THE; PITTSBURGH' GAZETTE NY uusrus OKOUlid & PiTTsMuMoul THVRSDAY MORNING. MAY Z. 1849. PLIMAIIidIvPHIA /MOUTH AiIIIitICLCAZI• e evects sed erµ,scripiousio the N. loner. Cm and lidded Buses enue, Yrriladelphia, :revived mud fur . rranka fro, uti. °Oka. NEW TOBY YZPSESS. will Erceive funrard Co.. a ezpensof.d ~ufiaeycuu utd aubacriptioaa sat this paper. irkt,;• . . . . rrraaraag DaILY Gazarrs . Is mblisbed Trs.Weakly, and Weetly.—lbe Daily as &Ten. • lysijars per autism; slos Tri.Weekly if Viva Dollariper mama; dos llfaelsly la Tyro. Ik!llars pest mama, swims) La *twos. • .Whit wad Atoo..llasoula Nositheattent, • FuR CANAL. COMMISSIONER, WSW Riimpuraiw Alit•T .: - .. 0 / LXIII* count. -L EA awes:ingot the datiaaaeonic aOd Whig c'oun ty oadwrittee of cm m p00d.,,,,, held at APAtaiters' Hersh Pittalrargb, on Saturday , ?day the folloo his tad nl a Jaycee ttpoo, '/Ite dauseasonie and Wei, • , ebetors of tad. ward, boorugh and tewliship Ails. . • &wiry county, are tequeeted couseult , it i 'their usual • - gatiTgt ' t ye d Ilab ng P lia m y * o r l.l n ' e u n ' Xh . to " . agpetVr ' w c o ' hr. • •' mates tram each &wrist, to meet in Couto). Convert , et the Coen /bow iu Weeny - of Pittsburgh, na Westuresday, die,l4th datum nest, at lit &X, ot said - day, to,wominate caudalates Cu. narwhal, stale and 'Atesury °flees, to be supported at the, ensuing elec. `ll/e plenary meetings ill nit . the towinuips ex. - reaps Pin, will la held mg Weleck, P. Al., odd ri ch• and all the 'ward* and boroughs it 111'. AI., of 'The coeuxuttee *add earnestly urge upon the raid . ' Ilerdlogs the once •sity afro edicieuttregannatton, pre paramr7l4"kr ' . . Citailowst. . Jogs dared, ' .: - • , Uunem, I Jltessesaries. road • VT Din suidersimed, Conimiarioncra of Allegheny would probeltly authorised by the Imo et Amenably to tut:sribe to the T h e smelt of the Penn- aylside Radioed Co mpany. They prefer, however, . • tha t the peeole Ma monly should:filet mores/I-their r tt . views to regard to MIA Important utessureotad abet. thence request coutaincd in the stove memorial, ;_, would ash' the qualified voters in each weld, borough tied lowteltap inrald couuty, to meet at their usual Dien of helding elemictue in mod districts; on Baum glut/lay or May next, each to appoint two Deargatts to meet in County Cottientinikiit the Court ...House in the cvy of Pittsburgh, oat the 31st of slay, to cousult and stirs. with 11)¢1.1.111.4011Crs lit referatice to ',A otinecriptiou on part of said comity to the 'Capital block of said liailroad Company. 'the primary meet . hors Ito ell the ottertudapt except Piu held at /Poem. PAL, mil to ran and the other wards end be. Toughs at :i.o'clock, mid day. We Me toll wash a free and Intl CR/Ma. ill JOHN bIeIIIIIWELL, • • ..106k.Ptt T. hiAltli.3.l•Corn. THOJIA.3Pk.IIKINS, • • Cosoasacasx's Orniat ••• ' Aprimal, lees. ) awathedlat,Gaweval Cantrariaoa. , - .Tho' Wuhasu of. time aloraittg wai confined, obidly, to the report c( oho coinininca on bout.. &ries, which was adopted,:initti Tory blight The Report of the Commhteo on the State of tbc Church tindi next inn ad; in 'a aka was compained the quetlioo of the Sontherfißouudant withal Aka.. gild Church. .Too Emu thriescctiona t ere adopttni with little dissent: 1. There exists no power in the Geoertl Confer ence of the Methodist Epi.smal Chinch to pass , say at art winch. either directly it indirectly, dinette ates, authorises, or sauctiows a division of said . - 2. It is the right {+( 'every member of the Henn). I dig Episeopal Chords, to remain in raid chunsh. unless guilty of the violation of its rules; and there .r' exist. nopower in the ministry either redivided) :or colleenvely, to deprive any marcher of sans ,'. I This right being inviolablyeecured by the AIM restrictivet articlq_of the Diseipliee, which guards. . tees to mernbersthe right of trial Sind appeal, any -. stat of the church otherwise sepamties them nom ,-- said church, contravenes the constitutional rights and privileges of the Membership. ._ The . ' a report of the select Wel nattee of nine epee "- the declaration of, the delegates in the alevetteld - frig State. commode called the plan of separation. - adopted by it. loot Gone, al Conference, of which :Alio memorialists complain, and the operation to ' 'which "repented them (mm connection with the Methodist Episcopal Chord, having beemintettrint to swum puce and harmony in ibur Samisen, border, and having been designed to be depend - 1 • ant upon the occurrence of a apechied necessity. . upon the concurrence of three-fourth. of the mane . bete of the Annual Conferences, and upon the, oh. , ; sureties of a specified boundery. .by the distinct . en:le/luting connection separating Irons us, should ' inch connection be formed, and the said neceasity . •in theopinion of this Conference ontluviug arises./ • .the Annual Cdnferenes having refused the Beets sarynancurreece,mnil mid provisions respectiug n :. bonndqy having been inkacted by the , highest nu , thorities'of eta 'ttemection. therefore, in view roll . . these Cady as weft' as for the reasons before sped- 1 "fled,-them exist. ne.obligation on the part of this • Conkrence to observe the provisions of said plan . rap cling a bonadary, and raid plan is hereby de. clarid anti and void: ' ; • . By order of the Comeaiiwe. BeepectfuSy salr :mined. -. Gen. Peck, Chairman. - The committee on the State of the Church beleave further to report in part: . • iliat they have had under consideration the claims . prefeired by. the Church South to a portion of the property of the Book Con cern and Chatteied Fund; and pending the dikussion of. the Subject, the question at - • proposing to refer the whole matter to disire . - wrested arbiters was proposed and:consider ed.: Whereupon the committee agreed to recommend to the General Conference for • adoption the following resolutions : ' Rmlted, 1. That it is•-the sense of this Conference, that we have ho authority rode= pendently - 01nm annual conferences to enter - into arbitration with - the commissioners o: the M. E..Chorch South, in, relation to the claims set up by them to a division of the vested funds of the M. R. ,Church . • Resolved, 2. That this General Conference recontinendgo the Annual Conferences no ' fat_to suspend the sixth restrictive tole of the - Discipline as to allow the appointment ot commissioners for the purpose of arbitrating • what is technically called the property goes tine, with the com Missioners of the M. E. Church South. ..- .- • -By order. of the committee. R espectfully . . submitted . • Geol`Piccx, Chntraurn. , ' • : Tie debate in the Convention, upon the goes ..•• . titabaa far as we beard it, was sported and dianik , . . ed. The Baltimore Conference Delegates resisted = ' the separation, upon the ground that -the bounda :,, tin were conwitutioaally nod Permanently emelt ' lished Emir yeara eince, and roulll not a&h be bre ken down, but by violence. oOe it ember (31r. Dasig had heard that to do this would Tate war *ad Sell to the knife. He hoped better thing., but thew wax danger in distuihing what had promised so welt Bev. Mr. Wilson opposed the report with loans sarcasm, proposing to the free Stare Dale. ' Bites, that they rhoold change placed with their !2: &albite bretbern, and let their Southern Intibree Wt Were Cepa:Sad to Slavery - grt.North; -He be. :pervert that the anti slavery S'entitneni was already upon the increase in the stave States. From 1532, . .until now the moutki of men bad beets sealed upon this settled, but now Men were beginning ha regard slavery as a ;crisis evil, nod to speaker it ars web; and many in ' be - Slave States 'avowed their tire n'toProotigligoregsition to ft; and not many year: berree, if things remained as they were, this oppo ertitia would he kit. . ~_ Rev. Hr. oCastweight, of Miaow, ' held that this -: . Clenceal Conßrenee had the same powers as the . , jai: What that established, this could repeal 1 . - Bev.:/dr. Collins, of Baltimore, proposed coat , ..eggioaers to settle the chuieti boundaries, and .- .edrogited an intendment to the .