Erie weekly observer. (Erie [Pa.]) 1853-1859, August 26, 1854, Image 2

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    lytivani to n, le* n) Valli" *I"
Letter of the See. John Chambers
Plo.anflo Iphia Letiqr. ..;
Mtssas EDlToitti :—During a recent c 141 t to
the Bedford Springs, I was celled upon 1) some
of the matt ardent friends of Temperance in the
State, and invited tv address the people of Bed
ford on the importance of inducing evt ry friend
of humanity to vote for s prohibitory liquor law
IA the ensuing election I most cheerfully com
plied with the rtsquem of these gentlemen, and I
had hoped that I had discharged the duty unpos
ed upon me to the satisfaction of all
I regret to observe, however, that my remarks
on that occasion have becomes topic of nevi:4 pa
per discussion, and my motives impugned I
deem it due to others as well as to u slf-that
the truth should be known
My recollection' is, that I urged up th, p.
ple present On that lm.)easiou the ato_p.rtauta
the temperance reform igenerally, and exhoited
them to vote fur a prohibitory law at the next
vitiation I expressed the belief that the whole
ituestion was ine,ilved in the res.llut,oti ,
ibt the people to vote for and a o tain-t a to obilo
tory law, and that the real trielcl. , l3 teanrwralke
shoul4l direct their attellt4oD t.. that pmut and
that only 1 laelared nay hello atilt it the law
was demanded in this wii), he the ~I.!t of the
people, it mattered but little wla titled
of Governor —the law .huuld he aa.tucti. , ned
that no man would ,et barnacle against the will
of the people I ,aid then, as I repeat now, that
I believe either of the distinguished gentlemen
would carry out that will if put in a kortu
tent with the terms of the Constitution
did say that tloveruor Bigler Yr 40 it ,1
beinucnit to resist the will of the people. and
that I had every eonfitien,e berod.e• to hi. Je•irt•
to do any reasonable and proper thug to t
the vie* of intemperance; that I limos from ,or
respondence and personal int, reour., with Mtn,
that he held the dile:trine that the will ot tht•
people should be binding so fah en reltito‘l to the
policy of the measure, but that he will n ot
yield his right to judge of the eoll,tittlti“tiaht)
and Justice of a law when it came Isf re hint
he would not so far forget the dignity of •ia
lion or the obligations of his oath. But litt‘t t
nor Bigler has written to m, nit It•tter int•ou-t•
tent with his manly letter to the Temporanee
Convention
I felt more at liberty to r.a) what I del ~t
iov Bigler. Lecauoe I believed au atteMpr h id
been omit: t.i proititute the .aereki teiu
pomace to mere partetau ends, and t.. turu u, in
finioce against Lis re-rleetiou I ltd u t he-ir.Lte,
so I tamp not, to rebuke this attempt, Aml I in
tend no to do whatfArer and wherever I ma) tu,
it, and thus is the true and real eatew ..t the eom
plainta Which have been pref ., rre.l apitea my
Bedford addreet
I also, at the same meeting in Bedford, rely)
rod to a sect et sworn political organization. wire,
object, an far as it is made known, ts tip disfrin.
chime ever y a d o p te d citizen of this o,,ritt-e,alu
try, and that too, in the face of guar:into , .
of the Constitution of the ()aired State , , well
as of our own beloved Commonwealth, 1, .ti, ..f
which reooguite the adopted citizen on thi situ•
broad platform of civil and religion- lile•tc u ith
the native born. Doubtless then, "the head and
front of my offending, - in the ey e . of ~1
the unknown and aitkii,ricliig .troug
sad uncompromising opposition to .1,
whether Pp-eters/int or liipat, and with the.,
men the same objection rests against tiol Rig.
ler, because of his tired determination not to %
claw the Constitution and laws of tin- land, by
disfranchising adopted
cit.tens, either iti aee•ottit
of their religion or the place of their forth
There are in In) own church, and to ever . %
other church in this -Land of the free and home
of the, brave," men of foreign birth as pure pa
triota, and as good men a.. ever breathed the air
of fn.:Wu—men, who to ibi Is the
,Cosstitution and l a ws of tb. country of their
adoption. Are these men to be disfranchised
and stricken down like felon-, by the iron baud
of a secret sworn band of petty despot.
true -hearted, l'imstitutiou and law-lacing
JCaa christian and patnt , o will an• Mer But
if the men who have emigrated front Scotland,
Ragland, Ireland, Wales, tat rmany, France, and
elsewhere, and made this the land of then adop
Lion, citizen by choice and not by accident, aud
smog whom are to be found soup ot or best
citizen,., are to he turned out of poittical society
and treated like serfs, solely because they sere
born out of the United States. let rho:. who ir,
secretly sworn thus to treat them, tallow the ei
ample of the M a yor of Philadelphia, sod
SNOW their purpose. and not hide thems,ive. or
their actions (min the light of day it ,silt he
much more in accordance with the t, -• \iiii ti
can character
So far as rep: 1. thr bald and weak u, v. 1111. , 11
that I wad gtnouptde the State for R ig
kw, anti the vulgar and chililiab clamor f.r -Out.
hater, - 1 can afford far ar l am •
myself to itreat them with merited • ni t. ay ..
sad to let pls.+ we tli. idle %Ain i 1
have a higher, holier, better E
o_jet• — t h.
of a:Prohibitory Law—and am ther..fore
Dot ala rmed the..- Temp, /11 T,,q„,/,,
neither will they prevent we from urging upon
every Mend of lrutuanity in the State, 4. , ‘ .it,
for a Prohibit ~yLii{uur Lax witie,ut , ind
for Orll,vernor fur whoioniecer tlit)
.&a it ni) own vote, t wtjl •1:1, 1631
tioverao3tr, 11. or Lao ,ath,r 11/31i h
my rote for the ofEtet 01 . Gos ar. tatala..—
willing to •lubtnit to the will ~t thn
this great and all.amportaut yue-tioo --nor ea",
L vote fora member .1f either tar aua ka aat tha 1... g
Istature ou any lather groaltaal fan will 1
vote for a member of au) J. •••uat
Protestaut hariug g ' rcaa-aau 1.•
believe him much Ilow eoulal I vaate tsar
who are alworu to disfrarieht-e tu) lather, ill) itti
ale, my brother, all,' A.LtiP %at
sod detirftst friend.' that I lau% , anal • anat. at Ha
beet turn ate wy church
Yours, &c ,
Wafts rfo. Este —We pai,l a low! ‘l4it,
yesterday, to the wreck of the Ern wish Ii 1.•
now being hauled out of the creek I. the land
just above the ship yard of Rants
The part of the v. svl alluded to is the middle
portion, and is about one blindr,l Alp] thirty feet
is length Of this about flirt feet .had been
battled out of the water ye.t..rday t..renoon—
hauling having been cumuli:n...l on Ott-previous
evening It t, a ellrious coincidence connected
with the Erie, that she was burned on the 4th of
August, 1841, and that her is r,ck was raitwd on
the Wait day of the' month t'64 The expenses
ineenTed thus far mu raising hay.• be. , 11 about $12,-
000, and the value of coin, irou,lk . &c , already
tikes trots her is alsmt 515,01111 to iIIS,OOO-40
that the venture has not thte. far prove 4 an un
weimesehl one While we were on the' wreck
wee of the men picked up thr cane of a silver
watch, sad a day or two since about 111,200 in
juncion gold, bright as if just from the mint,
gni lowa Dearly midahips It is supposed that
"b oat $BO,OOO of coin are still in the part now
Swiss healed out, and this sum will be "angered"
by the parties roped in getting her np. The
mark is fo ndrkexed under the supervision of Mr.
than, o f the irm of Mann, Vail & Co , at whose
warehouse easy be seen large quantities of stuff
taws from the wreok.— ANjj,mL. eoffri,r
SUMMAR DIATEL-4}eii... t !Wh ose ,
Is
benr
os t h e m a ne d , employed just below the
eisy, as Toseley last, while in apparent health,
west OD the easerseter under glom he was work
medo=cul hist to send (Or prat, say
wag he die in half an hour. The contract
or being inclined to humor what he supposed
was the assn's whin, complied with his request
O'Halloran confosned; sad atter receiving the
last rites of his raligina, laid dwell upon the grass
in the Said where this singular texurreace took
place, and, after a while, quietly Mani sway in
death. He had no sialsdy of which any one we,,
otigninani....-chicasto Jejferaumtuk.
JOHN CIIANIBER
eletkip Obstrbtt.
BRII, PA
SATURDAY HORNING, AUG. •:6, 1854
DIMOCRAIIC IWAI2 1101X114121011
YOK GOVZANOR
WILLIAM BIGLER,
Of Clearfield County
JUDOS OF SUPRSMS COURT
JEREMIAH S. BLACK,
Of Somerset County
FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER
HENRY S. MOTT,
Of Pike County.
The Desocruie Address
\V t.- givt• upon the outside of this week's paper
(tit Address, No I, of the Democratic State Com
mittee This paper to devoted exclusively to a
discussion of the ts-ue presented to the people by
the •uw and uhjeetis it that ..eeret organization,
called ••Know Nothings, - of which Judge Put:
L o ck, th e opposition Candidate, it is well as
eertaitttd, is a member' And we ask for it,
from all 1111 r readers, no matter what their poli
tical pr , slivitie-, a ',•arefol and candid esamina
tiou Li, is upon a 3 tilleck which demands of ev
ery man strieu, retieetitiu"lle issue is whether
men shall be allowed to worship tiod according
to the dictates of their own conscience, or whetb
,or they shell ree Whether persecution shall
be revived in the nineteenth century, ur whether
it shall not' \\' :,ether twenty millions of Pro
testants shall persecute and proscribe—deprive
of all participation in the affairs of government
-a few hundred thotutand believers in another
or whether, in the language of the Consti
tution of tear country, "no religious tests shall
h. required Another issue is, whether the
p hey ~f our government, in regard to naturali
zation and the eueouragement of emigration, nn•
der which we hay.• and prospered, and
iuultiplied as no nation ever did, shall be chang
ed to the narrow policy of a secret midnight cau
cus -1 bigots Whether the good old Jeffersonian
iequutition, ••is he honest, is he eapable," shall he
set aside iu the bestowment of honors and office,
by one of hirth ('pun such an issue, it is easy
to determine where the Democracy ought to be,
an•l by reading the address under consideration,
it is as easy to determine where they are' Read
th• ,ddre,s, and then judge:
Its Legitimate Fruits
11 . , I t, ro giving newspaper notoriety
t ti g ht that occurs, because we be
lieve eliat uc) bad There are ominous,
however v.lien "AWL ,k,cusretices "point a moral,
and adorn tel.. One of that kind took place
as Tlittrolay 1)r .Johnson, of this city, a bro
ther 1 the l'ldtrot ot the r 'unstitution, was met
upon the .trect by a N:gro Barber named Clif
f‘ortl, when, in consequence of some fancied inju
re, an injury, by the by, that had been adjuib
eated before legal tribunal,) the latter eom
'mowed , violent %smolt upon the Doctor by
knocking how down, and beating him in a must
shocking manner "It is not necessary to our
purpose too viiy One word fur or against the Doc
ir or his assailant., with them the public have no
thin, to I. But to the ps.litieiaus and the par.
ties who, by their •.t ;.s.l and Liberty" harrangues
--tlieor constant appeals to the passions and
prejudiees of the people—their unceasing efforts
to instill Mt.. the winds of whites and blacks
the fanatical dogmas of the day—their anti
. Nebraska crusades„ and its legitimate result, the
waking of black- believe that the "negro ques•
"tile great question which now absorbs
large skate of public atter s ,tilo, - we have no
doubt way be asoribeAl 311 such ocourrenocs.—
These pion:dans and abuse parties teach the
blacks that they are 3/04 g ) , %I—ua3., better than
t For than, Ofit,..USl itt) , they hold con
% ell! io n s --for them, s isteusibly, they agitate the
e on ti tri , threaten 4 J . /solution ,11 the Union, and
pl.-claim through their orgzio, the. New York
Tr d'art, , rant I f vrrh. , "Better that confusion
shook! cool, —l,etter that thsoord should reign
iu Council- —better that Cougresm
should break up in wild disorder, nay, better that
the capitol moult should blaze by the torch of the
inceudiary, ar tell and bury all its inmates be
'neath its crumbling ruins, than tint' the white
inv. should have the privilege of deciding the
nature of the institutionr they propose to rear in
the tree and boundless west. We say the par
• ,es and the partlzaus we allude to proclaim their
t,. risies ostentibly for the Macke: but it is only
ostensibly! It's 3 base sham' It is power and
plat., they seek for themselves, not the freedom
or the welfare of the negro! It's their own ag
grandizement they are after, hence they seek agi
tation to obtain it; and that agitation can only
be accomplished through "Saratoga Conventions,"
"Fusions" re-unions, and the like.
h. • f
It is said by the Pittsburgh Pot!, upon
what it believes to be good authority, that at the
convention ut the Know Nothings, at Philadel
phia, the other day, they quarrelled among them
selves, and drew sod flouriehed knives bravely.
The quarrel Arose on the question of transferring
the whole vote of the order to Pollock The re. the Riecutive, and as a private citizen, he lids
solution was vote 4 down The Bradford men labored unremittingly for the adjustment ..f
not only prevailed to that, but they also prevail- our railroad difficulties satisfactory to Erie and
ed in electing th e .ehai rinau of th e convention.— just to the State If he has not succeeded in all
Twice Bradford beat Pollock in the convention. that we could wish, it is only bemuse he had
and the convention finally adjourned without de- not the power At any rate, the adjustment of
ciding the question as to which of the two claim- the Western road question only met his , y p,•..
ants should receive the undivided vote. Brad- ; ail after it bad been approved and r o t,,i /;„
f or d w ill p ro b a bly p rev ail The nativ es , who the members from Erie courtly. as well ur the
form the basis df the order, will stick to Brad- friends of the Sunbury and Erie road generally:
ford The few Democrats who have joined will . And now, will Krie county app - ibve of these
vote for Bradford, but not for Pollock. Brad- ; acts sad these efforts of Gov Minya in her he
ford's ()hawses of securing the vote are the best. • half ?—or will she disapprove of them?" That
This is evidently what the GazeNe apprehend' iis the issue Twist it, turn it., as you may, that
w h en it declares i ts d eterm i na ti on t o tu s k the is the uses, and the only one, which the election
result of their action next October before laying in Erie county ought t o decide. And hence, let
any thing is the way o f ap p enwa l or di sallow ,. us look a moment upon the effectosfr decision
al;" if it don -hods cause of di eetisfaetion (i. e. j will have upon the future: ID a few days th e
if they don't vote toi Pollock) it will boldly and'W Supreme Court.of the State will decide the ques
unhisitatingly express them." What a "bold" tion st issue between Erie and liarborereek, and
Editor! Hero is an element that his party may I tbe Railroad company. We take it for granted
or may not we' Until he ascertain whether' that that decision, in all essential points, will be
they use it, he is mess, but the waviest the lin our favor. We know, from the movements
question is decided—es soon so the grave yard ia I of the railroad men, that they look upon it in
past—he promises to become as' "bold" as a lion, that light, and are even now preparing to go be
arid "whistle right out" spook or no spook! We fore the legislature to have the holes in their
say again, our neighbor is a "bold" man—as . charter mended. The contest in the Legials
"bold" as a abs?!! tuft next winter, then, will decide whether the
railroad coasbiaation shall triumph, or the pet
sign. Thciaac 1' Jocaap, charged with s h oo t. pie; god it it 'Of the peep& of Erie b. MI
jug in gm T•levapb Olioe, at Hamitic's, sear their eleittiu« B . * Octobor 'Aid' if than he If
ei t asiar is ti, gr o o m a. s o ws , h as b en Uot. Bigler. cootie ib t hi' latter .
wd to bail in SIO,OOA. He hand so diflosity r.l (t
t l 4 l l 2 i Pt'id" uf . ( h'osiwl , ••, it csukuut
iv securing the regained amoont. be that either his 'fries& or himself
Misr that gliongd net be ?apt
12=ZIEI
'The election which is la Mike plow* in theober
is one in which Erie, sad her citisens, have mote
direct and local interest than any that has occur
red for years' l'pon'its result mainly depends
whither the policy adopted, and the course pur
sued by this city and Harborcreek towards the
Erie and North East railroad, backed up by the
pod wishes and words of encouragement thee ex•
tended to us, from the balance of the country, shall
be heralded - forth as having been approved, or this
approved, by the "Sober second thought" of the
People' This is the imam involved! Tbis is the
question which must and will be decided at the
ballot-box in October In that decision, what
ever it way be, we, for one, shall feel ourself
hound to acquiesce' If the "either second
thought' of the people shall thee declare that
the city has been wrong—that. Ilarborereck Les
been wrong—that those who sympathised with
us abroad,—who exercised their personal and of
ficial influence in our behalf, and by that means
averted the interference of the Federal authori
ties,---have wasted their eytupaties upon, and
then influence in favor of au ungrateful and forget
ful people—then, we say, in that event, we as a
Democrat, bound to obey the decision of the ma
jority, will deem it our duty to acquiesce, and
henceforth' interpose no obstacle u. the utmost
fruition of the hopes and wishes of the leireeuirs
of that road In that event, they may place
their iron heel upon the neck« of this people, and
front us they shall bear no word of remonetra4ce
or complaint And why; because at the peoiele
so decide, why should te. tiomplaio! &Num/ if
the people of Erie and Erie County love their
party better than their liberties, it' they ale dee
posed le submit their future to untried hauds,
because party fealty dictates thus, in prefereuee ,
to the hands of one who periled his personal,
politics.l and official reputation, in order to sus
tain us, they give the best evidence in the world
to nit that that which they considered paramount
to every other oonsideration a few mouths sieve,
is now considered of but secondary impertance
Why du we talk thus? Let us review the past
and See
Wheu the President and fiancees of the Erie
and North East Road, ou the lit day of No
vember last, issued their tuauifesio, and declar
ing their determination to etrike a blew, as we
thought, rt the local interests tat our city, and
the general interests of the Ciuuutonwealth, all
classes, and all seam, and all parties, united heart
and hand in determined opposittou 'jst persie
nal feuds were forgotteu—poltneal differeuves
were laid upon the altar of the g, nem) i Misl—
ead like a band of brothers we all pledgee our
selves to know no differeuce until we had achiev
ed our rights, or were erushed in the etinfliet
It was to no longer, -Is lie a Whig'" he
a Deutecrat(' but is he faithful to Erie! We
grant that no direct pledges of this kind, were
given None were required, for then it was
that the people of Erie, outside the ruilroail to
&tenet, were a unit. They thought alike, they
acted alike, they spoke alike Had it not been
so, we would have became an easy prey to our
powerful opponeuts .Ind h. re we do not wi-h
the people to forget the pots - . r ch o re agattot
whom Erie, isolated au I alun, boa: up arms --
They were a powerful eiiilia nation, ex
tending from the Atlauti ie ili. NI rep
resenting more that. tifty if ,-,tpital, an,l
controling, to som au 1 ,titluencitig iu
others, by mean- r-mal its, tie teeire
newspaper pree, ,if the eoutitiy -an engine at all
times powerful, and in our ease twist unfortunate •
ly so t uder the pri-esure of this outside influ
ence we were jbe point of being crushed—
crushed by a combinative' that, misrepresented
as we were, we could not withstand. The entire
country, outside the borders of our own state,
was against us, while within our state few, very
few understood us, and fewer still sympathised in
our struggle. The agents of the railroad were
in Harrisburg endeavoring, to poison the ear of
the Executive, and invoking the power of the
Commonwealth to crush us in this mission the
failed, for they found a man in the Exeent tt
chair who had a heart to feel for the oppreesed,
as well as a head to fathom the waives of the
oppressors He had also the courage to fool 'w
the right when the path was clearly pointed out
That man was Was Brotxa it was then that
he sent us words of encouragement—of sympathy
—of hope' And from that hour the tide if pop
ular s. ntintent against us, titeitiltly set hack
From that hour our opponents saw the baud wri
ting upon the wall; and to avert the fate it fore
told, they then app. lied to a Federal court -
We need not repeat the history , if that disgratee
' ful prostitution of Judicial authority, but their
is one fact which certainly ought uot to he for
got When they had eucceeded in securing
the eo operation of that court anti its officers. and
had also secured a false return, setting forth that
the Marshal had been resisted in the discharge
of his duty, and hence had a pretence for iuvok
lug the interference of the Federal Executive,
and through him the military force of the I 'ne
ted States, William Bigler, as Governor of the
Commonwealth, again stepped forth to ward off
the blew He succeeded, and once more the
President and ihrectore of the Ene mei North
East road, with the powerful combination at
their back, were foiled by the tinunese and inflii
, ence of Gov Bities:a And frem that day, as
will 11
011..11 1, 1 to thwart the popaki' will of
pesspl, as deeply interested as onts.rihse
Pointedly sod etuldtedeally expressed' It is ties
for the people of Erie to decide, we ey, anti tip
on their deelsion depends l b. mud" We do
not say this bemuse the Iroise of the people of
Erie are necessary to 1160111141 . 1iis deaden! By
no means ' That event it simply decided as
definitely as any eyelet in the fusee can be deci
ded that depends upon votes! The only ques
tion now uh, how large his majority shall be—
whether it shall be 15,0011 or 20,000! But we
say it, becau.se we desire the issue to be distinct
ly understood, so that in the fa/ore tier guy
he no complaints or repining's! We want the
people to uuderzatand whom they will serve—
thetnselv,,,, or Know Nothing intolerance;--
themselves, or party fealty; themselves or An
ti-Nebraska agitation ? : themselves, or temperance
demagogues; themselves', or the Shanghai omit
bittatiou: As ye make your bed so ye shall rest,
and do not quarrel with it. if it proves a bard
wie '
- - -
Tomporanoe and Know Nothings—Rev. John
Chambers' Letter
We publish this week, the letter of the above
mimed gentleman, which appeared in the Leiiyee
of Monday Mr. Cham b er is • Presbyterian
clergyman., and has probably the largest congre
gation of any elerytuan in the State. He ig an
ardent friend of the Maine Liquor law, and has
olt*.o been praised by the Whig press for his el.
041:WO( lidvoi.sey of that mase He is uuw con
demned by the same press because he refises to
prostitute that oallSe• tee the • lleVe..l of Whiggery
See Los Is tier sit this day's paper for his opinions
on that Inbprt
Ile al. , takes strong ground against the Know
Nothing , fie witnessed the scandalous con
duct ot and his Know Nothing
t'ouncils since the lite election in Philadelphia,
*MI Lai tike the great MAs of the peo
ple of Philadelphia, thoroughly disgusted with
this conspiracy of political trickster., who dare
not play an open game
The reaction in Philadelphia on this subject is
w.LII known, and extends to all ranks and classes
ot OIL people The term Kuow Nothing will he,
in that city, a term of reproach and derision
h,.r..,ift,r A few young ladies have been turned
out ot employment, appointments and onlitian
ce. delerlaillled in their secret coo•
chive.; and the Mayor of a great city has pros
trated buns If like a poltroon before au associa
tion that Jar, not ornly •igow its exi.:+tenci.., and
who*• itwitiber , dare not own their conuection
Kith it No wonder the people, are disgusted,
,11,1 the ieaction violent
th. r So .ay , thy Pittshurgh
•
mar The doesn't like our reasons why
the Denweratic Central Committee did not, in
their second address, (a document, by the by we
-hall publish next week') discuss the Nebraska
question It don't like the third address, either,
although that I. devoted to the discussion of that
tnea..urt Now. this is not uuexpeoceci to us;
therefs,re, i r ,• .611 no t s ho t " a single tear over the
(;.,-ette'. dislike. That paper never did like
ati3 thing that savored at all Democratic, and we
did not expert it. taste would improve at this age
"I it- corrupt and vindictive party life The
eliar g e, however, that the address 4hittioi the
9 t i 'II 1, a,
puerile as it is false, as our readers
shall .see moon as we can find room for the doe
ucuent Neither does this Bigler shirk the is
.ole lie ha. met it boldly upon the stump, and
will meet it boldly wherever he speaks; and our
coternporary can rest assured that nee of the pla
ces he will speak will be Erie
The Giszeite ham a good deal to say about a
"great question whi,•6 now absorbs a large share
of public attention •• Will our cotomporary tell
ua what that "great question" is! What's its
forte? and what's its shape? We know very well
what it was, in its opinion, a few weeks since
Then it was the repeal of the Nebraska bill, and
the restoration of the Missouri compromise; but
what is it now? The Missouri compromise the
rte hap always opposed It denounced Mr
Buchanan like a pick poeket LsTause he savored
the V: I..uskuu that line to the Pacific, and heave
any tears it shisis over that compromise now are
crocodile tears, or its denunciatons of that great
wan we:e of the basest kind, the result of A bad
heart or a had cause, or both combined: The repeal
of the Nebraska bill it knows to he impossible:
That humbug ha' been abandoned byeven great
er fanatie•k that , iur neighbor, it has been scout
ed, al,u, ar ilk by those who first set the ball in
motion, and who t aialy hoped to make it a hob
by that would satiqy land thew in power and
place' Wh:d then is the "great question which
now absorbs a large share tit' public attention,"
and at the same tune 90 disturbs our neighbor's
dreams" It cannot be whether slavery will go
into KaLIStl • ;t1),1 Nebraska, or not? 0, no, it
can't lie that, tot Poid.oca, the great "Know
Nothing, - knows something upon that point,
and -ays it ra•ver. nu, never, can What then is
the "great iine•thm - which so painfully exercis
es our neighbor's wind? "Auswer--oson..r—
,
somebody •'
Nur It Is worthy of remark that while the
11,1 y, Ia /4 n, Otaiterrrr and otherl)emocratic
organs denounce .fudge Potamett as a Know
Nothiug, they are engaged in the Yupport of
Henry S Mutt fur Canal Commissioner, who is
asserted to be a Know Nothing and the (wadi
date of the Know Nothings!' What consisten
cy !—C,l,2.zette
True, " what consistency " And now let us
try your "consistency" and your pluck, too We
say th at , c o l Mo TT i s not a member of the se
cret organization (Ailed Know Nothings." We
assert farther that Roo .lAmxs Pot,Loeu is
And to test whether our assertions are true or
not, we challenge you to join with us in a letter
to both Pot.t.n,•K and MoTT If Marc does not
come square up to the mark, and deny all con
nection or sympathy with that order, we will
pledge ourself to take his name from our Edito
rial columns, and use all honorable means to se
cure his defeat' If o n the other baud l'ot.bocK
du, s not come square up and deny all connection
sad sympathy with the Know Nothings, you
shall pledge yourself to take hix name from the
Editorial columns of the Gazette, and use all
honorable means to secure his detest Now
" fish or cut bait," or forever after hold year
peace :
81:01.11CT SOCIIMItS.—T •
he Evangelical Luthe
ran Z•ty nod of Ohio, and the adjacent States, have
pursed a resolutiou not to admit to elms-eh Man
btrAiiip any person belonging to secret societies.
Will some of the churches in t h is State rebuke
thi• anti-Christian spirit of Know•Nothingism
which is now rampant in our midst? The Rev
John Chamber%, with all the noble nianlioess of.
his nature, has stepped forward in this line of
Christian duty Who will follow it the setae
Pot!
dime wes.wisse Ga
lesii the forlorn hope of
not was befouls he yes
esti maim st Washisni
has not cured those who. Bedford °vulvae, who. la addition to editing nee of the best
in
Bed him on. Honest Woolf, ha never suspect- Deln"rratie
papers Lb. 14"1" ' h " lda tit* r"Ponitbi• poet
of Adjutant Getters' of the e.irameasetiahh. He was eo
lid th a t tim e who acted with him, were not as route for Meadville. to inspect the State Arsenal there. -
honest; but he has bad a sad awakening, and he I Politically, the General is as , enthusiastic ea ever. lie
finds that the road they had marked oat for him j says, sad we have no doubt of the fart, that the guberna
torial question is. already settled—that the only point yet
is one he cannot conscientiously travel. Hence
uncertain ts how large Biomes majority shall be This
he has resigned; but in doing so he finds it necee- ~,areded, he arerr, by the politicians el the sari
airy in pi liah NI island" to his togaggiggleattad.- I, Otis parues who bare risked Bedford nesines dsriag tas
few week". It was not, however, of the political as
fending and explaining the whys and the where- P s "
fore,
of
his courts.
yrs. It.
wee, it is
essay
poet of affairs that we were about to speak, but of thw ea
thapiasio• sad gronfytog reesepnou our Berman matt&ll
seen that Smith has little faith in the integrity friends extended to the 'letters! upon his return fr..w
of the Anti-Nebraska agitators. And it is easy Meadville, tin Saturday Seen after it was aseeruined
ID ate, too, that he know' very Well that the rea-
3ne general had arrived, the Battalion formed upon the
be te d ei,
sttleSqUale 11/ military order, and sent ire a doperstion
eon be has been abused and denounced,
re.duc.t the pleasure of an
cause he was too honest and honorable to du thy' General promptly 4,111.110.4. Slid wry introdu e .,o by
dirty work expected of hint by those, not only, in reply to the enthusiastic greeting with
Who sent him there, but by the fanatics in ill wh i ch h e ern e received, he said that it was &suttee' tea as
parts of the Union. He is too high-minded/1, It
wta w . lbe h
h ttl: gratifying that he appeared before that Battalion,
oud lu
like and brat w as ti dulled h'ee'Snillte". one I f u tai h i:es7,7 n ' t ‘ iCi l
hold the place and disappoint that numerous
the tioneral, %isittug Pennsylvania's lake city, net
class, who expected to make a bully of him,
tor the porn,. or meeting officers, either military or pot,.
without regard to his own sense of duty, under
the oath required by the Constitution Sad' . ""4l' pettLiet is ,llns P eet or congratulate
frum the
.. , 17:e , w , r o a t : ,. ::: " o r o , ly t h y where resuming
s.()ntiti 1: I . duty
d bi i n n i e t
41: t r r e s :s t '1 :1 , 171 1 : ,
he-- n en -
"I noticed strictures upon almost the very fi rst L
entirely unexpected, upon this hi s Brat visit t,. th e rot,
sentence of my very first speech in Congress,
which taught the that my official, no more than wera•ea ground o 1 perry, hr was tr e e to •ar was highl y
my private life, was to be exempt from the in gratifying Ile had reviewed and Pu ''
t Y
rnarid, oa %anon. , parts oh the btatie, when they wer r elein pe e"ln h ;
justice to which I have here alluded It so bap
petted that I begun that speech with expression, to legend th e .1 their e i nuntry in Mexico__ b,, pad
hihro, tortlurtne.l lhe same duty with those who had just re
Of civility towards those around we, and with
kind and charitable interpretations of the duff' - -- tipped from the held tit gtory• cut Irian the si.laierl%
epees between them and myself No sooner was tearing .1 those he was , then aildressoug, he het uo 414Ut/I
the speech in print than many Abolitionists coin- that it their "sung> rognlrel their son wee, they would
plained of my courtesy to slaveholders, and in h ethi tir•t bo h onhnhoer to go. and the last to leave where
sisted that I had been guilty of making light 'hulk r Like th e apt Iguaer's i . ouipaur.
the radical differences between Slavery and Ab ek..ry wan 01 ehhoral clanks in that ' river% hierlOnn terent
olition—betweeu Slaveholciers and Abolitionists s " "1"1"`i Ly ' ls ' ghillhint and who ]ought with on.
Assuming as they did, that I was "a une..id. Ire. cry from rUI tbr u 1 Sis sies,
Abolitionist," they further and very naturally to. laud •I,oht who. then , tooti belote min, would
assumed that I stood up to make that speech With not step to inyuire before they the orders their
nothing but Slavery and slavebolders, in my t•y. nhlnn. J cr is li,. *"I .•r.Lie poiEto id affinities, o r
the acme' Two things, which they should have remembrr ""'" r '" ,, 4 1 " tth. l4ll, ' knelt ]store the god
od,
they
-seemed
entirely
to
have forgotten beta, • Neither their Comilla/tiler 14 Chief sick
them that w, re born, or under what .retariati creed
One of these is, that I entered Congress with h
[tie eilkerience tit sae{ hr, the war
such peculiar theories of civil government—ma
war .1 1'1.... Sol ,/r war with Mei /C 44 La+ settled the
tured and cherished, however visionary and false
—as I foresaw must be continually bringing out 1""'"u° " ' at It4 " . ` "h" had at , l fromthe tyranny .ind
differences between my asawiates and my sell 1 ) 7:: ' ; "h" •
V 1 '4 1 4- hoh made their
al-. tree. Lace ur -trong arto• and as
not on the question of Slavery only, but on in
numerable other questions also The other li',
that among these theories is the duty, resting;
imperatively on the inmates of a legislative Lail,
to know nothing while in such hall of each (oil
er's private' character and private relations; and
to recognize and treat each other as gentlemen
Again, as an Abolitionist 1 desire the au
ne.sation of Tuba a, Our country, because that
would end the connection of ('uba with the Af
rican slave trade, and would, also, go far to end
the trade every where Ido not forget the chow , .
that to American slaveholders are in favor c,f
re-opening that trade with the country. But
know that the charge is nonseusical Not only
-does their interest forbid it, but I do them no
more than justice when I say that their civiliz.l
- forbids it They have outgrown the barbar
ism of the African slave trade May they speed
ily outgrow other barbarianisms which fall but
little short of it
I said, that, fur having wade th,
ferred mean my ,perch on t h e M ex i cali
Treaty--the newspapers ha% e call, d
buster." They have called me -pro-13% cry - ,t
so. But if to be tu favor oi .Lnuezing 1'0 , 4 t.
our nation makes me -pro-,l..‘ery, - then I Lae,
been "pro-slavery" fur years, 4- thane of you know
who, for year. have heard me speak in favor of
it. I readily admit, that if I stood upon the
platform ooenpaed by many anti-slavery wee,
and had a creed made of nothing else than "no
more slave territory, - I should 4ilt:Wr VP Li) be
stigmatized as "pro-slavery - for consenting to
have Cuba eowe with her slavery iti,o our nati,.o
—for then, according to wy own creed, I should
be "pro-slavery." But I thank God, that he has
not left me to take my stand ou that narrow pl
form nor any other like it."
Give us an Answer !
111=7
We have answered a great man) q uestions
propounded to us by our neighbor c,t,the t,',/-
•:ette, and if the answers have not been satisfp -
t,ory, the head was to blame, not the heart. --
Now, as "one good turn deserve!, another, - as
the fellow said when he bad the chap', nase up
on the grindstone, will our neighbor answer us
one or two' does Judge h ItleUr/
when it
_e says that -slavery can have no 1
e.ridenee to those territories Kansas and Ne
braakat either by act of Congress. ..r itu,i•-r the
/aka pretense of popular sovereignty What
did you mean when you told your readers that
the Kansas and Nebraska bill "legislate, slave
into those territortesY" Did you tell the truth,
or did Judge Politick Which, 0, Priest. which'
Again, what does Judge Pollock mean when II
says that, •'lf slavery enters those te rri t ories .
will he there not only without the authority ..t
constitutional law, but iu violatiou of law
Then, what did you wean wilco you solimuly a.
sured your readers, that thkier territories, although
dedicated to freedom by that "iolplnn compact,
the Mis.souri compromise," had been git eu oei
to slavery by the "Nebraska swindle," as you
sada& sullen the Nebraska-Kansas bill.' hid
Judge Pollock tell the truth, or did you . ' \V hicti'
0, Priest, which?
If Judge Pollock tells the t,iit/‘, :uhi "'laver)
caw haven() legal exuitence in the tarritoriet.,
either by aet l'otigre.s, or under the (*Ake pre
tenet• of popular ,overeiguty" ---if it P: true that
"if slavery enters those t. rruories it will be there,
not only without authority .if e.iniat it Ut law,
but law," what is "the grt at
question which now ab•orbr a large ...hare of pub.
tic atteutiouf" Don't "couetwle to I„• a Know
Nothing on theNe questions, - but "answet
,ire , r—likt• toatoebody''
ugh. The letter of Judge Black k which, by
the by, we will give in our next,) to the temper
ance men seems to meet with universal appr4dia-
Lion It contains sound doctrine, and Las well
and pointedly rebuked the efforts of whigs to
make the temperance cause a party issue. The
Philadelphia le lyrr hat, following on the
subject:
It is well said by Judge Black, that the law
was made for the protection of the weak and the
unpopular; and it may be added that.the tyran
ny of a majority requires 64 firm and independ
ent a judiciary as that of a monarch. Wheu
James 1., of England, required of his Judges
that they should pledge themselves to decide a
certain ovtuttittaional question according to his
wishes, Chief Justice Coke answered, "When
the casr happens, I shall do that orhirh ooholl
/it
. 14r a judge to do."
HOPI G TAROK DAASIX. —The Whig candi
date for Canal Commissioner was in town )ester
day. He informed his friends that he had sent
in his declination six weeks ago, but that the
committee - had as yet taken no action upon it.
This he was forced.to do in oonaNuanoe of hav
ing the misfortune to be born in Scotland. Of
course the radical Know Nothings would not
touch hint A of about owe hundred
Know Nothings from Fritssieugh rent east yes
terday. A oonvention of tbs order will .no
no Soul* soon pia* t h e assa to take Mr.
Dude's place.-- Skudani.
CM
'Omni ab
A lititary Visit
A.
t W e were city ousel% rained leo im•t. get , k .by 11 visit
tifrom mar,v.timmmod ftftimporary, 040s1. NowliamoledW
brat e h• :art-
11 S ru.•ttuln.4 ill , l lye
13tel thAt 143• ;I'ooli them 3 ,Fit•lter 34 U 1,30, they pore
I All I /VI u, w•,ntr« 1.41 AP,
t...rio Upult
whether nutt‘e nc.).teti, that neither %•ntt C. , lntaxot.ler
in t n 4' I,uttm• rnl. writ Its% e LIO 'Zeal
0.1 til tAt• :At a. rifiltu.stalg *Kunst au) wan.
r ,, r 11,,
is”rd 41.,11.• Ilia • I Lb lllab, r
OPP *LI t I 11,- • Me
6 4 4 ~.44 4-i 41. h i.• "untr) whery
14. r-hip -I .4 , 111,„! • 1 . , .. 1 the. 1•.. n ., leut,
6• prr-rn'•r rolintry err.,r
I=
ME
.rlii .1 tl4. •Lintr), tn-
lotit at, I r. Llit. , l.'llkit , r, whether itese
tteet'v Pr. , t,t.mt RIIs I,t .• aLid
Ill3=ll
d... 1 , I l•
att ILe trenenti eldriotutiell nv
lnar~kin~ i. in,tiar% Ir ••,Is ku.4L 1.. f tiattcrllLi u.
Ilf e tab , ~11f1 Ilfeh e.e,.reft 11 ty.• K„ E „i, the runt
r yr a .iu.l trw prr,..tial retirrti t..
\% Ow thri.e
=II
.-rn' I: 'lts.,l tinn.• th,rt, en
OEM
MEMO
MEM
I.iht.•le I
I I •, %ay 4.1 .telnrv•t. and
' 1 ,, II In. , ' Irti 1)) etteet 11p. 11.11/Itrr)
Ar A ,A A A A •1.11
hat • he plen.4llr.• ..t )1 nmptiri , trig that aftrr due
tawtt,r, the A djutato tieneral hno •unrluded to
I. Ai , 1% , 4 , 1 .:1 I it.ar). -..uu•trw. -
'or 140 ter, .1 artalt-rN '
f 1% fi iic and " rum un ni.prir. in t'le el 111 , 1 ure
• -rent pl • k•eause Cap: Woad, thr Lwal Mail Ag..nt
11,.:. about to k,e rvin..% ed. W r think they
.tota, e con•istency it rho N ...miplato be
aun ttr wam'ot retuoved long ago N. I , 4ent the etu
(.10 Iltpartateat u.,lk r ,rt."l utteuar Gar test
c., duty uud cu. "nu .dt.•nor
•
hill !Iv I it 1:r1,.r.•, li-w. v. r, 114 s, .lecisite steps!
.sk u m iho :...p , eetai Agent, Mr
at, hod :.• V ,• tiln , l .114 IVA, there a week, ah.
kb...VI t., the 1'..•1 Mater r I •ipt Lt. ..1,04,1f11.411
al. 1 in w l.ll It.lllllol . tb
•tilt v.,14 y t tr w„u•trut. &ti t hu4
,141.1.0 tn. up-r, th.
ni. tio . 1% 14,4 vt. r 1 ;311.....
I It, • 'lrk• ••1•IV IfKrat. thgulg.
M,--r• Isryant a. ,I 15,,,
I I•
t:,. F furl I u'.o
11.1n4 and Lq a I,,titet „t
r• u.kw• intt,l that 0 1111, ilk. .111
...1 t th•. rtia.tug 01 all ttir entiy,
=I
"r ut Wlt• l‘• return 14.tn1,....
. 1 .1 r .//rerril •Upply ..t Pesette- %ht. lir
1 tip,u ur tattle ‘e,.:.r'la) Ilt•
1:EMIMMIII
;it u I le we gut•••
vh..tat the •uppt) ..t t. Iter
ME
A 1 1 IA , /i.• :12 Ir. Ir-2: 2.12,
=MEI
.c. • 1(111131 I r,.% t• 1
1,4 4 '4 141 ii , r,?1 . 111 " , 01•••• 11/li . Ih. 11,1,1
•ttgli tt , rtl,.rtr.•t
.•'lf
• - unnoun, • thus \ Ir ,
It • •.• h i,drhine; , •hth.l r•hg. h
'he •• 1:111LI: iJW ••• ll,e ...LI PI
p E la) A,. i 111E11 tht tupth,, pa ISt
,{Ailti
RE
I IP II tl ii i uiu , a oi I • 'ynnker: 11 n e
....I 1 ,0. trait• thtti the I.: ht.!
ill, 1 I • • gtig
I • w .1:It r the ery .int
hit.iol I .er ..11 k it. lii i k a. nMn 1ii%,,11114;
It I IPA- V/ ili 6 , ,a lt% excre,lingl) reakal.le
1. ..ur N•.O I..rk • orre”.. , u•lent oil our out.u.le
Prt 11:3!lor 41 ' , he'll .111 it
:•*/- I I) Malt led tutu r oi the 111
t. /tl4 utr ularrtwge
• tht• L IL In .1(
that ”faintly entre , will iirown hi•
iv•r , kerr bun &len," rte. tau. • ~ite
~.116,1 .peak. 0,41 rap., ~,,, rsv tea as the M s evil
btlt we thiuk tr he i,Cut •'Aurae down . ' until "f.illtily
re•prm'dMhttus •' du it, ue'll .tauil r icwki wLite Sri
Lys Firer have leeen ragtag in various party if the
vounty for •el , •ril weeks, mut they are not eitinguoh
yet "'Much eatuahie timber has !teen destroyed to say
nothiug of the knives and other loose property who h has
suileresi. Nothing short of a weeks rain will Flay the hand
of the destroyer, and such a Messing appears a.. insprubs
We at the present writing as it did a month eta, e,
A. Among the numinationm in Crawtord. none give. ,
wore pleseure than that of our friend Wm.
Loi.. for Clerk of the Court. lie well qualified fur tae
—l4 a IMO: %Ad reliable Democrat,—a whole Sondra
fellow, whose election hy the 1..00e we confidently eount
upon recording in october' May hl. rhaduw victrr gr .w
end that la wishing a good deal!
w4fr- Herr to •utur capital which we bopr will
ti‘ul use fullower among our reader*.
if you want to eerye humanity effeenvely, don't com
menc•e *ending tracts that are never road, and duntlei
*turn! that are never worn, b. Afriea, but help the needy
ar• ;lad you. If there be an) old mail• about, get them
husi.aude; if pour glee them money; if widows, COIIIO6
them if pretty girl', please thew; if pagan/A, preach the
wurd to theta, stir thew up. turn. twi.t, l y, hod. stew of
,nok there into something Christian and good. After the 4
Link out fur the heathen and other t..lk 'in foreign parts'
- - Don't tonsil the trash .t the halantazo. Railroad
Bank, the Sisk of Washten.u. and Tennessee money
generally.
Our rn.ler' PLOUId Me 3 ram P WU) arty Where
await., or Knything oh* motet. we wteb they'd let nq knew
as. An loon littlit.r pheeu tiue.l f.. 0 t noticing
r girl in church.- -ba, Arr..
Cheap enough( We tiw.t. Lugged a girl to church *ewe
ten v-an ago, aa.l the wrap,- be: mat as a thouaana &A
tm* avert e•lif rhecoam ) ugo,
- •r ) lately, but theu final to your lo: , . f= doidallers, Ltie
" 1011 7's to as lacreamid population.
thrtr Lint, 1 1 14(,, ,r thetr
.voluur,l be. ,‘ th, ...entry when,
nay /...er o,d I rroi) I, ielt fr. e
i❑ Cll,l. or. i hirer for hi,
I •woi..i,K,•%,tb,
WIIII thl., WO
~ •yt pt rf•rmr I hi• •Ititte
1113111=1E1
1,•. Prowlar, Plkkini •,
~ a, t:lla II W.IN not t..r th,• taut
11 •,t. • tor,
=MD
'chess ,rasa
D
E,..
Treellk.g
A N 1.....,, 'A. 13*.erter-
There to a pia,. New I'.rh city w
eurtositiee Worth otraatiorattag--It,
Avast, war rwastilla. I des't owes
tmerterhus Zgypuest heerserpluce wad
Owen relebrit7 to other ..tierce, but 1 I
which LI shut up inbOta those
watt• %our iorttopond,ht hepl.rnrd
la At week, ri'.t "11 1.01. '4kton, h4.wip,
Illy wretetwd fl s ida,l
Don'ts no 141bcsa4r An gettaug to. tLe
ifl the dayOsading into the 111 , 14.• et.
to three story plastered ...Hikes, f..r to,
prowners Soo ran walk al..ng the
freely. thr ,ugh the grat,4 dour..
Thvy are allowed t.. reertv rhythm,
fricuti., and vain) , much Ithert) with
uwo. The .pot ~t gr,,uod on which , h
tvrtuerly r klu‘ k-pool, 3'14 a Aami. ..1
kit 111111 ark •h,At
lalgith (1N.., , Ir art.A.ltle4 • - oat 11114
irr,•uu , ”uhurtuent. There , ~,,,
with the operation of the
Liwyer•," bete t law, talking ' ,i. 4
1.4 ..cult , ttid Lad••q. thin%
lin. He s%•l that if he u."I .111% P.
(e.• 4 .• Tomb. lawyer - be
itaktal huh h..," that ...Ott 1.. II
du). nu I hatted that then:
Oar luo)erli, and ~n•tat,t..• ,11 t
Lvs pokillVe eV 1.L..11., that II i
bargt44k t Ittt '464,117, , t
T„ Lo b,„ ",i ~,.t the uext by
they have paid .flait ..1
2111 4 41 W With thy n stun• ••t
the. Irishui.tak 'lota wip,tn I t•ilk,.
liehrtri tilleUV/4 ienr,ll", 4.11/A r
.tru , k a watchman, while
.011:. %/1
n.,w abut up wilt, i p,ckp,,ek,4atal
won A t re. d count.
, tat.,, prt•ua. H.r ,rt.11:1011 .
roaultmg from the u• or of It w.f . , sand
dewy that alert: umcbt Mame I
t.nsutattti till 131, wage- he t-ttulti
unto., wtttal I Jr.tti: Liao-• R ttttt t
man wtth `tam It
U•e• trvestany. winch pia I
flit Urtlll3l,, ..,,
iug tu.puiito,u
forrot. Auv.tig thrw, ••%•rt mgt g
bitit,ell, 6,mrclt Li
trig, t.l Itty up i Ittlln w.giry, ctrl ,It.
he is the mrroc t in.tutau It.
Kv‘...l t. A 'I.
Way MALI el,ll •.lt , money, t
nnbu•ly till he hi
It to IL pity thni
pt. ,unict hr taught n t.w
Tdl )
to. Lot. "Ikuwera of yor too Poi Aw
1. your vonneipoiltitilt. 1;m.1.• •
:r. t..••
too aur,u,;
V ran
ULU( I •4 , ttn• N aK
curl.kus pdo ot en,:,
up. t ir , mt .41 the oral , r . trrr,
tei it,fitt oil, nu 1 it.lit:
pi. , rt/i r•ani tit,,
In I, V. s-r IA I•,
a ur,, au. “1, r
ilt r
iwtwevn .nv and IN. , th.J.n
out l:r.wicl!. i , .11
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