PEOPLE'S STATE TICKET. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL: THOMAS E. COCHRAN, POR SURVEYOR GENERAL: GEN. WILLIAM M. KEIM, 01/ BERNS COUNTY, ler The Pennsylvania School Journal for August, is on our table. It is replete with sound educational matter. $1 a year. sir Peterson's Bank Note Reporter is one of the best published ir. this country. Pub• limbed by Peterson & Bros., at $1 per year. I The American Agriculturalist, for Au. oust, is a very interesting number. Published in New York, by Orange Judd, at $1 a year. iiirlbe Genesee farmer for August, is filled with interesting agricultural matter. It is a useful book, and costs only a dollar per year. Address Joseph Harris, Rochester, N. Y. Organize for the Contest. It is of all things important if the American , Republicans of the State desire to triumph in the coming contest, that a thorough and eff• dent organization be secured, and that a pro• , per spirit be aroused amcng the working men of the party everywhere. We look also, to the , active exertions of the young men. In past years, their services by means of Clubs and Associations, bad a weighty influence, and we hope they will work again in every district, and without delay enter upon the.formation of clubs and prepare for a vigorous defence of the great principles which we now take with us in the canvass. We urge thorough organization, dirk cipline, unity of action, and with all, zealous effort. These are as necessary in politics as in war. A force wanting in organization will be sure to sustain defeat, when opposed as we shall be is Huntingdon county, by an organi zed and regularly trained opposition, backed by the countenance and aid of our National and State Administrations. It is sometimes a source of wonder that the Locofocos should sue. caed in Pennsylvania, with principles known to be directly hostile to the interests and views of a large majority of the people. The secret lies, in a great measure, in the force of party drill, and what this lacks is made up by the moat unscrupulous professions of friendship and pledges before an election, which are only made to be broken. We must therefore coon• teract the influence of organization cn the part of our opponents, by an organization equally efficient, and what is equally important, the duplicity of Locofoco professions and promises must be exposed, and the ur.wary and ensue• pecting placed upon their guard against them. In times, past, these professions and pledges have been disregarded from the moment the result of an election was known, and so they will be in future. The principles advocated by the American Republican party come home to the very door of every man in Huntingdon county who lives by industry, or holds property. They are the basis of Pennsylvania prosperity, and it excites wonder in other States that Pennsylvania. with her mountains of iron and coal, her ability to become a large manufacturing State, and to maintain a dense and thriving industrious pop ulation, should be any other than a Republican State. We believe, and know, moreover, that she is Republican. We know something of her people. we hare the voles. We need but get all our vote to the polls to insure a brilliant and overwhelming triumph. Shall this be done ? or shall the people be suffered again to put confidence in Locofoco professions, and thereby lcse the little that remains of them of their prosperity Democratic Principles. It has long been a matter of wonder to many unsophisticated people, what those things are which Loco Foco papers talk so much about, and which they call Democratic Principle, We have at least met with a brief sentence in an Administration journal, which may serve to throw some light upon the subject. Here it is "He who disputes the Dred Scott decision is is virtually against the Democracy in the up. proaching contest, as he who adheres to it ts for and with the Democratic party." This, of course, defines Buchanan Democ• racy. The Douglas Wing of the party insists upon "Squatter sovereignty" as the great prin. ciple of their battalion; the Wise wing makes special legislation to protect slavery in the Territories the great principle„ and the South. ern secession tail of Democracy considers the African slave Uncle as the sine qua non of the party. . . Here is cert‘fply an elegant variety, and it it evidentthat without the "nigger" there would be nothing left of Democracy. Spoilsmen. There are men who attach themselves to a strong party, with no other motive and for no other end than to secure their own selfish ag grandizement. "No pay—no fight," is their motto, and on other creed will the? own. If disappointed they always threaten to "leave the party." Well, we say let them go. Even if they had thousands of vote's under their con trot, we would rather be consigned to a hope less minority, than bind our party to the inso lent dictation of politicians so utterly devoid of principle. But they possees no influence be yond their own votes. Office, office is the bur• then of their song. And our hope is that those who are attached to our party from no higher consideration than 'poi., may always be disap pWlWwwg. Exports and Imports. i election, and the votes of which are absolutely as now in Missouri, we may be sure that the "Our imports at the port of New York this , essential to the success of the Democratic can- Republicans will be zealous Emancipationists• year, have thus far been $114.536,000, and our I delete should that party be eo fortunateas to be But as a national party they insist that Slavery exports, exclusive of specie, but $28,501,000." able to agree upon a candidate. Over against is and shall remain a purely State institution ; We find the above in one of our New York Mr. Douglas and the Squatter Sovereignty fac- and