BY DAVID OVER. 4 FILLMORE aOXG. i:v THE SAME OLD COOX. Tt.vs— Pop Cots the Mianel. Come Union men from every side, We'll alt go for Fillmore! The patriot's trust—the Country's pride, We'll all go for Fillmore! C :a • one and nil. at freedom's call '""rue rally 'round our standard, . : high, the low, the great, the small. We'll all go for Fillmore! (' a e Whigs from all the country 'round. We'll all go for Fillmore! Xt> truer patriot can be found, We'll all go for Fillmore! Wii.it boots it now, of when ami how He got tlie nomination? Jlc'syi-t a glorious Whig I trow. We'll all go for Fillmore! What say the patriots everywhere? We'll alt go for Fillmore! In North and South they loud declare, \\ e'H all vote for Fillmore! lie is the man,if any can IV'serve intact the Union, Despite the tricks of Buck and Van, We'll all go for Fillmore! 't !><>) s espouse our glorious cause, They all go for Fillmore! Aild greet his name with loud applause, They u!I go for Fillmore! They know full Well, that he" 11 dispel The dangers which beset us, An aii seditious troubles quell, The boys go for Fillmore! ( :ae forward then, and doyo ir brst, We'll all vote for Fillmore! Froia North and South, aud E. st and West We'll all vote for Fillmor.-* i iii- Locos swear, and tear their hair With downright desperation, i : .11 the Presidential chair We'll put gallant Fillnu r.! Both B-i an 1 Wooliy-fTo: ; we'll beat, If all go for Fillmore! Their vandal hordes w.i'ii sure defeat, If ail vote for Fillmore! il yonTa doubt, we wift uieui rout, If Whigs will do their duty; 1 iiea let us give a joyous short, Long live Millard Fi llmore! CONGRESS CANDIDATES—TUEIIt i : CLAIMS. ; < —~ , I J The friends of \\ ilson licit ly are boast- : I big (hat he will sweep this di-tnct, be lug j I elected to Congress by the votes of Ameri- j l . .ns and Keputlicans. We trust that < this is a false assumption. Much may he j uihjtvod to personal friendship, but how can | I right-minded man who values great pnnci- j ] LS, and places a just estimate upon the - ioumity of the election franchise do so violence to Lis sell respect, as to a.s --si-.t in giving the verdict of the ballot-box against his own cherished views of truth, an '■ t.c instrumental in securing the defeat of K;s own sentiment*? If a man be honest in his advocacy of American doctrines; if he b" sincere in his hostility to the distui bcrs ; <f the [iiihlie peace, the violators of public faith; will he be true to his own conscience, j will he b:- just to his friends, if he strike at L own standard bearer, and lend his sup j".-rt to the enemy armed to the teeth and t.-roaihii;g out denunciations and threaten- j in :s against hiui-elO Will any one do Mr- j lleiiiy the wrong of saying that, were the. e:ise reversed, and were Mr. I*, the voter, ; and any one of the American or llepubli- 1 ran party the candidate, that \\ ilsoii llcilly would foiget his partisan ship and vote ; >• personal feeling would induce.' No!! No! j Lieat issues are before the Aiucriean peo ple. It is important that we have a Con- t grc-s true to the interests of American rc- ; pubiicatiisfn—how suicidal, then, would it j be to send into tLat body a man intensely h -!:le !u us—a niau who would oppose us arieutly. both by Lis voice and hi* vote. Against \ r i!a >i Kcilly as * citizen we say nothing. vVc d* not qucstiou Lis social, iu teiiectual, or moral qualities hi* motives ' '-lay bo good, his abilities commanding; yet , v > elieve he will exert himself in Congress •f eiec'ed, as ho has exerted himself every fh re, upon the stamp and upon tho street, j i't hostility to our principle# an 1 our ali lates, and tie feel assured that his ■. flection would be fraught with mischief to i-ur countiy. If we feci our position to he houefct one, should wc not send to our national legislature a utan who will defend " against Southern arrogance and anti- American opposition' Asa matter of princi ple, of justice, of light, of self respect, uo one oppo sod to Wilson Reilly'a political views ean conscientiously vote for him on grounds of personal preference merely. If we are opposed to the extension of slavery, —it we are opposed to tire bloody code of Kansas, to the sacrilege agaiust the ballot to the Murders and Arsons and Crimes which Mr. Cobb acknowledges,go unpun- Kli'd ;n desolated country; if wc are A Weekly Paper, Devoted to Literature, Politics, the Arts, Sciences, Agriculture, &c., &e---Terms: Two Dollars per annum, opposed to. the highwayman's pica of the Ostend conference, which if carried out by Congress, would involve our nation in wars that would be unceasing, without glory, au-i cursed by Christendom: if we are In favor ' of extending the area of freedom, perpetu ating its blessings, preserving the liberty of! the press and freedom of opinion, maintain ing our plighted faith, and dealing honor.