-Wport. tie thought that the.ehtireires North and South might ~. ends their differen4by pacific means. Ile pro ' poised three northern end three southern ecomeite . lioneni,:acting in concert with the 'Episcopacy, and - - dekr,ded his point with ability. .., Thii course be argued would prevent any dec landing' sate Ilse constitutionality of the plan of . eepration; With the permission or the Confer* :awe, Mr. Cellists requested the reading of an opiti . ipe procured by Win from JtsJge McLean, este the • :' 'lower of this general *Cencerence to decide upon get age of ilie body of 1544, by declaring the plan of setitirallorithen"adopted, null and void. The' . opinion of Judge) hiaLean• is .that, the general Conference bad iir. f _ power to wimps the church, ' inasmuch as its cionsbluents hid delegated to it ' . the power of carrying on the government of the - :"Chauch and not of destroying or sepenuing ih Theo the neperation at present existing, and Theo :,- • apt; . rag oat of the action dales by that Confer. . emu s .wrong, yet inasmuch. the parties to the '• " sell sitstio' a acted upon the essumlition, that:such • power was in them, the decision cannot be Fever : Md. Thu could 'not be done•bseause one:party .. githgeentract was not reprerciated, and Chit one .. :' party alone would break no cptrad. Theitrepa - nocetbeabo stated was ritadempoe such aqtasis • that iteould ant be called a weeision. .It could not be wailed by ordinary reference., but took' a pole, -r ' . :-.ride sterns all_constitutional, law, 'and upon the great Moral law, the discussiou of which comes : , - within the power, of the Coakienee. Mr. CoUch -- ' then went on toargue that 'no act of thin Confer _ . . ... awe amid tiring hark tio : Soulhirl. collfercloNws ' ' d that they. should now sword declaringwins . ah . .. `', ,, ' 124 . : -.the ad of the Canfercence a 1614, and providelie - r ":.- the seederneni of .tbik border.troubles; in the man!' . '• . _.- me Sawa to tbe'good of Church. At the cot •.'-..:- : elusion •or his speech, the conference adjourned ~.. . . ''', ',WOhost action. , . ' - . HIM MEM . .. • ..! ffrawieese--84::The 3snliteedon is sought to be Made here that yea will not be made a candidate the resionaination so the Whig Candi• date - fur Congress in thls District; and• so your Whig friends are anxious to have your valuable support upon the door of Congress, of the cberiah ed principles of the \Vhig party, and especially of the particular interests of Allegheny minty and the West, which were so ally defended by you in your recent speech, wwbope that you will permit lour name toga before your constituents as a can didate for re•nominatioo. Jas. Dilworth; ' Henry S. Bing, Wm. Douglass, Harrison Parry, Alfred P. Anahute, Samuel W. Semple; 'Andrew Johnston, Wade Hampton,- - Jam. P. Tanner, John Walker • *noel Moore, John Gebbart, Unman Stoner, Leopard, John C. Parry, and other. Henry Chalfant, Roost oF MaassCs - MIA - FA Wuhingtrin,,May 3d, ISIS • 1 Grivuotrst.- : -Youresteemed favor of the 29th of March last, was duly received, and ar the kind feelings you are pleased to express towards me, I beg leave to tender you my wannest thanks-- Next to the consciousness of an honest. Amite to discharge with tideluy the duties of my station, the approbation of those who have honored me with their Lana - diner, is most grateful to my bead. The present Congress has peen,-sad will be, called upian to act On tome of the mostditilcult and deeply Interesting qua/ions that have been pre xentedfor many years. • When the present Administration came into power, the country Was prosperous and happy.— We had a tariff which not only afforded - fair mutew don to the industry end enterprise of the country, but which had produced no amout of:revenue sat ticient to defray the ordinary expended of-the Gov ernment, sad pay otr a large amount of public debt. That wise,judiciousand beneacialmeagure, was repealed; in violation of the 'most solemn pledges by the party leaders, and the free trade hill of 1816 was enacted m its placee. And s now we are told that the doctrine of protection to Muer. ' iee¢ industry is a Wen& doctrine -Mod the lead. era of the party declare,inthe face oftbeir pledges and pretended friendship for the interests of the people, their willingness'° fasten upon them a ll*. tem of iiirecticurran. And besides,: the present system, if eoptinued, will break down the. Menu facturing interests of the country, create , a - licenor. mous foreign debt, and turn out the toiling millions to bag or starve. This: system, in my judgment. should be repealed, and: tiro principles of the tariff 0f1b42 restored. The country, elm, at the period referred to, was at peace With all the wild. The sword of the as. doe had reposed in its scabbard for more than Min tv ream, and our people , . were (Indented - arid hap py in the cultivation of the arts of peace end Medi. nation. And aithongla at that time, we wry have hid cease of quarrel with Mexico, yet no one an. uciitated the adiablest danger of . rupture between the two countries arising out of - the issues which then ex.ated. Whet then wen the orgies and oh jest of the prevent unhappy_ war in which the country has been engaged Mt the last two yenta. this gitmaioa liu been discussed et great length during the present session in "loth Itouseaof Con. grout A few words may, therefore, be proper on this subject. Attortile Inlradasiott or Florida into the Union, the South had rm .111011, territory 0 1 1 0 4 which slave States could be carved. They saw ta the Northwmt • large scopnofterritory which would. 'in a few years, be formed into tree States; and brought into the Union. which mint iuevitably break down the political slate power of this nos, eruineet, itit did not eadanger the eXistence ca. - the institution Texas having &Sued - her Intlepeadenee and maintained d for a nowhere( years, h ad made ifs ',beau. for admission into the gains. And in or. der to aid that applicatidaTeigross Saud was per petrated ou the people °fide United States, as has recently been proved and admitted by the publish correspondm ea between the ExPreside nts of the two 2.epotilics, by hada* out the idea that Texas ...about to throw herself into the' arias of GM; Britain. - The South. footing to present the naked question of annexing Texas oa atmouat, of ber slaviny,pro. poised to the Noah the occupation of the whine of Omgon, up to Iftyleurforty," which wee free ter ritory. Thisdecepu. proposition had the desired cflect on the Northweetem wing of the pony,—and wimrdingly the Baltimore Convention, which re jcined Mr. Van Bu ma became he was opposed to annexation, pasted resolutrons is favor of - Oregon - and Texas both. Tlie independence of Tex. had net been ac knowledged by Ilexica,s stair of war still esisted. .and although actual hostilities had ceased for a time, they were liable to be renewed at every too. moat. If, therefore,.we snorted Texas, we must espouse her quarrels, and would be bound by the Bomatuution to ..protect and defend her against Mexico. And oar most cmineut Statesmen of hot. political parties, including Meters. Clay, Van Buren, Webster, Wright, Adams and 11011101 i, all declared, as did also the press and leading Whigs oft.e country every where, that the annexation of 'Texas would ismitrale involve the country in a war with Mexico. This was the view taken of the subject by Mexico herself , Mr. Almanto then Minister from Mexico to Mil "moony solemnlg_protexted before. hand against the measure, and - declared that his government would confider the annexation of Muss:quietism to adectatation of war against the United Stales, Aud'ener the act was consum mated he asked for his gumaports, left the country sod re acme,. Notwithstanding all theseiiedethn warnings, the portvdctermined Maim out their nefarious schema for the extensioq of elavery,,,with the certainty of ! war, the dean:dim of the Lest ieterests ,of the country, andon the imminent richof the Union it self • The deed was done—the enbico¢ was : Moss. •ed—and from that art and that hour origivated most of the evils that now afflict opr beloved coon. t Texas claimed the Rio Grande as her Western boundary, bet fearing the attempt toffe that as the boundary might leopard the auccess of the meas. use M C0ng0..., as friends passed the act of an nexation leaving the western boundary no open question. Slavery exited to Texas, and by the not of annexatiou.other Stales might be carved out of territory sr/Arra-aim lissastion or restru tion as to &sorry, 'Hence the importance to the slave power of the South to extend the territory as Cos west no poasible and accordingly. it was deter mined to march the array to the /tanks of the Rio Grande. This was part and parcel of ,the grand schene concocted by the slave power in the Bahimore Convention @r advancing the , interests, and ex• tending the territory of Slavery. Thu anne.tion of Texas then, ton. "the primary cause" of - Abe war, and the immediate occioton of , hcostaitica e tween the two Republics arose out of the' march tag of the troops to the banks of the Rio Grande, by order ol the President- Thus bas the annexation of Texas, by President Polk and his party, cod the country more than a hundred Illiiiloo/ of dollars. occasioned thelass of many thousands of valuable lives, .and added to this Union ienitorY, which will he divided into at leastifoo arra Stara—supposing itto stop at the Rio Grande. . . Jim norther, and a very grave luestion arises •ir to on rfuture acquisition of territory. Shall this Repnblic either conquer or porchase free ail, and Stain it with the foot print of Slavery? From such a burning, withering, national disgrace, may Hea Yen in mercy deliver ns. Such an act would just. ly call ,down upon us tiro acorn and contempt 01 the civiPzed world. If we are to have more territory—and that mems incvitable--let it he open to the free white enter prising laborers or the whole country, without sub jecting them to the degradation of being placed on • level with the slave population of the South. This question is now harem the 'House, with re gard to Oregon; and if the Treaty with Mexico shall be ratified, the same questiorturill shortly be raised with regard to the territory we acquire un. der iti and whenever that question does come, my txtrututuents will find me where I have always stood, on the side of liberty, doing battle in her sacred cause, in opposition to the ester/aim of sla very, bj all the legal and constitutional means in my power. We have arrive-I at a Awful crisis in the history clime country. The ConatitUtion has been met aside by the President nod his party—its sacred injonctions disregarded—and the will of the Pre aideot—the osie man power --set up with° supreme, paramount law of the land. The will of the peo ple, as regressed through their representatives, has repeatedly been defeated by Mr. Punt.' bv the ar bitrary and tyrannical use of the Veto Power.— While this hydra headed nnonster—the 'one. man powir—has united: or its overthrow the hearts and the arms of Monarchical Europe, Republican America nourisher, cherishes, and drape it to her bosom. as the most precious jewel of , democracy, This phew of the veto moat be cavorted, or the Ir a:: itself shorild i lte taken away from the Pt. .• ror the correcti on, of these abuses, and the to moral of the evils brought upon the country; by the party now in paver, the people look to the great Whig party of this It behooves all the true Whigs, therekire, to wand bawl*, as one Man, in the great struggle , before us., All person,' . .preferences should be merged in the vital question of success to Whig Principles. Let us buckle on our armor, nod make ready for the contest; so that when the enptnio General of the Whig host shall be-designated by the National Convention, we may gokirth to batik in full confidence that a glorious victory awaits us In reply, gentlemen, to your request that I will permit my name to go befit* my constituenta aa • candidate for renomination, t Iregteave to as that. b e f ore I kit home, last fall, I tad determined not to be acandidate for reelection. But certain cir cumstances have transpired, since that time, which have induced me to submit the question entirely to the decision of my friends. • ' • With sentiments of profound respect, am, Gentlemen, Vans Friend, . • . • • -• M. HAMPTON. Pees Tom &mix the friend of O'Connell, the eloquent armor, and the true Irishman, Who at• tempted to destroy - his from mental anguish, end who threw blew/Mime Waterloo Bridge into the Thames, was set at liberty, alter Mexamine. lion before the Bow Street Poliee. He gave his word and histecurity; tad the security of friends, that, henceforth, ha would resist the demon of de. eclair, and Wi th tears flowing down his ebeeke,he thanked thiee.wlmlied tamed him from s grave cf watersoend restored him to his friend. - • 04116L1710 Saists—Tbete are add to be,- in Waskinetce, fiftrone gambling establishments, Gam 1 1 raM• -edess an the suburbs, tolls falls losable mods* Pennaplnnia Avenue.' F .. n.~s.. ' c. .r . v~'i ...... o . GE=iISEIME c Icannrincknow, :n PitukrAde..• - cirsaigi Staatesal Nessibitatlear seems to have tariatWati sealed role Aritb Editors to refuse all commtudes doss relative to . the comparative merits of candi dates for nomiot rtious, I shall not stop to questiori the propriety of this wile; but adiritriug, for the egr ession its correct 'mess, I think an exception. tardy occurs where a l sablic serves% high in office, he colnts a candid& le for reelection. Thes surely, his official may be discussed, and thilinewirm mired how firs has truly represented his corr, gamuts! Otherwise, our boast of a free press, is but a mockery, aid the master we become awake to the Oct, if fact it be, the:better. Feeling, how ever, that naive no right to assume before hand, that your press is closed against a proper discus sion of this subject, I proceed with my assumed task, and shall endeavor , to maintain a moderation of tone dictoted by wLat I suppose you may deem proper and admissible, tatter than what I think the circumstances wousa justify, or the case, Lmand. . Mr. Moses Hampton our present Congressman, will not say representative) as I am informed, is most industriously seeking a ranom illation. He cannot therein, object, that his political life, sine he has been in °Olga should be brought into ve view, sod such light thrown upon it, as collateral and!ciretimstantial evidence may serve to gi re. Mr. H. who is a lawyer, knows very well how dark and mysterious a case may appear until some small matter, unimportant irk itself corns up and throws atiood of light upon the whale traumatism. Ile will not, therefore, object to the Uw of circum stantial evidence in his own cue. D. will at kart relieve him from tits charge- of hiving unintentionz ally committed a gross blender, which with some Might he denied worse than a crime. On one of the horns of the dilemma, lam afraid he most in eviiably bang. Early in .Tantfary,Mr. Hampton voted with the T.....4 , c0a against a issolution, or rather amend. meet declaring emit the war with Mexico • onus .• . • rrainVesrarily and come &rpm by t 4 Pratid.st of the D. Stare' beipir the only Whig who so voted. This was an extraordinary vote for the representative of the county of Allegheny, sod created a great sensation here, and elsewhere ats we! it might. Mr. Hampton in dekiice say. that ha merely voted against an embarrassing amendment Let us see bow far this is likely to be the trathr.bow far Wm. On Dam 13, (rout thedate, the votebeing given in hoary) the editaeof the Bast bed an internees with Mr. Hampton, in which be (Mr. IL) iaftirmod hitref the Bost editor That be would • have of dale, troth mast of his Whig friends in en • gad to the win Mexico. lie said Wet his • tuber and grandfother were old dernansts of-the • Jettericielan school—du hs had brut raiud a ,Sr •weerae! . hiiirtf, but did not hit bonny of the • acts LIM/. Van 13nren's adminiscuion hen" In reply to thus prodthat Mr. Hampton's trench. ere waa delibewite and had been the some time •coutemplated, be dues nothing better than • to call the Eduoiot the Nat (fag...' Ile may be right in that particular, but it does not batch the (thee. Lion. Mr. Hampton should remember the proverb .0 blob leapt that ~.childien and Mole speak the truth, that•Harier did non tin occasion we have OXlCill4re evuleuee; the on the very day on which the numeration took place, be wrote hortip i To. fr=l4'illl.lltYY l.ritta of A L AI. VICAPUM eying l he ice perfect geti ll eatir^ am pleased to leave kom his own l•mi that he will sustain the Our Hampton will be popular here," with the Icocorlocca it is to be presumed. . Now It is tate al all Wmly that the editor tithe Poatoe ache. Meat partisan of the Adminiaration, would have spokes tees of a . Federal Whig" if that same ,Whig had not given him to understand that he contemplated numb:dug the Administration. lie did sustain it: The evidence is complete that be :.M/We/Ito sestaill it. The ptediellou thhis he would was fulfilled to tbe letter. Mt. Hampton's vote theilled the expectation of hla - new Mond friend. .fle stood up to his Numbs, to a stria petty vote, arming thetthe war was unconstitutionally and unnecessarily commenced by the President; Mr. Hampton did as it had bean previously predicted by a Locofoco he would do. He sustained the Administration. He is Mood in the negation with the I.:callow. I thank God, the only Whig found, whether Northern or Southern. He enjoys the honor, such as it is solitary and alone. Three more such traitorous votes would have changed the result. Imagine then, fellow ,, citizens,—you with whom polities are a serious re *ll'yr—something better than a mere game ir self advancement, bromine your shame and grief if a Whig Congress by aid of two or three such Whims as your reprewatative had reiterated the declaims of the Looet.ams that the war was constitutionally and nedmisarily commenced. Shalt we again en pow ourselves to the possibility of such a moctill. cation, and to such a tnettepreseatatiOn of our tea- tamest Of the possible motives and - hopes which led Mr. HamPlifeato th u MM, aid of the reasons ar their own thoothlfillutent, I most here sefriLa from speaking of, thought I by no means meow= my rule which wou4 prevent me from specie laung • upon them; end, in another place, and at 'mother time. I shod undoubtedly do so. But let pass Mr. Hampton'. vote; let =even put the lieu ccaastruction upon it that the case admits elf . Believe, if you ma, that it wesoe/y a blunder, it le his resolutions which forma an samosa, bar to hissupport by such Whip as are true to them wines and their cause in this country. These resolutions were presented immediately after recording his vote on the `Ashman amend. , meat" a vote by which be severed himself from the whole Whig party in and out of the Iloase. They were his firs essays in , his new career, no doubt carefully studied and designed as an exposition of his views on the great question of territorial so. quisition.. They are diametrically opposed to Whig principles not only as to aegusitionaterritr ry but without guarding the question of slavery in -soutiirmity with one views should territory be ac quired, and this is not all; the very occasion which he seised (immediately after the vote on the Ash. mm Amendment) seems to oar mind conclusive rus to a deliberate design to cot the Whig party. baler:Ste with and eau-Wats their opponents. 'StrippM of their verbiage and glows they mewed and sanctioned the mnexaket of the states and territories now occupied by the armies of the United States, under the military govern. meet thereof, laving it tithe Inhabitants of the future-states to be carried thenafmni to say wheb er slavery shall eziat or not. In other words *total abandonment of the Wilmot Peoria°, while even oor !mote° br e thren are in large masses reader. ing themselves 'respectable by declaring that they will support ne man who isthot mooed 'to the annexation of any more slave territory ) that is, who wodwolm for the Game of Re ester, eubJect to the declaims of the Anti•Masonle and Whig County Convention. \ • • • asysfeekartf IS • MANY MHOS, Ctivarr Itwasrah—Ttut :Wee of JOHN UEDA& KEY lereepectfally preseuted to the Wide and And. ktheonlo Conveotlost, ea Weindetati for the office of Register. style \ I MANY FRIENDS. 'Fr JARED M. BRUSH wiLl bea esathdate bolus the AntiAtasonto and Viblel Comte Cot:vendee, for the oflusafElere of the Clean of Quarter Beaton, At. snytle - SIXTH WARD. • Apr T. lo biebliiLAN will be ,a candidate for She *Rea of Chet of lbConn of, guunn ke I eibfeet ihe deelsk,u of the ePPumbh , ll o . l ..tio. 'Come Couieueuutee.,—The name of THOMAS . TAUREAN walk, presented to the Whip mad - Anti-' Atathale Cathentloato assemble oo the Nth of Jane Mat, as &candidata l ot the above °Mee. • sayalawe • • . THIRD WARD. Coda,.Bsentni—JAlKED W. KENNEDY, of Allwl Elko elty,' supposed heft. the Wawa 2thtl.hlatothe Coneentioth kw she oaks olCotattylles. iwar. mribolltkersC • mercy WHatla In. Don't ban pillow dub Trali of b• R V& pndy hiss um ..M g • • bin of Joon Amber Toon Pan. It linianno gam, mean. ne bnan. to. 'obi st lb Waal - naltditylyr. X . 1311444e0i 1 7 y0 40 r 12 a~ret 1. 811, adden d Sir—Ydur V *Orbs; ces sack - wssderfid natant bat Pthiskltworthachrle gisa port a few fano shoat it. "X neiakbor, bessght from am one curio( it. amPgare the contents to timm of. bin. abi/dren, the first mused 1t94 theimmod 14 and de third 70, making MN it•OrlS. &actualized by twang- one vial. P.S.. Gray inmediarel) bows four ral mom.' file. J. llPStaley also gave dm commas of one viol to three of his children, whiel. Lrotigki from the fint frosi the secorid,W., and from the Wird 30, making ISO wonsos, by the um Drone vial. I unto mY Own triad. aged one year,• too teaspoonsful, width ex pelled 14 Weraia, one of which Was at least one loot M ug. lour Venrauge is considered the best that has everbeen brought to our section of the Country, and so far as boo:. has never failed. loon respectfully J. 1.. Prepared and sold by It E. SELLERS, N Wood st. Sold by Dr. Cassel, fah wank IL 34. Curry. Alleghenyt W. Smith, Tempera...evil* and P Draro,-4..sw retie eVII:G. • ..)••# . Wailes! Weamdl—The synipfoins• of the presence °lemons in children should he easefully, wambei by parents, and to soon as there is reason to suspect their eximence, every mehni should be used to expel them prompai and thoroughly. The Proprietors of3FLane's Worm .Vermifuge are confideut tint they odemho hew means of accomplishime this result that has a, otter been submitted to She public; and they; invite to it she atten tion of all who have Me management of children. The medicine la Jude andileassui One, and 110 Car folks produce the desired e rm. For side at the Drug More of raft! - 1 k Co, 130 . .w00d et DOTStti, Rheum, Scurvy, Old Sores ' Erysipelas Dce'sal, Chap., Sore Alm,le, Sore Beards, run lea, p • ;1 Jones' Soap is used by m any pdysicians In this city In cluing the above, and we would not conscientiously sell unless x e knew it to be all We gate. • • As st cosmetie, the' Me Jottea'Soap . t:Cps the only article ever known that reganved • Mies and cleared and beautified the ekin,inaking it clear, 'woo-ink and alum an an intant's.T.:Eold by ViM. JACK SON; CO Liberty street. • untr4 ED- Men never attempt to . Counterfeit a morthlems I'ert k le cilea:;VwlOl'emottlitc'etta"n'ottli:fittairoin'it as greats Clime as if it Were a hank note or - the coin oldie United Slates. •II S.Fartnestoers Vertnifuge,. which le the only mg - nand certain cunt Mr worm., ham been counterfeited in many sections attic country, and persons should be on their. gat when pureltiuung to get the genuine article, prepanst at Pittsburgh, Pa. arca Jusx's Execcrossm—We;nnould call Etude. to this excellent remedy for Cush*, Colds, Consumption, Asthma, and all erections os :the Throat and Loop. I-laving several times within . - raw years put had occa sion to ass a medicine of thls kind,wo hue by expert enc. tested Its excellein qu aliti e s, and ere prepared' to recommend it to others.' hlithsters or. other public sp re e:A d ro te m d i r u. b .. bronchial • elections will . fin! I t prepared hya season , to physician, and all classee Wlll find it ca feand C. cacthus msmeiue in the diseases for which it is re conamended.--ICelumbus Whit.) Cross end JounthL For sale at the Pekin Tea Stdre, Pio. - th Fourth sweet. TT2S V. The pubhe are respecifully Invited to auend.a =cretin of The Aisociatiou of /button:ph and lot promoting the Interests of kuluestont, this Mors. day