Weekly Reveille, Volume 39, Number 33, Vevay, Switzerland County, 13 August 1856 — Page 2

required by the station to which he aspir- 1 cs, ami'for, the times in which we find ourselves, to either or all of his competitors combined, I shall’most cheerfully give my vote to- that condiJate who both hails from and lives in New York, ?ml, not to hiiA who hails from and lives in Permsylvanhi; or to him who living in. .New York, for the purpose of this cam ! voss hails from California—or to any { 'other, who* is amphibious, cither to his• jhome or his principles. '[Laughter.] II hope this may ha. considered i ■sufficiently explicit, for Ido not intend | to engage here in presidential discussions : ■ —I do pot’regard them as profitable; and ; while 1 . sincerely believe that Mr. Fill* more is the only one of all these candidates whose success .would : give any assurance of peace and-harmony either at home or abroad for the next four years, I shall nevertheless acquiesce, without murmuring, in whatever they .shall order to whom .the choice of_ President peculiarly belongs.’ lam con lent with any AJmidist rat ion ivh fell ivilL secure ami advance the peace, pnispcrity, ; and honor of my contitry, and would oppose any that did not. 1 have no interest in determining wild may stand at the doors of the Treas-1 ury, and enjoy,the facilities of that. posi-' lion to plodder its vaults; and 1 never can I have.' 1 ■! . ■ _ - Tv.';-’ ■ And now' leaving this subject entirely, I again bcggeiitlemen to consider well if we should venture an adjournment until we havelnade some further effort to settle our difficulties; Sir, I have again and again tried .during all -this day, when it would be in*order, to move to take up tbe Kansas lyll'for consideration; to get Ilie.j floor with a view of presenting my amend ment. and letting gentlemen then dispose ; of ihewliolcqnestionnfi they might think best, or, perhaps J ought to say expedient, I have not been successful. I shall continue to[ try to get this matter up and acted upon hi some way, on every Mouday .until; you adjourn. ' There is no other day ti ndcr our rules that I can make any such effort, f;11i6 majoVity here may take] it up wheneycr it shall pldnsc those hav- j ti'.g the control of mature in this House to take iip the business on the Speak|riy | table. ’ They cau not prevent my ceasMcss r efforts Id force a'cl i pm If, through ?ihe! course of tlipt majority, I must finally fail { it so. ■ The consequences for good [ or ill cauno|; ahd shall not, attach to-inol either praise or blame. I wash my bandit: of them wholly.' If mischief comes/let] it; come, y* Iwill have hb share in its guilt J or in its blood. If that great sufTcrhig is; to come which will oppress the Iioarfi; of all nicri, I humbly hope to find that for* tiiudoto bedr up under my burden, which is given from. the consciousness of iiny duty-ray whole duty performed, to flic extent of my ability and opportunity,-; in striving to avert public calamity. Sir, from the first to the last, I nine stead Ky labored with on umvnybringjdc] tereiinatjoii'thiit has never filtered since the;passage'of the Kansas-Ncbraska act/ until this moment, for tbe restoration of (he Missouri restriction.] 'With .d purpose that I have never lost sight of, and that I never],will lose sight of. until that is accomplished, so long ns I hold q scat upon this floor, or.'.cau; by my vote else* where, pronlpte . that object; I shall continue to lahbr with n ny id d i ng's t ubb omess for that rest oration in someahdpe brother, liam impelled to this because,iff the first place, it hr^hi; and ini the second place,, because there is no peace, for the country, arid there ran be no peace, until that is/ in substance or: in lenns—in somo form or other, accomplished. ; Let gentlemen North and South Consider the mattjsr well; and they/will be constrained to'this same conclusion..I them remember, if they please, that jn all future time, or until this restriction tsogatri. applied to the-Territo-ries of Kaniusand Nebraska, there wither ran, nor be peace: I speak this with no meaning of offense br spirit of threatening, but rather as a fact which mob may deplore br. defy u« they' will—rur/i is bur. certain ,. bur neccestary future.' I loll gentlemen of this House that tho time must come, unless wo interpose now and prevent' it, when wo will look back upon the hours wo aria vainly, wasting, pud see. that this Congress had it in its power to have’accommodated 1 our troubles and! made easy terms of public peace andjrepose, if we had only willingly and ear--ocstly, and without selfish aims, addressed ourselves to the task. We will remember tins, gentlemen, as wo see our coira* | try and our institutions passing from us' and from oar posterity forever; for both I must go together. Disrobed of her in-1 solutions, this is no longer our country; wo are then but aliens to our own inhori-! tance —strangers in these very homes of' our fathers. Of what profit is it to any maa*if he should prevail' in the lUllo| schemes he tflay have for himself, or any h- may entertain in regard to the presidential canvass—of what importance are his hopes of being again returned to Congress or that somo favorite shall be President, and will then help him to other places of power—what are all these mere individual hopes, these miserable selfish aims of personal ambition, without a country? What are you to be, gentlemen, when your halls of legislation shall be silent, your high places deserted, your temples made desolate, your fires of sacrifice extinguished, your altars overturned and. broken in pieces? What will the proud-1 cst priesthood you can now win be worth to you then? Those are serious questions, and it behoves us io consider them in all soberness.

