sate it J-EFFERBQ REPUBLICAN ThursdayTrotober 7. 184T. rTerms,f2.00iuadrance. $2,25 half yearly; and $2,50 if paid before the end of the year. not .Democratic Whig Nominations. FOR GOVERNOR, JAMES IRVIN, OF CENTRE COUNTY. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, JOSEPH W. PATTON, OF CUMBERLAND COUNTY. L. BARNES, at Milford, is duly author ized to acta3 Agent for this paper; to receive sub scriptions, advertisements, orders for job-work, and payments for the same. ;OIilJttTTEEB ASSEMBLY TICKET Benjamin V. Bush, L Smithfield, John Heckmaif, Easton, .Vacob Freeman, Freemansburg. The Last Word. Whigs of Monroe, are you prepared foi the bat tle which is to be fought on Tuesday next. The contest, preparatory to it, has been unusually qui et and free from much of that bitterness of feeling and animosity which has attended other Elections. Yet we feel persuaded that the people have been none the less alive to the great issues which are to be decided. Then let every man who has a vote, and who feels that the election of General JAMES IRVIN, will redound to the honor and welfare of our Commonwealth, come forward and aid in putting down a corrupt set of political in triguers, who have shewn themselves, in the ad ministration of public affairs, regardless of every thing except the spoils of office. Remember all the inducements you have to defeat Francis R. Shunk and the unworthy men he has collected about him at Harrisburg. Now is the time to re "deem the Slate from the many evils that have been brought upon it by the present administration an administration whose practises have ever been contraty to its professions; and which has done no one act to redeem its head from the censure of the people and to recommend him for re-election. Then to arms, the time for action is nearly passed, and every one should be prepared for duty on Tuesday next at the Ballot-box. A united and harmonious effort is all that is required to insure a brilliant triumph ! The Whis Candidates. The news of Gen. Irvin and Mr. Paiton's pros pects, are most cheering from every part of the State, and renders their success as morally cer tain as man can be certain of any thing before it transpires. There is not a County in the State, but will do better for them than they have for any other Whig candidate. Then Whigs of Monroe, be up and doing, and deserve your meed of praise in the general jubilee which will be celebrated over your candidate's election. The Assembly Ticket. We place the Volunteer Assembly Ticket at the head of our columns, this week, and bespeak for it the cordial and hearty support of every man in ,the County, who is in favor of the Volunteer Sys tem, and opposed to' the manner in which the Reg ular Ticket was formed. Messrs. Bush, Heck man and Freeman, are all good men, and contrast most favorably with their opponents Schoonover, Laubach, and Zuckenbach. Besides, their pros pect of success is most cheering. Northampton it is said will do well for them, and Monroe, we are sure, " can do better." Then give them a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull altogether, and their success is certain. LOOK OUT For Xyiug JLocofoco Handbills and Circulars ! . Wecaution the People of this County to be on their guard against the TRICKS and LAST CA'RDS of Locofocoism. Be not deceived by the FALSE AFFIDA VJTS and other rile publica tions put forth on the eve of the election to poison the public mind. Remember that Clay's defeat was the result of the most outrageous PR AMD ev er perpetrated upon the American people; and shall IRVIN and PATTON be defeated by the ..same foul means ! Whigs! be on you GUARD ! The corrupt clique who surround the present im becile Executive will resort to the most base and disreputable means to carry the erection. Remem ber the FRAUDS of 1844 the KANE LETTER the Union's story about " Polk's near neighbor" and all the wicked DECEPTION of the Loco foco leaders in palming Polk upon the Peoplo as a better Tariff man than Clay. Remember the TREACHERY of these Locofoco leaders, and be r.f:Eful how yu a2ain confide in them. They are . r??yJng a desperate came, and aro floodine the State with LYING Handbills and Circulars. v Again we say, BE NOT DECEIVED! The venerable John Quincy Adams wilt take f his seat in Congress during the ensuing session j He thinks ho can winter jn Washington more i -comfortably thaa in the severe climate, of Mas $fCkufr.ett; . 'if- To Your Tents ! As the election day approaches, every patri ot who has watched the shadows that are gath ering around our country, must look with in creased anxiety to the issue that will deepen or dispel them. To those who think at all, and in the spirit of patriotism, a word of admonition is perhaps needless, for they will recognise the solemn duty before them, and perform it ; and to those who do not think or care what avails it to speak ? Yet we, too, have a duty it is to warn our fellow citizens of the crisis before and round about them ; and to invoke them in the name of society and of self, of their interests arid those of their children, to arrest and main tain the right. Every citizen is the repository of a sacred heritage, the trustee of an invaluable estate for posterity. It will not do to say " we are weary of the trust, wo are no politicians :" if they be not prepared and willing to act at the polls in maintenance of the estate entrusted with them they are unworthy stewards of the glorious past ; they fling scorn upon the labors of Wash ington and his compatriots ; and claiming to be freemen, are duller than the fclave, for he at least loves freedom. Friends of Industry, friends of Freedom, friends of Peace, will you permit the sacred interests for which you profess a love, to perish because of your indifference ! If you do, and British Free Trade beggars the land, war demoralizes, and slavery governs it can you murmur except against yourselves ? It will not be denied that Pennsylvania is a Tariff State ; all her interests, all her princi ples are in favor of protection. Can the lash of party drive her people into opposition to it 1 The fraud of '44, the pledge upon which the vote was given, the treachery which followed, when James Buchanan who had promised sta bility to the tariff of '42 from the election of Polk, intrigued for its repeal, and Dallas ihe Tariff candidate voted for it are they forgot ten ? The people of Pennsylvania, however divided, are not subdued to so degraded a tame ness. They signally rebuked the fraud at the last election ; and they will not now embrace those whom they then denounced and dis claimed as traitors to their pledge and to the people. The Tariff of '46 was recognized by the na tion as a war against Pennsylvania interests ; and so it was and is. Those interests have sur vived the blow but the end is not yet. The Bri tish Free Trade men promised unbounded mar kets and inordinate prices for our produce; Eu ropean famine seemed for a time their ally; but where are those promises now 1 We know the evils, but where are the blessings of this war against our coal, iron and industry. They have brought prices below those under the Tar iff of '42 ; they have induced excessive impor tations that have flooded our country with for eign manufactures ; and not only distressed the domestic manufacturer, but laid the land under heavy and ruinous obligations to Great Britain. By inviting the goods of England to this coun try at low duties, they have encouraged extrav agance and luxury, debt and ruin. Already we hear the first crumbling of the unreal fabric ; and yet its worst consequences have had no time to mature. And this is inevitable upon the British and Walker system : We must import to excess, and so ruin ourselves, or, to make up the revenue, we must resort to direct taxation. The people of Pennsylvania will submit to neither of these results. Will the Tariff Democrats sustain this policy, as they must do, in supporting Mr. Shunk ? Has the treachery of Buchanan, Dallas and Shunk been obliterated from their memories, or atoned for by any subsequent penitence 1 Are they the same men, and are you 1 And if so, can you cast censure upon your past course, by indifference to the duties now before you ? We cannot imagine that there is a Whig in the Commonwealth who will be careless of an issue so vital. fennsylvania may, it sound principles triumph now, save the system of pro tection ; surely no Whig will, upon such an oc casion, prove recreant for between the open enemy and the careless friend there is not a discernible shade of difference. But interests more profound than those of the present generation depend upon this issue. We appeal to all parties in the Keystone on the subject of the present war. You sustain the prosecution of ihe war so do we ; you go for the country so do we : you rejoice ovr her victorios so do we. But are you in favor of the kingly power in the President of commen cing a war without the assent of Congress or the country ? Aro you In favor of an invasion, by the President, of a disputed territory, in pos session of a sister republic 1 And when war exists are you in faor of prolonging it, for po litical purposes, by denying the men and muni tions necessary for its prosecution ? Can you sanction the persecution and disgrace of the gallant Scott by this Administration! Are you prepared to support Polk in his bitter war against the hero of Buena Vista ? If not, how can you, what ever your party, sustain Mr. Shunk, who ha? formally proclaimed his sup port of all the measures of Mr. Polk's adininia tration ? Our Whig Generals havo conquered, but it has been in defiance of the Administration ; we rejoice in their glory, for it is the country's.- But what are the inevitable consequences of this war ! The establishment of the precedent that the President has, in defiance of the Constitu tion, the power to commence a war without and against the consent of Congress and the people; and Ihe erection of a pyramid of public debt ; and-Jhe promise of direct taxation by the Gen riH Government, in addition to the taxes im posed d pay ihe interest on forty millions in dieted by Ld&ifoco misrule in our ow'n State But it has also given us a standing army, not- " without standing armies liberty can never be in danger, nor with them safe." But the worst consequence of this executive usurpation is the establishment of the policy of L e ri 1 i 1 sight of God and man and cenain to bring upon .0 . .... 0 . ' the conquerors the curse which haunts national wrongs. we neea no additional territory " with room enough" we are quoting the words of Jefferson " for our decendants to the thou sandth and thousandth generation." The course of the Administration adopts and recognizes, war, with all its dangers and demoralization, and with the ultimate certainty that it must prove fatal to freedom as a settled policy. Still it has an object even yet more fatal. The war was not that is now made manifest commenced to redress wrongs or vindicate rights, nor even for conquest alone. It was commenced, has been prosecuted and will be closed with sole reference to the extension of slavery ; or rather to the multiplication of slave States. This is deemed the crowning glory of the present Southern Administration. In the first place, while all the world exclaims against the sin, the degradation to master and slave, the political crime and folly of holding fellow crea tures in bondage, the President borrows North ern bayonets, and sacrifices the freemen of the free Stales to perpetuate slavery. We are im pressed to forge shackles and twine whips we are made the ministers of a tyranny that we abhor. But a result still dearer to Mr. Polk and his Southern ministers and faction is sought. Tho Free States have, notwithstanding the ad mission of Texas, become the stronger political interest of the nation. To overcome this ma jority once and forever, it is proposed to patch up a number of Mexican slave States to over balance us in the confederacy. It is true that slavery does not now exist in Mexico, and that humanity shudders at the thought of abolishing freedom, and it is also true that Mexicans, mon grel in race and color, ignorant, degraded, cow ardly, and our foes, are not fined for political fraternization with us. Yet such is the project. Agains't a scheme so patracidal all the patri otism of the Democratic party of the North have protested. But Mr. Polk and his entire faction sustains it. Mr. Shunk has proclaimed his warm support of all the measures of Mr. Polk ; his organs are those of the National Administration; and his meetings, wherever held, avow a cor dial support of the President and his policy. Mr. Buchanan in his recent letter to tho Shunk men of Berks, urged the re-election of the pres ent incumbent, and coupled with it an earnest exhortation that the people of Pennsylvania should sanction the slavery scheme of Mr. Polk and oppose the Wilmot Proviso. The motives of Mr. Buchanan are apparent. He sacrificed his own pledges and the interests of the State to a faction in the South upon the Tariff question. Was it for nothing ? He now would ungratefully sell the State to this South ern conspiracy against her dignity, principles and interests. Already we see the most ultra of the slavery papers of the South claiming Penn sylvania as their own, upon the authority of Mr. Buchanan, upon whom they shower, for his trea son, praises that should, be coals of fire upon his head. He has sacrificed his own convic tions as emphatically expressed in 181 9 against the extension of slavery, and with them, endea vored to transfer over to the South the virtuous freemen of Pennsylvania in a mass. Will they consummate the degrading bargain ? We will not invoke ihe gallant Whigs of Pennsylvania to arise in their might and defeat this fearful and guilty conspiracy. We will not point out to them the duty of energy and vigi lance to save the Slate from the debasement of a voluntary sanction of the extension of slavery, and from the ruin universal and overwhelming which must fall upon us from the establishment of a Southern supremacy and policy. For we cannot doubt that every Whig who deserves the name, will be up and doing that he will regard the contest as more vital than any struggle in the past, and lend his every energy lo dispel the cloud thai impends over the country. But we will appeal to our Democratic friends, and ask them if they do, if ihey dare to, call Messrs. Shunk and Buchanan's opposition to the Wilmoi Proviso, Pennsylvania Democracy. It is not the democracy of Jefferson, for he wrote the ordinance of 1787, from which the Wilmot Proviso is copied ; nor of Madison, for he advocated it ; nor of the democrats of that day, for they almost unanimously sustained it: It has never been the Democracy of Pennsyl vania, for the policy of the Stale has been con sistent in opposition to the extension of slavery. It is not tho Democracy of Mr. Wilmot, the au thor of the Proviso, nor of a majority of the del egation who sustained it. It is not the democ racy of Pennsylvania now, for every one of their representatives in tho Legislature voted for the Proviso at the last session. Whose Democra cy is it then ? Mr. Polk, Shunk, and Buchan- an s t Wo cannot be convinced that the people of Pennsylvania will be blinded to the important duties arising from a political issue so vitally important. If the Keystone does not woo infa my, if she be not anxious to render herself a hissing and a scorn throughout the world, surely j it is not possible that upon such issues, and in favor of such a candidate as Mr. Shunk, she will prove recreant to all her principles, and careless of all of honour that she has won by her patriotism in the past. N. American. Settlers Wanted Lauds Given to Them. The State of Arkansas invites emigrants to come and lake lands which have been forfeited for taxes, and no payment will be required of them. The Auditor, upon proof of settlement, will make a deed, which deed the Supreme Court of the State hai decided will be valid. The forfeited tiacts compriab sonie of the finest lands in the State, f ! withstanding Madison has said Who shall be Goyeriiort? ft Friends of your- country friendsof the tariff remember that Shunk is in favor of free-trade and opposed to American manufactures. That Shunk prefers the workshops of Europe to those of your native State, j To tUo Pnllo thon anrl pas To the Polls, then, and cast your votes for Ir vin, the friend of a Protective Tariff. From the Easton Whig Extra, Oct. 1st. A few Facts connected with the is suing of the Death Warrant and. granting a respite to Lawrence Tearncy. &, Lawrence Tearney was convicted of the mur der of his wife on the 29th of April, last, and sentenced on the 2d of May, by the Court, to be hung. During the same week the record of his sentence was forwarded to Harrisburg. Shortly afterwards a petition, signed by a num ber of persons, was sent to the Governor, by the prisoner's friends, asking him to suspend the execution of the doomed man until after the meeting of the Legislature next winter, in or der to give him the benefit of any legislation that may be had on ihe subject of Capital Pun ishment. In answer to this. petition Governor Shunk gave Tearney's friends to understand that he would suspend the execution, as aked for, until after the meeting of the Legislature. This was in May After hi, more than two months elapsed without any thing being ilone in the matter by the Governor. In the meantime many of our citizens became dissatisfied with the delay, and some of the Governor's political friends declared that if he did not carry the law into execution, as he was sworn to do,vthey would oppose him. Whilst these things were going on one of the Govern or's office holders, from Harrisburg, arrived in Easton, and found his polittcal friends of North ampton in a state of great excitement on the subject of the execution, and that any further delay on the part of Governor Shunk would ma terially injure his prospect in this county. About the same time the " Argus," came out with an article staling, in effect, that Mr. Shunk had been from home, had but recently returned, and thai as soon as he could investigate Tear ney's case he would act promptly and without fear upon it. This article, if we recollect aright appeared in ihe Argus on the 22d of July, and on the 2Sth of the same month Sheriff Adams received the Death Warrant for ihe execution of Tearney on the 1st of October. Whether the office holder, one of the editors of the Argus, or somebody else wrote to the Governor, informing him of the excitement here, and -whether the information induced the Gov ernor to send on the Warrant we leave the com munity to judge ! That a portion of the com munity, ai least, entertained the latter opinion we know for as soon as the receipt of the Death Warrant was made public, some of Tear ney's friends OPENLY DECLARED that Governor Shunk had given them to understand lhat he would do nothing in tho matter until al ter the meeting of the Legislature, and that now for political effect, he had limited Tearney's days to the first of October. As may be sup posed, this double dealing could have no other effect, than to make enemies of those who had been so grossly deceived by ihe Governor, and induced them at once to join the opposition a gainat him. This they did-- and now we bold- ly proclaim that it was lor the purpose ot re claiming their votes thai Francis R. Shunk granted the Respite, which was issued on' Mon day last. The letter of the Rev Mr. Reardon, (alihough no doubt written in good faith by that young Priest) was demanded by Mr. Shunk as a pretext for the Act which he had previously determined on. That Mr. Shunk had determin ed to GRANT the Respite before he received that letter, is not only evident from all the cir cumstances attending the transaction, but it is POSITIVELY KNOWN to have been the case. The Rev. Mr. Reardon's letter was written on Friday last, the 24th of September, sent by Saturday's mail and could by no possi bility have reached Harrisburg before some time on Sunday. Yet on Monday, the 27th before the mail left Harrisburg, at 12 o'clock, M., the Governor, had the Respite prepared and lodged in the Post Office. Who believes that in ihe short space of one forenoon the Governor could receive and ponder over such an important communication, and not only re solve to grant the Respite, but also, have the document prepared, and the letter covering four half sheets of paper, copied and annexed there to ? Nobody ! But we are not left merely to conjecture in ihe premises. It was boldly de clared before the Respite reached Easton, by a friend of Tearney, that the Execution would not take place. This can be proven by the testimony of those who were assisting to erect a platform on the property of Mr. West, from which the Execution was to be viewed. And what is more, a distinguished citizen of this Borough, who had shortly before seen Mr. Shunk, and who was in his confidence on this subject, told a friend of his, as early as Friday last, and before the Rev. Mr. Reardon's letter, probahly was written, that the Execution would not take place. These are a few plain facts connected with the history of this murder, and prove most con clusively that both the DEATH WARRANT AND THE RESPITE were issues for politi cal effect. This tampering however whh the life of a fellow-creature for political purposes, has produced the most intense excitement, throughout the community, and the People are astounded by the conduct of the Govornor.--? This feeling is not confined to ihe members of only one parlybut the political friends of the Governor are as indignant at hs prostitution of power,, as the Whigs. They ail hold the life of an irnmnrtnl being too sacred to bs made the toy of POLITICAL GAMBLERS. Ohio has begun to pay off her public debt. FARTHER NEWS FKOJI MEXICO! ' HIGHLY IMPORTANT. i 73 Deserters ESautg. General Worth and Three Hundred Americans said to be blown up by Explosion- of Powder Wagons Capture of $300,000 by the Mexi cansDeath of Gen. Smith Capture of Cha "piillepec Bombardment of the Capital In vested by the American Troops Death of Gen. Bravo Santa Anna Wounded - The Reject ed Treaty of Peace. The North American of Monday laTt gives the most exciting intelligence Irom our army. We extracl tne mosi important. The accounts are meagre, and we shall a wait with great anxiety the receipt of official despatches, which, however, may not reach u for some time, as the first courier from Gener al Scoit has doubtless been cut off. Nothing yet has been learned, except from Mexican sources, and we indulge the hope thai they ex- aooerate our I039, though it ha necessarily been severe. 1 he suspense in relation to Gen erals Worth, Smith and Pillow, will be pain ful in the extreme, not only to their friends and relative?, but to the country in large. A terrible retribution has overtaken the ren egade Riley and 'his fellow deserters, who have been hung, 72 in number, jn sight of both ar mies. On the 7th, Gen. Herrera, as commander of the city of Mexico, addressed the clergy, ex horting them to exert all their influenens to in cite the people to arm themselves and prepare to resist the American army. On the 8th of September, Gen Scott attacked the mil Del Rey or King's Mill, in the imme diate vicinity of Chapultepec according to the Diario del Gobierno, and 'the Boletin published at Atlisco Onr army was repulsed after a se vere conflict, in which wo lost .about 400 in killed and from 600 to 700 in wounded, and fell back upon Tacubaya. The account given by ihe Boletin represents the battle to have been the most bloody and severely romeied of tho whole war. This, however, is a Mexican account, and concludes as follow.: Ai 10 o'clock, the enemy commenced a ret rogade movement, and, by iwp o'clock tn the afternoon, he withdrew his forces from Tacu baya, abandoning the two points he had occu pied,, and blowing up the house of Mala, tho' some say it was set on fire by a bomb, fired from Chapultepec. It is believed that Gen.'U Twiggs and Pierce directed the attack, and lhat they put in motion about 8000 men. It is certain lhat the fire was more intense and brisk than at Churubusco. It is impossible to ascertain the loss on ei ther side. Ours does not amount to 100 killed and 250 wounded. There are a few missing, nearly all not killed or wounded retiring to Chapultepec The enemy, according to the confession of an Irishman, who came over to us in the evening, carried off 400 dead and (300 or 700 wounded. We hae to lament the lo: of Gen. Leon, since dead; thai of Col. Balde- ras of the valiant Cols. Huerla and Gehi!!, ami of the determined Capt. Matcns of Puehla. A Mexican letter announces that Riley ami his legion of St. Patrick, 72 in number, wre ordered by the Cotirt martial to be hung. Tho sentence was approved by Gen. ocoit, and on the 8'h Sept. the whole legion were hung. When General Perez abandoned the Mill el Rey, a bomb, discharged from Chapultepec, fell among ihe ammunition wagons of the ene rny in the ya'rd of the mill, causing 4 of them to explode by which 300 Americans are said to have been blown up, including Gen. Worth, wh according to the account, had not been seen or heard of the next day at Tacubaya. The Mexican Government has taken $300,000 which were being sent by a commercial house to the camp of the enemy. The only reliable account we have of the last struggle before the Capital is in a letter addressed to Mr. Dimond, our Collector at Vera Cruz, from Orizaba, as follows : Orizaba, Sept. 19, 1817. I have the honor to inform you that an express arrived here this morning from the city of Mexico, which brings intelligence lhat Gen. Scott was in the city of Mexico. That on the 13th, the Amer ican troops took Chapultepec and the Citadel, and went into the city that night. Gen. Bravo was killed, and Santa Anna was wounded in the arm, and has retired with the re mainder of his troops, which have suffered much, to Gaudaloupe. A letter from a creditable source confirms all that is said in the above, and only disagrees with it in stating that the city was carried by assault on the 14th. ... In regard to the American loss, the Picayune says: "As to our loss before the army entered the city, we have nothing authentic. We fear this new victory has not been achieved without great loss of life." A passenger in the James L. Day informs us that it was reported among the Mexicans at Vera Cruz that we lost 1700 men in killed and wounded but could trace it to no authentic source. Anoth er passenger estimates Gen. Scott's loss at from one quarter to one third of his army. Wheal Crops. The wheat crop of Michigan for the pro-, ent year, as estimated by a gentleman now pro paring statistics for the Patent OthVe in Wash ington, will not fall short of $8,000,000 busheU, nor exceed 10,000,000 bushels. The quality of the grain this year is superior in every re spect to ihe crop of last year. In regard to the condition of tho crop in Wis-, consin, ihe Buffalo Commercial Advertiser, of Monday, says : " The brig Giddtngs arrived here on Saturday, with a cargo of 10,000 bush els of Wisconsin wheat, of this year's crop, which for plumpness of berry and general ap pearance exceeds any thing ever befpjp re ceived from that quarter," How much pork will a bushel of corn make? ia a question set down for discussion at a a'ebal ihgfsbciety idme where u down east,""