Moulton!), Politics an News •GEN. s SOJUIfIIIT " Look 074 this fictarc t" , i" An eventful, thrilling, and highly danger crisis has been forced upon the country by Luc i d demagogues, regardless of the sanctity of Oaf, which is so ,dear to every American citrzen The Wilmot Proviso, as it is called, has erne. fearful mine beneath the foundations of the sac Con i stitution. That mine may explode the in of midnight, and forever destroy the proudest fib of human genius and virtue. To avert this thi e erred evil, to close the Mighty chasm that begins yawn between the free and slave States, is a th we owe to ourselves, to our posterity, to the met ry of the illustrious .leaf'. Ilow shall this be do We, must elect n man for President of the.Uni States, who lives ire our own. sunny youth ! nln willing to peril all fur the Constitution : who 1 the 14,,uth and her CHERISHED IN STITUTIO. and yet will do ample justice to the North. r last, thunghltot least, we roust,' to ensure ...nee support a candidate for the Presidency, of such overshadowing, popularity, of a reputation that ti ere ns the Ilinialaya mtinntains, above all others Such a man is General Zachary Tat lur. He I in the .`.-.;outli. and otakesl:lo_o boles of eallwi, on banks of the Mississippi.' His inierests, I FEELINGS are ALI. IVITII US ! 'Fbrungl the Northern and 'free States, he enjoys the unhot ed confidence of the entire people. His patriot his genius, his undoubted honesty, and entire d tion to the Constitution and the Union, will eve cure him the support of a large majority iu c portion of the United States. Who shall say Gen. Taylor has not been raised up at this eve m crisis, by ail All-wise and overruling Pro% idence quench the fires of discord, and petent the de' fall of the Republic ? Where is another man in the Slave States, can receive even a respectable vote at the Not . If we elect Gen. Taylor, his genius \t ill enahlenim to guide.our ship through the gathering swim ; his honesty, his sterling integrity, will secure to in, his best endeavors; his immense popularity will eniahle him to triumph over all opposition. Then, we ask in all candor, who will_ oppose Gen. Taylor 1"-- r .11- abama Whig. " We rejoice at the selection, because we fee under such leaders victory is certain—becalis feel that he inteiests_of the country will be tested by him who ha 4 declared that his sole will he the country's good—becausc we feel as that our rights as southern men nay be safely t td to nne who is higtscit'a HOstihri'll nu,n d .Sq.AVEIIOLDER lice/Weer. GF.N. Ts YI.OII AND Tun W-14..y0r Matagorda (Texas) Tribune, on the 224 of a IfiN The following emphatic paragraph xt ith re-pc Gen. Taylor and the ex i neted benefits of his Lion. "If elected, our institutions—we sreak out very, will be under the protection or his (ig ! and his giant arm. \Vito does not . . , [now ini,titution is in some chapel or other tinder dail cm;sion in emigrets, amd that at this momen, Southern member, are ill at ease in consecpiet enure IWO: and fearful rum ements being made lution to it ? The old i,e,tor of the Sot) l'ailionn, warm: us that We are approaching a I pregnant n+ttlt danger, and that before lung tt hate toe the mark." 44 We Esuw. flint, in thievtroat ;Tram/min lcndinlr questien the rights of the .'..Oitth, he l'itylor 7 ) ie. of ! hie to N% II us'. and lie is US ! - -Beeedi:tion of a Ta ylor uteetingto Ch i on , Carolina. 'ln regard to the converiirition had with Taylor., I have to say, we [lid not talk on the —we did on the wqr. ' lie expressed hims - elf vor rjr . Me war :Ile said he was decidedly in of prosecuting it vigorously, till they should nu honorable pence : he wns for indemnity. tie AND %%as nut Nt to any line particularly. but thought , ;lethal; kind of compromise with the Wilmot l'rovisi we had butter go up to 42, deg., making th •Gra tole the western boundary up to that degreei said the South 'should - never agree to the pro of the Wilmot Proviso: although he did not I there would ever be slavery there, yet if the try wns acquired, the.citizens should be left f that subject. Ile says all Mexico will eve,. conic into our Government by degrees ; that not be voided. On the subject of polities, he was no politician been three-fourth.; life 'in the army : devoted his time and mind ; service, and paid but little attention to any else. —' from one of the rommill« hiss iscippi LePislala re, efppiinted le invite t Taigur to visit that :••:tate. In n letter to the editor (4 the To.ehlooF barna) lluuile,r, Ge•neral Ta)hir he has notyndur,ed remark:. of the Co Siffnal, to the shut he Would nut v AN i iltlint pros iso. 110 "In reply to your rematlis cnt:cernior whico I ndhe-00-d thi.e tho the (:;:iciunati 'Signal, I ha‘u thatit was nut my intention in that co cation to expte,4 an oidnon either ;II colic with,. or hi opno,iti, n:to, auy of the vows PI in the tltrvoriul article to tt lt it ruler-. '1 :e let ter it,eff, Ithe ino-L other ;elters 01' mini! ut (moll'', inattei) m e fwind their wa', into ZiS nut ijitondud for 1.11111.c:01 , n, hul ripen n, a [natter t , f eGurte-f. - , - in kt to . . . one which I l e received from the Eentlernan th :ine-thd.. - l '' It Ntas •iniol2 my de-ire, on that creihsion, as has been my cu-teat millornilt ihrteigh lif e , to ( , ;1,r,,, my - re,:ont. l',r opinions which I be lieve to be honestly entertained, and as longjas thus held. my approx al of his maintaining thetml "The chat ge carries such abseradv on i , ' face, no not to deserve a serious rehitat ion 'Taylor, a southern man, the destiny of hint his children identified nHi that et the ti, t immense wealth consisting/a stares, amid Inn has to be cultivated by Raves to render it t•ul Lo an enemy to the f-lotitli! he in tat or of prim sutolurn rights mid interest'! The tety. settee of absurdity! They might as irrll G. ".- rat . .l'a !dor is a Pree .Vegro! They bein:t cd josl about:as soon, and exhibit fully reason hod truth in'intiking the chat go. - - (.1////drairr ) Review, a Taylor paper. "(llorious news. The Union preserved. dintion of the Wilmot Prot iso by the WI vention.