one of the great purposes of the party is city exchanges, and wish the working-men and' tion, stands the faction at the head of which to withstand that insidious course of legista all classes of citizens of Huntingdon county, to Gov. Wise hat lately attempted to place him- tion, judicial decision and executive acticn, notice it particularly. It appears that the de. self, that which demands actual legislation on by which especially of late years, it has been crease in the exports of the seven great staples, the part of Co tgreas for the protection of slave attempted to give to Slavery a national char. for the week ending July 30th, upon the week property in the Territories. There is still a I aster. In view of the new ideas on the subject of a year since, is $652,707. With these start. third faction, which may be called, par excel-; of negro slavery which have obtained so sud• ling figures before us and the year almost half lence, the spoils faction which enjoys the smiles den an ascendency at th 3 South, and of the gone, how are we to come out next January. and assistance of Mr. Buchanan, and of which, attempt now so vigorously making as the na- If we go on as we bid fair to, we shall have to the " Bald Hornet" begs to be considered the tural and logical consequence of those ideas, pay Europe in January, 18G0, the snug bal. leader is Huntingdon county This faction, to revive the African lave trade, the Republi• once of $70,000.000 in gold, and in the mean regarding the possession of power as the main can party may be regarded as having been thee will have sent her about $70,000,000 be. thing after all, and platforms and principles as providentially raised up to meet a great crisis side, making a grand total of about $140,000,. of hot little comparative consequence, is sex- in our national affairs, and to preserve our in -000, drainage upon us, of which the trifle of ions to contrive some means for stepping in atitutions on the basis upon which out fathers $100,000,000 in specie will have gone for dry between the other two factions and carrying off placed them. Shall this nation remain a Free geode by the end of this year, every rag ; first the nomination of the Charleston Colleen. Labor democracy, or shall it become a Slave. which we can get up at home, and suffietently lion, and then the votes of the rank and file of holding aristocracy ? Shell the element of free fine and elegara for any American woman to the , serty, industry remain the cornerstone of our social wear; and we do not sabscribe to the principle I. Thos, it will be seen, how utterly impossible and political system? Shall we look to erni that our American women should wear any. it would be to secure anything like a harmoni• gration from Europe as the means to furnish thing short of the best, neither. One of thre e oils " declaration " with so many factions to that supply of labor required ne a suppliment days a reform party will spring up in this cotes please, and hence the willingness of " corruo- to our national increase, or shall we open all try to advocate the support of American man tion " and " fraud " to kiss each other. But our Southern ports to renew importations from ufactures. The thing can be done. We can aside from these differences, there is another Africa? Are these United States to remain sell as low as Europe when wo set ourselves question which would have been particularly what they are, or are they to be Africanized ? about it. annoying to the "unterrified, ' and which might To these questions the Republican party stands We can, but we don't mean to do it. We not look well embodied in a " resolution." We ready to give a firm and dee'ded answer. are ageing to work for ten cents a day, so allude to the position of the Administration In regard to the mooed allegation, that in long as Jim Buchanan is President. relative to the rights of naturalized citizens— the resolution above quoted we "have given up We are doing a heedless, "neck or nothing" that a native of a foreign country, though now our battle cry," we shall merely add, that the trade with Europeans, and furnishing them with an American citizen, is still liable to military resolution passed by the Republicans of Maine, the gold we might and should keep at Home.— service in case of a temporary return to the concludes with these words, " subject only to We are "going in," on foreign marchandize at place of his birth. This cold-blooded heartless- the constitutional powers of Congress." This a tremendous rate—say not far train the rate Hess that " your naturalization in this country is all the Republicans have ever asked—that of $300,000,000 a year—and having nothing to will not exempt you from that claim" of service, the people of a State should govern themselves, sell Europe, or next to nothing, we are sending has so materially damaged the party, which "subject to the constitutional powers of Con. over the go!d, and the lose to England by the everywhere depends upon the foreign vote for gress." What that " power " may be, is the war is made up by us. All this is com t. placee its success, that it finds some healing and question to be determined. But if we admit, ly dwelt upon by the English papers, which soothing application, by which to allay the " for the sake of argument " the plea of the congratulate the commercial classes of Great , threatening aspect of the question is necessary; Union, that the doctrine taught by -the party Britain on "the great change and recovery ob. hence, they must either accept the balm offered cans of a particular State, bind the entire par strvable in the transactions with the United by Attorney-General Black, which takes ground ty is the other States, what position does the States." directly in opposition to the assumptions of no-called Democratic party now occupy? Let IVe should like to see a little proof at home Gen Cass, or go it blind. us see. The Mississippi Democratic State of commercial prosperity. We see nothing but Another item which might not be very accept- Convention have in addition to passing resole the character of a spendthrift in the future of able, " and would be very hard to swallow, in a lions in favor of the revival le f the African ourselves so pleasing to the English. We are resolution delegates to with on endorsing the face of woful business depressions, and may an inability to Old S uc h, "is th e record Slave Trade, instructed their "going it" at a fearful rate', and that, too, in resol of his Administration, in a pecuniary point. draw from the Charleston Convention, unless only be brought to our senses For instance—on the 4th of March, 1857, whets they succeed in engrafting upon the platform by go further. Here we are, with railroads doing nothing. and ruining their stock. J. B. came into power, there was a balance the repeal of all iaws against the African Slave comparatively in the Treasury of $26,000,000. Trade, and the enactment by Congress of laws holders. Farmers are unable to sell—and if On the Id of June, 1857, it was reduced to for the protection of slave property in the they were, the prices are no much lower in Eu- $17,500,000. United States Territories. The South Carolina On the Ist of January, 1858, it was reduced delegation will follow. rope that grain cannot be sold except ate heavy to nothing. Then again, some of the most prominent loss; manufactories all over the country near- On the 10th of January, 1858, the govern- Democrats of the Southern States have signed ly bankrupt ; ocean commerce fat; millions r meet was compelled to borrow $20,000,000. a call fur a convention of disaffected Southern of property being sacrificed by the law, con, In August, 1858, $10,000,000 more. States, to meet on the 10th of November, to pelted to borrow millions; the only relial,e sta In January, 1859, $10,000,000 more. declare the dissolution of the Urine, and to pie we have—cotton—going down hill; all this is the true picture, and yet our foreign perches. And now it wants $30,000,000 to commence induce as many States as will co-operate to a debt of $500,000,000. withdraw from it, es are so extravagant as to be a cause of con Tt e idea of approviug of this enormous ox gratulation Due R. B Ellett, at a meeting at gratulation to the businees classes of England. When will our people learn window? We are pertditure of the public money, might not, we G rebate ville, S. C., on the Fourth of July, said: afraid n it till it is too late to nee it. opine, be so pleaitant to contemplate. As remarks a valued cotempotary, no coon- .But perhaps, the Mongrel Convention, will try has ever prospered at a time when a pro- think little of the mutter and re adopt the Cin.l duct so valuable as wheat bore no higher price c u i!" o . : l 6 l ) , : a l V e :ift f r u n o ' i c t : , !';: r i m o " e ll o i r z g e e r ' than that which exporters are are willing to 1, tfashin pay for our Eillrplus. This is correct, and we ton! Bowman says it means lion.interventien hope it may prove the means of arousing our'i ith niggers in the Territories; Gov. Wise says ' wilfully blind population, that they may under • t means a Con gre-sional slave code, and J udg e stand the truism that cur agricultural interests Douglas says it is equatter sovereignty: .d it and our manufacturing interests are so closely will require a platform admissible of these in connected that what affects the one is no less terpretations to unite the Locofoco factious in injurious to the other. this county. "Which of these," said the epee- And further, it the credit and the confidence ',tin. to the man of the menagerie, "which which our natural wealth warrant could be re of these is the hippopotamus, and which is the do vived, if the public energies could be given uns rhinoceros'!" "Tither of them will reservedly to protecting all our interests, if one or,, o pays your money, and you takes the other," said the considerate for the show some statesman of the commanding powers of an' our own Cameron, would be elevated to the your " So let it it be with the interpret. Presidential chair to recall us to duly and to tiOnrci choice: incinnatilatform. How else can direct the treasury policy once more aright, all there be rmony among the brethren? that the most sanguine now dare hope of de future of enterprise and industry in this coati try, would be sure of realization. We endorse heartily the sentiment that the spirit of Henry Clay, and his devotion to American interests, ought not wholly to be wanting at a time when every blow struck would full on prepared ground ; and while huge negatives sit in the seats of pow er at Washington, choking the life out of the nation. Let there be a united and determined effort put forth to resuscitate our paralyzed en ergies, by the elevation to the "highest office in the gift of the people," of a Protection Pres ident. So mote it be. They go it Blind. The editor of the Huntingdon Globe has sod• deuly become affected in the region of the spi• nal marrow, and meekly cries out in his last issue, "pass no resolutions." To this agonim lag wail of a spirit in torment," that classic sheet the "Bald Hornet," responds its Amen. The position of the Globe, is somewhat singu lar. Whilst the editor "cannot vote for the State ticket as it now stands," because "it would be an endomment of Buchananism,"lie has no hesitancy in declaring that he will sup port the county ticket—no matter what may be the views of the candidates—provided the Con vention does not "damn it with resolutions en. doming or repudiating the State or National Administrations:' To this, we believe. the " Hornet " again cries Amen. Here we have an act of equestrianism, which all the circus riders in creation cannot equal. A performance unequalled in the annals of "ground and lofty tumbling." But the truth is simply this, it would be im possible to construct a platform of principles, which would suit the different elements of the Locofoco party in this county. It is split up into hostile factions, and between each, there exist almost irreconcilable breaches. On the one hard stands the Globe man in all the gran deur of his magnificent proportions, as the defender in this county of the views of his lead er, Douglas, with his doctrine of Squatter Sov- ereignty, which the New York Tribune calls faction No. 1., and to which a large portion of that remaining fragment of the Democratic party to be found in the Northern States is un derstood to adhere. What gives to this fee. tints and its leader a very great importance is, that they control those few Northern States in which alone there is any chance of obtaining a Demcreratic majority at the next Presidential "NOW AND THEN:, Under this caption, the first issue of Mr. Buch.an's new supporter in this place, has an article relati . ve to the " Republican" party. It starts rut by asserting in indirect terms that the " Republican" party was called into exis tence and " still lives" solely upon the goes• lion of " slavery in the territories," and broadly charges, that it has forsaken its first love: for proof of which it cites its readers, to the recent action of the Republicans of the State of Maine, in passing a resolution declaring that the `'pea pie of a territory have a right to establish the r own institutions in their own way subject only to the constituiknal powers of Congress." To these two questions, we ask the attention of our readers fur a brief space. In regard to the first assertion, we hold it to be untrue in every particular. As remarked the Tribune, at first our party was composed of materials drawn largely both from the old Whig and from the old Democratic parties, and a portion of those who formed it having been temperaly connected with the American party, it was naturally to be expected that a t first it should exhibit a certain want of unifor mity and solidity rowing out of this compos ite character. But already alt these diverse materials are firmly united together, and the party has certain distinct principles, aims and objects as to which all its members are agreed. The Republican party is properly entitled, and alone entitled, to be called the conservative party of the Union. It does not pretend to have obtained any new lights, or to set itself up as wiser than Jefferson, Washington, Hama. ton, a nd other great men by whose courage, labors and sacrifices our independence was secured, and by whose wisdom the Government was framed. It looks upon Slavery in the same light as they did—as nu evil, political, economical and moral, a great grievance and heavy hardest unfortunately inherited from co lonia' times. Hence the opposition of the Re publ:can party to the spread of this evil beyond its present list its, .d its disposition to set ore all the territory belonging to the Union for the exclusive uecupatitto of Free Labor, bit .ng in this the example of the men who q.t.. .1 the ordinance of 1787, which was 1.1.1 , . al 111 cable to all the territory then belong' to Union. As to Slavery within the Staten. it proposes to leave it, as the Federal Constiot Lion leaves it, to kcal legislation—though whenever the question it raised in a Slave State. Shall we submit to be single amongst all civilized people in the world. in our inability to expaud ? Shall we !um down to so hostile a milky ? I answer—nol If in all other things our union with the North woo unexceptional, I would break it on this one pretensio t alone.— Expansion shall be the law of the South ; as of the North. * * * If these things are so, why should we have any anxieties about the perpe tuity of Alean slavery in the South? It is of God, and cannot be overthrown." Again in reference to the opening of the Slave Trade, in a speech to his constituents, lion. Stephens said: "I am not telling coo, he said, to do it, but it is n serious question concerning our politi cal end domestic policy; and we do not want voters nod declaimers eo much es thinkers and reasoners. It is useless to wage war about nh• street. rights or to quarrel and accuse each oth• er of unsoundness, unless we get more Afri• cans." The South must "get more Africans."— That is the doctrine. "Slave States cannot be made without Africans," and in order to secure these, Mr. Stephens is in favor of stealing Cu. ba. He says: "If Cuba wants to come into the Union, he would not ask Spain, but would be in favor of repealing the Neutrality Laws, SO as to give our people a chance to help in her wish." Both Mr. Rhett and Mr. Stephens are prom inent Democratic leaders in the States where they reside. They both favor the stealing of Cuba and the opening of the Slave Trade, for the expansion of Slavery. Here then, according to the Union's arg o n. ment, we have the platform of the Democratic party of the United States. It is simple and easily comprehended. consisting of two planks only, with a resort to a third, should both the , others fail t let—A Slave Code for the Territories: 2d—A renewal of the African Slave Trad, This is the entertainment to which the De. mocrecy of the North are to be invited, and to this complexion it must came at last. The first plank will meet with comparatively little opposition from the Buchanan democracy of the North, as is proven by a recent speech of Judge Jackson, at Athens, Georgia. He is a member of Congress from that State, and he said: "The President is Bolinder on the great clues. lion at our constitutional rights. than Boy man he knew at the North, holding the extr•erne Southern octrine,that if the territorial legiw 'lnure refuse to vrutect the slave-holder in the territory of the Union, Congress ought to do it. The judgment of the President was that of an impartial mind." Again the Richmond Enquirer, the leading democratic paper in Virginia, in replying to a contemporary no this subject, said: "If the Charleston Convention shall reject the doctrine of the power nod duly of the Gen eral Government to enact a &tee Code for the Territories "we regard it as much more than probable Territories, the conservative democracy, not only of Virginia but of the and of the whole Uniuu, will rot use to "a, fir the noini nee of the CharlcAmi Cnn . ii,,o , Robert Tyler of Vi, u iaim Chairman of he i'enadyirama Slam lamiorratic Coalman,. openly scouts at equal. ter auvereiginy, and advocated in alutuat direct terms, this very doctrine of "Congenionsi in. tervention for the protection of Slavery in the Territories." As this must now stand for the doctrine of the Democratic party, we recommend Judge Owin "to appoint a committee of three strong men" to attend the Democratic Convention, today, and with the Siave•Trade•Reviving res olutions of Mississippi and South Carolina, the speeches of Messrs Rhett and Stephens, and the address of Bob Tyler in their hands, de• mild of every delegate "their approval, and also a renunciation of the political heresy" that a white man is as good as a nigger. '•and on refusal of compliance, seize the independent rebels by the gullet and remove them, with the proclamation that they do not belong to the household of faith." THE PENDING ISISUE Nothing can be more Millard and unfranded than the charge which certain journals persist iu bringing against the Republican party, that in the coming Presidential election they are de termined to ignore the white man, and to make the negro the only issue. The cor.nection of the Republican party with the Slavery question has been from the beginning, and still is, such as to afford no shadow whatever for any charge neglecting, overlooking or postponing the inter ests of the white population out of any sympa thy with the black race. The truth is—and we state it not as a thing to boast af, but as a mere matter of fact and history—that the Republi can party cannot lay claim to any such charac ter for philanthropy and disinterestedness as the presses we refer to are ro anxious to ascribe to it. No doubt a very large proportion of the Reptibican patty would be greatly gratified to see those who control the policy and legisla lion of the Slave States as alive as Washing lon and Jefferson were to the evils, moral, so cial and political, of the institutian of Slavery. They would hail with delight, and would be ready to second by any means in their power, .y steps which those States is their sovereign capacity might take to ameliorate or gradually to rid themselves of that evil. But the Re public. party does not claim, any more than dues the Democratic party, or than did the old Whig party, any right to interference, should the control of Congress and of the ex ecutive Administration pass into their hands, with the exclusive authority of the States over that subject. It wee not any sympathy with the black race, the cruel treatment to which they are subjected, or the degraded position in which they are held, that called the Republican party into existence. It was the defense of the interests of tree labor, the interests of the great mass of the white population of these State r s', the interest of those residents in foreign countries who might wish to become citizens of this, that so suddenly called into existence and so rapid ly built up the Republican party. That party, so far from closing its eyes to the fact that in seventeen of our States there are few or no lie• groes, and that in some of the other States the negro interest is far from being predominant, makes this precise state of facts the very basis of its erg nization. and the foundation of the system of policy which it advocates. As it was oppesotion to the attempt of the negro interests to seize upon and appropriate to its own use territory which by a solemn compact and corn promise hid been set apart to be colonized by tree labor that called the Republican party into existence, so it is the same devotion to the in terests and rights of free labor—that is to say, of the great mass of the white population— that still sustains its organization and dictates its policy. Tee free labor of the country tins nt last come to realize that nothing but a firm organ. twins and a perpetual vig r 'ilue.oo cett sty's it f• encroachment after encroachment, and from being again and again betrayed by those whom it looked to as its most reliable champi. otto. No sooner had the adoption of the fa mous Compromises of 1850 given a great tri umph to the negro interests, such as nobody had thought possible, in the passage of the Fugi tive Slave Act, than achemes hegan to beftwmed fur the repeal of the Missouri prohibition. No sooner is the Missouri prohibition repealed—a thing which, two or three years before, would have been scouted as it political impossibility ; and not only repealed by Congress, but pro . . . - flounced by the Supreme Court never to have hod any binding force—than we see a new agi tation set on foot for disposing in the same way of the laws prohibiting the African slave trade. It is not the Republican party—it is the Demo. erotic party,, under the guidance and control of the negro interest—that has given and that gives to the negro question its late and present prorninency. The Southern States are the great stronghold of the Democratic party. and whet political tines:ion