; A'; ...;" ' BY MOORE 8i HEMPIIILLL Ir . 3aw,su .rha'n DEMOCRATIC BANNF‘R" _ weekly. 11382 per annual—'o _‘ '8 Pyblmhnd vulsco. .- bdi rsl 50 ”pan! mad. 0 pnpor'rnp o “omin“ ‘d . ‘ . . , uon nflho editors) unul on n:rer:r;gg:snl {his op‘ WAdvumaemonta. &c., m “h“ “sum :Lfignvfidw The Rcbcllion in Ireland 7 [One ollhe Imh _lendora. Mia'M'Ghoo h . " ncenxlytzlrnved in Philadelphia. given the}?! 0 "m uplnnnnon ol lhe. muse; o! lhe fuilune of no OWIHS bouiunjn Ireland :1 ‘ no mo r 0 7‘» the Editor 9/ the Spirit ofthe 7' ' . Commas HALL. oc}. 12, 18:2“ : DEAR Sm :—Severul genllemm at lhi: city. who have long lelt a .deep inlr‘reuv in Qhe afl'uiys of Ireland: ("I which "umber w" Mytnol bee-”A "‘9 “.’M‘l activr.) lchifE ”m I should give “menub'iq explanation nl lhe causes which led lo lhe “nexpécled {ailme‘ of the late rgvolulionary'moyem‘ém In thnlvcounlr'v. ~ , . . l leel bound In meet, their wishes, as bcinglheira. and lor um alher reason [hat no'fiunesl statemenl‘ol {he mnnercn‘n be made at present in Ireland. “here (he ugh! oi meeiing and the liberty of lhe, gum liaye. been bolh Innilnilnled by lhe Briiisli nulhnrilies. “'ere il (ml my for. rune to‘urme in your rily. i thank] have lell il Ihy-,dulj‘ to have made the Execu iive Diicclory 01 New York the medium hi this gglpiemcnl. Bul- ,being. detained here. and hearing so many anxious inqui ries dolly madml have yiehled lo lhe gene ernl dmire lo make it public wilhnul de luy. In doing an. I fear I wiil lry your patience much, bul I am certain none of your 'readers' will consider lhe final Inn:- 0! H’Vl'n millions of n generous and gifted race a §ulljrct 0|: inddlerence {0 them. as men or an Americana. - l In «bill may I shall _dpeak from my oon‘knowlgtlgv. for. though lrwent on a mlqston‘ into a neighboring countvy toward the' and 0! July. I was back in Ireland the li‘rsl work in Auguul. and was engaged dim tlll Sept‘ember.‘ ' 3' ffll'heve ar’edlnee dates to3b9‘ home in mind 11l relerence 10. this movglnent ; the month bl February, “ho-n Ilw'cominental rcVolulions hogan—the 24th of July, when the Habeas Corpus Ac! wns-luspended, and the, Ham-at time. whicb,,in Ireland. doqi not. cometill Septembw. v‘ . In February last. the Irish‘parlirs who wughl a change ol Government. were loo—"the moral force Repealers." nml Young: Ireland. 'l'heuewparties oliginalc‘tl in July,il,¢46‘.;wlwn Young lteland secg‘ dtd Irom the. Repeal Asaocialion. on the lnwlulness .'qf shedding blood to achiew politicalyighla. ' Before that eventflhn u-l O'Connell was-m absolutely the ruler ol Ircluull. as Nithulas Rlvmnnofl io‘ul Rusbia. 'l he old'hbnured him for but do ‘ lioua tactics. the young. became England leaned nnd'hnml blm’-; many Punestants‘ (-tn-(uperoledx'wlmihim lor hln liberality ; the Catholics rc‘vered him as the man who («r-built Ihc-it altarn. nml toos-nl'lhe to’ng’u'ea‘ and aims of "WIT Priesthood. 'l‘wo'lhuu rand Catholiétlergymen. quartered at H rry hamlvt'lmd at evevy cum-road. wete Illa ”brains “and his mag‘vsn'acy; llis «ord‘unQ’lliex‘ 'u'n'ly lnw‘ in’ the‘ land. and :llildgrn ”he. baptiyddmlh hlll name on oilh‘llie’nqnle‘ola Saint. . 