-,-The triends of the South, as \k the Union. will learn truth inexpressible sat 4 hat the Whig Clout ention tnet tli. /resit/ Wilmot Prorico, and Ripudiand a / eso/litin ing flint dorl rine i tone!' by On overudielinin, ity. IT wou la) Nol"roucti THE (J\ l 'ilirs(;. now different tlii. generous at otis• action from tI e dangerous sectional to of the DelllOCllilit Convention. It will 1/1 Jested that a resofution ix us introduced Mr. Vaney to- repudiate the proviso, vt Cunt ention refused to do, by a vote of 210 This vote aimed a death blow to the risk South, and its efllc.t., has been to cast glbont and disdnny ill the hearts of those who strug.gl for the preservation of our, glorious Union. De übts and fears began to °vent helm the piddle. mind, lest et en the Whigs, the great conservative parts o the Un ion, also inilfht be infected with this He Tsy, and have yielded to dim , progiessive' noting s. id the Locofocoisin of' the age. Thank to a kin I JProvi, dense, which has always watched °ter our beloved land, n party still lexiots deterimned to , r4 , ,ard the 'cemproinises of the 'Constitution,' &c., and those just rind ennui rights to all sections, %%ilia lit ivhich our glorimis UlllOll (1111110 t exist one mome It. They hane'snet this incendiary add destructitr princip(e as )1' .ies—iii the old Whig spirit *of enlightened patrimisrn Of the. patriotic ? fathers. and on which the party is founded. They timed to stand up and 'wet thisfierbrandSof unpflocipled factionist s baldly (as the Democratic Convention did not)—t o me e t it Its men aware of their duties like their great leader at Buena Vista, 'asking no favors and shrinking from no responsibilities"—to cast it .out' of their Contention in the teeth of these infuriated fnuotics, and to declare that it was no part, and shwild be no part, of the Whig creed. 'Phis the Democratic Coot enljtin would not do. %Vt. congatulate the ;Seutlx--.Ae congrntulate the southern men, tt ho hate taster appealed to the lidellty, honor, patriot ism, o,tid generosity, of their northern Whig breth ern in vain. We congratulate the Union that there is still one great patriottc pint); which is determined to resist the mad and malign influence, %Odell, if unclucked, vi mild soon leave of its sacred rights but the lllllllC...—.lhilwiaa Journal. - • = - _ "The subjects of a tariff, bank, anti internal provements, are dwarfed into insignificant dimen sions when compared with the great and overshad• owing one which an tinprindipled northern mid northwestern Democracy has dared to throw befoiS the people, [alluding to the free ttritory principle]. It is of a %it:11 consequence that the South should march up to this question. By. birth, education, sentiment, feeling, assoctation, and interest, Gen. Taylor is one, of us. South may well answer the North through him, and redeem the pledge it has made to support no man who is not of us or with us."—Charleston South . Carolina Courier. 4 :One rea-onwhy the South should sustain Taylor for the Presidency with great unanimity is, beennse los nomination atilirds a final - and unlooked-for chance of election n Southern Man to that The importance of plscing.at the kead of Govern. meta oni.: who, from birth, association, and connec tion,itA identified with the South, and will fearlessly uphold her rights and guard from oppression,can. not fail to strike every mind. In this view, his elee tipn becomes a question of . vital moment to the ,tiarelioldeng-portion of the Confederacy;"—.Y. 0. Bee. us co it a 1 ed "A desperate attempt is making, and will be made, to impress on the public mind the belief that Gen.! Taylor is not thoroughly with the Suitt!' on the sub ject of slavery. _Such an -attempt will only proVe to what resorts our opponents are driven, in order tt injure li!an in tie estimation of his admirers. Why who is Gen. Taylor? and where does he live? Eve rt body knows that he ii a citizen of Louisiana; at extensite and - ioccessful farmer; and owns mor slaves than the most of his slanders can iner hoprt honestly to obtain. • Is there,any fear of such a mat on this suhjeet? Born in a slave State and still re,- siding in one; With a large portion of his capitol in vested in this species of property; identified :101m interest, inclination, and educati nt. with the insti tittions;around its; will any sensible man hesitate of this subject to prefer him to his opponent?''—Co /i f :a. ( Geo.) Enquirer. Tun LAsT BLANK Gotis.—The opponents-'of glorious old ' Zachary Taylor, in their reckle4 attempts to injure hint with the people of the South have asserted, that, in his letter to James W. Tt6r lor, editor of the Cincinnati Signal, written in re ply to and answering certain interrogatories pril pounded in a letter from hint, he had pledged him self not to veto any bill which might be passed b' CongrOs in which was embodied the Wilmot Prd viso ! This monstrous declaration, so entirely I tt war ii its the character of the man and the teborof his whole life, could only have been made by Oil litical leaders when in the last stage of desperado 1 - -when they saw that everlasting political rout and rein Was approaching them as fast us the course!Uf time would permit. How dare these illisCruodons maligners say that Gen. Taylor—a Man ot7such pine, noble and utistl character—would prove a traitor to those among %%hem he was born and raised I—that he would 1;e -, tray the southiqn people ,un this sital question that. he would prove ful-m to his own interests, and scornfully turn his back upon old associations ? What ground hate they for,ptitting forth such tale and unfounded statements ? In the coarse of aloug , life, has Gen. Taylor et er displayed any disposition to betray his country I No! Let his vilest tradu cers point to a single act of his life that smacks l of trea.-on ! - On the contrary, for forty years he has stood by his country, and on many desperately con tested battle fields his strong OM, stout heart, clear cool head, indomitable bratery and iron will, halve rolled back the lurid tide of battle, and covered hiM sylf is #1 his country's flag with imperishiae lie ' now 1. Why should Socha man—so pure. so ex- It Jill to -Isll w chat pro 'Dim orvd ost d a The ha, t to eNe that ,(hs the .1 re , : Ir. 'V iP O. I'Utt is /v: trite( , so patriotic, so de‘oted to Ilk. country, ‘ylio ha, consecrated a lung life to his country's wholluts ,tied immortal glory upon tier arroQ, a l nd %%lit so honest, t , O magtianisnow, SO trylerOliti t so nObl in all the 'elation; of life—he ,Izindereil in ME ririS n fa- sort of style True it is, that I‘e hate not yet kith any Democratic editor who (hire opehly ge Gen. Taylor'tvith abotitionitmt ; yet such a game has been fur two or three months, and is Il i pw goi.n on all over the South by implication and n ninuatutn. They iiirdetiate slily r% hat they dare not chore openly. This is worse, meaner, and milffe detetable, than if the charge ties . made boldly There 1% unld then be some manliness about the mat ter. this net chaiA tutor ) !vie] fain, vddt d , U,, a 111011• Rio • mill UMM I ® 11 the people of - the South detntml stronger (knee of It motes ,ounflop.s.i t quo., MEE ee 01) tunlly Cu n- than the Pact that he is a suatherner by birth, b and associations: that he always has been identi with the South, and that all the.property lie has the t\ oda is in‘este.l in a cotton pl ai d a tion_i not likely they nill ever get it. They do not sere niore.—Xiss. ('ou n •ier. r. caitl of Ili, .o that chitty wH E RE D 1w „, sTAND ME 11112 E The 'lug dead ipt ion of Nni horn NVllig. i 3 from the Albany . Woe, Ow leaditlg I)artiburi paper in Nell, hate nominati.il hero ma bla%chulder and deLlci', a ihintary elmAtain, a party 1111:1).::nd a mail ‘‘ithirit ci%il capacity. 11,t v.iot tint nominated, by Native .lone:it:am., con,tuteilt.lL? into the licitl,by lad •pun.l.2nt 1)-i:10c:raiz, and cepted the %%1111 inure cordiality an - ( \ 0.1:0 MEE IMMI htor rn ,in_ MOM rrerive oi•aced tie acoo d ied the nomillati,:n c,l the s•nttliern ho bud I ci uti att..d Fillotore 1.1.2 rotti-ad to pay th • poi.tage on the NVltig.• h (ter of tiononatlt ti—and ‘t hen after a mouth it re luttiod to lm, it•plieil to it. in Gold and gtia l tdvd term z. Il tilt re j o . i .,l to silo an.l airorove !CACI' ,gut, the \V Lig Ipader-, d, elating lulus :.If of their party ll° ,iIVS he i, not. fit fur the Pre.ideitcy. 1 • .`,lr. ‘VeL.,ter bap, that he 6 out eVCII fit to be a candidate fur that (Alice. - 1 . Jour:; I: which supi)ort him , 111. 1 wit, in the tatignage of the Ab lily Evening Journal,. "that he lit tit to be the whig candidate." lEEE i nil nth. ht. I m.hich !tale— haling ”0111 CI pit! " Of InllllllC-:• is the only one vide!' the Whigs and the lVhig, candidates nr agreed. Webster branch, the Se branch, the Fillmore branch, the New York NN'higs, and the people of the West without tinetwo of ploy, harimmize upon tlti- platf Uiion it the whig ale gaining great access, and if ti,-.le %%ere gi‘en, would carry out their ciple ut 'mntitness 'by nearly a unanimous co the people. - y I;ta ui I lu 1111111181 11,,rion Yet, despite all this, the whigs uho believe Webster, Weed, flail, Selden, and Taylor hie that he is omit, are to be denounced if they d vote for him. Gem Taylor himself never voted' for a any uhig follow his example mice, next Novel he is to tic, drummed out of the party! General Taylor thinks he is unfit for the ofii If any uhig agree viith him he is to be (tenon Titus, agreement a illy Taylor, either in his or opinions, equally A'iZpose the whigs to pros ton. If they disagree with him, of course fare no better. - . The Taylor Whig journals affect to assai the Free Sutl [ploy as a combination of discordant ele ments, uniting on a single principle to which they at the North also assent. Yet they admit tha. they harp thrown aside all principle to stand inn-a com mou organizotinn aith Nativists and Nulitiers, Inde pendents and Slotery propagandists, to install the great slate holding general into the chief exclutive olijce it) the natiou. The politicians who have got their party inr this inextricable confusion, acknowledge that they were led to their position by the "Will o' the w s p," availability. They confess that though they have been swamped in't!,e mire and feel themselves sink. hug every moment under the guidance of this !iglus fatuous, they are farther of than ever fall their bourne., And yet they-are implored 'to remain tindr the same guidance; because "returning was as tedious as to go o'er.' Iteptr riig (*ori ell as of -cacti ,o n ne n ndopt ir ntrrjur- CI.EAN pat ri natici.m 0 rue, I hero by 601 the to 36. It- of the TOM CORWIN GIVRS UP TUB letter to the Cincinnati Chronicle, a day of two aftei the Stale elect inn, Toni says: " Pro :Teets look dismal enough in Ohio, kidging by the returns now in hand !" • Shooldn'i wonder ! Taylorism is dead—dead in Ohio, and after the November election every ;moth ers's son of them will be ready to make an affidavit that Greeley never told a greater truth than ! when he kaid, "the - Taylorization of the w big partY l is not paying expenses." The (pei3tion to be decided by the Whigs of Ohio after elect i 6 will be, " who killed Cock Robin ?" or rather, did Tom Corwin kill Taylor, or did Tilylor's name kill the elliict of Tom's speeches '.—Detroit Free Pre.;3. $ OBSERVER. -"MITI PA: SATURDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 8. 1848 Democratic Nominations. .'OR PRESIDENT, G EN,: LEWIS ()ASSi • OF MICHIGAN.. VP.llavingi full confidence itt you abilities awl itTiticiples. I in% ite;ll)cal to my cabinet; and 1 can u iii; v; bat di,cretion and talents you met those great questions which were brought Iteloe, you Ni the Department of War, whirl) entitled !du to toy that ever be recollected V 5 ith the inu.d li%ely feelingi of fr. the . "Mil Whit( hal CO :eared you to every true Anieric noble stand whicli'you wok, ris our minister at ttuitititple 'Treaty'. find which, by your talents. ener4 less responsibility. defeated it 4 ratification by Prant intended by Grt•at Britain to change our internationall her ini , tress of the tseds, and destroy the national int not only of 0111 country, butt of all fhlrot, , e, and rnahl come the tylatifiui ct ery uceati."—rierterld Jack.ron'a 1 end L'ar.re.. FOR VICE PIIESIDEJNT, Gen. %Vm. O. Butler '1 OF KENTUCKY. i'Vr"ItUTLER anti 111.4 live none" wag a favorit,t WabliitMai. and Gen. 1V11.1.1:111, tl. BUTLER The Butler , hn fttught on every field from Bunker h terry, aattrthere is a l tower of strength in the very nate Domoat atic Mcctors: I OF:NATI/RIM. EI.F.CTORS. WILLLINI or. 11%.1.:%7trit:t.n. - DAVID I). W.1111;NEIL orNoiltnAmritoi. TikvarsEsovil% IS Er fOroi I. II EN:IV L. LIENNut, 13. Jon N h 1,1101 N IL. IL Jou?: IVini,m 11. Is 18. Ron 1 , 111 J. 11,tn it, 1 4 .1. 1.. Rounr,.4T, 5..1. 03 S. Cog r. 6. Romot r %Vntelwr, 7. I Vq. IV. 1.14).,1mi, P. 111 -:!(RV I. N, EM2t=2l 10. 