Erie observer. (Erie, Pa.) 1830-1853, September 30, 1848, Image 2

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    illigtellann, politics anb News
TRIBUTES TO GENERAL CASS BY HIS OP-
PONENTS.
In the public positions which Gen. Pus has been
called to fill, he has won the esteem arid approbation
of his countrymen of all parties. • We are aware
that when a Statesman becomes a candidate fur the
Presidency, it is regarded by some as a matter of
politiCal duty, end often becomes a Matter of feeling,
to assault and decry him; but it is impossible to re
call the strong expressions of confidence, and the
admission to his talents, industry and patriotism;
made by the same•partizans, at a period and under
circumstances which evince their sincerity. They
may be offered as so many just tributes to his ac
knowledged worth and capacity, by his political op- , .
portents, and as a ready answer to any attempted
disparagement of his charaCter and talents, from
those or any other quarters. .
The following extracts from Whig and allied pa
pers, when General Cass was called :to General
Jackson's Cabinet, show the estimation in which,
he was held by political oppouents:—Albany .Irgus.
From the. N.Y. Evening Post. July 13,1831.
"The New Cabinet.—Evan our bitterest adversa
ries feel obliged to confess that the new Cabinet,
which by the appointment of Goy. CASs to the war
department, has been completed, is excellent. Tho
National Gazette, at present ono of the most,acri
monions of the opposition papers, holds the follow
ing lang uage , which we quote, not that the opinion
of the Stational Gazette, whatever way expressed
is a mutter of the slightest moment; but that our
readers may be ableto revert to it on some future
occasion, when that paper shall have added another
to the number of political sornersets which it per
forms with all the facility of a practised tumbler."
from the National ida:eue, July n
, •The second Cabinet is completed. The materi
als are good. Gov. Cass, just announced as Secre
tary of AVar, is a man of education, talents and in
dustry; He has been for many years conversant
with the subjects which belong chiefly to the de
partment of War. We may presume that all the
details of the public business in the four depart
ments will be adequately euted."
from the New l'o, k American.
4, «'e rend with great sn!tisfaction thd, annexed
notice of the appointment of Gov. CASs.: lie is a
soldier, a scholar, and a gentleman. • We know not
any one point, save ¢n his view of Indian rights, that
we could wish him @ther than he is."
J,..- • -
•
CO7llllicreial .eldrertier,
Froin, the, N. i
"GOB. Cass is a native of Exeter, New Hampshire
and was appointed Governor, of Michigan by Presi
dent Madison, on the relinquishment of that office
by General hull. His thorough acquaintance with
the manners, customs and traditions of the Indian
Tribes, with whom his situation has led him into of
ficial and personal intercourse; is widely
He is also distinguished for his great general ac
quirements, clear, philosoph:c and capacious intel
lect, and fine original style composition.
BIG SHOTS FIiONI A BIG GUN!
No man bits federalism liarder than lion. B. F.
lista.Err, and no man more clearly and satisfac
torily - shows up the gross inconsistencies, their con
temptible tergiversations, and their Utter reckless
ness of principle. The foll Owing hard hits are from
his speech at Syracuse, N.!Y.,•and are but a sam
ple of the way in which he "puts the licks into
them" in all his speeches;
In short, the o:ily rule upon which an honest
Whig can support Gen. Taylor, is the rule of con
tradiction. They must :construe. their candidate,
as we are told, to interpret bad dreams, by oppo - -
sites.
They claim to be Whigs,'and they support Gen.
Taylor because he is not an ultra Whig„ that is,
not enough of a Whig to hurt him. So the less
Whiggery-be has, the better ho is for the Whigs.
They profess to be opposed to slavery and its ex
tension into new territories; and they support Gen.
Taylor because he owns two hundred slaves, and
will not be very likely to go the Wilmot Pro
viso if it will deprive him of a market for his
slaves.
They are opposed to the land indemnity from
Mexico, and go for Taylor because ho was in favor
of taking seven of her provinces, up to the lino of
the Sierra Madre! [See his letter to Gen. Gaines.) .
' They denounce the Mexican war as "a God ab
horred war," and all engaged in it as partakers in
the crime; and they support Taylor because he
InfietioMinssatylustireft Tnngtirrii - cmft. \bar. --
• They are the friends of peace and afraid of an
other war if Gen. Cass is elected, who has been a
friend of peace for thirty odd years, and therefore
they go for Taylor, becau S e he has been like Go
halt, of Gath, "a man of war from his youth up!"
They insist upon, having a Northern candidate to
humble the Smith, and are opposed to a " Northern
man with Southern principles;" and therefore they
take a Southern man with,no principles at all.
They are desperately bent upon having "free soil
and free men;" and therefore they want to elect a
President who has stocked all the soil he owns with
slaves.
. _ •
They firmly believe that the salvation of the coun
try depends upon the Whig party, and therefore
they went n President who is no party ,mtn; who
will have no opinion of his own, but wilrbe Whig
if Congress is Whig; Democratic if Congress is
Democratic; Abolitionsts if Congress is Abolition.
Native American if Congress is Native Ameri
can; and neither one thing nor the other, if the
Senate and House of Representatives happen to be
divided.
In short, u - sort of chameleon President, who is
to take the hue and the color of the Congress he
happens to light upon. .
TREATY WITII THE PAWNR , P.S.-4 correspondent
of the St. Louis Republican, writing from Fort
Charles, on the Platte river; under date of the '22d
tilt.,.inentions tilt a treaty bad both] concluded by
Lt. Col. L. E. row0)1, the commanding officer at
that post, with the'fiftr confederated hoods of Paw
nee Indians, under an order from the War Depart
ment oppropriatiog qie2ooo for theporchase of a site
for a military post al that point. The land pnrchns
rd
l , ythe trpaty embraced the -whole of Grand Is
lend, wen° sixty mike in extent, and is invalonlA
to thi, im.t, from the fact that it contains much the
larzamt proportion of valunbte timber to be (wind
nny where on the Platte river. The extent of ter-
ritory purchased is about 609' square miles. •
, The Pawnees have been ter n greater part of the
ustimmer out upon their Buffalo hunt. 0n their re
turn to their village, they Stopped at this post to
recoive the goods lately purehased fohliem as con
templated in the treaty, by j Captain'Stewert Van
flier, of the quartermaster Department, at St.
Loris.. •
They seemed highly delighted with the bargain
they had - made with - Uncle Sam, as they were in o
%cry destitute condition, and needed the articles pur
• chased for them-;-the blankets to comer their naked
ness, and the ammunition-end guns
.to protect them
against their enemies. The portion of the $3OOO
en:inning after the purchase of the articles bargain
ed for, was expended ill pritiring- presents suitable
to ;their -tastes and fancy .) The' were distributed
ns reward for virtuous tu i tion and good conduct
towards the whites among the different chiefs, while
at the same time,those,who heretofore had been guil
ty of committing :trespass and had not s ustai n ed
• a good character, were'notonly slighted, but receiv
ed severe reprimands from the.commanding officer,
us well as threats of summ4 ry and severe punish
ments against any that mig be found hereafter ot
!ending. •
TRAINS FOIL SANTA FR Atf) CHIHUAHUA.—A gen
tleman who arrived at St. , L ouis a few days since,
informs the " Republican " that on his way in from
New Mexico lie met 'over One thousand wagons in
'different trains, bound for iSanta ,Pe,,EI Paso, and
Chthauhau. Nearly four hundred lAtiOnged to gov
ernment, and ,were laden supplies for 'troops,
in that region; the balance t.. 0 traders, and were till
ed with merchandise for the difre . rent - points named:
But a few dots before the gentleman left•Chitiahua,
a train of two !Modred andllifty arrived from the
States, and a large train, bound out, was not met in
'consequence of its having taken the. Bent's Fort
route. The past is paid toile'e been u very profit-.
nlile season.. A large amount of goods has been ta
ken into the country and sold at high prices; liut it
is thought that the increase in numbers, and the un
usual quantity uffinerchandise now On the way
thither, -u ill make it to those last hi, something of a
hhhardous speculation.
W. F. JOHNSTON AND THE BANKS:
. From the Pennsylvanian.
His Accidency, Governor Johnston, has just pass
ed through a region of county which has been sad
ly punished for its confidence in the good faith of
dishonest banks. He began his electioneering jour
ney in this 'city, where thousands have been made
poor by these corporations. He passed on/ to Read
ing, the scene of the Berks county Bank / imposture
—an institution which enjoyed the facilities extend
ed to fraud by his Relief bill. From Reading hp
went to Allentown, where the Lehigh County Ban'
existed, in the explosion of which, so many upright
and hard-working men were plundered and prostra
ted. From Lehigh he passed - to Easton, the scene
of still another Bank - failure, almost without a par
diet in the entire history of fraud. These institu
tions, in the circle of their operations, did not die
pense their blessings over a limited surface. The
poison of their example and their policy reached to
other counties traversed by his accidency, and we
have no doubt more than one of his hearers in Bucks
i -, ,
and Mont ornery, and in the counties beyond North
ampton, an testify tope fact that it is not always
proper to place your trust in Banks. We presume
Governor Johnston will extend his tour to Bradford
county— 1 only to convince the free .oilers there of
the propr ety of voting for a man who can advocate
he Wil of Proviso and General Taylor at the same
time. B adford was also the theatre of a rotten
Bank ex lesion. Going to Milling county, where
the 'Lewi town Bank gavelup the ghost, he may say
with trut i that he has travelled over a portion of the
State wh)cli has been highly honored by the system
of eorpo l ate powers of which be has always been
the friends and champion.
As peOt Harty appropriate to the present campaign,
we this morning publish the great veto of the la
mented 'hunk, of ilia 7th of April last, upon sever
al Bank p ills presented to him for his signature.—
The cog ncy of its easons—thetmoderation of.its re
quests—the jostle of the reforms which it suggests
—are such as the' judgemeut of the people of the
whole 14nion would approve, even if they had nut,
unhappily, a sad experience which make these views
such as defy equally denial and assault. No feature
of the administration of Francis R. Shenk was
more tic eptable to the people of all parties, than
hii oast crying hostility to the system of irresponiii
ble corp irations, and his resolute support of all just
reforms in the existing banking system.. When he
came fo ward for re=election last October, many in-,
telligen and honest Whigs abandoned party line to
tote for him. What wore then recent examples of
Bankin dishonesty endeared him still more to the
popular heart, and gave to his sentiments, long be-.
fore ex ressed, an air of profound and practical wis.:
dom, if not of prophecy_ itself.
If Ju ge Lougstreth, the Democratic candidate
for Govtruehas avowed himiell to be the bold and
resolut friend of the Shut* policy, so has William
1 6
F. Join ston, the Federal candidate, by his public
•cunduc , declared himself to be its •opponent—its
bitter and malignant foe! We now have before us
the Journal of the last State Senate, of which Gov
ernor Johnston was a member. As this journal i f
the Bth of April last, page 743, will show, William
F. Johnstomnot only ,voted against the admirable
doctrines„of the veto Which we print to-day, by vo
ting that the bills to which it objected, should pass
by the constitutional majority of two-thirds, but he
also remainedlin his,seat to vote for two three or other
institutions—at least one of which was suspected
of some not very,honest practices! The reader will
find his name recorded no less than six times against
the doctrines of the admirible message which we
print this morning. See Senate journals, pages
743, 744, 745, and 746. Side by side with Johnston,
in this work, was Middleswarth, the present Feder
al candidate for Canal Commisioner, whose course
in this respect loses so much in comparison with the
bold, radical, straight forward deportment of Israel
Painter, (the Democratic candidate for the same of
lice) while he was in Legislature. The doctrine of
Governor Skunk had no more active or more resolute
friend titan Col. Painter. _
But there is in the exhibition of Gov. Johnston's
opinions new cause of• alarm, when we reflect that
thirty-seven, applications on the subject of Batiks
and Banking, have been advertised to be roade.to the
next, session of the Legislature. The amount of
capital for which corporate powers are demanded, is
the enormous sum of NINE MILLIONS, ONE
HUNDRED AND FIFTY-TWO THOUSAND,
ONE HUNDRED AND THREE DOLLARS!—
Of this immense amount, nearly TWO MILLIONS
AND A HALF are for on increase of the Banking.
capital of the State! We put it to the farmers nod
medhanics who have been plundered by the Banking
an administrAton,wttich could revive suchThstitu
tions as the Berke county, Lehigh, county, Lewis
town, Towanda,, and Schuylkill Banks, thoggh 'it
might be under other names! If they are, let them
vote for Willintri F. Johnston, whose devotion to this
plundering system, he himself has proved by his
opposition to the noble and - just Bank vetoes and ad-'
ministration of Francis.)R. Shank, as the records
will show. if the people wish the Skunk policy
kept up, let them stand by the friend and disciple of
Shenk, Morris Longstreth, the farmer of Montgom
ery., • 1
Thelveto message of Gov. Shunk, above alluded
to, wil be found on our third page. A list of the
Bankspplying for charters, with the amount of
i
capital asked fur by each, follows:
i ,
New Banks. capital.
Dauphin Batik, at Harrisburg, $200,000
Ifollidaysburg Banki• - 200,0q0
Allentown Bank, Lehigh county, . 100,000
[
Anthracite Bank, Schuylkill minty, 200,000
Bank of Danville ' 2oo,ooo
Farmers' Et Mech anics' Bank of Moritg'ry, 200,000
Armstrong Bank of Kittanning, 100,00
North Lebanon Savings institution, 75,000
Columbia Savings, at Columbia. 100,000
Somerset Savings Institute, • 50,000
Banks applying for increase of .Capital.
Bank or Penneylvania, Philadelphia, ' $512,300
Farmers' Et Mechanics' Bank Philadelphia, 500,000
Bank of Chester county, 75,000
‘Vestern Bank, Philadelphia, 166,000
Renewals of Charters.
_
Commercial Batik, Philadelphia, '.- 81,000,000
Farmers' & Mechanics' Bank, Philadelphia, 7.50,009
Bank of Northerji Liberties, Philadelpha, 500,000
Bank of Chester' county, 225,000
Dlontingaliela Bank, at Brownsville, 300,000
Lebanon lin Ilk, - 200,000
.
Ilarrisburg 13:plc, 300,0p0
Wyoming Bunk, atiVilkesbarre, 85,30
Columbia Mink and Bridge Coriipany, , 150,000
Western Bank, Philadelphia, . 400,0,00
Farmers' Bank of Bucks county, 200,0 1 00
Lancaster Bank,' • 600,000
.
Bank of Delaware county, 200,000
Franklin Bank - of Washington,, 1'20,000
Honesdale Bank, , 82,000
West Branch Bunk, at Williamsport, ', ' 100,000
York Bank, •' 238,2 . 75
,
Bank of Montgomery county, 400;000
Bank of Germantown, 150,000
Bamk of Chambersbur,, 20.5,838
Farmers' & Droi.ers' Bank, Waynesburg, 100,000
Farings Banks—ltencwals.
York Savings Bank, " •
Hanover SaVings Fund,
Lancaster Savings Institute,
MURDER IN LO.—The Buffalo Commercial
Advertiser gives the particulars of a murder com
mitted in • that city on Tuesday evening last
. by a
negro. The murdered -person was a young man
named Stephen Brush, about 19 years old. He was
in company with three others, younger than him
self, on their way from the theatre where a play-had
been performed in which one of the characters was
a negro servant. They. were passing down Seneca
street talking about tie play and the character,
when two negroes passed them and hearing the re
marks; turned round and asked what was said about
negroes. Some reply
s was given by. Brush when ho
was struck by the npgro who asked the question.—
Ile ran Rom the side wr.ra into the street purimed
by . the negro, and aftcr a short• scuffle cried out
"boys"-and fell. On examination, it was found that,
he Wei..stabbed by a 'dirk knife in five different places
in as many differentl parts of the body._ He died in
about five minnien.afterw: The two negroes, Henry
Shorter:nrid GefirgeSharp werearrested soon after.
Shorter acknoWledged that he bed: cartunitted the
murder—said that it was unpremodiatede.an impulse
of the moment, and tliat'Sharp had •nothing to do
with it farther thin that he was in his company.
In t4e old army orders, Gen. Taylor's name ap
pears as ‘i Zuchetriali"—he has Written it" Zack
urn'' of late years.. Why is IWO
THE WEEKLY OBSE
SATURDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 30.
Democratic Nominations.
GEN. LEWIS CASS.
~.,,;~'
~r:
t~~t~
FOR VICE PRESIDENT.
Gen. Wm, 0. Butlr,
FOR GOVERNOR, t r
Morris Longstreth,
OP MONTGOMERY.
FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER,
srael Painter,of Westmore
James Thompson, of Eri
Demo=tic County Nominations.
Assrmtvr,
JOHN S. BARNES, of Girard.
SMITH JACKSON, of Erie.
IPIKOTHO‘OTOET,
BENJAMIN GRANT, of Erie.
COMMISSIONER. •
JAMES WILSON, of Greenfield.
AUDITOR,
D. W.IIOWARD, of Wayne.
DIRECTOR OF THE POOR,
lIENRY COLT, of Waterford.
FEDERAL BLASPHENIY!
The Federal supporters of Zachary Taylor are
men—very moilest)nen! They claim "all the dec
all the "learning," all the "eloquence," all the
and all the "intelligent voters" of the country. 7
farther, and claim that their candidate assimilates
actor and fitness for the Presidential chair to the Fl
OUT country, the immortal WTSHINGTON: Such
parison ought certainly to. entitle them to everlasang disA
giiice: But they go farther still—altlritugh IVashington
was all that was pure, aid good, and great—theYhave at
different times attempted to heiehten the cotlarison,
give a brighter . tinge, to the effulgence of his character,
by likening_ him to Martin Luther and- Wesloyl - This
was to elate!' ono portion of the religious world. And
then to make it even with another persuasion;, ho is
speedily transformed so as to assimilate in character with
Pope P . us. All these parables have become tali., and
the adulation based on them no longer excites attention.
There remained only ono character, with whichl his ful
some panegyrists could crown him, and the folio;
tract from the Lancaster Trifaine, furnishes that
of political flattery, coupled with the most revolt
'thorny
"In view of the wisdom, the courage, the forth
decision of character, the self devotion. the p
tho regard for his country, and his honor, hero
tied by General Taylor, if it should be asked
records any higher instance of moral sublimity,
be answered yes—oNE AND ONLY ONlE—tha
GREAT REDEEMER, SUFFERING AN
MINIOUS DEATH TO SAVE 1115 ENEM
Have over the minions :of an autocrat trail
this impious.obsequiousneius? Human chase
picture the ;virtues of a political aspirant! •Th
on the Croat; ill the only similitude, to shadow
divine perfectiiousr We have witnessed many
to power and greatness; have heard the unctuo
of well-feigned admiration, and phrensied since+
this gross and unpardonable mockery of the de
of tho Redeemer. exceeds 'all our conception
truckling and driveling capacities of humane a
And who is this man thus pictured as being one
low the Redeemer of the world? A victorious
in a war these men have pi:onounced "God abh -
the author of the project to hunt the Seminoles t
da with blood hounds. so loudly denounced by
1810—the owner of a regiment of 080 of hi. tort
upon whose labor he has become rich, and noW
luxury. But we drop.the disgusting detail of
envies.
Av7.;il . ,ATzit - tiTe7z.3.hvg. - lorxtup - ed - nrj , to
fine style. They hold two.largo and enthusiastic meet;
ings on Saturday—oue at Girard in the afternoon and the
other at Lockport, in the evening. Judge Thoulpson and
Murray Whallon, Esq.. addressed them at both placosin
their usual happy and eloquent style. At Girard. where
weoveqo present, the Judge spoke for about two bents,.
and \ rdlowed the course, policy and positions of d the two
parties in a most masterly manner. The meeting was
an unusually largo one, and will result in a it happy
effect. Atiockhort we understand the attend nco was
much larger. and the enthusiasm greater. Tte fact is
our friends in the west end of the county aro bound to
give a good account of themselves in Octoberi-the tide
it rising, and the boast of the whip that they will defeat
our candidate for Congress, is helping to swell ho wave
and will continue to do so until a= glorious Nieto • --
our efforts in Ootaber. Push on the ball!
TILE NATIVES AND GEN. TAYLOR.TiIO F
hero would escape from the odium given to the l
lion of their "availablo" candidate by the foc i
was first nominated hy the Natives, if they c
we shall not let them. Ile is emphatically th
candidate—has accepted their nominatien— and l
ahem found him in that company, they must • •
to keep it. Just listen to the N. Y. Day Book
Cass paper:
Look at the leading names in the Native
party, and then at those in 'the early Taylor I
hero, and it will be seen that they are the earn'
was it that presided at the first Taylor meth)?
New York? Mr. George Folsom, the tool of t
laying clique, the man who rendered .himself
ous as a leader among the Native Americans, a l
the few individuals who so far !succeeded in
himself into police at the time, as to secure a
as State Senator by the aid of that:faction.
CLAYS ENDORSEMENT AT E TAYLOR.--Tho N
Express contains the folkowing letter, written b)
upon being informed of the Clay dendonstratio
York. It is put forth by that print and its, wh'
poraries as an crulorquneat of Gen. Taylor.
"‘,Asm.arm, Sept.:,
brims BROOKS, Eaq : I have given, and shall,
countenance or encouragement to env move
bring my name, tut a candidate for that oilice, ((
idency,) before the public."
• •-• • . • •
"On ono point I desire no sooresy. and that
am utterly opposed -to the use of my name. ,
date for the Presidency.
My warm regards to your brother.
lam truly ypur friend, - ,
cud obedient servau
II•C
$200,000
36,000
MI 60
Winn an endorsement The Stars beim'
Express. and are ominous. Such - an enders'
this. is like that Cf Gen. Taylor of the whig f •
an endorsement. but not an ultra ono But
behind those stars 7 Certainly nothing rery co
ary to Gen. Taylor—nothing very gratifying to h i
or the Express would be the last ono to suppre • •
think the friends of Mr. Clap should call out'
pressed portion of this letter. :„(
Tani, Ilnanumn;—The Detroit Free Pres I
Advertiser of that city has just discovered th,
Cass is elected, ,the democrats are going to an 1
dn. It presumes that Gen. Cass will recom
his first mes*age. The Whig party have frien
ada. who took up their residence there during.
war, hence its alarm. Pick youttlints.-
• ST The Dog war in New York. during the
July and August, this year. has cost the corp
teen hundred dollars. The total number sl•
down at 3,000,
Ortl.,ses Taxes.—A letter from a well
source in Testa dated Austin, Anglia! 19. ortya
as is a wonderftil Csss.and BUM= State.
4,900 voters here. -My estimate is that Cu
ceive 19.00 Oand Taylor 3 1 009—a very respec
victory for tho star Slate."
assn PAt
FOR PRESIDENT.
OT MICHIGAN.
Or KRNTUCEY
FOR CONGRESS.
AMPBELL ENTEriffe, REF 0611
— VOTES ?
-
'a the votes of the Aboli I men
be directed the.main afro .Cettophen'
ends. LTo do. thb; ho aid - they inotnise ary
every ing. No barg •in is too humiliating
are not ready to' make— in concession too great *
o not promise to grant. Success. and sucees,
.are to be their object.. For' this they -would
Is MR.
To ob •
appears
and his f
thing and
that thev
•
that they I
alone. aP
sir political identity if o Free Soil men would,
. ecure success. Wo lie r them daily proclaim.:
their prime, and in fa t, only object to defeat
ompson. To necompli h this their only hope
eta of the Free Soil m u and Abolitionists. 7
t believe that Judge Th impson can be defeated
io union of the whigs !nil' Abolitionists—and,
o do not believe any see h union can be accon.i
And why should Free Soil men vote for Mr
lie says he is With them in everything, it id
to show it, in all his speeches proclaims himael
aylort , Of what ado pray would ho be in
to tho free soil idea, with old Zack as President.
Ithe Taylorites.here at the North say their can
Wilmot Proviso man, but is it not known the
bargain
or could,
lug it. to
Judge
is in the
We do n
even by t
farther.
'dished.
Campbel
true. end
for Gen.
Congres.
It is true
didato is
and
• -
he owns two hundrad anal eighty reasons. in .the shape*
slates. wly he should not be! kis true Mr.. Campbell'
organ he • . the Gazette, says it is "asedred upon the Ira
evidence that" Gen. Taylor 'its disposed to favor the
great No thorn movement of opposition 4t, the eitensio
of slaavery," but is-it not equally true thutS. S. Prentiss
and Bail , Peyton. together with eight other distinguish,
ed frien of Gen. Taylor in New Orleans, have pu b
lisped
ls
limbed a: address assuring the people of that State oflth
exact con nary. That address uses the following I l an
gunge in regard to the question:
"Thelection of Gen. Taylor will afford to the SOUTI
and to ti e West the strongest of ell guarantee for secteri
ty, dune . his administration, on both of the "great sub
jects to ‘ hich we have referred—[Wilmot I'roviso en
Internal Improvements.] As regards the WILMO'
PROV I 0 we need not remind you. that being himself
SLAVEHOLDER, a natire of Virginia. a citizen, o
Ltnticia nn , WITH EVERY FEF.LING AND INTER
EST IDENTIFIED WITH US, WE HAVE NOTII
ING TO FEAR; we recall to you his deep reverence fo
the constitutiOn. for the principles which guided Wash
gto,n's administration: and on this basis, the true safe
guard of OUR RIGHTS, we say confidently' that, IN,
inm WILL WE EVER FIND THE FIRM DEL.
FENDER OF THOSE RIGHTS,"
modeg t
=SI
=Mil
hey go
MEI
iatherid
EMI
Now i i iho should know best the opinions of pen. Tay
lor upon this queition, Mr. Campbell and the du:tette, r
S. S. i rciitiss, Bade Peyton, and his immediate neig -
born. These gentlemen are stumping it iu Louisiana f r
1 r
Geo. Tavloroind speak by tho card. Mr. Campbell s
stumping it in : this district, and speaks without any'i os -
tire knowledge on the subject—his assertions are me
guess tsti i rk! Bade Peyton is one of these three who visit d
Goo. Taylor after his nomination by the Philadel l ph a
"slaughter -house," and procured from him the coleb -
ted endorsement to Judge Saunders' statement n
said "`slaughter -house" convention. Is it not protst) e,
therefore. that he speaks upon this subject upon a 1 .
better ed,idence than our neighbor of the Gazelle.° M t
assuredly so! Mr. Campbell, therefore, Monde as t e
acknoniedged champion of the extension of slarerYo oar
the territories of New Mexico and inlifornin, his plio
fessions to the contrary notwithstanding. Is such aca -
didate entitled to free soil votes? We question it! lis
opposition is delusive, for while,,he is straggling toII.
lain a seat in Congress in order to oppose the extensi n
of slaiiry 'over these territories, ho is equally struggli g
c,l
to place in the Presidential chair, General . Taylor, t e
owner itl• a black regiment of his fellow-men, and ro,
4
"as regurds the . IVilinot Proriso," his friends, confid as
and ncilrlihozs, all slardiolders, say his "crefy feeling and
interest is identified with" them, and they HAVE NOT l-
ING TO FEAR!" Now. in what a humiliating 'p i
tion will free soil men place themselves by uniting with
the Ta.4orites and' voting for this man! Will people -
Beim slavery over he
W riter es is their object? No', from it! In theirlist
campai
x t,
n they enter into a dishonest and disgraceful o
alition rith those who. are straggling to place an ttl -
slaveholder in the Presidential chair. and elect an — c
knowle'dged supporter of that rtra-slaveholderP ' h peoplu'rill say, and justly too, t nit they care Very Ittl
for principle, and everything 1 1er - success. If Jo g
i i
Thompson did not occupy radical ground upon tbisq of
Lion they profess to love somuch,then thero might be s in
friend of non-extension. A half-loaf is sometimes bol
tor than none, bnt in this case decidedly the largest
ing ex
extreme
ng bias
,
ude, tho
triotistn,
xenmli
*f history.
it might
of tho
IGNO
ES."
ieendend
r fails to
Savior
for.h his
bblatious
notes
rity—but
6 th-seeno
of the
ature.
at •Q be
Genera
rred"
, f Flori
thew in
rol s in
nc ist.
'No"
of th&Thaff-loeff is otr the side of Judge Thompson, 11
is radical upon this question as wo have already demon
grated in a former article—too radical it is true, fOr u
but as wo agree with him in the main upon other:Ai os
Lions, we can elmorfully sink this and support him. D, 11
misunderstand us—we do not ask free soil mon to ip
port him! We only ask them to stand b ty their princi do
—to act like honest men, who believe in what they pro eh
and not like dishonest political hacks, who look one a
and go another!
LF.T jr III: 111:31)::1111EREI)!7Let ii be remembered h
the more they prove Gon. Taylor to bo a whig, the i o
conspieuous becomes his contempt of whigery; for
accepts the whig nomination only upon ,the same co d
tions tliat he accepts nativist, democratic and all Beetle
ing no l inination. Tho general. who says "I have if.
dared myself to be a whig on all proper occasions," di
noLconsider his acceptance of the whig nominatim f.
the presidency a "proper °elusion." to declare liimsll i f
a whig! Never having been a whig, we don't k o
I .s
how whigs feel, but every comocrat has Mason to o
graftage himself that, lie 4i't called ' upon to taste t
bitter. cup of humiliation Which. Gen. Taylor °fro
his EsuPportors. Thank Gall, democracy' has so . uc
pride and honor as never to support a'canditlato who c
find occasion not proper for an open and public moo,
lion of its principles. , - -
EC=
ederalists
, 1 nornina-
that ho
uld—but
,e Native
ea feder
conten
an anti
merican
ovement
Who
I '
hold in
ho pipe
onspieu-
id ono of
bringing
, election
TxstasszE.—Tho Nashville Uriton; a close Ono y;
of passing events and not Accustomed to encourage i
political friends without substantial reason, says'
protest against Tennessee being counted doubtful. SI
will wits' for Cass. 7'hcie's no doubt about it."
course not. At the Presidential election - in '•l4 Cay
majority in Tennessee over ProSident Polk wab — only
—a number too small to ho counted UpcM in a conte t.
Tenneisee and the whole South, with the exception pe
haps of Kentucky, will veto for tho Democratic u.rn
nee& I ,
nr York
Mr. Clay
in Nov
g cote in-
ME
VEnnosT.—Tlio majority against the whigs is in r.ut
nnmlie l rs 5400; last year.it was 3000; szchrig /038,TW0 T 0
sAtin retry tausintEh, and al foilure to elect two mindbe... 7
of congress." Tho whigs have 11 majority in the imitate,
same as last year, and claim a whig majority of 8 in the
house, 1011010 an last. The ,Montpelier Patriot, howiver,
gives 114 demoorats and (floe soil men to 108 whi i rs in
the house. ' I
givo, no
OM Mit to
lio Pres-
is, that
a candi
V" Some of the opinions of the no-party whig c • n
hate h a ve boon arrived at. and We suppose will ..n r .t
disputed hereabouts. A correspondent of the Mobile •
abl (whig.) writing from East Pascagoula, under d a te
August 19, gives an account of a conversation with o
Taylor, ] in which the following passage occurs:—
"11e, ran through various topics, which ho illust
with excellent sense and varied information. Sim, i
of the froe soil movement of the north, ha expressed, o
that it would be the abiorbing question in the present' a
truss, and engross nil other questions. He said t t'
ronsidOred the Misiouri compromise a TAM and LIB, It
Brie for settling the slave question; AND HE WAS WI k
TO ANN IT ADOPTED."'
AY."
g to gm
&moot 08
pith—it is
what aro
is friends.
it. We
'the sup-
nye the
t if Gen
ex Cana
The B°ol4 Corlinian calls upon the Chart
deasociatie Taylor men; to publish the letter of Go:
Ilistfer luldressed to them. It is understood he has rl
ad - the •e of h - *
us name along with Taylor.
end it in
in Can
EMI
he Taylorites are giving' the votes take
oats, &e., as "straws." They did the sa
nd their voters turned out straws pretty
ed."
Er -
Steamll
1641, ; n i
"thras
ontb of
'ration fif
ti to put
I
As 4,
no mail
tilers:
self ise
turd at
in be El l
own 811
/ 1
Tams Stamm.Ens.- 7 WO never reply!? Ch ,
r wliat they may be, mado by anonymous
!No man but a coward and a liar will shelteri
informal
"Tex-
▪ here ore
b▪ lo Cass
bad an anonymous signatureno man but
cart and a scoundrel from practice, will eta
ark which be dare not avow in open day oy l
Inature.
- JOHN M. BOTTS AGAIN.
Whig, John Minor Botts, la out with another
like Gen. Taylor's last,explanatory of his pre?
but as a kind•of reviow general of himself.
and the Whig party. We really have not
is precious production. Or we certainly shOuld
. r readere. We. know our Taylor cotempora
t touch It, I land we also know all true whigs
see it amazingly—nevertheleas, John's opis'-
e too long this time, to allow its publication
- i. columns. 1 But then, we are willing to coin
th the whigs—we won't be cross or ill-natur
a kind of neighborly way, will cull out a fe:
at exotics their " groat and good friend" has
r them. To begin then—here ie a gem, witl
my little "aid and comfort" to the whigs, an.
.d deal of the element of truth, which we
go was not quite so comfortable
of yet said I would not vote for Gon. Taylor.
no regular organized ticket in Virginia for Mr.
I presume there will not be, for 1 fear there i
pirit and energy enough left in the state to ge
certainly shell veto for him pon rho grotto
or to take the CHANCE of eying the govern
tAI
inistor on sound princip s, rather than th
ti p
f having it administered on unsound princi
herfl give that Vote, it must be borne in min
ty individual vote that no man has% right t.
am as free to exercise my judgment upot
aylor's qualifications and whigery as any ma
ict, and !shall give it as I choose ; but if th -
mild come to the House, it will then .be th .
e district, and / shall give it ES my constitu
e, but if I yield my vote to Taylor, I will no
'svt.ontsm. l " whiehls more ruthless and pro
'llan Jacksonism ever was. Jaeltsonisin cul .
its enemies. Tayhirism proscribes its friends
in proscribed those who did not subscribe to th ,
it avowod; Taylorism pro - scribes those who ad
rigidly to them. Jacksonistit proscribed tiros
HEM; Vaylorism proscribes those whom the •
Jacksonisin suffered a man to think for him,
voted right; Tayloristo requires one not ottli.
T it to to think and speak with them and foil
That •
letter--not I
Views one,
Old Zack,
room fort, i
give it to ,o
ries will n
would like
tle is a lilt
entire in o
promise w
ed—but i . I
of the far
prepared
a little, a
with a g.
should ju
I have tl
If there is
Clay—an ,
not whig
np one—
that I pre '
mont ad[
certainty .1
plea ; but
that it is
control:
General I
in the die
election s
vote of th
ants choo,
yield to "
scriptive
proscribe'
Jacksonis
principles
here most
who loft
have left.
self if he
to vote, b
them,
oh dear, who would ever hive thought it !
at and good . " whig like John:M. Botts, woul
accused some of the Taylor men, we wot o
aintenance of an ism "more ruthless and pro
han Jarksonism ever was!" Is not John afrai
laving slept so long with these Taylor mei
em will turn round and attempt to "head-hin
sho did John Tyler? But we are keeping of
ds too lopg from the rich dainties ; we i Lava s
their repeat. Hear what lie says about th
e's " last : •
Oh dou
that a "gr'
over have
with the
aeriptit e
that after
some of t
or-die,"
Whig frie
lected fo
" availab
Noiv, i regal-Who Allison letter No.' 2, which Iha e
road sine. the above wsitten, I pm free to confe a
that the o inions thereitllllllressed, L and the positron s
adopted, .o matter at whose suggestion, an d
more
,saa -
factory to MO than any other that hasl preceded it, and i f
this had I oen the only one, it would have been entire y ,
j
so. If hat Gon. Taylor - means to say is, what I int:r
from this letter he does say , that when he said hew a
"not an ultra whig." and "would not be the expone t
of any party principles," and "would not be the cand -•
tu
1
date:of y party," and ". would accept no party noire -
nation." nd " would look to no party doctrines as tl is
rule of his action," and "would express no opinions olti
any political subject," and "that t h e people must
take him! on their own responsibility," and that " F e
would as soon accept a nomination from the Democrats
as whigs," and that "he would only accept a nomina
tion of the spontaneous and unanimous voico of the
whole people," and that " he would look to the Constitu
tion, (which all Presidents are sworn to do,) and not to
the views of either of the groat parties of the countryas
his gilide."—if by all this lie only meant to say what he
now says he did mean, that he was not a party candidate
in that straitened and sectarian sense that would prevent •
his being the'Prosident of the whole people, and that he
would not be fettered down with pledges that were to be
an iron rule of action, in despite of all contingencies, and
that he would not ho required to lay violent hands indis
criminately on all public officers, good or bad, who might
differ with him in opinion, and that he would not force
Congress, by-the coercion of tho veto power, to pass laws
to suit him or none fit all—then 1 must say he has writ
ten a great many letters to very little purpose, because
nobody expected or required it of him ; ho cannot blame
me or anybody else for not i tunderstanding him. I never
should have guessed it, for. to my mind, his letters have
borne a very different reading. That is certainty not
what I should have understood an " ultra whig" to mean.
I shonldlthink any man who would give such pledges
was noer an ultra VEMOCRAT than an ultra wino, and
n ultra iroor. than either ; and no man in his
ould either give them himself or require them
I.r. When he spoke of an ultra whig, I natural
s dedthathe had'reference to some one or snore
or principles of the whig party, and I succor
il
lod that any-of these were. •
8 protest against finis, ice do l First, in such a
nil barbarous manner to expose the inconsist
old Zack—telling" him to his face that "ho has
great many letters to a very little purpose," and
d up by calling him "nearer an ultra fool,"
er "an ultra democrat;" or an " ultra whig."
" rascally 10-co-fo-co" had said that of the '
old
We have no doubt convulsions would have xriz
ntirct Taylor press. It is lucky, therefore, it
om the source it does. But here is an extract
to his advisers, and this probability of his oleo
is significant : . .
lECZI
=0
of allot!)
he conch
1
' measure!
understo
LOW %-
ruthless
- 6ncieo o
written
then wi
than cit
If sonic
Genera
ed the
ISEEEM
in rogn
bon. k
The truth is, and it cannot be disguised, that General
t •
Taylor has had bad advisers. If ho - had relied on the
.
groat whig party and struck for the whig vote only, and
' not "spread his net to catch birds of every feather,l he
o would have been elected without difficulty or doubt.—
There would then have boon no disposition to bring Mr.
Clay for Ward in the first instance, and still loss to lave
opposed his election after he was nominated ; and-i he
is not elected now, he has nobody to blame but himself,
d and Anse by whose advice he has been governed. llnt
r 'whether—in the language of the French people to Louis
Phillippe—" IT HAS coin: Too t.es•c," is a question yet to
be solved. I apprehend it has. ,
-'-• One more extract and we are'llone. It is in regard to
• the Wilmot Proviso, and to it we wish to call the portion
o lar attention . of free soil mon of all parties. It is another
and conclusive evidence of the deep, two-faced game
h the whig party is playing with old Zack. Mr. Botts is
' high authority, and he does not scruple to say that upon
this question the whigs of the North and the South, rep
- resent Gcn. Taylor as occupying exactly opposite grounds
✓ —certainly "both sections of the country cannot be right."
But why are we left in the dark upon anther subject?
o ‘Vhy are we not permitted to know what are Gen. Tay- -
lor's views of the Wilmot Proviso It is very evident
e that every press and every man nt the north that sup
f r r,its Gon. Taylor, does it on the ground that he will not,
H , and is pied Ira not to veto that measure. Mr. Webster,
Mr. Ashmun Mr. Corwin, Mr. Baldwin, Mr. Truman
Smit I; Thaddeus Stevens, Mr. Caleb Smith, (who has
repo , ted,, in his speech in Cincinnati, that ho was [mut--
- ed b the Han. William Ballard Preston, of Virginia,
that I e would not veto it, and. that he would be sustained
in th south if he signed it,) all take that ground ; while
it is equally certain that at the south he is as generally
A and universally sustained ou the ground that ho is a
southern man, a slaveholdor, and that ho wilt veto
Now I soy, itt this case, both sections, of_the country
cannot be right, and one or the other must ho cheated;
and the only way to avoid it is for - Gon. Taylor M say
what he will do. The people arc entitled to know it be
fore they vote. I think, perhaps too much importance is
attacheil to this question, both north and south ; but that
is their business. If it is of half the importance they as
cribe to it, the fact ought to be known.
MEETING AT NORTU EAST.--A mooting of tho D.
mocracy was held at North East on Tuosclay.. NErt
nun Darr, Esq.. acted as chairman; assisted by Capt.
PORTER WILLAILD and Crouthr. Iltutsr. Esq., as Vice
Presidents; and Russel Ad White and Dr. T. Van Scoter,
as Secretaries. They were addressed by Judge Thomp
son in a speech of nearly two hours length, in which he
reviewed the course of the two parties since he has been
in Congress—compar:ed the qualifications of the Demo
cratic and. Federal candidates for the Presidency, Cass
'and Taylor—and held the mirror before the course of the
whip on the war up to life. His remarks wore listened
to with profound attention and satisfaction, and we 'doubt
not will bo the means of strengthening our friends in
that part of the county.
In spite of "barnburnerism,"
we predict a good account froth North Eaat in October and
November. Our friends are enthusiastic. ardent and de
voted. and are determined that the East shall do bettor',
111 Irr Who says that military qualification alone IS TIM
sufficent, title to tho iircaidency? Henry Clan Wim
says 'Taylor !mina other qualification! Daniel Webster.
, da.
Tit . . listtio.—Ten thousand dollars a llay in gold is
i ple T k if edup in California out of tho sand. We ° hope it will
make onoy easier. .
rhe Gazetti calls upon the people not to " forget
noton I" No danger of it, gentlemen—the pee
-1 never forget him, while they arc cursed with
duleut repot issues
Bill Jo '
ple will
Ais f , ,
a ClOod for 'Pc/retro
Cosrespo!itionce' t qf Mir Eric Obsi
CLARION, Sep
ea:—Aa a great shout has. we
d "barnburners" of little Clario.
I f a few Democrats here. I have t
on the subjeot,setting forth matte
ght not be amiss; more particula
it ls reported by thb whigs In yo
I •
ut of his ••pronunciarnonto." on
I
ed 400! Now let mo say to o,
n Erie County, be of good cheer,
guns for littlo Clarion, for as sur.
of OCtober comes she will give '
I I majority against the combined
whip, Nat(ves and barnburne
l.rity, I repeat, In any event, and
ble, we will swell that majority .
for Thompson alone. but for the
ket!'
e these 114dertioils from a thorouh l
nga of our friends in every towns
for years my calculations of the r
• hundred off the mark, and will
magnifies the dissatisfaction he
, is the professed great importa
NI their hacks on the Demoe
numbers. Thin, yod know, is
But let me unsure you, and
on, that for each of these Iron
their principles in the balance
dollar," and found them wantin
est and industrious workmen wil
rom their wood•choppings and o
of the election, and will help s
any previous election. In the
11 the dissatisfaction prevails we
lug up
mornin
be) and
nearly
largest
burner
etnocratic vote we over gaire.
voto in the county; I have made
nd can gafely say it will not be ov;
quiryo
whir
for Ta
Cass!
On
cy of
glom
nd part Democrats! Arid as to I
or, there will be more whige w
o whole, therefore, you can assu e the De moc ,,
•
rie that Clarion county will do her share omi t( ' a
victor,' in October and Novemb
• In haste, yours.
[Er
Porno
may.
he above is from ono of the old'
Democrat in Clarion county, a. ,
relied on with confidence.
NO TO THEIR Ry.41.1.E.--Tho E
lensor, who has nOt i l it appoars,
hgatioas wo havo'horetofore ad
donia
11 back, comes to the rescue of hi
Gazette, and endeavors to make •
n. Taylor and the Wilmot Pro
The following are the extracts:
, u know,*too, that the chairman.
d by the Mississippi legislature
Taylor] last winter end invite hi ,
hat State, maths a detailed report
Id with him on that .occasion, ai 1
!Gen. Taylor Eiald, was that 'The
to theprorieionsof the Wilmo
t owing all this—with these facts s
what must an editor's opinions of
readers be. who expects, they w
'has said enough to satisfy the g
•rthern supporters that, as Preside
having for its object the practical
.0,! when ill fact, he has soid.nothi
• the discriminating and intdlig
1 inforstand wind wo intended to c.
1 of thif; paragraph. It is this- 7 41
lid no such thing as imputed to; hi
I. s it would have been plainer to
tlemen as the Editor of the Cacao
politic
of the
on "G
in fact ho hag said no such thin
enough for all whose minds do
ihblings of a Yaukee pettifoger:
omplaint that we khew "that the
a . Taylor" in the first paragraph
I •
ming from him." we reply. we
We have never seen them den
Ctile right to do so. A denial to
nust come either from Gen. Tayl.
ers,of the committee. Now the a l
Is never seem anv such denial.
w for poking his nose in when ge,
lllenl
sor h.
;$
has n
lug.
BE.
Main
T
lit th •
lobo)
• ER •ND BETTER YRO3I MAIN
e show.up brighter and bright
e Augusta Ago gives the ret
!. state, leaving 11 small town
hoard from, T h,ch give the I ,
Dana, dem.
mho, Whig.
senden, and i;cattering.
Ljority of Dan 4, ovor llamlin, 9,2-
,000.
En
T
lion:
or
TI
o Sentto will r bo nearly wholly de
e, so far, stands .. .B4 democrats, 5:
'lition, andlmt3 bolting democrat.
e state insure for Cass and Butte
iA "Free Soil" correspondent
a t
ing description of a Whig meetini
. After the Whig orator. t•B the
!_of through, it was moved and ca
resent, should answer him. rhi
vto the no 4nutli annoyance iT
of th
1 w
. It as then moved and Carrie.
present should answer him, b
uch, the gentleman from Erie b
1 erieral's three hundred niggers. t
1 had said was perfect nonsense. a.
" was saying was n'e true. Our c.
re are 'sotto° Whigs in Union that
.r because he is not a Wilmat 1
fore will not vote at all; and it is u
pr old, to conic to thorn without
ban the shallow and hypocritical
o whiff'papers in this countyon th
TI
difro
and
ly et
its und i rr-rating everything pertai,
• from us in sentiment, is a small
troperly beneath the dignity of an
culating and influential newri i pape
e infer from the above that dr at
lely circulating and influential no
cation of those , who conduct it, for
es, we know of no paper so const
" under-rating everything pertai
" with its Editor in polities. lie
.typed'sneer—the sneer of a hypo
*. I am niore holy thou Ton"
everything democratic.
IWZ!
esti'
cm
it of I
diffe
SE
TABl:3?—Tho Dayton (Ohio
.)lowing hot. Why don't titi Tay'
and take it, if they have - any c
stimatos? If they believe a4en
the
pu
own
hoax
tion:
they would catch at this offer w
at 1000!—For tho particular bone
that has ..a thousand to betl' on
residential election, we state that
ted in tho following manner
I I that Lewis Can will be I
1 d States.
1000 that he will receive tho"
States respectively.
000 %hal hp will carry the, , Si
d a farm worth $356 that ht
;: Spam of -Michigan.
EUM
OE
11) . 10NT.—There were whol
t did not give CAs . 4 a Coto ad
• other mwtte gave him one,
Republic:
jondorful—most wonderful!
vote
Our
to towns in this Stale which did
at the lute elution!" Hoar my,
nformatiou is that Vermont has
dent, and that ;wither gen. Cass,
Van Buren received a vote in the
ORIDA.TIIP erection for gorcrat
ber of congress takes place on 1%!
1=I:
M:ZE
Mil
23, 1948,
4 Up from the
over th e d e.
ought that
In theirner
ly go, a I nn,
r Colltity ti ut
majo r i ty kill
r. Det eecra.lt
and prepa:t
as th e ', e 044
Thprep tic ,
forces of F e d.
This irilf
onld the 'day
1200 or 1400..
entire Demo.
knowledge et
lip in th e c„ u i.
:suit here oft
of he t h is time:
in the eyeg of
CO of those ; 4 1 , 3
tic per , 041
amcteristie
mark well
tern who here
with 'th e
hundredn'tf
be found Cont.
;mines, on ige
oil the rnvlorib.
.orou,gh whe t ;
will give ;;;;
to the
the strictest
,r 40 or 50,) 44
mocrafilVotin' t
.0 will rote kr
R. _Tt
8t anclbei;
his•stntemenu
itor of the Fte.,
ergot the re,i.
inistered to ha
used up tend
n article of ma
iso" coatnef4
of a conin
o call apoi Ea
to visit the eq..
of Mo nomena•
among CM
ah elsould
Proriso"
raring him itt the
tho intelligent,
believe Gen,
t mnjoeity
t. ho Will veto
Ilmamtion of the
g about it!"
rootlet will el
nvey in the latuT
at Gen. Ta il or
by the Gawk.
itch aiddlalmd-
I :if we, bid sai4
but as Nit
not descend t 3
As to the Cyr
words attribtrxi
, had been deck
know noMad
ed by any Fienas
be valid in th i s
himself, or from
!ditor of the Ces,
never will sn
oAcilpts ‘has M
ME=2!
The retuns Ern
.r the democracy.
from 360 town
d 17 plantations
wing recopltola•
39,175
29,933
11,965
2. It will runup
eocratic; and the
whigi, free din
by full'lo,ooo.
'flion gives oil
at that plays 1351
way from tor;
r icd that a Demo.
was done, et
I traveling Tar•
that a "free gill
it before ha hal
.Ited, swearingki
at what the Den
d what the "free
rreepondent age:
will not vote for
I
i roviso man, ardi
o less for lawyers.
some better tea
=EU
Cl2lll
I 4
top; to those , vb o
)iece of busineta,
editor of aside
Ir.—Gaulle.
;sae is not lever!
ispaprir," in' the
among all OUT CV
antly in the bah•
ing to 'ho o who
has always one
rite, which plain.
with which he
I Volunteer effete
°rites make op a
nfidoece in their
part of ihelt own
thout any hesits
tt of that geDUe
the result of the
ho can be acorn
t ?re/adept ado
IEI
tial votes of thr
IEI
Mi . cl4an.
9YgrY c°lll‘l
130 o:
will
,
ins in Viis co
tt) EiECPCIA;
lor ti!Topi c$C5,"
c tip
Ithe I
twq
therp ahtlida
.pt give 001
VerY
lot yet Toted f' f
Gen. T.Viort
eleo State: 7
SIE
11CjillV Octobe r
: ,7 4