Fillmore, and the Frees.

Political Items.

ate then which ponrcd oil upon the troubled waters, and calmed the riling storm -with which ruthless agitators then sought as they now seek, to overwhelm both sea and land. ILriio. gentlemen will only coma up to the work in this Hall, 1 will repeat the words of cheering and of comfort which have revived the desponding heart in past times; "Look to the Senate:” and 1 shall do so in a strong and trusting confidence that wo will not look, there in vain.

®1)E Peefelg He&eUIe.

.TIiofoHo wing incident occurred at Maysvillo some day* since:

If the influence of the public press is any sign of success, Millard Fillmore will surely be the next President. Every day wc see notices of new papers starting, and old ones coming over. In looking over our exchanges one moraine this week wc found the following new Fillmore papers: Evening Ledger, Boston, Mass. ItegUter, Ann Harbor, Michigan. r Gazette, Utica, New York. . Sentinel, Harrisburg, Penn. Gazette, Trenton, New Jersey. Standard, Salem, New Jersey. The Franklin (La.) Banner has struck the “democratic’’ flag, and'hoisteu the names of Fillmore and Donelson. The Thibodnux Minerva, in the same State, formerly o Pierce paper, has done the same thing. The Courier of the Toche, a Whig paper, published at St. Martinsville, same State, has put up the Fillmore and Donelson banner. ' Mr. Gannway, editor of the Biownsrille (Term.) Journal, has abandoned the Democratic parly and declared bis adhesion to Fillmore and Donelson. The Sing Sing (N. Y.) Chronicle of last week hoisted the names of Fillmore and Donelson, and heartily enlists under the American banner. ’ ■ • ? The "Hliocc Island Telegraph," published at Warren; has taken the field for the Union candidates—Fillmore and Donelson. .The “Central Georgian," published at Sanders vi lie, Georgia, heretofore neutral, has la ken a decided stand for Fillmore, Donelson, and the Union, A new Fillmore and .Donelson paper is to be started in Louisville, Ky.

The Rushville He publican tints pitches into tbo Old Line party of Indiana, who ; are alt at once pretending to bo’vory strong (Fillmore men: { , Wc need not say to Fillmore men. l»- : ware of the snares of the tempter! These ’ very men who arc now courting yon shameIcssly acknowledge that they assumed (lie I Free Soil ground in 1840 to buy op the | Abolitionists! Do you believe that they i are less* hostile to you than they were last - year when they* denoimced you as "raur- ’ dcreni,” "midnight assassins," “enemies to your, country,” “rioters, rat with the blood of innocent victims," (fee? They say they neededthe abolition vote In 1840, and got it by bidding for it it! They need votes now worse than they ever did, and they will bid higher for them. They aim desperate and nnprincipnllcd. They are witling to get nd of their uniform position on tiro subject of slavery extension prior to 1854, tu acknowledge that they wcrcdishoncstall their lives prior to IS54! Von cannot mist them. Their words may be pleasant, but like the fruits of the Dead Sea they wilt tarn to ashes upon your lipa—"sweet to the taste but bitter to the belly." Old Hneism, ns led by the Niilljficrs of the South and the Doughfaces of the North, is the common enemy of thttwbiie rarc, and of the liabilities of the country. It is the champion of a government by the few, by an oligarchy which makes War alike on (ho free laboring man of the North and the South, whether native or foreign born; It treats them as vassal!*, who ought not to bo allowed to think and act for themselves, and. whose labor ought to be reduced in value to the standard common out lire world. It is seeking.to wrest the territories from the hands of the white laborer and givd them to tbo slave oligarchy. It is supremely selfish. It cares for no one’s interests but those of its lenders amt a few, nabobs. It ignores the intercuts of the working classes, and says it must have slaves black or white, that democracy cannot get along without them! Old - Ithcisih. is the common enemy of a pure’governmentand the promoter of ox--travagnnt expenditures, and fat pickings to its leaders.

Vevay, Wednesday, August 13, 1856.

On Saturday evening, llio Glh nil, a storm.of wind accompanied by rain camo up suddenly, while (ho splendid ensign of the Maysvillc Americans was streaming from its one-bund red-and-thirty-five fool standard. The first burst of thipdorficcmed to'summon a score of tried and true friends of Fillmore and Dotielson to the rescue.' Such, however, was the tension of the flag ropo that all efforts to lower it were for the time unavailing. A Fillmore Whig passing by remarked, “Let it alone —that’s the flag fora storm. It signallcd the safety of tho Ship of State during the storm of 1S50 to the friends of tho Union, Let it float! Lot it float!" Wo did let it float, Tho storm subsided.— Our bright colors-lowered by patriotic hands for tho nigut, were given to tho wipds of the ‘morning, "with not a star erased, nor a stripe polluted.” ■ - ■ Fiixmorb' in 1 New friend, who'has just relumed-from traveling in New York, and whoso opportunities for ascertaining the state of the pAUic were of tho very, best description, informs ofl that everywhere the friends of Fillmore are largely in tho ascendency. Tho relative proportions os between tho candidates are ns seventy-five to twenty between Fillmore and Buchanan, and seventy-five to sixty as between Fillmore and Fremont, Ilii founi.it to bo universally conceited that Fillmore would certainly carry, tho Slate of New York by an overwhelming majority over cither bf his competitors. Ah fpr.Uuchnnan, no one thought ho had tho slightest chance, and tho' only contest of' any interest is expected to he between Filin ore, supported by Americans, Silver Greys, and conservative Democrats, and Fremont, sustained by Abolitionists anil Freesoilors. —American Democrat, Doxiiuon* os FimiotiK.—Mr. A. .1. Doriflson, in a 101101’ in response to tho proceedings of tho Ajmorican Stale Convention of Georgifl. Wiys: *T once did gidat injustice to this eminent patriot andstaiesman, (Mr. Fillmore) by holditig him responsible for ..what 1 considered an attempt torn i ergo the Whig parly of the North into a sectional oppoposition to the Soijfh; hut when I saw him. rise superior to aui'li local prejudices, and ; ' prcfc.riho'dntcrpsti of. tho. whole country to that. ..of tho‘section in Which .he happened Jo" be horn, I made all amends in my jidwer to offer, a id declared publicly; long before 1 knew of thoexistcnce of tho American party, tLat hi-ought to he called again, by the'united voice-'of tho pcopltMo the chair of thp Chief Magistracy.*’

The chaiiman of the Committee .of Ways and Means [Mr. Campubli] has told ns we must remain here until the appropriation hills are passed. Sir, I have 1 intimated heretofore, and now deliberately repeat, that, until somo measure shall be passed into a law which will, to my mind, give assurance .of a 'just and permanent settlement of these troubles io Kansas, no appropriation willmver pass this . House by my vote. X will not grant one dollar to maintain and advance the movements (if the Government in a course which promises nothing but universal ruin. 1 will give no support and no countenance in any way to such a deplorable state of affaire as wo are now in the midst of; ranch less will I give means ft ill-further to advance and aggravate this condition of things, I speak for myself alone, and without reserve or hesitancy. !' would cut off the supplies and stop the tvhcels of Govern ment, rather than let jl'tf ovoan inch further in its present mostilldircctcd and perilous course. If those who : control that coarse are -refractory—if they will not heed the clear and distinct-utter-ances of an overwhelming public sentiment, justly aroused to indignation against a great wrong—if. the dangers that threaten us will not worn or check them, 1 would cut ojf the sinews of poicerand thus compel submission to on overwhelming public necessity. [Cries of . "Good!" "That is hi" "That is *1 io doctrine!"] I would promptly and slernly meet the’eon* sequences of such a course, wbntevqrithey might be. It is a remedy attowahlo’uudcr our institutions. It is; not .revolutionary or violent, bat lawful, peaceful, (jniet,' and effective. It is a means of certain redress against the abuse of power and attempted nsurprions, without tho terrible resort of revolution. It was intended, to save ns from all necessity, or pretense of necessity, for revolutionary resorts.. It is essentially tho great, tho very greatest conservative principle in onr Government; not to be recklessly resorted to, brtipdn slight or trivial occasions, but only in times and emergencies 6f high and perilous concern. It is tho potent lever of our Constitution to crash out usnrption, and force nil in authority to observe the fundamental law of'our Government, which is, "regard tho public will when properly dcclnrcil”—for that is the corner stone of onr institutions. That is plainly and distinctly my opinion of what is right and proper in the present emergency. Gentlemen all know that there arc bands of lawless men, desperate in character and in fortune, hovering about these Territo-ries,-and, clsetvherc in waiting, on both sides of this controversy, anxiously watching the adjournment of Congress without action which' will restrain their profligacy that they may rush again to the conflict. They stand like madmen, with flaming torches, at the sidc’of a magazine, which any moment they inay ignite, and produce a general explosion. If this is done, does not every one see. that the good' and tho bad must be .involved together id all the consequences ‘ that follow? Docs not every ono see that the flame, pnee fairly kindled, must, in the nature of; things, spread and run along all the Hues of those confederate States, until onr whole horizon is lit np with sncli a blaze of civil war that all the waters of the two oteans that wash onr shores could not extinguish it? Are gentlemen willing that tho batch shall bo applied? ' Will yon adjonru 5 and leave tbe least danger of suchan occurrence, if you can possibly prevent it?. If yon will, for what earthly reason? Is it possible that you can Ho influenced by the hope that continued agitation, and all these dangers, may perhaps, in somo way advance the interest of yonr candidate for the Presidency? , My judgment would he that you ought to have quite. as much to fear as to hope for; oven With that aim. If men would control their passions long enough to reflect, you would have far more to fear than to hope from such a continuance of onr.; condition. Of that, however, you - will judge for yourselves’. Until recently I have been in doubt What is best to be done in regard to this pros!dcntial'canvass, which, unfortunately, is too apt to control tho course of our national legislation. What with objectionable candidates, or objectionable positions of candidates, resulting, as I think, by tbe too precollate action of tbeir friends, 1 have been somewhat perplexed as to my course,of duty; bull have now settled that question for tbc government of my own conduct Other gentlemen have done the same thing. I make no controversy with them on that subject hero; Imt 1 do object that such choices shall have any control in.our action ns members of this House, on subjects closely connected with the very safety of the Republic. Mr. LANE,'. Will my friend from Indiana inform roe whom ho intends supporting for tho Presidency? ( Mr. DUNN. If-it is in any way useful to anybody, or will at all contribute to the satisfaction of the gentleman from Oregon, to know what so humble an individual as tnyself may do on that subject I have no difficulty in giving tho information asked; and I* tell my triend fully and freely that in no contingency will I support Mr, Buchanan —neitbor.will I in any event vote for Mr. Fremont. Tho only man spoken of m connection with that high and responsible office now, that I consider at all safe to be trusted with our interests, is one who has given-ample and reliable pledges in his past public service of bis wisdom, fortitude, and patriotism—of his eminent executive ability and his personal integrity. And while I am free to admit tfastthero are some things connected with his present position that I wish were otherwise—still, regarding him as altogether preeminent in every quality

NATIONAL AMEUICAN TICKET.

For Prri.lilrtit t •M I LLA11D !•' I I. LM OH K, OF NEW-VOBK.

For Yke Prealrtent t A X D U li W J. D O X E1. S C > X, or tf-VSKSSee,

THE CAMPAIGN.

\ la order to place the Reveille within the reach of all during (he great political cam-, paign of the present year, we have determined to furnish it from now- until the Presidential election for TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, in advance; FOUR COPIES FOR Oar. Bollab. By a little exertion on the part of otir friends, a large club maybe raised in every neighborhood in the county. j ■

XT Every Joy the evidence accumulates that the Humiliation of Fremont was secretly* and craftily bronchi about by (be inllnt-tice of (lie (toman Catholic element in this country. )t | has been clearly proved that he is now, or has jbeen until very recently, a Roman Catholic in 'full standing. This charge stands before the -country'undented by Fremont* although he has been called upon time epon time to deny or disprove Ih? charge, lie cannot do it—the proof against him on this point is positive and cannotbVexplained away. . We see by the Eastern papers that Arch* bishop Hughes is in favor of Fremont; and also' we now see it slated (hat the “American Cell," the leading Irish Catholic paper in this country,* l*as-come out against the Democratic candidates, and ini favor of Prcmoct. When the Irish Catholics go against Ihe Democracy, it is high.time Protestants should be on their gVard. J list l.liittk of it—the President.of the Uhiicd Slates owing temporal and spiritual allegiance to the Pope of Rome!;

; Secret Electioneering.

The following is a cony of n document received by a prominent Democrat of Vevay not tong since. JIc sent the Senator a lust of names, and he has already sent them a document in defence of the border tufliaus in the Territory of Kansas:

Washington- Cm*, July 7; ’56. Mr. ; —: Dear' Sin:— You will ploaso, furnish Senator 1!right with the following information, at ymreitrUesl convenience.

1. Give rite a list of all the Germans in your townriiip; and as many of them else where throughout the county as you. can.

'2. Give a list of all the Old Lino AYIiiga you know, ami the moderate Kriow Nothings and Black llepublicans, wifo, hy judicious treatment, might be.induced to* vote - the Democratic., ticket.— Also a list of the Fillmore Know Nothings. /*'’vU.-v/.;--,— '■■■■/■ • 3. ; - . Give a list of Democrats who loft us in 1854,;now disposed to return to us; and the names of such 'Democrats who have left uk since 1854, or are now considered douUfal or icaveriug. : * Your proinpt atlcntion.to this matter is .urgently ami corrcc/fytlcMrcJ. We have a fresh lot of new speeches on. hand at 81 per hundred;,: * ' . * * ’ K. S. SPBOULE. Sec.

Fillmore’s Prospects in Pennsylvania. From all parts of the interior of this Stale, says the Philadelphia News, the intelligence is of the mot.tcliccring anJ gratifying character. Our march, is mow onward/ . Confidence has taken (lie place of douhtj and from one cnd.of the State to the other, them has been aroused a feeling thatymust lead . to .vietoiy/;-'Planting themselves on Protestant American Na> tipdality, the Americans arc moving forward, in a body, nnimalod hy a common regard for the Union and American institutions, and determined to repel the insidious attempt that is being made hy tho Dl’chasax arid FhBMOST parlies to obtain pos^ion-of.the Government, by the pf the lrish Cuiholic and Bed Republican foreign, vote/ ' In noticing the powerful reaction thus going on, ' lito Beading Journal truly remarks as follows;

The 12th Section cf the Platform.

Some of Hie Freni on tiles' arc very bitter in their denunciation of the Platform adopted by the National Coiinctl—(he Cojjveniioa wljicii nominated: Mri-Pilliriore made no platform—and some of (hem go so fora's to slate that the “twelfth*section? endorses ihe outrages committed in Kansas, ami all thatsort of thing. The following is the section s' / / I2lh/Thema mien once and'enforcement of all Ia~* CONSTITUTI ON A L L Y ' enacted, until said laws shall be repealed, or. shall be declared null an J void b) competent judicial authority. -

Hon- Edward Everett, Hon. Edivant BiUc.v of Mo. r Hoii. AV. C. Rives, of Virginia,. Hon, A\>hington Hunt, of NowVotk—men who Have filled some of the highest p.o.>iilons in the councils of carnation have, within n dimt time taken their places by (lie side of Badger, arid Graham, and Marsh jll.nim Granger, and Bell, and a host of ptlicra, of the ablest, noblest,, and pure*! of our • Amor icon Statesmen, in jmliljtly , enrolling theiitselves active voImilcbVs under the banner of-Millard Fillnioio] ' . .

: TIie'abovo section will be subscribed‘to by every good citizen of the United States—and disunionisly are welcome to all the capital they,can niahe out of it, if they do not garble it, and thus mislead those who are not informed] on Hie subject.'.

IX We condemn the outrages committed in Kansas—Mr. Fillmore coadem* I hem, and every Union-loving man at Hie North arid,Sou lb condcms them. These arc hbrribleMains upon, the Administration of Gen. Pierce, which time will never obliterate. Every fliend to the Constitution, to the laws of our-Republic, to peacearid order, is naturally opposed to the enormities lately perpetrated in Kansas Territory.— It is because we arc opposed to Hie actions of the present corrupt adminislraiton, that'we so earnestly support Mr. Fillmore. -Every man whd sincerely wishes to prevent a repetition of the present administration, should rote for Millard Fillmore/ Those in favor Of old line misrule will vole for Buchanan, or what will probably amount to the same thing, throw their votes away on Fremont, -

' ‘ThdFrcmbnt papers art laboring bard to get up: the impression llmt Fillmore has ‘no show' in 'Pennsylvania and other of tlio Northern States compared , with their candidate.—This is very far from the truth. Fillmore is even now liy odds the must popular.candidate in the Held, North and South, and. appearances indicate that his popularity is vastly on tho increase; Ttie cntire conservarivc vote of the country, embracing the Very hone and sinew of tho nation, will undduhteJlybc cost in his favor; nor will, so firas we can sec, any* feeling of policy or expediency induce his friends to sworyc from his support *’

Connecticut.-^—V o nrc happy to lo able to state, that tlio America hr and Whig# of .CuimcL’tuiit will ■ assemble in New Haven, Sep. 3, to nominate a lid of Klcctore.-- Depend ijpun it, Connection! will never, can hover, cast ber electoral votes for Ecciionalistli, but will bo found limt ami foremost in the coming battle for Fillptbro and thb Union. ; llic ‘ Heading Journal, I’a, trnlbfully says:. "UUguiso it as the politicians may, Mr; Fillmore lias stronger hold upon the masses than any oilier candidate in the field, ■tlio people know liim—lrnst in him, and will vote for him when the lime comes, despite the efforts of agitators and sectionalists, either in llieNorlhor South,* 1 •

State Campaign Paper.

TliC; Stale Central* Committee of the Fillmore party in Indiana have established a Campaign paper, of a large siri, to advocate the . election of Fillmore and Donelson, from ijow until the election,; The name of the paper is the “American Campaigner/-* aiid.is published simultaneously at Indianapolis otid New Albany, under the supervision of the. Central Committee. .Milton Gregg, Ksq-.is the Editor. It is furnished at the following low rate; Sin•glc copy, 50 cents; Clubs under 20, 30 cents; Clubs of 20 and’upwards, 20 cents.. Clubs to be to one address.' Address 'A. H. Davidson; Indianapolis, or M. Gregg tj Sons, New Albany. - - ■, ■

GRAND RAliLY AT MOOREFIELD.

There will.be a Mass Meeting of the friends of tic Union and the Constitution,.at Mootcfietd, Switzerland. county, Indiana, on,'

Colonel Fr emont’o Religion.

Tho Troy Whig has tho following item: ’ "Colonel R——, of •Missouri, laic collector of Monterey, a gentleman of the highest character and an intimate friend of Henry Clay, slept for eight months nni'dor tlio same blanket with'Colonel' Fro* . raonV in California, and on being asked whether he was a Horn an Catholic, rcpli- ; cd, ‘docs, any one doubt it? If they do, / ' am ready to prove, it. .1 did. not suppose . there .was any doubt on the subject. Fre-. jmont is not only a Roman Catholic, hut i a most bigoted one/ If this statement , should he dented, we are ready to substanj Uale it with affidavits from tho party. If I Protestants persist in casting their, suffrages for a Roman Catholic President, wo 1 ; are determined they shall do it with their jeyes-open/' •. | If, by Col. R. the Troy Whig means , Col. Russel, of Missouri, who ms collect- | or at Monterey, California, we hare only {to nojman who knows him will I dispute : anything which; he may assert, - and certainly if a man 1 can know the religions opinions of Col. Fremont, the man . who was his camp companionfor eight jinbntbsjmtjst know them. .. . .■ Two months ago nobody horej os far as 1 we know, doubled that Col.;Fremont was i a Catholic, nor ore wo aware that any one I hero doubts it now, but there an many Jhere now who are mum on the subject I when interrogated. .We suppose they are obeying orders.— Washington Organ. ,

CO* M*e hope a large Club wilt' be raised nt every post-office to Switzerland county-;-and sent to ua immediately, and we. will forward the same to the publishers.

Tlinrsda}*, ’’Angus! 31, 1800.

• The entlmsiosm for. Fillmore in Georgia is daily increasing, j. In Ahgnsla, Fillmore and DoncIsonCIiibsaro being fortiicd in each Ward. Urns if is llial flt the* North mid in the Sopth, at the East amL in the West, the people arc rising ip their might for the titan for the times.

A Fillmore'and. Donelson pole, 200 fecl.in length, will be raised. Able speakers will be present to Address the meeting. ; ' (TT The pcdple, far and near, are invited to attend, and devote one day to the cause of our beloved country;- Let the. friends of the flag that beats 3L stars, tally to the contest; and leach the men .who carry .a flog with only 16 stars,-that they are enemies to the American Union, v

The .Work Progresses;

From oU pails 'or imliana tiiJings come to us that the Fillmore men arc arousing themselves loth e.import a uce of the present’ contest, and are organizing 'Clubs ohdtnaking all the necessary arrangement*forcarryingon the campaign. .Tenor boa' already taken* possession of ouropponehU; and: they will see ere long the band-writing on the wall, . A large meeting was;.held in Rushville a (cw dojs ago, at which time a Fillmore and DonelsonClub was formed,

A correspondent of the New York Daily. Times says largo numbers of- the IWbanau men are going over lb the support of Fillpiorc. New York is not tho only State in which they are doing tho something. . In an election which has just transpired in South Mississippi for Circuit Judge, the Democratic majority in that Judicial District was cut down from 1,000 to 23! Tho friends of Fillmore and Donclson intend holding , a meeting in Knoxville, Ten’n., commencing on the dtbof September, and. to Jafit; three days. *.!;

nyA vote was taken in a railroad car, out West, recently iii the following manner; A llochonier arose from bis set and called, on all wete : in ‘ favor of Fremont to “pull off their bools/* No onc appeanng to support, irt this novel manner, the claims of, Ihp; great Path-, finder, he requested those: favorable to Buc* hanan to “keep their boots on/* which all the passengers did.-Unanimous for Buchanan t

A* rousing meeting waa held nt Madison, the: hot-bed of “Republican'*, fanaticism, on Monday night, for the purpose of forming a Fillmore Club. Gen. Milton Stapp was. advertised to address the meeting..

HX A Fiilmoro and Donelson Club 'was organized in lids place.ipn Thursday night !?*{. The Club is already, large, and new'members are added daily. They meet every Thursday night. All those in favor of the election of Fill mote and Donelson are invited to attend.

A few days ago a merchant in 8t. Louis mode a.beavybct that Fillmore would get electoral votes of sixteen States. •

Fillmore In Pennsylvania.

A large and enthusiastic Convention of the friends of Fillmore and Donetson met at Harrisburg, on Thursday last. The Convention rejected the dishonest proposal of the fremontiles to form a fusion electoral ticket while supporting different men for the Presidency.— They formed a full, electoral ticket, putting at its head, as Scnatoiial electors, the well* known names of Joseph R. Ingersoll and Andrew Stewart.' The defeat of the Fre* moot era in this matter of a fusion electoral ticket, is to them a staggering blow, as it ren* ders the election of the “Woolly Horse’* utterly impossible.

Who is Ahead?— There aro American electoral tickets, straight out Fillmore and Doriclson electoral tickets, in Massachn* setts, Rhodo Island, Connecticut; Now Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Mary* land, Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky,’ Illinois, Mississipi, North Oarolinia, Tennessee, Arkansas, Georgia, Alabama, Missouri, Louisiana, Texas, Florida, arid California, —in all ■nvEstv'i-FouR States.

07 We stale, for the information of advettisera, that the Hevejllk has now, and has had for over two years, a muci larger circulation in Switzerland ceunty, than any paper ever published in Vevay, This is a fact, reports to the contrary notwithstanding.

O’The “College Venture," a rabid Fremont sheet, published at Hudson, Ohio, has ceased to exist. Cause—rapid rise of Fillmore slock in that region. So they go.

The Abolition Parly.

The following twin resolutions wero without a dissenting voice, adopted by the Democrats in their Convention the year 1849, at Indianapolis: Itesolved, That tho institution of Slavery ought not to bo introduced into territory whero it does not exist

As yet the Buchanan and Breckcnridgo parly have an electoral ticket in not half this number of Slates. In many tho Northern States, it is confidently believ* cd, there will bo no Buchanan electoral ticket. Mr. Buchanan is evidently not in the race, Fvcry week, every day, ovary hour, ho is falling behind, and in Novem* bor will scarcely bo mentioned at tho polls.— Lou, Jour.

[17 At a barn raising on Friday lost, ol Stephen H. Rogers’s, in Craig lownship, Switzerland county, Ind., a vote for President was taken, at the suggestion of a Huchanan man,, with the following result: Fillmore, Dubhanan, 6; Fremont, 3; undecided, 3. The Fremoniles were from Jefferson county.

“Ono by one they loiter and they fall.’’

g7 We are indebted to our old friend, Sir. Thomas Wright, of Craig township, for a basket full of fine apples ond green corn. We return him our thanks.

Jt5TOno of the , Republican writers from Lawrence, Kansas, to tho Now V ork Times, says to tho editor; "You must keep up this Kansas excitement, It is the only element of success for tho Republican party in the coming Presidential election."

Jierolved, That, inasmuch ns New Mexico and California arc in fact and in law free territories, it is the duly of Congress to prevent the introduction of Slavery within their limits.

CT We are informed that our friend Robert Hatton is a strong Fillmore man, and opposed to all sectional parties. Any reports to the contrary ate incorrect.

gj* We have received a note from the “Democratic Central Committee” of Vevay, in which they state that they had nothing to do wt;h announcing Messrs. Real and Gillespie as candidates for the Legislature.

AmncoLTt’tuL Faih. —Tho Switzerland and Ohio Agricultural Fair will bo held in Rising Sun on tho 24th, 25th and 2Glh days of Bcptmbcr,

07 Captain John Gibson, one of the pioneers of Clarke county, Ind., died at Charles’ton, ou the 30th of July, aged 70 years.

Tub New Cent, —Tho director of tbe Mint proposes that tho now cedi shall be eighty-eight parts copper and twelve parts nickel. This will make a coin of a dark reddish color. It is to weigh seventy-two grains, less than half tho present cent, which is one hundred ima sixty-eight grains."

B7 We are indebted to Hon. Geo. G, Dunn for public documents; and also, for a package of seed from the Patent Office, for distribution'.

07 We publish this week the speech of our Representative in Congresss in regard to bis bill for organizing Kansas and restoring the Missouri Compromise. Let none of our leaders neglect to give it a careful perusal.

(£r More than two millions of people have left Ireland in the last fourteen years.

JCS?' The VVabash. OaztUt, ■ a strong Fremont paper, published in tho.(own of Wabash, in this Stalo, has boon "dried up” fur want of support.

(17 North Carolina has gone Democratic os usual. Local issues of Stale policy were the paramount questions in the election.

(17 Particular attention is directed to our new advertisements (bis week.

A Picture of the Democracy.