i mm I iipmb in mm iwi tmttmt iiMiaiiiinin i mt ii man imh iiw i m i in mi n n n riiaTi inii IMWIil 1 ITMKIMTliririPOT i TMBniiinimMillmTl rtu m wvwfr' nIH rvffJT' m-t IB JBmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwmw 'Immm If , l nif -VTH- - ...... I ! Ok VJE ITERS 0N1AK REPUBLICAN. ... 4 Quakers. In IG77, in rompanv mhh Ooorge i Fox and Robert Barclay, he again sfct ssil on a ruliinons visit to Holland and Germany, where he and his friends were reroivod'by many pi us persons, as the ministers of Christ, parucu- 'arly, h-the Princess Elizabeth of JJohenna fhe persecutions of dissenters continuing to rae, notwithstanding their repeated appjica tions to parliament lor sufferance and protec ttnn. Win. Penn now turned his thoughts to waids a settlement in the New World, as a place, where himself and his friends might cn- lov 'their relinious opinions, without molrsta tion, and where an example might be set to the -jtjfrinns of a just and righteous government. "Thrre may bo room' said he, " though not here,Jbr such a holy experiment." He there fore, in 1 6S , solicited a patent from Charles 1 1 , for a province in North America, -which the King readily granted, in consideration of his fa there services, and of a debt still due to him from the crown. Penn soon after published a description of the province, proposing easy :crms of settlement to such as might be dispo sed to go thither. lie also wrote to the Indian natives inform ing tlicm of his desire to hold his possession with their consent and good will, He then drew np the l Fundamental Constitution of Pennsylvania," and the following year he pub lished" the Frame of Government a law of which code held out a greater degree of reli gions liberty than had at that time been allow ed in the world. All persons living in this province, who confess and acknowledge the one Almighty and Eternal (rod to be the Crea tor Ruler and Upholder of the world, and -hold themselves obliged in conscience to live peace ably and justly in civil society, shall in no wise he molested or prejudiced for their religious persuasion or practice, in matters of faith and worship; nor shall they be compelled at any lime, to frequent or man'ain any religious wor- "&uin. iipate ur n:i:nsuv wiiiiisuuici. Ol'uilltorv the nnblicatior ct these proposals, many res-! j'sectable families removed to the new province lf the chy of Philadeldhla was laid out on the banks of the Delaware ; and in 16S2, the pro prietor visited his newly acquired territory .where he remained about two years, adjusting its Voncem';, and establishing a friendly inter- coarse with his neighbours: during which period ; ;no less than fifty vessels arrivdd with setilers J from England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Hol-j land and Germany. Soon after Penn returned to Etrgiand, King Charles died : the respect which James II bore to the late Admiral, wlio had recommended his son to his favor, procured to" him free access at court. He made use ot iludrnmnTnin sli,it ih rlWcm nf liisl persecuted bretheren, 1500 of whom remained in prison, at the decease of the late King. At the revolution in 1 GSS, I?enn's intimacy with the abdicated monarch created suspicions, of which he repeatedly cleared himself before au thority, until he was accused by a profligate wretch, whom the parliament afterwards de clared to be a cheat and an imposter. Not ca ring to expose himself to the oaths of such a man, he withdrew from public notice until ?93. In that yeaT, through the mediations of his friends at court, he was once more acquitted of all suspicion ol guilt. The most generally known production of his temporary seclusion, bears the title of " Truits of Solitude, in Reflections and j Life." Kot long after his restoration to Socie ty he lost his wife, to which he said all his other troubles were as nothing In comparison. He travelled however in the same year, in the West of England, and in the next prosecuted an application to parliament for the relief of fiends in the case of oaths. In 1696, he mar red a second wife, Hannah the daugter of Thomas CallowliiH, cn emminent merchant of Bristol, and 50on after buried his eldest son 'Sprircgeu, a remarkably pious and promising youth.' In 3 698, he travelled in Ireland and re-1 sided the folIowing3-ear at Bristol. He then -sailed again for Pennsylvania, with his second wife and family, intending to make his province the place of therir future rdsidence ; but advan tage was taken of their absence to undermine proprietary goven.ments, under the color of thp jviiigs prerogative, and he thought it necessa ry lOireturn to England again in 170L After ?1iTb Viarrival the measure was laid aside, and Irc'mrbecame once more welcome at court, on the accession of Queen nne. In 1710 find ing tiie -air near the city to disagree with his . eclining"hes1h, lie took a handsome seat in 'ifftCkingljanysliKs at wdiich he continued to re side, during iii remainder of his life. In 1712 "he had throe disthfet fits of the apoplectic "kind. The last of iheseso impaired his mem ory and undetstanding as to render him ever af- "Wr, unfit .foiiawon ; buttle continued to deliv er at thom?eiU!g at Reading short and sound sensible expression's. In 1717 hs scarce 'Jykncw his old aequainlancr, or could walk 'without leading. fie died July 30, 1718, The twruings of Win. Peim'(ifrst published ijj two volumes folio) "bespeak his character as a chris tflh and a philanthropist. Of his ability as a pojwcian anu u jcgisiaior , j,ne prospermaoj PtnoyVffma is a htstin f.i-en $i1fnVcii of whom livooTlsfHSm, V r.nd Lfiiia were tlie issue of lirJt-wjta c jFt1iJ1Uunafi, Mttrgaiet, RicliHrdand 'Den- ins 31 minors, tu ins "Uuvjiu. Northern New Fork seems to be; catching the Harrison enthusiasm. In the large buntj .of St Lawrence, a cw&ntAQh of several thousand as sembled at Canton coming into town -with log cabins, tf&nners, and music, In those coal jn aim tain re gions rare has. been such a scene oi popular excitement as this. JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN Terms, $2,00 in artvaivc: $2.2.. naif yearly ; ami $2,50 if not paid befoio the end of tlie year. CAIB2S2A',ES Q? T2ISG PEOPLE. - PGR PRESIDENT : Gen. WilStam EFeKvy KarrisoK, OF OHIO. FOR VICE PRESIDENT: JtoEssi Tyler,. , . i -i , OF VIRGINIA. . SENATORIAL. JTcIiu A. Siitilze, of Lycoming, . .JTosepfi Itiliter, of Cumberland, . DISTRICTS. 1 Levis Passmore, 12 John Dickson, 2 Cad wallader Evans, 13 John M'Keehan, Charles Waters, 14 John Reed, 3 Jona. Gillingham, 15 Nathan Beach, 4 Amos Ellmaker, 16 Ner Middles warth, John K. Zeilin, 17 George Walker. A. Pv. M'lllvainc, 18 Bernard Connelly jr 5 Robert Stinson, 19 Gen. Joseph Markle 6 William S. Hendrie 20 Justice G. Fordyce, 7 J. Jenkins Ross. 21 Joseph Henderson, 8 Peter Filbert, 22 Harmer Denney, 9 William Adams, 23 Joseph Bufimgton, 10 John Harper, 24 James Montgomery, 11 Wni.M'Elwaine, 25 John Dick. Col. Johnson said (in Congress) "Who is General Harrison The son of one of the signers of the Declaration of Indcpencence; who spent the creatcrpart of his large fortune in redeeming the pledge he then gave. -of his 'fortune, life and sacred honor,' to secure the tiucrties oi ms country. Of the career of General Harrison I need not speak : the history of the West is his his- . , . -1 .--1-.v l" or ioitv years ne nas uecn laemmea wnn its imprests, its neiils and its hones. Universal ly beloved in the walks of peace, and distinguish ed by his ability in the councils of his country, he lias been yet more illustriously distinguished in the field. During the late war, he was longer in active service than any other general officer ; he was, perhaps, oftener in action than any one of them, and never sustained a defeat." Asaotiies. Falsehood I2eKtcd. In the "Monroe Democrat" of last week, there is a long and laboured article in which the writer endeavours to produce the impres sion that " General Harrison is opposed to the ... t Pr man s vote. J o prove this the whole truth is withheld, and he is accused of having while Governor of the Territory of Indiana, sanctioned a law requiring a property qualifica tion to entitle a citizen to vote at elections. If this had been true, it might have been jus tified on the ground of his having been a na tive of Virginia, and of having carried with him that fundamental principle of her consti tution ; but when we examine this charge, like every other, it turns out to be false, and proves that so far from restricting the right of sufii-ae, Gen. Harrison was for enlarging it. The w which .g ciled tQ thalhe WM in favour of a property qualification, turns out to be a law explanatory of the ordinance of Con gress of May 7th 1800, requiring a freehold of fifty acres of land, &c, which extended the construction of that ordinance so as to give the right of suffrage to those to whom it would have been denied. Congress settles the constitution of our Territories, and neither :an their Governors, or Assemblies, make laws contravening its provisions. rThe Constitution of the Territory expressly made a freehold of 50 acres, and two years residence, a necessa ry qualification for an election. But this cry is a mere " stop thief" cry, in order to divert attention from the acts of their candidate Mar tin Van Buren, who we boldly assert without the fear of contradiction, was in favour of re stricting the light of suffrage In proof of this we give the following extract of a speech, de livered by him in the Convention to amend the ' constitution of the State of New-York, held at Albany in 1821. " Mr. Van Buren said ho had hinted at the numerous objections Which he had to the prop-; osition, which the other dry passed the con vention in regard to the right of sufirage : ob jections which he had intended to-make, hadjj the committee reported in favor of that vote ; and by which, when fully urged, he knew that he would be able to convince every member of the committee of the dangeraus and alarming tendencies of that precipitate and unexpected prostration of all qualifications. At this mo ment he would only say that among the many evils which wouid flow from the wholly unre . .1 n 11 ' . I 1 I . .1. PfifiL. J I would give the Lily of Hew-York V.. '' . . .1 .. . " ( !.. 1..- anew twenty live mousauu. vows, wiiusi uiiuttr i ho liberal extension of the right on choice of the delegates of this convention, she had but about thirteen or' fourteen thousand. That the ciar.aclcr of the increased numbers of voters wouid be such as irould render their elections a curse rather than a bkssiitg : and which would drive from the polk all sober minoed people ; and 'such he was happy to find was the united opinion, or nearly so of the delegation from ijiat city. The just equilibrium be tween the rights of those who have no interest in the government, could whjn once surren dered, (never before regainepl except by the sword.'' p. 3G7-8. Uhcted suhTage, the toiiowing wouni ne uiejan one taliss oi lioeny ii :s me. mun gumunsn To Assessors..- . ' The act of the 2d July, 1839;.uuder the 57th 'secjipn, directs as follows. . ' ? It shall be the duty of the several Asses sors within this Commonwealth in making the enumeration now required by law, of the tax able inhabitants residing within their respective townships, to arrange the names of such taxa bles in alphahclical order. Section 58th; It snail be the duty of said Assessors on or before the 1st day of August in each year, to cause at least one copy of the said alphabetical list of the taxable inhabitants, to be posted up at the place, where any com ing election is to be held, and at such other places within such townships, as the Commis sioners of said County may think necessary, to afibrd to the inhabitants thereof, an opportu nity t)f freely examining the same, and they shall further keep copies of tlie said returns, in their possession, subject at all times, to the inspection of any person without charge, and shall at any time 10 days before the election, on the application of any person claiming to be assessed within their proper townships, or claiming a right to vote therein as being be between the age of 21 or 22 years, and having resided in the State one year, enter the name of such person on said return. The said As sessors on the ninth day preceding the second Tuesday of October in each year, shall sign and certify the return of taxable inhabitants and qualified voters residing within their re spective townships, and deliver the same to the county Commissioners, to be by them, held and handed over to the inspectors of elections, at -the time required by law. FOR THE JEFEERSONIA.N REPUBLICAN. Mr. Editor : If you can find a place in your paper for the effusions of a noble heart, you will oblige a subscriber by r inserting the following extract of a letter from the adjoining County, of Luzerne : We continue to have an accession in num-' bers, and Gen. Harrison is gaining many valu ed friends. There isnothing but his Election, which will restore confidence and revive busi ness at least so it appears to me. Vast exer tions are making to defeat this hope and the ad ministration will faulter at no expense to re tain their power. It is a fearful trial, and will test the ability of man for self-govern ment, an experiment which has always failed since the time of Adam, but which I trust will not fail in the present instance. No doubt there is a majority of the people in favour of a change of our rulers, and in favor of . a change of meas ures, but high bids will be made, to induce many to barter Principle for Interest. Van Buren has boasted that the 9-10ths csn be bougnt with money, office &c : if his view is correct he will retain his power and though to be regretted, it will prove that Americans are unworthy of freedom. But I hold him to be a false loon, who has impudently judged of others, from that base nature which he finds in himself. The great mass of the. people I believe to behonest and if they will but think and act for themselves, all will be well and Yan 3uren will be found in a lean minority. They have been yoked to the car of party, as brute animals for the draught; they have had blinders to their bridles, curbs in their mouths, and a tight rein on the curb-bit well fed indeed, they have been, if true to their cursed harness. If it was not beyond a doubt true, we should all declare it impossible for free-men of America to be so degraded. Al most every independant man is found to be an- ti Van Buren it is the harness alone which gives strength to the party. I will give the right hand of fellowship to every independent thinking man, even if he thinks that to be good which I think to be evil, but the coward slave who daro not think and act for himself, has at once my opposition and scorn ; he is no longer a man, the manly part ha3 been lop'd away, the animal remains but the spirit of manhood is gone ; Well has it been said that hour that IUUUU liJUII iX SiaVU IU1VU3 nail Ilia huiui and what slavery is so thouroughly deep and so defrradinf as the slavery of the mind of the God-like part m man 1 he body may he in chains and yet the man in spite of bondage, 0 may be nobly froe, but the chained thought le vels at once to the mere brute, and when such 1 it r ft . 1'i !t. 1. of a chained maniac. What a revolution, what j 1 most happy change we should see in all our affairs, if every one -.would resolve and deter mine to be free, dereritnne to pause, to consider and think for himself, to call no man master and leastof all those who fill the offices, who are paid good wages by the community, and who should be made to fairly earn them, and who should never be held to be any thing else or more than the servants of the people, for whpse good and for whoso use government and all its offices is alone crpated. If men would go back to original principles, if they would but Tor a mo ment fairlyithiulr of them, liTmustlgusidpr'and muse upon them, victory over all matrbinds and enslaves, would aijOnce spring forihT.armed from the Very birth in full, in complete steel. It was from thus thinking that we became independent in the days of our fathers, in the times that indeed tried and proved mens souls, the days' of 1776, and there is no way in which we can remain independent, but by again thus thinking. As we ponder 01 these things, the truth flashes upon us, the " Rights of Man" is again before us, " common sense again engages our atten tion, and mighty truth nerves us in her cause. A people thus thinking are invincible, they are born anew, the children of Liberty, the dread and the scourge of Tyrants. H. W. D. Governors of IPoRsaSylyaoia previous to the laCvolMtlSoaa. October 24th 1682, William Penn (Proprie tary) till June 1684. Thomas Lloyd (President of the Council) till October 1688. John Blackwell, Governor, appointed by Penn, till March 1691. Thomas Lolyd, Governor, appointed by Penn till April 1693. Benjamin Fletcher, Governor; appointed by William and Mary, till June 1693. Wuhan Markbam, Lieutenant Governor, Gov. Fletcher, till 1699. William Penn, seeond time till November 1701. Andrew Hamilton, Governor appointed by Penn, till with James Logan as Secretary of the Province and Clerk of the Council, till December 1702. Edward Shippen, President of the Council till December 1703. John Evans, Governor, appointed by Penn, till March 1709. Charles Gookin, Governor, appointed by Penn, till May 1717. Sir William Keith, Governor, appointed by Penn, till June 1726. Patrick Gordon, appointed by the Proprietary amily till October 1736. James Logan, President of the Council till June 1738. George Thomas, Governor, appointed by the Proprietary family till June 1747. . Anthony Palmer, President of the Council till November 1748. James Hamilton, Governor, by Thomas and Richard.Penn he was the first native of Penn sylvania, who was Governor till October 1754. Robert Hunter Morris, ol JN. J. Covernor, appointed by the Penns, till August 1756. William Denny, do. do. do. till Novem ber 1759. James Hamilton, 2d time do. do. till October 1763. John Penn, Grandson of Wm. Penn, do. till October 1771, Richard Penn, do. do. do. till Au gust 1773. John Penn, 2d time, who continued untill he was superseded in September 1776, by our State Governmet. From the Cincinnati Gazette. A Good Tiling-. Gen. Harrison was among the in vited guests to the dinner given to Gen. Van Eensselaer, in this city, on the second inst. He could not be present for reasons assigned. The following is Ins letter, declining the invitation. It is one of those good things which frequently fall from the pens of American statesmen, and from none more often than General Harrison's. Good taste will relish, and correct judgments approve it. North Bend, 1st July, 1840. Gentlemen : A recent domestic affliction in the death of one of my sons, and the present illness of Mrs. Har rison, will prevent me from enjoying the great pleasure of being present at the dinner to be given on 1 hurs day next, to my beloved friend and old associate in arms, General Solo mon Van Rensselaer. It is now forty-seven years since I first met this distinguished soldier in the army of Gen. Wayne he in the capacity of Cornet of Dragoons, and I as an Ensign of Infantry. Associated in all the toils and difficulties incident to a war, the theatre of which was an unbroken wilderness; of ages nearly correspondent; and of dispo sitions and tastes which induced us fr oolr lliA cnmA nmnlnumrmfc Tin samft amusements, arid the same fcl- 1, neeQeinYi ..ml h nil in nnmmnn IJ I 1 Is l7V;UOV,'tJUlVli UiVI (Villi ill V. V'UUIU14 danger, could not be. ephemeral. It was such indeed as though we bad owned the same paternity, andhadbeen nur tured at the same bosom. And I may say with Castalio of his brother. " When had I a friend that was not Polidor's, " Or Polidoro a foe that was not mine 1" I will not attempt, gentlemen, to give you even a summary of the ser vices of ; Gen, Van -Rensselaer, I will not tell you oj the deep debt of ffri?t.it.iiTlB- Whirh is ,l:tfr TO, f?W. western men of his gallant botiri-'; in the battle 6rho Rfepicis of t' Miami,' and the Wood which I saw pouring from bis manly bosom upon the soil of Ohiqroi; Jiis"iilUmo re glo rious achievements upon the hdgrts of Queenstown, ennobled, lifce (hose of Abraham,, by the blood of the con tending heroes. All this you krow. It is to be found in the records of 3rour country, and fiirnishejsfsome of the brightest Jiages of its . hitory. Aye, what is Jie -now'?' ; What and who is the hero of two wars, the con queror of the heroic Brock, of him by whose management or gallantry, sc deep a wound had been inflicted upon the military character of our country ? A 3'ear ago I would have answered -ou, fellow citizens, that he was liv ing.in humble retirement, in the bo som of a large and happy family, supported by the emoluments of an humble office, the gift of a President who had himself jeoparded his lffer and shed his hlood in achieving the independence of his country, and knew how to appreciate a Hero's ser vices and reward a soldier's toils. Such, gentlemen, was the situation of my friend, the defender of Ohio cabins from the furious savage, the bearer in his "body of the marks of seven distinct wounds, when the spoilers came. When the disbanded lesions of Augustus were suffered to eject the happy husbandman of the fairest portion of Italy,, we have reason to believe, we know indeed, that some were spared. The ruthless warrior was not suffered to usurp tne seat and violate the groves which had re sounded to the songs of the greatest of poets. We may conclude also; that the scarred veterans of former wars were exempted from the other wise general proscription. Indeed, we must suppose that the sympathy naturally felt between men of the same profession, would have induced the usurpers to spare the warworn followers of the great Pompey, al though the3r had been the soldiers of liberty, and the sworn enemies of their own faction. But, gentlemen, let me ask you now to point to an ex ception in the proscription which has raged m our country for the last twelve years ? Who has been spared that professed any thing which could tempt the cupidity of the spoilers? My friend is the last victim. The reason of this honorable distinction I could not tell. It is somewhat differ ent from that which induced the giant Polyphemus to intend the like honor to the king of Ithaca. But you may perhaps be anxious to know the reason which has been assigned for this outrage upon the feelings of the American people.. "Why, it was precisely that which has been given in all ap-es and in all countries for all the violent and unjust acts of tyrants: " The public good." In this case, "the advantage of the democracy." In the midst of such abominations, how appropriate is the exclamation of one of the distinguished victims of the savage Robespierre, "Oh! democra cy, how many crimes are committed j m thy name ! It may be proper, gentlemen, that I should add that Gen. Van Rensselaer has accounted for every cent of pub I lie monev that ever came into h hands, and that he dares the stride investigation into his conduct as r.r officer. What cause of deep relY tion, gentlemen, does the case cf n friend, contrasted with that of t'.i knoull to 1)e pnblio (leiaiukr. tO "C IWlriOt HUcl Hi? li'iewl I I - licau government I conclude, gentlemen, by ? you a sentiment: "Ma' Solomon Rensselaer be the last victim in country of party violence; and n. the services which are to be the fut? pasports to office, be not those rend edto a party, but to the whole peo Your humble servant, WM..HHARRISO: . To Samuel" WDaVies; etc. v i 5 X mm