PuntinOn ournat. 0 i iii.,1 4,...4/ 1 : 3 / 44 ., itiour . .. 11.1 , "" N .,.. ~. ~. ".....ir ,',s•' ,',-4,,,'Th--.--,r-:- 11‘ ' * ' % 4 , " • r'',akt,e•",l WILLIAM BR EWSTEII,I EDITORS. SAM. G. WIIITTAJLER. Wednesday Morning, Oot. 29,1858. Forever float that standard sheet, Where breathes the foe but fullsbefore us, With Freedom's coil beneath our feet, And Freedom's banner streaming Warns!" FOR PRESIDENT, JOHN C. FREMONT, OF CALIFORNIA. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, WM. L DAYTON, OW NEW JERSEY, PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS, Gen. James Irvin. Ma C. Fremont, DISTRICT. 1. Joseph Edwards, 13. Russell F. Lord, 2. Geo. N. Eckert, 14. Fred'k E. Smith, S. M. H. Dickinson, 15. Abm. Updegraff, 4. Wilson Jewell, 16. Joseph U. Simpson, 6. A. G. Rowland, 17. Hezekiah Easton, 6. Caleb N. Taylor, 18. Edward Scull, 7. WM. Darlington, 19. Wm. M. Stewart, 8. William M. Baird, 20. 'Alfred Patterson. 9. Meal H. Shirk, 21. B. C. Sawyer, 10. Simon Cameron, 22. Jacob Paiute, 11. Jno. McCormick 23. L. L. McGuffin. 12. S. B. Thompson, 24, Gee. W. Arnold. 2S Ja;n. Skinner. ' ! WO ALL WHZ YEZZWD OT JOHN C. FRFMBITI HUNTING ON COUNTY. Eon have just emerged from a neat contest, beaten but not dismayed. Another great con• test impends on the 4th of November, fraught with tremendous issues for weal or for woe.— Are you ready for the battle? We hear you exclaim with manly pride and strength—"We am" The frauds upon the purity of the elec• live franchise, at the late election in Philadel. phis, amounted to thousands—and yet your opponents have only elected one•half the Mem bers of Congress, while in the Legislature on joint ballot they will be in a minority, thus losing the 11. S. Senator. W e have carried our county ticket against the most unheard of opposition—in spite of money and colonized voters. Friends of the great cause oChuman liberty, there is nothing to discourage or dishearten you. The partial victory of your opponents, while it exhausted both their strength and their means, was virtually a defeat. In 1840, did they not carry the October Election by a majority of 5000, and yet were defhated in November? Have the slanders of the foe lessened your distinguished leader—or rather does not your seal for the cause of freedom animate you with sentiments of new and increased dovo. 'don ? Vreemen, will you surrender the vast terri• tortes of the Union to the Institution of Sla very, while you behold with sorrow the ?dia. souri Compromise, the plighted faith of the na • tion, trampled in the dust? Are you prepared for the violent seizure of Cuba for the purpoee of creating four new Slurs States? or for the degradation of free labor and the suppression of free speech ? of the only paramount issue the restric tion of slavery or its unlimited extension?— The Constitution protects it where it is, but carries it nowhere. The great heart of the nation is violently convulsed. Rally then to the rescue. By the 'wrongs and woes of Kansas—by the injustice and oppression of the slave power—nerve your Leans for the contest. We know yon will not shrink from the struggle. The Electoral Ticket, settled by the conven. tine equitable and just grounds, in worthy of your confidence. Give it your support. The territory of the Union was intend ed for the homes of freemen—your children and your children's children—for untold gene. rations to come, as their rightful heritage, and not for the homes of slaves and slave owners. Strike one more blow for the Constitution— one more for free speech and free sail, along the who's line. Let your watchword and your battle cry be—The Union and the Constitution —the Constitution and the Union. To Clergymen. We want to put a plain question or two to the Ministers of the Gospel in Huntingdon Con. ty, of all denominations. We believe we have a right to ask you seriously, this question: You are emboss& dor. of Jesus Christ. You are here on a mission from God. Your duty in to prepare the world for the coming of "the kingdom" of your Lora. This being conceded, now tell us, can God's ..kingdom coma" no long an you, yes you, the very ambassadors of "to whom all men are alike," are striving a. gainst the coming of that kingdom? Can the will of your Lord "be done ou earth as in hea ven" so long as Slavery is extending itstionlin• ion over the world I In Slavery a principle of God's kingdom 7 You have influence, and you can wield it for v.-al or for woe. If you, by your vote., aid the a,•asion of Slavery, we pray pm for the cause of 'kristianity, for the sake of consistency and OWL, and for God's sake, quit praying—" Thy *iegdom Como, Thy Will Be Lone I" Work ! Work ! PNYMIIINLIEULITI4, DO YOUR DUTY. In 1836 the so-called Democratic party car. ried Pennsylvania at the October State Elec. lion by a large majority. In the Presidential Election which followed, the Whigs, with scarcely a hope of success, reduced the major. ity to a very low figure, as follows : Harrison 87,111 Van Buren 01,475 In 1840, when the tide set so strongly in favor of Gen. Harrison, it was again carried for what was called. Democracy at the State Election—the total vote for Congress stand. ing : Harrison 125,902 Van Buren 130,551 Van Buren'. majority 4,619 And yet, at the Presidential Election which speedily followed, the State went for Gen. Her. rison by the following vote Harrison 144,021 Van 8uren13,672 Harrison's majority 34 9 In 1844, it was carried for "Polk, Dallas," and "the Tariff of '42" at both the State and Presidential Election. In 1848, at the State Election, it went as follows: For Taylor : Fur Cass : Gov. Johnston, 168,523 Longstreth, 168,221 C. C. Middlesw'th, 164,284 Gamble, 166,930 Johnston's maj. 302 Gamble's. maj. 2,636 When at the Presidential Election, directly after, the vote stood: Taylor, 185,730 Cass ' Van Buren, 11,177 Gen. Taylor over (ion. Cass, 13,544 In 1852, it went for sham Democracy at both Elections, though Gen. Scott received more votes in November than were cast for the Democratic State ticket in October—an follows : Whig. Dem. Oct. Hoffman, 151,600 Hopkins, 171,548 Noe. Gen. Scott, 179,122 Gen. Piercel99,s6B Mat. Oct. 19,948 Nov. 19,446 Thus the Whip, after success had become hopeless, not only polled votes enough to beat the vote of the sham Democracy in October, but actually reduced their majority. While we do not give np the State to the en. emy, ever. if she may possibly have gone a• gainst us now, we believe that we can carry her for Fremont in November by a moat triunt pliant majority. We call upon those men in our midst who have fur years refused to vote under a "Slavery Constitution" as they called it, to come up now and vote against being made slaves themselves. No man but has some influence ;no citizen but has a vote. If our own freedom is worth preserving, if free soil is worth holding to make into free States for our own posterity, then every man should rally against the hosts of darkness and sin which are crawling out into the light to vote down and to scoff at everything of religion, of virtue, of truth end of right. We commend the following from a member o! the good e 'Luse we fight for, to the eonsiderat on of all uur readers : "It seems to us impossible that the ensuintt struggle should be fought under disadvantages at all equal to those which have just been en• countered. We had no organization to start with, and tittle at any time ; and there is very little at this time; and there is a very general impression that the management of the canvass on our side might have been improved. Our losses are nearly all in the Counties most ac• cessible to money and influence from Phil adelphia ; our gains are almost exclusively in the impregnable West and North. We entreat the friends of Kansas to lose no hour in perfect ing an organization that will insure universal confidence, reach every school district and bring out the last vote. Men of Pennsylvania I the issue of Freedom or Slavery in Kansas rests with you. There is no longer a hope of reset• ing her by the action of Congress ; a President pledged to her cause alone can save her. Let no moment, no effort, be wasted, until a triumph is secured to Erections and Humtmit y ."' Are You Ready? Now Or Never. Are you prepared fully for the next trial?— Have you got a good and perfect organization in your district? Have you polled your bor. oughs and townships and do you know your own men ? Have you appointed sub-commit. tees for each school•district to bring out your vote? If not see to it at once I Go to work and do up what has been neglected. Do not wait for your neighbors ; what is everybody's business is nobody's business: but take hold at once as if it was your special duty. We can add hundreds to our vote on the 4th of November by simply bringing out those who failed to vote on the 14th. Remember, that three additional votes in each election district would have saved us the State, and may do it again. The fate of a nation may hang upon this contest. Let nothing of the past be suf. fered to dishearten or dispirit you. "The bat. tle is lost I" said Napoleon to Desaix when he came up to Marengo. 'There is time enough,' I said Desaix, "to win another," and the battle of Meraugo was won. Glorious Little Connecticut. At least 6,000 votes have been lost to the Buchananiers in Connecticut since April last. The returns of the late election there shows this fact, and conclusively prove that at the OctobereleKon the gloriously little State's ma• jority for Fremont Is actually 7,307 I What will it be in November. Caught , Caught. The election in Philadelphia is being contes ted, and already it has been clearly proven that 1400 illegal votes were oast in oue single die• trict iu Philadelphia I Our whole Union State Ticket has been elected, and it will be clearly proven this winter. Two Congressmen in the city of Philadelphia, will thus be secured. Never Despair ! Once More unto the Breach. Dear Friends, Once More BRIT I The late disaster which befel our friends in the political battle of the 14th instant ought to nerve them to determined efforts to redeem the State. The history of former contests in Penn sylvania, in the years in which a President was to be eleeted, is full of hope for us. The op position to the shar.Demeercy, in Presiden tial years, have generally been beaten at the October Election, but when the majority at the State Election was small, as in the case this year, the November Election invariably went against Locofocoism, and even when their majority was large in October, and the contest seemed hopeless on the part of the Opposition yet November saw a larger vote polled by them, and, a reduced majority for the Loco focus. Let these results in former years teach us our duty in 1866—Let as all work hard— aye, harder I—from this until the night of the 4th of November. to bring about a like result to those which have crowned the unflagging nevt•:R DESPAIRING offers of the opponents of Locofocoism in past contcsts. The election was carried by fraud, and Phil adelphia alone cast enough franduleots votes to defeat us. Bat the system of fraud put into operation by the desperate political gam blers of Locofocoism on the 14th instant, was not confinsd to Philadelphia alone. It pene trated the interior, and each county was reg. laxly farmed out. Along the line of the Del aware river, men wills the red soil of New .Jer sey still sticking to their shoes, swarmed about the polls, and voted—in other sections swarms of foreigners, with fraudulent and dead natn ralization papers were on hand—in many in. stances, where the game could be safely play ed "stuffed bullet boxes," after the fashion of San Francisco, were brought into play—mon ey flowed like water, and here and elsewhere the votes of the reckless or thoughtless were purchased for a dollar or two ahead. But why continue? The black deed bus been done to the disgrace of those who perpetrated it, and to the detriment of Republican i nstitutions. The half of a million of dallars, raised out of the State expended within its borders a few days before the election, accomplished our partial defeat. Let it pass. Their cash, or "corruption fund," is nearly all expended—their imported voters will be wanted elsewhere in November. "NEVER SAY DIE," THEN—NEVER DESPAIR I Forewarned, we are now fo:earmed, and if even they could poll all their fraudulent votes, read in another column what was done between the two elections in former years, and then "Oncc more unto the /r aria:" 172,186 LOOK sit rota° Ticket! Fellow-Citizens of Huntingdon County, we urge you to beware of Locofoco trickery, de ception and fraud. THEY HAVE GROWN DESPERATE, and will resort to corruption and deceit to defeat the NATION'S PRIDE— JOON C. FREMONT. They have had frau dulent tickets printed, to deceive the unwary, containing THEIR FULL LOCOFOCO E. LECTORAL TICKET, with the exception of the first, and that is headed with FILLMORE or FREMONT. These spurious tickets are now being circulated by scoundrels and borde r ruffians in this county, who claim to he in fa• roe of the Union Ele,torat Ticket, bet echo are TRAITORS IN OUR CAMP! Here is the true, and only correct ticket ; veto this and all will be right : .11losi'lliedeceived The True Ticket, Opposed to the Lo cofoco Party. ELECTORS. JOHN C. FREMONT. James Irvin. Joseph Edwards. George N. Eckert. Mahlon H. Dickinson. Wilson Jewell. Albert G. Rowlsnd. Caleb N. Taylor. William Darlington, M. D. William M. Baird. Michael H. Shirk. Simon Cameron. John McCormick. Smith B. Thompson. Russell F. Lord. Frederick E. Smith. Abraham UTelegraff. Joseph D. Simpson. Hezekiah Easton. Edward Scull. William M. Stewart. Alfred. Patterson. Beunir C. Sawyer. Jacob Painter. Lawrence L. leGuffitt. George %V. Arnold. Jnmea Skinner. Free and Slave Labor. A question of fearful importance is to be decided at the coming election. It is between free labor and slave labor. Let Buchanan be lelected and Kansas made Slave State, and the great West, with her noble rivers, and fertile valliee, and broad prairies, is doomed to this curse forever. Shall this virgin soil be the home of Freemen, the domain of the hardy free laborer—or shall it be worked by the °battles !of Southern nabobs,—msu who too. , upon labor an disgru cful,—who call our mechanics hire. Zings, and have no more respect fur them than for slaves? WORKING MEN of every trade and occupation, and party, men whose hands are hard with toil but who know the dignity of labor, and can look any man in the face and say, "I am your equal." Consider, ponder over this act. Depend upon it, it is no idle alarm. If you slumber now, you may awake to Grid it a dread reality. The Last Appeal ---"Strike, For your altars and your fires, God and your native land." On all hands we are beset with the inquiry, What are the prospects! It is the old inquiry renewed, Watchman, what of the night? We bid our friends be of good cheer. There is no cause for being disheartened. At best the Buchaniers have achieved but half a view. ry. We have about half the Congressmen and both branches of the Legislature ; and they have a paltry majority for their State ticket, which they have obtained by fraud and pipe. laying. Looking at it from the most favorable standpoint for them, it is a drawn battle ; while from our stand-point, the fruits of victory are with us. Our majority on joint ballot in the Legislature is worth far more to us than their State officers can be to them ; and it gives us, beside, a chance to investigate the frauds at the late election, and unseat these officers, if the frauds should be clearly proven. It is a little remarkable that at the October election in 1840 the Democratic majority on the popular vote was 4,6s9—snore than it is now—and that the Legislature was ours by a close vote. The ensuing struggle in Novem ber gave us the State, as will be the case now. In many counties the vote on Tuesday last was quite light. Dauphin, Beebe, Chester, Northampton, Cumberland and most of the in terior counties polled but a light aggregate vote, and yet the Democratic vote was quite full. This will not be the case next time. The immen e imported vote, seat in upon us in all the border counties, will be needed at home on the 4th of November. We will not, we think, have that to contend against. In addition to this, thonsands of pro-slavery Fillmore men throughout the State voted the Loci:sloe° ticket throughout, and this vote will, in all probability, be diverted to Fillmore. The indications are all in our favor. In every elec• Lion district our friends tell us we can do bet. ter; and in every 'western county the promise is the same. Friends, remember those pro. ! micro and keep them, The Bnchaniers cannot poll for Buchanan the vote of last Tuesday. What we want, now, is organization and work. We want the boroughs and townships thoroughly polled, the cause of every friend of freedom put down, and efforts made to bring out every vote. It must be done. Its every township there should be a matt named to eve• ry school district whose business it shall be to bring out every voter its it. A full veto is a victory fur as. Co to work, then, at once. rouse up the friends; co nplete the work of or. ganintion ; and see that no labor that is need. ed is left unperformed. In addition to this, there needs to be snore precaution taken against frauds. Men must he stationed atevery poll to challenge every doubt. fill vote, and keep the hordes of imported voters front debauching the ballot-box. A vigilant watch must also be kept upon election officers, ancPaery precaution taken to check the info. moor imposition to which we were subjecffsd last time. There is no time to be lost. Up, then, and to work! Devote every day between this and the election to the task before us. We earl, and we must increase our majority in the cons. ty. Thu result in the State may hang upon it. Election Fraud. Know then every man that the frauds in the city of Philadelphia alone were deliberately planned ; that the State was canvassed and the tended number of votes computed ; that money was sent into the principal cities of this State to buy votes and to colonize to vote down our own citizens. Aye, even after Ito vote was ac tually polled, we had news at the returns front Philadelphia that the Shninoerats bad carried the city by 2140 votes. On Thursday, when the vote began to look close in the State, the tnajor ay began to grow. Wards were found in that city where more 'votes had been cast for "de mocracy" than were at first thought. On Thum day morniag the l'ennsylvanian put the major ity at 2900, On Thursday evening it began to be rumored that it had gone up to three or four thousand. The exigencies of the case deman ded it, and in the sliding scale of the political thermometer the . ount went up to the required figure. Can any sane man believe that for three whole days the vote iu the city of Phila. del; hia was known to be within 000 ? That the omniscient Forney, notwithstanding his former meanderings in the Forrest, tilde% know within two days after the election to within 500 votes of how the vote stood in the compact city of Philadelphia? The Kansas and California game has come home to tie, and it is our own fault if it is tried on again. Let fraudulent voters beware. On the 4th of November the same game will not win. We nak only for right at the Itallot4.x. We ask not stow men vote, but by what right. If a majority of the legal votes of the State are against us, we cheeeefully submit. A fair trial at the ballot-box is all see ask, and that we must have. Vote Early ! As soon as the Polls open—VOTE. Dedi. cute the balance of the duty to your country, in getting your neighbors out. litre carria guts and horses, and see that every vote is polio d. Car. ry in your arms—if you can get no other con• vcyance—the aged and infirm. (let every vote you can for Fremont, and you shall have your reward in a great, an overwhelming, and a GLORIOUS VICTORS' ! Be rigilant. TILE PROSPECTS ARE GLORIOUS. Many attempts will be made, freemen, to de. ceive you at the polls. The Locofocos will at tempt to force a spurious Ticket upon you, but be not deceived. Stand at the polls—see that nu man votes who is not entitled. to do so.— Challenge every imported voter. Give the en tire day to your couutry and in aid of the glo rious principles of LIBERTY. rot— "Wbo so base, as be a slave V ONCE MORE Unto the Breach. Let all the friends of Freedom, Free Speech and Free Kansas—let all the opponents of For eign Interference, Foreign Dictation and Pope ry, go to the polls on Tuesday, the 4th of No vember and veto the Union Electoral Ticket. Fremont men and Fillmore men should join heart and hand in taking the State from the friends of Slavery and Southern Dictation by voting that ticket. Each can vote for his own individual choice, and by combination on the Union Ticket can secure for that choice the full strength of his preference in the State.— There can be no reasonable objection to this. There is no compromise of principle required. It is in accordance with the course pursued in voting for the Union State and Connty tickets and must strike every one as not only fair and honorable, but the only course that will tuba the electoral vote of the State from the Slavery and Soilhern party. Let the friends of Fremont and Filmore everywhere go to the pills nod vote the Union Electoral Ticket headed by these two candidates and the result is certain to be a triumph that will rejoice the hearts of the opponents of Slavery and Popery over the Union. Once again. We say to our friends gird on the armor a. new for the contest. There are thousands of voters who voted the sham Democratic ticket who can never swallow the Cincinnati platform. Men who refuse to vote in the State elections but who in the present fearful crisis when all we hold dear is at stake, will rally to crush the worst enemies of Freedom that ever band. eti in defence of wrong. We call upon all our friends, everywhere, to redouble their of in a cause as holy as ever was presented to a free people for their support. Rally with new hopes and determinations in defence of truth and right. There is no such word as fail to mon who fight in a good cause with truth and right upon their side. Let no man flag for one moment in his efforts; let us look anew to our organization; bring every man to a knowledge of the. justice of our cause; let every effort be made to bring to the polls all who have a right to vote; be prepared on the 4th of November to exclude from the ballot box every bogus vote. We can sweep the State in November in spite of the combined efforts of the hosts of Slavery. Again be up and at work, night and day, in season and out of season. Work, work. BC(fiCit, but not "Subdued." The Mends of Freedom and Free Labor in Pennsylvania are beaten, but not subdued.— Those who hold that labor should be owned by capital—ehould be subject to the will of a mas• ter without -fee or reward, have triumphed at the late election. Bat they have not yet sub• deed the spirit of Independence, or conquered the principles of Freedom. The people have been led into a wrong path by a blind zeal for party and principles that have a fair exterior, but are within "full of deed men's bones" and all manner of uncleanliness. They have been deceived and led to vote against their holiest convictions of right and duty, but this cannot long endure, and the universal triumph of truth and justice is sure. Let all who desire to see Kansas n Free State—Let all who desire to see labor free and independent, and not under con• teal of task•wnaters, go to the polls and VOTE FOR THE UNION ELECTORAL. TICKET. the Ladies! We appeal to you, our fair and noble coun• trywomen, to do something for Fremont and Freedom. Your influence is great, and will you not exert it in the cause of God and your country, in this, the great contest between riumzioss AND SLIIITEBX ? It is your duty—a duty you owe to God and your Native Land, to use your every power and exert your every influence with husband, and father, and brother, and friends, and kindred, and neighbors, to aid the cause of Freedom and the Right, over Slavery and the Wrong I Then won't, you aid us in our great struggle with that ferocious and soul-killing monster— SLAVERY ? ".More Proof." The Fillmore Journals have Coon weekly la den with articles headed as above, to prove Col. 'Fremont a Catholic I One of their stron gest arguments, was a letter purporting to have been written by Archbishop Hughes. We pub lish a card from Archbishop Hughes on nur outside, in which he denies having written such letter, and disclaims all knowledge of Col. Fre mont's religion. Where will the slanderers now go. Whilst we hell• ye every man hat a right to worship God as he pleases, we do not believe any party has a right to saddle a rel igloo on an in lividual, obnoxious to him. John C. Fremont is a Protestant, of the de. nomination known as Episcopalians ; and be. lieves in the Triune God—Three in One. But what is Mr. Fillmo . re ? Millard Fillmore is a Unitarian. We will not say a word against his belief, but refer our readers to the 2d chapter, 22d & 21d verses of St. John's Ist Epistle "Who is a liar, but he that deuieth that Jo. sus is the Christ. He is antichrist, that &pi. cth the Father is the Son. Whosoever denieth the Soo, the same bath not the Father." Plain Argument Slavery extension is contrary to the Chris tain religion. No Christian can aid anything or any movement contrary to his religion with• out sinning. James Buchanan is pledged to Slavery gxtension. Consequently, no Chris tina can support James Buchanan. HUM, Let Us Reason Together! Fellow-Citizens, of Huntingdon County, we make this last appeal to you, as Freemen, as Honest Men and Christians! We appeal to you, Democrats, Whigs, Americans, and Republi cans. Let us lay aside all party prejudices, all party feelings, and "Come, let us reason loge tber." You all love your country, her institu tions, and her progress in prosperity ; you are willing to pledge your .`life, fortune and sacred honor," to the uncross of the glorious FREE institutions of our native land. The cothitry demands a sacrifice coo, your part, to prere..ve her institutions, and uphold the glorious fabric of the Union—she DEMANDS IT NOW ! It is not the sacrifice of your wealth, your life, ur your sacred honor—oh, no, it is the sacrifice of your party prejudices ! Believe us, we arc honest men, and for our honest purposes, hear and believe. We tell you. and speak it in all sty evidence of its truth, that, the an ety and preservation of the rights you enjoy as NORTHERN FREEMEN—which have been handed down to you by your patriotic fore fathers, demand that you break asunder the strung ties which bind you to your political par. ty.- To come at once to the point—we have yielded, and yielded, and yielded again unto the arrogant demands of the slave oligarchy, until now, she even demands the very old home. stead and its free fields inherited from our fa• their, to he given over to the cursed BREED. INC! OF SLAVES, the Overseer's Lash, and the bondman's chains and shackles ! This is the direct issue—you cannot, and you most not blink it. We tell you that the slave power is , endeavoring to increase the area of slavery, and demands the free soil of the North—your homes anti your fields, consecrated by The blood 1 of your fathers, and dedicated by solemn com• 1 pact, to you, your children and I'R LED Olf, fbrever—for the inhuman traffic in their fellow men. We tell you, and oh, fur the sake of t he glorious raise of Freedom, for the sake orop• pressed and shackled Humanity, for the sake of the replians and widows. made such upon the bloody fields of Kansas, fur the sake of God nett Religion, believe us, that our liberties are in danger. We invoke you, US Christians, and as Freemen, to come to the help of your brethren, who aro combatting with the monster which seeks to make slaved and tondosen of your sons and daughters, and reduce the lobo ring man of the north, to the level of a ne e ;ro slave ! Jaines Buchanan stands .pledged, be -1 fore the country, to sanction the extension of human bondage ; aye, though it should bring the mused power and institution into our own Commonwealth, and fasten it HERE, a with ering cure upon us forever ! We aslc you, fellow-citizens. as neighbors, can you endorse the doctrine of the men who nominated Mr. Buchanan, when they say— " Slaver!, should not be confined to the tows ; "all LABORING MEN, whether WHIN; or "black, were so intended. Slavery is the nor. 'final condition of all laboring men," d'e., sic. Such is the language of all the sapporters of ' Mr. Buchanan, in the South, and such is the doctrine you endorse, if you vote fur him. Do you risk then with Webster—" Whether ' shall Igo ?" We answer—go aid those who are earnestly striving for the good of 'the whole ' country. Go vote for JOHN C. FREMONT, who stands pledged to the Union and the Con ' stitution, and whose doctrine in regard to the ' great issue of Slavery, is comprehended in a s ingle sentences—“Tlins far shalt thou go, and • no farther" ; where slavery it, let it remain ; , and there, let its dark waves he stayed. Will you aid the cause of God and Freedom, or will jou strike fur the offspring of hell--Slavery? THE KEYSTONE a Union Ticket ! I L ZZA I DP A ! We have the satisfaction of announcing to our readers, that the entire Opposition to the Sham Democracy in Pennsyliania, have united on a Asir and honorable Union Electoral Tick. et—the plan proposed by the circular of the American, Republican and North American Cmstnittees, which was published in our last issue. This secures the defeat ofiatnes Buch anan, and REDEEMS PENNSYLVANIA I Thielicket will enable every opponent of Buell. anon and the Cincinnati P.atforin to form un entire and hearty Union, and at the same time cast his vote for the candidate of his choice.— No man honestly desiring the defeat of James Buchanan von object to the plan proposed.— With such a union we can beyond all doubt defeat the Cincinnati nominee—without it that party must inevitably succeed, and the pledg. ed executors of the Pierce Administration will curse the country for another four years. 'Why should not the union be carried out? Opposition to Slavery extension is n prirciple held in eointeon by the groat masses of the Fillmore and Fremont voters, it is only In this way that that principle can be carried out.— United we can succeed, divided we must be conquered. No :Ban voting the Union Ticket is called upon to sacrifice a single point in do. log so he indicates his preference and at the same thee his ballot in made effective its favor of the great principle whirls is to be decided in the content. Look at this question in the light of reason and common sense, and discarding the petty jealousies of partizan warfare, come up to the issue like men determined to strike a firm blow for a great principle. Let your motto ho a union of the right against the wrong—a un ion for the sake of the Union. One 1 lore Trial. Let the friends of Freedom in Huntingdon County gird on their armor for the great con. test on the 4th day of November next. On that day the fate of Kansas will be decided ; and whether it be for weal or wo let Hunting• don county at least do her whole duty. If the territories are to be given up to the debasing Slavery let Huntingdon county at least have her skirts clear of the crime. A large majority can be given against the eaten• Sion of Slavery if the proper exertion be made. And they who aid in giving that majority will have sotnething to be proud of the longest day of their lives. ITHE THREE PLATFORMS On Siav — e - ry . In the iVer;itories: THE “DEMOCRATIC" PLATFORM. The American Democracy recognize and adopt the principles contained in the °sprig laws establishing the Territories of Kansas and Nebraska, as embodying the only sound and sure solution of the "slavery question," upon which the great national idea of the people of the whole country can repose in its determined conservatism of the Union—NON-INTERFE• RENOE BY CONGRESS WITH SLAVERY IN THE TERRITORIES, 01k IN THE DIS. TRIO.' OF COLUMBIA. THE"AMERICAN" PLATFORM; The recognition of the right, of the native. born and naturalized citizen of the United States, permanently residing in any Territory thereof, to frame their Constitution and Laws, AND TO REGULATE THEIR DOMESTIC AND SOCIAL AFFAIRS IN THEIR OWN MO DE. THE "REPUBLICAN" PLATPOII4II: Rewired, That the Conetitution confers upon Cos r.• a sovereign power over the Territories of the United States, for their government, and that in the exercise of this power, it is both the right and ditty of Congress to PROHIBIT IN THE TERRITORIES THOSE TWIN REL ICS OF BARBARISM, POLYGAMY AND SLAVERY. Will the render take the tremble to orate these three resolutions ? He will find the first two eubsten , isn , tlnt , tiral. end the latter the only true PLATFO'SIM OF FREEDOM. Monks Voting. It has been alleged that for some :411;71;n:el nom to the election, a larzT s-e' ,;” feenits had been introduced into St. Vincent's Monaste• ry, near Latrobe. The ; •., ; They appenred on the day of the elution at Yea us and voted. This b,in,r d , ;:, they are now leaving, as appears from the following letter LATROBE. Oct. 16, 1856. DEAR Sta :—Since the eieation, the Monks of tit. Vincent have been shipped to different parts of the State, Since yesterday morning a large number took the cars at thin These arc the into sent into Westm.reland County, to decide her elections. * * * What think you, American citiz,n4 of this? PHILADELPHIA ALL RIGHT. The Philadelphia Son. North Amirieun, Times, and Bulletin, are all out in import of the Union Electoral Ticket, and in denuncia• twin of Sanderson and his treacherous organ, the Daily New. Geo. \V. Heed, who heads the list of signatures to the Address wide!: will he found in another column, has stood at the head of the Fillmore party in Philadelphia, and deceived by the artful duplicity of Sanderson & Co., bad resisted a Union up to last Monday. Ho now goes in heartily for Union, as will the honest masses of the American party all over the State. Ohio Election. Ohio lens given an overwhelming Republi• can majority—not lesa than 30,0001 Three fourths of the Congressmen are Republica. —some four or five have been lost to fro. dom by running distinct American candidates. NEW GOODS ! ! J. & NV. SAXTON have jug received at the "Metropolitan," one of the handsomest etocke of Goode ever brought to town. It is the "Metropolitan" Store, and if you want bargains just go there. OUR BOOK TABLE. ger We have received the let No. of the Daily Telegraph, published in Harrisburgh by Gem Bergner. It in a very ably conducted and handsome sheet, and we won4l most re spectfully solicit an exchange. Will you ? fib — We have received Hunter's Medical Specialist for November. This is om• of the very heat medical works extant, and ever ,•hv aician should he in receipt of it. Pr•a $1 per annum. Addrese R. Hunter, M. D., 1.21 Broad way. N. Y. air We have received the first number of a nrw weekly literary paper, published by Cro. fut & Bietzluw, Phila., at $2 per annum, and milled 'rho Nation." If wo nre to judge by the present No., what the future will be, it bids Mir to outstrip all competitors. rarricb, On the the 21st by the Rev. A. B. Still. Mr. Samuel Smith to Miss. Eliza Ann Bilger, both of Shavers Creek rfuntingdon,county. On the 19th inst., by Simeon Wright Esq. Mr. JolpQuary to Bliss Temperance Slone, PHILADELPHIA MARKETS. The Flour market is rather quiet to day ; holders tire firm in their views, hut the export demand continues limited, and only about 1200 bbls extra found buyers at $7,35 for single and $7,5047621 for double—the latter for a fancy brands • mixed and straight brands are held at 56,8747 per bbl, but the sales are on• ly in a small way for home consumption at these rates for common to fair retailing blends; 57121 time better brands, and 57,25a8,'.:5 for• extra and fanny family flour, as in quality.— Rye Flour is scarce, and wanted at an ad e on previous quotations; the last sales were at $3,87] ;ter bbl. Corn Meal continues steady, with kurther small sales, :n all about 250 Mils Pennsylvania Meal at $3,371 per bbl. The demand for Wheat is less active, and there is not much offering or llama to day.— Sales in all only reaching about 3500 bushels, in lots, at 146 c for prime red, and 168a170e for white, mostly at the latter rate for choice Southern. Rye continues scarce and in re. quest at 80c for new Yemen. Corn is about stationary, without much ofibring, and about 4000 bushele Pann'a. yellow found buyers at 66a67c. afloat, including some small lots of white at V n66c, as in quality. Oats are scarce and wanted at 45c, with but few offering. Of Barley further sales of 5000 bushels Westeru . New York have been made at 130 c.