Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, September 20, 1848, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    'Vtiali• - gt's_ - **Avtt6l . eT
WEDNESDAY, SEirrESl FIER pB4B
Denzocrittle Whig Nominations.
FOR PRESIDENT,'"
GEN. Z. TAYLOR!
II
OF LOUISIANA.°
i• • VICE PRESIDENT
MILLARD FILLMORE,
OF NEW YORK
FOR GOVERNOR,
WM. F. JOHNSON.
OF ARMSTRONG COUNTY
CA - NAL COMMISSIONER.
NER MIDDLESWARTH
OF-UNION COUNTY
ELECTORAL TICKET,
•
• • SENATORIAL.
John P. San Orson, Lebanon.
Thomas
'rboznas M. T. mucenna.novushington
REPRESENTATIVE
13. Henry; Jot:neat)
14. Wm. Colder ) sr.
16. Wm.,Mellvaine.
M. Chas. W. Fisher
17. And'w G. Curtin
19. Jesup!' Markle'
20. Daniel' Agnew
21. And. W. Loomis
22: Richard ji win
23 Thomas H. Sid:
24. S. A. Puiviance
1. Jos. G. Clarkson
L 2. J.Price Wethorill
3. Jatioes I%.Davis•
4. Thos.W. DnDield
t, Daniel O. Hitner
Liushua_ilungart_
7. John D. Steele
8. John Landes,
9. Jos.•Sehmucker
10. Chases Snyder
11. WT. G. Hurley
12. Francis Tyler
- COUNTY TICKET.
Congress,
•
JASPER E: BRADY, of Franklin coarit)
Assembly.
IL P. MT:MAE, Shippensburg,
GEORGE RUPLEY, E. Penneboro.
Prothonotary.
J. J. HEMPHILL, Hopewell. '
. ' • Otirk of the Courts.
DANIEL SHELLY, jr, Allen.
- Register:
AUGUSTUS A. LINE, Corbels+.
•
Commissioner,
JAMES SIeCtLLOUGH, W. Fenneboro'
Director of the Poor. se
JOHN - W. CRAIGHEAD, S. Middleton.
Auditor.
WILLIAM KNETTLE,
ARE YOU ASSESSED T—This
u vetylinriorlant
sire to vote at the 4 appreliching,elections.
Remember you must be- assessed TEN
lairs before the October election. Ex
amine the assessors lists, and see if your
names are thereon.
Jre
. Irou Ready?
Friends of TAYLOR! The election
takes place next Tuesday two. weeks!—
ARE TOO READY? Are your township
'committees at work? Have you every
*an - assessed r Have you arranged
means for getting out every vote ? If
not tlit:ri lose no time in doing so—dolay
no longer—inaction and neglect now will
be fatal. Victory is within our grasp,
but it will slip from us if we are not
wide awake and active !
Taylor Mass Meetings!
KEEP VP Tan FIRE I—The friends of
TAYLOR will hold a meeting at Paper.,
town, on Friday afternoon—at Hogues.
town, on'Saturday—tifid at Richwine's
in Dickinson township, on Saturday a
week. The Carlisle Rough and Ready
Club will meet at Glass' Hotel, on Fri
day night,, to forma delegption to attend
the meeting in Hogestown. "Give them
a little4tore grape," boys
Gov. Johteson on the Stump.
TLe papers in the northern counties through
Gov. JOHNSON is !ravelling and deliv
ering addresses, are filled 'with enthusiastic
accounts ol the masses of people who throng
to hear him. He has been speaking at the
ratd l ot three limes a day ! 'A letter from
Allentown says, "Thus far the journey of-his
Excellency has been or.e of triumph. The
feelidg of the people is certainly in his
friVor."
Gov. Johnson will address the great Taylor
Mass Meeting in.Carlisle, on the 7th of Oc
tober, Ody friends heed fear no clitiappoint
!Tient in thlit..expeotation,nod we trust they
'wiltbe . prepiredto come as an "army with
bannirs,.tr . . ,
Attend!, the Meettagn
The Taylor 'heehaw, tin oughout the coun'-
„tytirtilips,„ing=Fripidly in pionbors and en
-lhiislsain
as the campaign „progresses. , We
,e',e•gied'leTatta-,thisi„.„Thotoinsinder of this
.1 mintli,althnlihthe.detoted to towilikhip inent.
ingi;tandlhe'tianitpaign'lpi the State, electidn
1 .
' r : 1 8140 aei our grand Mali
' : ' - I , oatfieril; . .,th'it7tft'fil °MOW ;
Attend : lh. mee"inge,',l The holt,
lot , station' ir::nenr. at hando , ,"Let , thir
inarilha"Pratiarati
"! *higienit' 'point IS IN3
)0P1 . 14 : , A , o
11' ',-17414tAYSTI'lIFFIG Y91141'1'1,781: Ev.
,; ory:nisraeihotthi;biqatrained to accomplish'
A.ihiergittat cankbellOna ' thit'Otor)i
r
titiliett . CAW '."
pieleelan, Courar,— . .rite *Imo! this
iliSti!!o.o4;°, l **S.ii, o ' l4 / n o# IFridWll4ts andl
,11f.e.11.1 4 ifs#. 1 !ral° ,( ft 11 .studeetshas ,
illiMPfsio , 9l l 4, l P 4 , oc sn' to " r : s ie lsts • Fr°,o
.1 .1 " 11,0 slew' lases we sheell ' 'ea e
664431-7,
( •hrtnettill'L.., iiii.
ti , '1111d09'4,•:, I.il4',llieerf,n.
-4 il ' lIPIR',. ,q,:bol,l.oPdfi aias,„y?r,kil
:Aliflos ,
idlioi,.
talion iiL.the' . .
~,,' alc "- „mime:l4o4
I'o 14. '
~ Othlt!l,''' .",‘':A.-.,0
441eti,....._,,,::. ,ti.q.i..l.
.:000,M*
IT 'c1.p1y74;244
Amit
,:;..1117e.itliji iid'
a0r....,,:„.,,_.
~,,,m4.ift.: ii:or..,,:‘„ 64:01i 1,1 i, ,. k i :.
i1,,....0-14, ti.htfiT mit,i,gdoilwr:,
"tokpple, --,,,x40 „I T ., c videoin Sh
~.,.L. 4011,' IMP4 ' - leitoofirie ! le r • • abeifiA:
“".i • doing • .lame ' r , t,
0 „%,,,ie."l-tnu, ra,.,,,'L tine ildvrev4),T,4 Pr "' i
v.rtl r_,-;- ifilivnew.-4. t!: :..,,,,, ~m„,10.1 I Li
:IdiOlgialr:;*totA7 i'' ~,, it, pcinnliPg't
11,44,f10,3‘1,? 'r' r ;;_,,hqiieetihgo 3 ~„: ~4nor
;,'
~,, ~,,?,g,,,,,-41.4,66'0., ,Iipi*IPIE"-' P'^
ii.l.
,110,ir*, O t )s fi,4l%heirk.°2°Oti''
'''
' reln ° t6re 1 '
' '' ' r'i e "' ' ''' ii .lii lll6 1 ' 'f 'Mil'
c il
- ..-).1.1- .Toilitie/04410
..ats\\ 4...r.,i4M1 . .'
il;l4' Inr:ol*** t6;5,5, o'.- -,, !' ‘.
'•
' :',":. ' • '
~e 44.47,ry 1'..:P.,,q'41 5.;.,.."...5.:
,:, ... . •
~,P.,.- Y'o:',..
.."ti.t.:
Ahribirt ihe'onlfiriefasurestrensittl fat' I"afrl
becloud county - in thelasi.Ligislattite, d a y
Messrs.ltaa9iterotyind.tErcvta,:Ahe are
sootjeli
thied)OriSeghgialiiciehiMittfaittiliipßep# ; .
sirtif.aifitayl.Wakttie'passagioq a fitw for the
gciretrtierion'ot,f4i*.wßpo:tforoycio ) :
`Bridge c iO 'LigibertOt
repeatedly importuned by persons irom!etio..,
rfsectton of the county to publish this law,
we gave it a place in last week's Ilerald
For this we are very severely calletl3o ac-
count in the Volunteer and Democrat, neither
of which papers, however:undertake to de.
lend the law, more than to say . that it
was pe.itioned for by ourself and a majority_
df the Whigs of this borough. That after
signing a petition for the Road ther-Vt'lligs
should now find fault with Messrs. Limber
lon and Lefever for having the la* passed,
seems .to be regarded..by the Volunteer as
something very outrageouK 'And so it
might
,appear without some explanation of
the circumstances.
For our part we did not read the petition
before signing it. 11..waahancied to us by a
gentleman in 'whom we had:cenfldence, and
,we therefore-signed-it-without much -or any
reflection. And this'we are informed is the
case with most of the other Whig petitioners..
They understood it to be a petition for a
nimilnownship road, which would be of
great public advantage, against which there
were no objections, arid the expense of
which would be trifling, and they hastily
signed-ft therefore without making much in
quiry. But these petitioners no more expec
ted- or--intended---to-ask-lor -the passage of
such law, by which an expense of several
&wand dollar's should be entailed upon the
county-, than they did of petitioning for a line
of the magnetid telegraph to Lamberton's
Saw mill. They signed. this petiton entirely
in the dark as to the facts which are now be
fore the public, and that pubhc may there
fore judge of their, astonishment at finding,
themielves - held up the
enormous expense which has been saddled
upon the county by the budding of this road.
But we may be told that we are responsi
ble for the passage of the law, no:withstan
ding we signed the petition thus unthinking
ly.• Let us see how this is. Many of these
Whig petitioners reccollect that they were
distinctly tpld that this Road would not cost
over 0600. Thu concluding sentence of the
petition • (which we have since , procured a
copy of,) in fact makes this statement, viz:
"Roads are already made to the foot of
the mountain on• each side, wtrich require
• but slight alterations and improvelnients; and
the road can be so advstitageously located
acrossilie gap of the mountain that_y_our_pe
titioners co.ifidently believe that the ex
pense Will — not exceed SIX HUNDRED.
DOLLARS." •
No Whig ever objecte to the construction
of improvements of teal value r ivhere the
cosLis reasonable, and thus believing many
signed this petition. But what is really the
expense of this Road, as priivide'd for in the
law secured by .Messrs. LAMBERTON and LE
FEVER 1 According to an-estimate of a cor
respond-ent in to-day's paper the Road will
cost nearly THREE - THOUSAND DOL
LARS! Others estimate that it will coat a
still higher sqm, and .in truth no one seems
to know how much ft will cost ! Is such a
road, misting this enormous amount, what
the Whigs petitioned for? Will the Volun
teer have the hardihood to assert that the
petitioners were aware that such a law would
be the result of their petition ?
The public will see at once that these
Whig petitioners have been grossly deceived
in this matte', and we call the paiticular at
tention of the people ol the county to the
fact that while the petitioners looked to an
outlay of only S6OO for this Road, the lan'
as 'framed by Messrs. LAMDERTON and LEFE
VER has provided for a Road which will cost
the county THREF. THOUSAND DOL.
LARS, and perhaps more! flow then can.
the responsibility be late on the Whig peti
tioners?
The Volunteer endeavors to screen Mr.
UMBERTO:A Irdn responsibility by saying
that its did not after,all vote for the law.—
Thie is presuming upon_i laige amount of
public gullibility. Here is a road which termi
nates at Mr. Lambtrton's saw-mill,the value
of which it of courso . greatly enhances, and
yet the Volunteer would have us believe
that Mr. Lamberton felt no interest in it!—
He did not vote for it ! We suppuse' he ne
ver asked a friend to vote for it! We , sup
pose he',was not sure that he had. friends
enough to stand by , it, bolero •he rioketi
dodging himself! We suppose' lie_ did not
onte4rtling it into an ume,nitte?'.piii, so
that it might go irately through
,on . iher log- 1
!.; •'- .
15OW we can teindily understand that. ,Mr.
Lamberton naturally 1,31! *tanned when' he
eaw, how far the provisions ol this, bill ex
ceeded, all' that was asked for by itetition
ere, 'apri.; , back open
he must:,b ,have,
done, 41'61014 , egpcnditefe b woul d entail.
the / 3 ,04 511 1 1 . 11 .; , rfi iPP;
Lamberton excessive* eulogized Inr his
I ,lfaith,lulnotta to the' interoitti,of ; _lAwt coitoty,!l;
we to ask he: WiW:o ol l4jel
when :the :inteiepts ot-ihe cohnly.'etere• thue
railTeriegttoibeitine of 'ascend :fliCe'greci, (01,
this i(:44;mi • twi distati..to
w:p ?P r '
int:PAIIIAGET : II - lelknewthti'llW'Mtto
eis i -the
Whigs' of
h"dut`.iiG know) and
fdie . dc4 we 'fiiid'ne
' Lion of his
akhi l at the'
04040 'er g
r .1 , ve
, I*,
. 4 4444 i
,weve not t hil e pbu i !l, of Reid inpi*Onitifl i or
InieittbeiAliiiie.'.Nor ppit-tr: o l qt
it hi evident Ntiii t-the-ioterr,Of county • think'
t44, , i644.fec.'oeiideita udl>t j 1
Affeolll, - SOMMTiiI. I 9 O T4 I VOI,IO /4 4 '
r 1 .11tr?,;.,°,4104 1 541r , ,511 4 140:0 1 .4k;
doe. jlie (*phi t? 0
- 1 4 AlittiO*1* 1 -tifiklAkOAtirl
ned.joifeiet.. If thei;F4ii" - Alo44itkiOlieS i :-
..' .• • ,
„ , ,
Wialritign memberir 7
die l'ocofd 4144 'i4it"iifnitinidid—theycitivott;
.14eiltti'dsf ied-'faithful Representatives' to STA lti•,
ix end give place' to nevi:Tien!
;I`lbnry clay for Gen l'aylor !
Evirm turritshes the .fittlityinig,
.e.titittet of a lefterrrom Clay;oillidlAgrr
intptiry undressed to , him, conce;rtiti.
bitt ; Pitoposed nomination for the Pretildern3ii:,
“Ashland, Sept. EV,1848;
" gif;takc tenons, Escr-1 itave_giyen, anti
- Countenance •iir encourage- ,
ment-,t?i,rinrmovement toltring my name,
as 41 eitildidate' tor that office, (the Preei
dencP)`belitila'llle public. `
11,,f 1 1‘ ,:sto:
•
"On Onewbbint 1 desire no secrecy, and
that is; thrit'f am opposed ic? the- use tinily
name.ins a candidate for the Presidency!
"My warm regards.to your brother;
.1
.. 11 1 'am.truly you': fiiend and obedient. ser
vantt H. C LAY." .
This is just what every good Whig knew
HENRY CLAY would do. Mr. Clay pleatly
showed hie decided prelerencelor General
Taylor, when he travelled filt3i
for John J. Crittenden, the early and ;tired
friend of G en : Taylor. But to mak-BPa:issu
ance doubly mire, the Poughkeepsie (N. Y.)
Ame i tictin says: • •
OA recent letter from Henry Clay; dated
and pOstmaiked. at Ashland, is in possession
of a gentleman et this village. In this letter
Mr. Clay says that he yields a cheerful sub.
miesion'to the." action of the Philadelphia
Convention. We have seen the docu.
Mein,"
This knocks in the head the factious move
ment of pretended phigs and disguised Lo
cofocos in ,the city 01. blew l'orlot Gen Tay
lor's election cannot now be prevented!
Free Solt Convention.
A Free Soil State Convention was held at
Rending on Wednesday . last, B.V. Rich
ards, ol Philadelphia, presided', An Electe
.ral ticket was formed and Mr. Jason W. E
by selected as the electoi• front this district.—
A State Central Committee - was appointed,
end resolutions adopted endorsing the Buffa
lo platform t _and cindidates fourresidept and
Vice President- John Van Buren was pm
mit anti 'addressed a mass meeting 01 free-
Boilers.
We subjoin the electoral ticket. The Read
ing Journal says all the gentlemen coinpo.
ring if are ('democrats.''" Mr. Eby, of this
%listrict, is a decided Sub-Treisury free trade
democrat, and is therefore fq a very conSis
-tent-position—The Journal adds that-the Con
vention made' io nomination fot - Governor,
because it is well known that GovarnorJohn
son the whig candidate, is, as sound on the
Free Soil question as any gentleman they
could set up. Him they can
,elect, but one
of their own party would oily be set up to
be knocked down - . They are not yet pre
pared for so bold n- stand, and ev,ery one
must admit they have acted wisely in the
pre:nittetk -
What arc his Qualifications!
Gen. Taylor has shown himself a great
man-by the great deeds he has done—sueli
as none but a master mind could have ac,
complishes)... 'Yet Locolocoism sneeringly
asks, "what ate his qualifications," Rely
ing upon Gen. Taylor's actions to speak sat
islactoilly for him, we in turn, ask , what are
the qualifications of Morris Longetreth, tor .the
high office of tiovemor of Pennsylvania?—
What high stations has he held Where tee
the evidences of his talents and statesman
ship? 'What has he done? Where are his
great- actions? There are none—he has
done nothing indicative of a superior man.—
The most that can be said of him is, that he
is a "retired city-merchant," grown princely
rich by the. speculations of city trade, and
now an aristocratic Locofoco politician, am
bitious'ol office without the qualifications to
adorn the, lac i e or serve the State. .
1-The Volunteer is extremely indignant
that the Chairman at the Whig Slate Central
Committee and two of his friends should lie
unveiling through Cumberland county. We
see no groundoi objection that the Volunteer
could urge except that_they are private Whig
citizens. If they were the Locoloco Com•
'missioner of -.Patents, or Assistant l'ostmaste,
General, from WashingtoNot even some of
-the Philadelphia of&ce•holders, on political
tours, we. presutne the.hbjection would no
be urged. Is the "Reign of Terror" iibont
to be introduced again by the'llpintleCos?
• Kt -Those poisons who biVe heen looking
in the Volta* or Penteitat. for Gen:Cese'e
Lite'ei to R. S. Wilson, EF.q., giving hiir rem
sons for: - opposing the Wilmot ProvEso,,have
looked in l vain. In that 'letter . he ertra':-7
“Tlie Wilmet Proviso Kill not pes's.the Sen.
ate: It toould be - death to ,llte, War—death to
all hopes of settiitg tin acre or Teiritorti—death
to:the ,ioninistrofini; 44,) ,doit; to . ' the DOW!.
publish
Let 'every man be, a , walking 'Minton of
Democracy, proclaiminaldeinocratio
plea:wherever he 'goesi-44ntakinocritt.;
':'VlT t e • go io
... ,ro,.!ke 040 1 0 : :,11,si
`vo i tt , iiyiliri i aii'ie),liTett OM Pi? . I),Ogean
town ‘ rimpiing on; Oitukliy: night a .Week,
:proclaimingfidernocraticprincildel in; ' ‘‘yii7 .
.112nieet7,Of yoaths; fights: and yoWilyieno, in
slyrB;:imer„s:Oiin or
'440,40,P4.04154.3 . /. , 04. ~,4!
ATErr • 00 EIGN 0 teams sip
„Europa', erriveitl,ali , NeWe:York- On ~ Thlinuisik.
Stif a ilie're4fr
j te,
ajOrYol ide
4eCOT t.7' i '
/, The, Graiii , Afaritet has. , superedtiiilecline,
thiv:prompeOlpf
tee than at m
'l.,' 9,14: nt ;.( 411111'
1 114 4 ,3 1.9 1 1 1 1 , 1 . 0Angti I Wt .1%
1i• . ;ft.; :s4l,„ .g ij c,.1 , , ,
ileoC 7lCll o t4U4 ":, lB 'P lUM P irl P, rlir Cat.
ithilloilkitterAind'4tmakitiolks ;greAt; hitv
tio lit*l; f ! 10 - "eirilfedeittlism,'Aly , hii
tt; itil
&IMO "tiWiki:osrio , :lii!‘zotoos4id
~!4','Oqi!', ,1iii4,40,1`14** 6 !,!=-,',9141Y ,
,t,p,r,„0 , t , d ,‘3,•,.,,„;, , ,,„ ~,,,0_,4_44,r , -.4-.4. ~,,:
~, ~, :,.,,
The,lgviir:the Papti ib; 'OuroPing• 4 1 1
'lib oirio , tik-bro iflii,llo4 , „,littli r g, , ,o;,dtii
, „ ~ , ~,.. ~,4 I.V .01 q - ,1. -4 • . 4 1.. , A 4 1,. , 1`;•..0 . ..
flll I, rige,,Volo,oo4llol"Pfe`! 1"....k1y.
03arvoluner,,.xv.l i kiiilde:.7.C' i iii,lvii
to,4#l# , Aft !iiio, igNiPAPI.ilPA I 'l l '*(3
-bfginiiwatoP i t 4 ", l o:!ii-tiliP:' ,. # 44o 4!t:
OrYittf . o,o,','!iiiti,iffli,i , ,.4i4it c ,diigi'pl:g i ii.t;:
%g e 0 , i ,1:i,.:1 , ,:,:',1,,tip,r'..4411? , ,,,D,-,, , , , ,-,,,),t - '
.„,..,,,......,,,,,,,-,,,
,:),',. ,, ,i 1 ,,' ,, , , •, , t 5,, , t , :., ,- , , \l' i '- ‘ ,. VK,,, r, '.• '4,r:- - 4 , t , , -,,,-,%;
• -
11 ,
•:'
._`l
A l V r4 ,, , v 4 sTu lr e" l ; 7.l 7:'': ".f ;l
a letter - iiinn.aren Tayl
with view
aS regard.
Varisiiii!reeonf-iMlilicitiocil detached ex-.
fiis . , privatn„lettepi to, individuali,,
ivbigh
,4 . 8it31*0:iil::111,1:1', the:public my
.itifioii.';ciljti'licif Confidence
. Which is al.
‘413:, - ,urn:ifirsipi t i .. 4)Ointac)l...to Communications
orthafitiaiatiptiOn.---
- The , rivesent-Jetter , gives a clear end con; ,
fleeted sate en :of theoircumsiances,which,
led to his_ , wimination_ . as a candidate foe . the
"Pteahlinoy,;iiiil de fi nes his position in nen
nection:Nattlf it irinjanperthat cannot be mie
underatop‘and,which, ,defies
tore misrepresentation, even" by .the most
reckless. of his poUtical optionents.
MEI
We deem it unnecessary to BIARE ANY
COMAIENtB on the letter, as it speaks for itself,
in the eleareat *and most satisfactory manner.
We recommend it to the especial perusal of
our Democratic friends. '
East Pascagoula, Sept..4lll, 1848
_ • :
null SIR: On the 22d day of April last,
I addreased yoga letter explaining my views
in regard to varionsmatters.M public policy,
lest my - fellow citizens might be misled by
the rranv.ctinflicitina statements-ineepect to
them which appeare d in , journals.Of the day
and Were 'circulated th roughout' the, country.
I-now find myself misrepresented and mis
understood'ppon another point, of such im
mixture to inkselrperiiinuilly, if not to the
country at large, as to claim froM me a can
did 'but connected eXposition of my rela
tions to the public in regard to the pending
Presidential canvass.
The utmost-ingenuity has been expended
upon several jetters and detached sentences.
of letters,. which have recently appeared'
over my eurtutture, to elinw that I occupy an
equitoeal attitude towards the yarious par
ties into which,the people are divided, espe
cially.totvaids tlia. %Vhig gutty as represent
ed by the Natierral ff.onventiOn, which as
sembled in Philadelphia in June last. Had
these letters and seraps.of.letters been. pub
lished or construed in connection with:what
I have heretofore said. upon .this-subject,l.
should. not now; have to complain oh the
speed with which my 'answers to isolated
queStlonaliave,b3en-given up to the-criti
cism of those who have been made my ene
mies by a nomination which has been ten
dered to me without solicitation or Jirrange
mem of mine, or of the manner in which'
selected passag es in some of my letters,
written in the 'reedom and carelessness of a
confidential correspondence, have been com
municated to the public press. But riven
from the context, and seperated from a se
ries of explanatory facts and circumstances
Avh ich-ave r in _so. far-as. ibis car! vass
cerned, historical, they are as,deceptive as
though they were positive fabrications.
,1
address you this letter to correct -the injustice
thal has been done me, and the public toile
extent that I am an object of interest to them
by this illiberalproCess.
I shall not weary you by an elaborate ie.
eitarel every incident conneciegtwith the
,firetTiresentation of my name as a candidate
for the Presidency: I was then at the head
01 the American Army in the Valley of the
Rio .Gratitle.: -. -1 was surrounded by Wings
and Dem - news who had stond'by me in the
trying hours of my life, and whom it was
my destiny to conduct through scenes of still
greater trial. My duty to that army nhd to
the Republic, whose battles we were waging,
forbade my assuming a position of seeming
hostility. to any pennon of the brave men
under my command—all of whom knew 1
was a' Whig in principle, for I made no con
cealment of my political sentiments or pre
dilectipas,
Suck find been the violence of party snug
gles during our late presidential elections,
that the acceptance of a nomination under
the rigorous interpretations given to the obli•
gat ions,of a candidate 'presented to the pub
lic with .li, formulary of political principles,
was equivalent'' almost to a declaration of
uncompromising enmity to all who did not
subscribe- to he tenets. I was unwilling to
hazard the effect of such rolationt hip towards
any of the soldiers under my command,
when in front of an enemy common to us
all. It woilil have been unjust in itself, rid
it was as tspuguant to my own feelings, as
it was to my duty. I wanted unity in the
army, and forbore any act that might ROW
the seeds of distrust and discord in its ranks.
I have not my letters written, at the time,
before me, but they ate all of ono import.
aril in.centormity with the views he,rein ex-1
pressed.
Meanwhile I was solicited by my person
al friends and by strangers, by Whigs and
Democrats,in consent to become a candidate.
I was nominated by, the-people in primary
assemblies—by Whigs, Democrats and Na
tives, in ;seperate and mixed meetings. • I
resisted them all, and continued to do so till
.led to believe that. my opposition was assu
ming the aspect of a defiance orthe•popu
lar wishes. I yielded - only when it looked
like:presuiription•to ' resist longer, and, even
then I shount.pot. have done so had not the
nomination been piesented to me in a form ,
unlikely toawal , en acrimony or re-produce
the bitternesti 'of" feeling which attends [dip
olar electiona.. I say it-in sincerity and truth,
that a part of :tliginducament to my consent
, was the. hope that by going into the canvass,
it would be conducted' with candor, if not
with kindness. Ithaebgert, tin fault of mine
that this anticipation hagproved a vaiii.'one.
-After I 4termitteit'mysell to be announced
for the Presidency, under Itig‘eircumstances
above noticed, I. acceptid nomination : after
nomination, in,the,opii it in which they.svei e
tendered:; They werti;madeirrettpective of
parties,,and•sq acknowledged.' No one•wliii
joinetl,iii.ihbagnomination could •have.been
deceived 'Auto myi,politicalwiewa. , From the
beginning till-into' t 1.. haVeCideclated'iriVSelf•
;,to beta vhig im ttlt.proper.:.o6etudene::'With'
this - 41etinut lisethil:pnblishedttritthg sforld,
'I
' dit;not:,thitik stab;(-. hailie,fight.l6,-reoel
norninaliOng;lioni,!pelitical" . t.Opponente" , ani
inomdittiy:l;Asilt right to ‘ielnae .the • vote of
;Demoerattil4he polls,, and I It, pronlaiintid it
: • itictaibllnit. 1 shOUld. not ,tejdct ihii'ptofleted
'.orilliptirt;.ooiiiiy , ibiitii Of my , ;lellOw , ottizens.
T,lds , t„Vpiltnic'pOsitiort '4hen, in November
Ittet;,:l returned to the:United %Stioet4i:long tie
itneteitlfer ,artluistitit,divisinns.o(:l4.pon
ples:;.hiChultt..n, natiOnalbaorivendon '-and
wvhoMiewiti.thonghtilnubifulF:illmenfAhetta '
r i l lit'kjial c. j„ , r a ny rd , ,i,. Oi .j 1 :, .i. - er , t'! L 1;.:1,".., , , , ,
..
:' , l l4illfejil At*" inthis •
tTaliitudkillll'apripg,-
when thikOi'weire' le - ritiaiir'Matiiiiiiittlain!Oli'l:
I ;rialstiiiiiii,ftinderitifig . ..io,.v.igiveijii 6 6"4oi7',
. - tioniCe national yoliey, , tlif.tjelt tionitt r utt l - ,
!MI tii eciffelit:thiil iffictis.tnio4hiablhs
,I!iub
' '' lie ' Mind ',..'ivtiti,filillingi, lik'n;:inaiO `7e.i r plieh
' !iMinicietion 'Of' ' iltiMpleKiitleNT• did 14 niy ,,
e uto4ou , ,n , WI : trilWr' - Tlitit:,hillgr,;tiniF
I Y.TITI • hiii 11 , :ligVeddliiite'd f halridily aski
'eprOttiM andetstanditit cifilnittivivtinld ~''ittni, - .
. ,initi.,developed Tilr .whole
,position'iiii,elition'
iti'f,thelPveslileneYiiiAltefittnuft:,‘',',.,oT+'' ,!.!,....-
740;001nporatic69onligalintl!Metini May ,'
ldiTiO*P o l4.'oo, l ( i figiMi to, ,,, sl4l f :, itvq;—
;This-'stiiky;,4 ..!, , tig :t. to Act:';: . .kike'lktall nal,
WhilicOnittintiotV'metlitJiint4 'Mid olitibtod;
Nite,lnstlicir!eindid'ute:; , ,f l .l , ,Sccepted'ihn iicnn'ii,
:lielled,kO*M ° eiit o t o te and ' :vi o !h l !prid el:ro 1 s
, mV t i'Vettre o t P giuo "C# . RL nti o a ci oY t e i
AchitON oftlie'liiled:Olitaeei'matitres
,..'.".--tUtiMit
i.,.;im:....M0ir.4;...0ii1•'tl be
c '' —ause. itl ' . ' i : '
.-'m, a j l n . ot
:no*)eteki#ith4ykotioo l 4 l 99MpalAblk7pi
If i iolt *sf lki ‘ mdo4 ll,ool 4,:,Pnif
'the Oopiipiltilett,o . li i ii)butti 3 o4 , lp,llt'e .: ' .
oAtiz:tnitleVlllevnadaitf A4'l-,**,
p44' . itstjheii;"pliioant;#o**lo?*acd . l )y,
: -17 r•:,
EERIE
'44"0.:1.1 , 1?1.7V
.itagiiii , lied.ettizeir of New‘.YOkle,eel ac=
lye kno 'opitifoils'inight have ju4ly,.,eatitledlvni
io the Orritillsee:'„on theiticketti . ,
The, , ,Conventiou,„' ; a4opted tile ail ,11.rioy!1
me4.a.VAPhigercidell hut aritl:',ultptAn
opinion's,' and Shiallil3 he Wittitilik - exo"
86 .
were toshilt the reltkOriship)yeiclistibsisfed
if :the time. ".They,ltfio'lue,Witit.illti
ration of principtelfiferPublished . 'to the
world, and should fie.without defence it, I.
*ere to say_ or do_anything to impair , the
force'of that declaration. • ,
-accept a nomina
tion.
-from democrats,. hnt. Id so-doing , I
would.not abate-elle-jot or tittle - Of rny_,epin 7
ions us written down:- , Suchrli ifcinnttiatithi,
as indicating a coincidence of opinion on
'the part of those making it, should
,not be
regar4ed with, 'disfavor_ br. those.,w ho._th in k
'With me; as a compliment personal to my
self, it should not be expected - thatj would
.repulse them with insult. I shall not modify
my views to entice them to my side; I shall
not reject their aid when they join my friends
voluntarily. '
I have said I was not a Party Candidate,
nor am Tin that straightened arid sectarian
sense which would prevent my being the
President of the whdle people is 'case of
my election. I did not regard myself as one
'before the. Convention. met, and that body
did.. not seek to. make me different from
what. I was. They did not letter me down
to a series of pledges which were to be an
iron Mile"ol TiettorTin 7 lill, niid despite Of
all, the contingencies that might arise in-the,
course of a Pkler4dential term. lin' not en
gitged to lay violent hands indisCriminately
upon miblic officers, good or bad, who, may
differ in opinion with me. I ant not expected
to force Congress,. by the coercion of the Ve
to, to pass laws to suit me, or pass nnne.—
This is what.' mean by not being a party
candidate. And I understand this• is good
Whig doctrine,---I would not•be a partisan
President, and hence should not be a party
candidate in the Sense that would make one.
This is,the,:sum "and substance of my, mean
ing, and this is the purport of the fact:
and circumstances attending my nomination,
.when-considered iu their connection with,
and dependence updn, one another. I refer
all-persona, who are anxious on the subject,
to this statement ter the proper understan
ding of my pbsition towards the Presidency
and the' people. II - it" IN - 1101 intelligible,' I
cannot make, it so, and shall cease to attempt
it.
In itikingTenve of the subject 4 have on
ly to add thaymy two letters to you embrace
all the topics 1 clesi.:n to speak of pending
this canvass. If lam elected, I shall do all
that nn honest real may effect to cement the
bonds . of our Union, and establish the happi
ness of our countrymen upon an enduring
basis. Z. TAYLOR.
To Capt. J. S. At.i.tsrm.
Espomitor.
The - Slate Road front Lamber
ton's Saw Mill.
- •Ma. EDITOR - :—Your publication of the see
lions of the Law authorizing the Construction
of a Road from- Lamberton's Saw Mill to
•Weise's Biidgerl utaleistand has brought
down on you the terrible wrath of the Denio
trat--aild-Voluote r:r . It .poems-terrine-the
giving publicity to a Law in which the-pec
pie of the county are so deeply interested,
was rather a meri!ortotis than a censurable
act; and I think the Editors of the Democrat
and Volunteer, if they have any 'desire to
put their readers in possession of all the facts
of the case, ought to publish the law t Iso.
It is said a number of -Whigs signed a pe
tition- for this Road,—amotig them yt•titself,
The writer of this also signed said petition.
But when lie_did sn, lie had no idea that the
Road was to be made at the expense of the
County.. He supposed that, being a State
Road, it would be made by th'e State. This
had been done in the case of other toads.—
rhis county was entitled to some approptia;
lion from the State, as it is pay,ing.enormous
taxes on achount of money expended in
other portions of the State. To strengthen
my recollection, f referred to the Journals for
the action of the Legislature concerning sev
eral Slate Roads iti the county, and found
that towards the expense' of laying out and
making the State Road from Gettysburg
through
through Cumbetland to Perry county, the
State contributed a large amount—See Pdm
phlet La wsiof 1832-3, page 478. To repair
the State Road from the Harrisburg Bridge to
the mouth of the Juniata, the State appropri
ated $BOO. So also, towards repairing the
State Roza( troin the Harrisburg Bridge to
Sterrett's Gap; the State appropriated $BOO -
See Pamphlet Laws of 1838 . -9, pages 449
and 453. These two last appropriations
were made- while Mr. Pemose was in the
Senate. The knowleilge of these facts, and
others not nevi accessible, led me to suppose,
when called upon to petition a Road
across the mountain at that place, fhtd it
would he made al the expense of the State. When
Mr. Penrose procured thza passage of Laws
lot State Roads, they were thus paid for, but
Mr. Lumberton, like a 4 ilaitliful' Legislator,"
procures enactments for costly enterprises
•which fall entirely on the. County And this
011ie Cumberland county is paying taxes
for the, State improvements, from which she
receives not the slightest direct benefit!
What'striVes me as singular is, that Mr.
;Lumberton, who -is peculiarly interested in
the making of this .Road, eh have the
heldnesti, while a 'lneoft, berof Cepigii!lature,
to, procure its' passage, requiting the Cotipf,y
,
•io-besr the eiPense. Feiv men:would have
'dared, te;risk their popularity in ;36 pirsonaki
measure. But Fr. Lthvehrrton,ieebol4Mae
NotP9Y9ishglP4ernleri.'it is said) he dill
not vote for the Bill, but was ,;peeping out ,
Troin - behintf :the - SPettiter!S: . elieir r while the ,
vote was faking, teistie ItCtv; his friends would
light the.battle.for; the;
44i:debitsIeferers:sion d ., e 0 the, rack, and
'pro toiriell;ths', re ni eustreitte'tigai nst that'
*6ol4euentiiis
`But it ; is said ; fie`making `ol,.the 7
4;50; Let
itieeei: The Rankin of die Road let,' to Jet.
ient.nti YOtthington, p, t ree., un re
and in;*length—le:Plan
mile Mid a VisttetLied 4 onlyjnointles the
mounpoin,speting, Rrqrao„t i 'P99P,
3Velea's
. Bridge; is
start thrielailitie.': l liiiii'Vait is wor,kes, by
''oese one
thousand zdollary mote., Besides; she daxteg
eqSsktlif,'Etin`ymt ',giss
two 'hundred ilollsrs, it.
Alit? CoilmillPi?n,°i?"*oi# ‘ o3 4l6 o,i':aiiiii, l , l 4F.
isi; Out Me Rond;, m
Einh;Oominpioll 4 Puirkii
neivi)d ; t7P . dc.' ll4 S B V?"Wßnit l 9 l s 4 FAT.,
4 1 ,A1H - 4,40 I,s' ciftit 711064..tkubit .tf
•
Atl4o:i
aigbuilt'tvil - •
I t u..
WOrttOngton!aleeeniOn,;: ; ,: 5.!.,592 Ott
Bridge saY-i. _ • ;:;."I , boo 00
Laytng out eald Road, gay l - : - 200 00
Oi, in•round ntimNits, thciifiand Altars'.
Mr. Editor,-for myself I object very line to
this road. It will be made r and Me._Lamber--
ton and other property holders niTerry, will
get their lumber over the mountain, and to
a. marketup_
improvements. I understand Mr. Liii4e'r.-
ton has said himself that the - making of this
road will be of more advantage to him than
a re-election to 'he Legislature. But I think
he ought not to get his road and be re-elected
also; 'for if he is sent back lathe Legislature,
there is danger that he will have his SAW
MILL put in good repair et the expense of
the rowdy ! ; A.
The Elections.
VERMONT.--The whig -victory in this
State is 'complete, and 'shows the State
safe for Taylor! The' whigs will have
ten majority in the Senate, and four ma
jority- ever both- the -- -Hu niters - and Van
Buren men in the House
MAINE ELECTiON.-IE 268 towns
where the vote . for Governor lad year
stooo, Whig, 20,530; Loco, 25,503; spat
tering, 6,29 B—the present vote is Whig
25,904, Democrat, 30,819; Free Soil
9710, leaving a pluralty against . Dana,
loco, of 4794, whiCh is' a loss•to him of
3470 votes.
The House of Representatives-etands,
Whig 59, Dem., 61, Free Soil 18. Toy
or. Democrat and 25 yet to hear from.
The whip have e'lected TWO Coogress
men—being a (MIN Of one 1
"HOPEWELL . AWAKE !"—Under this buipi.
ring caption the last Volunteer gives some
lengthy proceedingp of a Cass Butler Meei•
ing in Hopewell Township, • at which there ,
appears to have been . exactly two persona
present I John. P. Rhoads presiusd, and
Thomastusk acted as Secretary, atter'Which
John P. Rhoads read a series ot, resolutions,
which Mr. Lusk no doubt adopted with great
unanimity I Hopewell must be very wide
awake for Cass and Butler !
GOOD REASONS FOR VOTING FOR GGN. CABS.-
One of mr..Cass'.l3 stump speakers in The dark
corner oil ennessee(where some green things
vegetate) a few days since discovered the'
true reasons why Gen. Cass shoald be Pres
ident: "Why, says he, a' man who has six
lives, eats ten rations a day, gets four sala
ries at a time, 'and has an opinion for both
sides of every question, must . be the greatest
- nifir.infrer*nrhttlbelltrvel - enultentiviiree
old parson Stownlow of it iLL co - Al see the
!Ad hose."
THE VOLUNTEERS MOVING I—Ont of forty•
Mx members of Capt. Nagle's company of
Pottsville, just returned from Mexico, THIR
TY-THREE havit publicly declared them.
selves for Gen. Taylor! The Locolocos had
previously crairned the whole of them
Au. Fon TAI - I.oll.—The Wayne Guards it
appears retort:et, from Alex too, unanimously
in favor of Old Rough and Ready. Captain
McKamey stated ib his speech at Calm"
Creek that he did not know of a single mem
ber of the Company which he had comman
ded, who would not cast his vote for "Oul
Rough and Ready." Does this look like "the
volunteers going for Cass?" They remem
ber the bill projected by this functionary to
reduce their pay, while in .11Iexico, and are
determined that he shall know it on the 7th
of November next.—Hrogingdon Journal.
rrrhe beauties of the British Locoloco Tn.
rifl of 1846 are developing themselves daily,
more and more. We learn that the N. York
and Erie Railroad Company have just closed
another contract with English manufacturers
for 5000 additional tons of Rail Road Iron, at
815 per ton, delivered in New York! 'Here . is
the enormous sum of 5225,000 which might
have been keptat home and distritieted t a •
mong, our farmers, laborers, andanechanics,
wending its way into the capaciotis }ales of
our British neighbors—and all this is caused
by Dentocratie rule! May Providence in his
wisdom soon deliver us from -this blighting
"democraPc rule."Readuit Journal. •
CO-The Army Orders at Washington have
assigned General Scott to the Eastern Divis
ion of the army, and General Taylor to the
Western Division.
Otr Charles S Wyttkoop of Schuylkill, a
brother of the Coloirel, has taken the stump
(or old Rough and. Read 37. He is said to be
a better speaker than his brother.
CAVED IN!—The New York corre
spondent of the Ledger says that Mr.
Clay's letter to Brooks has made a per
fect nullity of the attempted Clay dem
onstration in that city. The .whigs
throughout the Union will -now present
an 'undivided front, and victory certain!
41 1 ""
•MILITARY I'ARADE iery - hand.
sdni e ' itery parade com Rrie i Capt.
Crop's atid Hendersol'o tempo
jiiie is ,of
‘ tlie
of • Atecliarticiburg, and a company - from
, Hogeidown, took ilace ci& Satarday in
,04110.1P:;`,::131,e, Aims very fine.
make.
foe'•llfen! . •
AiJalitge enthugnislic miming of
the ','MeWdS'.:'nf',
— TAYIOII.; , 'JOHNSO,N;
601'd:still: ileum) Of" Lewis Rabbi'. ‘in Allen
_
on:nsl!ie;
, Satiirilnk evening _
yiee=
dog waccirganized ` as
-Presidliit:—AßßAHAM coo Lg.
4 Pict TresitAesti.—?)olin sherbalin, Elias Me
dan?, ,P,Nebineerl
Jacob Zir Alf; M. , Mile '7 `Hiram fienlA
' lienryßre z, an . . -urnue
'Secritailies—Henti ißranjnMOSil).- tia4
cob'; Kuhn.,:] i• .!9 1 , 1 1 1 r,i1 1 ,41D , 5 ) 4 , P*1!. 1 4 1 . ;gei l re,w ,
A,
• ° series ebrise;Alent;rita° l 4iiPlielo o , j"d•
I ...?° * ! lll o:!i ti Oe# o4 +: lloo ' 4,io ir :
bY;e
‘cw,e - are 0 0114 4TP - I • ,
t a taus e n
PP,,
-440462110h6:04,10n •Ippliri leuo Or
0 1 g0 4 11 1- roFO IO -
'P,it'f',PllloiP7:olAih.olll444ll,7,
- :°NOW'MOn - t - '"10 - THE - iittilH1
CAINE RALLY!
QF THE FRIENDS7TIF
- -
2:IIIe.LOR, Pillmore, John
son end alliddleswarthl
THE CONSTITUTION, FREE SOIL AND
HOME IMDUSTRY!
mrzziam moan GRAPE!
The friends of the PEOPLE'S CAN
DIDATES, TAYLOR; Flumonit, JOHN..
ioN and. MIDDLESWARTH, in COMBER.
,LAND and the adjoining counties, are
herebyrequested to assemble in general
MA SSM EETING,
CaRLISLE On TURIM
the sevehth of October,
to fake measures for promoting the elec
tion of our candidates.
Friends of the brave, the heroic, the •
unflinching old warrior—Gen ZACHA
RY TAYLOR—the youthful Hero of
Fort Harrison—the great Captain who
covered himself, his army and his coun
try with glory, at Monterey and Buena
Vista—but who is the friend of PEACE
—who i.s as humane and magnanimous
in victory, as he is lion-hearted in battle
—whose greatness is only equalled by the
modesty and republican simplicity of his '
characterwhose military 'fame.iti only
surpassed by the purity and integrity of
his irreproachable_ and - siainless
call upon you to TURN-OUT on this oc
casion !
Come in the majesty of the'People's
strength,! From, the mountain, the val
ley, the village and the town—from the
farm, the Workshop, the furnace,the forge
and the factory—let the toiling sons of
industry, of every class, and every age,
and profession, come to this mighty gath
ering of the true and the free friends of
Gen. ZACHARY TAYLOR!
He has led "forth your aellant Volun
teers and met the enemies of your coun
try in baffle—he has "never surrender
ed" to the -foe or been defeated—but has
borne your striped flag in resistless tri
umph from , field to field, bathing its stars
in fadeless glory, every'suceessive victo
ry surpassing its precedent in plunder,
and.riow, the War erided, he is by t)Ar
spontaneous and grateful impulse the.
candidate of his countrymen for the high
est office in the Republic! Shall he not
have it? His actions have shown his
greatness—his unsullied life proves his
honesty—his patriotic , career has shown
him faithful to the Constitution. Come
then, free hearts, to tho gathering, that ,
you may advance the good caus*TAT. -
. LOR and the Constitution • x
Let every friend of good goiftrinterit,_
—every friend of Peace, and opponVir
of schemes of Conquest—every advocate
of Free Soil and American industry--ev
ery opponent of the One Man Veto pow
er—every one who desires to see the pol
icy of the earlier Presidents restored,and
the government brought back to old-fash
ioned republican simplicity—let ALL
COMP TO THIS GLORIOUS GATHFRING
Distinguished popular speakers wil be
present to address the meeting. The
Hon. WM. P. JOHNSON, •the Rough
and Ready candidate for Governor of
Pennsylvania, has promised to meet his
fellow-citizens on this ,occasion, and give
his views of public policy. Other well
known and eloquent speakers will also
be present.
Come, then, friends of TAYLOR and
JOHNSON I come to the Meeting. Come
out as you did in 1840! Let us go to
work now as we did then; and an equal !
ly triumphant - victory - will — crown our ef
forts ! By older of the Co'y. Confmittee.
JAS. S. COLWELL,
Chairman.
Sept. 11. 1848
K CET IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE! .
The Washington Union, the "by authority"
organ pt the great locoloco party, gives the
true position of Taylor and Cass on therms-
Pon of Slavery extension. The editor of the
Democrat says we are committing afraid
upon our readers in representing Gen Tay
to be opposed to the extension of Slavery.—
But the following extracts from the "Union"
show that we are correct, and that it is the
Democrat which is falsifying the views Of
Cass and Taylor:
Cass in favor of Slavery extension.
" At-all events we are happy to under
stand by private letter that General CASS
firmly stands the ground which he has taken.
'Being applied to formally by a man of the
Wilmot stamp, he declared unhesitatingly
that he adhered to his Nicholson letter anti
to the Baltimore platform' and that elected -
Pendent, he woad VETO Truk Wismar Pao
viso."••••-Wash. Union, Aug. 1, 1848. „ •
Taylor opposed to Slavery •Extension:
There can be no doubt nbent:General TA T. ,
Lon being•opposed to this exteneion cif Slave
ry. His letter to "Gen:Gaines .'end'the Cm
einnati•Signal nee proof
. q[this,figt, ..-,Thitt he
fives in a slave State ; Is no aqui/lent • that he
wishes its extension., Thousands of ,the citizens
of the, South believe, slavery to be ieToilEcih ern,
aspect in which can tic vicired"Washing
too Union, Aug 5, 1848,, • .
the went,commf!" pit!
optficirk*je
"'sands4f4o l zPnci. okayst
o
..i.if4 4 *
to-be in o .reiY. BB Pi ttl i J!.l.rols*
;liiiyjcirilie-inaby-faelerthavOLabOwilt ' •
‘_...d11 ali t CptIMIOn
,I,' fiTHE Gil' AT ' ,En t I PA,,- - -" a , hi),, L ij aii .
,jp, p r a&t: . .
erroiltiluroPe""'ntil'" T'n-i-PrO"oo.ldy
00 , 4 , 0?.01 , 00.1,,_a.0,Thiita i 1ut,,a,.. 0 , ..ou
of thki ; veord! 3 ' l,o P i i!v"W ~ ~ ' ''''","j p/. 1 ,1 ' ,', 1 7,,:T:.
gießt,:politica!,dr , that
,I..iiiiii4,4,--,diusie,'eti:
.I fiel ' ak ' l'M'";: "• 94 '7" : l;;,liiilitilii ( lolkl Court
, logislic vf0,r4 , 9 1 1', ltillk ifi*ori4oiiiiifor
111PEACC010 : 1 9 1 / 1 1 1 10`peri.i4fdr . ii:Fro*ti"Irt
lh e ifl n klf 49; rl ;.-h truti,..waqiinigio,airl
'lrtitc4:lo*il Alf , !1,1, _., ...: ,
~,,,,
~., i, , .
l , • ' , ;'',h , v.'• ,, ` ' '-- ,' r ',.!' 01',r,',. : .. , .
itilliiti' T z,,,,-,;'•:,:d“W -4----==:=- ~.`
c,.044.0,-;,;:,
.:rtill.llVolitititi.4.l7.,:,::,..\,l,i',;;:ri,l;4,hit;.
-!.. 01t.,,'“ ' r h i - itii4lVCh,rirliii FrACrifiti,
iitiirliPlOr99,9Yl4l,----,-,i.7.; r, , A 4 n,..e7. z,
. 1- '1 3 , l# oll oo 6 vg 4 iMii°r,r - '
',,,-,,.,/1"'
•
-•!'''';.,,;.:::".,f,',:,'''':!''',i%:.4;4'.;V'f.i'l'i
a,,