- i ably and justly to each other, we must j secure a wording majority in Congress, j and we must begin by keeping Wilson Reil ly at home and by sending there Joseph Puinroy. But supposing it was no great matter that we had iu Congress, a member who would reflect our views and support j our principles—supposing it made no differ ence that we had a member who would op pose us in everything, who would denounce us on all occasions, who would strip us of all offices and honors, who would regard us j as bigots and traitors and so treat us; sup posing all this, has Wilson Reifly claims up on our support, from personal merits? Has he claims upon the support of the ' Republicans? It he not now traversing the district, day and night, sneering at John C. Fremont, whose scientific laurels he is clutching at, deriding the pretensions of the J gallant and laborious man whose research es the great Humboldt says has enriched ail the naturnl sciences, whose scholastic attain- j incuts have been certified by the ripest j scholars, whose military and civil abilities I have been attested by our greatest states- j men, yea even by James Buchanan? Does : lie not call them disuniontsts, abolitionists, incendiaries, wouly-heads &c? Thus is he j entitled to the support of Republicans. Has he any claims upon the support of; old Hue Whigs? Who more violently op posed them—whose speeches were more bit ter, more denunciatory, more unrelenting \ titan were his? Every school house, every cross road in this county has echoed, with his philipies. Did lie not help to persuade the people of Pennsylvania that Mr. Polk , was a better tariff man tban Henry Clay? Did be not pronounce him a gambler, a ' duelist, and a murderer? Did he not carry ■ with him the bond, aye, the bond, all through the county, to prove the bad char- I aeter of the noble hearted Harry? \\ ho with so significant a gesture could wring hj 3 coat ,-kirts, declaring that the blood of ('il leysaturated the robes of Clay? Now, when the American people have done justice to that patriot's fame —now, when the friends of his arch slanderer seek to secure the fa ! vor of his party —now, Mr. Re illy longs : for the privilege of shedding reverential , j tears upon his toiubl Thus is he entitled to the support of Whigs. Has he any claims upon the support of j America us? Who lias bceu louder iu his vilification of the "dark-lantern oligarchy : —who has been severer in epithets of con centratcd bitterness against tae intolerance j and corruption of the American Order— who has oftener charged it with po'jury, or mre opeuly asserted that he did not want , its s tpport? Did he not, stump portions of . this district with renegade Americans, tell ing the internal workings, and pretending to give even the obligations of the Order? — Is he not now denouncing it upon the stump 7 ; Thus is he entitled to the support of Ameri- can?. We concede to Mr. llcilly all that his admirers reasonably claim. We acknowl edge his talent, his energy, his legal abili ties; we rcpcet and esteem him as a man. but we fear him as a misguided partiaen and camiot trust him as a representative of our will in t'ongres*. And in the naruc of principles, by hut pre sent opposition to our policy and our candi dates, by the reminiscences of the past, by our fears and hopes for the future, wc call upon Republicans, Whigs and to cast their suffrages against Wilson Reilly the enemy of all, and in favor of Joseph I'umroy, the friend of our princieles, aud the candidate of tho Union party, for a neat in the next Oongr *<**?.—Cham. Whig. BTTCHAN AN'S DROSPKOTS NORTH AND WEST. —The St. Louis Intolligencer in re viewing the prospects of Air. Luchanan, says: Buchanan is a doomed and defeated man. As surely as Cass was borne down and de feated iu I*4B. so will Buchanan be de feated now- He will never sit in the Presidential chair. Buchanan will not get a single New England State, lie will lose New York and Ohio by 100,000 majority. His stronghold of Pennsylvania is torn from him, and nothing is more certain than his inglorious defeat in his own Stato. iu all the Northwest Buchaoan. is as dead as an Egyptian mummy buried a thousand years ago. He will not got a single State nor'h of the Ohio river, or west of the lakes. He will be overwhelmingly defeat ed in the Northwest. His own partizans know U and feel it. The First Great Battle, A WORD Oh ADVICE TO FILL MORE ME.Y. To every man who desires the triumph of National Americanism in the election of Fillmore and Donelson, we would say in all candor that everything depends upon the success of our State and Local tickets at the October election. That election is near ! at hand, aud if we would come out of the j contest with our banners crowned with vie- | torv, we must, to the language of our form- j er gallant leader, Henry Clay, awake, afouse, shake off the dew drops that glitter | on oUr garments, ud work with a vill from 1 this time until the last ballot shall have ' been deposited. Let the election of the ; Uuion State and county tickets he the one great object of every man who desires the ; overthrow of the corrupt dynasty at Wash- j ington,aud the complete annihilation of j the Cincinnati Platform as embodied iu tlie ; person of that arch intriguer and truckler i 10 the Foreign aud Slave Powers Jauies Bu" i chanan. Our tickets are composed of well i tried and unexceptionable men who will do ! honor to the various positions for which ; tliey have been chosen. And if we would j repulse the enemy at the very outset, and ! seriously cripple them for the entire cam paign, let us rally cn mnsse under the Union I flag and carry our State and local elections as we can do by an unprecedented majority. ; The Cincinnati platform is already nearly : crushed beneath the avalanche of Union victories that have rolled iu upon him from ! lowa, and Vermont, and Maine. If Penn sylvania repudiates h'm with equal empha sis, Buchanan will be a dead cock in tWe pit,—he will be buried so deep politically, j that plummet line will never sound his tomb; j the effect of such a result here in the old : Keystone, the native State of Buchanan, cannot but prove electrical. It will show bcyoud all doubt that he Las not the shad- ; ow of a chance for an election, 'i hen, throughout the entirs South, the Democrat- | ic electoral tickets will be virtually aban doned, while the accessions to the Fillmore banner will be overwhelming. This is the prospect at the present time, and it cannot j but improve during the few weeks that in tervene before the election. A prominent Democratic United States Senator recently declared in Washington that if Buchanan lost Pennsylvania at the October election, the Southern Democracy would give up the contest, forsake old Buck, and go over al- , most en maw to Fillmore! A number of j Southern Democratic papers have already come out for Fillmore, and the Charleston Mercury, the leading Democratic organ in I South Carolina boldly and ably advocates j the abandonment of the Cincinnati nominee and the adoption of Fillmore by the De mocracy, in order to the overthrow of th° | Abolition candidate, Fremont. The con test in Pennsylvania will decide the whole matter. If Buchanan loses the State in October, Mr. Fillmore will certainly carry : thirteen—probably all ot the Southern States, and will be the next President! To work, then, every man who desires such a consummation. Labor unceasingly for the election of the Union State and county tick ets, so that when this primary battle shall j have been fought, you can return from the coulest with brows bound with victorious wreaths, encouraged for the great struggle in November. To secure the success of Fillmore and Donelson you have only to carry the State against the Pierce dynas ty and the embodiment of the Cincinnati Platform. Up. Union Guards, and at them! One fire along the whole line, and there will not bo enough of Foreign and pro Slavery Locofoeoisin left iu Pennsylvania to tell the story of its downfall lhrriaburg Sentinel. THE NATIONAL INTELLIGENCER. A number of the Democratic aud Repub lican papers have stated that that this high ly respectable, old and truly conservative journal had come out for Buchanan. A\ are indebted to a friend for a copy of the last iasun of the Intelligencer, in which we find a lengthy aud well written article re viewing the proceedings of the Whig Na tional convention. From the tone of the article it is evident that the lutelligencer is about to throw aside its neutrality and sup port Mr. Fillmore. After quoting one of the resolutions adopted, it says: "Whether considered as the nomiuee of our Whig brethren, or as a civilian nud statesman of approved ability and integrity Mr. Fillmore is worthy of all respect and confidence and wc arc free to coufess our gratification at the seiectiou by the \\ hlgs of one otherwise so worthy of tho compli ment paid him, and who, if he shall accept tho nominatiou in the same spirit,' will be deserving of the zealous support of all Whigs who in tho absence of any other ac- BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY. OCTOBER JO, 1856. knowlcdged Whig candidate, have remain ed unpledged, and who are yet anxious to discharge their duty to their country under circumstances confessedly of peculiar diffi culty and trial." The Intelligencer, alluding to the effect of the nomination upon the Whigs of the country, and their probable action during the present contest, holds the following lan guage: ■'As a Whig,'pure and simple,' and in default of any previous nomination of a can didate of the Whig party, that of Mr. Fill more must, we think, commend itself to the approval of all uncommitted Whigs who conceive that duty to the country will not permit them to remain idle or indifferent spectators iu a contest involving conse equences of the deepest importance to the public interest, if not, as many conceive, the existence of the Government itself." It is evident from '-he above, that the National lutelligenccr iutends to give Mr. Fillmore its cordial support, and the im mense influence it wields, as a conservative journal, will tell powerfully in his favor. following extracts are taken from a speeeb lately delivered by Hon. E. Joy Morris, at a Fiilmore meeting in Phila delphia. Read what he says about our Union State Candidates. The Union Ticket—lts Origiu aad lis dominations. Mr. M said he knew of nothing so . ffect ual to this end as the election of the Union State ticket in October next Having ori ginated that ticket himself—having for two months at Ilarrisburg last winter, exerted himself to procure its sanction by the op position members of the Legislature—hav ing participated in the nomination of the gentlemen whose names it bote, he knew its whole history and aim. It was formed for the purpose of purifying the .State govern ment of the corrupticn and m'smanageuien 1 that had solon# disgraced ??"•' A " had placed a citizen of consummate integrity at the head ot the State we desited to see him surrounded by men of equal purity of prm" ciple, who would honestly unite with him ill an effort to check the gross extrava gance and the waste of public monies that had long marked the Canal Board, and other branches of the Government, bor this purpose it was necessary to form a tick et which would unite the whole opposition in its support. Mr. Laporte, a member of the Legisla ture from Bradford county, was nominated for Surveyor General, from the Republican ranks. Ilis father had filled the same of fice with great distinction, under Governor Shunk, and he himself is a practical Sur veyor. He is a gentleman of sound prac tical ability, and I never remember, said Mr. M. to have associated in any public body with a gentleman for whom 1 formed a higher esteem. A more honorable, up right. frank hearted and open handed mat: than Bartholomew Laporte Joes not live within the limits of Pennsylvania, lie is a high toned, liberal, true man, worthy of the suffrages of all who can appreciate the sterling qualities of human nature. My particular friend, Darwin Phelps, said Mr. M., the candidate for Auditor General, is an accomplished lawyer, with the head of a Statesman, and the incor ruptible temper and nature of Cato, the Censor. His conscientiously scrupulous conduct gave hint great influence in the Legislature, and though members might differ with him in j ldgmcnt on particular measures, none dared to question his hon esty of purpose, or the sincerity of hiscoo victious. The era of rctorm will, indeed, be inaugurated when such a man is placed at the head of the Auditor's bureau. Mr. Mr. I'. was selected from the American ranks. Mr. Cochran, the candidate for (.anal Commissioner, was well known, from his long experience in the Legislature, where he hail won himself a State reputation. — Thoroughly cognizant of the system of pub lic Improvements, no mau was better fitted to probe the abuses ot their Administration or to correct the extravagant and wasteful expenditures of which they had been the fruitful source. Mr. C. was nomiuatcd as an old Line Whig. A stronger ticket, in all respects, never bad been [ laced before the people of Pennsylvania. Its election would not only be a political triumph, but a moral one. Efforts wero being roada to draw the friends of Mr. Fillmore from its support, be cause, as was alleged, all die uomioees up on it were in favor of Col. Fremont for the Presidency. He, Mr. M., bad no know ledge of such a fact, but even if it were so, it would Dot deter him from voting for the ticket. The nominees, like him, wore op posed to the election of James Bnehanau— they would reform the .State gotrernftiont of existing abuses, and further he did not ask of them. Friends of Mr. Fremont might refuse to vote for him, Mr. Morris, be cause lie preferred Mr. Fillmore, but be rose superior to these differences about men—be looked to principles, and his heart and hand were with any man who would purify the Augean stable at Ilarrisburg of the corrupt practices that yet infested it. "I invoke every opponent of the Pierec policy and its pledged adherent and pupil, James Bu chanan," said Mr. M.,"to vote the Union State ticket entire as it stands, and we shall thus inevitably defeat the Cincinnati Plat form and its candidate on the l-4th of Octo ber next." (Enthusiastic cheers.) Mr- M. closed with some eloquent remarks in favor of the American party and its nomi nations. * The speaker retired amidst the most cn" tliusiastio applause. ANOTHER SWINDLE. The Loeofocos arc at the old game of false pretence again. In 1844 Mr. Polk was a better tariff man than Mr. Clay. In '52 Pierce was the Union candidate, aud now we see the country on the very brink of disunion, at least so far as such traitors as Pierec, Douglas & Co., could drive it. The uew dodge is that Mr. Buchanan is opposed to slavery. Trie Locofoco orator®, wherever it can be avowed with safety, proclaim this black lie. Read the Cincinnati which he not only endorsed but swallow ed, and if he is not pledged to Atkinson and the Border Ruffuos wc will say then, like Talleyrand, that "language is used to con ceal our intentions." tSome of our Loco foco orators in Ilarrisburg have been trying to humbug the hunest eitizeus of this county by such assertions which they b now to be false. We dare (VI. Forney to say iu l>is address to the people that Mr. Buchan an is opposed to slavery If ho does wc will agree to put the Buchanan flag up and work all we can for liiac. The iSouiL would tixq. him like a hot coal, and'alas poor Yoriek,' where could he look for his suppor'? The swindle is too barefaced and outrageous to be successful, and we arc surprised to find respectable men willing to disgrace them selves by dealing in such bogus coin. We trust this will Ix 3 sufficient warning B>r the people against another Locofoeo swin die. FRIENDS or CRAY!—KESEMBER 1841. —THE BROODY HAND. —Who of YOU that were active in the ever memorable contest of 1844, that- Jo not remember that when Mr. Clay was a candidate for the Presiden cy in 1844, James Buchanan and Gov Big ler stumped the State of Pennsylvania in company making Doiwocratic speeches Whatever thy spoke, Bigler repeated the stale and oft refuted slander which Mr. Bu chanan had stated against Mr. Clay and Bu chanan heard it and was sileut. They both stood under a hammer wi'h a bloody hand painted upon it. Upon this banner were inscribed the words: "Henry Clay, the mur derer of the lamented Cilly! ' And the Democratic patty have now the unblushing impudence and are constantly guilty of the unpardonable effrontery of appealing to old Clay Whigs to support James Buchanan — the. man who ot all others should be the last to ask anything at the hands of the friends of Mr. Clay, unless, indeed it be that degree of supreme contempt and loath ing, which words are not strong enough to define. Where is the old Clay Whig who will vote for James Buchanan the vile tra ducer of the purest patriot who ever raised his voice in behalf of human freedom—fnr 1 James Buchanan —the man who sat quietly ; beneath the bloody hand and lying inscrip ! tion, "llenry Clay, the murderer of the la mented Cilley!" Wo thank God there are but few such traitorous s'>uls. But what few there are, deserve to he constantly haunted by a bloody hand, pointing at them the slow moving fingers of scorn. INSULT TO INJURY. If ever there was one man that pursued j another with a fiendish hate and devilish bitterness, that man was James Buchanan on the track of lleury Clay. As early as J 1825, we find Buchanan, lying like a sneak in corners and behind the back of the man he wished to injure, when he first put into j circulation that wicked lie of "bribery and corruption" against Clay in connection with the election of Adam*. This feeling of hate toward Clay seemed to be one of the rulinz passions of ins existence while Clay lived. We saw it in 1841 when he travel led Pennsylvania proclaiming "Polk a bet ter Tariff man than Clay," and giviug cur rency to all those other damning charges which hunted the great Kentuckian to his grave. Why was Bnchauan so bitterly op posed to Clayl He was envious of Clay's truo greatness, of his brilliant genius, of his overpowering oratory, of the admira tion he commanded from the people; and like a base heart, he hated the man who was so immeasurably above him. Feeling his incompetency to cope in a mauly contest with the great Commoner, he sneaked in by ways aud closets and murdered his reputa tion with the hand of an assassiou. "A falcon towering in his pride of place Mas bv a mousing owl hawk'd at and killed." Aud the great Clay died under the nation's ingratitude brought about by James Bu chanan's slanders. But now the old friends of Henry Clay are asked to vote for this slanderer of the man they loved while living and worship now he is dead. 'Die Whigfriemls of Ileu ry Clay are asked to \ote for James Bu chanan! The request is an insult, and no Whig worthy of the name would stand quietly an 1 allow such a request to Lc re peated. James Buchanan can never get the vote of a sincere, candid, honest old line Whig. Jackson's Farewell Address. (hi retiring from tlie Presidency, at the close of Lis second term, followed in Lis withdrawal from jxtlilic life, by the blessing of the whole confederacy, General Jack sou Issued his celebrate.l address to the American people. 7bi; document, altho' iK>t so generally rend and appreciated as Washington's Farewell Address, is remark able for ifs high and patriotic sentiments, and should be familiar to every American citizen. Looking into the dim \ is!a of the future, the old Hero beheld such a state cf affuiis a® now uistracts'oui" Republic, aud lie rais es his voice in tones of solemn warning.- .Speaking of the condition of onr country, and of Washington's caution against dis seniion,General Jackson, said: "But amid this general prosperity and splendid success, the dangers of which be warned us are becoming every dav more evident, and the signs of evil are sufficient ly apparent to awaken the deepest anxiety in the bosom of every patriot. We behold systematic efforts publicly made to sow the seeds of discord bctwepir different parts of the United States, and to place party dis seniions directly upon geographical distinc tions, to excite the South against the N"< rth and the North against the South, and to force into the controversy the most delicate and exciting topics upon which it is impos sible that a large portion of the Union can speak without strong emotions. Appeals too, arc constantly made £o sectional inter ests in order to influence the election of Chief Magistrate, as if it were desired he should favor a particular qnarter of the country instead of fulfilling the dutie3 of his station with impartial justice to all; and the possible dissolution of the Union liasat at leneth become an ordinary and familiar subject of discussion. Has the warning voice of . Washington been forgotcu? or | have designs already been formed to sever the Union?" llow truly ore the words of Andrew Jackson being fulfilled at the present day ! Ilad he been gifted with a prophetic vision, lie could not have portrayed the political condition of his Country in a more corree* light, lie gives a perfect portrait of the Ba chancer party, wlio.se seditious schemes are everyday growing bolder and bolder.— The hope of the Loeof >co party is a contin uance of the outrages in Kanras. They have renewed them,and rumors of fresh out. rages are every day spread before the pub lic. Keep it before the people that this last Kansas foray was commenced by the slavery par'y. — Cincmnti Tunes. Thkv Will Have Cit.a. — Tir OstenJ Jilanifexto in Full Blast.— The great Demo cratic speech of the LI en. Mr. Keitt; of South Carolina, is full of the most iujc uiSccnt Democratic ideas. Take the foliow iuw fur example. Mr. lveitt is talking about the Democratic party ami Cuba. Hear him: As 1 said before, lam in dependent, not neutral, (cheers.) If that party deviates from the right line of policy, I will oppose it.— (cheers ) I say. never will I act with any party that docs not staud upu tire constitution —1 mcsu for the rights of tbo South. (Loud cheers) Igo with it now because it is a gallant party—because it is a progressive party —because it is a conser vative party. (Cheers.) W Lave before as a great couutry. Wo have two races— the Latin aud the Anglo Saxon an J with suei, elements composing the papulation ot our country , our destiny must i>c a noble and axaitcd one. Tiicy love progress, and the Cist step in that direction is the acipru." tion of Cuba. (Loud end enthu iaatie cheers.) Standingoa your southira shores the scntiuel of your watch tuwers, it must b? ours, or the South is exposed to in fa VOL. 20, AO. 41. MOD. Yes it must be Ours an J I have no objection to the Gillibuetera talcing it. (Load cheers.) Take it and we v.ill pay for it afterwards. (Tremendous cheering) Take it—l care not in what manner—and then we will roll into it a gulf stream of South" ern population that will make it truly the grin of the Antilles. Kxternaiiy guarded, by nature protected, roll into it your South ern population, and the navies of all the earth may thunder nrouuJ .ts shores, anJ they v.iil thunder, in vain. (Loud cheers.) Ye, controlling the commerce of die West for three thousand miles, and controlling al so the commerce of the Kast, through the greater enterprise and commercial spirit of our population. Cuba would be what I'al uiyra was In ancient times, if it oooe throws off the despotism of Spanish rule, (cheers.) Ihc I)cmocratic party can and will take it. (cheers.) This proves that ihe Osiena Manifesto of Mr. Buchanan, of "wresting (hiba from Spain, if we have the power," is a liv ing principle among the Democracy of tiio South. i Can Mr. Buchanan be to dis charge the office of President 7 Tlic Cn --| stitutien requires that the person elected President before entering upon bis duties ■ shall taite t prescribed oatb. Mr. Bucban an having lest bis identity sr.J personal!!? . in the Cincinnati platform, is no longer , morally responsible—a political platform is , not subject to the pains and penalties of ■ perjury, nor can it have the fear of future 1 reiiribution before its eyes. Mr. Buchan j an can't say, "I, tLe Cincinnati Platform, do j solmnly swear to execute tiro office of PresL : dent of the United States," and tfiere be ing no longer a James Buchanan,-as a ner j seuality— a moral, re>pon*ibt!e bring—to elect bitu would be as abortive an act as to i vote for Matizei's Aatoinaiuni,which p!ay s : chess and talks pretty good English.— Ex. The California Jdemocracy ate irs n hail Tr-.xj. TI.C Ic-vfiUlTr* r?f o-iTOttiVH 1 of the dt rut cratic party in San Francisco to the Vigilance Committee, bascan-elan ir recouciliihlo split in their rank*. It is ex - tending throughout that i r atc,and will bad ly damage the cause of ten cent Jfuiinr iu ; the gold diggings. It is said that a company is being form ed at the A'orth.on the principle of the Bos ton Emigrant Ail Society,-to purchase awl colonize large quantities of land iu Tide Water Virginia, with auti slavery settlers. The Richmond Enquirer waxes fierce at th . prospect. Tin' New Orleans Delta the leading or gan of the Louisiana Bemoeraey, openly re pudiate* Buchanan becauso of bis declara tions in favor of sqmtter sovereignty in hi° Setter of acceptance, and declares it* de termination not to support him. Mr. Fill more, it says, is one of the soundest men in the Union on the subject of slavery, tufd be is a patriot ttad statesman. U supports Mr. "Fillmore. 50.000 MBORbRS WASTED! AT TEA CEVrS A DAI !' Read the following extracts from a speech of Mi. Buchanan, in the United States ate. in 10, in which he sdwated the ri duct ion of trrg'.vto the L iropcan standard We urideist ;nd the Loeufoeo*, incase Mr. Baebnnao is ieeted, intend to pet dowir the price of ial or to ft" cents it dnj /*,- diaitttj. They now want 50,000 laborer* at t-n ct its i >!"y to try the experiment cm f- Won't seme of our hard fisted laboring men ;l p r !y to Mr Buchanan at Wheatland tor the situation without delay? Here's hi? arguments tu favor of the re duction "Iti Germany. ,er~ the currency ; purely met alio, a.-I the cost of everything laJtRDUG EU to a hard mor.cy standard,a piece < t hroad chth can IK? m.U'UfiCtnred for fifty dollars; the manufacture 1 which, in our country lrvm the , spans: . of piper currency w0.,1t cv-st one hundred doiUts. The nd German manufacturer ftnpoHr tin* cloth into • >ll r country aud sells it fi.r a hundred Does not everv tiers.,,, perceive that the redundancy ofonrecrrer.ev is equal to a premium ® one hundred per cent, in la", u ot the manufacturcr . t iritl" „f protection, unless it amounted to prohibition. coul.l Counteract, these •advanta ' favor of ton !, manutaetures. I *ouW To Heaven tin t I c-mld a, .use the a tent,,, no* eve,v manufe turs, of tSe uati.m to int. u„po, '* n Wu& .eassn that, with alt tD se ,d --vanta-'is t with the nfotecuverdutwa whi. h our tors atb-ril to the doV*nc manufacture e cotton. we cannot obtain exclusive possesion ol lire tiouiC market, and successfully ctmttmd for the markets of the world? It taswnp y bei*u we man,,faeture at the nominal prices> of our own infl.ted earn ncv, and ar- towU at I'm real pric • of other nation;-. WsDIA t OUR NOMINAL TO THE ke ,u.. AHD OF FRIGES THROLGHoLf IHE WOULD, nJ you cover our country with ainss .vii.t benefits ••The comparative LO 'V PRICES of Fratto® and Germany have afforded uvh a * u their manufactures, that the? area?* ragM? r v lending themselves and would obt>. " 2 TV) TUST PR OTP l'l N(t DLTiES Vhite fcriti-d. munu factuivs are how languishes, j continent are vpiins'iag Ui ' ,J a )J ''• 2 vigorous existence."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers