The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, April 24, 1856, Image 2

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    i nUdei r theidniinistration of Thomas Jefferson,
ire great aposile, on the 14th of April, ,1802,-
'the term of residence previous to naturalizii•
,eon, was restored to five years, what it had
;been Under General Washington, and - where
ithas ever since remained. • No, fellow•citizens,
the Father of his COuntry was never a Native
American. This American excellence' never
belonged ter. him- •
4 "The Fuginve Slave Law is all the South
• tias obtained In this r compromise of 1850, - -
!t, *gli law founded both upon the letter and
the Ipiiit•of the Constitution, and a similar
law has *silted on our statue books eversince
the Admintstration ot Gen. Washington : —
. 11istUry teaches ns that but To r -the provision
in favor of fugitive slaves, our present Con=
iititution never would have existed. Think
To that the South will ever•tainely surrender
f
theiigitire' slave law to Northern fanatia;
and lAholitionists. " .
"And now,' fellow citizens, what a glotious
partYthe Democratic Party has ever been!—
Man rabid the being of n summer's day, whilst
principles are eternal. , The generations. ' of
mortals; one after' the other, rihe,and sink, and ,
.are - fOrgotten, but the principles of Democracy,
.which we bare inherited from our revolution
ary fathers, will endure to blest . ' mankind
throughout all generations. Is there _-any
- Democrat within the aimed of My voice,
~ is
there any Democrat throughout the . broad
limits of good . and great old Democratic
Is'enteryliania,.witiO' Will abandon these sacred
principles:for the'sake of following in the train
of a inilit4try conquerer, and shouting for the
heretrof. Lunde,' ' Lane, Cerro Gordo, , and
ChaPuttepec.;.." , •
And When. the campaign resulted inti
nriaph; President Pierce tendered to
.:air.--
Buchanan the leading foreigtfmission, which
was a ccepted.. Circumstances have transpired,
within the -last few, years, tonoke the - Amer
. icarrinissionlo the Court 'of St. James ,inge
larly important, and it has happened that,
during Mr.. Buchanan's stay . in Lotrdem,
several great questions of ak.exatious and
complicated 'character. have di.ittubc f l the
interconrse between thettro countries. how
ester important to bath the - cultivation of
continued peace and good will, the fact that
Great Britain seesour. growing prgre.is with
jealousy and alarm, and' the fact that we.
behold her pragmatical interferetif!e upoft this-
COO i °cut wherever an opportunity ispresented
Ito . her, With indignation, render our relations
iwpitl'
r Great , 'Britain of. the: inoq deliCa‘e
Chsracter. , The very intimacy of onT.l.ensiness
. Contiesions eonstituting- as it does the cord
witieh bind's us together, is apt, moreover, . to
coitus in conflict with political considerations,
and !the commercial attraction, so to speak,
throwa,intodangerous neighbol'hood Ettglitdi
ambition on the One hand and American
prOgress on the other; It has become .prov
erbial that the selection of a 'wise, able and
experienced man to. represent the United
, -States'nt the British Court, ,is one of the first
duties ofan executive, hardly secondary to the
• election of its ow-n chief :cabinet ministers,
, beeinso the, English mission is always i ntern
felyJnoportant to the immediate int e rests of
• our people, During the trying
. bane of.- Mr..
13achanan'S -ore 'nation seem
to:have '.becorne with.-the imper ,
tan . o and justice of ns. They
felt that in; the .Ainericati . r they .; "had-
.st man upon whose safe - charat3tefe
'counsels they could Confidently ' lean. . Their.
eyes were constantly fixed uponhim. .Every 1
, steamer brought news 'occasioning the great-
. eat' anxiety to the commercial 'and other.
.' daises. On more than one occasion colEti-on
seethed to. he inevitable, ,but every
_panic
pits* off. :- Th 4 'correspondence of fir. Bu
: 1 cbnniin, such of it as - has been published,
; ! exhibits . on his part a vigilance, a discretion,.
an 'lndustry, an at the same time a, dignity
!of Character., that have made his name a
Hfaverite name in 'every section of our beloved
; Union. In the 'later troubles which have
given rise to so much excitement and di..;cus.. ,
sion in Congress' aud the country, Mr. lin- 1
.
.chanan his towered in all the, dignity otbis
..high character and intellectual superiority.
: .'lle, will leave his post to give, way 'to, 'his
• successor, bav , ing.establisbed renewed kind
relations between the two votintries, and i
hiving fixed upon the hearta,ciftlie Engli.li
tr.:
_1.„ . ',.:1ti the impress of a republitin character,
71 - ;..;'-. 1. 4 - ihicti baa never, for a single inOinent, yielded
'....itS simplicity.. and _iti, truth - to aristocratic
- ~.- 7144ndishments. Courted and __flattered duririrr
hii stay, he studiously abstained from paying
'. . trikate to English vanity. Inall circles, and
°trail-Occasions, die displayed his American
dignity; and his American palriwism. , Never
gratuitously obtruding his country or her
- : ' advantages, be never. hesitated to speak of
ber as one speaking of his parent ; nor was
he ever actuated kv any spirit of offensive
partimnalnp., 'As he came plain, untitled,,!
i . unpretertiling American eitiied.- The highest
:clames tried with eneb.other to 'do him honor;
and on a threatened collision between the
• 1 - •
- , two countries .alattried the people of both,
his presence aritong the populace of - London
was- greeted - with - - cheers, on evidence that,
• - i : , howeverrpartiiiii may intrigue, : otte honest, ,
atraiglitforwaril patriot is mire to hold a high
Plane in the atections of the masses.
. H .One -- great: - reason why Mr. .13irelianan's
:thatiejs..at This moment so acceptable to his I
..touritif..s,-itert. ".is,, because he stands before I
iheil:l,l4l,,merey he an- eminently chimble,
but 0 ri 3 OZimilierstlyz7fe mail. In, the grow.?
' ing greatness of our it:public, its. incmasingi
Importance, commercially and., p4litiiially, it.
j
. 'extended and .extending. relations with o:hst
• :
pot ern; to'speak 'o f the efforts of reckless
, . agitators against the Constitution, anti all the
vetitirity'apd guarantees of our domestic -sate
, •
.'•,ty and trinquilitr, we tee the evidences that:
'such *limn tvoniti be - able' to confer sigaat
; benefits upon ;tilt American people in the
li'residen..itil Chair. For the first time in
manY years ire behold in the person .of
:iitints ilticliens.n,,a statesman - who cotnbinss
I - the. rare,quality .of havi i g been' among the
veryfnit, in every etnergency . ,,, to I take the.
most prOwieSsive view of every great question
1- - • r"
. ' Iftld vet. of - being able to preserve,in the midst
. .
~
-i of umbel:Dement:kg ,the bearing, and to .1-
~ erovie the :influence of a sagacious And well
- - poisetdemoc . ratio statesreaue .'ibis thi..4, coin
, - bietathin'tif elements wliiet hawawakened the
- favorable sentiment of those classes of chi- ,
- ' sons 'who look for a wise and- . judicious Ad
. - ministration of the Federal Government,' and
whieb., has., also gathered around lain, the
yawn juld :genmons sympathies of the vim
' stitittients who confide iti . _bits progressive in
.: stitiets; as illustmteo through - all his long
0
end Mutations Career.. • ' ~ 1 .-- : .
'` .- -
' Thera i! !not nosf,:to be Contalys reasonable
man - - .'
of the
in Any:part 0 _e Union, who does out
believe - `that - Mr. Bachilan's nomination
FeitTalie'iliceeeded by hii; certiia and IA;
- -staiphatrtrelentiOn. - _ To the South be presents
i-40! , teitiOmsialititt; even. irv'the- ,tglttest
. ..4ktoie i irit4Abitisitieh induced this '. &Nth
''; ! ern>delegatei toioti for. Into so long and - to
steidilyin the Demoeratier.Ouventioa of '('2,
Neor ast*, hest:arida Path - the .unCompro
-. misineeneti)7 IA dieie enemies ; .the devoted..
..advocate of ;their OoMititOtional riibts.. To:
• : the•NOrthwasterisStates
_be proems the . un - . :
. .•111dliid Istickid'. 4 one-.who.' bee - tO.o twl
witli-•:- their own .plotteer: i , .
Gm•3o4 l lWopetting:iito Witt fiestASkritiwiew
tO-Omtimerelloil Mvilikkiksi.' The -*nitwit
wr fWaterW States lino* hint'its shei:ahstopio#:
lof theif-nights'Arhero Mesa: Were tierlik>4lo'
' British. rapsteity . :- While - in Vie saddle States
T: tell)e ready enitiflitsj Ilieiliinesiorith,
^4 ,
• s' i ,
1 -
v
~ 1 ,
no disrespect to, Other eandidatei. that he is
this day regarded as -the very striongeitt, man -1
whom the Deritocracy Could Wominate - for
the Presidency.:', The divided political hoitse=
hold of our political frietids in New- York
*mild, - we believe, find-in his name, the 'olive
branch of banns:My and team; the- I.lemo
crita of Ohio, would, under his' banner, ad
' vance to that victory which their patriotic
efforts so - well deserVe l ; and Pensylvania,
standing between these two gigantic States,
would pronounce for' such a candidate, with
such a majority as would the days
when these three Commonwealths constitut
ed the very fortress of the DeMocratic - party
in the,. free States. ,
During Mr. Buchanan's absence oUnearly
three years, while politics raged at hotue, he.'
proudly abstained from interfering with the,
irtrtiggle for the Pres idential 'inceession.—
Fiom the time he set fOot on 4riglis-13 Soil, lie
wrote back to his friends, that :in no -,contin
g-e'ney would he, platie himself in the field as .
a candidate for the_ nesideney. There was
nothing of grief in this , resolye, nothing ,of
diSappointed'arribition, It was the calm and
deliberate judgment of :a mind! which, having
looked carefully over, tale political 'past and
'future, had comp to the • conelu4on that the
day_ for the scramble Tire Presidential ihnnors
had passed aviay, at least with him, at d that
he was deterniined tti apply himslf to other',
pursuits. We assert', that, if by .every
vate letter, written from lindon since
absence. by James Dirohanan,l in•lthe' unsus-.1
peeting confidence ofj his .hear, 'should now . ,
lip published, and laid before the Ameti - csin
people, there Would- not be l found one line;,.
no, not one syllable. inanifestium a desire fuel
die nomination of the - Derimeratie 'Conven .
tion. or suggting ithy 'way by Which
inioliti.he obvtined by hiMielf. Even bin
haS liecoma formidable as a eandinat.., his
letters are aniiroited !by the same generous
spirit. And the•terY f;tet, •;` ; that ho has taken
this com-se frjm a oinscieutious, belief that it
would he out Of place for him to struggle fot
the nomination, has Made lam acceptable tO
thwnasses in !every part-oflour country. Al).
sent he is, it true,; but his image:-is before
their eyes %,!herever they go.. In dicta jt
it is trite, .but counsels have been
• felt as if he were present itinon'g us. Con
-i tending with the giants of foreign diplomacy,
it is true, but the -thoughts iind the • words lib
left behind, rtre his' living ,representatives.- 1 -
The people *ill judge of him by the .regard,
by the even tenor 'of his' life, by the spotbils
,purity of his !character, by his unditanted
triotli4n, nod: by the trophies with %Illicit he
returns to hii-riativ,e shores, to be crowne4,4s,
we confidently hope, with the highest honors
of the Republic: . - • • •
igutrose pemocrat.
ERE 62 ST , CIRCtiLATInt+ IN NORTHERN PEICK'A
E. B,'CLIASE, •
rose, Thin r4dtty. April 21, 1.1986
• i von, PREFDEST.
3AI.IIIES BUCIIANAN.'
Subject to the decision 9.,f-the National t'On.
- •
Desiocratic , State Nomtnations.
Foti. CANAL COMMISSIONCR,
GEORGE i SCOTT,
of Columbia Courtly.
FOR ACDITOR
,JACOB. FRY, 3U.,
iI
of '.Voragunzery County
F9 I R SL'EVErGIt GENERAL.
411310T11V IVES,
of Potter County.
lar The 'Poem of J. F. S. will appear neat
week. It was overlooked until too, late for
this number:
11anrna's . '11.io.tamg...4 The May nuMb'er
• -
of i tLis_ well conducted' Magazine came to
filled „
'rind prosziptly— ;with choice reading
Matter and the nee , sarie4 for a • good
book. Addrefis Wm. ; PATTON,
or_ 'll.oasze T.
City. - ! •
i rlr Last', meek, in a parairaph or a4,w
we reiterated didclaitn.tr which we
made in December last; that we hn , l not hi-
tended, in the articles we have written, Tr-fet
ing to the interferenee'of Judge Wilmot '..in
political conteas, to charge him wit!) corrup
tion in the discharg6 of his duties .on the
Beuch,—thatis, we had never intended -to
dtharge him With going on to the Bench .7 in
the discharge of his Judiciid duties with
corrupt intent- to decide causes from political
parti.lity:or bias. This disclaimer Peons- to
have been underatood to relinquish, on our
part, the prfriOple ofian-interference by the
Judiciary inixditical contegs, which weliavc
b 0 tenaciously discu4ed in the past. Tbrre
who supperc this, are:entirely Mistaken. Afie
have not relinquirhed that principlewe
- .
i have not, closed our press against - its di:euss
ion, nor have we compromised our manhood
or integrity in that particular at all, nor need
anyb..xly have the keit applebension that we
I shall do so. !; We safd little it re
any molast
I.week than we have said in subitance a hun
dred times Verbally, and several timei, in our
1 paper since these diffiCalties broke out.to wit,
1 that we had:never intended to chats Judge
Wilmot with wilful corruption, io-any Of its
forms, in the discharge of hia..duties on the
I3ench. . Last December, before any Grand
Jury had taken action on the subject, we
used the following explicit language. ' 7 We
have not charged, .or have Ire intended to
.- 1 .
charge, Judge Wilmot with wilful corrtiption
in' the diseharge of his duties: - on. the Bench,
for we haste; not, seen anything to Is-errant
thaycharge.;" . We then laid dowq,the posi
tion which we had - occupied'and should 6C-'
cupy for tlitifuture. i We Said we eared. not
how pure the motives and intentions I of. a
Judge might be on the Bench, the 'evils re
salting (WM impropei Cmdnet ofilte:lkriek
were just ar, dire'and fatal in their effects as
thoughAvunnitted in the legitimate discharge
of his Judicialp duties, , and - tliat fOretnost
among those improprieties, -stood that of ma t
king . hituielt a heated partizan - in the party
contests Of the diy.,l-_We said that . when a
Judge, kaillitenday 1 night.ot each ter* of
Po* eigalldoirs tmpt - 14. ; Bench And ad
• - 1440/ s a'a c itod iicntifia - an **Wiwi
*saner, PCilll:lng out AenunOti9t, 91 those.ot B
- . "te opinions - strict pirif aaaseationii, and
• ag iSat okeilkaakgas* T imm*, of
-thißaris daily risioth* bean. hisa, iii*Pebi
, , -
_ .
exciting hestrt•burnings, contentions and per
sonal and' partizan bitterness in the twin mu
-Div about him, even though, if it wore_ pos
sible, lie might go bark •upon . the Bench
:with intentions as paresis an Angel's thought,
in the adtninistmtion Af Justice, still the pub-
lic confidence *se none the legs' wy‘kent4 in
the 'parity of the Judieiary,. and the ,Judteia
ry itself none the less degraded a nd re p ro a e b 7 .
ed. We said that when* Swigs. indulged in
such conduct,. disappointed suitors in his
Courts, and their friend', found reason on
which to base charges of partiality and bier
reason -which they could enforce with
arguments plausible to the public mind; and,
diet thus, however pare "might be the inten 7
Lion of the Judge, the influence and dignity,
of the Bench would be demoralized, prestra...
tod anti ruined, Tliii i 4 the precise ground
upon we Owed ourself in reference to
Juage months ago, and we there
fore had les.s reluctance in saying what we
did last week. -
_ Judge Wilmot had brought, two suits
against us, more as we hay: no doubt,through
the influence and ini'portunities of our friend
Jessup than of his own volition. We
.were
about bringing suita against them, and suits
too that would have developed someunpleas
ant transactions, for we had no disposition to
stnud still' and be rained' without a Vigorous
efrott at least to defend ourselves' and over-
wheitn our adversaries. We foreimv, as any
contd, that irthis • stale.of things was.
persisted in, this . whole people Would
s he in-*
vowed in the most terrible party struggle on
record,—a struggle that would make the J
udiciary a party to the. worst passions rind in :
fluenees of human nature. And though the
final resuk, personal to ourself, never gave u s
moment's trouble, still. we felt that the pub
lic tranquility and; interest had dim that.
otight.not to be disregarded, and that F such
.B,eouteit - could beavoidud without sacrificing
the tight and freedom of the press, it was a
duty to avoid it. We did. not feel like being
in any way instrumental • in bringing about
such a contest in this.connty until 'absolutely
forced to do so. 'Under such circumstances
'the proposition' was ,made. We could not
conceive that it compr,artised us personally,
or the rights of the Tress, for lac had substan
tially disclaimed the same, thing for mouths,
in the paper and out of it. We accepted it
feeling that howeieOwtn might view it, .for
the moment, the returning sober thought
would convince theta of its propriety. At
least, if not thus convinced they will admit
that "to err is hnman,—to ,forpire Di-
EDITOR
•
rine."
• 1 . . _
As to our lalper, - tione of its oblizaiions to
the public hare -be l en compromised, nor a
ptincipie it_ has ever, advocated relinquished..
So far as Judge Wilinotis concerned,: all we
have ever asked is that,' while he" !ilda the
position of Presiding Judge, he shall observe
those proprieties dui., the ii•ultlie sentiment in'
all times and, in all °unifies hive deinanded..
from that place: •We shall conduct no per- -
sonal-quarrel against him through 'the press.
nor burtheu the public with our
. personal dif-.
ticultiei. We dettiand that the Judiciary .
shall,' like Caesar's Wife,. be s not only pure-lint
above suspicion. This can only be pieserVed
where our Judges carefully abstain from, in
terference in those Conflicts of opinion -and of
- •
men, incident ' to— aI- government like ours,
1
where the mass of die 'people. arrayed unde'r
!
a difference of opinion anti obj. ! et; periodic
ally lending to excesses of 'feeling, essay - to
guide the destinies of the most powerful .na
tion on the. globe.l And ohenever Judge
'Wilmot, or nn3 oilier Judge, refusing to re
gard.this just and iwholes'une rCstiaint, de
grades his office add sets the public. good at
defiance by such al course of. conduct as, rte
litiVe denounced itt the past; we -shall contin
ue to denounce, re',rove and condemn - it in
all -ways and formi of discussion proper for
the press to empl,6v. . . .
We hare said taus much because . we felt
forced to do so, to allay the apprebenSions of
friends and disarn i the abuse of our foes.—
We trust it may n!ecompli4l; its object..
Mr. I3ycnANAi iz .expected to, arrive in
New YOrk tlas Wee k by the Ammo. The no
-
thoritiee of the, City have appropriated . a
I
bap sum of money to give - him a public re
ception. which will probably ho one of the
most imposing evr accorded - to a private cit-
men.
Mr.,B. now occupies the• most envikble po
sition that a public man ever attained in this
•
Republic. Ile has lived to -silence the voice
of calumny, and to -know that a life lime of
devotion to the honor and interests of his
country has attrotecl the'gratitude and ven
eration of a great, and generous people. *At
of / onri,erninent statesmen have passed away,
while partisan bitterness was at its height,—
have not lived to convince their country of
their disintereued patriotism, but Mr. Bu,
ehanan, in the full tide of health and vigor,
sees the fullest vindication of his fame accor
ded by the heart of his countrymen. Ile has,
indeed, reached the summit of earthly great
ness. No accumulation of honors can add
one iota to his fume. If called soon to pre
side over the 'destinies of .t!te Republic, it will
be but a sacrifice on his par,—but another
evidence of lus unselfish devotion to his Colin
try #. On him are the eyes and hearts
of th'e asses turned, as the man for the pres - - -
ent erisis. , Let-politicians beware how they
thwart the people by arts and management.
sir We phtee at the head of our paper
to-day 'our colors for 1856.. We had thought
of delaying this till the National`Conrention
should Meet, but have finally made up our
mind that Mr. Blielnutan's nomination is a
filed fact, and that ire shall not therefor suf-•
fer.the ittcwitileMioewf taking . down..=
We honestly that with' our present
nominees for State. and•Buehanan for,
President, this State can be,oarried by fort
thousand majorlity.• uOnvieni ,to "'dory' rt
Cir Oa aunlou of R. 11,14iitlis Zit, Wok.
M. Post eras adaiittsvil tolintoiaa,law f!"
several,ourts et Alai:S*4y at-iliklaria teal.
110 1111110 •
Sr Hon Jaws Oati,vasaio Pest Wok
General; bas oar dataka for. valuable docit
meats:
sprat plewa:
F'"?'
•Or The Biadford . .,„Reporter ist severe in
its way upon- us for : 'our remarks upon the
Union t.lottvention and the course of Judge
Vl'ihnut with : , reterenee to it. Leaving the
Reporter to thn'field - -_9f argument . ;in which
nature has so eminently fitted its Editor - to
live:—and to the nee otsuch, epithets as "fool,
kunce,",./kc., - proi•eed briefly to, notice
some points passed over in our other article .
on this subject, s.
Judge Wiltnot is, or assumes to be, the
head and fror4 of the .Republican patty of
thistate, and as chairman •of the State;
Convention, issued a call for it SI:11Q COllVell
lion of that party, in June, at Phil:1 . 0106;0 1 1
On the very heels of that call this Union Con-
vention as it to natnetf,. - but really called by
the Know Nothing members of the Legisla
ture,'lnet at Harrisburg, said we find- Mr.
WilinUt present, an a c tive participant
in' its doings.. -The vote on Mr.. Inszloon's
Reptiblicau Resolutions showed. but 18. lte .
ptitlicen delegates. The platform :of the
Convention was a ! recorded falsehood, and
the Convention itself n fraud. They set fo'rth
as the basis of their platforni this proposition,
that "the only true bond of political "action
is agreemenOn pri,n4le," and then set forth
that agreement, and put.their candidates in
nomination. Now if the pr position of their
platform was not a . falsehood .when applied
to. that Convention, wh . v, were its members
divided under different names I Why too
were the Republican Resolutions of Mr. Ing-
liain suminiqy dispir'sed of I And why call .
it ii Union Convention,. for if there was no
diversity of [Political opinion, there, could be
no demeOts'of disunion ! _ '
But there was a diversity of sentistent in
that Convey ti .n on the slavery ,question, for
the Republi!cans, or free ; wilers' ;)roper,
com
posed, as shown by the vote on Ingliam's
Resolutions; just just One Oh - 'of the Convention.
The balance was made up mostly of Know
Nothings, with a few old line, or pro-slavery
Whigs. - Mr.. -Phelps, the candidate fir Atßi
tor Geheral is , :an out and.out Fillmore Know
Nothing and so claimed by the 47 Fillmore
presses_uf the State. Mr. Cochran, for Canal
Ciontnissiditer I:1ml old line natiOnat Whig, ,
who according to the statement cf Mr. Grow,
when last here, was so flinch opposed to the
free soil KMiw Nothing ticket last fall, that
he voted What•the free soiiers Ca:led the Ne
braska ticket. that is, foie Arnold . Plainer,
Chr
. ..Democratic noniinre for Canal . C:ortrniss-:
jotter! Laporte, for Surveyor General, is a
rampant Abolitionist and a Know Nothing,
void of ability and- destitute of manhood: The
pros slavett majority of the, Convention put
him on tolcatcli free soil Votes, bacilli no
6sitencv in doing so, because he is to feeble
to give character to the ticktit one way cpr,
the other.: This is the ticket that Mr. \Vit. '
tpot helpeiil.fix up at. ilairislturg, • and which:
expeeti his free soil friends to. support:--- 7
Cam they !luso! Can they as censetentiqs,
men prufeSsing to be goVerned - only by : prin;
ciple,--cat'a they:- support .this - nomination
If they - can And do, we :never want them tik
talk Ofi rintiplo again to us:: e
like to ktmw how the/ can support
: a pro ' -
slavery KU u'w Nothing, making no pielen;
pious to gee. soil, and :a pro-slavery Whig'
Alio, Mr. :',Grow, says, Toted the Nebraska
Pe:ma:fade ticket lasi fall, and yet be too
good, tooTure, too holy to vote for a nation=
al Penwell And .we 'would..like to knoW
how it is t tat Mr, Wihnot eati :coalesce with
• •j
pro-slavoy elementslike these in loving em,
.brace, anti vet •so Struck with lwror as
suipporting Democrats holding similar viewp
,on,:davery, but . 'agreeinl; with his proftissed
.principles on other questions of vital import
.mice to the welfare of the yountrv 4 If the
Reporter can lay , aside - its Cittyll•boy epithets
for once, we should like to Late it ausue:
these que . -
r i Again; what, Intaint;iis had Mr. Wilinqt in
that Convention 'He professes not to lA
long to the Know Nothing. part,—why then
coalition? - Ile had - ended a Convention.
Of his party to nominate State ufficifri, itr
June. Why, then, like a manly, • st.raight
forward ''/politician did he not wait till the
time he had -,,appointed, instead. of first put
ting the Olndidates to be nominated by the
Jime Convention
- through -the Knoll , .Noth
ing trill l lA .this the conduct •of a man
wh)se whole soul is burning with 'an intense
flame of principle, or is it the mere trick of h
small politician,
,determined to carry his
points regardless of the . tneans used Let
the peoplejudge I
SuPpoiie Mr. Wilinot bad attended the
Democratic *Convention; and: proposed -'to
unite his . free soil forcesovith the Democratic
party 'oacondaton that his protege, Laporte,
should be placed, on the ticket' for Survey, or
• c
General,; With two men for thiother offices
who Make no pretensiont to free soil, and
that such conditions had been ace4pted„ ;
would Mathe,be: in a position - just as conris.=
tent as now., Every honest-judgment Will
answer 'es! And yet wst think the free sOil,
ers of this District would hardly 'sustain. snobs,
a Coalition. -
The truth is, this Whole Union Convention
besineSS is - one grand genre of deception,
just. asjwas the ras.smorebWillinmson fraud
Of this party last fan: They 'dare not
male's °contest without the aid of the, KnoW
•
Nothings, for by doing' so they would show
Co'd'e world their pitiable weakness
State. .One can ,respect their ptutience in
this respect, while it is utter ly lv bnpossible to
lock upon the fraud which" they endeavOr to
in pose upon voters with any other thaw feel
iligs of abhorrent contempt.
. .
itir /Au P. li** a late speeefi at
il artfoid said 40 ant . give a cent to
.minister without pirtittar This is unilouht
4dlir true, for, ai,tlmiiiustois Post well save s
j all he wants of n asiulatais his polities
And since this is thf_ . p?liily of our opponents
141 hle our blot *Opts similar piaci
and ire bothiiiittiiirifekviAa support of a
minimal; who Ouititatithi'-pilitius into pul-
A Doeue*Fazoo.'-ltriaatantd that Doc
tor Dubaiit, who altandet* Dupree 'Euge
ne in bar ionflaeaseit' featiiired -five - hun4red
thcosand fnmei-inst * bandied thototand
dollars—for his serricee:` 1 1 0 1 •gre 41 . N ' aP°le
00 only gave half the stutefe Ace father. of
Dot** Dubois; when 1000 in the 'sand
eapacity at the birth ottbOtiq of Rome.
There is do doubt that, the country is . nOw
passing through the most important crisis in
its histbry. True there hive been times when,
all its energies have beeti - availed by foreign!
foes, hot in those comests; though ' their his-:
tory hits been written in blood, laid their
consummation in trinmph_ and riniqiiitglory;
in none of their terrible terms, did j they ever
threaten 'ro permanent disaster to. the country.
as tiotiriihe internal strife !now 'wfiging be
tween contending Sections. - . Those : were
time:i. of ;peril, but they milted • energies
and hearts of the whole people in defense
. of
their' con u trY unit-11er institutions. In such •
- a contest defeat would . . only humiliate, not
de-troy ;but now ive see the fell spirit of
"selisiOn rioting in the dom e stic tranquility,
ther4yiurelyunderniinitig the .veiry founda,
tion ;of the goveinment. There is Inot to-day.
one . tenth of that love of country , that fra
, •
ternal affection—that bogy reverence for our
country that. there existed in the' hearts of
the people five years ago. This• is; a fact that.
should arrest the attention of.evoly patriotic
citizeut, Mid-that sho..ild determine{ him.to go
work%vith untlaging 'zeal to tit - tin back the
tide oftli,4:ster now threatening to engulph
tlie, peaCe, happiness, and liberties!' of the peo
ple'
,
We shall find the cruise . of the Prese . nt gloo
'my state of things in the agitation of the Sla
very question. here is the root of the evil,
and it is now bearing the bitter emits of dis
cord and fraternal hate. The man who-cx
presses-indifference and unconcern asl to the
final result of this agitation, sinitsi,s . himself to
be indifferent to the 'welfare 'if nig, the very
existenee of government. Let this agita
tion 'continue two years loncrer'wth the saute
Intensity tnat it has spread ftir Vivi) years r ;asis,
and we will be in the midst of evil' war.— .
folly,,,nay,
s ,nrirdness to cry " no danger,"
. -
when we t ee daily about us the most ineon
trevertable evidence that the rank upas-poi
son of disunion and mobocracy has taken hold
of the ;very vitals 'of the re)putar heart, and
that bad men are rioting upo' n the credulity
and unbridled passions of the'rnithitude...
We state facts and upon thorn ask coal re
flection: We affirm that not orte act ;if posi
g,Coa has ever been accomplished for hu
manity or our conniTy by the -slavery agita
tion ;i but, that on the other lined, it' has al :
ways resulted disastrously to eve principle
Of philanthropy, : and._ brought the Country
facto to face with the giant Of 'disunion, • an
archy' and des p otism. When the Confedera
tion Was formed, every state salve one held
/slaves. The fathers of the Republic wisely
adopted the pelicy of leaving tae' institution
to the 7oVereignty of the atatelt, land the sole
-responsibility of municipal - lawp They
ply conditioned fur the restoration - of Ingi
tives on the same principle that we make
treaties : of comity with indepearlent • nations,
for the states were - in Me relat‘n of indepen
dentH nations to each other. The Constitu
- 1 • I
tion I, w as a mere treaty of-alliance, and sav e
in this partiCulah it studrouslY avoided nia
king itself a party to the instittition of slai.ery
in any shape, leavingit entirely to the•Fstates
whore it existed.- *Under . pie spirit of the
Constitution the work of gradtial..emaneipa
tion; was going on,--had: been perfected - in
every northern State, and had •reacited with
its i nfluence the Slates elf Maryland ; Virginia,
and Kentucky. - when northeb, zealots not
raiment to ribidn the sure operlitions of tinny,
seized the question as one of 11014ieat power
tied; demanded Congressienal rtiterference.-7
This came, as Thomas Jefierton . said, " like a
fire bell in the night," :startlihg the whole
souih, impelling them to 'a equise of self de
fente.,'unil they then demanad the ptotec
tion and inierferenee of the eieneral• crovern
' • •
ment, in behalf of the institutron. . Thais has
'the agitation sprints , up and griiwn in strength
and fury. Both sides are Wro i ng—both sides
are. wit bout the true pale of constitutional'
construction, and - the spirit; in which . the
foundations of the gcrvernment were laid, for
therjcannot be found either.in the letter or
spirit of the Constitution a single clause *in,
any 'way a party to the institution any
shape—for or against it. *. -
We have said that' no po4tiVe good has
•res'eltell from the agitation ofithis question.—
We appeal to history and to facts. When
the people of the States nerr : controling the
question in their own gay, without interfe
renee, emancipation . was marching -onward
with a steady and advancing tread. It ac
cornplished its work in every" norther7n state,
and was gradually working its way to the
very heart of the South. • chary hand • Was,. ta
.king steps to rid herself of shivery, Kentucky
with her patriotic; Clay was, devoting Irer'en 7
ergiestO the same work, and ' i au Act of grad--
ual Etnancipation Came wit h nine votes of
passing the : Legislature of Virgini a I • • To day
that veyyrAct could not rec i eire: one vote. in .
that Lodi. -Why this great . change.?
Be
cause reckless men took up the, question as a
pOlitical hobby, sought to. make the general
government the instrument lof accomplishing
their purposes,comtne need tis agitation there,
awakened the south to a defense of-whit they
considered their rightti,. 4rove.them_ to
the work "of fortifying : the" institution, as a
matter of self-preservation.! And thus has
-the agita tion goneon ; riveti ng the cliaintijof
the• Slave and involving the
.country still
deeper in all the excesses' ofl• sectional strife!
Not a single free 'state - hao been made by it :
but, on the contrary, it is! constantly pro
claimed by those whir are pitshincr on the ag
i
prttion in the North, that the South pas al
ways triumphed in Congmss whenever the
question has been acted tipiCri there in • -a po
litiCAil form. Why then insist on Gingrerks- .
ions) interference I • Why . i insist on feeding
the flame that is . burning. Away the very
heart of the national happi nets and repose
'MI insist that the country shall be contitant
ly itoneulroot with an agiuttion• that is sap
pint; • ate fon nclat iona of thii government and
constantly adding to the iriumphs of slave
inatitutionsi *.WhY not iplace the ban
political death on sigi triton+ Nortivninl Son th;
and bring back the goseirnm ent the - Itiql
phr principles upon which ft wan 'emoted t.c.
The democratic party mud 414 thit.Wlol, ark
auk commence it by plat" in . the F44o43q
live Chair nextNevernhe a Stnteetnen tit
the,chi SchOol, ItitpolietWnr• intellect
and n haranter will well ttrtiund him. the in► ! .t .
trintistn. of the nntlntry+ltuth wen ,as
AMEB.BI3OO I SOI - -
say- We publish to-day a eamintini
from " ohi Lenox" a neighbor of Mr. I GrOw's,
on•the.s objectof that gentleman's political
coarse. It seems . from. this that there- are
Fume DeMocrata left in Lenox, not*itlisand 7
ing the boast Of Mr. Grow's friends t4t he
would 'take a dean vote in that- town.
'We have_ been used to - regard the .I:;)emo
orats of Lenox as pretty independent' riquded
men, but it has.been given out here 'thir. Mr:
Grow would control the 'whole vote there, -
Ita
king them body:and soul over to the arms of
the opiksitiou. We are glad .to be attired
that the Democracy, of that township are
•
'posed to succumb to the influence' or i dicta
tion of no tnUn; 4dt' them show, Mr. IGrow.
that they are against him when wroM
.its:strookly as.they, have been fur hitor
. -right
Communiciitioits.
li ou.• G. A. GrAv.
. .
.._
Ma. EDITOR :—Will you be; so kind I rts to I
publish the few remarks old' Lona haS; to Of
fer upon the above . named indi4luitil. Be- ,
cause old Lenox feels a little .down
. :bt the
heel, in regard to the course whitih Mr.
Grow has taken in the 'political :field.l Well
does she rememner the gteat turn outs she
gave hint, and how she showed her zeal in,
his boludf, and felt proud when he wasl/ lifted
up-and took a scat'at Our National -dit r itol.
• 1
Now. Who can blame her for gettiogia little
roiled up,come to see the course, whiOt . . her
loilOved and cherished Grow has, taken: He
has left the party she - admired. •Ho lass left
his great" Democratic Piinciplet that he
.used - to tell about. He has left , them and
gone—W.here - -has be gone ! 11e • has gone
over 'to. that party - that:he so elotptenqT Warn-1
1 ed his. constituents to look out for—lO' be • on
I thi:ir guard against, Se. Can . this dbe, so I
ICan this be the Grow.who so eloquently de-.
claimed the great cause of DemberacV? l'e,
'Os the same chap. Ile -g.) t into theL,Clutelie4
of-Know Nothings andliepublicans Ole saute
platform that Greeley.'and . &Ward ~,$) fit to
walk upon) and that led him where he used
to warn his con,tituents to beware o'' going,
natuely, the wing prty. - • ' I - '
. 1
- Alf! Mr. Grow, note do yon suppose' that t hat
Ohl 'Lenox will forsake her great DCinueratic„.
Principles, and follow you . Oil in the Path.you•
7 .
have chosen.` NO SIR. k4•.', .&4110. -rwia;
',on, will nor- do this. You have Warned theta
'to beware ofstreh doings, and . they - Mean to,
stick to it. And, sir, %Would taaf4t. tell wit
you, if you, had only lived up to Ilthe•war
ning yourself._ It is curious
. hoty a -mart's
Mind will g1:1 so wrought up by the slavery,
question, that he will cling to that : nd make
that his lii4-hear, and jump over 142:mother
party, adopting-its measures and forsaking
the good old party that took him ,11,910 the
avocations of privateltfe, and placei him 'in
'the Halls of Congress. Wesay 'ti . passing
how a Man will do this jai On lit:-
count of Niggers! • Niggers r Well . how. are ,
you going Co better - it by wohtg ovir ‘ • ' to. th e
.. , ,
Republican Party. 'This' nigger e 4 .eitetnerNl
is :rot up, merely for the whigs to ll:arty the
Election ; and slfoUld your RePuldi r i
ment lie defeated, then where will
Mr. CfrOw. . You Witl•ne done ovOi
politics. You cannot expec t bat H
crats will follow-you. Thervill ti
cil
the great cause of detnUcraey• :Atl i ',
with you to the, whig . party : at !
•
LOOM i n Z. n Old Lenox. Old Lenox
watehing the 'movements' of her cla
for sometime. . Last fall, a. year
peopl t wanted him to give thein
- but, oh, no! he couldn't attend .tol
'aftei . Elrtion.rolleti 'rotind,then ht
Ito Spealkto them. . . • • , . '
There he was blowing Bigler beC'ause he
did not come out,- as he th9ught, quite, plain,
enough an the nigger question.. lie thought
that. GM% Itigler . ougln to :direct Ithe Bente
sentatives how to g.nin' :regard i t O the Mis
souri Compromise. Why dont. pollock . dil;
rect them how to go: Why.. &din% lie di- 7
.
rect them how to proceed in regard to elect-
ing, their Speaker;and not hare Oen) spend
day after day, and. Week after • wgek, merely
to' elect One. 111 I ! that was a prior sort of a
! i•
game you'ph(Yed, wl4n you put [out a Big
ler, and put in.a Pollock. Ilutyitu couldn't
keep'him under. 'The next thing yota heard,
Bigler is elected to the. United S7ttes Senate !
That rejoiced. all Lenox. ,
,ioni 'O4 the . wish
of Lenox,•that next fall, Janie BuChanan.
.I
Will be elected Preside of the LI sited States.
how that would make the democratic sons
rejoice, and especially. Old- Lenoir. . ,
Fauilaicism Cures ligeff.
. , .
Perhaps it is not 3.1. i ho, regrqted 'that fi,,
spirit ast variance with t lie gent ill. of our insti- \
stitutions has been allowed- to itrike; conside
able lietawil:'. in this country;ll within the
last few Am. Intolerance lots been al:Owed
att. unusualli free course; contenipt of .au.
dioritti atifvested rights have coma remark
*ably'-'in,vogue.; short-sighted views of reform
. have sought to. trample down all . deferantle
to lessons of experience, and violence has . as.
slimed to take •the place of order —yct at- all
drip, the true patriot - may - not: be dismayed,
nor have good cause f,or regret. i • . • - •
The most effectual way, we think, of . - de,:
stroying, entirely, the ititiunce.'of evil prinei
iqei, is to allow tire commuititvi,for a while,
-to suffer under,their .operation.ll So long as
the argument against any course of nolicy is
confined to supposed cases it t . eikinot impress, :
thq . public mind-with much
.force, but once
give • power to the iiiivociqes Rof erroneous
views, and allow diem to itiAelpractical il
lustrations. of their opinions,'ati II , with an in-,
telilgetit peOPlepo:ssessed'Of :tiro ter constite 7
1
tioual rights, their sway will be of short du
.
. ration. .- ,• .. . • ' . -- 1 * . .
It is but a nottple of yeais sin ;a there 'sad- I
dunly sprang up, as it were
. by inagie, in ere.
ry section of tite country, a pOurfal - party,.
etultraciiq wititittits.folds wet iivfaa had been
pieachiug for 34sara every' %peel of tattti
cisrn, and whwe nonunion band. of union %%4 4
sitnply opposition to.lite , wise{ 411 littoraiity 1
of. the Dowel/1040 part.L. The; , rtuarted to
dark aolusittusi•tu atut4 walititin. andmean
ly prootitted.o* 41 oTettilik.ti . G!.. 114 Foopio,
irtitlyAgt iloamikito (IMAM Oi t he scorn. sm.
outt4crattation certain to follow l i on, the rdi e ,;.
ma i
unroll of. their duplicity, We l l, for- - a time
they trinolithed. They uarrital fi t eit tic k na i n
ivltt State % *n4 were antidal 1114411nd in
puwor„ they warn even. mu et their own
*na cos, With , the rthit in r hand* they
d rov e on to legitimute eoileatt , ti n, —lt requir
4 but 6"hart exPeriennot tit tlt 'r &minutia*.
to bring themph. to thttit and welt
them not won again.to put thetnselvesin - tl4 •
hands 'Of - rain" pretenderN-Wiko would push ott
fancied' reforms . and Boyer exueretnents in leg:
islation, .utterly regardless of the .. -low* of i f
Wisduitt and instirry. A 4liff :trial,
fa; them.: In this State theeeliresdni 3.
ers hail attained .ahnost absolute "
They paased laws to suit their 'own. notions;;
Or such as were _dictated'. by itth;roir •
policy. ' The jug Jaw_ was their trisin;. -
ter . piece. "- • Its brief operation itnpreind .
people tourewitlia sense of the' wr sag" and
folly of.sitch arbiter); lisws, sod .of,the illibe;
rid spirit that giyes rise to them, than all the , -
I• g li men ts that .could be, ad.luivd by :states
The .harm h worked more •speedilyc .
cored the evil. It was consigned to the
early,without anypestibility_ of rear-
rection: ' • .
The inNane and unworthy cry against Cath
olies aittl-foreigners, !Ni:. also, in a gre a t-m o w).
metaremetstill' 4:4 quietus' from its owe e
ffi
I
tree violence. IL 41 . 1 w, etiiitely Ivo ve I/
Cr'
merit to la y• loa;. True,_ it vill'be kept
upkin .t.yme I f wittities, but generally those who
uttered it, to eat. are, oovr most ashamed of
it. .
Rhea
• The delefal sou' , " of neg-ro sliftell - *lO
is now mo4 . lrarpe7l.upotr:- ttusit out- -
rage•is the most prominent theitre left far •ta, -
naticimn to decant upon, Here is' the last .
hook on the .cauting reformers can
Jiang a hope-for success - egaitist flit Demo. -
cratic. 2 party. But they . hafe'-ciambeed so .
Much on this subject that the co `l try is, al. - .
read, sick, of it. Kausas,js becoming averf
great, bore, There - has "been so much - lrintl-*
work; so intre:lildowing off of gas, so 'muck ,
etnplyblu'ster in that territory, and so many
Rin reports rent out from it ftir political el'.
test, that men generally are disposed to re
gard ilk: Kansas afftir as a very c onsiderable
-• , i •
humbug.
Ilowever*.bitter . anti unpleasant at times
may be the liulitieal agitation, of this coup-'
lrV.• we . maystill have the :cougoling reflec
tion -that error and prejudice cannot long
:van,' the test.-of free - dhwifssion, and that if
.
ter'expeterneUt fat.atjci m , .alwala cures. it-
The Kansas Proetarliallou Of Pre* ,
. Idetutt Pierce. „ •
.
No het of Prci,4lent - Pierce' escapes - -the"
-ahn,ire tongites-antk pens of the Black lie-'
tielangpi n rOW!•: 'lliailroularnatioit
t e pt-ace of Kansas, and Internet:*
jolts 10 Crow. Shannon were as..ailed: bitted?
by the whole tribe-of the abolitioni6t. How'
could they send . their _rifles and bullets to ,
Kansa.; if they admitted that the law Was tr./
maintained there by the Exi!cUtriv . e arm
[tow c,oulti they keep up their' outcry about
•WIWU tileti 41 4 1Mittea s tlAt the.
'President PLerce had tak:cti measures -le . re
, .
v 14.) U.tattl!.4lll.ztlle- Tifrltt.s" Of the
:444M.1%; •
The Herald afFreetkm; - trai reading :Free:
partr f . pnbli;bed: at. Liwranee, in its is-
,ue Nturldi I:sth says :
We published the Plvelamation of Presi
dk-nt Pieret.-4
. weel;; -or - two . ago in; regard to.
•Kan , ev =mem-- We are-glad otthat Tree
laination. It hoar ci readif prcveited oa intii
sjmitrom aad_ a. resort to- hlood-'
shed by citizens in self-defewe. - _ The „te - opt*,
of the Territory have; no , thitig to. fear from
federal 'troops. I);aing.-the'late invasion their'
wen:est:hope was that.C6l. &in:ller sit Fort Leavenworth, would war& with hi:troops to
Lawrence, and interpose them between the` •
mob and the 'citizens.
Guy. Shannon has the - military of Torts
Riley and f.eavettworth at his eurnumail, and .
this he . will use to pat down insubordination •
On the one hand, ;o l d prevent invasion on
the other. If he dues. this ;if he obey ids.
leiter of instructions ; nu-mule Dows,_or Bar
hers, o:- Collins, or 1311 ) WriS will be ruthlessly -
murdered in i. 01.1 blood ;. - ito toore illegal 'in-
terfcring-with.the ballOt box will be allowed.
On the coat rare peace - and - tranquility will
be re-tared to our distracted country. • .
The Proclamatimi of Piesident Pierce is
not so' willanions a door meta as the telegraph.
reports made it, and as for the-instructions to
Guy.Sl - lumina', they are . all . we expect
or.eren:Asire: While the Corertior abide&
by the letter of au.seitistruetions. it will.. af
fork iv. a Tleasure to sugtain l,im . .
'sane man dare deny thet„An invasion
uas CialtelOplatea for the first of March from
Vissouri. eoaclusive of such'inten-.
lions can be prod-uced.; htit the. President's"
Prodarmitiou disarmed them, and now at
tempt is.being made to ..lw.v that oureprepe.
ration to defense- was Uncalled
k an tnttvt,-
Nat stand
i • with, In
be derno-
A. fnmke
go -over
least they
has • Ewell
MITI
ago, her
Teektli,
t then,but
was. ready.
Some discu::sion having taken place upon •
the - position of Mr. Buchanan on: the .Knuias . ..
Nebraska bill, we are permitted to copy. the
extract from'a - leiter addressed by
Mr. - Bach:nom to S.ettator Slidetl,.dxted Lon ! --
don - 2 . Bth of Dectaiber last, when '
there
_seems:lllo be no diarence its to Mr. Ills
thorough identity with. the democratic Party •
ou this, as on all other issues. It ' ll' 1 , 1 be
seeti that Mr:43, *Peaks of the. Kansas Nebras
ka bill with his - usual frankness and decision.
lV e ars confirmed in our iru - piession by
this' 'lett er that .no man, no set of- men; •
and no newspaper,: fire at all .warran
ted to speak - itutheritively for Mr.
chanan upon this or any - other. question. His
own words_speak far-themselves....
The letter of Mr. Buchanan was not, it .
be seen, intended for • publicattion,. but the
gentleman' to whom . it Wag - addressed has
thought it necessary,. sifter the 'editorial hrti- .
cle in the Union of Wednesday last to 14 it •
.•
before the country. :• -
• . The. yfestion, has been settled by, Con-, .
giess, and this seVernent . should be inflexibly
Maintained. : Thei Nh;.souri Comprornise is -
gone. and gone -fOrever. Tut nO. - assault
should he made upon; the . DetnocratS who
maintained-it ; provided ,t hey are noW wilWn
in. good faith to..tuaintain the settlement as It
exi sac - Such an, understanding is. - wise and
jest ' . • ,
known how i labored in. ;am- .
southern \ tuen to have. this line a l .
tettil6,r' t :ta the Paethe mean. • But it hail .de--
partedi:d,The One fir it lifts passed
- atm iI y believe that.the,t l tB,7,
nOW . .left.•,.tA ktoting. down the . til,
mitten' andreekless spirit Of -Ahollticitt at,.; . 4:-
North is to.adhere, to:the existing: tiettlimatc,
without the slightest . .thou . ght or apeeMsnee
of wavering,. and - Without regarding' say.
storm which may be
igr•The price of I . kitad warrnall-tanges
from itlo6 to $l2O per acre, for the "differeetV-
ulasse4. • - ' , The Chicar Trihene states that;' detiar
the year entle.l June 20, 1855, •tbeltrnited'''
SiA N
tes exrte(l oora 'to the Value or $1,31:4;
rs
\b,l,
071;100 iittikirttiii uig4 valued at'sB .- ,811; •
Ba 4 . Via isxportatinn of f, lalt9W7ltidelk:
$ll4l I honks/01 ie.' 'd7
uring- t e 001 - 'o : - ; 'p rind,.
niananteityi 0,241,554, apt n!_t: Ai ~.eximib. 4 l ; • -
tare of 158,241, 408 fur imp() , oil - ',.btititifro-.-
While - Re-eaputt leheutstl 0 - :thit' - ' vitae 94 4-
841,819;318, we "htijiari - OA Mit ' ';'2ofrie' L..
- umlauting tp144,800,000;.•• The- Vigirnigite :
vtluit if ilitt 9tAttlin eng4 l l4 :1:1 1
.-4 4 illr' , .itill
*109,460, 0 0 0 t • ..'..r, - -.,,.. '' • '';'—' -- -''''- - ' .
:The Yotetlrqo4nUr
in 411 .hut ibietuan'iunall tquiri,l4tottfy.' Tor
ham benuioritt. so.oli 'Amerien.,
sl3,6B7 : .,'Wvltis
laitiU4inleucia.tilior !HA ifkqb
1491 of s' rnsiiitly, over '
Bucliaisan.