Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, July 31, 1844, Image 1

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    IEI
ITSY2III3DAS2OI
the Reporteicif June 5, and 19.]
YE AMERICANS.
,ratlford Aigus - , - in its two last
~has made and reiterated aniaut
ion publicvlecency by most foul
ti oa of the . . fair, lame of David
g E s q.. and by entire perveroi - ion
r ecent, resolutions -of
,the Demo
isolation. The, first is a COV•
(fur assassins are - only,.brave
,k,) but covert merely against
visibility, (for they too 'dare
Disarmed.) while an adjuvant
a corner" guides the dagger,to
Ahrust. We had supposed that
stereiatype slanders of bloat
&,c., were worn out ; but as
IP revived, t 9 save the cost of a
late,,We iyould now suggest that
le 'tang be set to music, to give
'charms, and turned over to the
l a b choristers of whose grace
kty the irgns-rnan has such-a
ellou fancy, since no club is
lete without one.".„ This. would
fitly shift the responsibility. Be
ese songs might help to fill up
ink caused by the -omission of
ty Van " ditties in a new edition
book with .the gaiter kiver,"
suddenly, out of date.
absence of Mr. Wilmot we
ii`lchis due. He fulfils the rela
i neighbor and citizen to the
'ion of all thus conooted with
We know him in none other,
to just remark; we can dream
subjecting him to -public -re-
He is.a candidate for no office ;
before the public in no way
) give his views to his fellow
when called for; and these he
le a poor
,democrat not to hold
fair criticism, which can only
le a pretext for foul-mouthed
by the basely-depraved: In
t, the "lower deep ' has_ been
far the falsification of his re-
:ems to have been a mere step
nn to the atrocious calumny of
character. We shall proceed to
tenor °nth. W's. remarks and
lege the spirit of the resolutions,
baie observation that the'riots
adelphia were in no wise the di
,bjeet of either, and without any
to meet, ipecifically, the world
igressioni from truth as to both ;
'lave no phtience with such low
manners, and perhaps could not
' moderation to speak of asper
.
false in lam and malevolent in
yet as disgusting in the-execu
)ossible, as calumnious in their
)n. If.we sought for an epithet
the infamous calumnidtor we
ask the. writer of the Artus to
echo of his own voice as he
. name, and to note how ,weak
he thunders of conscience it
aken, syllabling ever the same.
MOUS 'CALUMNIATOR !"
the evening was far-spent in
teas of Mr. Allen, who was, the
anent man of the• meeting," as
ttu terms it, Mr. Wilmot pre
te %solutions we publiiihedlast
(with'lmispririt, by the way,.of'
) for.ratice American) with brief
is chiefly to this point ; that. as
111 therein, the Native American
'ion is' hostile to the principles
3 ciaration of Independence in-,
lican &,e. ; that, it is contrary to
litality of our laws ;.'calculated
ill-blood between native and
, citizens who have by law
,tits ; that riot and bloodshed,
are the legitimate
iiiable fruits of such invidious
ms,, especially when introduCed
polities ; that this combi
assumed a,political organiza
that all its political importance
the
_countenance given' it and
chieved with it by the Whigs
York ; and that , all efforts to
this question into the politics
ly ought to be frowned down at
for Where is'the se curity= if you
the victim to = d ay of the acct.
your birth-plaeir and the con-
Isness of your religion,; that I
,fall to-morrow for my native
lich I can- not help and my
religion dearer a thousand-fold
• This, dwelling upon scenes
le Of Philadelphia as the certain
`le of the unholy union of Such
with partisan • liStitipa, wars
spirit and extent of Me. W.'s
. Without imputing' at all, di
tile deplorable riots Of the city:,
party, Which we know he re-
irately, to do ; publicly he
id, the Argus-men to the con-
Tithstanding.
Native Americin Association"
'eh, scattered through nearly:
ties' and dotting the Union in.,
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all the principal towns, with a head in
Washington, is capable of immense in
jury, to the Republic. As samples of
its principles we quote now merely a
resolution of the - N. Y. Association
viz We do solemnly resolve to op
pose the'election or oppointment Oran) ,
but American Citizens
. to of fi ce, and
henceforward to use our united efforts
and unsparing zeal,to procure such an
alteration in the naturalization laws as
shall exclude from the - Titht of suffrage
all foreigners who , come into this coun
try after such law has passed "—and
an extract from in address-of the Lou
isiania Association published with much
solemnity' of fdrm,,saying—i , It is in
deed by their labor, and by that only,
_that, foreigners render any-service to
the United / States ; and it is' the first
prerogative of the American people to
confine them to this, their only proper
vocation in our country." Such are
the proclaimed , , principles of an Asso
ciation with which " the whig, party
openly and manifestly identified them
selves in the recent. charter election of
New York " when the Democrats gave
their candidate for Mayor some 20,000
votes, near the ' party strength ; the
whigs, theiri, some s,ooo—those who
scorned a coalition—while the whigs
and "Native Americans " together gain
ed the day 'over both If this be not
identification, for all useful purposes,"
we mistake the term ;—and this was
the first movement which gave them
importance as a political party, and was
speedily imitated in; Philadelphia, or its
• Liberties, but with an ill-success which
engendered feelings fora very different
contest.
•
But we wish- to show fully the hospi
tality breathed throughout our institu
tions for the stranger within our gates; ,
'premising that it ill becomei us who at
most are but few removes from a for
eign stock, the migration of whose fa
thers hither was to find for themselves
and found for others an asylum from
the religious and political despotisms
of the old world, now to close our hearts
and our ports upon the miseries of the
unblessed of the earth, while , the bound
less fields of the ,West offer the rich de
posits of ages to the uses of labor. Nor
is such inhospitality less opposed to
the spirit in which our Government was
founded and theform of all th . e funda
mental laws of our country. The Con
tinental Congress, fourteen months be
:fore the Declaration of Independence,
-published an address to the people of
Ireland, in which, after expressing the
regret of the colonies - that their com
mercial non-intercourse with Great
Britain must affect Ireland which "had
done them no wrong," they say : "It
gave us, however, some consolation to
reflect that should it occasion you much
distress, ‘ the fertile regions of America
would afford you a safe asylum from
poverty and, in time, [noble prophecy n
from oppression also;, an asylum in
which thousands of your countrymen
have found hospitality, peace and afflu
ence, and become united to us by all
the ties of cosanguinity. - mutual inter
est and affection." The Declaration
of Independence itself (be it immortal !)
assigns as the 6th " act which may de
fine a tyrant" in the King of Great
Britain that "he has endeavored to
prevent.the population oithese states;
for that purpose obstructing the_lawsv e nf
naturalization of foreigners ; refusing
to pass others to encourage their migra
tion hither, and raising the conditions
of new appropriations of lands ;" and
to carry out the declared inalienable
right of man to the ." pursuit of hap
piness," wherever it may lead him in
his honest vocations, the constitution
enumerates 4th among the- pow.rs of
Congress this, " to establiih an uniform
rule of naturalization" Ste. Congress,
has decordingly • passed various laws
whose tendency to ameliorate the con
dition of aliens is known in the redue
lion of the term' of naturalization from '
fourteen to five years. Naturalized
citizens become eligible in time to - any
station in 'the general government ex
cept-the Iwofirst.offlees. By the con
stitutitutions 'of Several - states no restric
tion whatever is placed on naturalized
citizens as electors, unless in-Rhode Isl
and—nor is their qualification for legis
lative funCtions distinguished in any way
from That of native Americans ezcep, , in
Mainland Gegrgia.; - the fothlor i;equir- -
inviasemblymeirapil Senators to have.
been five years citizens of the U.S., and
thelitter limiting seven years for the
-H.
'R. and nine - for the Senate: "• We ohoUld
add that in three - states, of which ours is
one, Assemblymen ore refittired.tolgve ,
been "citizens and inhabitants of she
state" three Sears,; and, Senator:l . iy . ear
or two "more; though'id. our plainview .
this. could not ' operate ''any , (loannina.
tion ; but we leave that to professional
•
Regardless of Detsanciatims from any truirter.-00,
opinions or adjudications. We Will no
tice here the State-constitutional provis
ions which appear more lenient than the
national: naturalization laws, omitting
qualifications not pertinent to , this inqui-i
ry.,. Massachusetts, by her constituticiii ,
of 1779-80, made'' every , male inhabi=
tent of one year's residence an elector &
eligible to the H. R. " and to remove all
doubts concerning thenvord inhabitant'
in this constitutionevery person shall be
considered ae an inhabitant (for the pur
pose of electing or being elected into any,
office or place within this state) in that'
town, district, or plantation where he
dwelleth, Or bath his 'home." In'lB2l'
an amendment 'wail made, as to - electors
only, substituting the word citizen for
inhabitant. The constitution of New
Hampshire Of- '92 gives "every dale in
, habitant -excepting paupers and persons
excused from paying, taxes at thew own
request," the right of voting, ang quali
fies inhabitants of. two years residence
for the H. R. ' with the . same clause de4
fining the word " inhabitant" above quo
ted front the constitution of Massachn=
setts ; and this' . constitution remains nil&
mended. The constitution of North Ca
rolina; which is contemporary with our
independence, makes " all freemen " of
one year's residence electors and eligible
to either branch of the Legislatere. It
has this remarkable provision, the only
one containing' the'word citizen:
"Every foreigner who comes to set-
Ile in this State, having first talion, an
oath of allegiance to the same, may pur
chase, or by other just means acquire,
hold and transfer land, or other real
estate ; and after one year's residence
be deemed a free citizen."
The constitution of Vermont pro
, vides that " every man" with the qual
ifications of age, one year's residence,
good character, and the oath ofallegianc.e
"shall be entitled to all the privileges
of a freeman" and borrows from North
Carolina the liberal article above cited,
- with this alteration, that every person
after one year's residence in the state,
"shalt be deemed a free denizen there
of, and entitled to all the rights of 0 nat
ural born subject„of this state, except
that he shall not be capable of being
elected governor, lieqtanant-governor,
treasurer, councillor, or representative
in assembly, until after two years' res
idence.'"l'he charter of Rhode Island,
granted by Charles IL, under Which
its government was administered i until
lately, made the governor and members
of the " general assembly" eligible by
" the major part of the freemen." We
learn from the Public Ledger that under
the constitution 'of the Algerines, "free
negroes are allowed to vote--naturaliz
ed citizens are not, unless they own
freeholds." In New Jersey, an attempt
made in the convention now sitting, to
prohibit naturalized citizens` of the U.
S., resident there, from voting until a,
certain period after their naturalization,
was recently voted down. Their con
stitution, two clays older than our Dec
laration, entitles "all inhabitants"
worth fifty pounds proclamation money
.to vote, according to which ladies for
merly exercised the right, until the
men in the Legislature, (for luckily the
constitution, tho' it admitted " any in
habitant" -to the council or assembly,
provided that, lie should possess h cer
tain amount of property) put amend to
female rights -and family
,jars, quoad
hoc, by a declaratory resolution inform
ing the world that "all inhabitants" of
New Jersey ware not women. Mary
land bad the same provision (making
" all freemen" 'of one years' residence
electors and eligible to the H. R.) as
North Carolina, which appears to have
copied from the former; ; but an amend
ment of 1802 - substituted the words
" free white male citizen." Tennes
see, like - these states, declares .6 every
freeman" 'after six months' residence
entitled to vote, and- after three •years
eligible to either house of Asiembly.—
Ohio and. Illinois -entitle "ally white
Male inhabitants'? to vote " the 'former
state after's:at ear's residence. the lat.
tor, six mini i ' • rid this- provision: is
copied in Mi',N•s - _
As to the hig in the gift of
of the people of the statBs, that of Gov
ernor, three only require unqualifiedly,
by the fundamental 'law, native=born
citizens,. viz :- Maine. New York and
.Virpiniab,_ and two,. Missouri and -Ala. :
ham, ‘adinit only , native. eitiiena. or
in
citizens at the foration"Of their-separ
ate governments 'With the broad pro.
vision, in Alabama, that "tarty white
male, person"' resident ,therein at- the
adopaon of: the
. constitution,' 1819,
shall be eligible .to any office ofirnst or
profit. any; pro.vision, to the contrary
notwithstanding. ;. Illinois recinires3o
years: . citizenship; 20 ;—=-
Delatirare; 'a
are; Smith
Carolina and Indiana 19 ;: aud ' the lest
of the , states fr' rn no year 4 as Con
necticut, up t. ,in Pennsylvaeia albne:
Massachus ts and New Hanipshire re
quire an 4 , inhabitant" (with the consti
tutional xplanation befoie given) of 7
yeays• Maryland and North. Carolina
a 5 ears' resident; VerMontone of 4;'
in 'the clauses asto freeholde:befOre..
tetVehow that-in the two list named
states, for all constitutional prohibition,
aliens are eligible to their . first offices.
An act of the. Virginia Legislature of
1779, contains this emphatic declara
tion
men haie a natural right to re
linquish the country in Which birth cit
other' accidents may have thrown thecif (
and to seek subsistence and happiness
wherever they may , be able, or may
hope to find them:
' Such is the welcome of our land to
the family of man—a land , proclaimed
by our National Convention, of 1840,
as always by Demccrats, the-" asylum
of the oppressed of ()Very nation.
Thus do we cherish, (in the words Of
Jefferson, consecrated by their incor
poration into. one of the text-books of
our political faith, the Kentucky Reso
lutions of '98,") "the friendly stran
gers, to whom the mild spirit of our
country and its law had pledged , hospi
tality and protection." And shall the
small-souled" Native American" (Hea
ven. save the ,mark !) stretch ' out one fin
-ger of the elenched hand, which should
be as open as our s hearts towards the
oppressed, to point to this land and
say,—
"Nor there will weary stranger halt,
" To bless 'the sacred bread and salt: 7
Obedience and protection are recipro
cal duties between people and govern
ment. The failure in protection is set
forth by most of the preambles of the
first constitutions as the reason why the
colonists renounced their former allegi
ance. Citizen and alien may alike claim
the shelter of our government, who
yield it their support and comply with
its laws. The shield we put on in, the
last' war with Britain, was the aegis of
protection -to naturalized citizens and
adopted aliens; for who but they coukt 4
suffer by impressment?
No right was asserted over native chi-zens, however thsy were involved by
the abuse. We waged war in defence
of our commerce and our adopted , sea
men—" free trade and sailors' rights"—
and scorned the base proposal to cupidi
ty of peace to our ships and no peace to
our seamen, " commuting our sailms'
rights for the safety of our merchants'
goods." Nobly then did native 'and
adopted sons' unite to make glorious this
vindication of national hospitality.
We delight to trace, in his official acts,
the course of the great Apostle of De
mocracy in this connection. He was
the author
_of the resolutions by the Cell
gress of the Declaration inviting foreign- I
ers to this " asylum of oppressed man,"
with the promise of lands &c.' He in
troduced 'into the Virginia Legislature
the famous act avowing the right of ex
patriation, in terms quoted in our last,
which 'should stand through all time a
noble aphorism against the odious pre
tension to perpetual allegiance. 1" The
right," says Professor Tucker of this
law, "has since expressly: received the
general sanction of.the American people,
and has . found a virtual recognition in the
practice of all civilized nations."
wrote the Kentucky Resolutions: whose
prophecy of " revolution and 'bleed "I is
almost literally fulfilled in a sad - history,
of blood and riot. He there says, "That
the friendless alien has indeed been se
lected as the safest subject of a r first ex
periment ; but the citizeiti will soon fol
low, or rather has already followed, for_
already has a sedition act 'harked him' as
its prey ; that these and iniccessivi acts
of the same character, unless arrested on
the threshold,.mt . ry tend to drive Mese
states inko revol u tion and blood;" and.
oaks indieftntlY what is ,our goiernment
burn tyranny which the President has
accepted (with the Alienact) "over the
friendly strangers to whom the' Mild spi
rit of our country and its lied had pledg
ed -hospitality and protection." The
repeal of these laws followed, immediate
ly. his elevation to the presidency, as
well as the restoration of the term El-na
turalization, to five years where-it re-1
Mainspirom fourteen, where the (*trust
ful counsels that preceeded . him had fix:
ed it. 'his first inerisage Ile says,
" A denial of citizenship Ceder a resi
dence of fourteen - years is a denial ,to a
great proportion of ~those who
,ask it;-
and controls s policy put-stied, from their
gist settlenient, hylrnany:Ofthese states;
and Still' beliefed of cortseqinince to their
prosperity. And , shall ,we refuse the
unhappy .fugitives frornAistress that hos
pitality which Ifib, savages.ofthe
ness Wended 'to' put fathers arriving in.
thiii land - ?` Shall' oripreised 'himatlity'
find no isYlum:On:thieglobe?-r&c.:'
r . POUTER.
r ~
is' thus seen how'Jefferson cherished-the , elitution
Constitution; as - Washington alleged' I
in one of his addresses to Cotigress, -
44 for the sake: of those who, from every
clime, are, daily ,seeking a. dwelling
our land. 7 And this
,has temained
,a
cardinal prieiple of' PemeeracY, Practis
ed' and•preclaimAkdown to' its last con=
vention in Baltirnote, to whose resolu
'dons we'rtfer the reader.
Where then
.lint among the federal
whigs are,
_the signers; SUCII pelitiollS
to Congress as one now before us Ma
ting that 4.6 the farther 'adniissicin otfor
eigners to a participation .
,in the _political
rights of native :: - :',Ainerieans would be
hurtful to the' interests of our country" .
and asking for 66a ;repeal of the naturali
zation laws"-which by the cool&
onlisend'aliens back to the uneqiialle-•
gielation bf the states for the power of
Congress is concurrent one ; . and - the
object sought,- to exchide foreigoers by
national legislation., is unconstitutional,
as well as hostile to the' 'hole tenor of
our laWs, state and federal. Who appo
sed the last war, waged in protection of
adopted, 'aliens ? Who but a . federal 7
whig committee in congress in 1838 re
ported at length it. accordance with peti
tions ofithe tenor above cited ? And as
if Whig printers must not want a hyphen'
to connect their name with that of the fe
deral authors of the alien . and' sedition
- laws-;--who but federal-whigs in Congress
avoided en niasse, the vote on refunding
in 1840. Matthew Lyon's fine imposed
'under the sedition act of '9B ? Matthew
1 1Lyon was a naturalized Irishman, a
,member of Congress from Vermont,
who wa s fined $lOOO and imprisoned
' four months In their reign of terr Fir, for '
a temperate rebuke of the Execulive.--_-
A successful effort was made at last to '
restore the fine unconstitutionally exort
ed. The House contained 242 members.
A vote to lay the bill on the table, a qui
etus, resulted yeas:l7 ! nays 129. On
final passage there were 125 yeas-15
nays ! !—all the democrats' in,their pla
ces, while the whigs, though unable to
preyed a quorum, dodged!—alt but 15,
who by , open opposition took-the bolder
way, of closing the link' which-bound
them to the fathers of their party. Even
as we write, the news arrives_of a peti
tion presented by John Q. Adams in the
H. R. on the 31st ult. extending the pro
bation aliens for naturalization to
twenty one years. Mr. Hammett, a de
mocrat,' moved that it be laid on the table
—earned, yeas 128; ,nays 26. Among
the yeas we recognizie• some' half ddzen
Whigs ; among the , nays one Democrat
alone. ! Where were- the rest of the
Whigs? The House now consists o
223 members ; 69 therefore did not
vote. Who fear to meet this question?
and why?
The federal-whig candidate for the
presidency in 1840 used this language
in his Cleveland stump-speech, an , au
thentic report of which is before us,—" f
rely upon the good opinion of my coun
trymen ; I care nothing for the Opinion
of those who have_ come hither, 3000°.
miles across the water." , During the
same, campaign the central Association at
WaihiOgton co-operated with the whig
Executive committee, enjoying the pros
titution; of congressional franks in the in
treim of adjournment, both adding dicta
tion to fraud by radiating delusion from
that centre of corruption, at the expense
of 'Mel deluded, upon the public senti
ment which democracy - endeavors to con
centrate froM the broad circumference of
popular primary assemblies. In every
attempt (and thexhave not been few,) to
disordei elections by questions Of nativi
ty Or religion—fatal -to liberty which
would; smile here blessingly on all—de-s
mocrats have frowned upon, the desecra l
tion '•' :they scent " Alien and Sedition,"
"Chuich and State " in the breeze.—
We hOld the earth man's heritage and
triamtain his tight to locate where he
pleases. But,the ,principles or the As
sociation are skunkieldy odorous of the
Alien act; and, with the cosi - del& addi
tion of CrittenderN gag-bill, ale tido
lent-enough of the - Alien and , Sedition
laws to keep any but " Native" and
Whig awes at a respectful
Under, all the Varied names Federalists,
National Republicans, Antimasons, De
mocratic' 'Whigs, ••Native Americans,
down to American •Republicans, the last
cognomen, (we read the .dailies,), asap •
med in Philadelphia,not a democrat can
be fonnil---whOm we Would take boat:
As Pennsylvanians •we should never
forget that it federal ,Senate .ejected onr
Gallitin by a strict party vote, on an alien,
question. Gallatin 'who
_was; the. Atlas,
of Democricy in the Congress of '99
.-1801 while leffeisori and Madison were
organizing - victory. through .the 'Mate
lepdatures.. ortly T of the
sante- charactir,_;ould- have 'ostracized
hiti from the equalityßf himers due pe
ctili6rlY to theta dial:who have itipres
ed. theirlgigaetic -teitst's upoil. the Coo=
1 , ;
,-
Eli
cot uta'aa'abotnitteka a mai
its - 0 Pgrat 1011 ) *o,teiltOr for
Aa
,stte
A att meeting of t emocrat
. „
ie:Associationlof.TOwahtla heldlat -the
Court House on Tuesday evening 21st
hoe, the .follOwiiig resolutions were
unanimously - adopted
"Resolved, That the resolutions
passed by the Wilkeibarre Assobiation,
th,inet., be adoptCdby - . thilo Aeso
ciatt,n; and' published itr the-Bradford'
Reporter. •
rl" Resolved, that this Association'
consider the -Declaration of Indepen
&nark° as - the - great Declaration of fit- -
dependence ,the great confession Of
the public faith': of the friends of Liber
ty in the: United : States , as embodying!
the prinCiples Of human freedom'.. -
" Resolved', That like . those who•
adopted that immortal charter, we•
hold thesetroth's to be self-avid - Cot: that
all 'men are created free . -and' equal;"
no matter what country gave them birth ;•
"that they are followed by their ,cria
tat With certain inalienable rights that
among theie are Ifie, Melly dfiii : fits
pursuit of happineBa.":' '
Resolved, That those who aertietr.
ed our Independence proclaimed this
country the 4 , asylum of oppressed:
man: • - •
"Resolved, That. we consider die .
society denominated the "Native_
A.mericap Association," a libel uppli
the character of our 'Country—a libet
upon the Declaration of Indepeifileoce,
and upon the charaeters of those who
subscribed, that memorable, eharter;•
that its ',spirit anti4epublican,
anti-A,mericati, anti-Christian, and ,a
most foul and'treasonable 'plot against
Liberty.
i‘ Resolved, That the Association of
" Native Americans" had its originc
with the Federal Whig party, the sup
porters of Henry Clay ; that it is a
renewal of 'the spirit of the Odious Niro
and Sedition Lows; that the federal ,
Whig party.have openly and mahifest ,
edly identified themselves withjt in a
recent charter election in the city of
New York; and is no less than a -dec. ,
!oration of hostilities against all foreign
ers who come to our , shores. in pursuit ,
of freedom." -
A TALL POLE STAt.x.—ThC Minot
rady of - Columbus,' Ga., and vicinity,
erected'on Friday the Slat ulf., a' Hick
ory pole which out-does anything we
have heard of. In construction it re.
sembles a ships - mast, beim/ b rigged
with cross-trees 90 fat from the earth,
where 20 men may sit and . `-drink
long life , and,health to Folk and Dal
las, and success to their. glorious
, cause. On this isjnounted a 1 - itece of
ordnance, high enough to send its bra
zen echoes for many 'miles' around the
city. When , every thing was comple
ted, this gun was fired, while the Amer
ican!Flag with the ' , Lone Star of Tex
as" were then run Up to the truck, in
token of the hearty response of the gal
lant Democracy of Muscogee to the
Biltimbre , nominations.
PASS IT ROUND, that the whigs are
opposed to the One Day Election
Law" becausii it would do away with
the iniquitous system of PIPELAY
ING, by which they are in hopes of
succeeding. Pass, it round, also that a
Democratic House of :Representatives
passed the bill, but - that a Whig - Senate
rejected it.—
SLADE, the. Abolitionist, and one of
the most bitter, cantini,hypoetitical,
drawling knaves we heie•eVer_lidoway
without Virtue or talents, liming strad
dled The. abolition bobbtio give him•
self notoriety, has been
_nominated by
the Whigs of Vermont, as thelt candi—
date for Governor. ,
PVT THAT AND TUAt tobrtnsit.--;
netnember, , also, that Daniel Webster
says—" What we did in 1840, we must
do in 1844 !" -
Pot - these‘ together, and 'then look
't for " pipe layers." ' •
_ -
, hams K. Pot.% is - 'the son Of poor
parints— z inch by inch and step by step'
has he' won his way frotn poverty arid
oliscurity,lty the sole'.strength of(his
indomitable energy' and, his:brilliant
talents. _
A Poinnoi—Senator Jarnag / an; in-ad
dressing the'Whige iu New
Jeraey,.'eeked what the i Deinocrate ex
pected to gain by electing Mr: Polk.-
4. Two dollars a die y ,a / rul roast beef!:"
replied a voice in thecropd.
,
anti4inabling-,
encieiyi 600-tnein6ese: 'fins" -
been formed*Raltiinote lately. `
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