BY DAVID OVER. For the Inquirer awl Chronicle. 511* IIOIIE. BY K. f. isi..vcKnr i:s. J'vi- wandered over mat y n plain. Jve luokeil on many a dome. Yet mul tljetu all 1 never t'oua 1 .V glace that s.vnetl like home. My home's a sweet sequestered sjit, Within a country lair, ' 1 love the looks of that ohl place, 1 love the friends that's there. Though sometimes I have wandered forth, And left rlitt side I spot ; 1 o go to school or visit friends, Ywt it was never forgot. Though our dear circle now at home Is not ins it was of core, for death his made such iuroads there, As tmil can ne'er restore. And though to part with those Wo loved Has caused us many a teat , 1 often think that it has served, 0 nndia tlie Vest more dear. My father's hottse l do admire, i or its siutpUcitv , j was I ; melius that 1 ioit Well 1 herefora vis dear to me. if : lands ujhiu a moral spot. "' >Ut truit trees growing round; A iiicli lortu a shade in .stiuihiet tuue And with rich funis abound. A little garden neat and fine i.;. s ju.it before the iltwr, \\ hich wi are wont to cultivate i u lalsi oar garden store. \tiil all the pleasant walks ar.uud V. liere iu ch.i'Jlmod I did roam, Are made l>y memory still more deir And hind uie to roy liotne. Front Fit Baltimore . Imeiic n.. V.ho Are You liciug to Vote For? I;T C II As. REEsE. Air — Vive lu ('-r yields !)e awieter made by Fillmore. For Fillmore is the only man, fcc. The X ort a aud South, and East and West, lie true to ilihteuD i lU-Moiaa, And soon JUuiiUin's haughty crest Will humbled be by Fillmore. For Fillmore is the only man In all the Union now that can The North and South unite arsia, And so all vote tor Fillmore. lialtimorc, tth July, lboO. MR. Fru.sioKE's ELECTION DECIDED. — Yesterday we received n call from an old 70 Vermont or, who stated that he bud had a vision iu wfueh lie had forseeu the certain • deney'iit November next. Said he, "You man think mc a foolish old man, but I know of what 1 speak.— For the last twenty years 1 have hail a similar vision on the eve of the Presiden tial elections—and never have I been mis taken. In 1814 I was a Clay man, but 1 cried before anybody else, in secret, for I knew that Henry Clay would be defeated; and I tell you now, thnt Millard Fillmore will be the next President of the United State-. They cau't beat him, for Provi dence is on hi- side." Just Fillmoio' 8 J gik. -r-Lcrkporl ('o'tner A Weekly Paper, Devoted to Literature, Politics, the Arts, Sciences, Agriculture, &c., See— Terras: Two Dollars per annum. For the Inquirer and Chronicle. Troubles of a Bimecrat. CHAPTER H. MR. EDITOR :—l>ear sir, as it lias been so kmg since 1 gin you an account of nrv self, you incut think as bo* my troubles had got the whip hand of me, or as how some varmint had run through with me, and brought me to my eend, jest to keep cur old Buck from gittiii my vote ; but if you are a tbinkeu sitcli things, you are pooty much mistakeh ; for though I have had an almighty sit", of troubles, yit they have trot got ahead of me, nor I ant not snake bit cor notbin, nitlier j but I have heeu so all- Sre'l busy that 1 couldn't write uor do Botbcn. In he fust place, 1 was busy as a ben v.i:b 000 chicken, a watehen to see bow the Ciueiuuaty Convention would turn out —to see who they would pick on for President: and I kunwed they would pick out as hon. est and capable a feller as ever was, but tln-n you know there is so many sit-di fellers in our I>iuieera:ie party —iu fac t n: irulv all honest and capable, especially the. Uctcb—that it couldn't help bein hard to pick one out froui among so many.— 1 lowsuujeuever, they got one, aud when 1 beard wbo they bad took and sot up for President, I was so glad that I ri- right up, and Inillord out a big shout, "Hooray for old Bock, Piiuoeraev and the Peteband 1 jumped about so that you would a thought 1 was yiitiug ; and you couldn't a told if my arms and leg, (it mont. not do, as I always want to be porlite, to say /ejs, so 111 jist take them legs back agin, and say limbs , ) yes, 1 say you couldn't a told if my limbs stack to me or some other feller, and when 1 got through, I said to a feller—that some umut ask, was this eld chap himself, if they would a saw bint; jest look at that ! Now, sir, 1 guess we'll go it. \\ e have got a Iwick to run as is a Buck ; and 1 rath er kinder sorter guess he'll go it like a Buck ; hot then that little "SAM"' Oh, if it wasn't for that little booger, we could je.-t do as we please ' I jest expose as hoW 4 if that little- man wouldn't a meddled any, we ui'ait a been under the government ot old Kiiel'tud to-day , and instead of otir ltuck having to run his limbs to git into some high office, be mout a bin called Imrd Buck, or some tiling so! . And some ether good one, not a hundred miles from Bed ford, luviit a bin so lucky as to have had a Sir , at the lowest carkelation, stack to one ecud of /tiii n.auie, &c., &<•. But then we couldn't till biu so fortunate : some of n say a few, perhaps twenty odd millions mout a bad nothing stuck to the ecttd of tiur names, but then we would a bin sari in to a had syiinetbiii stuck iu our pockets ; we would not hjive the fun of any 'lections, nor any voice ti> be beard In anything, but then we could pay tax, for ail, and that would he easy, you know, if only we could he governed by foreigner*. Y-e-s s-i r-r-e-e, all this umut a Liu, and more too, it' it w."s ut for that feller. Why, yes, jist look, we v>* ones under one George 111., ami vou know how uiee he used us—chat nice Governors &v. he sent us, and all that kind of thing, yet little Saw couldn't rest; hut ji -1 because good old George had a mind to tax us without latum us have a representa tion in Parliament, be got crusty, mwl lor any tiling 1 know, he gin a big-cuss about it, or said souie other bad talk—anyhow he undo a fuss about, it ; and when oldGoorg. sent us a little store tea over, aud wanted tr* toulrinl- it, that he UiOUt tax us, Sam he cut up a rusty, and wouldn't drink it, but worked it so that it all got spilt out into Posting Harbor' And that wasn't the vend of it; for when our old mother coun try sent some of her boys over here to dress Sam off, they found as how ho had got so stout, that lie would go a gunuin, or fUltiu, or isuntio birds' nests, &e., jisf vi'ien he. phased ; and if they would try to stop buu, and git him to pay a little tax, while they didn't give him a chance to talk sometime-* he would lay down his things that he had a workeu with, and pick np something or another and trounce the whole of them.— Well, so it was ; and after our old mother found that she couldn't do anything with him, she, acting as a kind mother would, sent off to a neighbor of hers—one Prince of Hesse—and got Litu to send some teu thousand or so of his valiant Ilessian Dcteb over to help her to git Sam fixed in sitch away, that she uwut bring him up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord . but then what a fuss ! Why tlwy was some seven vcars a working at him, and still couldn't git him Tight; and after that the good old lady sent lmf boys over agin, and still couldn't do nothing—but one thing, you know, and that is, that if thojr could nut get him straight, they made him and his followers a world of trouble ; caused him and his men to suffer hunger, cold, and sometimes nakedness, and also they drench ed the earth with what some would call the blood of the most upright, and noble, and caused thousands to be widows, and tens of thousands to be orphans, before he and his followers got their liberly—but then you know, as foreigners did it, 'twas nothing. And since that he has doue so much mis chief, and is so unres'less. Jest look how he has bin a worken iu polities! When weMiave been a worken it si that foreigners uwut ccmc here and git naturalized and vote, whether they are civilized or not, or know or care anything about us and our country, he always wants to have tlnem dear people to wait awhile—like we have to — before they vote ; yea. git civilized fust, and lam to have some feeling for us before tb°y meddle in our things. And when wo seem inclined to put. foreigners in what Sam calls places of lienor and profit, instead of our "inrnb countrymen, he will jump up and say, inasmuch as these same foreigners didn't help to git our liberty for us : but on the other hand their G< vcrmuents would, in our struggles for freedom, have stood by us with their bands in their pockets, and seen us crushed to tire earth without lending us a helping hand : so let tlieta fellers mind their own business, when they come here? and we will try to manage our things our selves : and if we find we are too dumb to git along without them, we will then, instead of voir, sell them for a song what cost us untold blood and treasure. And if they can't cum here without ruling us, let them sta\ at home : for they don't cum here for our good, but their own, and we can git along without them. And another thing, if we would go to where them fellers ctim from, and want to git into office and rule, or raise a mob, or the least lectin bit of a fuss, we would stand a pretty smart chance ol gitting our heads brok". This is some of his doctrine, and la! what would we poor people do without them dear people 1 But so it is; and so it is that Ham has gone and get a big feller named Fillmore, to run agin our Buck for President, and 1 jest expose as how he will work it so as how that big felior will play hokcy with us,in this our year of grace, 'stl. like lie got old Tip to do in '4O, and old Zack in '4B. If he docs raise one of them conflusiifieatioiis agin, we're gone suckers- But then there is so many Dimeerats, aud Pctoli, anl Irish, and all the good people, licit lam in Lopes as how we can go it; ex" posing as I do, that we will all stick t > get'oer, and work by every hook and crook to git. old Buck in, and let Hani and his tol- Icrs take cure of the Government, while we help ourselves; and then agin we all vote one.-, and some of us twice or so, aud 1 think we will have the most votes in : and then old Biik would be in, and the way the Detcb and Irish and Catholics would stay in the good offices, and slavery grow and flourish, would be good to look at ! Wouldn't ii ' says 1 to that feller. tl Oh,crackey ! yes, I presume that y HI ev idently expect to see us Americans up in such style, that after the election there will be nothing found of lis, except a lot of old hoots and a little bit of hair! However you should not bo too sanguine, for you may liud it very difficult to got things iixeu to your liking hereafter, ax you have done for the last few years. And knowing us I do, tko strength and influence of that little gentleman, whom you call Sam, and also his natural turn of miud, I would advise you and your party, if you want to get your old Pack into the White House, to start hitn for it immediately, and tell hint to take some private way, for if Sam should be in any way evil disposed towards him, he will be sure to get on his little pony, and over take him, nd then be would knock the horns off of your Pnek, an l perhaps be tempted to break them over his head. The truth is, 1 know that Saw has lately been very much displeased with the corruption o £ vour party : so much so, that he will be likely to coutiniie bis meetings night and day, and ltoll up the picture of your de formity to the eyes of the honest members of this nation, and raise such a spirit of en thusiasm in Ins favor, aud such an opposi tion against you, as will compel you and each of you, in order to get Mr. Puehaitan into the Presidency, to vote at least two or three times. Take iny word for it, that this nation is not so depraved as to put the reins of government iuto the hands of such rec reants again, as have had them during a few vcars past, and at present. lam uo proph et, but it is my opinion, that after all your "fuss and feathers," Mr. Fillmore will get to the White House, and have everything fixed "nice aud tidy"' before your Mr. PUCK will get there, uuu we will be pretty likely to know who is to be Post Master General about as soon as some other of the dear peo ple, and perhaps as much about some other things." llut then, Mr. 15 liter, when he said them BEDFORD. FA., FRIDAY, JULY 18 1850. things, my troubles got a holt of me agin, and a troub'osome time 1 have bad. I can't write any more now, so hoping as how you ; arc still a good Bimecrat, I remain Yours, trulv. A DIM ECU AT. I From foe Louisville Journal. SIR. riAl ANI) 51 IS- BI'CHAIIAX. In nearly all the artfcley wo-see relative to the prominent and active part taken by ; Mi. Buchanan iu the bargain aud intrigue j slanders against -Mr. Oily, a very important! point Las been overlooked. \V e shall call j attention to it, and the authority for what we state is GalSs &- Seaton's Register of Debates iu Congress: "On the Cd of February, 1825, Mr. Clay 'rose from his place' in the Speaker's Chair, and demanded au examination into the charges brought against him in the public prints by Mr. Kreuier. After Mr. Clay concluded his remarks, Mr. Forsyth, of Georgia, moved that the matter bo referred to a Special Committee of nine members. Upon this motion of Mr. Forsyth, a discus sion took place, when, cu motion of Mr. Coudiet. of New Jersey, the subject was po.-tpoued until the next day. Ou the next day, 'on motion of Mr. Ceudict, the House resumed the consideration of the motion ot Mr. Forsyth to refer the communication of i the Speaker to a Select Committee,' when a further discussion took place, during which Mr. Foot, of Connecticut, said that certain papers were relerred to iu the motion of the gentleman from Georgia, (Mr. Forsyth,) which wefo not before the House; and he suggested to the gentleman the propriety of so modifying his motion as to refer to the Committee nothing more than the communi cation of the Speaker. , ".Mr. Forsyth accepted the mod fication, and, at the requisition of the member, re duced his motion to the following form : "'Resolved, That the eomuiuuicaum made by tlie Speaker to the House, be re ferred to a Select Committee..' "A/,-. Buchanan, of Pennsylvania, now movd I hut the House adjourn. "The motion was negatived. "Thereupon further discussion took place upon an apictiduient offered by Mr. McDuf fic, of South Varolii**. pending which Mr. Randolph, yt Virginia, moved 'this propo sition, nitlt its amendments. accessories.and principals, should be indefinitely postponed. "The Speaker pronounced the mutinu of the gentleman from Virginia, indefinitely to postpone, not to be in order while an amend ment was pendiug. ".Mr. Mepuffij now withdrew liis amend ments for a lime in order that the question might be takeu on the motion for iudciiutte postponement. "Mr. logrnni,of Pennsylvania,demanded that that question sbouid be taken by yeas and nays. "The que.-tion of indefinite postponement was then taken by ycaS and nay s, as fol lows : Here follow the names of yeas and nays. Mr. Buchanan voting yea. The vote stood yeas 77, nays 1"7. "Mr. JleDafEe now renewed his motion to amend. "The question was then put on Mr. Mc- Duffie's amendment, and negatived by a large may wit v. "The question then recurring on the ori ginal motion of Mr. Forsyth, as above stat ed, in writing, it was decide i in the affir mative, by yeas and nays, as follow: "Here follow the names of the yeas ani nays, Mr. Buchanan voting nay. The vote stood yeas l'Jo, uays GU. "So Mi. Forsyth's motion was curried. "Mr. Forsyth moved that the committee he appointed by ballot; which was agreed to." (Messrs. P. P. liarbour, Webster, Mc- Lean, Taylor, Forsyth, Saunders, and llank m were appointed on the next day.) "On the 9th of February, Mr. Barbour, from the Select Committee, reported that the Committee, through its Chairman, -had summoned Mr. Kremer to appear botore the Commit lee, and bring his evidence, which he declined to do, and 'in this posture cf the case the Committee can take no further steps.' And here tiio matter has ever rested." Those proceedings will he found in Giles and Seaton's Register of Debates iu Con gress of the second session of the eight eenth Congres--, volume 1, pages 44.0 to 444, and 4(5i! to 4fMi, and 52) to 520. Now is not this monstrous* Gen. Jaek- SOII said that his informant was Mr. Bucha nan. Mr. Buchanan, according to Gen. .Jackson, was Mr. Clay's secret accuser and slanderer. Mr. Clay asked for an investi gation, when Mr. Buchanan, to defeat and prevent, an investigation, not oulv moved an adjournment of the House and aftcrwardg voted for an indefinite postponement , but voted directly to disallow Mr. Clay the op portunity of vindicating his character from the foul aspersions which he had secretly and basely helped upon it. No houoraolc mau would act thus toward a negro, much less toward the Speaker of the House of the American Congress. Even the notori ous and infamous George Kretner, who re fused to make good his public charges, did not thus act, for he failed, refused, or ne gieuted to vote upon both the propositions denying Mr. Clay the right and privilege of vindicating his character. Theu where was Mr. Buchanan when the chairman uotitied Krcmer to appear before the committee withis witnesses? Comment is unneces sary. Mot for all the world's wealth would any man of the slightest pretensions to honesty act towanl -another as Mr. Buchanan acted toward Mr. Clay. Knowing himself to be the orginal cause of the atrocious slanders against Mr. Clay, knowing them to be slan ders, and knowing that Mr. Clay, if an op portunity should be presented, could not only prove tbem to be slanders, but show Mr. Buchanan to be guilty of the very 1 crime with which the latter had caused him ; to be charged—knowing, we say, all these I tilings, Mr. Buchanan pertinaciously voted j to deny to the illustrious Kcntuckian the i privilege of an investigation, a privilege ; that even the humblest might, under the : circumstances, bare justly demanded. He knew that, upon any full Congressional in vestigation, the accusation he had caused to be made against Mr. Clay, would of neces sity le exploded, and that Mr. Clay if he should think fit, might fix upon him, before the eyes of the whole world, the guilt of an attempt at bargain and corruption. And after all this, after having done all in his ' power to deny to Mr. Clay the right to es- j t a Wish his innocence, and after having ly- • iogly expressed in the Washington Tele- > graph, under his own natue, his conviction j of Mr. Clay's guilt, ho had the ineffable j and altuost inconceivable uiean-spiriteduess,} effrontery, and baseness, to beg, entreat, and humbly implore Mr. Clay to graciously abstain, out of pity to Aim, froiu disproving j tlie imputation by the means at his eoiu | maud, inasmuch as the use of those means ! would inculpate him. Mr. Buchanan may be supposed to Lave said in substance to Mr. Clay: 'I did come j | to you in Mr. Letcher's room and propose j to you that if you would vote for General i ! Jackson you should be Lis .Secretary of j State; 1 dkl Ly my conversation with Gen 's oral Jackson, cause him to charge you with l bargain and corruption and name me as his . witness, though I personally knew that you ; were innocent- I did falsely say in my let- I tcr to the Telegraph that I believed you ! guilty, and 1 have stoutly resisted all your | endeavors to obtain an opportunity in the | House of refilling the charges that I have j caused to be brought against you before i the people of the nation: but 1 ask you, oh ' I ask you to remain quiet under the charge, | fur if vou were to be so cruel as to relieve | yourself by revealing and establishing the j tact of my proposal to you. I should be ru | ined with my party and the country forever. I I have no claim upon you on the score of justice—my whole appcai is to your mercy # We do not profess to have given here the exact words of Mr. Buchanan, but it tie or ! his political friends deny that we have given | the substance of his appeal, let him or them ; make a call for that letter of bis, of which i Mr. Clay so often said that he would never publish it unless with Mr. Buchanan > consent, or ut the call of the Senate of the United States. And Mr. Clay, with ill-Judged clemency, with misdirected generosity, spaced the mis erahle .and guilty suppliant, and bore, tbo riot with patience, his deep and deadly wrongs for nearly a quarter of a century, and until every hope of the Presidency had died out in his mighty heart. And now, it the ncople of the 1. uited Estates, with the facts laid before them by the almost dying hand of Ileury Clay, were to elevate Mr. Buchanan to the office which they so often denied to the illustrious victim of bis ca lumnies, the Aiame of the foul deed would rest upon the American name forever. TFThe Memphis Eagle and Enquirer Si ,vs:—While the Sag-Xidhr Democrats were tiring their hundred guns or so, yesterday afternoon, to get up a iittlc artilieial enthu siasm for Buchanan, a horny-handed true-, heart hi mechanic, formerly of Pennsylvania, was heard to say: "Ah! they may fire as many guns as they please for .Jimmy Buchanan, but they never will he able to make mc forget that speech he made to prove that Ten cents a. day was wages "iiough for a poor laboring man." [Jjp*The "Old Line Whigs" of Florida at a meeting recently held in Tallahassee, adopted the fellowing resolution: '-That having undiminished confidence in MU.I.ARD FLLMOKK, as a statesman and a patriot, who has been tried and found faithful to the constitution, and appreciating his high character and distinguished abilities, we will cheerfully support him for the Presi dency." A great Fillmore ratification meeting was held a few uights since at Cyuthiana, Kcn tuokey. 35°"The Cincinnati Times adheres to Fill more. So'also the St. Louis Intelligencer and the Louisville Journal. CHURCH BUILDING IN IRELAND WHENCE THE FI NDS The Chapels now in course of erection ev erywhere, not only in the metropolis and large provincial towns, but even in villages and country districts, amaze men by their size and magnificence. And the question that instinctively arises is. Whence come the funds? * I believe the true answer is: the penoy-a-week system. Arrangements are made for collecting this sum from every one, and the building goes on, often for as the funds conic in. W heu then the decorations. Then, there are "indulgences" obtained \ froui the Dope, for special contributors: and periodical "masses," the benefits of which can be transferred, either to others living, or the souls in purgatory. And legacies are a great source of contribution, especially to the priest's bouses, or to special comforts and adornments. But, iu regard to eon- J vents, and similar establishments, I doubt not, a main source of the funds, so immense as shown by their buildings, is unfolded in the following:— A llicu ENGLISH Nix The departure of the Queen has, likewise, uot been the ouly one which has attracted our attention during the week. Ou Tuesday last, set forth for Algeria's weeping, gentle nun front the Convent of the Assumption, in the Avenue Hte. Maria. The young lady '.s a convert, the daughter of one of the no , blest anil most powerful northern English families. It has been lately discovered that die had made over by donation every far ; thing where she had taken refuge, and her | family in wrath had hurried to l'aris to | contest the proceeding. Already was the gentle pieneteut bending once more to wards the tics of bioou and kin, already was shp consenting to withdraw the meas ure which would deprive her relations of any share in her iuhcvitalize, when on Tues day night a carriage was drawn up to the gate where she had taken au affectionate leave of her sisters a few hours before, and the feair nun. muffled and veiled, was hur ried into if, and driven to the Lyons Rail way, on her road to embark for Algiers where the Blessed Ladies are in possession |of a branch establishment, which is doing i well and prospering greatly. Of course the | family is furious, and threatens exposure; i but the reverend lady at the head of the community declares that it was the dear child's own wish to be conveyed beyond the reach of temptation, and that of course she had no right to oppose this most holy and reasonable desire.— Pari* Correspondent of the Jitias. A FURTHER tI.I.USTR ATtOX. .Since the prevailing account of "Our Im maculate Lady of Refuge" chapel of Ratli utines was written, a powerful appeal l.a appeared in the Freeman from Monsignor .Meagher, caliiug upon the Roman Catholic population to realize the Legate Cul'.en s suggestion, and before the great eighth of December comes, make the temple worthy of its patroness. As an inducement, they are reminded that the ciiareb of our "Im maculate Lady of refuge" ut lUtluuines, is the central point in Ireland of the Arcli coufraternrty of the Immaculate Ilcart of Mary for the conversion of sinners; ond holds, in a measure, the same position ntnong-t us as the church of Notre Dame des Victories does in Paris. . The following additional inducements ad ded: "On every morning in the year the holy sacrifice is offered in our parish for the tem poral and eternal welfare of all those who, by the smallest contribution assist in bring ing this magnificent church to its comple tion: while on each Friday an additional mass is celebrated for those who contribut or collect the sum of one pound for the same object." It is thus that Romanism, like its Paean religions prototypes, from which it borrowed its peculiarities, as well as the way of turning them to advantage, wrings from the hopes aud fears of iis dupes the means of erecting splendid structure>, and of sup porting its ministering priests in a corres pjudiug style of magnificence.— .Vcw \ork Observer. MR. FILLMORE ON TOE REPEAL OF TUK MISSOURI COMPROMlSE.— "Territorial gov ernments hrol been provided for all the Territory except that covered by the Mis. souri Compromise, and I bad no suspecion that that was to be disturbed. 1 have no hesitation in saying, what most of you know already, that I was decidedly opposed to the disturbance of that Compromise. Good faith as well as the peace of the country, -eeuied to ine to require that a Compromise, which had stood for more than thirty years, should not be wantonly disturbed. These were uiy sentiments then lully and fearlessly ex pressed, verbally aud in writing, to al my triend* North and South, who solicited my opinion." VOL. 29. NO 29. FILLMORE'S CHANCES BUST-OPIN ION OF A NEUTRAL. The New York Sunday Dirptrfch, a pa - per conducted with acknowledged ability and intelligence, and whoes political specu" lations are frequently f|Uoted takes a sur vey of the political field and enfues to con clusions that sagacious urea generally will endorse. The DitpatcA sets Mtt saying that when Mr Fillmore was nominated, "i was universally conceded his nomination' amounted to nothing:*' that when Mr. Bu chanan was nominated, "he was. t<> all ap pearances, the most jmpular man in the Union," aud would "carry the country by storm, in spite of all coalitions and candi dates;" that "Freeuiont, the next rocket sent up" has "cotnmeiieed coining dcv.n aaiu;" the Dispafch proceeds to sbj: The next astooisher was what followed the return of Mr. Fillmore, the most un popular candidate of them all. from a visit to the I'ope and other crowned heads of Europe. When it wis supposed be would hardly he noticed, a magnificent welconio was extended to hint. Not only Know Nothings, hut the people geucrally joined in doing bin; honor. His speeches m favor of the Compromise measures and the Union have electrified the masses, and to day At* chances are far above par. On all hands we find men who had bocu talking in favor of Buchanan and Freeniont now giving in their adhension to Fillmore. Commadore Stockton is out for hiui. The North A | utericaus, it is whispered, wiil endorse him 'in a day or two. Edward Everett is to take the stump for him, and in a word, it seeuis as if the people had made up thctr minds to administer a signal rebuke to tho Sectiomdists, North and South, by the triumphant election of Millaid Fillmore.— [f his friends can keep at the same figure it has been during tho past two days, Millard Fillmore will he the next ' President. There uno dUgtiising the fact that the the sentiment of the country is against sectional strife and discord. With the exception of a few fanatics in the North,- and secessionists aud bullies at the we vereJy believe that the people of these States desire to perpetuate our form of Government, and live in peace with each other. GEN. JAOKSOX ON MR, BUt'UANA'N: We find in the Washington correspouueno of the New York Evening Post au anec dote, which proves that Gen Jackson, who was a pretty good judge of human uature, tally understood appreciated Mr.Buchanan's character as a political trimmer. The writer says the following cau be proved by unques tionable evidence: "On the night before leaving Nashville to occupy the White House, Mr. Polk, in coro pauy with Gen. Robert Armstrong, called at tLe Hermitage to procure some advice from the old hero as to the selection of his cabinet. Jackson strongly urged the Pres ident elect to give uo place in it to Buchan an, as he could not be relied upon. It so happened that Polk had already determin ed to make that veiy appointment, having probably offered the situation to the states man of Pennsylvania." "This fact induced General Armstrong to tell Jackson that he bad given Polka pretty hard rub, as Buchanan had already beeu selected for Secretary