11. S. F, 111111NOVF It, I I. ‘V‘I. IN 1 , , 11. N 411 11114:WS rER, THE DAY DRAWS NEAR, DEMOCRATS The day of trial is at hatut—in hiss than tivo weeks we shall again be called upon to choose a chief magis trate of the nation! Pennsylvania is emphatically the battle-ground, mid upon the result of the contest in which we are about to enter depends whether the' tried and well-known principles wo have upheld so long, and which have brought the to a state of unexampled popularity abroad and prosperity at home, are to be ex changed for newl and unproved experiments; or the sa gacity of the experienced statesman, titer-mighty imbued with the spirit of t his party, identified with its interests, and, next to the Country, desirous of its advancement, is to give way to non-committal ignorance or transpa rent duplicity. These are the true points of view of the approaching contest; thette the trtm spirit of its leaders.' On the one side a faction yet in its )outh, whose infancy has ever vexed the air with its clamorous outcries for at tention, has in its growth of years,' not wisdosn, selected for the guardian of its imagined rights, ono whose Cu lver of active life has given the lie to his eleventh-hour professions. With vascillating weakness it hopes to gain these very poets by one whiiin, but a few short years gon e by, they railed at most for Biwa, ling. This party, under the lead of Martin Van Buren, Isa. 4 no hopes of Already those tvliigs who have pretended to look upon it %villa Itiv'or, are showing the while feather, and falling into line in suppoit of Gen. 'Paylor. The Dem ocrat, therefore,) who is galled into throwing his vote for hill), might as well throw it into the lire, for an', pro/lieu/ result that will flow from it to the principles ; lie is con tending for: (in, the contrary he will indirectly help in die election of as ultra Southern , Javeholder, and the ac knowledged ownere,Q.hree h u ndred human cattle—a man totally inexperienced in civil affairs, and by no means distinguished ill any of - the elements that consti tute the ruler of:n free people! Is there a Van Buren democrat—a genuine "free soil" man—thut would rather To Gen. TA viam in the Presidential chair, than Lt exs , ? If so, in the name of all that is consistent, let him vote for Inin—in the name of all that is honest and bola, let him say so, and prove his faith by his works, by m mum g tor 111111 rmieitim: . 1101, It 00 nail rather trust the question of slavery in the territories in the hands, of one whose associations aro all Nottliern— who::: feelings ti lily national—who has served a reg ular ap; rents ics ip, as it were, hi the affitirs of State— then, we say, let him vote for Lewis Cass. OUP 01 the two men inn t h i e President. Let him choose between thi'ni, and not the result. On the one hand he sees the democratic party, with which ho has so long act ed, headed by two as tried statesmen and pure patriots a the country contains. The men, however, are' nothing in comparison to the great minciples of civil liberty they are the representatives of—to the great mess-ors , of dem - °et atiejuilie? -- thr , y are expected to earry out 'and sustain. What the Denmerstey hove been contending for under Jelfersort, Maili-on, stud Jackson, they are still contend ing for wide' the lead vi Cuss and Butler. 'f hi .) have no concealments, Ma point in all confidence to the past as the 'proper page to learn what they are at the present. On the other hand, l the great wing party, tottering to its fall, este-Mims of its weakness, has already, with mole-eed saerificed principles to foamed availability, and, iii denying itself the support of one of its hitherto mint cfa•risheil °ltalians, has deprived itself of a mop, which might have served to render it, downfall less violent. In bidding -o dear t price for allies, it has acknowledged it self half beateoJ—it remains for us to erwili the monsterli, giVing firm mull vigorous support to our (cadets. It need, but one effort,ot the gigantic might of the democracy to sustain its well poised principle - s ; shoulder to :shoulder, then, brothers, let us to the work. Be not de . ceived by the shallow pretct4snia of the one—be not betrayed by the soundleiss tacinirnity of the other; but strike out boldly in wholesome deMlis which well-tried experience points out to yon, and with confidence will come success. Success, however, will not come without Tabor! We may warn, =II ME yard city dis- • hut you must . synitti—we may writurbut on must Act': ME prlll c of we may urge, )nit you must luny appeal, ba you must second that appeal, by warning thu cominitteos, waking up the sluggard, visiting the doubtful, and on the day of election, seeing that all, every man, is at the polls! Without this, all our warnings.. all our appeals, will be in vain: We say, them the day draws near, Dein oeratsl.—are you ready? If not, go to work now:— Lose not a day—not an hour! MI Isell, II slot I. If ,nber, 'A TAYLOR }zits.—The wings attempted to get up a toreh-ligln procession on Saturday night last in honor of the election of Johnston, and the eforeat of MiddlPs worth and Campbell, but like Taylorism generally, it did n't pay expenses. The whole affair amounted to four or fivo transparencies that looked so much like 'oyster and clam signs; that a "stranger would have unquestiona bly mistook thOm for those useful articles, if it had not been for the crowd of boys and rho drum and life that ac- D iced. rick* crip the% companied theM. As to torches, they were 'about as scarce as the voters, and they were us slim, in compari son, as Johnston's majority. The one hundred gun. , dwindled down to less than one-fourth of that number, and tho enthusiasm ovaporaled, except whore stinfilated by pale-ale and bald-faced whiskey. Take the demon stration as a whole, it was a perfect fizzle, and discoun tenanced thrdughout by the more staid and sober mem bers of the part•; The Whigs are welcome to all such performances,' but wo 'protest, so long es they indulge in them, against 'their claim to "all the decency." FILLMORK BELOW PAIL—Some one hundred delegates, returning front a Whig meeting in Striven county, Geor gia, called fur three cheers for Zack Taylor, which were given. Threil cheers were then asked-for Millard Fill more—but says a correspondent of th l o Savannah Geor gian, "an universal and sinister ailenc'e was the unex pected resiponte! Not a Whig, or "ultra Whig" dared to befriend this representative of din great Whig party. this Northern Abolitionist, with "Southern Whig prinet plcs;" with a nod of recognition!" DON'T SLA I says Longstre Don't slanderi gavo Longstr Cass and and we don't contradicting seen CLARION.—The DCLrOit Free Press .h's majority in Clarion/county is only 180! Clarion in this way, friend Harmon—she nth 984 majority, And is good for 1200 for ler! Clarion is the Berke of our diStriet, intend to seo her abused this way, without the slander! I republican no% er lurgrl over ¶lk. and will ien&liip by .nu \trig tlw the v,y trvaty Inv.., mine lt , p,n n•e, o lu•r In be :kr to Cett- ye t 'AM %% tat Ale t t 01'111. Sill to %1.011 10. FRFIPI 1(1,1( Smi 17. .1011 , i ('lp till ELI., (:11NItt I ' S 113.Acit, 19. 11ro. W. 116wm R. SII %%IN, IMIRMIII=I i. t.m 11. DA its TI. Tint) ad% Ishe, G. (.I.m.nt.t.t.. A APPEAL TO THE DEMOCRACY. FellouJ,-Democrits, wo hnvo passed through om the nrostihotly contested political bottles-over fought the KeyiUono State—wO have met the" enemies of principles and measures, and through the treachery friends in our camp and a combinatfini of every fact known in modern politica, have collie very near suffer t a total defeat. Our captain has been.itreacherm struck down, but ourtlag, with the measures and pri pies of the demociatic faith clearly emblazoned of ample folds, still floats untarnished, a beacon in storm tolurge 119 Oil to the great contest in Novem Under these circumstances, then, we appea to you .people, to arouse and put on the antler for that conies We call earnestly upon our friends, not only in this co ty, but in erery county, to go to 'twit', arouse the el Bard, point out to their neighbors tho danger to the Ut and our institutions which would re ' It from the sue of Taylor and Fillmore, and see tint every tlemocr vote h c ist at the pulls for Cass and Butler. All we to fear at the approaehiulr election, }vas tho over co donee and security of our friends. I trust, the recent reverse Will removi regarded Its it calamity may be the by that rroyidence which has ever tunes of dill Democratic party, to s chair froM being pointed by ono who ster has declared "was not fit to be Democracy been successful by ten majority i l at this election, over confif aright have burn our political dead had to fe l :U.—Mat, as we have befurc moved. I Tile shouts of the whigs tory must and will aroti.o the Den stone to action, organization and a. Peonsylv i ania has never, with the ci boozy year—cast lier electoral vote for the P l residene . L—and wo appeali taints and subalterns, to sound the the tried stbliers of Democracy to November. Is this a time to sluinti pies, which are now fiercely assai and successful operation; when, uni Democratic measures, our country perons at home, more honored alit for l'ennsivania, by apathy, to sac of her past glorious struggles, and terestl and the destiny of this grat hands of one who, with his sword itary commission in his pocket, ref pie what-are his views of puhlic 11111!=11111 importnnt nor neee•sary." furl the lutUrter of Jefli,rhott let her devoted sons pia on age, and go from mountain Ivy to valley, and summon the fall •one founders of our fuith to Lions for another and yet more gl cherished principles ...11Aitt;As Asti Stt.E."—The G . _ Hotuethi 4 , , else to talk shout, we Inl Fenders with ".Bees" of au allegt betwee.i' the DeMocrats and "free bleetion in this county. We she went with the alizelte, to prove tit as it alleges, for that were useless. representation and fakehood, and de aces wo might adduce, would the information of the public., we{ the whole th ntr iv a f.dwieation; of fah. hood as plain as the light of a "li.Lrgain aiul nule" mint sli received on both sides. This the show. The returns do not show man voted for Illionip,on—on their own candidate and thereby Mr. Grant's withdrawal from the. or rats an undubled right to select "free veil" candidiitis for Prothotd oeratie Central Committee tin 00 mend their filen& to vote for Mr. mi., aim route to toe tact that tin should be the laLt peisoM4 to aeon e others of a "11 gain and Sale.'' It cannot have scaPed the rnemor l all that When the "Free. Soil" (- ongvessional Con% tion met at Coldinlms, one of th'sii so lite E•ii . tors there! What iLI he go there fat' I:ver:k body tea l that it was for the puipose of ttial,Nm; l i some kind ut arrangement whereby the ConvedtionNemild nut ain . limo a eanum 1 i ate I, ant, i then throwl 1 ho vote of the p for Campbell! Ili, was frustrated in that, and now h shunting "Bargjiin and Sale" iigni at Milers .it olilei, pie:mine, to hill. , his own e‘perini mt n the same gii 1 lint this is not :III! In Clarion co 'nty l the at hig,s tlt( into a 'ii.i,-g-airi and sale" at illf . Gillis, Long ..\.-. wherahY the ttlig eamlidate for 8 natter was withdra and the Whig vote cast for Long i co l nsideration of friends of Lomi voting for Campb, II against Tholup Where is the Gazette's indignation at thin corrupt "I gain and sale." Where is its indignation at tho " gain and sale" made hr the whigs, in the Crawford uric t'—mitre 1.4.11.5. indignation at qtu. "bargain and at b;tween the Nativjs, AhohtioniA and its own pa whereb : Wm. I'. Johnston is elect !il Governor. But up, we presume, and stowed away ti the shelf with honcstv. &HUI COUNTY—I: saidliiir zet!e makes a great parade ova l a, whig majorit SelmythlH county, and argues the Lk? from that the T question has worked a change am ug the Democrat. Such however is not the fikt—no —hut a gloss fraud on the ballott-b: been 'l) , rpetrat'ed: .Ikt 1811, Shun: in 1818., Longstreth polletl 3.138, a natural ant probable iucicase, 'the Domocratic party is concernel cliattgo on account of tar;lf, or at look upon tho other shit) of the pieta' public will agree with the Gatene Him c in political history." In 11814, Marble po. . ) :.190 voles—in 1318, Johnston polls d P. 166 votes, an in ci ease in fotir years of only 1876 votes! Now does w) body believe this incrmss is a fair aid natural one! Vt for one,. do not, and we aro strengthened in such belie' b the fact, that one year ago this increase had not tote place. Last fall Irvine polled only .2 , 433 votes, or 113 less titan Johnston notntas. how thenhas this inerlas taken place? li it a legs one? Is there another cot ni or city in the st••to which shows a corresponding one?- Not one! lint say the Whigs, this county is a great ii Mug county, arid the increase is from the influx of ni nets! What, with the coal and iron interest prostra re by tin t , trill . of j'.l6?—with the country ruined? Gentle men whips, it not do! There has either a fraud,a goa and unparalled i sod, been committed in Seim) (kill co in ty, or Veil aro preaching falsely when you say the on and iron, interest has been prostrated by the taritr of 41 'false olio horn H of tho dilema and you have committed t fraud upon t ott-box—take the other, and you ar endeavo l ring unit one upon . the pee le! When th Gazette l ithe tin to find changes in favor of wl ig , c r y, causet, tariff, it had better locate then it seine oilermylkill county. - , Earouras Y.— Tile Ga:ctte has issued three ext ai• announeing th, election of Johnston as certain. ' ho fiat onti also announced the defeat of lion. Jas. Th p son—tho next had to back-water and put the defeat on the oth r foot. It also announced the defeat of SID th, wing, a id the ylection of Gillmore, democrat, in the 11 , i . ler district. Wake announced the election of Israel Pa ter. Tim last Ono again announced the election of Jol n sten as .ertaiti, and, what appeared lobe of more imp r lance, that the !Observer had actually forgot the G v ernor's I electio r. As the first item of news had buy publish d twic before, wo conclude the latter was h object fur whit 1 the extra was issued.• According to tip, we are f ortainlv getting to he a very important person, i in the cstimatifm of whigery. Wo dre undoubtedly n der great obligations for such an important position, t In what we are supposed to have forgotten has to be hera d I 1 . ed forth in an ' extra, extra, but - hero is an error in the state- I mentwe have not forgot the Governor's election, neither' has th i e Democracy forgot it,, tri the whip wi I find out in November! That cause of and what is neans made u , c , batched over the I No the Preside' so nomination . 11 made." Had or fifteen thous; dence in Novel i 11. 'That was 'all said, has been ver this pie-bald ocracy of the K id/ veto nt the in Iceplion of 18W- 1 or a federal condi bto our friends, tl eredte and sum he great contest t i er, when our pri died, are in) glor tiler the influenO hal eb the :and fiber IMMO Foils. that ,data up iiloll KEIB IMUI 11:3113 NO ZEN was never more ad? Is this . a lieu the noble • .Iruits in the nut-' uneuder her owl 'd confederacy int t his side and his sea to inform the Jolley ?—nuti (led MEI fii t.l vitiws aro "ne [un-ylvania, then, teksou to the bree f nor of truth and cl Main, and from tiwets of those:- Hitt t and unceasing e i noes triumph ofl ME EIRE MITI MI to mot ' , ter- Tier t of itelie, for thel writ some, is rei;altij id "bargain crudtil !soil" tarn at the 1 11 enter into no a ye vets no such bati mmi ~a U fl it I:3 beta tll , Oll Ito matter what Itill persist in, it. will say, however, id bears the ear-i I If Alay. The evil MIMI !Nv home (laid pro ipresent ce.o doe• but n single "free contrary they votel 'bowed their lion !aIIVIINS gave the between the whig to—it gave tho oubted righttO ree, Kellogg. But we Edame of- the t.a ) xul).—The ataire, has iahrn p i ! x has ungoestiow l polled 3217 cot vLlch it will be b, 1141 shows that so f 'l, there has bee'l EM=IN e, and wo thinl tat it •Huts srar I IN ADVANCE OF THE TELEGRAPH. President Taylor's First Message. - • The following draft of a Presidential communication, says the Philadelphia Republican, said tai have been found in the street, near the residence) of Gen. Taylor at Rtton Rouge, was kindly furnished us by alfriend. har monizing 11.9 it does in sentiment and style +th the Gen eral's letter:4 to J. R. Inger,oll and Dr. Dehno, and the celebrated " horse letter," we are not at Id;rty to doubt its authenticity. To IltaNenate and House qf .liepresentatinv Section M. of Article 11. of t h e ConsTution of the United States, makes it the duty of the; President to " rr cotuutend to the consideration of Congress) IIICIN• ores as he shall judge necessary." lilt m i shits:4lo vio late so express a provision of that sacred instrument, and lil p1M411:111CC of the costom established by: J ill prede cessors, erhich With oitt a single exception, any Line, by any not: of them, I avail sn)sell of die occ i ision of your assembling for the first time since I hi:rmie' Pri sident, to say to you, (as I have frequently said to yinir const.tu-' ruts,) that " I have no opinions on question. of domestic policy," having spent forty years of My lifel in the camp, sleeping for two years ht a time without aroof over soy head. Believing that my '• opinions as I'resident are 'leafier important nor necessary,"--that in ' e of language. of the, ci lebrated Air. 'loots, they are "of no conse quence," 1 re'spectfully recommend you to do as you please on such measures as the newspapersinav suggest„ Z. TA ‘.1.(./It. P. S. Lest any of our readers should dou}t thrynthen- asi ticity of the above, we append, for comparison, the an- I Whi nexed letter from Gen. Tri)lor, in answer to inquiries l l t i N , l front a citizen of Patterson, N. J., as to his opinions up- 1 7 1 7 ' out the "bank, tariff, proviso, &c."OW . Ihros Runes, La., March Tr; l'i 4 Ist. last Slit : I have to acknowledge the receipt of our polite ii . '''' comintmication of the 7th inst , asking in) l views on cert" ...... taw questions ot domestic policy. I beg to inform ion that 1 have uniformly cl dined yielding to ehnilar requests, in the belief ili)t tii . 2. l opin ions, even li I wet o Presidoit of the Untt l ed Stales, itre neither important nor necessary ;and I re.4ri.t to add that 1 see no reason for departing, in the .preXent instance, from that course. With sentiments of flinch resileca, 1 ain,lsir, your obe dient servant. , - ' Z. IPA:VIA/IL i Gk.:J. TAILOR AT THE Seel H.—We in v it e t h ose vi , tigs, who are deluding themselves with the . idea dr 1. Gen. Taylor is not opposed to the free soil prinqiple, mrefully to read the following t . ;`‘fr:ict front a letter writte t by the ' lion. J. McPherson lit rrien, U. S. , Senator fret i Geor, ' 1 , gia, in answer to an in jtation .1.0 be present at a Taylor bat beetle given at B;alverelam in that sta C. it will be seen, on reading the eXtrail, that the pooplr of tile south, without distilietion of party, are invoked to! supinirt Gen. Taylor, because he is opposed to the 11Votot Proris i o It is as, follows "I ask you to make ktiown to our fellow-citizens who will be assembled 011 the 3tl h inst., the reasons why 1 am I. t with them, not so hunch to explain ' My aft-dire; for that is comparatively unuttport tilt, as to enable 1110 through the proper organs of the ineetindto s ' ay to them how deeply important I feel in to be, that we should work with "might and main " In the presiutt canvass—that I co/IN/der a as the rn oat impurtaat Tt esohntral dertion, e.;perially to SUIT 11Kit N whirli has vicar, cit since the foundation'qf the Garern anent. " harc great and imp°, toot interests at stakr-11 we fail to sustain them now, we may be forted too soon to de cide irlicther we mill remain' in the Claim at 'theinerry of a band rf J'anotics or political jogalers—.or rcl irtantly ' retire] root it for the preserention of our doincsne insti tutions, and oil oar r:iehts asj're..ni. a. If ire are bolted, ire can .s.istain therm—tr - ire (bride on the old paity ay most he rictinis. • . W tin A 111..117 111,N 011:0 10 Tit kin tit knrst s ON 1111 , (11(EA 1.51 . 111 , i. A 11/ NV IT 110 t T RESPECT TO I ' AIUr , I bolo, c lay % fellow -et its of Georgia, whirr drillgi rat, to I'o/1111. rim ill,. find. 1111,111. flit FY 10- vl-I„s,--TO KNOW EACII (1„1,1: .1S SOLT! N EN—to art opioi the trnishi r.to i l hurt .11r. Calhoun, 0101011 this 111. U. silos—Me pre.,errii -100/ qf urn riottiL,/ic inaktutruus, the its 111.111 WllO is farthest from us, is neater tuns than itit notlh. rn man eats be—that Gen.•Ta>lor us in feeling and interest—W.ls born tit a slay. Ito:thug - stati in a slaveholding state—is liiinselt a slaveholder—ithat his slave property constitutes the means of suppott to him self and tainily—that he cannot de-ert us, witionit s,hei fit 111 g his interest, his prinviples. the It dots mid It tilinw, u. his lily—and that with hint, thereior.., our instiuit . o are sate. I I.lCSee"ll tllOlll, theidory, ton 10v0 'lllc 11 10,11 1.0 t,ut (10111 sl its, to rally mutt t Ike banner of Zaeliary Tau.lor, and with one tiMtyd Cute to send him tonne. 4,4•1: o• that yak. 1101 ml • ' I 10r; IIiISI :111:N, READ '1111.s_:! it• ;Lit Ituhman in the_t iiantry vito viAt. CA,: in N‘ivember' It io, It hint R. La Lb, rL.LEL,‘ ILL : 2 ; be:undid the. " Id vo,luntecr" pa ti and Itiq nation in the Spn:no, 1. , t w ai r lo hr ion. 11 h , mid W:11 u. ak, t:;1, 1/00/ lean V. hi , , TO \ 5.17, (Vet' , cntnaenl, uSc Shr lullowing plc: "ft i. very n ell to tai': of t%••• 1 “ing; of th E; , e n lish—ol hut" jui y and the bahe., proud thing, fir (110 , 0 IVIIO POO 1 1 1 '11111V 111. hut breed is a better thing for a starving Mold:. than alai by jury, and a Inut-e is a better thing Man a haheas oi;ahls on the lave of the glob l e there io no such squa lid misery' as in the hovels of In Iona; nor was the spi,it of man ever passed don n as tliThie, 1 overpower ing ,cds which surround liim. hilmid is seare; Iv the country of Irishmen.. It is the tountry of _England, Ivldell the MM.: of Ireland inhalid and n here diet exist rather than live. And Mi.. opina...ton sends them to ev ery rt-zion of the globe: and n hereNer thoy go they e,:rry with t iew an instinctive hatred of 1:‘ hinny and the lore ul liberty. They have made mast. vain Ode occasions to our pc pulation, and in ponce and tv.o h all the duties at A nir as zealou* Mae bout iii our et. unit Flom the i dds of Alit bow s tyatitel V. all lle blood 01 . ' .‘lolllglllllCll',- to tli vert I let battle fought in 11exico, where is the Held crowned by the col or ;111«.xertions of tho Aineriean trOups, in which the blood - )t . Ireland has nut :nitwit-it with our own, and in which her native, but our adopted. sons have not nubl) rdhod around the standard of t1;;•ii chosenihume! Tit that 1 I tar Kit it' oL OvEat. is Well knoWn oraco Creeley was the f i rst and most hitter, in de ep, the nomination of Taylor—that to his influence, Ilan any other man, is tit l e existance of the "Frei party at the pre:wilt time ittributable! lie has n ow ol that party he was instrumental in forifflog,and .olittg. to thaw them into the auppoit of Talpr.- - the last kick of a cling; a%s-l-he has pined a coo us part on the political stage fur the la-t (ow seats, w the waters of oldiviin arc about to clo,o over This lost act, however, is worthy of the man, and t manifesto to the "free soil" patty ik Ohio, leristic of the duplieity of a Tallyrand. It now re ! to Ito socu though whether the .•free soil" whigs Iled around, front Clay to Van Ilurtn, and from El= I ore Soil" ile.l rt , endva 111 i, i , 111111 lint 11 ESE Er ZEE! ILlEffill MET o Van area to Taylor, by such a 'political weather-cock. If a, it will be moo( positiv to thobe Democrat:, that been decoyed into the Van Buren trap, that it is .o for them to leave. 3 they 2 have ISIEIMIE euCos'i .11 • the whigs profess to be I•—and aro the practical °ppm i —and that tho Van Buret !tulen their thunder, and •tes of.slavjry, who ivoult ! trove their position by nominating a citizen of the the owner of two plantat on's of slaves, and gra% o- Ire the. public that the slaveholder is a practical ab 'St and opposed to tho extension of slaver), :Mil to supported as such—while the democratic candi non-slaveholder and a citizen of a free state, is luthrnt candidate, and in favor of the extension of and as such must be 01 nosed. wonder is that these pAticians, in making, their id not think of the old rdle, that is uttering a lie, should he consulted ( assumption, he wing a falsehood, is c palpable contradiction. EMS ME MEE ME ME MEE South lc a,st EaTEI date, ear 2 slave' Th; COO proba Sou. tv Onto.—la ILt n tilton county, Ohio, Ford recei% a much larger vow 'Ulan the other wing eandi - dates. At least twelve hundre free soil votes wen, cast - for hi nis that conn'ty alone. In Sennett con nty•the free soil aen elected iistate senator.) Every eandnleh• fur the n legisl, titre in eleven counties, and a hall of the itc , ervQ. is, with the execution of two; iperily arid 116 - equivocally ' emu l ated against General Ta . t lor. And yet with such facts its these before them, the Zacharites talk of carrying Ohio laboll COMPIAMENT.--TllO Albony Argris, in no- tieint.,, the re-election of Ilan, James Thompson, says I "Ju most go Thompson is one of tht3 ablest, as ho is one of the popular, of the demi:tenni metnbers of the present 11123 Vl° the MEI EMI MEM 11111 LEM 'raw 1 ter Nia mi ire .Iricrac victory, as the \ ing he el-ction of Gov. Johnston. ItAt plod is itself—read it, IriblunenrGertnan meni ! G . ' 1,111E1INO:t W ... M. F. JOIISSTON.IIIO N party in the city and county of Philade; em..tenee hot a few t ears ago, and their been felt to the extremity of the St:: 71/i of Norco:her will Ge alsa fill 1/tot, Their fiktiteen thousand votes hare air. cleelionyor Goren:or in this Comozomte, rontrihqt,tl to rlit, e Inn. I'. Johnston larval choir. • SN elim,e great reioniii to lor' almost immediately after th of the re.ognation of Gov. Sll4ll 710/i/ cilia/1 V Yr. .10/t11:4011. for th ive American:, with a unanimity I I, responded to that nomination, 11101 uu 01ilfeilr,i the rtertion. -Toesda9, fart, Mot the sdque Natter ch lir,t stigi:ested, and Ai' ri:itwA I TUX E 1.1:( 'TED Governor Jol )MIN' FOR WARD :11.0 to the II for the high (Alice of President of tht 11.'401 and Iti ady—the people's C. :xamiiial Convention of the Native'. .11 a ri reiple..ting the Nativ l'o'on to ran> a th energy in atippor I'atlot tut the el the Unit tog Convention, which 4sr•etithled in le he I. A DOVTED OUR NONII. ALL BE ALSO I NSTRU IN SECURING IllS ELECTIO TI! E VOTE WE POS.SESS. I neq% the \:1t1 pled tali( '' l.> l Sil TYI lull t it fa/ cIAIII 111:\ 1:1'1T, he shill, f..m coil 6 I sun: not one hundred d lar l loily thou , ind (11.41.1:s: ;old -.4 thou one, nor 11/010 111:1I1 IWCIVO 1//UnthS N.‘c :tr.- pert; otIV -," ' WI: in t.!,:( elret:On, 011/01 I.Vt to ••httrari: how pin torn, to 11le Iri pc° ian Argas very proper "lroe-sollerb" cut, of the extension of men are pretenders who the Cas4 dentoerats the not steal it if they could. TO otra ADOPTED e Evidence of the Identity of Native Americanism: o call the attention of our adopted el 2 tRr confeasion of the Plt2l2tdelphia :422 afire American party of Penns)lva by this boasting confession that ( his election entirely to the vote of di party—that that party first put him i they Were first to siontinate, Grni. 1'; .1d to vote for him. and then, if airy, It wt. alry_1(1) occupy as a party, and izetion, %elide et in its infancy. been •of the land ! We are literally tlul tha in the hour of peril and difficulty st eotffitry and its hi loved institutions, nrbi driving. front pluce and power in this Nei It , almost festered in its oWn corruntßor fVe have ONE MORE CONTEST: and we should buckle on our arm Thu VICTORY WE HAVE ALREAI , • IMuld stumhtte us to renewed and red thelbmtle yet to be fought. With old FOR OUR CAPTAIN it is impossible I he rt.; the leader _that: never faila to co i neither surrenders nor retreats. Untie certmn of success. AND 1F WE ru:l:s. AND PREPARE FOR TU lli OVERTHROW •OF THE :MOCRACY WILL lIE COMPL • to ee ul>! Zarle riding up to the W iritey on the fourth of March, an ,tdation of knowing IT lIAS .T 111: AMERICAN VOTES. 1: opponents •• jets , irk ere ere want thee mces , ary to complete the overthrow, nds give them a "lade more, grape." Df. WARNING IN TlME.—There are I they employ to labor ought to cot iti their service.• We have-hoard of t. ! us to the late election, that if certain Lc very active in the Democr a tic can, t they were a' out, they would get 11 l s. - A tuan.who will take such a coin , ewes the curse of every freeman! illtirds of monarehi..l Europe, but •elive franchise is the sheet-anchor of - .4 have verb propt-rly made it a crimit iefort tln ri arc those aniongUs wh. t the ci uninal in this respect, at the, a 1, we rt publish the following section and beg leave to call attention to Ft ( If anyoperson shall gt i SAO It 12,11 - I or ren ard, In order to procure el d • or promis.e or attempt, eiCl aimed:, to r ollrer any i.ucti gift or r. wa, pi.o.e, or •liall attellipt or endeavor to in! oti ., r or proms„- of any appointin or 'l,,.uot.tri bow tit. or by TIIIIEAT. ANY /INTNIENT, ti d o i a • It ult•t. aiu to h:,ve thcit stamp:eh c ei.i,•loye; , , how can tit( y be called ate eivs cal.:, they ate the votes (:) and t<,• the ‘vollstng cla,, of Penn.-NI p. I.:l..tti,Llvet , to h usrA, on a fuut, of the '.7:outi.. S‘ou , _n'(• tlir . 4 4s,yntAL, n lir •kinz-0:t-s of Erti/mi uwror of the ,ante of our acquaintance. I) tra,t_oeautOttil!—is not thZ; t%vo-fcct (;tincrai ailhis friends refreshing to ht upport( r, who prqfc.. , s '41( . 11 aJ of horr teU-ion of ! Mo.t a urcdh di th.s dou-iit game is 'not confined htti fricink North and South arc oppo , t tly oppn-itc teaons. At the South ti a, an “aholitiott,i,t'• and Nut th they oppo , e hint a. a -,l,tvery s.peckniett of stich eleetionecnntr, Ave standing. matte' in the New Orleans Taylor paper in , Keep it before the people, that Gen^. that he never we, a •laveholder, Lt tiLAVER 1", and would be deli t flited is it roMil be done anti peaceab:'. Net ptt before the People, that (;• eltdmiql the MONSTIttit'S Ton of Slavery in the ne%sly acquired t ttled In the people themselve,, thu (haus, Me,tifoc:=, Zamboes, and other r 01 quell ttrntoty the rNrht Lurl pea er to of the South Item e,talkshing theta ,:tperty on the ,011. Kt el' it be tore tile people, that Mr. 11 demon :it, and tiel-f4ate from Alabant d,titer ratic convention, refu , e , to pi °flouncing him • • •AN ABOIATIONI and Ft LSE to the -SOUTH." RF.1101 , :l. WHILE Yov gins are having a ,"good time of it" i election of Johnston, and make the tAli l lotion upon carryini4 the state fur Ta3lo —go tt'whtlo 3ou have a chance—feel can—for just as sure as the 7th of NO" Dontocra4 will "take the kinks" out manner as to bring the laugh out of tl! your months. The fact is as we concei t Gun. Cass to be as certain as anything . not already transiond. The late elect' shown that the vote of that state will bo the result in Pennsylvania will have the he democracy to action. Thousands st polls at the recent election, as the vot e some commis not over two-thirds o strength was out. A perfect system of. now be carried into circci t and the del be out in November.- PMsylvania one Whig President, mid we presume coMpare the present contest with tllai. "A GOOD TIME COMINQ,"--Tho Tay Giddingsites are having a good tithe of vengeance. Each faction accuses the o tiny;,. for Ford, and each, in consetittenc lat 4 allies am dishonest, hypocritical than qtrtrrel yilh ear, we agree with D'Stodda 'Judd,' Van Buren cant! 01 'Wisconsin; having been a'wo.;; drt never to he a candidate when Mere it th of his succeeding. Hence ho permits use his name._ Erwin the Fredonia Censor be go thnt Thompson is elected by a larger 1. herr° given in the district. Last eve - ed l by a small majority. q...7T1i0 Free Soil paper at Lynn dcos.n.the names of Van Buren and those Of Gerrit Smith and Charles C. Buren is not to be tru...t.t.d. TM 0 .ni to the. I, the (4.., J 2. OV. Nater r ;Le. norni r , r ---tha t I, 11 ell • 1 4 a tclt et. and F,ne Atriorf t t.I cabin ,• J 11 - 11, and upoit, ut,the yt zurned t/i, and meo !hr proud of rcee pt of Ire , ragf N olticc TI unto I f hart, t A. , 1.1 It ritrul ) , tun, 1:1,, len of th. Lived ah x., rlty., s. ld?1.1 laud ),S MEAN s t the c. )q LLB for tr lIES L ticv- 4 4 id 11..4. bkd lit u t pier, 'II, b ItAl :Co .I,F. 111:,_ lITE Y 11111 n j We LI Ikl9. I)' + hn~ Fig thlt ME ad! Ices, ,I. trig I ce cry IZE lu fora i hen 1 4, nY ,L 4 l Ler, a.Ol to cke lEEE 6 rt• C.: proa h of ou l e or b. pe r dur I d for nmane a., ru L tau, e. i~~ I LCI fined card not - c-go • 7th MEI /o r 1 ho th: o ~lass ~I fi n„ U :\C , Alt. fct .celo at the =I MEI IMM lIMM the a tb tit the that. t ri tury 111 to 07. ilia' kCS w NM - rc,n to tio. In - Let% T f ME isr • Tim ood vi other ect.6a h bs 131t1 lIISIM tots MEI Jon s'? loc - atic MEI ME ICI ch l s lights o free ‘ j orlt , t had 1' 113 V Jr. V Ea: