illtecellaag, politico a b Nerve. Gen, Taylor's party Identified with the Native Americans! le there a Native American Party in the Me ' tad States? Under Gen. Washington, a law was passed by Congress, naturalizin g foreigners after live years residence. But in 1 798, under John Adams the Chief of Federalism, the law was extended to four teen years. Foreigners were defamed by Adams and his party "as a rabble that designed to overthrow all government,. revel in massacre and ravage, and band with French Jacobins in favor of Athei•rr. and destruction." The Alien and Sedition Laws were enacted,to proscribe foreignerss , and all who dared call in .question the measures of the domineering Native Americans. In 1833, Thomas Jefferson, the Apostle of Lib erty, and Father of the Democratic party, had the' Naturalization Laws restored to five years, as they stood undet Washington. The federal presses of that day abused him without stint, and especially when he appointed foreigners, Gallatin and Others, to office. In 1807, the Troy, New York Gszette, edited by John C. Wright, now of Ole Cincinnati Gazette, declared that it was a shame in foreigners to vote, for elected democrats only, "and real Americans should barricade society from the influx of emigrants as they are incompetent to decide on our political interests!" :Jefferson was abused, day by day, by the Hartford Courant, edited by Hwight, thelSecretary of .the Hartford Convention. vvhich, in 1819, aided by Daniel Webster . and those who opposed the wilt- of 1812, proposed t.teloinge the Constitution of the United States, as follows: "No person who Shall hereafter be naturalized, shall be eligible as a Member of Congress, nor ca pable of, holding any civil olfice under the authority of the nited States!" %Vebster, who so recently held forth for Nativism In Boston, was in full communion with the Hartford Convention, and desired to deprive Foreigners of a vote as well as of office. ; And he is a supporter of General Taylor! In 1839 Gov. Crittenden, of Ky., and Bell, a Sen ator of Tennessee, both Taylor men, wanted Sedi tion Laws enacted 4 congress, and particularly to deprive foreigners of the liberty of speech. . In 1841, Mr. Clay, in the United States . Senate, said: "He was opposed on principle to the proposi tion (made by the demcicrats) that Aliens should be invited to take possession of our public lands." Mr. Mangum, federal Senator, said be "would ex clude foreignsrs from the right of pre-eruption!" In 1842, Col. Stone of the New 1 ark Commercial, a federal paper, headed the Native American ticket, and Col. Webb, a Taylinite, says Horace Greely, of the Tribune, voted that ticket, and thousands of petitions were sent to J.Q. Adams to get congress to extend the naturalization Laws to 21 years. In 1843, the New York Tribune said the Nativists gave 16,000 votes for the tthig Mayor! At this time the Native Americans formed organizations in New Orleans, Philadelphia, Btston, St. Louis, &c. Wan ) Freret, the whig candidate for Mayor in New Means, said, "I am in favor of the repeal of the Naturalization Laws. I would give foreigners every civil right, with the exception of that of vo ting!" .. The New York association "solemnly resolved to oppose the election of any foreign born citizen to office, and to get the laws amended as soon as possi ble to exclude them "front the right of suffrage."—' The New York Journal] of Commerce, (a Taylor organ said that the "presence of foreigners will al - ays ie viewed as an offence to American citizens. ,We have a number of native born colored persons, now prohibited from voting, but FAR BETTER . QUALIFIED to participate in our`elections than foreign born citizens!" • In 1743, Mr. Wethered of 'Maryland. a member of. Congress, insulted Mr. Owen, Of Indiana, for speaking on the Tariff, and he was told that no'"fer signer should be permitted to speak of Ameriein affairs." ' In 1844, the Bucyrus; Crawford county federal paper,' denounced the "Dutch us dirty, indecent beggars, drunkards, pests of society, who ought to be kept down." It said: "Our country is cursed by a horde of foreign beggars, the filthy out'rour legs of besotted Germany !" ' Col. Jack, Mr. Levin.and others who addressed the Nativists in Philadelphia when their full drenclied the city in blood, are Whigs; Jac 'was twice a whig candidate fur congress. Levitt was selected two years ago and is up for re-electh the Native whig nominee. Col. Christy, late nominee for governor in Louisiana, is presith the Native faction in New Orleans. The National Intelligencer. the leading whi .per, at Washington, said; "Already du m e feu demoralizing effect of emigration. The fore who have emigrated here for the last severa l are of the lowest prude of beliefs. They sht ] excluded from participating in elections." The New York Courier (Webb) said:— Naturalization Laws must be extended to 21 or we shall be overrun with a lawless, ign ! proilidate and detvoken set of foreigners.' ' The Pittsburgh - Ant-rican said: . "The here aro friendly to the principles of the Nat and will et the proper i time, unite to carry out." . - Bucking ham, of the Boston Courier, says Germans and Irish, "They are too ienotant 'ORLI. THEIR voTns to crsity demagogue.., ao _jure their souls at the command of profligate era." 'lle calls on the whigs of N. York ant. .adelphia to put down these foreigners, as they laminate our soil," end he adds, " I shall lit' die in faith of-the Hartford Convention." The N. Y. Express, now a Taylor organ, r "A negro, bond or free, but a native borr4 better qualified to exercise the right of su than a peasant from the Scheldt or the Rhi from the hovels of Ireland." 1. W, Green, editor of the N. Y. Native Li ma paper , sa ys "As for the idea that for ebouldetijdy the privileges of :Valises, it is to` SOCRATIC far me." TherßOMOlL:Alleasays The neturalizsti "can be reformed only by strengthening the 1 PA RTY—t he; true. America:apt: rty." The Vicksburg Constitutionalist says" Webers. / •6,000,000 of foreigners in this country, 100,000 he -ing-vagrants, perjurers, Ste. Alter the laws—du it speedily end save the country." In June, 1844. Senator Archer of Virginia, said in Congress': "If no one else took the subject, he would introduce a bill, extending to 21 years the term of residence, before a Foreigner shall obtain the rights of citizenship. And when the whips should come into power, he could giveefr e et t o v i ews of sound policy, as were daily called fur by hun dreds of petit inners." What did Webster any ?, "There is en absolute necessity of a thorough reform in the Naturaliza tion law. • • Let us have such, provision made that the sovereign poWer shall not be swayed or shared by those unused to liberty, who do not un derstand it, and have never learned the duties of re sponsible freemen," ,Space does not permit further extracts on this subject for three or four years past, .but we have one Jost nt hand, from the Wisconsin lieritld, written since the late defeat of the Federal party in that State. It says : We are beaten. There is nn mistake about it. The whigs of Wisconsin are defeated, and Locyfo. coism is triumphant. This is the fruits of unlimit ed; unintelligent suffrage. The party professing to be Democratic, has taken FOREIGN PAUPER ISM into its alliance, end has beaten us with the vote of the aliens. Our sovereigns are the RAG, GED.RABBLE OF EUROPE. • • • The Germans who speak nothing but German,are i all Democrats." Etc. gen. Dearborn, President of the late Native American Convention, spoke the.lollowing atrocious language on taking the chair : Armles s we stop emigration. we cannot preserve the liberties of .miricotintry. If it continues, the time - will Tome aisherywe will have to rise in arms, and MASSACRE the, FOREIGNERS! or make them our slaves.. in order to preserve the free In stitutions of our country,aeileansrait them .unim paired to our children," Gen. D. declined being a candidate for President, because he.,was for Gen. Taylor. TS GEN., TAYLOR 'CONNECTED WITH THE NATIVES? - Gen. Taylor, at an early period in the late war, used the most insulting language toward ..,t'oMign era. In • despstch to the War Department i le says: I - "Send me no more foreign volunteers." . . In his letter of Jan. 90th, I:48, to Peter •Sken Smith, a leader of the Native A orien) party, Gen. Taylor says ; -"If I am nominated for the: ' residency by any body of my fellowjcitizens, designated by any name they may-choitse to adopt, I shotild esteem it an hon or, and would accept such nomination:" The Philadelphia Sun, (a Native American organ) said.: "The Native Americans were the FIRST to re. F pond; ass party, to the poFitilar demonstrations in favor of Gen. Taylor, and formally recommended him as their CANDIDATE for President." The Phila. Son, at the nomination of old Zack, said ; '" The Presidents of'the various Native Ameri can Associations met this evening, fur the purpose , of taking into consideration the. best means, for bringing out the wholr strength of the NATIVE AMERICAN party fur old ROUGH AND READY in the approaching catnpaign•" IVIIAt IS THE OBJECT OF NATIVE AMERICANISM ? HS papers profess, 1. to repeal all Naturalization LawS ; 2, to exclude FOREIGNERS Lom every kind of office; 3, to take from them the Elective Fran chise ; 4, to establish Natives only, in business, and thwart Foreigners in every cklhng, profession or trade ; 5, to denounce all who may -put foreign horn citizens, in any public station or employment ; 6, to make a religions test. 110 W DO THE DEMOCRACY REGARD THAT PARTY ? As'one fraught with danger to our countiy end its institutions. The Democracy look upon the Nit: . iivist faction, as our fathers of 177 k did upon the Tories of the Revolution. They are the same breed' of tyrants.' Jeirerson flays, in the Declaration of Indepencl-1 once, as to the British despot— • "tie has endeavored to prevent the population of these States ; for that purpose obstructing the laws of nuturalintion of foreignors : refusing to pass others to encourage their migration' hither, and rais-i ing the conditions of new appropriations of lands. " ART. 6. Nit religious, test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust, tin der the United States."—Constitution UniirdStatei signed by George Washington. Geir. Washington, in 1788, said : that "from the, excellent character fur diligence, sobriety, and vir-' we, the Germans who have settled in the U. S. are among our among our best citizens, and endeavor to aid in the welfare of our common couoiry." Jefferson said :—" Equal and exact justice to all menof WHATEVER STATE or PERSUASION; RELIGIOUE OR POLITICAL." This is the DEMOCRATIC creed; this is the motto we carry upon our banner, which we have always _defended and always shall, [with General Cuss add General Butler]. '-, Madison says : ‘, 4 America was indebted to euti gratiun for her settlement and prosperity. That part of America wltich had-encouraged it most had advanced must rapidly in population, agriculture and So sold Generals Jackson, Cass and Butler, Sena tors Buchanan and Walker, l and so says every dem'- ocratie orator, statesman and Press, from one end of the Union to the other. STRONG REASONS FOR VOTING FOR From the Pennsytranian We find the following lin the Pentsdale (Ala. Democrat, of October 11. and ask' the attention of our readers to it. It is certainty' a frank land out= spoken document; and the writer, formerly a Demo. clan of some position, seems to feel what be says. We commend this precions.letter to the attention of the Native .Imerican a:.d Goierner Johnston. 11 itli these distinguished atitlyiruties 'have contended that General Taylor isespecially acceptable to the North, and now we have his Accidei cy traversing the State amok , ter show that the slave s luilder and elave beyer of Baton Rouge is the fittest man for free soilers to vote for.' We call upon all closes to wit ness and to Mark the extraordinary game---to mark it with their severest condemnation. It is a cheat too plain to be denied, end those who are misled by it, might es well vote for Taylor on the ground that :ie lived in Itlpssachtusetts, and that lie was a greater statesman than Jefferson himself ! Yea, this is all as true and as undeniable as the argument used by the Federal leaders. But read this really extram i tlioary_lettee...... public notoriety, and as I learn from the best '4401, sources, 'that some of my Old friend still think, aye, and are offering to bet largely ton, that I will not vote General Taylor—l have theught perliais it would be best to define my position at once on this subject, and ther - eby put the matter forever at rest. I adopt-in the fullest extent the language of Dr. Cartwright. of Natchez, as my motto: it is this—s.l go for my country (I mean the Sioult), right or wrong. But only with my party wisest I know they are right." Consequently I shall vote for General Taylor, because he is a Southern man, and when elec:ed, if his course shoold injure me, as a South ern man, it will injure himself, This I think' it fairly presumable he will not do. I will vo t e k os Gen. Taylor, because if elected he will go into the office free from party intri g ues , party corruptions, I and' party influences, having no frienis to reward nor foes to punish. • I I vote for Gen. Taylor, because I believe he is an holiest man, and becaUse I believe he will redeem his' pledge to cleave to the institution, both in its spirit and letter—l will vote for Gen. Taylor, be cause 1 wish not to share in the great rest) 'risibility to the South, if tinder existing circumstaoces, they by their votes, should all in el-cting a Northern into) to 'the Presidency—and finally. I shall vote fur Gen. Taylor, b Tense I be:ieve every Northern man is fatally bent on the destruction of the South at.d its institutions, and because I believe Gen. Taylor is perhaps the only man that C3ll stop them in their mad and fanatical course. 1 cannot vote for Gen. Cass, because my reading constrains me to believe that he at heart is both an Abolitionist and a Wil mot Provisoist. 1 will not vote for Gen. Cites be cause he lives in one of the most Abolition States in this Union, and doubtless he does hourly and con stantly, when at home, both harmonize and frater nize with them in every particular. I wi:l not vote for Gen Casa because I have it from the mouth of a Preacher of the Gospel that there is at Ibis time, just over the Canada line, and perhaps in Gen. Casi neighborhood, a colony of near 3%000 stolen ne groes: and I learn from another source, that there is at•this time io the State where Gen. Cass now re sides, a large Seminary of learning now about be ing erected by the people, whose avowed object is to educate these stolen negroes, "in order to place them upon's: pealed equality with the white man;" and 1 see no place where Gen. Cass has ever at tempted to arrest these robberies or even to bring the thieves to justice. Therefore; I must believe that he winks at these.great enormitiee. And last ly, I will .not vote for Gen. Cass, because 1 under stand that he has the notorious James G. Birney,for his neighbor, and doubtless they are often in secret conclate together, concocting plans for the total overthrow of Southern Institutions. • Thu., I have given you some of the reasons why I vote fur Tay lor, and why I do not vote for Cass. I could give many more reasons but time with me is important, and I forbear. I regret very much the dire necessi ty I urn under to vote for Fillmore, and am ready to pray earnestly to God that the cup might pass frost me. But when all the information I ten command, informs me on that subject Cuss and Fillmore are in the lame category, I conclude it is better to hare an abolitionist at the tail than at the head of the Gov eminent. I have uniformly, on all proper occasions, openly and fearle,ely, declared my settled and fixed purpose to vote fur Gen. Taylor, end the reasons which influence me so to do: and I never will, so help me !leaven, vote for a Northern men again for . President, wnile this great question remains unset tled, unless it should be in a choice of evils. And hew Southern slave:holdere,'whe are reading men, can vote _for a Northern e man in preference to'a Southern one, it is to 'me' an unaccountably strange., that 1 em alinoat'terripled to fear sonietimes .that Providence has :permitted a divine infatuation to • seize upon them, !Warder to hasten their destruction. It most certainly. points to Something more fearfully ominous to the South, than anything I have yet met with. 1 n, aS. wh:g lent. of ig An el the giter. I )enrb quid be "The years, orant, whip them of the they per lead- d Phil "con- •o and is fir i ffroge; ne, or epub -Iligners Dlcsi I n In ws VIIIG And My constant mad earnest prayer to Almighty Gnd, is, that he may so order events; that the pep plo of the South may not have bitterly to rekret, when it is too late, that' their party temerity, or blind zeal, led them into the final overthrow of their own institutions. - ' ' THOS. BRANDON. Aberdeen, Miss., Sept. 24, 1848: TAYLOR. THE WEEKLY OBSE max!! rat SATURpAY MORNING. NOVEMBER Domocratialrominatiolus. FOR PRES IDENT, GEN, LEWIS CASS OF MICHIGAN I TT"Havlng full confidence in your abilities nni principles, I invited you to my cabinet; and I ca with what discretion and talents'yots tact those great questions which were broudit before you whilst you the Department of Wnr, which entitled you to my tlid ever be recollected with the Most lively feelings of f me. °But what has endeared you to every true Amer can was the ruoldestand which you took, as our minister at Part against the tlnintur,le Treaty , and which, by y..ur talents, energy and fear 'less responsibility, - defeated its: vilification by Trance—a treaty intended by Great Britain to change our I nterlintionai laws, make her mistress of the seas, and destroy the national independence, not only of our country, but of all Europe, and enable her !to be come the tyrant on every occau."—Gsr.sraf Jackson'statix to Gen eral Cass FOR VICI: PRESIDENT, Gen, Wm, 0. •Butle or girdirucitr. t 7" 4 "IIIITLER and his nye obwe. %vas' a favor Vashington, nod Gem 'WILLIAM O. BUTLER is The Butlers have fought on every field front Bunker terey, and there is a tower of strength in the very nab DOMOCI AtiC . E actors. EIRNATOOAL DLECTORN. , WILLIAM ntuLtit, or CLEanriELD. DAVID D. WAtiENER, or lioniusu Ittearwrrwrivra ELECTORS I. HENRY L. BENNER, 13. Joux l'. Kl. 2. HORN R. KNEASP; 14. Joint IrEto• J. ISAAC SILVAN, 15. ROOKRT I ,i , 4 A. 1.. IDIVNTORT, 10. FREDERICK 5. JACOB S. VONT. 17. Jolu CRLNW 0. 1100ERT E. WRIGHT, 18. Cl/MILER A. 7. Wi4. W. DOWNING, 19. Cm. W. Bo S. HENRY lIALDEII•N, 20. JoON R. Sn. 9. PETER KLINE, 2l. Mo. I'. DA' 10. 11.'8. donoomovr9, '22. WILLIAM 11. 11. WM. DVI'ETLAND, 23. l'asirrnv Iv 12. Jox,tit Baswerres, 24. JAB. G. CAM' FEDERAL SLANDERS. - While the whigs lay claim to' all the intel igenee and decency in the land—while they stigmatize l e l i very demo crat as a "vile locofoco," whose constant occupation is to pander to the prejudice - and passion of the "rabble"— they let no occasion slip to malign and misr:present the pricate life and „public acts of Gen. Cass., It has been said• that men have been hired and paid to i Worm this ) dirty work We do not believe it, howe:ver; nid for the simple reneion that it has not been necessary. Every fed eral paper has been engaged in it, and conseliently' the market hai been glutted. The Chicago lett° is a nota ble instance of how far, and to what small, things, the whig party will resort to injure an opponent. ) Would a great party contending for principle, and conscious of right, stoop to the degrading occupation of itinerant prim er peddlers, for the purpose of holding up a political op,- ' ponent to iidicule—that opponent, too, one Who in peace and war has been the unyielding and firm Chatnpion 'of his county's rights and honor? Most certsinly not.— Gen. Vass served his country well and faithfully during the last war. His conduct then and since received the it approbation of the whole country and of all p rttett. But now he is a candidate for the Presidential hair, it has be en discovered that this judgment of the canary mid of all parties, was founded on erroneous conclusionS; and instead of Gen. Coss being a brave Man, a good soldier, and a tried statesman, he is a most arrant Coward—the "hero of Hull's Surrender,"—and the nor unprincipled demagogue in the country. Tb have been the constant theme of newspap since his nomination—they have constituted i trade of every federal orator from Daniel W! through all the intermediate grades to the Ker ' bastue Furies°, Gen. Leslie Coombs: Gen. Criss has been represented as the en imy of har borll , bor and river improvements, end ye k while ' the Sen ate those measures had no warmer and mor influential advocate than him. Ho'has been held up as the eulo gist of Louis Phillippe, and yet he' only +kis of that individual as the whole world spoke of him at the time. We remember well when the "nni;rersal lvNg.,partyl' s' r Louie and the French - nation with *Ur: litter's the twenty-five million indemnity was forpicoming.— Then they were the eulogists of - the "citizen King,'! and the denunciators of the, good,old man wh rn ose iron-will (...._._ and stern patriotism could neither ho brough o bend or yield to their schemes. Then, as in the war kith Mex ico, they were ready to denounce their own r ountry, and give "aid and comfort" to the enemy. liow .. true, then. is that remark,•that they are the war men if - - the pence men in war.- Because Gen. 9 Statesman Of, this character—because ho do n and offered it voluntarily to his country'at tl out of the last war with Great Britain—beca l i ion voice was raised in the Senate in favor'of prosecution of the war with Mexico—and be Minister at the Court of St. Cloud, deemed to defeat,fite arrogant efforts of Great Britain the inistress'of the sous in fact as well as in means of the quintuple treaty—he is now sf the sl i inders which the fruitful brain of the era capable of inventing. . On the other hand what has been tho c! Democracy toward Gen. Taylor. 'They h Was not qualified for the chief magit.tracy nation, but that hu has said himself. Th "his nomination was not fit to barnacle." bu iel Webster. They hare said that he was man, and a military man merely," but so itt high authority. It may be that they buy "war, pestilence and famine" rather than n aiasm for mere military renown, but if they more than the "great embodiment" of th prayed for at one time. They have said tha owner of three hundred slaves. and that tl ninny pledgee to the South against "free to Baily Peyton, his own near neighbor and fir made the sarnerassersion. They have said cnditlato of thio Natires, but the Nafires say and claim that the.whigs have come. and not they to the whip. In fact the De never ?aid aught against Gen. Taylor othe' the facts would warrant, and not half as mu ! as his own supporters said of him Previous nation Nonrn CATIOLINA.—We have ever put thi as probable for Taylor;yet the Democratic "Old. North," are arguing that Cass and 13 ry the State. The whole voto at the deed] was 84,218, and blanly's whig majority for e but 854. This vote is 2,000 larger than that is the largest ever cast. Reid; . emocratic Governor, ha 2,395 more than Polk, and 696 less than Clay. The Democratic' gain the Presidential vote of 1844, and 2,299 o nor's vote of 1844. It is holieved that the least 88,000. and that the vote for Clay, 43, than the whigs can possibly get for Taylor. own fault, say the Democrats, that they did State in August, and all they have to do is t , full vote in November, to give the State to certain that Morehead and his whig &hinds pointed in the Auguat election, which showe d ly that they made a losing fight under Ta nation. - ' A &tone Darranzscs.—The whig pope copy every thing that the Democrats have said in pmis. of General Taylor's gallantry, and then remark, ”The .. now. hear what the kienfoCos eayof him!" and then, again, they copy all our commentaries upon his unfitness, and then censure tie' for speaking disparaginglyof hi in. They for. i: . get, howeier. thatoUr praises have upon then a stamp of disinterestedness. for we sustained Gen. Tay or ail along, and stood by him wheirthe whige were opp ing his mil. itary operations to terminate the Mexican w , while they have only diacoveredhis merits since his co nectipn with t he Presidential canvass. ,. „ , - . . , il:17 A writer in the Whig Review . tells a anecdote of ,a lawyer fvho Charged - his elietit;amongothe items, "for waking in the night and thinking of Malin neje , - IMMOMMEMENN CONVICTED BY - TH • ; V Mt The Democratic meeting a perfect bomb-shell iu the consternation among the pected upon the countenenc as the ,lend-writing, protean; is to be seen upop the politi up our cotemporary of the event, but like any one else god, wo fear he has let the c the charge of uniting with A ty much more firmly than wi had wo attempted it. After e nation upon Mr. Penniman, of Philadelphia city and con for the purpose - of electing Jt 4. 1848 republican never forget land (knew resided over Inks and Is ill .lendship by "From the Presidential el they — elves not in the ptate as the ivhigs wore overwhelm. varying from 5 to 8,000. .Ii erotic majority was swampy Jainism!' Now hero is the fact ack united with the Whigs-that has been token to the arms nursed with as tender a ca Chronicle acknowledges the large Imajority in philadelpl our "majority was swamped ranism." Who wero the Ca did they belong, that thus "s Ova' Americanism?" No le.' the whig candidate for Cove ity of nearly 6000, where tile viously from 5 to t 8,000 maj Clay, the whig Candidate fpr„ same majority, in the same with the Natives? 1t ccrtai for they ceased to have a map had ono. And for the sam • the whip, for they suddenly they were previously in th whether these voters were came Notice Americans, for and voted with the whips, th The Chronicle might as, well a whig still as to argue the acted with the Democrats; th , that, too, after acting for four Gov. Johnston received 5000 county of Philadelphia, and t that brfore our majority was Native Amerieaniem, wo had a Where then do the Whigs gel if not from the Native Amor it from that source, have • Most trquestionably so. So its efforts to identify the Dom And ti l ow for the attempt of th the skirts of Gen. Taylor fro burnitig faction. pe tow( Willi one of thew. Mitt to Mon- • [SHIRR, 11111, El I, f ' f ll..toc, tql AS, N 111/10N, DAVIV. MED Tux AIFET MG ON SATURIY, demonstrittion I for Cass and 1 *as of the most enthusiastic The Court House was a p speaker, Dr., Brunch, of Buffs sic froM the band and the shot ing and cheering, was perfec that the whig party and its . would receive but precious Ii our adopted citizens on the 7t understand but very little the easy and graceftd manner of gestures and the repeated ap ter of i the crowd, we judged min& of his audience with h . by those who understand the yield and powerful effort the) he had concluded, E. A. Pen, -phia, took the statid,l and add lish. We shall not attempt t remarktr-suflice it Welly be attention, and was only inter, a - little too carelessly on the t i 1 pratire Americanism- AL Thos. D. Grover, one of the American movement, belong that Thos. D. Grover -was when ho ceased to act with th tire. ho ceased to be a Democr do held responsible for his act on to demonstrate the union cans and whigs at the lute ele ally that the fact can ro tang( nests. In short, the speech t ability and power, and inspire ed efforts in the glorious cans proceedings were mortifying od them the hand-writing'on t were fairly aroused, and deter stone in November. rit vile and hese charges per slanders the stock in ebster down , t 1 lucky Bain- in peace and f irs is not a 'OW his sword ihe breaking r i nse his dor f a vigorous tcause he, as it his duty to become CASS is On o.—The Whig for Taylor against the combii most prominent men of their over, without substance or -re Giddings, in a recent speech that unless a "coalition take burners and whigs of Ohio. (' rem) Gov. Cass will carry th. Hero the astounding fact is pti who has b lett stumping Ohio. that nothing short of an imm. soil candidate can possibly ea Cass. I What a fine prospect, in tha,West: theory, eject to . Hl l whig party urge of the aye said he I d this great 6 y linve said no has Dan- a "inilitan s the same pro)od for blind °tabu- nye, it is no THE OFFCIAL OF THE STAT publishes the vote for Gover and members of Congress. State. Its table.it says, is m lishetb official in the several c suppoSed to be very nearly co on GOvernor is 288—the De Commissioner is 2,687, and t CongMss OW We will gi whip party ho w as the oy /were BO itory," but ( supporter, hej was . the that them vor to thorn, 9crats have than what SMITH CAROLIRA..--A port deluded themselves into the may, by soMo chance, cast N Taylor. - Tho Charleston It such expectations by the follow we speak within bounds wh that of ono hundred and sixty gislature, not moro than thi electoral ticket, if indeed suc h or severe o his nomi- . / State down . spars of the Itler can car in August 'overnor was .f 1844, and and idato for Manly has is 3,091 on `}heGover 'tato polls at ' 2, is larger It was their of carry tho 'bring out a I ss Case. ' It is oro disap . conclusive ior's nomi- A DEMOCRATIC U. S. SE ATM. rnou Ouzo.—The democrats are now certain of majority on joint ballot in Ohio, and will elect a domo.ratic U. S.,Senator to suc ceed Hon. W. Allen. We c.nceive this to be the most fipledid victory of the.season ,A Whig legislature gen mandedthe State last winter in such a mat nor as to feel ii confid nt of success in • all time to come, and place a fed eral to y - Sonatai at the 'odd() of that infamous traitor and black earted anti-American, Tom Corwin. Ohio will still b ropresented•by one American in the U. B. Sen ate. tETThe Editor of the Meadville Journal hisinuritcs that Mir friend, Penninian, who addressed tho Democra cy on Saturday night, has a lot of cash about him to buy Up merchantable whigs, and gives notice that he " will endeavor to track him, and give further information of his fuiure operations." This fellow is evidently for sale, or intends to pick Pcpniman's pockets. Tut SOUTH COMM° UP TO THE WORM.—The Democ racy of the southern part of She county had a large and entlnteiastic gathering at Waterford on Saturday. They were addressed at length by Judge Thcimpson and Mur ray Whallon Esq. The meeting gave unmistakable ev idence of the determination of the masses to redeem the ancient commonwealth from Federalism in November. ArrOtsyssear.;—The Governor has appointed . James W. Biddle.; Esq., of the Dint American. Sealer of Weights and-Measures for Allegheny county. eke Mr. Hern,the Democratic incumbent. The whip don't re•' move ?nen fox 'opinion's sake oh. no. not they IR OWN WITNESS. .n Saturday night last. wats whig camp. It" has spread I ftders. while dismay Is do- ' of the rank and file as plain ling their inevitable defeat. al wall. It has even woke Clulbnicle, a most unusual laboring under the drowsy tout of the bag, and pinned giceittnt upon the whig par could have done ountn Ivcs. boosting all its sleepy indig for charging that the Whigs ty united with the N“tircs hnston, it goes on to say:— ction of 1824 down to 1840 ronger democratic county— d by irresistible majorities, 18-14 however, that demo in a flood of native Amer owledged that the Natives this church-burning faction and bosom of whigery and of as a favorite child. IThe previous to 1844 we had a is county, but in that year a flood of Notice Anteri iliidates, and to what Party vamped us in a flood of Na a person than Jos. Mnrkle, nor, who received a major= Chronicle says we had pie rity. No loss than Henry resident, who received the district. Who then united ly was not the Democrats, lei ity where they previously reason it must'have been acquired a majority where minority. It matters not )emocraLs before they be. hen they left i their party y ceased to be Democrats. claim Dudley Belden to be because these voters ohco ey are still Democrats. and 'veers with the' whig party. I majority in the city and I a Chronicle acknowledges swept away' by a flood of Majority of from 5 to 8,000! this accession of strength cans?—and if they obtain iey not uniied with them? nal for the Chronicle and retie party with Nativeism, other whig papers to clear the taint of this church. /AY NIOWL—The German Butler on Saturday night, and satisfactory character. ierfect jam, and when the took the stand, the mu• its of the crowd, the stamp. tly deafening, and proved raqrs American candidate Id "aid and comfort" from . Unfortunately we could .periker said, but from the enunciation, the eloquent lame, cheering and laugh e carried the hearts and "nr. Indeed. we' are told enguage, that a more elo never I.stened to. After inrush Esq.., "of Philadel erred the meeting in Eng- . follow Mr. I'. through his as listened to with marked pled when ho put his fool. i 1 of whigery—we mein i rri.httektpr 10^ , tei4aryitiny ! F ilm° leaders of the Native /.d. Mr. P. readily replied lormcily a Democrat, but t party and became a Na .l, pod that party could not i . The speaker then went letween the Native Ameri lion. and did it so etrectu rbe denied by our oppo 'as ono thioughout of great i the Dernoctoes to'renew- To the whip the whole nd unpaleteoble. Itabow e wall—that the Denmerney tined to redeem the Kev- talk about carrying Ohio l i ed efforts of ninny of the arty It is all talk, how -on. For instance, Mr. t•Norwalk, Ohio, declared, .place between the barn union- upon Mr Van Bu t State by 50,000 votes!" i t forth .by Mr. 'Giddings, from one end to tho other, r diate union upon the free le the State from going for I • opening for Gen. Taylor —The Harrisburg I Union .or, Canal Comm ssioner, rom every county in tho e up from the vol as pub .unty newspapers and is ect. The whig majority ocratic majority on Canal e l Democratic majority on e the table herenfter.l on of the Whig presX have elief that South Carolina ler electorid vote for Gen. i emiry entirely dispels all , ing statement: We think en we express the opinion , -eight members of the Le i ty will veto for the Taylor a ticket is voted for at all. GOVERNOR'S ELEC The following table made up from t turns.r is believed to be as nearly occur be until the official vote is counted in . January next. Uncivil. Johnston 1806 2331 6164 8856 9133 2994 8411 4207 2383 • 2764 2739 2613 1427 2293 5245 5081 2308 2410 3748 3241 1421 1151 996 , 768 5140 589 - 2544 164' 3269 - 08' 3157 198 2238 - 125 1004 . 80. , 1111 1 63 2861 ' 258 2269 321' 1500 197. 283 11 2087 350 3290 277 , 2988 375: 2362 1354 1871 ' 228 4 1568 237 1201 110 902 ,' 783 1800 263, 5514 972 2996 255 3785 296 2298 185/ 1769 425 3104 1 361 1591 1141 5218 461 - 429 1 37 3476 255 .2124 154 2064 13, 4972 896 16028 16998 612 126 627 278 3538 4264 1103 2755 f 360 182 4 2416 1597 Adams. Allegheny. Armstrong. Berke, Beaver, Bedford, Blair. ' Bucks. Boiler, Bradford, Cumbria, Carbon, Chester, Centre., Cumberland, Columbia, Clarion. Clinton, Clearfield, Crawford. Dauphin, Delaware, Elk, 'Erie, Fayette, Franklin, Greene, Indiana, Juniata, Jefrithice Lobanot Lancast Lehigh, Luzerne Lvcomil Monroe Mercer, Mifflin, Montgo 11 , 1'Kent Northan Northut Perry. - Philadel i m ME pton, tborland, bin city, county Pike, Potter, Schuyl . 1 Somers. Susque Union, Venang, Westin.' Wushin Warren Wayne V 4 yoMi Y4k, =3 '2077 1686 1532 4955 3948 1145 1145 948 4345 reland, ton, 168231 163519 - 167086 161377 288 2709 ihose counties marked with a star we have taken d voto for Governor. as the Canal Commie vote. Wo have no doubt the true majority for commissioner will be somewhat larger than re- * In the repo Blotter* Canal C ported. i Cosonzastossi. Vol E.—The following are The es in the several congressional di;tricts of this I r members of Congress. It will be seon that the l athe majority is about the same as that for Shunk BM mejoriti l State fo Democ in 1844 1 District'. 11. f 12. - '62,§11 Dein. niej. • 1 4521 ig ciocted in this district i n consequence of !there o Democratic candidates t IV being t THE FREE Son. VOTE.III their efforts to induce 'the people I; believe that Gen. Taylor will carry Penns:tiva niu in ovember, the whigs aro endeavoring to deny that Free JohisstOn obtained his election tiy the help of the soil rotie. Tho "free soil," hori l f ever, like tho Native .. . - Amer'i in papers, are not disposed to submit to be thus depriv d of the honor of this achithmment, and are nnon- Naomi • entering their protest against it. Of this einr acter was the - article we copied last week from the Alei. cer Lu finery. owning that Johnston's majority in' the State ould be - overcome twice over in that Congression.. al distr ct by the 'adherence of the ' il l Tree seders" to their ticket, nd that no candid man could doubt for a moment that C• a would carry the State. Of the same character, too, is . n article now before us in the Philadelphia Daily Republ c, the organ of that party in that city, it says "the whigs, :otnething encouraged by the success of their Gov ernor, , good deal alarmed 'by the loss of their Canal Commissioner by above two thousand votes, which in dicates even more than their real party strength in the State;mi doubtful of securing f r Taylor the vote which t it made_ p the balance for Johnston, are at once near and uncertain enough to excite them to the; utmost efforts .I of which theyare capable. They have nothing to hope from the Hunker Democracy. The availability of their candidate did its utmost for them in that direction in the State c oction, and amounted to nothing worth rho effort. They will turn, therefore, of nece4ty, to the Free Soil men, and after the fashion of Horace Greeley to the op, ponent.4 of shivery extension in Ohio, and many other miics. beside tl4so that "are justified by honor," 'we , May be'expected obe worried by their appeals and as sailed by their atacks till the struggle closes." lcln answer to t is appeal, the Republic gives the fol lowing 'answer, - and in it the Zacharitcs can road their doom; 1 ' • 1 Out answer to them, in advance of all their importu nities, is, that we loft our old party positions for reasons which still exist in all their force—that we cannot aban don the right to choose between either of two wrongs, and that if we could prove recreant to' both honor and duty, wefeel no inclination to throw ••way our rotes as well as our principles upon a party which is bound to be beaten, notwithstanding the help of the few among us who could be induced to apostatize. .. Johnston took every vote in Pennsylvania which Tay lor can by any possibility hope to get. and many hundreds, aye, thousands. beside. Ho had advantage of all the Taylor enthusiasm, all the instinctive and habitual wing cry of the Commonwealth. and over and above this, all the preference given by the strong sentiment of the free. men who care nothing foe names or men, in.their deter mination to check the aggression of the slave power. Ho elected himself by his hearty advocacy of the Wilmot pro viso. The whip Congressmen and th whig represent. atives elected to the State Legislature d d the same thing. The loss of all that the party gained. b this course will i) put Taylorism at a heacy discount on e 7th of Norm ber. We cannot say how much old Rough and Ready must lose by being so excessively smooth and nnreadv on the question of slavery extension, but 4 feti sure -that they will cost him the rotes of Ohio and Pina.ylrania. T. I g I 1 il ;I "A LITTLIL Mont GRAM CAPT. RACICINVO SOO by the Southern - papers that Maj. Brag ~ w hose military services in Mexico have been the Ali the of universal praise, has taken the stump in North Carolina, and is doing as good service against tlte enemies of democracy 08 hod against tho Mexican 'greasers. “Givo them a little to re grape, Capt. Bragg!" • They'l come out at the I of the horn in November. i ldteeu l l rr ed the but und ! on. , DudleY Marvin (not Dudley Belden) address ! higs of this city last evening. We did not attend. • ratand it was his speech of 1844 re-hashed and to Suit tho Zacharito, movement. He did not in creating any great amount_ of enthusiasm. or g much "aid and comfort" to the already des .l Taylorites: re-vam sumCe• imparti • I ponain! EMI newspaper re e as any table can e Legislature in 168231 151377 Whig. 670 2782 746 Democrat 66 4101 443 , 3 3320 2072 4714 2.23 2535 610 ]053 318 19037 11516 14516 , A DISTINGUISHED COME The Democracy of Philadelphia mass meeting on Tuesday evening of l' the speakers were Janiee M. Porter, fl of war, Lorenzo B. Shepard, and Dudl l York. The latter gentleman, our . re' aware, was u itil lately one of the Mo! whigs of New York City. Of hint, I Bays. " we have only to say, that his a of the fame of the recent leaderof th. York. . It struck terror to the souls of our ot not expect itis coming. It was the bo fort of an able man, heartily disgusted tude of his party." We re-publish a small portion of Belden. and in it the Taylor men can Mr. Selden staid he had closely exe and the conduct and actions of these though he would be opposing those for a loop:Aline acted, ho would voie f. do all in .11 s power to promote his elect lug.) He referred to the Several qu policy, and discussed the tariff questi. gumentative eloquence. The finan. other questions next claimed hie atte he discussed in a masterly manna questions ho had once been opposed policy, but he had become convinced proper ineagires for the prosperity of lie said he had known Lewis years, and believed him as honest a the public service. He then reviewe : of Gem Cass. Ho teas an intollige man, an pointed to him with firid: Look at him at his home in Michigan the United States. or abroad, lie ie a the good of the people, and he deserve Countrymen. Ile rey:ewed Gen. Taylor's pqsitio try, and ridiculed the idea of a party without any otherqualification than I In conclusion he called upon tilos() a , to the work nobly, and if Pennsylyrnii CMS., he will undoubtedly be elected, I will tell the world that no mull can upon mere imlitary renown ; he said I party who supported a man on such would leave them with the wish and nonents,would carry their candidates Vice President. and do it gloriously. t nion •of Mr. S.'s romarks, the whole three tremendous cheers. After this, we should not be-rbuch Henry Clay hinrgett taking the mum nnteer." ' The Gazelle and the Commercial that the Native American Convention' Gen. Taylor, but merely recommendj endeavored to ascertain from standar. difference between a recommendation but it is so slight that it would:take a l tionist to hunt it up. But is there a following is the reso!utioa of umninit: Resoled, That this ConventiOn, a advancement of American interests, Arnerican institutions, and the Intel principles, do propose to the America ' ! didate to be voted for at the next Presi name of General Zachary Taylor, of ident. Now, Webster says to nominate is fore Gen. Taylor was nominated by th,l Nliore, he accepted that nomination jai accepted any nomination—just as mu the whig nomination, and is the just as much as he is of the whig part deny that they arc. now calculating a • vatiia by - the help of this same Nat Dare they deny it? I Dare they American votes elected Johnston? every member elected to the legislatu , county, as Whigs, when it is notorious to the Na4ire American party, and hare not a majority on joint ballot in ce -tainly they do, and if our' adopted to tite Gazatc of 61.4 week they will not all the Native American papers i the election of Johnston as a Natire t denten, it will not do-3 our union. wit palpable that you canhot hide p ed citizens see it and will act accordi , A PAIXIFTAN Gvs.—The speech of of Nets' York, has astonished.the CLA long been identified with the whig pa one of their idols in the Empire State. bored harder for their success—no m illustrated theit doctrines—to part• been more indebted for izict. connection forever, with his otd ass• takes his stand under the Democratic is a heavy owner of 'coal lands, and i silly clamor that the Tariff of 18-16 h! est which has only been temporarily heavy operations of the proprietors the ed by the selfish and mercenary condi take's no middle course—like Willis 1 White—but adopts the beet method t.' from the election of Gen. Taylor, a Cass. Hero is an examplo fur the upon and to bo proud of. THE Taylorites are the fraudulent election of Wm. F. Jo indieation'a the success of Taylor i say the free soil lawn, the abolitionists for'Johnston. to this? The intl4n now made to redound to the advanta and a slam trader. , —one who owns 5265 "whose interests and feelings;(accord press) are all with the South and her re GEM. TkTLon.—Let every freema paragraph from the pen of the lament! "That man ought to be a SLAVE. W candidate for tho Presidency, wbo r I principles when called on by .the pith; and in reply says that he will not H quires them - to elect him without erca a Such a candidate isiu heart a tyran huare." LT A nowinvention is noticed in Awed Can, for the benefit of way pas A large dial is ferent places arrived at. A as to sound w CURIOUS Fe ple, in proporti There is one :y number is in South Carolina, whore 6 sane person in every 6,548. In the w land, there is one insane person to eve It? There is a man in Virginia wh• litics three times within the last thrc first for Taylor, next for Cass. and wh for Van Buren. Ho lives in IVlsedin pose, accounts fok his "turn-about" p Irmo, regret*, announco that o previous engagements, Hon.'a Wm. N Irwin. and flestr.' S. McGraw, Esq.,' Democracy of Erse this evening, ea Mouday's paper.' A LADY TICILLRD.-A lady in Phi nice female infant in a basket on Wednesday night. Having no baby o highly delighted with the little god-s , cheerfully adopted. 117 There was'a tremendous meet racy at the, St. Louis Exchange, Ne llth—unparalled enthusiasm—the p rico' Presidents, veterans of 1814 and the best-triad veterans on the plains o Should Gen. Taylor be elected best song in his praise will probable b. legation to some court in Europe. of Garoline.'t Should Van Buren a. • the poet will go out consul to, son Islands. SOUTH cAROLISA Au. RIGHT.--T: curt' announces that more than Ara- Ishtar° who have to choose 2 the,olecto Butter! andthst 6or 7 meinbers of l men. - NI. F. CHEERSFOT. 80U1 11 . " rni t l irl etree y lL :' y 9elde., ' l l l 's pro l i . t 114[1E0 e Pen, ech w I Cl l aY wh i potent ; i d and .pl. 1 with th., iil li ci lam ~' COM fined th a urinate; !ith wh o 'r• Lewis Ion: (G, ption o o I n in it et pon o the . (that the the qft and land ix! in the • ay ,t t i the tit ! beforl -he h re m il l alb! d ca la elected tould , ; fi r • 1;111? tha ; th I e et; ME! =1 ~~~ loth ha dill n. him. exlco ! and a Virgi atetue tor 6 1 not marry t cc. for XlOll9 1 e pre • •tv 0 a Poop! .antial o prop afire ME t as; m hash data o Do that pan • i, e l m p i p, g Pens!; pazal • carryi. e Am deny o the Natiri bat dun .e 4 cihaal which t6n Ad/ bea t dvt Again, a ithout hat ~ ee it.' the timph the A ain th 00. Ir lead no m riot m affec all and ioicing out as arenas Din i= ME! this St , all of e of ti t.o of a human IME dart wart hangs as! r n Souther: stitutorr " ~' UM MEM read t d It Id softie!' publish I s counts!, i? 1, but m loioyUdgi iprin6,osl o WOO 03(8 t ns of mcer romist and i Stieatifie in the ars, mei of the p 43 macbilxl the Ll' rongers 'insaDepo . ode d the ItiO .131:17 oats' Now fg or, is 11010 of ry GOO hanged ti 6. He" has • mont • it las whi ! heard tom Ih, we Or !ME other ar and v'. «• addrea lb Iced 144 'ing t. ilkins i ill no ninon a food 1 r step, 11 / 1 gaol lett tbeb. delph' r do bar 0 1 1. d, ~i~ he awe ris „ 0 B : n i Or and oe4 it Onle eiden 1816, I Chap utt.olof secreill ° audf Jai e then: Wittdoi the made' U CISSI. -of th o Cha rots f the Pi' r Cass° . etre C° noLLYAI '3211 ongre
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers