• • 14- r 4110. • INicar a ,. •• • `-?' ice • -- . - 7? --,- ....c•--.. - var;roarr- : ? :OP Sh s, ra 4 foVO, 14, ePingter• E 0 1 1'0Wiiiii*edniiilay, Novell. 1, 1848. DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. Gem LEWIS CASS, of Michigan •FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, Gen. W. O..BUTLER_, of Kentucky. Pregoldenlint, Team Alerrembe; 'T. N Par. VI, Ds .t.'. Posit WHO, The Philadelphia "American and Gazette," o the 21st ult., contains an anicle, which for emblush ing falsehood and brazen impudence, wehave nev. er seen equalled in that unscrupulous sheet. - We extract a paragraph, which will show the aim of that paper, and the spirit of the whole article: "ft is reported on the alleged authority of a letter addressed by a Local - tiro member ors Congress from this State, to a prominent Politican Ilosion, that Mr. DAyta'Witosow has agreed to support the elec tion of Cass and Butler. We state the fact that our Whig friends, who abandoned their own Congress ional candidate and supported Mr. Wilmot, for the purpose of attesting their sincerity on the question of Free Soil and their respect for a champion who bad exhibited some zeal in its advocacy may inquire into its truth and enable us to act understandingly. The returns on the Governor's election: from that district do not show that the Free Soil party sup ported our candidate although Whig votes secured the election and swelled the majority for Mr. Wil. mot. flaniesibeld their respective positions pretty evenly, and all assertions to the contrary have been conjured up for political effect and are denied by the official figures." In the first place, we do not believe that Fttch letter as is here spoken of, ever was written. No "loco foco" member of Congress from this •S:ate, could be so desirous of infamy, as to coin such a slander,. , or so reckless of troth, as to propagate such hasetiocd, without endeavoring to learn its au thenticity. The whole affair,we have no doubt, is atinfamous fabrication of the American aml Ga zette—that paper having, upon all oecasions, taken especial pains to rnisreprment an' sillily Mr. Wil mot, end impeach and malign his motives and po sition. The friends of Fief . Soil irr almost every section of the Union have been during the contest earimii fy importuning for Mr. Wilmot's preseuce. A tithe of these requests it was out of the power of man, under any circumstances to comply with. The late spirited contest in this District demanded his attention, until the last -moment, and since, he ba s been addressing meetings day and night, in the neighboring counties of New York, where his friends, who have sympathized so so deeply with him, have desired his aid. Since the above was written, we have received from Mr. Wilmot, a letter upon the subject, which will be found in another column, • Political Sitionsarr. The returns of the various State elections held in October after a long interval of doubt are sufficiently full to allow the results to be Summed up as fol lows. Pr.ristsvt.vsetA.—ln our awn State- Johnston, the Whig candidate is elected Governor by about 250 majority more or less over Liwigstretb, Democrat- Painter the Democratic Canal Commissioner elt c• test Whigs have elected 15 and the Democrats 9 members of Congress, a Democratic gain of one. The Whig majority in the Sale Senate is nine, 21 lo:l2,and the house isa fie 50 to So. ALT. s: Senator jb to be ch2ten in the place of Mr. Cameron Dem. Curo.,—The crmtcst in Ohio has been equally close as in Pennsylvania but the latest returns show the election of Pool the Whig candidate for Geyer crnor, by 200 majority over Weller, Dem. The Democrats have elected 11 members of Congress and the Whigs 10, a Democratic gain of two. The Legislature stands a tie in the Senate. In the House two Democratic majority. A. U. S. Senator is to chosen in place of Mr. Allen Dem. Gwent A.—The Democrats have elected four mem bers of Congress and the Whigs four—same as fast Congressional election. The copular vote gives about.3oo to 400 . majority- for the Democrats. Pi.mtum.Floritla has been carried by the Whigs who have elected their Governor, Mr. Brown mere. her of Congress, Mr. Cabell, ancl.a majority of both branches-of the Legislative. AU. 8. Seintrx is to be chosen in place of Mr. Westcott Dem. Veamosrr.—The Legh,lature of •Vermont met in joint ballot on Weilliesday, to elect Slate officers. The whole vote for Governor was 243. of la liich Charles Coolidge, the Whig candidate, had 122; Shafton. Free Soil, 65, and Dillingham, Democrat, 51; scattering 2. Coolidge, the Whig candidate, was elected. For Lieut. Governor, Mr. Pierpont, the Whig candidate, had 124 votes, and was de clared to be elected. Tan OFTWIIAL VOTE roe GovEturoa.—The Led ger oLOttober 25th Pays--we received, last even ing, horn our Harrisburg correspondent, the lull official vote of the State given at the last election for Governor, which settles the long contested sub ject of the exact official majority. Johnston's ma jority in the State is 302. The entire vote is 336,- 711, divided as follows: Johnston, Lon e „ *, • Jitianston's majorily, . The' a=reg ale vole is 51,284 greater ihnn was east, for Governor in 1847, , when Shook had above 6000 majority over all the candidates. Ma return have been compared with the general lemma re ceived at the office of the Secretary ol the Com monwealth, in Ilarr,isbarg ; and it is thought the special' returns, when opened in'the presence of tbe Legislature, next January, will aot vary three votes from the above result. A DITIFICOLTY HI SPAIN WITH THE UNITED STATEE Mtutsrea.—The government of Spain is famous for its' quarrels with. ministers of foreitno countries. It lately expelled Mr. Rohrer, the English minis- HU, and cow-it is at 4oggerheasis whit the Ameri can minister, Mr. Saunders.. A letter from that county in an English paper, says the quarrel is a severe one, and originated in consequence of an arrest of one of his servants. The American en voy dipanded satisfaction but It was refused. EMI ME ICH, EDIT 168,523 168.221 EMI uttErrffliM II A Wag . * kAlliMaTc` fq3 : t, P: -1-; e P l ' f.-r"."M ilk - ow - T 1131 0 1 4 borneiall 4,lelilf, aller lik . ''''' A ~.., lei ain a line' , • I se , 113,4t_ritinna we ._ rife over ibis Sta te , - and doubtless beyond its bor der! eaknlat if allowed to go enecatradieted, rioosly to a .'iMt me :pa .y letters received from various parts of die State, as also from articles in the public peso, to which my attention has been called, that wide circulation has been given to the miport r thachayiq slim i cerl7 ed in securing my osim re"-elt4tion,laA ling - toidimokurtheimatiosaimitherellereempi.l ed on the gut:unmet the Presidency. From what ever source this emanates, or whatever may be.the , motive for giving it eitenlation, it is due, alike to, truth, and to my own reputation, that it should re ceive from me a prompt and explicit deniaL My views upon the question of the Prftidency remain unchanged. I stand now where I have stood from the day I heard of the nomination of Mr, Van Bu ren, at Utica—his firm and uncompromising sup porter. To those-friends who have so recently and gene rously sustained me, in the trying and intensely ex citing political conflict just passed, I am bound by an overwhelming sense of gratitude. I know that a la ge t ropottion of those who gave n.e their suffrages, are the friends and supporters of General Cass. They cannot feel dee, ly upon any subject, without awaking in my breast, strong emotions bf sympathy. I would do nothing to subject me to the charge Of ingratitude, or that should give just grounds rif offence to those gene mos and magnanimotis friends ; but my position upon the question of the Presidency was early tak en, and has-been, as it shall be, consistently main tained. In assuming it, considerations of duty alone influenced me. The crisis:, in my indgmeut, de mands. fin - mess and moral courage. The friends of Freedom should stand firm, upon the ground they occupy, and in no respect compromise the great movement in which they have deliberately I embarked. Yours trnly, D. itrILMOr: To E. 0. Goodrich, Editor of Reporter. Joint VAN Bt - azs arrived at Cincinnati on Tees. day last, and was received by a largo concourse of citizens, who would have a speech from him. Important from Mexico, Return of Santa Anna. The Charleston Courier has telegraphic informa tier front New Orleans, antler dale of 21st instant, which says that by an arrival at that port advices had been received of the return of Santa Amia to Vera Cilia. It was but recently that Santa Anna & ent•his Secretary to sound public opinion upon the matter, and he probably finding affairs in such con fusion in the country has thought it a favorable op portunity for the: " hero of Angostura" to return and try what ketone will do for him again, in the way of raising him to power. Mexico is always to be afflicted, it appears, with the presence of de signing and ambitious adventurers, which keep the country in a colinual state of enmity, and the peo ple in constant dread and insecurity. The ether news from Mexico is that another bat tle between the whites and the Indians had taken place near Tampico, in which the latter were vic torious. Much excitement prevailed in Tampico in conatlnence of the appearance of a Pronnnciamen to, givar4 the preliminary details of the Sierra Mad re movement. The Picayune of the 19th poblishes an article which was a kind of a prtmunciamento cel the part of the citizens of Tampext; in which they declared that they viewed the presence of troops in Tampi 7 co as the precursor of a reign of arbitrary despotism, to which they never would submit, and that any at tempt to introduce more troops into the city, would be met by them with stem , determined, and an yielding resistance . resistance. The of Tampico is tlefen , ded by five companies of National Guards, who are highly indignant at the measures contemplated by Montays, commandant general, and are deter mined to foil his effints to establish a military die tatorshie in that city under any pretence. The in habitants langnish for a re-occupation of the city bribe Americans, and their movements are said to be connected with the Sierra Madre project.-- Whether the Indians referred to have taken advan tage of the state of affairs which prevailed and ,made an assault upon the city or whether the battle refer red toil but a continuation of the difficulties bet ween the military govemer and the people we are not at present advised. An abstract of another document is given by the Picayune. It is from Senor Tenorio, the comman dant of the troops who were forced to evacuate the city. = ' Li It is dated the Ist inst., and is addressed to the Tampiponos. He tells them the troops thus expelled were the battalion "Guards Costa," of Tampico, and gives a recital of their deeds at Resaco Adgos tura Patients., and the Motion. He wonders at the ingratitude of the Tampiquenos in requiring the removal of troops who have served so long and faithfully, shed so much blood for their fellow-citi zens and conferred so much luster on the city. He vaunts his own deeds in a longer paragraph than he devotes to the army an! protests that his only aim has been to save the beautiful city from the horrors of disorder. He tells them that the troops on their way to reninforce the garrison of Tampico were desk:tied to protect it from a coup de mein Imm New Orleans and that the story of their wish to pronounce for Santa Anita is totally Ws°. He says the garrison of Tampico has reasun rather to detest than admire Santa Anna, and that all are agreed a ,revolution at the present moment would destroy the political ex istence of the nation. - THE GOLD REGION or CALIFORNIA —The St. Lou is Republican hasan article which looks to the dark side of the California gold picture, and thinks that the flattering statements come from interested land holders who wish to profit by a flood of emigrants. It strikes us as undeniable, that the possessor of a gold mine is not very apt, voluntarily, to ask other men to come in and sham it with him. The Re publican adds. "We were yesterday visited by a tgentlemin who has been for many years a conductor of gold mines in Mexico. • He;examineci our specimen, and then informed ns that he had toweled over a large portion of the Sacramento r eg ion in search of gold mines, described the evidences he found, and concluded by assuring us that after spending five thousand dollars in experiments, and attempts at discoveries, he came out minus the investment. This is one side—our readers may compare it with the other." AFFAIRS IN YUCATAN.—The New Orleans Pica yune of the 7th, has the 'following : " A private letter informs the edit ws of La Pa tna that Gov. Barbacachano was so well satisfied with the gallant bearing of the American volunters in the late engagement with Indiana ,of Yuca tan that he contemplated making application to the uovemnient of the United States for 500 more !-- The anion alluded to took place Iwo leagues from Vallarlolierl. "iseinto Pat was so enraged by the defeat of his Indian troops, that be ordered four of his officers to be shot. Pat was making preparations to fortify himself in Peto, and at the moment of shooting Ins four officers he told his trillowev's that fro w *about to emerinto another aetion and' if he lost ft they Were welcome to shoot him !" - *Plioimilizerl—Yin. refer Toe to the, HiCntee sir k Free Soil hi . Thbs add is ',` ed loom 1 ,4 t When the • Greely ref , , by it. He demented the proceedies of the Whig Convention. and t • for its betrayal of tte.:2 He has since, almost air Mike prwsvit jinm s teen liberal in his abuse of the policy which put aside his favorilt; candidate , and has been firm in his re. 48a . 1 .1 ° tt" the oL tor- Nay, even tortlie g e Man this, he has encbanged fita wilnitimmemerestvisaily indirectly / treated is piecing before ilee•ainierican people the nominees of that party. But, :lately / a great ebastisa come over him. He professes to see in the signs of the-limey indi cations which portend the election of Gen. Cams, and throws himself into the cortime,lo avert that result, by the election of Gee. Taylor. We had given him credit for sincerity, in this FMB Sod movement, and bad almost learned to respect him as an Lana( ems., Bat this lot apostasy has completely .undeceived us. Horace Greely now stands before the American people, as the base betrayer of the great principle be rehoused to have most at heart, and merits the execration of every honest man. How hollow-heaved and hypocritical have been all his protestations and professions! That be will eery with him enough voles to defec t Mr. Van Burn in the State of New York, and give its.electoral vole to Gen. Taylor - , we have no doubt. If, by Lis adt:ress to the free soil whip of Ohio, and his personal exertions, he succeeds in carrying that State for Gen. Taylor, it ensures tlis election to a certainty. As IT rs, ins DEPIXI7O, nu MAILISOW. CD TOT. CONTENT TO Gen. CASS OM Gee. Times, ONE OF WHOM MUST BE CHOSEN BY THE PEOPLE. Fellow.eitizens! Horace Greelyhas postponed— abandoned the principle of Free Soil,-in his open and avowed support of Gen. Taylor: a Southern man, a slaveholder, pledged by habit, by interest, and by a tacit undereandin,g, to support not only the interests but the prejudices of the South. And why this flagrant and base desertion I To carry into effect the destructive policy of the Whig party! A National Bank, a Bankrupt law, a distribution of the proceeds of the public lands among the states, ruinous and extravagant appropriations for internal ' improvements, a consequent enormous national debt, a high protective prohibi ive twin, and a con seqnent direct tax—such are the measures express ed or implied, which Mr. Greet' , bolds cut to the Free Soil Whip, as a lure to rally under the stan dard of Gen. Taylor. Look around you, in your own county ! Hare not the Whigs obeyed the summons and fallen brach into tbe ranks of their par ty P thus deserting the Free Soil organiza tion, they havethe impudence to asK you to adhere to the tunnies ion of Mr. Van Buren ! Knowing that every vote you cast for him is indirectly cast for General Taylor, the Wh* candidate! They un blushingly taunt those Democrats with inconsisten cy who have opened their eyes to the fraud prac ticed upon the party ! By brazen appeals to con sistency, they endeavor to persuade the Van Homo Democrats to persist in a course which promotes the overthrow of the Democratic party ! 7n sheet, they have adopted the policy and the arguments of Horace Greely. the Free Soil Apostate ! Yellow-Democrats ! Yon with whom we have knight shoulder to shoulder in many a glorious field, against these same whigs, shall we appeal to you in vain • when all the glorious principles kyr which we have all so often contended, am in im minent danger of being subverted by the artful wiles of our old and inveterate political opponents ! We cannot believe it. We cannot believe that you will consent to sacrifice ail your principles, as Democrats, to the empty pride of consistency. Fm remember, that in preferring your consistency on one poke, by voting tot Meeting Van Buren, mid thus aiding on the election of Gen. Taylor, you be tray your inconsistency as regards the great Demo antic principles upon which pot believe the pros perity of the country to depend. Choose then ! On one side you have the vain gratification of an opinion allied with the triumph ef your political kiss. On the other, " the sober_ second thought," resulting in your return to party nominntions, and the triumph of your principles and oftyour friends. Choose then, between a Ka tional Bank, and the constitutional Treasnry 7 L-ber tween a high protective Tatifl and a Tacikfor re revue only—between appropriations for internal improvements, and the principle laid down by Gen. Jackson in his veto of the Maysville road •bill—be tween an enormous national debt and an economical administration of public affairs--between cenntrali• tuition and the sovereignty of the States—between privileged classes and an aristocracy of wealth, or equal Lew& for all and privileges for none. In shoe, CHOOSE BETWEEN GEN. TAYLOR it GEN. CASS. The following Democratic Senators and Repre sentatives of the present Congress, who voted for the Wilmot proviso, are, / notwithstanding, out in fa vor of Gen. Cass AlcUcllciel,Burart and Bingham, Michigan. Let na unto with these statesmen and patriots in now rewiring Democracy from the perils that sur round her. While we follow their example we are in no danger Irons the charge of inconsimency, or the mortifying reflection hhreafier, that we are resportrible for the downfall and overthrow of the great demociatic party. • . GEORGE SANDERSON, U. MERCIJR, G. F. MASON, A. MIOEAN, J. F. MEANS, 1 . D. VANDERCOOK, B. LALORTE. lth,l'hientisi su havetad "nears' from pm:oi While the Whil head of the Union was bounding i 1 01 Sr,nrroas. Dodge and Walker, Wisconsin. FelFh and Yitzgerithl, Michigan. Ohio. , Brew, Illinois! Atheraon, N. Hampshire. Bradley and:Hamlin, Maine: RsearsrwrArivr. Thompson; Stroup, Mann and Bridges,•Penn Edsall, New Jersey. Jenkins:Lord, Nichol, McClay, N. York. Peck, {Vermont. Peasley and Johnson, N. Hampshire. Smart. Clark, Wiley, Maine. Preis, Monis, Farand Ohio. lienly, Civet-cad and Rockhill, Indiana. Eynde and Darling, Wisconsin. Thompson and colleague, lowa. Weniewth. Illinois. • TO THE FREE MOIL WHIOI9 0,01110. i.g sissy - 6 Peaasylvaaia' . there ease bests from lira that ' eltalal the aad dimmed the it tails. 16 - Iva ' set ; the 11.11atil • 1. r ..,., „ t...- : ~... strailliamor; .k, , .. extl tets....w. • 5 , Y aid Viva seeirliM'S oar . , `• '''. vi tamed oat their inmates, so lately dumb bad-cower- *Digest, coasciestines Wbis farmers and 'sedum itstrelm glade Maw* lto ibises your red friends because of flair misfortune at Philadelphia. could but brave sees lbosebordes wbo rushed tosetber is "thamielkigetlithalse4.4l.o** l o4l l and scream over the est Telegraphic report of impelled le henitase. to tikshtiloireekew the polities von bad taken. 1 rawest yon , to do it Noe! • • ' Yes, friends ! doe result GI your sate is dissi' trams, an meaner whether Ford or Weller is Darer. woe by s ifew lissdnidvenetti s The het that.Casairai entrehtlin say sort of s Willem* hr °hist; enomils. Wa 'all expected a elan sad &alien! struggle is November. but anticipated the election of Ford by . 5.40114w111,000 majority. with a decided Whig ma jority is Caimans and the legiihnstret Colt have sadly disappointed us:-.bat Sr•Pesnaylvants yen would have 'turned as. As •it is, we are able to succeed without you, but we don't like the idea.— Wiles every other whig State of '44 stands Ann. T how can we Dew rt to pa con . y with the greatest. the Noblest of all! When N w York mid Peals sylvanincamefirrwarl to admi, s ad, atone foe their, defection in the last National snot, bow can we, surrender our Aag.ship in that glorious though no ' fortunate struggle! We cannot. will not do. itl, Yon have shared our defeats—you must share our, victory! Success will hardly be joyful without' I you. And why should Ohio fallout of line with the Whig array just as they are achieving a decisive} triumph! What good end is even proposed b i. thoSe who counsel that course! Suppose it we possible to give the vote of the State to Van Buren (and you must know it is not,) do you not see Altai is in etfeet giving it to Cass! Every Electoral Vote against Taylor. is either a vote for Cass direct ly, or against a choice by the people, and so in favor of Car indirectly ; for he and no one else will as suredly be chosen if the election goes to the House. With the Delegations from fifteen States for, only twelve in all against him, and the other three divid ed aud f io view of the knowledge that. if no Presi dent be chosen, the Senate will certainly-ilect Gen. Better Vice-President and dins pat him in the Pres.. idential Chair, there 13 not a chance for theielectioa of anybody but Cass by the House. And why should any Whig vote so as to humor South Caro lina and elect Oen. Gass I Why l The grounds of demurer are three—Gen. Taylor -=the Philadelphia Convention—the Extension of Slavery. Let us consider them in order. . You know how little I like Gon. Taylor.—or rather, bow thoroughly I disapprove his nomination far President.. Personally. think well of him, as almost everybody does. The uniform testimony of those who know him proclaims him a shrewd. sen sible. practical. humane. honest. unassuming man. jf it were simply a question of men, I believe at least three-fourths of the Ilition would prefer him Gen. Cass. As to his being a soldier anda slave holder. I should like him better If be were neither; lint I never did and I think I never will oppose any than merely as a slaveholder.for as office under die Federal Government. for I believe such opposition contrary to the plain intent end scope of the Fader s! Constitution. If it had been understood - or sus pected in 1787-8 that the citizens of the Preelltates would ever come to proscribe and vote against flousbern men merely as slavebolders, I am sore no Contain** would have been adopted. Ido not behive Washington would; have signed the instep must; I am confident Medals's and Pinckney would not. I cannot Anise in a proscription which seems to me faithless, ill-directed and worse than useless. Nor will I Rieke the soldier's calling a reason for opposing any one so loot as the Nation requires, trains and employs soldiers. lam more than will- :ink to orate in any effective movement for abolish. in; the trade of War; but, so long as the Nation encourages, requires aneliepholds that trade with out objection or cavil, I cannot unite in proscribing warriors who have ever been blameless in . private Ike and obedient to the civil power. But we heartily agree that the Philadelphia nom ination was not the right one—that a candidate for President of superior qualifications and merits should have been selected. The choice made was not mine, nor yours. Boas of you I visited and conferred with last year concerting the defeat of this selection,. Many of you must know that spared no effort, early oriate, to defeatit—yet is was made. And now the only question to be coasider ed is this—ls it your duty, is it mine, because of our disapproval of the reasons which induced and the latlueoces which erected this nomination, to op• pose it and thus contribute to Gen. Cass's election, I have carefully weighed,l have calmly deliberated, and my conviction is clear that I ought, is view of aU the circumstances. to vote for Gen. Taylor. I Alin do so. Rear my reasons, and then judge my (maw. As to the iudnences which prevailed in the phi!. atielphia Cooiention, I do not respect and shall not Baiter them. A low expediency--a mole-eyed Con ning—a loose-principled complaisance to those who promised, if Oen. Taylor should be nominated, all manner of Southern and Mouth-Western States which they had no more power to Make over ihatt Satan had to give away "all the kingdoms of the earth," —4 saw all this and detetted it. But this is of the past; and is no longer of int practical con sequence. The' intrigues and intriguers hive alike Similar into their amoral proportions. Gen: Tity lor is noutinateilt but they who suddenly expanded into great men en the Strength of votes they were to secure for him and the United &4WD Senators they were to carry by means of hini in Alabama. Ni.. sissippi, lowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Tues, ate., have been proved meat of swelling . words and so real force. Every day renders more and more ap parent the fact that Gen.• Taylor will not be elected nor materially helped by no-party oar by Southern party rotes, and that,he mum be carried by old-Cash ioned Whig strength and Whig means — by appeals to the understanding, the patriotism and the ,con scienee of the country against the policy and Meas ures recommended t , Polk and supported by Cass —by Whig airmen, mid whig votes. Glen. Tay lor has himself been constrained by the necessities of the cue to place himself diitinctly on the Whig platform. lam a pretty determined Whig, and I don't want-a7maidelst more decidedly of us and whit us than hii liter letters make TIM Stites which will vatelor him will thereitylktivim* ale getteral`frateres nete known of stn nieif; The Con gimis elected with bitti' Irina* a Whig Castgren, milrthe more volittitit' lelrewanniess dies, • • . - t" ' -;s" r a" is, •I , - wialdi - ria to . country through coonity iIDVeTIMI Represestatic o“, lam cow 40, KT* I AA swo wbiellt, of be intlhbi Ms Millais ow thi litho* atehlig or orri:inoiles eiden:Airily sesdigegts its this 'point *VCR is sot'ir tifirf. be hanwa ter yea alb . 4 Thit Helm Taylefris nital!ei hotihifrt-Ahl he °Frosted id* Atureitation of It2its' ?dottier haseßes spoketrlislimyrettensktrt of Elm rap' yet, with the utilise .1110010112 inethisisethey, insists ow cherishing the eeitatidripdthre edirree Bute isserfeemtee with ite-wto inuelir is opfnmylie gesasby knows. That be &siert oretthiemptetts say Extension of Slavery. I *knot babel/a; aordirl I believe that say eassidalthe portion cif, tbs Whigs of the booth ilo no, to ail aty miatersations with soothers whip on this subjeCt,l,lssire not yet niter the first man who expressed a desA e tl ir see slavery=- acresßoil. the Rio Graide.. theist thee they will not be excluded— , a soothers plaster has a right to take Ns sla ver to this sew territory as clearly as a Northern wted-grower kas to take his sheep there, and they can't agree to surrender the principle; but as to. desiring the practical ex-. tension of slavery, I know not one of them who 1 } 'who does so. On the Coat ry, their geompli stuck, meet is not dissintilarM, tha -of the great body,of intelligent conservatives at t Nonli—name : that slavery is an evil which, t ugh they shrinl from the sacrifices apd_ hazard of abolishing it, they have no wish to/impose upon others. In defiance of the noisy manifestations of zeal for "southern rights" whici(the lynx-eyed jealousy Of a flagrant wrong nate:Filly indite. I finely believe that if every southern s i ring could vote Yea or Na) on th ques tion of slavery extension, in inch manner that no mans rate should be exposed, two-thirds of them would vote in the negative. The jealousy of the powelful classes of slave breeders ,and slave trad ers. thay long -reveal any open exhibition of this 1 sentiment, but it is there nevertheless. Now let ea suppose Gea. Xaylor- chosen Presi- 1 dent, and with him a Congress (House) *big by . 1 20 to 30 majority—the whig strength consisting of ninety Representatives of Free and forty of slave stales. You know under what iniluenees the whig members from free states are chosen, asd what are the sentiments off this subject demanded by the public opinion of their camitituencies. Yoe know 4 whether a President could afford to commence a detully struggle with two-thirds of his supporters in Coagress. Yea can guess whether the Loco Foco -Members, whatever they might be impelled to At for a President of their own stripegpeonld be likely to do toward helping on a whig President engaged in such an undertaking as slavery extension. The inducement to such a self-sacrifice for a President tif adverse politics would be notbing.the peril every thing.' I have looked over the whole ground care t folly, and it is my deliberate conviction that, should Gen. Taylor and a Whig . Congress be chosen, there will be no extension of slavery during the ensuing Presidential *l.ll=l trust sot ever after.— And I do not see bow any candid obseiver, after a survey of the whole ground, can come to a differ ent conclusion. What would be done in case et Gem Cass's election' I cannot so clearly foresee; but the prospect cannot be better in that direeti , it May be far worse. The south Will trust a soot ern President farther and bear from him more ths from a northern politician_ whom . she knows w against her claims until she bought him by lurks his inflamed ambition. It is the pride, not the • terest, 'nor the calm 'judgment, of the south the stands inlhe way of - the .establisluoint of the f snit - priueiple—dread of being overruled or of - borne rather than an earnest wish to diffuse eta • over the wilds of New Mexicci aad California.• .T IMMIX' tranquility and success to the Administ tration of a southern Presidest of general and d ;served popularity, the south will concede what s never will concede to the samerical preponderan - of the North. Taking into account all the circa , stances, I believe the Extension of slavery an , - Gen. Taylor as little probable, as under any , • President whatever. - • And if not on this nem:tont, on what should an whig falter ! , Since-Geo. Cass or Gen. Taylor ma be President. how. should any whig hesitate ! . the difference in the men be nothing. is not difference in their principles something! On one side, Legislittioe ,by Congress: on the. othe Government by Presidential patronage and Pie • dential Vetoes. On the one side, Protection American Indartry ; on the, other, hostility to I. e principle, and persistence la the policy which now the main rause of our moneyed contractio and convulsion. On the one aide, Peace and cp - tentment within our own boundaries; on the oth r IA lost of eonquest, the glitter of arms, and ' t e bottomless abyss of Public Debt. On . the one sit, the application of the Nation Revenue Li good p t to the improvement of Rivers, Harbors and the means of intercommunication geherally; on the ' ether, the policy foreshadowed in Gen: ' Case's letter to Ohicagerand thelltiltimore Resolution condetnn ing any general system 4,f Internal Improvement: On toe sidtythe policy of collecting and disbursing the Revenue in sieh manner as - shall vendlolacifiz tate Commercial Intercourse and Exchanges:: as the other, the eleventh eentaryleets-Tithsury, ssitlr its rigorous exactions and its. complaisant velazi. tions—its smiles I,r the Palace favorites and its frowns for the basiaenconimunity. 0 believe not men of Ohio: that the whig party periihed at Phil adelphia or anywhere eb.e; it lives. and must live, fur the Country, has need, of it; it hits important duties to diseharge—glorions destinies to,aceom" pHs& Whatever the faults of its representnives at any time. it is the same party still—the party of generous impulses. of enlightened judgment, true and steadfast patriotism. Other parties rorrecty regitrd paylleular objects or measures but this alone has that just idea of the nature and scope of Gov eremite which make its great end Ilsasnaars and its existence a straggle for the widest diffusion of positive handl; and blessing. They .who call most loudly upon you repudiate And destroy the whig piny are ,reenilyntin • who never undeniood its aims nor concurred its views—who. having for yeitrit bitlerlY , Oppoied and decried cannot see why Should teieriel6l: presents:floc and as- eetidenejr' - ofjray consequence whatever. But joa, titte-hetiteiViihtis'or'Ohio!'who haVe litt4 shout- ITCTIM jar/ possibility -gu The ( In *gone goo .ftfthisenast, atreciosi ever, _prer.,, t erritt this eitY andibe esilitortiiitrwfiicinteautv. - at the time wart of the most intense description, i fekh from The time of - his conviction -to the 1 1nc 41 ?"444 1 4 1 , 4 P1( 11 4F.1v0ird %Moab ' hiiinnikeitee of the crime - 1)y asserting it few 'rig that the-WM*llles eel the tifil kwore falsely- H .waeattended a yesterday by several Catholic Cler en but in 'consequence of his Tefbeal •to'aublitit 1 0 id them - alone; they tithed; diter was- • wended i sevend of the , Proiliftamt lergy. He Apar& w v them edieenneitienat4P tichntim -en4 ,Ild v* ~ and said ;bathe had no cortfessionici 'Wake ti Mai), that' God knew Ids salt. i He Vila led f iel the cell to the scaffold -at lerminotesitiefore 2 i 'clock, anti after he had oecenged, be addresser) t. • assemblagL in Geuman, cAtiEb. eras mterpnetcd i the l Rev... r. Fleleacitstart, .14 th e Protestant t mg*. "Lingfillilt sit that he wasletindingen the • i 'id ref going from this world-to hie 'Creator, that • t fiftisen witnesses swore fakely against him the jellies of the Caro hal no spirit in them in ei :Limning him under so ck circumstances, and at from the evidence et arman lying on the bed i him . Rademacher, a coneinsiewof gailt tepid he rawn, - He forgave ail-4ite judges, thejury 4 r 1 ,1 witneeses-,.und cencluded leith _the 411100 tug mentions remailt : *God aillishlge." Tito cap ivastlien:drawn over his lace—the rope as placed round his neck by Sheriff Lelar, anti thri props except the waist rime beieg removed, stood on the brink of eternity. The next me ent, and he appeared at the bar of a rkdayous 1 ••. He Was cut down in half an hour, and an zamination conducted by Dr. W. T. Duffle proved' bat the verfrime bad beers eeparated, and of rourre i eath was instantaneous. There were about five 47. undred people present, and there must have been ore than a thonsand outside the walls.-.-Dotly blic October 21st, ° ' ...• Tnz honlOrtuar.—The redaction in the price i Iron is charged by politiciansto the tariff 010846. I , is, says the Upland Union, is wholly false, as hownbi the facts of theorem. In 1845 the ramps mports of iron to this country were over 810,000 i 1 1 ' wbile in 1847, under the present tariff, it fell o 86,000,000, and the amonut of iron exported in '47, compared with '45 shows an increased valix. , f 8460,000 - in !heck of the tariff of '46. If there be ny diffrenlity with the bon men of Pennsylvania, t comes from over production as shown by the fol. owitig facts. The t o f '47 over '46 in pi, , , , , art ron and 'castings is n rly 23 percent; in wrought ron 83" per cent ; nail and spikes 84 per Cent. • • CLOSE C01114811.-'t elections in the different States are remarkable for the closeness of •the rote between the two parties., Another ja.konnotin Sept. Carolina. Mr. Samna : the Oita Reptesentatire,-it re-eleetedo Cook in the Georgetown.w district, over Mr. , 39' zit y. NevOlbacrhstittents. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. A [lemmas iinletitYd to the estate of Bostwick %di deeihyhittii onVyalualagv., are "beretry wipe* tee to make psi - meet without date*, and thine baying claims against amid estate will plane preassrt thew dal} authenticated ; fey settlement. JOHN 111. BADGER, Standing Home, Oct. fit, 1848. Administrator: 411166100% • e. KINGINIER.Y & CO, A itrs .a.rsesivbar. sad will be away day for bat A yeedie t , • Tety lam! aesoneaest • • FALL AND WINIIOi. DOOM • embalming every thiug walled by tliktniYers of cheep goods. Tbase having CIO to pay, fur goods. would d. won't° eat iitivir more anti wave ttlenivlver from urn In Meat per cent. Aube mid Ohm erriikir we meet b$ noceim.ell etre gesdu,skerbieti iimeme,erill give a mom extepljed deimipti?Wof Jibe br%ert 'mad cheapest lot of •goodieier I . iipastrt tn. treivanOi . • nv I zumausTiv asttram• Q*11,4% illaY an order at the Or/rheas' Court of Bradford Co., A) will be exposed to public sale, on rtinrida,y, 30th day of lifemenher, 1840, at 1 - o'tdock, P. M.,, spun Me 'enrolees. the lillowirm peliperty.-te wit: A certain piece at petrel-oflaad; situatie. lyintantlieing in the township of Leroy. moot" afrrcsaid. Am!. bounded and described se lilloare; . to wit : Beainii at a poet, the sem (farmer el" J. Hient's lot, ftt • Mirth along mid Heat's Mt. and widow Andrew's lel* 232 perches los post, thence east Worm,* line of &doer Bums'e laud. 31 3.10 per*es to a poet, dicer south-231 perchei to the bunk of Towanda creek at i post, thence op aid ereelc.tbe mews *ems( to the piece of beginning.— Containing 6fty aerosol/40 oneepre c iresag siert id the hum of the lite Peter Walter, deceased. 'Attendance given, and tenet made known on the day of sale. • JOHN •VA NDYKB. Administrator. Oct. 30. 1 948.1 1 4AIRDBLANA,WALTE118, Ad B elaWastffirO . WriTriVo riAtE l F:tr Y:an order of dm Orpliaifireeertaaf Bradford n', will be exposed to- public as* as B.4,TURDA 25th day of Nov, 1848, at 1 o'climit:. upon the premi se*, a Tract of land situate in Orwell township Brad ford Co. * Containing sixty thise,scresoind`bounded au the math br Linden( Wendy Robinson as the cart by , lands of Liman Lyon, south by leads of Harry Liars and on the west by lima Robinson rag the use wset of land Which Stephen C. Smith ask wife. by Deed dated Oct.. 29th 1948. (recorded in Deed Book. vol., 24 pages 366 60) .conveyed to the said Jubu Dimes Deed., with about twenty-five semi theieorimpreivell, and a small framed house 'there on meted: ' • I .Attendancts gives, end terms malls known nn the day of ode. C. G. GRIDLEY. °chatter 31, 1818. Adminisqator. R E OIIB.TER f 9 NOTlCES.—otiee isfarthi gime to idrpersotts jntereilteil, that - 011Priabiei and GiorMl W. -liard.r. isdminhirMitra of the emir of Jamie Benjamin deed , . Me of ealottl: . Rumen Pratt ; administrator of the eatautmf..Goorge Jetties Aged,' late of Sbeskequin; Periey If: Hoek administrator of; the MIME' of Win. Deritokre'd., hue of Pike: • •-• Grows K. Shepard, nue of dm adatiaistratom•of.the estate of Nathan Alcord, jr., fete of Wells; - Joseph Ber.usait, guardian of Mary Jane Cook, minor child of Aaron Cook file of Columbia. • D.L.battl e administrator of the estate. of Wilson Scott, deed., la's of Towanda homneb; Erma Aock lAA administrator of Samuel Rockwell. k. who' wai adininisuater C. Roam, deed, late of Cookie. . "OypOsal. Buns. executor of the estate of Joel Buns dee'd, late of Orwell. Charles Elmer*. sdatinistratimiof Ruth, Criodsl, (Ms of Wirdbam tp • A W Wik*x. administrator of threats* of Abw loe Wilcox. deed. late of teßoy. Won - M MiTnatd and k Oar. saptinistnitom _0( the estate of .1: D.. Taylor, deed.. Ist* ofl Rome.—hsve Dal and fettled in the sacs of the Resister of Wine. in sod ftw the county of Bradford, the fern ints of their emend adniiflh tioiii opowthe estates aforesaid. sal that dm. same 'will Ks prestited to Orphan's mart of mil coodYkflo Monday.** 4th day of December next. kor copfitretioo and. alkmance.: L. E. D.RW 012, Res. Resisteii Clem, Towanda, NQV. 1, 1818. who plied the here 'late out is Id kw the , and Aziae.*• Char. ue 2 '►g~.