be prepared to defend our. self; and, should it become necessary, be able tea.° our neighbor's neck a dreadful 'w rench.' 1163""Evc:1 coon CAN coot: FROM NAZA rarrit."—The American State Convention of Pennsylvania assembled at Harrisburgh sth inst. lion. Andrew Stewart, was appointed president. The Convention rejected the prop. oaition for forming a fusion electoral ticket by a large majority—the vote being 72 to 1811— This gives "Old Buck" Pennsylvania by at least forty thousand majority." We clip the above from the last issue of the Tyrone Ironhcad Democrat. Americans does it not prove that the Fillmore organs which dis. countenanced a union are sold to Locoroistn? We need make no comments. stir It is universally acknowledged that G. R. Auxer is taking the most lifelike pictures that has everbeet. taken in Huntingdon. There- fore we would advise all our readers to go and got their likeness taken as such another oppor• (unity may not be had. His pictures are equal to any taken in the cities. Rooms in the Court Rouse. "The Republican meeting last nightndiourn d with three cheers for Fillwore."—Lfunting• don American. To pros, this a falsehood, we havo only to remind our readers it was written by the editors of the Huntingdon American. AGRICULTURAL. At a meeting of the Executive Cdmmitteo of the Huntingdon County Agricultural Socie• ty, held Anguet 14th, 1850, the tbllowing rev , lotion!, were adopted 3 Resolved, That thin Society hold a County Agricultural Fair on the 6th, oth, and 10th of October next. . . Resolved, That a committee of.soven he up pointed as in Committee of Arrangements, and that said Committee shall have authority to make all the necessary contracts to complete the arrang,nents for an annual fair; and that said Committee have full authority to audit all hills of their contracting amid to draw orders on the Treasurer for payment of the same. Where upon A. IV. Benedict, Geo. Jackson, Christian Couts, John S. hat, Jacob Miller (Creek,) nacj Wm. Dorris, Jr., were appointed said Commit tee. ---- on motion it wan resolved that T. H. Crcmcr, Hon. George Taylor and Thos. Fisher be a Committee to report a listof premiums and the names of the several judges to award the same, to the Executive Committee at a meeting to be held on Wednesday next, at 3 o'clock, P. M. Resolved, That the Treasurer be directed to pay John Lutz, Esq., late editor of the Shit.- leysburg Herald, $9 for printing. A. W. BENEDICT, See'r pro tutu. The Huntingdon County Agricultural Soeie• ty met at .the Court House on Thursday even• ing the 14th of August, and was called to order by the President. The minutes of the last meeting of the society were rend rind adopted. Gen. Speer, the chairman of the Committee appointed to rcpert on the cause .d remedy for the potato° rot, after making sonic remarks upon the subject, stated That he was not fully prepared to report at this meeting, but if the society would see proper to continue the Coin. mittee he would be prepared to make a report at the nest meeting. The subject wee discussed by David Blair, A. W. Benedict, Gen. Speer, Maj. Caldwell and Theo.. H. Creme, On motion the committee to report on the cause nod remedy for the potato rot was con• tinned to next meeting of the Society. On motion, Theo. if. Cromer, lisq., was ad , ded to avid Committee. Watson, the chairman of the Commit. tea to report on the bent method of resuscita ting old wormout meadow ground, mated that he was nut prepared to report, and asked that the present committee be discharged, and ono tiler appointed in itA stead, to report at the next meeting. Tho subject was discussed at some length and with considerable interestby Messrs. Green, Caldwell, Benedict and Blair. Kenzie L. Green, Esq., was added to the committee, and the same continued to the next meeting of the Society. . On nnAion the committee on the effeetsuf lunar influence upon vegetation, was eolithnu ed to next meeting. Mr. Cremer was prepared to report but ow ing to the lateness of the evening and length of the report it was deemed expedient to defer The subject of holding a fair was diftuy,ed by MIAMI Blair, Earl., Gen. Watson, Geo. Green, A. W. Benedict, Gem Speer and others. On motion the action of the Executive COll, mitte wan elltlol,ed. On motion the meeting. adjourned. JON,\. McWILLIAMS, Presit, J. S. BAHR, See), • OUR BOOK TAI3-I,F. Coley's Lady's Book ha. September ling beau received.- it has some beautiful engravings, and in literary mat ter it ontstrips all eou y reti• tors. par year. L. A. Godey, Philadelphia. We have received from Horace Waters, 233 Broadway, N. Y. mus . c entitled 'Nell all vu, t again in the Morning,." It is a beAuf fal piece and our young friends should get it. Only 23 eta. Texas Election. The Intest tens front Texas indientt,:, that the State has goic for the Democrat,: by ilicroit sed majorities, stal-• Our colored population intend holding a "binth meeting" we are Manuel, cut:Hue:lc ing en the 29th inst. UV. On Sunday last a lied in a gentleman's house in town was burned up. the tire was extinguished before doing any further damage. ter A camp meeting will begin at Tipton, Blair county, on Friday next. The camp meeting ut Shaver'a Creek Logi. tomorrow. Congnss adjourned on the 18th but w,ll co .ve:o• again on the 21st, to nut on the uppm priati ns. stV-Tho Louisville Jounial, Fillmore organ, gets off the following t "It seems to be estab• fished that there were more nilgers in the Buchanan procession, nt Indianapolis, than in the Fremont procession. The natural infer. once is that must of the Indiana nig,gers arc Bucklaiggers. gifvu Alexander Kayser, one of the leading Democrats and most influential Commis of Missouri, has come out in a letter to his fel. low Germans, in furor of John C. Fremont.— Kayser has been a Democrat for If years, and was a Pierce elector in 1852. ger The Fremont campaign is commen• cing in Kentucky. On the not County Court day in Logan, Dr. George Blakey, nue of the Republican State Electors, took a tilt at both the Buchanan and Fillmore parties. He will address the people of that county more at length of the court house on the 4th Monday in Au• gust. geirn•The Charleston Evening News is sup porting Buchanan and Breckinbridge. That paper has heretofore been an advocate of "A. mericanism," and its editor John Conning. ham, Esq., was a delegate nod one of the Vice Presidents of the first Philadelphia Know Nothing Convention. The New Bedford (Mass) Express, the Know Nothing organ, hes recan ted, nod hoisted the flag of" Duck and Beech." Stir The Dubuque papers publish a •enrd from D. N. Cooley, one of the Executive committee of the Buchanan Club in that city, saying that though ho con swallow n good many things, he cannot get down that Cinch). nati Platform. Mr. Cooley will go for Fre. moot and Freedom. 023''The Connellsvillo Enterprise, published in Fayette county, brings us the following good tidings : "Among those who have lately announced themselves as Fremont and Day• ton loon, and now advocate the principles of the Republican party, in our town, are Alexan• der Johnston, Fag, Dr. James Cummings, Lester L. Norton, Esq., and Hon. John Ful• lee. These gontlemen were the leaders of the Democratic party in the county. They nut roan of much intelligence and experience-- men of undoubted Democratic faith—men 01 the Jefforsonian and Jackson school ; Andover in declaring their intention to vote for John C. Fremont, that they maintain the same prin• ciplea they ever have done, hut that the mod• ern uaisttauted Democratic, party has left them. Proposals will be received by thecounty coin inissieners at their office in Huntingdon, np to 2 o'clock on the 29th day of August, 1956, for re building the bridge across the Juniata ri• ver at Huntingdon, which was blown down by ft utorm. ' HENRY W. MILLER. triatingdou,