1 'l‘lllé than. ulpouetlul and so well b'e lovod. lnughljn hi- la-l days'lhe doctrine that "no aqnuunl olzllbovly was north the rpllling at one dmp nl llgmnn blood." and the. WV,“ Vlnajmily ol tbv'dvrgvytnen and Ihe_pgop|9,adopml it implicitly. rHuL [hove was on undergrowgh 'ol__ a. new gen rrution )n' llel‘aml, whodé-‘uéd ‘sell gov mnment. and who thought in came Worth fighting llll're- who. indeed. I‘lshfd to light lur j!,'progidetl'ilvcnuld not otherwise be had; DYComu-ll.introduced. In July. ’46. histutotmnmberuhipfln the chval Asa socia’tionrknown ammhelPeace Rewluw tiunsi’fe—and sYOungllreldudJlnolV'lflg lb!“ and“! course wooldme .latol vto aucceu ngoinsl auclhEnnénemymccoded. ln Jan itor}, 1,8147, thry loaned” who lmh Con.- ‘etlcmtlon," out all which the heat at due Continental cwnte produced this loletnb‘ lfmptal insurrection. !. . -.vv , . ("in 1847. Yqu-avltelamlnwas busy gain. {Hg-0V9!" lhe inhabilalua of lhe-:lpwns from “(floral lorm,” and with the example! of; fllnfdhe.Nlmlnmnd‘tlm (evolutions ul last. Svtlfiggflc Intended." Al'n‘ny time du nng lhe In»! six mun'ths the tnwna'people of lteland were, in'cl‘erml. cummined _to afltmpln [urcible expulsionol the Briush power. _.,5 1 . ' . This towmhip organizaiioncoh‘sisted of 500 Clubsndnilhe «om olunbout 30.000 manor. the fighling ugh-«Ufuheue. lell “hi"! ha‘lfiwere move or leg: armediiu July. »find_!he,.other.hull were acquiring arms as ‘53“ 93 they could Mneremoneymna scarce and mililary.sveapouu dean: : [have' known hall-employed u-adeamebv lofslimvthem -39h!” Omheir daily, meals in ord’er tabuy {Emu Each Clubvntidivided-inlo sec: Hung of tong-men. . withmsMaslen (much. QSFHOFa>fithkuemhpersonally. each»! 'l'! let! men. Anddeltme assule nurgen “9MAmenumiendmhm alflnough the glubs. an clubq.,.do notmeet. n‘h togelher "1 Ireland, Ih‘psc sectionuzneudynll exist. 3"Q"'ofm~ n- nucleus of ,fqurc‘mpvemeut “hwh'é‘afin'ot'begmchi'edfo‘rx“aimed. I auure them’ of :hu‘ both ;from knoMe'dge M {h‘ei’fllem andal'vomé the factilha! Uhder mc‘Dill'fiminng’cl;.twenly stands 'ofurma h'"6”°!'icl be‘eniapmred Irom dheC'un» federnlea,zt ~;;g; ,me-u.,1»‘..g;.,m ‘ .. . : '. - , . I' v , . ‘ .. H »..- . . ‘ -‘ —4" ' « w I-a. =»‘ “flu" “’"’ 3.} _ a ‘“~"h".""~-.-';' Ir «1‘ .' '.~ -: ' «A . - ‘ V t H , a? 3. t» fivr-fzt": ‘: ".‘afjfi r-, v'! ~ w , '. ./, " ‘ 2 , ' ' ~11" ~, ~1‘ L "r. ‘nv -' ._th « I II .. . .- - . LI .. I . .v , {-I .i I - ,;. . ‘ ' ' '1" I ‘ I (I I ‘V I 1 1H ..;',' .; . ' I I «v ‘ ' w.‘ . :,_' " § ~ AI - v . ‘ l . i I '. -~. . ‘ —, . V ‘v . ' .' Iv 9 . .: I . I' I - I ,I\ . ' ‘ - ' Y' I I ”II g I II II . . I n‘W.’ ' ‘- ' Buttthe Contederate principles didnot persade the. rural population up to the last hour. Forthie there are many' cancel.— The famine of ’46 and ‘47 had left a lanai tudeelter it'likethat which follows fever. The Peasantry could not retain the heat that MitehelL. Dufl'y, and Meagher, would inluae into them. They felt the electrici tygae—e shock—and it paused thro' them. ‘The Government saw—nit was a patent fact—thnt we hadconvetted andtorganlzed the town but had not reached the heart ol the «bunny. 'l‘hev knew that the club system. formidable where population was grouped. was unsuited tothe rtnaldiatricle. They,thereloro. opposed the insurrection with two weapons; they concentrated their forces on the towns, and used everkatt to preveni the junction. of the Catholic cler- 1 gy with'the Revolutionary leaders. In this latter enterprise they were mate rinlly' aeaiated by the opposition of Mr. John O’Connel to the formation of the “I -fill) League." ’l‘hat League. devised and advocated by the beat clergyman and citi zena, waeintended to swallow up both the Repeal Accociation and the Confederation. Its actual result would have~been ’to bring together‘Young Ireland and the Priesthood -—lhe two vilnl elements of lrinh‘pblitica at lhal period. Mr. John O'Connell'op posed it by a succession of amall amfices, unworthy of any man, and which were on- ly lolented because, being hlfl lather‘sson. he was neceuary lo lhe union of parties. He asked a delay olaforlnlghl—of a month —and of six weeks. Finally, when the six weeks were expired. 6; {0: very shame he could ask no more. he openly assailed il as Illegal. and inlended lo be no Calho lic. The Catholic clergy, wilh lhe'exce‘p lion of lhe courageous Bishop of Dairy and his clergyman. übandoned Ibo League, and so lheConfederaleo were lafl alone, face lo face. & fool to tool. with ihe Government. Any one, Who knows Ireland. socially. wdl ltDOw how indispensable the Priest ‘hood are to discipline and movement in the rural parts. In many parishes the Priest is the only educated man; in nearly all he is the only one who feels and tails for the people. Ireland hae no middle class, and. it would be well for her if she had no gen try. ‘ But the'P‘riesthood is ‘everywhere, and revered everywhere. 'And this rever ence has been the reward of unchanging: ,devotioo. Through the entire seventh cen t tury the Priests and people fought stde by side ; Bishops rcommended armies. and Friars conducted sieges. In the penal eigh-' teenthi-century .the flock open the moon tains stood sentinel for the shepherds. and many bloody corpse bolted the paths by which they escaped. lam satisfied that If the Church had'be‘en‘ involeéd even ev-‘ er so ltttle in 1848. we uould have beaten the English. But the Bishops and digni» taries opposed the movement. or-whv had just the same effect, prophesied its failure. and Argued‘its ruin. The secondary Cler . gy‘s‘nd'tlie Cur‘atés‘ivho were more favor able to it, in submission to their order. were silent. , , ~ 1 In taking that course. the Irish Clergy did no! leave lhpmwlves wuhom argu menla. ’ The bloody (lays ofJoqo In Paris ——tho' lamentable anarchy in the Cny of Rome—lhe comparnlive unpreparednéts of lhe people—Hm slaughter that would be made—the partial lnilure of the harvest are all reaaons for their c_ourso. _Bul,.aa aure’dly. 'lhey tmade lhe revolution (ail by preaching Ihm' il would fail. A 1 Ca'rrick. at Castlereagh. in Tipperary. Limerick. «St Clare, lhey preached againsl an appeal lo arms. and made conwna. ' Now the'eonéelniralion ol ’ the trhops in rhetowna and cities; compelled the _Con fede'ialee lo choose a Guerrlla war or none. The eituatio‘n of'an Irish town“ in August last; bray be undemo‘od lrom thra' instance: Ila-Dublin, as inmost Irish rownl. there in anold and a new town. The Gavern merrt'people, live ‘in the. new town. and colmmaml its Open and angular streets mm, erro‘ng public buildings. filling every vista anrludwellinghouaea nearly ‘Bs‘3‘fon2r In theold town livetlre hereditary rehels’ who could be deqtroyed by a ebowegoi shells which might be so directedlae no'f to injure the old quarter. In Dublin.’the garrison west. on ihe 27m hl'Ju'ly. 15.000 nren. & it averaged throughout 10,000. The ob ject of making the warfare in Guerilla one, lwas to drag itheae’concentrarioneto pieces. jeetho‘Spanieh palriore did Napoleon’s ar‘ ‘mies of occupation. ”and by bringing them into districts where only infantryficould act iwit’h ease, 'to put them more on a lerel lwith‘ihe- raw levieewl" the" people. "I‘he‘ irernainder of the course that might be ta« iken would be to burn~ the towns end cit iee..,aa.the Athenians did~Athene.rand the ißlliélan'Moflcow 'l‘bis..l‘ believe. would ‘have been the result. on, lh‘e new; 0“??? ‘fiut royaliet blood being drawn in the rural dretrrcta. whilher._theee,eonsideratiune. and the Heiress Co'r'pual’SuiponEidn A‘cr. had 3 driven our leadere.“ ‘ Bur the rural districts ; Would nor'movfiyirhwl'rheir Clergy, and i the Clergy were 'openlyladlene or inactive? I! is no! fair pdfiuumuhfi!lh’qwflmy no, system of opemfidnp nqu on amongfihe: Colife'delates. ”Them will. a feasible and 'welL‘underaloqtjplqn. ,Whal i! wan. it is not advisable for ago publicly £0 explain.— Beiido‘.‘ l‘hathalher A {main apccé'u‘ ofidéld publish it than I. ‘lfihavano objec’fio‘ne quilmlhomamn’qyfiéld explain it 'Qp‘fany Commiucnor cilcla'of the. hienddio’. 1m; ULEARFIELD{PAQOCT.WJMB land, bul printing il wouild "we no puri pose except lo a’im the enemy. The conclusion I'dra '«_. [io'm all I know of this mlempl. is lhiu—lhbt the clergy 0' lhe peuple «nude a grave pdlilical misluke, and lhul Ihnl mistake wan lalul In lhe in~ rurreclion in in. incipient Hazel. It would be unfair and lnlae lo nay that they can not allege strong g'iounda lnr lheir course; bul I am. for one, fully convinced. that ll Ihey had headed the pensanlry, w? Would have reneucd the miracle ol St. Palrick. I know there wuuld be slaughter. but Fe ver nml Fummmnow nodes the prulecliun M the Brllish flag in Itclnnd, WI” destroy more lives. and wilh worse weapons, (bun the :ixty'lhousnml ntmed men could have killed. And lhen to compare the two re sults! , . I left Ireland at the beginning of Septem ber, despairing of any Immediate-National movement. But Ido no:. and never aha” despair nl the country. The people are not tnblame that there has not been a H’V olution. Next time they mutst trust in lo cal lentlera, like the Rappnrees and the Cntalunian chiefs. fierce men and blunt. without too mnny lieubinding them tn the peace. They [nu-t cltuone. too. the favor; able occ‘t’irrence of a foreign wnr, an event which is likely to' precede the settlement at the newly awakened races at the Con tinent. The cxletmtnatiun ol the Irish people is not to be apprehended; they cling In lhe soil like grass. nml while lhry cling. they hate England.- The numerous emimmiona ol them make scarcely any iensible (limmulion in the paveul stuck.— Thelr [no strongest political feelings are hatred 10 England, and a'aungulne hope in Ireland. Until lhe good day of victory comes. all individuals ol the Irish nation must only strive lhe more to make their names reu peclnble by doing noble deeds—by hones- Iy. by courage. by gentleneu. by genius. ‘lo Have the nulinnal spirit lrmn barrcnneu and the nnlinnal chnrnclcr Irom disparage lment. ll [his late movement has produc rd nothing else. it has wedded the Irish cause nnce more to duinlereulednen and sell-aacvifice. and next .lo such sages as Washington. the Me mosl Valuable lree dam. is a life like Emmel'o oflered up up on her holy altar. lhe scallold. Such ol lennzs have been freely {made of In": in Ireland by lhe sell iminolation ol John Mitchell nnd his Inilhful friend John Mar lin. by Mr. Meagher and Mr. O‘Gurmnn, lhe Inn! 0' Wm 01 our richest merchunu, by Mr. Dufly. our groom! journalist.'by John Lillon and SmithO'Brien. men whom much fortune and many lrien‘dl wooed m vain Irom “lhe (horny pnlh‘ol duty.” In ulher revolutionary attempls. lenders are usually less exposed to danger Ihun she people; In Ibis Ihey have openly mlven lured lurlune, home.“ lriendl, and file.— The countrydhal gap bear even a lew uuéh then _w'fll'nol re‘udily degenerate inlo a nursing tfio‘her bl slaved. For Fréeduih'c hnllle once heguh. Bequenlhod from hludxng auto to non, Though baffled ofl. in ever wun. That il. will be won in Ireland, and sooner than many, even among her friends, dare hope. I béhevc. The vice ol luyally In gone a! the rum. and il but needs a lu-K II: more 0] Time's 'lt‘achmg to make: Democtallc Revolufion, Whlch 2",” wait (or no leaderahip lo s'lrike. lomnke Ireland as free as lhe “Pest—even as lree as lbu parent land 0! liberty itself. ' Requesting Spur indulgence, lnr thin 100 lung leuer. lhremain, my dear sir, yours, very truly. K . ‘ "THOMAS D'ARCY M’GEE. '(A Traitor lo lhe Bi-iliah Government.) Important from Oregon. BATTLE" WITH THE INDIANS Intelligence from Oregon City to the 3d at April has been received bylhc New $95!; 'C'ommercialn Immllgvhich we con d'epse thé lullowing sumlnivy ol newt:— Governnr Mmmn, of Cuiifurniu. Mn! sent to Oregon lor a regiment of rignl hundred men. but in the‘exiaung candi linn of lhe lerr‘imry, none could be spayed. Money and ammunition werp much wan ted lo’c'arry on the war against lhe'Cayu‘ hes. ' ' The Oregon Speclalor notices a tobacco box of pure copper, Irom virgin ore discuc veretl in the lermoryt Lear! nunee o! the richest quality have been discovered to lhe Cowlitz'neighbovhood. by Mr. M. H. Kellog, who had worked in the landmines ollllinoiplond is now-opening a bed ol atone‘conl near the ‘Cowlitz river, Sev. grdl barrels of this cool have already been shipped to California. ” “ ' ‘ ; sThe dwelling house- and goods 0! the thief _ol' the Molnlas had been burned. by some of the whites. in, revenge, lor.n rllnall theft committed upon a settler; and, oev eral ofthe ‘Calipoolas had been severely {whippe'd'tor‘etéalihg cattle.’ ‘5 ‘ " = - Advices were reeelvedton'lheu2BdiFeb‘ your}, [tom the ;Oommiasionegtpent- ;to treet'wjth thenlndianp. ,by the] 3'91!!!" oi Moabibik ‘Ne‘Well' ‘a'nd‘ Palmer. 7 Having ‘aucceeded in procuring the neutralityof ‘lhe Nez Perceo, tha Walhu. _l'amall ‘partiof the” Ooyosen an'il the"_Bacharnuho, j-oud assurances ol friendship from the Flat; heaps. Shanna, and, upper‘coontry lodi sum” returned to member. a'ndwen; “6.039%. W.i‘.h;.th.°. :De Chhteo'lodiao-‘i ;th‘b‘lhuer declareo that you Ibuvtiuja‘ lhey were thelrrends of the Americana. Thelndtans in the field then consisted of two hundred warriors, of Caxusea and vi‘ citrus nndreckleas persons from neighbor ing rribc‘. Theae'were‘ pursued by Col. Gilliam and party. until the 14m March, when the little army came. itt.aighll_ol the ltonlile‘lndians. The lollowtng is an ac count nitric succeeding battle: When Within 400. yards ot~ their camp, We were met by an old man. unarmed. Wilh one hand on his head, the other on his heart—assuring us they were. lriendé. the people of the Yellow Serpent. anti Would not fight us. That the murderers were gone. and our only resource would be to take their block, with wliltlt the hills around were covered. We went into their camp—lound them all patoted and armed, but from the repeatedaasorance of friend ahip we ordered not to fire. but to proceed to the hills and collect in their stock.— VVhen we reached the highlands, we saw Snake, river just below. lull 0! their stock, swirnmingmer. and thousands ascending the oppomte bank. We succeeded. how ever, in securing about 500 head of horses and cattle. and proceeded about one mile on our route to the tort, when Were atlac’ ed in rear [by a large parity of Indiana— those we had just spared. and Pelouchaa. to the number 0! about 400. We con tinued a very warm marching fight till a bout dark, when we encamped on a btnull alream without food or fire. They were ithooting into our camp all night. and an ‘noyed our guard 00 much that we turned out our stock. At daylight we renewed our march and With it the fight, as vigor ously as the day preceding. until within aboutdwo miles "l the, Trauma river. where the enemy charged at lull apeed to the river. to'iget posaeasion ol the brush at the lord. in which. owing to the svriltnen ul their horsea. they partially succeeded. ' The history of savage watlare contains few instances of greater Indian prowess and daring than the scene which lollowed. The struggle for the lord was obstinate for some time. the fire of the combatants mingling together evinced‘the obstinacy ol the combat. And here I must say. had it not been lor the bold and decided stand ol a lew men at the most vulnerable point. the army must have sustained heavy loss in crossing the atream.. perhaps been thrown into cnnluaion and cut to piece-I; In an hour the sound ol our rifles had hushed. "The long battle had ended. We Were all over the river olive. and buttninet or ten were wounded, none mortally. . It was not to With our enemy. Ihc deafen ing roar of their muakctry. which hed been aoondtng in our car‘s {or ,‘3O hours. had died away—their shrill warwhoop was changed to the melancholy death song—while a number of their lilelena brothers, who In] on the field, heard not their mournlul el egy. . - -.. V They Called ofl their wanton—more anxioul to leave theJurd at the'l‘oosha than they had been to guin it. We mov ed on to the lurt, at whtch place we artiv ed on the evening of the 16m. worn down with fatigue and hunger, having eaten no thing but a small colt lnr thme day-«- Two days after. a council of officers was copvlened, in whith it was resolved that m; had accompltshed all we could with out mnre men and ammunitihn. and that it was best for 150 of us lo.pruceed forth. with to this place. and remuve up~a tum; ciency of umtnuuitioni and cottler. with you or) the tarther mnvements of the army. Col. thltatn was accompanying ustin put sunnce 00 this tesulutton when thc.fhta|_ acetdent of his death occurred. at the Iprtng this side uf the Umatilla fiver.— The death ul Col. thliam was produced by thg accidental discharge of atmuskpt. The intelligence of this battle and at the death in! the Culonel, produccd,a great excitement in the aeitlemenls.‘ Gnremur Abetuethy immediately issued a proclam atibn calling on the Citizens to _aid in rais ing and equipping}: [nice rufiicienl l 0 pul agtop lo Ihe_ludmn depredatiuns. , Majtu LN; «as chosen CUIQOCI in the piaceyul lhe lmnenled Gilliam. I . Acouqnls Item. the camp veprcaent the men to be in a “very destitute cunditmn— some almost without clothing. and many without nurses. The lerm of enlistment of some hag-bout to expire. .'l‘here yvas Very We nmmunilmn and no bread.— Snmeni the vulunleers hat; Mag learned that their firm; had been taken poescssinn ol‘by unprinctple‘dulelluws, who had slay ed,“ hotnejnétend of .joining in the com: mot: defence. . Indeed. the dinbnnding ot the tinny ab‘péale‘dto he inevitable. allhu’ many 'lgiendly Indians had offered to join the whites against the Cay‘uaea. and \mnld no douptr'hnv'e dyqnc ,an hndlltherev been tri'ennqto encolumge lhe-mg. . :s ~ In this ‘cop'ditlun of‘the little armyjl inhy’be well Ito‘ubaerve that our accounts opeqk of en abundancenl _{ood ;; but they 61th tiny-...'aig''nifieently.~ that "new much of ”:8 rqdldy' means, of the country. is “2""? _lta'nda of‘flfit‘ish subjects.” .. The Bruigh Subjeetq'fillbfled to uretheptfieers, agrnts._ uuq employee's bl the Hudson’s Bay Q 0911: p,uny..‘,, _A .. .1 _ ;, .4: . ;.',.’_A,,'(;hap ip‘ ZAlbahy',‘com’plaine that hav; ing inlaqi‘éd a faqlory ,gi‘rl. aha has beep‘qn ‘a'aujik'g lefyer :li'n'cehbe {o‘ku hay; 30, his hep}; tam! homemfihe .viciniw. 0U"?- oyep will W'WH ' .:\;;1.‘;¢;‘:’:!- sulm' Héai'llsb‘ay'ggrée: ‘llllébig‘hnbéaldazdifim NEW SERIES—VOL. 1, NO. =,40.---WHOLE.NO'. “1116. ‘ orrln this region.,gho lending’advocam of lE. aleélion ofGen. Taylor,” 'urglg mi ‘ aloé'lién op lh'. ground ihal ho is . "I! Sthun inn with Norlhii'fi, priDCIPIOI." Tbil il done for ihé purpose ofdo- Eoiving Iho Abolilionilll inlo the support o‘onqfl Iho molt exlonlivo Slave-hold": of the South.“ In order, therelnro, to 'uhibil in inlmo “85‘- tho hypocrisy and double-dealing OflhOJ-‘cdofil pm]. we preuem Iho following a. Gen/Paylbr’g BOUT”. ERN FACE—confining of "(melt from Bomb-m Whig oddrcnel, speech" and now-papa" :3 General Taylor’s Soulheru PAGE-j T" ‘ "An eventlul. thrilling. antlhighly dl'nf gernus criaia has been lorcetl qpqn'the country by .Locqfoco Demagogues.'ra gardless ut' the sanctity ol that Unitinl which is too dear to every putriotic Amcrl ican citizén The Wzlmolprovt‘t'to.'d‘i‘tt is Icalled.‘ has .0 met! a fearful ,_m't'n'c ‘b‘é neal/l the fauntlltlliona o] lite nabbed cbn atitulion. That mine may exflo’dd' a: lhe [tour of midnight. and forever dgalroy (fig proudeslfubric 0/ human geniué t - virtue. 'l‘o avert thts THREATENED EVIL. to'cloio the mean CHASM that hvgins to yawn between the lree and slave Stat". it! I (In; ty we one to ourselved. ttg uurfpdflfllt]; lo the memory of tllt’ ll'u'sttiottd dead.-_— How- shall this be tltrnr? " We must elect a man for President of lhe United States who Iwea in our owri’ 814 an South; who is willing to peril all lurlhe Conslilulion; who love'aflle Sdlllllll’ and mm cunmsnan ms'rn'u'noua. ain'd, yet will do amplejuslice to lhe Norm}; And last, though not lean, we mual, (0 ensure success. support a candidate lol! the Presidency. ol such an overshadooio‘ popularity. of a rapulalion lhal lpwgta'll lhe Himalaya mountains. above a'lr'o‘théra‘." “ Such a man is General Zachary Taj-h lnr. He lives in the South. and Mire: lwelvefiundred bales of collon on 'the banks q/lhe Miaaiasippi. His imam"; ms FEELING! am: ALL wxrn ua."—flla bama Whig. “ We rejoice at the, selection, bee-ugh we leel that under such leedere victory is certain—because we leel thetlhel inter ests of the country will be protected 11% him who has declared that his sole Ii will be ‘lhe,couutr}’e gopd—bece‘ute we feel uaaured that our righle u Southern’ men may nah-l be trusted to ope. who is himself a Squlgem man and 'a Slave/I61; der.”—Ronda Advertiser. ‘ ' GENERAL TAYLOR AND‘THR 'th'orf Phoueo.-'l'he Mategorda (Texan) Trio~ bqne. on the 22d 0! My]. hgrthe tolled? ing emphaiic paragraph .w'ith, relfibél to Generpl Taylor and, the exp‘eqted bene fits ol his election : " ' _ ' .. ll elecmifiour inatilutiom—we‘imk out—SLAVERY. will be undefr lhe,pro-_ tection of his, éngleeye and his gipn: Irm‘.‘ Who'docs nolknowlhauhat ineliputlou in in Some ahapepr o|th under daiiyv dil- CUiBiOD in Cnngrest, and "in! “this nib-W ment the Soulhern memberu'r'e ill It en's in consequence ol‘new‘ and learfu' move-' men's being made in' 'relaliun Io it? The uld Nestor of lhe 300”), Mt. CnlH‘oun,‘ warns us that we are approaching] c'rh'n" pregnnnl wuh danger, and that belotd‘hn" we will have to toe the mark.” ' "WI/g know (Ital, in Iln'a' grant, para ;mounband leadmg QUESTION ol'lhe tßlGH't‘s ol the an I‘H.‘HE [general t'l'aylor‘; tab! vain ll WITH 8; mt] tim xa OR US!"—— Resolution ofa Tayl' lor meetingin (bar/eaten, S. Caro!iha.;"'.;: ‘- lnhregard to the conversalionmjaf wilh General Taylor. IhaVe l 6 uy‘fie did‘not talk on the tartE—wa did'bn “30%; war. . He‘ expreued himde” in favor‘ofi, (he wdr: he said he was decided/yin Idv'ot‘ . ofproaccu_ving it VIGOROUSLY, till they shuuld'yteld an hnn'orable puce',fn'n walfor inder'nnily certain. and that lefgi- , tonal; tvas‘n’ot wedded to an‘y‘lipe [gig-r ticularly. bulllhoughl perhaps. ;Blj'iind of compromise 'wtllh'lhe “’llmtit firg‘vll‘olu Ille‘n” we had b‘rttéjr, go up to 3'2 dung-:3 making the Rip'Gi-ahtle the Western h’ntill‘l duty pp to "3,“ Marie; & said the Soulhf“ should [lever agree ‘to' the provisioni q" lhe Wilm'dt Pr'onao; although he did‘lntit'f‘ believe there ever would be slavery lbéri; V yet.“ the cuuntry'was acquited. the cll‘ié'"| zem should be lelt (we on that suqucl.-,L‘. He says all Mexlco will evedlualli‘ co'lli'o)’ tnto our gnvwntnenl by tlegreéa ;. ' HAI“ .l'l‘ CANNOT BE. AVOIDED‘. Oh “la 3 subject of politics, he 'said hé was no polil'; .tlcian; had been threa-lourtha of hislil'd" in the army; devoted. his time and mild“, to that aervige, and pnitlhu'l’lillle n’llfeu'v“ ttoh _lo anything else‘.”—‘Slalerhién2flbhi'{ amp] the Commillee qftb'a Magical '. Legislalu'i'e appoinl'edlo'invite‘ng"‘ . 3“ lontgviail lhatiSlale. , ‘"" V" 3f The chgrge (an/trio's suc'h ahiomify'fiohf; i'td'vle’r’y fuc'c. as but to degerv’g’ ‘l'. i'grjéfli“ felhta'liun. , Gen. Taylor, a‘ Sodtyfif‘ralinith‘v’ the destiny nLhimugll and,’ chi!d‘cchjid¢‘n‘;‘“ ,t'nfiéd' w‘llh that, at iheSg‘ul’lfi hgi i'th'méfloi’ ;weanlthDNglsTlNG},lN,SLAVEfifiu igp'dffwhicn'hs; fgbé ferun‘fégréa’byigo m. :0 ie'ndéqnit-;?h!u‘af)l‘éj§hd"dn 'egglsdmf: Sail/A! [w-flpféfiffi p/‘prga’lngflhi ”th- W" rjghya‘n' ' ’ihl'ffqlsts I fig‘éWM’IGHTLi ‘ (9353099 fil],.flibl‘ilvg i|.'v'!"l'. ’GEN‘TA‘YJ‘ LQRISAFREENF‘G '. r '0 » ..ufinu‘w‘wu pg b'qlieVé(l j‘q‘st 92’9”, 9? 396“" ‘u .633“; imn‘v: 'as'un‘uu ;:'-609 9r: ““pr ”2.! W 92: the gait); sp): ‘l"o’.’ MW); ' .."I' , ' ‘5!v£!"!":.l‘~;‘"§.". f‘fi'fifiomnewn TésaVMmfia: of ' . i ME
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers