. , ~ - - L,— . 77.14 . 7.rM11PL11111M1N1 . .... . ~. w;•• ..,, . tre.-..,:i ..".:- , k. ~;•••, 1 ..7::; : ''1•"':•,,•-•1",-..-,-1-':?' -.---J'."'"-'•-•7-4-:,,,, ,-•-,: , . -- -:-::4:aly:tE - 7 ,3 - . .---..-1-2'ff , - t, . , ..,-,,.. - - ''f 'l , - ' !':- • - . • . - , :i 1!, ..• . • 1 • . ' 4, .- .., ' ,•.••• • v•-- '-. , i 4, ,:'.• •• • 4 1, , ,t,..+:,,,.... ., _•;*: , , ,, : f '•= 4 ' 7, ;.•;; -•';'? ' -7':& '' . ''. ''' ' ''. ..i. - '1„ • ' -' - - - ' - ' '' . ..' -- ••- • • 7 ..;.. "? - i -)'7 . - t . ..'.' , .•'''''''' .•• 9 ' ' '' ' ';;• .1: , .n. , . ..7 .t.': - ,, - - - ,Y.. - :,....... '• ~,, , 1'. . ,, ~.,..,t- ~, ~ ~t --•- ' • ''*. , . 1• . i , . . . . . ! , ~ ~. ~ , „ • - ' ": , •'.-_ r . . . . . l''''• v. • ~. ~ V wim r . . \' ' - S *. .• , ^--4tl - ... i 1 , ... ' , . . . . ~• • TRE i.P. I ENDOW :,-. S. G.IIENTSTEAk.Editor. Illestrose r -September IT, ltWit. 1, ... Por President, • GEN 'LEWIS SASS. , •1'.. 1 • - - - , T4,micinamt. .. _ . 1 ' .y ' Foe4 - ICO Presidelit,.. L I , 4z i,,EN. WM. 0. /U a T Ell - a t , • • - ISIP.KENTII6IItY. 1 • iot.ooviairos, MORRI LONGSTRETH, 07 17011200111LRT COUNTY-, ' vow, °ANAL COMMISSIONER, ISRA-1L PAINTER, Of iiv.iiirrotoeizianD CotMT! County .Nemintions. TOE ',IMPRESENTATIVES, !ABM= TJIPGART, of Middletown, " Wyoming. ?'FOR C. U. CEEM.E, of Itiooklyn. F!. EMI . TOU PROTHONOTARY, I f F. N. 111'11,0LLIDIS, of Sprhigrffie. you REtIiSTER AND , RECORDER, L. DROWN, of Frlendavilllf. POO, COMMISSIONER, DAVID'O. ,nrittuELL of Liberty. *on cdßox En, MAIN 114.1LER, of,Clifford. 1 *Olt AUDITOR, EEO. 114LDWIN, of Great Bend. The Vest Governor. We have at leng th the pieasute of announc ing to our reades the name of the next Gover nor of Pennsyliania_ non. Mounts Loo -411.111T11, tht MoOtgomery county Farmer, pure patriot, aid,Defsocrat in whom is no guile; was nominated .by the proper council of the `Party, - at Harrisburg, on Thursday last, which nomination under the circumstances and _with eke tisaaisaity lit:which it was made, is every where regarded as tantamount to his election. Entertaining, thftefore; not the slightest - doubt that it will be verified, we make the prediction that so sure as tt!e day arrives, the - third Tries day of January next :will witness the inangrira tion of Monn.lo,oNostarra• as G-overnot of -this. Commonwealth. • - It is needless to say here that this nomina tion. perfectly act with our own choice, end •.meets a hearty response from the entire mass 4) , f the Democracy` of Susquehanna county. No selection could hSve been better, :or more en thusiastically reacived. Everywhere among ' oar people the nathe of LoNosre.eyn is ideniti fied with the nahie and policy of our late he loved executive, the sterling patriot, eminent I republican and medel Governor, Sut'sx. That ' be is of the sameholitical school, plain, pratiti cat, progressive *d radical—the inveterate Later of all monepolies, special privileges and monied aristocr4es„ pledged by his whole life sad character to usury out the entire series of :dorms commenced by that great and geed snan—Tsdmits of tip floubt, but is a subject of profound felicitatlini by his hosts of friends - and admirers. Witylis recommend alone, badbe none others, he wild inevitably succeed. FAA it is not all, as we shall take the opportunity to show. hereafter. :21. • Of his person;; Mad history we will only I speak in the langiage of the address of the eon- ! vention that nom4laied him ,i, " Moan's LoSo 'VIETH is a gennthe representative of the ear ly settlers of Pennsylvania. Simple in his hit - t itf„strictly repulili n in All his feelings and, principles, firm bOt a ild, he posse;ses in an em #entdwee thoie f terling qualities which are SO pecuiiiirly req*Cd at the present crisisi— From choice devoting himself for several years to the -cultivatioit of the soil in the fertile conn ty ofillcmtgomezli lie has improved an excel lent intellect by ilreful study, and by an tx tensive intercourse with Lis fellow-citizens, has spade himself fautil):ar not only with their °him toter and their WSnts, but also with ;the re nounes and capagilities of our glorious Ciin monweslth. rl i -i ... As an Assigciale Judge of his own county, 1 b4rdisplayed a .., . .d and correct: judgment, end his abort care to which post he hav;*, pecrohaa' I.tnelis 4; Ite belongs to I" faction, and he ' 0 eithnly . ana oriel, of 'Prins*" of real',, prackieed by the gt• party. And that b peat, no mortal m 3 we give - 1U paid . " : Old Demoor,allo 0 and roll 4 a, DO preeedanted. 24 , The •The Whig Sti , ;'OP4 , on on Thun4 "iiiiroMPOY -4*-10,10k. Akoully**". - .hurseetikiiaist; • wasaoe"t at 4 Xigi• 41.1111411 *din Inielpent l e ader Sil(141011(11 - as a Canal pommissioUer, elected by an utpreeeden ; orded ample proof of itis iseharge the duties of 2x- clique, is surrounded hylno if elected, go into . ofOce, ed or uncommitted to any id bound only by the pure • mocracy, as inculated and t fathers of the Democratic • will bye elected, we again .e-. can doubt.. For this res Ult, 1 antagonists fair warnipg, • .. uehanna will do her dUty tic majority wholly tint it I - i . ,Conveintiont. • i 04 i 40onitntion met at be 1 (last; and went tbie 1 Matins (=Matt ta etb. Vim, 4. a ' " ,• - , . Covirnor, was . - a - limn from Ae Ifair - Convention vatwot bldf '''.. their Ames 'tein+ de , , ea' so ,hopeleei *6 " eiloi the nominal . - ;"irlifi I.r. by mail 0;1. .i. ti„a*:,l l l-.*is in a ' Aii- Parti 'dliclirked.b . eing : beibte - tbe , CenvaatiML . . , tip whi g ewq ':-..;.::- jitiSIVA 'tad Ihiwtoolote, - Wok/easy-Agog'''. • ' 4 ;.olloTerlar Migdirt, the I Wet ara fr*#4.Pe,lioa*M t , 414 4 1 4 4 4: Ng ' uoispior;Vitita tO "stump fo : it4f daring : approaching campaign. OrSeWnte7bs,Owgeffort was madslin plija enEaturday evening last--kdrowi be'ene Ofias it is to have bee 6 The Pfassfriva*" says it is given o tls) r Otutiei Of 4Bucks, , dte. 'tnuisediafity; slid a> as ibat his be followed by soma of o; stampers in those counties, not, as Gen. lor said in his blood-hound letter, " to wi him, hat 4 1 to find out wherein may be f. aims the great questions of the day. One year se these same whigs wen bySterics, almOst, because Gov. Shuck ad. ed .a meeting in Reading and another in dolphin. Marvellous consistency b Johnston ran. lie will be overtaken throttled. If he comes up here we will ante° to GROW his tracks for him, in a m that will send him back with a flea, some at least. The Motivt.--Said a Whig Barnburner the other day, " We [that is Whig Bari ners] admit there is no prospect of dein; thing for Van Buren in Pennsylvania, In mean to defeat Cass. Democrats! do yol that! Here is the motive of-these men— real object is-not to help Van Buren, but t rnpt and be-devil Democrats, and cause to throw their votes away, that thereby may be enabled to "defeat Cass" and the ocratiu party, and give the State to T whom they profess great aversion for, bu really s triving to elect by seducing your Irdl you be duped into such a plot as thi for,this is really and truly the game. N'S is the Democrat, who i tbough upon one poise ly, Gen. Cass may not be of his mind, not infinitely prefer him to Taylor? WE dot believe there is such a man. No Dem( we are sure, will thus jeopard all the great sures - for whia - Democrats contend with the, prospect of Taylor's election in.view. member the motive of these men—that admit there is no chance for Van Buren it State,,and that therefore every Democratic cast for anybody but Cass will be oquivale a vote:given to Taylor. Beware ! Mow It Works: The recent letters from i Titylot haire kicked up a terrible bobbery i already distracted "Availability" party. of them denounce them as ' forgeries," loc , devices,' and so on, while others !anew r l theit genuineness, but rave and curse the' beeile author. One paper in New York; the reception ,of the letter to the Demo Chaileston deliberately hauled down the lor, and run up the Van Buren, flag. In ny, aftet pouting and cursing for a few da Tayloritea had another meeting and resole support Taylor let him say or do what he w Rather' ironical, we should think. In N. it is stated. that the Taylor men appoint committee to address him forthiith, an (prise him that if he does not stop writin; foolish letters they shall look out for an candidate. So they go.. ' Where may he be Found I There is beiond all donlit a most diab intent on the part of Gen. Taylor or his fr to cheat 'somebody, and some section o Union most egregiously. Oa the slavery tion he has as many faces and opinions, al if we can place the least credence in th ''ings-out of the Whig press in the aggre there are degrees of latitude from the Ari Ito Texas. We have already given the ex ;Southern version of his opinions in relat I:slavery restriction from southern whig Jon That he is opposed to it, and will veto made. President, it is regarded preposter the highest degree to doubt. But is we Lder4tood that these opinions are illy adap • the free States.' Accordingly a Janus-f put upon him, and eounter-pledges to the are promulged. Now public attention being startled with the announcement th; friends, Gov. Baldwin, and Senator Tr Smith ! of Connecticut, are in possession o ,tersin which the General positively asst wonldnot veto the Proviso if elected Presi And in another place to-day we record hii laration, made to a Southern Whig, thai ia:favor the "31issouri Compromise" itiPbesi niethocrof settling this vexed i!iti of slavery-extension. Now which shall lieva ? Which is the position of Gen. T Will any one be so kind as to inform to of;these United States ? Aas! for the people that politicians ; honest. Why does not Gen, Taylor co candidly and plumply, as Gen. Cass has analtell'the people where he stands upo rittestioW? Wby does he skulk in nonce ler. Istffer himself to be masked in 'this Is i not dean es_tho sun at noon-da sofiehodY, or some _section of the Unio !ha': +ttsigeonsly cheated by this incog, J Ifaie!l gams.: of this Federal paragon r irqesna .a.aeszwr.--We are much p 1 10,y111111;44,041101,Xy fr . I**, N. ; sboaii* open iCiebnoliw• Ade *lige f dia‘tintiallii hied, necessary sad • ~ scf°‘ pf:P9IO4OI4P. He . welirreenainiendell,44 . 4 tfie*ress An eainipatini nen, an4,l44iiirit., no ,d sebool bite will be eminiatiOneeendid: soaaidWill opswio {Friday).' COS The hesi . doo# aos liF4l of e,r;3olof the lesdifil Val *fen ,buriiiri - Now Nit, fro*ibi bop" lice pfl,t, Dist4o44;nl4 *,l4 01 Chif iggi r eltXifit4 lll 4er: filksta fOr: - - , 4440* eirfein.4avel with* Weir te t Vilitkiatitifevea -- A - .Taylor 1143 last Baltimore clippet.;. 2 ....Ti0r paper, devoiiiff to : the:principhts of slav irell4Bnd 'iotitains a long letter from correspond ent sdiciinid just held an inter** with Gen: l Tayl4r, and' heard him define his .position on the-Free sOirquestion. He says : "Speaking of . the "free soil"' movement in the Orth, ho expresssed fears that it would hel the absorbing inestion in th#preseut canvass! and thigtOsS other'lluestionS*44 said that be cohaidered,the ..Missouri compreolige a fair Band litraral lino:for settling the glade question, and he wail willing to see it adopted. Ho did not briskets to pronounce slavery an evil and blighting in its effects upon the agricultural and commercial prosperity of the South. To this ho attributed the decay of Virginia, and he thought it Would extend to other slave States. He spoke at some length on this point, and drew many of his illustrations from ancient his tory. So ben. Taylor'is at last " out," and thor oughlt committed to the south on the slavery question. Hear it, ye " Free Soil Taylor Whio !" The " Missouri Compromise" is Gon. Taylor's method of disposing of that .quesOn. Do you understandy Slavery is ran 01, blighting in its effects upon agricul tural sind commercial prospects," and yet Gen. Taylot is in favor of extending itrlir one half, I.(and all the best portion) of o* Acently , ac quired, territory ! He' is willing, nay anxious, " the agricultural prospects" of up iwardiof 200,000 sqare miles of territory now \ free, fr a passport to the Presidential chair! 0 ! cOnsistency ! thou art indeed a jewel. into •88- hila let and 1E! o us bur- any t we bear their COT bem they V ern , lor • Nor.--The Taylor organ of this corm ty IS#, week was as silent as the grove about the late letters of the old Scribbler, neither pnblislting nor in any way alluding to them. What? in the wind ? Does o'nr neighbor doubt ;their itennineness ?---or does he prefer that his read* should be kept in the dark ? Which ? otes IBM On ould The Whig Candidate. The Pennsylvanian closes an, able article upon .4be brilliant prospects of the Democratic candidate for Goierner with the fallowing pun gent obslaught upon his antagonist : :MI3 But if there could have been any doubt at any time that such a rqsult would follow the, decision of the Democratic Convention in favor' of anylman, the choice of the Federal party ofi Willi* F. Johnston, as the Federal candidate 1 fur GO: ernor, places the whole matter beyond the pOsibility of doubt, and clearly points to a victory, that will brighten our banners in Octo- 1 ber, worthy of the cause of the country and the Homocratic party. Mr. Johnston ,is the very . elabodiment of conservative Federalism. He wit the anther of the Relief law, and there is not'!,i citizen of the State who Will deny that that v4s a measure, equally corrupt in itself as it iii notorious it has been corrupting in its I influe4es. Few politicians have been more i inconsistent, and none more unscrupulous. Ile; I s roved: his selfishness by opposing the " Inde pendent Treasury" while in the Legislature, i ;against that glorious institution, *with the al-; . most avowed intention of putting the Democrat- • is Senhtors out of Congress,- that he might get i in. Ele has lately proved his hostility to Labor; lby his, bitter and relentless opposition in the State Senate to that measure of justice to the 1 operatives in our factories, which fixed their term Of daily toil at ten hours. He shows his proscif_ptive feelings by turning Democrats out of offiep, owing to the temporary power which' lan insdrutablo_dispensation placed in his bands, I•afterAs party had been repudiated by a ma-1 jority of more thaneighteen thousand votes. This ilti the candidate of the Federal party.— ! Against him, our ' divisions are blown to the' 'in Against him, our ranks are closed up 'in solid array. To oppose him, we forget all .fends Teal .or imaginary. To oppose him, we 'will ark with renewed enthusiasm for our principles, which he has trampled under foot. ITo oppose him, we will toil to add new thou sands ,o the certain majority in store for us.— And mien if our candidate wer4 4- not, as he is, „, , ' ; "an ab 4. pure, and fearless Democratic states ' nia.n, Or political opponents have in the field an antagonist candidate, whom the people of :; Pennsylvania never will put into a position to I destroy their best interests, and to outrage their cherished principles. , SE ;.ome foco dge im- I. roil Heal ends the MI oat; giv e, as .took reuse n to als, MEI un ed to WIioMING COUNTY.—From the Wyoming Patrol —Extra of Saturday, we learn that the Convettion which met that day made choice of the.ifollowlng ticket : 111:E9 orth just t his Corigress—Hendrick B. Wright. Assembly—Robert R. Little. Skiff—John Jackson.• Prolhonotory—Wm. H. Barns. Register 4- Recorder—Franklin C. Ross. Treasurer—Miles Felton. Commissioner—Stephen Capwell. Auditor--John G. Spalding. nal' Patrol says: . The abet trileket is bounalto shine." . man let fts he l h ent dee e is ne as tion e be •Ior? I . IOOA COUNTY. The Democrats of Tioga, ii Co4ention on Friday week, nominated the following ticket : Assintb/i—Nathaniel Pro* o notary—Jno. F. Donaldson. Reg ster 4. Recorder—Henry Sherwood. Commissioner—David Ellis. eople not 6 out, done, thit, , RO4rt G. White received the nomination for , Congrtiss, we understand on the 19th ballot. way? that is to • WEOTWAIth Ho !—Five of our young men, viz., O B. ryler, John C. Truesdell, Frederick C. Mclntosh, and C. N. Stoddard, took die it departure from this village on Mon day nOt last for the ! West—Wisconsin, some of the* contemplating, locating perznatently iod s othera i 'adecidea. Good in `.with is veryi#wderate share of home-sichnesiseeom my yin, boys. Let us and our readers hear irmsilt l m 4- Cov!T PROCELDFfiIs. Brundage, Ts. Wells for 13,14der, came on fontriil on Wednesday Modfioiftumed till Saturday, when the jury were t oat.:- Omni in Sunday morning with a verdieo'or Plaintiff of p 25, damages andcosts. Tory OFOYiFied: CourtadiQiirn6l reports from Bo4l'reuhteit' 14inefeinktiminonnee the refusal of the Banks 44,4 , ' t er to pee. lire the notes of the Sandusky 11tirtisprobsi Viairdir e i s uidi z : • „ . t bit lEs Cot. ZM I 4 14ALE WITUDRAIOC— Hon. John 1 a written a letter) to an Abolition a ston in which lip withdraws his , 'candidate of that, party for the Id - recommends 44st sincerely,and I ,I]ioarty and ener4etio, and nnani iof Martin Van Ittiren and Charles as the most Consistent Coursii for ned friends of }lnman liberty to f &nix P. P. Halo h meeting in•r name as t Presidency , 1: • mous supp st F. Adams, 1 the enlig,..hti pursue." Maggzine for Septembei ny excellent things;, and is really a ler. How so excellent and aurae [zinc ,as that can b,e published for year, is more than we can corn ! ! t certainly contains more reading, Ong, too, than any other monthly ea- Holden' • I contains m sUporb nu mag. ote dollar pieliend. .1 choice read taint. Arks...—We preceiVe that the sub-; , ited States Senator to succeed Si- i 11, is beginning to be broached in I l o counties - of this Stbte. The eke . e place in JanuarY i next. my Conventions Of Luzerne and e preceive, have, passed resolutions) led their members of the Legislature lon. Geo.W.WoocivAnn. He is a i hem our member from this county `ted, and whom win have no doubt •ould be much pleased to see elect be, remembered that he was the cats nominee of the Democratic the Legislature 31 that time, and euted out of bisi'election by the eed, Outrageous trickery of Simon bo bought the Whigs and a few Democrats into his Support. Ju -1 sow be clone him: ' U. S. SO jek of a U.l Ilion earner. 1 some of t./ tion will t • The Co Co' Columbia; . 1 and instrue in favor of good man 'l l onto Bllppo our people ed. It wil regular ca members o was only e most bald- Cameron, treacheron ' Lice should CIE n Burets ConcerniOg , ton Union pOlishes the fol . furnished it s by the State The Wu lowing info Departmen DEPARTMENT 17.1%' STATE, ' aShinzt(iti, - Augat:l2, 1'648. answer to. numerous in e at the Departmetr4 by Members GENTLE quirks ma, of Congres: of Mexico ; municate lotions of t the 15th S I the Mexico on that sul may be fou l " Coleccio'n General de and others, in relation to the laws ou4erning slavery, 1:: herewith cum yon, for pnblicatiod, correct trans ie decree of President Guerrero of ptetufier, 1829, and of the act. of- Oitlgress of the btili April, 1837, 'eat. r The original of the decree )4 in volume -ti, page 201, of the '( de Leyei y DecretoS del Congreso ' la. Nation Mexicana." urs'respectfully, • JAMES BtrCHANAN & Messrs LITTON OF SLAVERY. nt of the• Mexican United States I • .• ni habitants of the4Republic. AB The Presid l to the nin—That, being 'desirous to si! , - nniversaryof indegendenco, in the by all act of national justice and which may redound to the advan inestimable a god; which may . re the public tranquility ; which '• the aggrandizement of the Repub - icinstate an unfeitunate portion tints in the sacred rights which tb them, and. the I, nation • should Wise and just lava; comfortably 'positions of the 30th article'of the act, employing th* extraordinary ich have been cone'eded - to me, I i .di,to decree— • r. Be it kn nalize the I year 1.:29, beneficence tage of th= further ins l may tend t lie, and ma of its inha nature gay=. protect by with the di. constituent facilities wl have resol% y is and shall rem* abolished in 1. Slave, the republil sequence, those wb have hitherto ed as slaves are free. 2. in co been re_Wd soever the conditic , Mof the treasury t, the owners of the slaves shall be according to the terms which the share. ' L I). JOSE MARIA PI pocANEurt.t. Mexico, (September 15, 1621. 3. \Vhe shall perm imiernniael law may d far the Abolition pfrSlarery. r Slavery is abolished without any iroughout the whole, republic. wners of the slaves manumitted by law, or by the decio of September tall be indemnified for their interests e estimated accordini to the proofs be, presented of their personal goal icii -effect, one appraiiier shall be ap he Commissary Geniral, or the per ling his duties, and another by , the in case of disagreement, a third e appointed by the respective con- Icade ; and from the decision thus shall be no appeal. ,; Law AftT. I exception •L. The ;the present 15, 129, s j therein, to . which may toes; to wl pointed by (sob perfort owner ; am who shall I) stitutional made there I• t" tell it not in Gath !"—in this century . of Progressef Reform,' of Christian Light and, Freedom, the a. if the South and their dough-fa- i 1 . the North, are exel,lng every nerve ' lipaHven and Earth in their endeav- ! I, y this littmane and riihteous decree, 1 l• t Freedom on Frcedbm's soil by the Istitation of &very: Aye! In this , I age of the world, when the whole f Europe is being 'xiphove and up masses of ourfelloi men in their I. row off the shackleli of tyranny by i hare heretofore been ound down— les are crumbling, Mid crowns and , !coming toys in the hinds of emend , lons—and while the glad shouts of I. borne to our ears fiom across the 1 s, gaining the heart of every' patriot i or joy"—our own gierioukUnion is 1. itk dismembortnenthe "Model And ye nineteenth Moral and Slave pow: cedallies o and movie, ors to null and nupp accursed i enlightene continent torn by th , efforts to t which the when thro sceptres b paced mil freemen a great wate to " leap threatend Republic" consequen. to arrest t, niepace4 with tot4nnihilation, in o otat effort of tho banninelnnd wise e.pxopagation of htunan bondage o- in sbich Mexican hiws.havainter- Shinn) ! Where is thy blush ! ver territo dieted it,! I everlin Staten Islan d.—From the papeis we learn tbat,l i this, frightful reeently broken out n- Staten M. hat, fitsi.,. More 4an fifty cues „ y 4'.*cu'reii,_ef wad! ilea r a fourth !. fatai The New. •ylnk fo lks arc fa; t: „ t _ • . onewaf, alarmed iv ?t, and mean- I• mit liti' spreading rei being put ' o 4g 11 ;Ffthe di . sP SP is 10.nenilY I' VI : l! . fron , 4iiir., (fr : for hiving f-O elfever tat , hoard . . P ' Yellow New York malady b. ana, ne a r have sires have pros; 'evidently :I !urea - to pr 'forth. attributed.. had cues 1)r the “Deniocriv? . . " Consiiteney" • -bait. well been; defi ne d :., a jewel." :It is indeed a jewel of intrinsic worth,. reflectinth radiance 'far transcending all the jewels.thit ever Alitened the : diadem of :! .i ' Earth's prondest.Potentate.l And whether we Iconsider it socially on:politically, it lithe make, ever prompting its subject to speak forth the i language of candor and sincerity, and " deal justly' and honorably withd the Opinions and reputations of others. L I I . !: - I was led to these refleetiOns a few ;days since,...upp_p , tev . iring or t 4r4ie . ,iqabe " Sas quebannelleguiter" : bearing d ate November 1 10th, 1842, in whidh'the editor (the same per son who now edits it) speculates upon "Presi dential Demonstrations" in this wise: " The fact is, be (Gen. Cass)- is too high minded honorable and independent- a man, and too unobjectionablato the Whigii, to stand any chance with the other party." Whit ! Gen. Cassia highl-ininded, honorable and independent man. Surprising ! Where fore, then, these miaow assaults upon him by that same press and its co-laborers in the I cause of Taylor? is this consistency ? Or how does it comport with the-feigned excuse for swallowing the Philadelphia slaughter-house offal, via : for the pitrpose tif defeating Caas. What a " bull"---or rather What shameless in consistency ! Can :human gullibility presume further! Gen. Cass''' d honor able, independent male ; " andlet who' can count the slanders his pulogist is now piling upon him, or fad* Surreptitions means he is resorting to to keep pm out of the Presiden . tial chair! 0:1111118TENCY, _ "We Want a Clniittge.99 Yes, we want a change, say .the Whigs and to; save themselves from perditiau, the cunningest among thorn cannot tell us whit ion of a change they would accomplish. The wheels o'f govern- , meet run along smoothly —pler ty of work and ! plenty of money, sufficient to Sat",sfy twenty mil; ! ' lions of people. Our ;fields, prairies and rolling !, hills are loaded with the produltions of the ag riculturalist. The hum of mill ons of spindles, ; • 'and the puff of countless steari pipes is beard! in every hole, corner and summit of the land, yet these, silly 'whiglings -are 'bawling • for a change! . .• - What change do they desil3 . If they look to the people to effect it, th y look upon . a I rock, as unehangyable and tru ,as the course! of the sun. They might as! . ell attempt to [ change the tides, reverse the stAsons and bar- 1 ness the clouds.as . to effect-alcl ange in the ad- 1 ministration of .our-country. , t is impossible I for wbiggery to get beyond the units to which I it was consigned by the. trium ' h of Jefferson over the, conservatism{ of the Ilamiltons and ' 'Adamses. The measures of t ! ose statesmen ; who doubted the ability of the I cople to govern ! themselves, have exploded, an ',blown their ad vocates into factions and fragin nts, from which,, they can never recover. A;s tendid govern-1 !ment, rich sinecures for the s , ,bcted few, ex travagant expenditures, high , riffs, standing ; armies, rag money by.lhe hilli •ri, high taxes, national debts, to grind the' f ce of the pdor, and mammoth banks,, have itl - •,sunk into the bottom of the sea like'the ho'st of Pharaoh.— .) In the mean time Dernocratie rinciples • have been at work, filling the- high destiny of our , country--checks and balancps have been put I upon the aristocracy. I We kill d their monster bank and buried him, we trust or-ever. ' There , is no debt, no taxes, et) burden ..of government, i and no liveried 'aristocracy te% ide rough-shod, over the people. ,NotT where i . the use of the i whirr bawling for a change? • Ve . never could find ono who advanced a read n, and we defy i the whole pack to. produce 0 e. We cannot see the necessity or een ;the? 1 ast shadow of a' necessity for any cha gott al . Who would exchange a certainty .otan,un , ertainty=solid prosperity for wliig expansion and contrac tions'! And besides who ~ WO ' ' d entrust the reins of government to a gild I set of :incapa- 1 tiles, men of no experience and nearly all pock et abstractionists, who love to ''crow fat on the' labour of others?" There is,rupernoerat who wishes to live to see such a stPte of things.— Let us then keep up 'the old, 4•effersonjan flag 'Of Equal Rights and put our shoulders - to the wheel in pushing forward the). no:blo spirit of Progressive Democracy. Thee can be no re trogade movement in a such Nails°, because destiny has' fixed its course , and the people have neither the time or the imilination to stop i their machinery to mnke,changes for the mere gratification of the Whig part.y.l---Read. Press. Murder in Chemuzig Co. . El mira N. Y, Democrat.igives th, following par ticulars of a horrid murder.iperpetrated at Southport, in Chemung'zodri6r, 'on the 26th ult "Two men named 13enjamt 1 n Cord:ling and Abner Shears. were returning home in'a wag- on, from this village, iwbero they had been to witness the balloon ascension, ;when a quarrel arov—the particulars of whici we haveTbeen unable to learn. Shears aroso, siezed a whip from the , driver and struck claltling over the bead several times, fracturing: his skull just behind the ear, which caused lib death. He survived CLIO 116ifry-two days. What:gives the transaction additional borror,lis that both men. are married, and their; wives ;were accompany ing them in the wagon. TlikU verdict- of the coroner's jury was "wilful inivder."" - Shears effected his Oscape,l liad a reward of $5O is offered for his appreheindon. • University of Nolhern , ennsylvania. An act incorporating an institution under, the above name, to be located at Bethany, Wayne county, was passed . by the LeOslalure . of this State at its last tuissio . It ;is to be under the supervision of -two ty-ei 1,4, trustees, Who have already been chosen, am 4 whom we 40- tice the names of Wm'. , ijesee Urbane 'aux rows, and Rev. 1. 0. Ward fr# SuatpOlitMna county. Hon. N. B. Eldred also one 4 the Trustees. . • t i 0t Comn.z.rwo.—Tbe Oisli,p "Penzocrat. and. Whig stat4linit 'ilie iriatte " W'aid Raspo al! Rail Re . completed 116,1. 1 ,be o p en' in a few days Oa. travel. This a conner.tion between the Erie Rail Road aid Jersey City, and it sr mle isage from Ramapi ides obvi ati, the ieb-i0 the winter AT' —The seat of nttlor to evbtriog of iho Art, ,Alll reitebed there, and ',hnnally ahanaork '" Old Zia," and resolve:ldle ouri,port - Van iitvilrAcl amic, ' . Daniel= , .'"-**er,llbOr... it 'la otump for ,iykir; . -.. t .r,4! , ,'1t,i . .. ~.', r . Ikilriv;iiioithe 1 ,i,lFic?from Irelanil-÷Arrest of • Neagh, fy_. Donodul,inul Leyne,--4foirs is Fra nce —;l6kence in Flour (tat ain. The steathihip Niagara, ¶ro Liverpool % the 19th W 14., irrived at New ork on Th us . i / 1 (Illy efeninglast, with eevert ys T i ter nen The ,cotton'market is un'ubleogd sinco.6, s lest steamer,=us far as regerlaid priCes but the demand is heavy, large qnatttities being i n .the, , niarketi , i Flour hits improved—he* adtt%6 4l 1 shilling 418 d, -01ing at 110 to ns d. ' The newiin regard to ails i ts of4in '' -- roduce is highly ; favorttbk Wheat has a d. 1 vnneed in tf siticipating i n tie insurrection of June, and o thousand hi ) . anted. , Lamartino has intimated! t‘ Macon a desire for retirement At Assembly. - - Great anxiety prevails: con closures of :printed evidench which will he soon printed fir 1 sembly, nothing having beentsu debate on is . will comment- will cause great excitement, [ b Aignac's arrangements will pre, violence. The non-intervention potie ber of enemies .to the got hoped that .good sense will tti A serious; not has taken p 1: not a politiegone. Several made. ' Charles Albert bas evacda Gen. Weldeb, at the bead oflt has entered:.the Papal &raw is greatly incensed on aeeonp • A battle 'ensaed, and the Allot ed. bELAND:^MeSSTS. Ahak .and Leyng have been arre.f and soldiers are in hot pils man., The arrest of the.Confed: every part,Of the country. The trial of O'Brein will So: Tranquility prevails, but! from help.. well disposed tow' 0 ties. Several Irishmen - and arrested in Liverpool for guage. A letter was found onSibi Duffy, of a highly ,treasonahl written after the open Yebegie The continuation of the wet causes an alarm throughout th threatened potato rot. - -• The Irish cleigy are doing' to preserve-th e eace of the 'c. Two AmOca s and one F ing from Seale to ArmaUg rested as syrnpat isers, with la ey on their persbns. Meagher has written a le denying that helms made ati • e O-I.vernment to save his life' i offer would ;be, accepted, ' tint leave the country. 1 The Liverpool papers are tl of the arrest of 'American sy ; G su*.m.—All the prelim tive renewalof the war in the, I ken place, but with the except. jwith the Prussian outposts lid in which six Prusiians were' hostilities have taken place. I I The blockade would reconill and we await the next tide. I anxiety. • - - I The combined troops on, tb; ' to 12,000 men, and these woill I linforced by 10,000 more in T , 6 • The combined forces of Fri Russia, with:the secret suppOr undoubtedly_ be employed ill I ' this unprovoked war. 1* Some trifling disturbauce.4 at Hamburg._ • I •No ***outbreaks have be The thartists are again ;al attithde, and various dem:U* made in various parts of the; k By an arrival from Vera C from the. City of Mexico to th,i The Capital, was quiet; Congr , the, tauction of the Tariff. ;:f I The Government was vi o f toyed by Betrera, who was bei Exertions are making to mem! of Mexico, which has been en! by the war. The actu,4l whereabouts io known, but it is supposed tha ; somewhere in tbe ; _capital. ;T i entirely suppressed, and canto make headwq,-agaip. • The Indian depredlioni, by i -still continife.,l. Vera Ora atlait dates wash A Mon. --,Cincinnati city day thrown into intense exti; quence of the assembling oflaA jail wherein iwas confined tw . had • been committed for hrUt, , girl 12 ',Tara Of'age. The eib:l was to -take . - :surninar3r justice fi Three of them were Shot doci and the Sheriff and his posiniii .i strumentalin dispersing thedi Gerrit Smith gives out,that draw his name as a eandidati ey. He has received - the National Ref6rm'ers, VIA a p4 - ri lition party,:4o . will notTioldi ran, or any be else. , - Ne , 111 -himself.the the isteseri:SA4`ic Au ti-SlayerYi party.. •- POSTSCR :' T 1 i*.. • . Tututeray 'norm , g i ttz• Irak. WerhaveSst - beee itkfon4cl.l4 oneef the CoOfereee from thus Bounty, ti t at the Con ference hold reterdey in . Toer da, ilae. DA viD WiLlior I irainominateti r Congtiejfor t this Dietrict`l'hes. Bra4e* tonfOlevien neeeimpeejiletttuPtea 6 r , V4 1 at., • ilif ) e,' i feriew Item ~.tllis eount,y, . sa t taieeu hoot; lif and iirtitei•Ohe'o , ely . eantlidit Tree! ted ,, byi the of 6 "mi A._ 4 .110,!-. -01064;04.64P0'.0t fftnl • 1 170 ," 1 .- a I P: of.th t g;o l .Alln* Raii , '- "4.1 ...,' 'ea at the thai the h She =I the elect:net em the Naha. erning tee die. 'of inputeetioa, be National,* ppressed. Th bfonday,o4 ) t General Co vent any act!' of c o r ae e t ii i e Lyons, butoi li D , ‘ 4l) ai mph.'; • ; e rrests have been l ed Lombardy— ! e Austrian arisy, ns. • The Popo ! of the inruion. ans were worst- :r, O'Donoghne , and the police nit after 0 Ger- tes Atikiatinue in I nsommence ie people are far rds the authori- tints have been g seditibus ,11 character, 13 0 araeter ,:fio sta of O'Brein. and cold weather i s Kingdom,of thw. 11 in their power nary. • nchman, cross- have been ar ge tunis of mon7 ter, indignantly stipulations with ile • says that no liberty for all to ed with accounts :isathisere. ►rariss for an ae -11 willies have ta , on of a skirmish r Haberseleben, ined, no further e u n n e t e s i on wt t h h e grealn frontier atnonnt speedily be re erve. ce, England and of Prusaia, will utting an end to ave takun plus nrred at Berlin. muting a hostile tuna have been ngdosn. Fropatext z wP have'dates 13th nitimo.—' sb was debating Imply °ming pop Mar. :e the commerce irely prostrated Paredes is net be is ockricesled e revolution is for the present nchee, !very quiet lan- on Wedoes :ement in collie- 1. , ob - around the Germans who Hy, ravishing' et-of the mob' cikthe culprits. by the officers, ere finally in- - . le does not with e the P,rei** inetion' pf the on Of the Abe `to M 4 Vin teOsir 6 11.1itioniel‘Oil• tl okott o, the