Congresa has no right to interfere with or control domestic institutions in the South." , In subsequent years it was announce d as a happy afterthought, “that this proposition was intended to embrace the whole subject of Slavery agitation in Congress." Still' later, as in the present platform, they ex tend explicitly this proposition to all "ter ritories," so that taken together, these ex pressions mean that Congress has no power whatever to legislate upon the subject. Yes, Slavery in the Democratic cred in Jib, cod beyond the reach of National Legisla• tion 1 If this be so, as it tenet, well may the freemen of the North tremble for their semi tl. This last specious dogma followed close upon the abrogation of the Missouri Compro mise and even this, in the course of the present Administration, tins been iniquitously pervert ed to subserve the designs of those who pro claimed it, viz: the unlimited extension of slip very. The sum and substance of the Demo cratic party on Slavery is, that the Consti tution carries Slavery or protects it when it is carried by individuals into any Territory of the United States; that the people are powerless to prevent it so lung as the Governtr.ent is Terri tonal and that Congress has no right to inter fere in the matter whatever. As the exponent of these views, the Democratic party has elec. ted Mr. Buchanan. To this platform he has "squared" his previous views and is prepared to "square his conduct" without taking there from oradding thereto, a single Wank. In this platform he has merged his identity as James Buchanan and consigns himself to this Pro. Slavery Democracy to be spent in their service. An examination into the past history of Mr. Buchanan will show that he has at some former period of his life, occupied the opposite of his present position on every political issue. From present to Pro-Slavery, from High Tari ff to Free Trade, from Conservatism to Fillibus terism, he has ever followed the flow and ebb of the popular tide. In none of these questions has his change been more extreme or more striking than that of Slavery. His lamentable fall from the proud position he took in 1843 when he pledged himself solemnly to make 36° 30' the boundary line between Slavery and Freedom forever is seen and known of all.— The record of his early Congressional career. compared with Isis present known views, give evidence of a great and radical change. Then he could wage an aggressive war upon Slavery in her own fastnesses, now he is willing to lead the van beneath the dark folds of her banner, to the subjugation of Freedom. The question comes home with force to ea, why has he fled from that position ? Had Freedom in Territo ries proved a failure? had those Territories in which it had been restricted been less prosper ous than those where it was allowed to enter? Had the Missouri Compromise proved anything else than the quietus of Slavery agitation ? had its repeal been anything else than notoriously linjust and pernicious, we might be able to im pute some other reason to him for this great change than that lie hopes to win the Presiden tial Chair by sacrificing his own principles and the tights and privileges of the North to propi tiate the Slave Power. Hu stands committed both by his public acts, no less than by ender. sing the Cincinnati platform, to the policy which demands the annexation of Cuba, if not by right then by might—a consummation most desirable to the South, when we consider that it will add vastly to the infuence and will tend to perpetuate the rule of the Slave power. Mr. also declares that the attempted einancipa• tion of Shires iii that Island, shall he the sig nal for a forcible possession. Fellow.citizens, we submit to you that the history of the present administration, that the language and conduct of the present Democre. tic nominee, that the openly avowed and un blushingly advocated principles of that party, place beyond the minutest cavil, the Ilia that the indissoluble qt . Democracy with Slareq Extension has been solemnized in good faith and ea: nest, We submit to you that the boasted conservatism of these united elements is subversive, revolutionary and progressive, moving away with accelerated velocity front the precepts and practice of the founders of our Republic, proclaiming dogmas and setting up principles that threaten t idefeat the results of their patriotism ; tending farther and farther away from stritt Constitutional Constitution, for the acquisition of party power; from the faith of solemn compromise to fraud, perjury and wrong, from the conservation of the lnion fur the sake of Freedom, to its dissolution for the sake of Slavery. , Those who see mirrored in such conser vatism, their own vices, need not hesitate as to which side in the coming contest to take But those to whom such Principles are justly abhorent,—to them we appeal. Democrats, who in the plauffer days, and purer life of the Democracy, were proud to own the name—you have hesitated to follow it in its mad career, it no longer has claims upon you. The glorious banner under which you fought, trails in the dust of slavery. Your leaders have perverted your organization to ends you never design• ed, and are ashamed to own. The price of the betrayal of the party to slavery in terest,: is that its banner may wave in ig nominious triumph from the dome of the Capitah—you have not left it; no, rather it has left you. It will be time enough for you to cooperate with it when it shall re turn again to its primitive principles, as established by its fathers. When it shall come away from its idalatrous worship of strange Gods, back to its allegiance and loy alty to the Constitution and the Union. That all causes should be followed by their appropriate effects, is a truth of uni• versal application—whether in the natural, moral, or political world. One of the most natural consequences of the wanton abuse of power, or assumption of authority in any party is, that new organizations should be formed to combat and overthrow it.— The foundations of our land are so happily laid in the enlightened sentiment and con scientious morality of the people, that no party may expect to remain long in power after it has been betrayed to nefarious ends, or made to minister to sectional interests. This principle is demonstrating itself at this crisis in our history ; this principle is alone the secret of the rise of the Repub lican Party. This party was brought in to being and has suddenly grown into ma turity beneath the fostering influence of the extreme measures of the Democracy. Had it not been for its numerous and great excesses, had not its lust for power, per• verted it to tiie extension of slavery—the great necessity for a Republican organiza tion Would not have arisen. But in its wild and reckless course, it never stopped to consider that it was calling into exis tence rn agency, which should be potent in its overthrow. In the enacting conflict, the Republican Party is the restorative el ement. Its purpose is directly antagonis tic to the progression of the Democracy ; "to bring back the Government to its early purport;'' to restore the ascendancy of the Constitution and the normal balance be tween State and Federal authority ; to re place the Democratic principle within the limits of law and reason, and social order; to promote human freedonT, not slavery, harmony and not discord, and to correct time-honored abuses. These are the aims, of the restorative element, than which none are more needful, sacred and obligatory. This result will he attained only by long and persevering exertion, but it will be a labor no less worthy of high patriotism and self denial, and earnest ellen, than that in which the fathers of our Republic engaged. The Republican party joins direct and im mediate issue with the other portico, upon the important question of the extension of slavery. At the Republican Convention in Philadelphia, which placed in nomina -1 ties John C. Fremont, the following reso. lotions among others, were adopted, viz : Resolved, That we deny the authority of Con gress, of a Territorial Legislature, of any indi vidual, , or association of individuals, to give lo cal existence to slavery in any Territory of the United States, while the present Constitution shall he maintained." "Renoleed, That the Constitution confers up. nn Congress sovereign power over the Ter}lto. ries of the United States, for their government, and that in the exercise of this power it is both the dote and the right of Congress to prohibit in the territories those twin relics ofbarbarism —polygamy and slavery. "Resole.l, That Kansas should be immedi ately admitted ns a State of the Union, with her present free Constitution, no nt once the most effectual way of securing to her citizens the rights and privileges to which they are en• titled, and of ending the civil strife now raging in her territory." In his letter of acceptance, Mr. Fremont cordially endorses the whole platform of which these resolutions form a part, as ex pressive of the principles he cherishes ; in addition observing : "It would be out of place here to pledge my self to any particular policy that has been set gested to terminate the sectional contropery, engendered by political animosities, operated upon by a powerful class, banded together for a common interest. A practical remedy is the admission of Kansas into the Union as a free State." it will thus be seen that the Republican party earnestly contend for the power of Congress to legislate upon the subject DI slavery in the territories. The ground for this they find in the language of the Con• stitution which declares that Congressshall have power to dispose of and make all need ful rules and regulations respecting the Territory or other property belonging to the United States, and nothing in the Con stitution shall be ao construed as to preju dice any claims of the United States or a. ny particular State. This clause of course confers the right of legislation on subjects only as are consistent with natural right. They contend that as Congress has no power to engraft a domestic evil upon the institutions of a State, as for example ppl ygamy, so it has no power to legalize sla very, while for the same reason its power of prohibi , ion is incontestable. The Re publican party contend for the restoration of the Missouri Compromise, and as the learnest of its fulfillment, demand the ad• mission of Kansas as a Free State. To those who are familiar with the history of legislation, no demonstration is necessary to prove that the mischievous and unjust repeal of that covenant, has been the cause of all the agitation on the subject of slav ery, with which the country is now rife. Thai Compromise was the work of our ve. aerated fathers in the Republic, and had received the sanction and support of wise and good patriots from all sections of the country ; and for thirty years had kept in repose the question of slavery. Ample consideration was given to the slave States for this agreement. That consideration had been received and enjoyed to the full; the right and justice of the covenant was all along acknowledged, until the South combined with the Democracy, found them. selves able,. to throw off their engagements and thus perjure their plighted faith. So it has been. the celebrated ordinance ' of 1787, which excluded Slavery forever from all Territory north-west of the Ohio river, was broken through in 1820 by the admission of Missouri as a Slave State.-- Then a compromise was adopted delaring Slavery forever prohibited north of 36' 30' The same period was allowed to elapse, when we were called to witness this mea sure ruthlessly thrown down in the aggres sive march of Slavery. At each succes• sive inroad we have been assured that it would be the last, and still the last act in that drama is yet to come. At each con cession we have been assured that there should be no agitation of the Slavery ques tion. The Kansas-Nebraska act, which abrogated the Missouri Compromise, we were assured was only the acknowledge ment of a principle, and would make no practical difference in the settlement of those Territories. But when through the instrumentality of the Democratic party that concession was obtained, we immedi ately see a Democratic Administration, in reckless disregard of its solemn pledges, in conjunction with and at the instigation of the South, lending the whole weight of its powerful influence to fasten Slavery upon Kansas. Thus has the Slave power deceived the North by fair promiscs—ap plea of Sodom, which tempt the eye but turn to bitter ashes upon the lips. And shall we trust them still ? het the ballot box record the answer of the Freemen of the North. The Repubpc!nparty!olemnlydemand as their sacred right, and make the great issue, the restoration of that violated com promise. They throw themselves into the breach, manfully determined to arrest and check this onward tide of slavery. Upon the Rubicon, they will meet and conquer the enemies of freedom, who, Casear•like come armed against the liberties of the North. Fellow-Citizens, when the Repu blican Party demand that a little of the ter ritory of the United States shall be conse crated to Freedom, they ask nothing but what on every principle of right and jus tice is their due. The North has contrib uted largely of her blood and treasure for its acquisition, and shall she be debarred from the enjoyment of any of it ! Proof can be adduced to show that out of all the Territory obtained on this aide of the Con tinent, at a cost of 80 millions, only one free State—lowa, has been created against five slave State ; and that exclustve of Cal ifornia, the slave States have double the area of territory, with an inverse ratio of population—and . yet in view of all this, shall we be accused of aggression ? Cer tainly the accusation comes with bad grace from the South. Hut the Republican par ty dottiest& the admission of Kansas as a free Plate for other reasons than that the territory was secured to the North by sol emn compact. They demand it, because such is the expressed will of a majority of the settlers ; because this will afford it speedy and effectual relief from the cruel and unjust laws that now oppress them and would give them the enjoyment of those privileges and rights which the Constitu tion guarantees to them ; because its ad mission as a Free or Slave State will deter mine, in a measure, the extent of Southern acquisition ; becnuso if yielded to the em brace of slavery, it will add still more to the formidable influence it wields in our national councils. That influence strength ened by the action of the Democratic Par ty, has for years controlled the destinies of the Republic. Give Kansas and the fet ters of the North are forged. Kansas lost to Freedom is lost to Freedom forever.— But, fellow citizens, aside from the mo tives which should actuate you, as patriots in demanding with us the admission of Kansas as a free state, there are reasons which address you as men, ns Northerners and Freemen. Kansas should be free, be cause it may eventually become the home of your children. Shell this land, so rich in its resources, of marvellous fertility of soil, and of so genial a climate, be shut up against your neighbors and friends, and perhaps to your own children. II shivery enters there, the free laborer whether far mer or mechanic, is as utterly excluded as if interdicted by a specific law—for free and slave labor can never dwell upon the ' same soil. Kansas. to you should be free, because your friends and kindred or at least your fellow-citizens of this Common wealth, are already settlers there, strug gling manfully to maintain their rights, and their cry of distress comes to you to relieve them in their necessity. Will you listen to the appeal of reason, patriotism and hu manity ? if so, decide while your action may yet be efficient. In this perilous em ergency, the only way to avert the threat ened calamity is by the success of the Re• publican cause. The presence of Mr. Fill more in the canvass, can only tend to aid the enemy. The South are unanimously going over to the Democratic ranks, and the sole object of keeping Mr. Fillmore before the people of the North, when the hope of his election is utterly out of the question, is the defeat of the People's can didate, John C. Fremont. Friends of Penn sylvania, your state will again be the bat tle ground of the contest between the de fenders of Freedom and the advocwes of Slavery. To you, one and all, we put the question—which atoll triumph P The Republican Party repudiate the charge of abolitionism, because in insisting upon the admission of Kansas as a Free State, they do not interfere with slavery in the Southern States. They insist on no power in Congress to abolish slavery in the Mates where it now exists. But they do object to its extension. To its extension the South hes no right. They are not dis unionists. No action of theirs has or will contribute to such a result. The threat of disunion is the language of the South— which has been uttered loud and fierce, at every fresh demand they have made upon the privileges and rights of the North.— Will you yield free thought, free speech, and freedom of the Press, and other free institutions, to threats of disunion? Trust us, the South will never be guilty of such foolhardy crime, as to sacrifice their inter ests in the dissolution of the Union, be cause we refuse longer to yield our inali enable rights to their vain threats, l'he Republican party is not sectional, but na tional ; because its great lending purpose is to sustain Freemen's rights ; the same purpose to which the nation owes its ex istence under the Declaration of Indepen pence. Freedom is National, Slavery Sec tional. The Democratic party in its sub serviency to the interests of the 350,000 slaveholders of the South, is the only sec tional party existing. The Republican party is not radical but conservative--be cause it holds to ancient compacts--stands on the conservative ground of non-iuterfe mnce with slavery where it already exists, and supports the principles most distinctly propounded and advocated by Washington, Jefferson, Henry, Madison, the Randolphs, Clay, And hosts of the primitive statesmen of our cumin/. Whet a rebuke is contain ed to these names, to the fanatics, North and South, who never tire of heaping op probrious epithets upon us ! Throughout the length and breadth of the Republican Platform, no one principle is avowed which is not entirely American, Democratic, (we mean in the proper sense of the word,) Conservative amid National. Popular rights Constitutional principles and the unity of the States. This will be its watchword in the day of battle, and this its shout of tri umph when "ictory perches upon its ban ners. The Republican Convention. We feel proud of it. And well may we.— It was composed of the leading men of the County—of men of integrity, ability and influ• once. Every township but one or two woe ful. ly represented. The proceedings were mar ked with that decorum which should be shown in every meeting of the kind, but which is of• ten forgotten. Huntingdon County is working. She is de termined on doing her duty in the approach. ing election. She will not be the dupe of Slave drivers longer. We have proof of this in the large and enthusiastic Convention, composed of the influential men of the County. Fire in Mexandria. On the 2d inst., the dwelling house of Enoch Cline, and the Wagon-making and blacksmith shops of .1. 1 W. Piper, in Alexandria, were burned to the ground. It is not known how the fire originated but it is presumed to have been the work of an incendiary. There was no insurance on Mr. Cline's house. Messrs. Piper'.{ Shops, were fully insured to the amount of $l3OO. IEARRIED.—In Chia borough rut the I Ith, tort., by Rev. A. R. fitill, Mr. Hugh Wileou of Warriorrnark to Mist. RUth BMW of Cantu) Co, Aournat. // -,.„.\\,,, d'. l 'lll,:bllitl c*,,,,.„4.1 - 4 1. ‘ , PA., . . 7 . . ,. inktYVEGANSI ' ' -‘ 74- \--.. WILLIAM BREWSTER, EDITons. SAM. G. WHITTAKER. Wednesday Morning, Sept. 17, 1856, Forever float that standard sheet, Where breathes the foe but fallsbefore With Freedom's soil beneath our feet. And Freedom's bnnnerstreaming &cr.!" Ft 111 1 - 11Zi D ENT/ JOHN C. FIIEMONT, OF CALIFORNIA. • FOR VICE PRESIDENT, WM. L. DAYTON, FOR CANAL CoMmissioNEß. MIZOBTAI M. COWMAN, OF YORK COUNTY. FOR AITFPOR GENERAL, DARWIN PILDLPII, AIMITRONG COUNTY. Pot? GENERAL. BARTUOLOVUOW 11/1.02:113, CONGRESS, lOU R. 211211. SENATOR, A. G. SIIMILIT. FoR ASSEMBLY, William P. Orbison. John M. Gibboney. A SSOCIA T .11,C;ES, John Morrison, ion. McWilliams. SHERIFF, John A. Doyle. roc STY COMMISSIONER, James McCartney: DIRECTOR OF THE POOR, Teter Swoops. DISTRICT ATTORNEY, Theodore U. Cromer, COUNTY SURVEYOR, James E. Glasgow. AlinTon. James Crce /lir NOTICE. As TE Republican County Committee will meet in II unlinwion, on Monday, the 22d day of September. for the transaction of important business. .1. G. 5111.E5, • Huntingdon, Sept. 17th, 1856. CHAIRMAN. Free Speech, Free RIINSAAS, FREMONT. The friends of Free Speech and Free Knn• sin, who honor flee white labor mid would shield it from the blighting influence and de• grading companionship cf Aare labor, will meet in Cassville, on the 20th inst. A number or good speakers will address the meeting and many valuable documents will be distributed. OPPOSITION TACTICS. In the Presidential cninpaign of 1841, the contest in Pennsylvania, it will he remember. ed, turned Mainly on the Tariff question.— E NRY • C LAY, the outlier of the protective poll• cy, was absolutely certain to receive the vote of this State is a fair canvass. This the l.o• cofocos well knew; and hence, whilst their candidate, Poix, was notoriously known, by every well-informed politician in the nation, to oppose the protective policy and especially the "NH; of '42 ;" whilst ho was openly and truthfully proclaimed, in the South, as opposed to protection, and zealously supported there on that ground, the corrupt leaders of his party in this State, misled by shameless falsehoods, thou. sands of honest, well-meaning voters, and ear• tied the election against us. In this infamous fraud nod base sacrifice of Pentisylviuda interests to the arrogant demands of the Cotton Aristocracy, .Isams BCCIIANAN bore a conspicuous and 14tally successful part. . Ho woo at that lime in a position to betray his State for n price. Ile had, until then, possess. ed the good itttl Democratic doctrine of "pro. tection to hone industry," just as he possessed, until within the last year or two, hostility to the extension of Negro• Slave Labor over our Free Territories. The hottest masses of plain citizens—farmers, mechanics and laborers— who do not watch closely the dishonest schen, sag of corrupt politicians, then trusted to his integrity ; and when he assured them, ''on his own personal knowledge," "that James K. Polk was as good a Tariff man as Henry Clay," they belie, ed his declaration, and thenceforth, innocently marched under banners inscribed with the infamous falsehood! Through this foul treachery to truth, this betrayal of confl• deuce on the part of Mn. BUCHANAN and the I corroborating falsehood of the equally infa mous "Kane letter," the sage of Ashland, the noble, self•sacrificing champion of American industry, was defeated, and a third rate South ern lawyer, a slave owner and breeder, the friend of British operations and manufactures, corruptly made the chief ruler ,if a seminally free, virtuous and patriotic people 1 These are races that cannot be forgotten by any man that reai a Locofoco paper, or attended a Locofoco meeting eight years ago; FACTS that will not be denied by any intelligent, honest man of any party new. If any thing can exceed the infix my of these transactions, it is the audacity of the same party, pow beetled by one of these arch traitors to truth and principle, attempting to deceive the friends of Freedom in the pend ing Presidential election, as they betrayed the friend. of protection in 1844. But, thank God, I the sites who were derNided of theirutp in that day, have not forgotten the cheat, and their sons, who have since grown to manhood, will profit by their recollections. The great ewin. dle cannot be repeated, and the attempt will only cover the authors with shame, as the in. &pant. voice of freemen will overwhelm them with defeat. But it has been said that "the price of liber ty is eternal vigilance,"and we, therefore, deem it our duty to guard the unwary against the Treacherous wiles of our unscrupulous enemies, by a brief expose of their tactics in this State since the opening of the campaign. Thus far they have directed their efforts to three distinct points of attache or defence, viz: Slandering our candidate, misrepresenting our principles, and elcilyiay their own. Under the first head, besides several minor falsehoods, they charge CO, FREMONT With making fraudulent demands on the government, and they allege that he is a Catholic, a slave-holder, and a duellist. From the first of these charges, the records of Congress fully and triumphantly acquit him. It can be there seen that his claims were thor oughly investigated and promptlyconfirmed by a Democratic Congress years ago I Every dol lar that ho demanded for hin,artluous services in our Western wilds, he received, and not a voice, either in or out of Congress, impeached the justice of its action. Eriends of freedom, wheu this slander is repeated in your presence, remember that the party that brought it before the public, audited and approved the claims of Cot.. FREMONT several years ago, and never whispered anything about fraud until after he became the rival of the pro-Slavery candidates for President. The story of Famsovr's Catholicity is cam pletely refuted by the undeniable facts that he was born of Protestant parents, baptized by a Protestant minister, married a Protestant wife, worships with her and his family in a Prates. tent church, has had his children baptised in the same church, and in educating them in Pro. testant schools! Is further evidence necessary on this point, it is found in the notorious, undisputed fact, that ever) Catholic newspaper from the Boston Pilot down to the liontinydon Globe, and almost e eery voter with Catholic preferences or proclivities, is fiercely arrayed against Cot,. FREMONT'S election. Honest rea der, look around you. There are, most probe. hly, some Catholics in your neighborhood. Do any of them support our candidate for the Presidency? No, they are all as fit mly bound to JAMES BUCHANAN as to the Pope, as devout ly attached to the pro Slavery party as to the Catholic Church. If the charges of slnve•holding and duelling preferred against Cot,. FRiIIONT, are true, all we have to say is, that they come with a very bad grace front a party that has been more or less subservient to the slave interest for the last twenty•five years ; a party that now seeks to spread this blighting curse over our free terri• tories ; a perty that has recently justified, by its votes in Congress and its press everywhere, the cowardly assault on Greeley, the attempted assassit &ion of Sunnier, and the cold-blooded murder of Keating, together with all the rob , berics, arsons, and butcheries perpetrated on the friends of Liberty in Kansas by the contd. vance and sanction of this same party. Will the honest voters of Pennsylvania believe such charges on the evidence of such witnesses 2-- They will not. But the accusations are not true; and we dismiss them without argument, believing that the character of the testimony adduced to sustain them, is a sufficient proof of their incredibility and talsehood. It now retnains for us to notice the enemy's misrepresentation of the principles awl objects of the Republican party, nod their denial of their own true position in the present contest. We have space, at present, merely to state their allegations, and must leave their discussion till our next issue. They charge us with prefer• ring the rights of the itegro to those of our own race. We show them, and satisfy all holest men that we are pleaditig the cause of free WIIITE law, They charge us with seeking a dissolution of the Union. We will prove that ourenemies, only,threaten that calamity. They deny, of late, that they are a pro Slavery party. We will demonstrate to every reasonable man that may rend our articles, that the present Buchanan party of Pennsylvania has been, and is the principle doughface ally or the South ; that .1A !!1,5 li t7i . II ANA V, their leader, has been and the clinging sycophantic servitor of the Since Power; and that his election would be a triumph of Slavery over Freedom ; and would doom millions anent, of the nation. al domain to Mschrok of Me bondman 's chains and the infamy of the slave pen and human auction block. BEHOLD THE LIARS. The editors of the "Huntingdon American" with all their braggadocio, have refused to com ply with our suggestion, and place $25 in good hands, that they are very base fabricators.— We have waited now two weeks, and these bi peds, have not dared "face the music." They thus declare themselves liars ; we prove them liars ; and the people long ago stamped them liars. These wretched creatures—penniless, and without character, me more to be pitied, however, than condemned. We should not have noticed them at all, had it not been to cot , rect their misrepresentations ; and for once, we have stepped out of the "even tenor of our way," to meet these creatures, whom it would be base flattery to call fools, with their own weapon and on their own ground. Can riot same of their masters spur them on ? We rnitlee7Loy"arrevelhrelt these obje poor objects :3 souls--for commiser ation and charity, than butts for sarcasm and ridicule. We hope, for these reasons that the public may not deal too hardly with them. Milnwood Academy. We invite attention to the advertisement of the above•named institution in another part of our paper today. It is one of the most heal. th r locations in the United States, and possess. no advantages, unsurpassed and almost une• qualed by any other institution of' of the kind,. in the country. We have the pleasure of a personal acquaintance with the excellent Prin• cipal—Pro. Woods, and we are free to say a more talented and in every other sense of the word, gentleman, we never knew. We know of no more desirable place to educate yotir chiltheik than Milnwood. Did Yoi Hear 'he News from Littl Mai e? S-a-y ? IMO GUNS FOR MAINE mott An Awful "shriek" for Freedom ! ! God blow old Maine! SIIOUT, FREE VIEN, SHOUT ! The gallant State of Maine "sends greeting" to her sister States across the swelling surges of Portland Bay. Buchanan is there swallow. ed up in the popular expression against the out rages in Kansas. Hamlin, the Republi can can didate for Governor, is elected by a popu lar majority over the combined Loeov, i gR, of 21.fOUSAND, together with all the Congressmer, and nine• ty•nine.one•hundredths of the rest of the ofli• cers. This majority is sufficient for all practb cal purposes. Fraud, outrage and wrong are receiving their sentence. The people "keep step to the music of the Union" and of Free. dom. Maine broke the ice in 1840—we no• cept the om en and march on to VICTORY I - A MAGNIFICENT r " FIZZLE. " In the early part of last week;;;Zile;tl a number of large letters on bills on all the cot nere of the town, announcing the fact that "the Democracy of Huntingdon and the cur• rounding townships will have a grand rally on Saturday night." Beside this, they intended to raise a hickory pole—(by the way, we won der how they can nee that kind of timber, since their party has re pudiated General .Jackson,) in the evening. Well, Saturday came, but not the—stop there ; we were just going to nay not the "Democracy front the surrounding townships;' but we believe in fact the Buchan-. an Democracy were out from the "surround• ing townships," en masse ; the delegations from these "surrounding townships," number. ing one white man and sixteen -'Paddy Irish;' the balance of the honest Democrats, being supporters of Fremont and Freedom. But to proceed ; the procession was formed at about 8 o'clock, and after a few preliminary drinks, it began to move. After the procession had moved up and down the streets 'invent' times, and the entire "Democracy of Hunt ingdon and the surrounding townships" had joined it, we stationed ourself at a corner to take a view of men who could disgrace their American eitizet.• ship, by thus openly endorsing the outrages of bottler ruffians in Kansas, by shouting for Jas. Buchanan, the nominee of these rtinialln.— Well, we made an accurate count of every vte ter in that procession, and we found that aecoo ding to Democratic authority, the entire "De. moeracy of Huntingdon and the surrounding townships" mounted to 49 American-bent eit• Nene, 26 gentlemen with the 'rich Irish brogue,' 9 with the ' swect Cern ne accent, tnd I who we tusk for a eolorttl "gt nimin," in the dark—but we "count him in," and make the procession number 82 ; mark that. eiglity.two. There were two transparencies—painted by T. Adams. we believe, on tete of which we rend “111.7 CHAS-N-A X CLUB." !Lathe orthography must have been very little better than their whiskey, for it would have busied some of them amazingly to have wnllo ed a two inch plank. However, under tint skill. ful generalship, of our postmaster in embryo, Placatory Colon, and the "right fun, left fat" training of our military chieftain, Robert the Bruce, the immortal 82 were safely lodged in the Court House. We made n calculation, and found that the prisoner's box there, could have been filled eight times with that crowd. Among the Vice Presidents appointed, we noticed our old friend cx•chicf justice Daniel. Tom•ass McDowel of Hollidaysburg, a Ito. unit Catholic, was then introduced and began to spout ble anathamas and so forth at Colonel Fremont. Thomas had better remain 'to hum' ns the only mnrk of interest he brought with hint, was a rubicund vis, a blossomed proboscis. If Buchanan's election depended on the powers of Ruch men, he wouldn't get a thousand rot cs in Pennsylvania. That's so., This was the grandest fizzle we ever saw; it hail not one redeemieg quality, except, per. haps, the music of our band. It was even worse than their fizzle at Pittsburg on Wednes• day last. The days of Pierce and Buchanan Democracy are numbeted. ger An excellent communication received from an "old Whig," will appear in our next. ler-The proceedings of the Fremont Meet. ing at Mill Creek, will appear next week. /fi•Graham's Magazine for October is be. fore us. It is unusually replete with interest. ing matter. Mir The Inventor for September has been received. It is an excellent No. tar The School Journal for September in on our table. It in a fine work. GODEY'g LADY'S BOOK, for October, is up. on our table and is full to the standard erected by its proprietor. Its fashion plates, and not chef work patterns are of peculiar interest to the fair sex. Loon our von SWIMMING T. Porter, Esq., who has had the experience of twentysix years an editor of the New York Spirit of the Time., issued this month a spor ting and literary newspaper called Porter's Rpirit of Me Times. It is of the same nine and character as the old paper and also con tain contributions from the able and brilliant writers that have given the Spirit its dietin• guished position among the the literary jour nals of the United States. Thin paper will have a large circulation. air T. B. Peterson, h as now in press, and will be ready for sale on Saturday Septonsber 27, another of Mrs. Rentz, works, entitled "The Baniahed Son." It is spoken of RI an excellent work, and can Le hkd for $1 2 5 , nest ly bound in cloth. • THE COUNTY TICKET. The Republican Executive Committee of this County met in the Court House, on Saturday, the 13th inst., pursnrint to a call of the tempo. racy Chairman, Pr. John McCulloch. Penna. cent officers were elected—J. G. Miles, Esq., being unanimously cho ten Chairman, John Read, \'ice.Chairman, Pr. W. Brewster, Re. cording, and J. A. Hall, Corresponding Secre. tary. A communication was received from David Blair, Esq., Chairman of the American Dare utive Committee of Huntingdon County pro, posing to unite with the Republicans on a County ticket, on 'fair and honorable terms." The proposition was accepted (one voice dis senting) on conditions considered to be frtir,, honorable and liberal, on our part, and a Com mittee appointed to report to Mr. Blair, the or gan of the American Committee. We have not yet heard the result, bat judge front niicrfli. cial reports that there are still difficulties in the way of a union on what sincere Republicans consider a fair basis ; and, therefore, we advise our friends to stand to their colors for the pre sent, and relax no effort that mny promote suc cess in case the proposed fusion should ultimate ly fail. Since writing the above, we have received the following notice from the Chairman of the. Republican County Convention. The late action of the Republican Committee an the overtures of the American party for a union on a County ticket, has called forth nob ther communication front D. Itlair, Esq., Chair man of the American County Committee, in which he alleges that the action of the Repub. lican Convention on his letter of the 15th inst., was based on a misapprehension of its spirit and intention. He therefore begs leave to renew the invitation to oar Comely*. to meet the American Committee, nt the Court House, on Monday, the 22,1 inst., nt 6 o'clock, p. m., to make a united, •hooest and earliest effort to a greo on a county ticket on equal terms. In response to this patriotic appeal of oar American friends, the Republican Committee is hereby called to meet nt the time and piece, and for the purpose above named. Whether the meeting results in a union or not, it ettni...t fail to give a new impulse to our future efforti in the campaign before us. It is hoped that the attendance will be fall. J. G. MILES, Choi. Co. Com. Hunt., Sept. 16, 1856. MESRS. EDITORS :-I am confidently inform• ed by citizens of Shirleysburg, that Br. Bald. win—that boisterous Southerner, who bus been a little better than ono year in our County,— who led the Into American Convention,—at whose dictation the Republicans were rejected; has now come out for Buchanan. SarA letter from Fayette county, Penn - sykyania,tty4 that that county, which heretofore give 800 Democratic majority, will thil year go for Fremont by a majority of 2000. Due borough alone will give a majority of 400. After a thorough CRIIVIIRR only seven reliable Buchanan men can be found in the town. eke On the War Eagle, Mbisidsipi steamer, Fremont 70: Buchanan Itl; Fillmore 8. Itisir On the Steamer pecan Wars., Fronton( .If, liachnnan 21 , Fillmore n. jiiy-The Watkins Itoptohlionns, hitherto yelep• osl I.l.mmernt moiler its new somisires turns its face In the nun of freedoms. There is n goud cheer in thin. :Air A 1111111r:4 1/1.111 o.ll'ololly eiIIISUSS(.II by :moot:imps Mr Paell ACIIOI,I iriet . The Soto ,it the l'resitlemiltl election Mr Fremont will not lall moch short ol 51.10, awl for 13.1mnan, Fillmore tool scattering about 75. Eir We went shown teL week an Ami, • tVp. I ink( out 11. e I billtry f our fiima) Aliso., and we h•oce no hesitation in pronoun. eing it the finest specimen or the art ever ex. hibitad in the "ancient borough." Friends now is the time to get true likenesses. Room in the Court 'louse upstairs. Co mance for yourselves. fie— We are indebted to Miss Ivory }lntl for a large basket of the most delicious grapes we ever saw nr tasted. Miss navy will please accept the hearty thanks of not only the whole, corps rdilorial, but the corps dia bolus, of the Journal ollice. May she live a thousand years , and her shadow never grow less. We are al. indebted to Mrs. Major Steel for a like favor. We can only any they could not be bent. ler The woods, above town, have been on fire for the last week. The fire extends a dis• tenon of five miles. /lir The Constitution ofthe Fremont Club shall appear next week. PHILADELPHIA MARKETS, Fresh ground Flour is offered at $7 per bbl. without finding buyers, except to the extent of 2a500 barrels ; sales of 450 barrels extra at $7,50; sales to the trade at $7a7,25 for com• mon and select brands ; $7,371a57,50 for can, and $8a8,50 for fancy. Rye Flour is steady at $3,50. In Corn Meal there is nothing do ing we quote Pennsylvania at $3,871 per bbl. Gram—There is a moderate demand for wheat at yesterdays quotations; sales of 6000 bush els fair and prime Pennsylvania and South• ern red at $1,521a1,53 per bushel ' • a lot of grown at $1 , 50, and white at $1 62n51,65, a. float and in store; 400 bushels Rye sold at 75 cents, at which rate it is wanted. Corn is its good demand, but supplies comes forward slow. ly ; sales of 3a4000 bushels Yellow at 67 cents afloat. Oats are steady nt 37a38 Cents per bushel for new, and 39340 cents for old Penn eylvania. mucELLANtottilivEnismitilis. NOTICE: The Jurors Summoned fo r an adjourned' Court, commencing on the 22d, of September, are hereby notified that they need not attend, as the cases for trial have been continued. M. F. CAMPBELL. Prot.y. Sept. IT, 1856. HICKOK'S PATENT 11 ORTADLE CIDER AND WINE MILL. Patented Nov. 20. 1846. Tills Mill occupies about 2+ feet by 3 feet sod is 4 feet high, weighing 370 pounds, and is worked by hand or horsepower, and goes eery easily. Two men can make from 6to 12 bai. rely of cider per day, if worked according to di reetions. For dale al, the manufacturer'. print., br Mews. Taylor A. Ctemer, Huntingdon Airege. Price, $.lO. •