is now discussed there, in view of the approaching Presidential elec. tints, except the question of the duty of Con , areas to carry out the Did Scott decision by protecting and upholding Slavery in the Terri. tories, in spite of the wishes and will of the in• habitants The truth is, that within a few yearn past the negro interest has come to feel and to realize its power as greatly exceeding what had for. teeny been supposed; nor, until it has been de. feated in a square struggle, and the patronage of the Federal Government wrenched from its grasp, will it cease to insist, as Austria does in the case of Italy upon its inclefetutiblo right to rule. The question now pending, and that up. on which the Republican party takes its stand, is, Shull the United States continue to he a Free• Labor country, or shall our whole policy he ahuped, no far as the National Government cao control it, to serve the interests of the own• era of Slave Labor? As au illustration of the purely defensive po sition of the Republican party. and of the per. severing spirit in which the negro question has for years poet been forced upon the country by the negro interest, we would refer to the lute valedictory speech of Mr. Stephens of Georgia, addressed to his constituents. In re viewing his sixteen years of political life, and justifying his opinions and his course of action, the only questions to which he thinks it worth while to make the slightest reference, are those which related to the extension of Slavery. Ho exults over the part which he bore in the an nexation of Texas; and why? Because the ac quisition of Texas, was important or valuable for any reasons common to the whole nation? Not at all; but because the annexation of Tex as secured four Slave States to the Union. In all his speech, from beginning to cod, there is .t a hint that the country has any other in. Wrests except those bound up in the extension of Slavery. The great principle to be carried out, he tells his constituents, is expansion— the light of the slaveholders to go into the Ter. riteries with their slave property. He is for expanding into Mexico and Central America, bat at the sitme time he significantly hints that outside of Texas, there is a Stile chance for increasing the number of Slave States, unless at the same time we increase our African stock. Thus, while Mr. Ruffin of Virginia goes for the revival of the African slave trade as a means of preventing Vir,--inia being drained of her la borers, Mr. Stephens appeals in a tacit advo racy of the same measure to the ambition and expansive ideas of his constituents. "Unless," he says, "the number of African stock he in creased, we have not the population, and might as well abandon the race with our brethren of the North in the colonization of the Territories." Negro Slavery. he asserts, is hut in its infancy —a problem in our government which our fathers did not understand, and which it re. mains for this generation to solve. It is grow ing stronger, and has been for sixteen Tears ~I~~~~um~•ut past, and unless checked, must lead on to the complete repudiation. and abanjonment of all that our fathers held sacred in politics. It is the great revolutiorary element in our system, calling, therefore, far the constant watchfulness of all real conservatives.— Tribune. LATEST FROM EUROPE. Count Teleki and Generals Klapka and Kmety are here, and Kossuth left this morning for Paris, to have an interview with the Env°. re!. The Hungarian regiments have already shown symptoms of disaffection, and lately de sertions have been frequent and numerous.— A short time since as many as sixty deserted en masse. They were retaken, placed before a battery, fired upon with grape, and all killed but two. At Brescia there were two deserters one of whom boasted of having killed his colo nel, and the other of shooting his major ehile in action. Here, again, the want of faith of. Austria is losing for her best soldiers. The best swordsmen arid riders sbe possesses in her cavalry are the Hussars, the boldest and most dashing, and, if led by their own country , men, as good as any in the world. But her system in this is narrow and bad; most of the }Linger'. regiments are officered by Bohe mians, Moravians and others, for all of whom the Hussar 4as a profound contempt—for his own nobility , the highest respect. I have been told that the sword cuts given by some of these troopers have been extraordinary. I re member having been told that during the war in Hungary they repeatedly killed the Ans. trian dragoons, cutting through their iron hel meta as if made of card board. Their infantry although not by nny means so favorite a ser vice—as they consider wearing spurs a sort of right, and also very tenacious on that point—is admirable, and the men are the finest in the whole army: and yet Austria now, by her mis government, her obstinacy and her arrogance, Las compromised her interests with these men roost seriously. She is evidently on the point of receiving ru severe lesson, even supposing that the present peace be advantageous to her i of which, n the end, there is every reason to doubt. GaribaL i ioes not seem to have coatinuedhis successes. From the time he fell into the am. buscade which the Austrians had laid for him near Varese some timesince, he has been rad, er retrograding than advancing. The recruits which were enrolled at Brescia and Milan in such numbers, being left at the depot with nothing decided about them for days together, at last settled the question by being absent with leave when wanted. At Milan notices were fixed to the walls to say all such would be considered as deserters; but they have not gone back, and now, instead of the 16,000 so mendaciously asserted lately to be with him, 1 know he has barely 1,800 men. A letter from Florence to the London Times states that MM. Kossuth, Klapki and Teleki, who had constituted themselves in that city as a Hungarian committee, have separated, re• nouncing all projects of political action. KOSSUTII.—The Birmingham Journal has learnt from private information that M. Kos suth's family were preparing to proceed to Italy, and were to have departed on Saturday, but the news of the peace treaty arrested their pr?para• Lions. On Thursday evening, they received a telegram from bl Kossuth, announcing his safe arrival in Switzerland. He thus seems to have lost no time in leaving Italy immediately on the news of the peace treaty, and so escaped a con ference with the Emperor or Kaiser. News FROM GARIBALDI'S Cones—l am able to communicate to you some details relative to Garibaldi and his corps &armee. You may readily imagine that the candy. sion of peace had excited some apprehension as to the conduct which that corps would per sue. I have always thoaght that the so'. or Garibaldi would stifle the grief which the separation of Venetia must have excited in Choir ardent minds, and that they would respect military discipline: which has always been exemplary among them. This, in fact, is the case. On the arrival of thespews of peace, General Garibaldi assembledills soldiers, nod after having calmed their excitement by a nu ble address, he invited them to renew the oath of fidelity to the King, which they did without opposition. This conduct, which reflects lion or on all concerned in it, will prove to Europe that the pretended revolutionary element in Italy fully comprehends the importance of con. cord It is worthy of remark that among the volunter.ra it Garibaldi there are a great num ber of young men beloning to Venetia. say- The Warm Springs aro now in prime condition for visitors. ger New grain has been pouring into our town for a few days, quite briskly. se...The election in St. Louis county, Mo., has resulted in the success of the republican ticket. 461- An encampment will be held in Lewis. town, commencing on the 19th day of Septem• ber next. Bar The last.Legiilature of Texas contained thirteen " men of mark." Not one of them could write hie name. Some jack—The nice young man in the vil lage who wears his hair behind his ears, and says "you' hills look dem foine." Puke. Iltar A grand encampment of the military of Blair and the adjoining counties will he held at Tyrone, commencing on the rth of October. WI. Messrs Williams and Walker, both Members of the Mouse, last year, from Bed ford and Somerset counties, are renominated. We are glad to hear of this. sar`lion. Horace Mann, formerly of Massa chusetts, but lately President of Antioch Col lege, Ohio, former Governor of Massachusetts, and member of Congress, died on Tuesday at the Yellow Springs. Ohio. ter The Burgessesand Town Council have had printed the "Rules and Orders" adopted by them on April Ist, 1859, for their govern. ment. It is a neat little book, and confess credit on its compiler, J. S Africa. Esq. _ _ gar They has a great time on Tuesday at Plymouth, layins , the corner stone of a monu ment to commemorate the landing of the Pil grims. There was a procession and a fuss generally, which made all the Yankees feel good se feral times. ter A lady in Indiana has obtained a di vorce from her husband, because ho always laid with his back to her. All wrong 1 The woman might have got over on the Other side of him 1 It beats all what queer laws Indiana has got. WY' Blondin must have imitators, of course. Every fool has his followers. One Aymar, a member of Louise Wells' circus troop, props. ties to turn a somersault from a scaffold eree• ted on float Island into the water at its foot, a depth of one hundred and seventy feet. Are there any police in those parts? Hold him 1 lar The Red Men's Picnic. given at Spruce Creek, teeently. was one of the most pleasant social gatherings of the season. The " Red Men" and their "nquaws" tar ed out in large numbers, as did the outsiders—the day and the place selected were delightful, and every. thing passed off in the most agreeable and or• derly manner. • IfarThe American party in Baltimore bud a primary election on Tuesday, and all the Plug Uglier, Rough Skins, and other beauties, had a maguiticent riot, in which any number of ballot boxes and knowledge boxes wore smashed. These were the capitalists who recently under took to regulate the now passenger railway in that city. A Voice From Virginia. CABIN POINT, Sorry Co., Va. Dr. Seth S. Hance :—I was in baltimore in April, 1854, and from a paper I received of yours was induced to buy a box of your Pills, recommended as a sovereign cure for the Epi. leptic Fits. At that time one o' my servants had been afflicted with fits about twelve years. When reaching home, I commenced with the pills according to directions. Ide not think she has had one since. My wife, though, is somewhat induced to believe she may have had one only. Enclosed you will find five do!. lass, for which you will please forward me two boxes. I suppose you can forward theca by mail. Your compliance will oblige Yours respectfully, M. P. Suwon. Dr. Banee's Epileptic Pills are also a sov ereign ronedy for every modification of nervous diseases. The nervous sufferer, whether tor mented by the acute, physical agony of neu. r.ilgin, ticdoloreue ' or ordinary headache, tif. flicted with vague terrors, weakened by period. ical fits, threatened with paralysis, borne doiva and dispirited by that terrible lassitude isWit proceeds from a lack of nervous energy, or experiencing any other pain or disability mi. sing from the unnatural condition of the won- derful machinery which connects every men, ber with the source of sensation, motion and thought—derives immediate benefit from the use of those pills, which at once calms, invig orates, and regulates the shattered nervous organization. Sent to any part of the country by mail, free cf posts. e. Address Sons S. lIANCB, 108 Baltimore street, Baltimore, Md. Price, one box, $3; two, $5; twelve, $24. * During the caflagration of Canton caused by the bombardment of the British, the extensive medical warehouse of our country. man Dr. J. C. Ayer of Lowell, (the depot of hie Cherry Pectoral and Cathartic Pills, for Chi• ne t ) was totally destroyed. He now makes a demand upon our government for indemnity from the loss of his property, nod hence will grow another nut to crack with our elder broth. er Johnny. Stick to it Doctor; and if our Gov• ernment maintains our rights wherever your Pills are sold, we ehall only be unprotected on tracts that are very barren.—Reformat, Tren• too N. J. ger Du Vall's Galvrinic Oil is sold in every State and county in the Union, and renders greater satisfaction than any other remedy.— It always does what is said it will do. All sore and painful diseases are immediately relieved Three bottles will cure any ease of recent Alen. matism—two bottles will curo the worst case of piles. New Advertisements. N 0 T IC E.—All persons indebted to the firm of Lore. & Cooper, either by Note or Book account, are hereby requested to make immediate payment or their notes and acconnto will be left with proper officers for collection. LORENZ & COOPER, August 10.-3 t.. EIRUIT JARS, mad air tight by simply tarr y ning a screw. For sale only at the Hard ware store of JAMES A. BROWN. NOTICE TO THE STOCKHOLDERS Oh' the Sherman's Valley & Broad Top R. R. Co., now Pa. Pacific Railway Co.—At the in stance of Stockholders a special adjourned meeting of the Stockholders of said Co. to called to convene on Thursday the 24th day of Att. gust lost, nt ono o'clock, P. M., at the House of H. H. Etter, Warm Springs, Perry county, Pa., to ,alea into consideration !anis, routes, die. and all matters of importance to the company. The Board of Directors are requested to meet at 10 o'clock, A. M., name day and place. A. P. WILSON. Aug. 10, 1859. ADMINISTRATORS' NOTICE. [Estate of John Morrison deed.] Notice to hereby given that letters of Admin. 6.tration on the estate of John Morrison, dee'd., late of the township of Shirley, in the county of Huntingdon, have been duly granted to the subscribers, to whom all persons knowing themselves indebted to said estate will make payment, and those having claims or demands against the same will present them duly au• thenticated for settlement. ELIJAH MORRISON, Adar , JOHN S. MORRISON, j Aug. 15 1839.-6 k. EXECUTORS' SALE.--Real Estate of IU John McCahan, deed. The undersigned, Executors of John Meat h., dec'd., by virtue of the power and author ity vested in them by the Will of said dec'd., will offer at public sato at the Court House, in the borough of Huntingdon, On Wednesday, the 14th day cy Sepkinber next, at ten o'clock, A. M., the following described Real Estate : 1. A FARM in Woodcock Valley, Walker township, Huntingdon county, now in tenure of Simon Coulter, about one mile north of McCon nollstown. composed of several surveys, con taining about 260 acres of good limestone land —about 160 acres of which are cleared, well fenced and under good cultivation, with a log house and log barn thereon erected. There is a fine spring on this property, and running wa ter through the meadow land. 2. A FARM now in tenure of Jonathan Har dy known as the " Buoy Farm," in Henderson township, Huntingdon courty, about two and a half miles north of Huntingdon, on the road leading to the Warm Springs. This farm is composed of several surveys, containing alto gether, about 700 ACRES, and tho greaterpart of it is covered with valuable white oak, black oak, hickory and pine timber. About 100 acres are in good cultivation. The improvements are a good log dwelling house and log barn. Anever failing spring of good water convenient to the buildings. This property' will be sold as a whole, or in separate tract., as purchasers may desire. 3. A tract of land situate in Brady township, Huntingdon county, at the head of Kishacoguil las Valley, containing 92 acres and 96 perches formerly the property of James Ross, dec'd. This tract is finely timbered with oak, pine, &c. A few acres of meadow land cleared, and a dwelling house thereon erec.ed. 4. A — tract of land adjMalg O. above, con taining 188 acres, known as the Wiley tract. This is also heavily timbered. 5. A tract of lend on Mill Creek, near Lane's mill surveyed on a warrant to Thomas Austin, containing 404 acres and 81 perches. 8. A tract of land lying on the waters of Mill Creak, Brady township, adjoining lands of James Lime, Dickson Hall and others, surveyed on a warrant to Samuel Ayres, containing 495 acres and 85 perches. _ . . _ 7. A . tract of timber land situate in Walker township, Huntingdon county, surveyed on a warrant to George Cutwalt, containing about too acres, adjoining lands of Benjamin Gratis, William S. Lincoln and others. 8. A tract of land on the Penna. Railroad, in Franklin township, Huntingdon county, known as the Freedom Farm, containing about' 10Q acres, adjoining land of Joseph Dysart and oth, Ors. 9. The balance of the survey in the name of Frederick Ashbaugh, supposed to bo about 45 acres, lying back of the llnntingdon grave yard adjoining lands of Daniel Africa, John Glazier, David Blair and others, TERMS OF SALE :L-One third of the par• chase money to be paid on delivery of the deed and the balance In four equal annual payments, with interest from delivery of possession, to be secured by the bonds and mortgage of the par chtuar. JOHN CRESSWELL, J. KINNEY McCAHAN, Executors of John McCallen, day% Watts.st H. Roo, Auctioneer. lientinghn, Jnts 2!,1H9. a