Northern democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1844-1848, June 22, 1848, Image 2

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    E
, .•
of Mississippi—the Woung Senator,o3ilghti ; To T uslt--The,.."llarnburners" o New York
from Indiana—with Others in compliny'; , ..iwi* hold the Convatiail - St Aitin s• ii , Imt.';'lliey
General Cass. Wash any wonder diet qlwitli, dill;i liki l a net ,„N'' °foliation fOr P ;s eat and;
all these chosen chanapions of Deinockacy, be . - . v . , 0 1 , - , ,-,_ i-t ' :... i _ i • A
.7, ieeireildent, s eems more t han °Far ;:--7,
fore and among- them`i that the gratification C ,
the people should be expressed in demo 4t4- i!ut who ill' be their loniinces it is impassible
Lions Of enthusiniim and applause, snot at our ite cUuteWare witli'ait degree of cis Sint.
-Icor pen fails to deptot ? 11: 1 . ' ' The. Whigs of,Maskischrtsctts, hit e' egged i s
At four o'clock, G6n. Cass and friondo left : y.:
co ve 4 ti A' at Worceitcr oA l i the': Bth ';inst
iitauttge of the committee for Treuton aid N. f1 ,,,2 1 _!
__'
_,,,,-. ;. F - 4 •, i : ''',
ork. Their way te• the boats thAugt, for •Put'l,"''''tq re • *!l#,nii er'if. In
treets lined with Deinocrats,-411°41adies *ay., Obi°, A tm -Terlr i :afid:U c ary *ll the Nevi:gngi.
s a g their handkerchjela from the wlndawi as i land Statei r ,lhe''SiMa -4 41arbfirril " feelleg
hey passed. -At the wharf, thousands were • prev a ils among the Whigs, who are lmost uni
angrutritetio gr,set*eni Cass before he left.
leAt".* AM Was clilleillon fora speech, and versa y in Twin atthe result
ll ' il . t ult. of the Cell
i ihinthest-etyle;_ altesnately sparkling and sar- i venti9fi- Nor is it easier to predict the termi
usticsi deliverea s eue if the best addresses be .; path - m:of. their movements than of 'the Barn
iyer-made. Du4ni)ta•delivery he • was most ilit4e i , :'s. They may at last be "whipped" in
--TV° ronsly a Plaudid., When the boat fi nal- 't, , 1
I.* oriSy li 'toe:support of Taylor, and tney may affiliate
, _ ~. _Anareas were on board 1,. i i , ~„ ,
of s ., s , ,li the
up_
wit she uarnourners ..)(..w 'ors u
to accjripsiy the General on at least a part of '
his j01ey, 1 ... , 1 !A ~ - ..r t,' r, ' . ' port of a ticket upon the free territory grounds.
d
_ _ _ ' The condition of parties is anomalous,.an we
Might add with much plausibility— 1_ ominous.
- .
'~D
HENOTEAD,
111
rzz
tease,
•. 4 ' • roe IPremident,
VIEN. LEVIS CASS
,
OF pI.CII.IGAN.
•
For - 'Hi •Presld4eut,
gEN. - Wit.. 0, 'BUTLER,
01 ii,CEIPTIIMET.
• I 708, CAN.OL COiMIBSIONER,
ISRAEL PAINTER,
Of Westrfloreland 'County.
Jumping from. the: Frying-pan into the Fire.
have noticetrthat some of the Whig pa
pers thaw endeavored to alienate some Demo
crat from.the support of the ticket because
Gen. Cass does nok come up to their• views on
the restriction of slavery in new territory.—
Now we are as ardnt a friend of the Proviso
is any person can he, and regret that General
Cass it compelled tb give it no countenance ;
but then we sincerely ask what is to be gained
by deserting the ticket for. Taylor and Fillmore?
Dothese papers which are.thus laboring to pro
duce disaffection inour ranks consider what
advantage ,\ the frihnds of slavery-restriction I
would gain.by going over to the Whigs ?
General Taylor, their candidate for President,
is a Southern man 4:.-:an extensive slave-holder
—and what is more, he was nominated by
southerp, slave-extinsion votes almost exclu
sively; hence is pri)sumed, by every fair de
duction, to be orthrjdox after the most rigid
propagandist's notihns. Circumstanced thus,
can it be prescime4 that in his election the'
friends of the Proviso would achieve any tri
umph for their printiples? The farthest from
it possible. On thh contlary, there' cart be no
doribt, 'From his rioiiition with the South, that
he would, if made President, veto any territo
rial bill that cozetaiiind the principles of restric
tiom and find an *use in some/Constitutional
scruple. Hence ago over from Cita to Tay
lor, inrereascravoiriftfri ., - , 4 ,, ,
ing ;out of the fryitig 7 pan into the fire" with a
vengeance ! No Democrat will be guilty of
esueh hallncinatio4 The attempt to effect it
will be emphatically "love's labor lost."
Or take -anothet view. The nomination ofl
Millard Fillmore, for the Vicetresideney, was
undoubtedly madii to sugar .over the Taylor
pill for :New York; and catch the Proviso votes
of both parties. 13ut even this adroit manten
vre Mils, or is lik;iy to fail, in its design. Mr.
Fil4nore, it turn4out, is in the same fix with,
Gen. ,Cass--oppoie, dto the Proviso. So says
bis_organ, the Briffale Commercial Advertiser;i
and the Richmond Whig and other Soutbern,
Whig papers re-neho the same. The South;
therefore, have inpuleled the ticket to their own'
ad.; and , devoidiof aßshame and conscience
must be that,pe4on who can even hint to a
Democrat that hi ought to abandon his party
for Taylor and Fillmore oni" Proviso grounds.l
We can stand a good deal of impudence and
keep cool, but tl4s. goes a little too far for our
equilibrium. 3
. . -
Lnreteitors--a-Yeay.—The Whigs hre evi.
dently d'epty,mOrtilled by the proceedings of
their own Nadenial Convention, and especially
with-its fersieat,adjeurriment. The nirminar'
tit% d Tailor , illl of itself a terribly bitter pill
teAle . -"Otiscinee Whip ;" (of whom there
are a few left, *ho derlams they will not sut
port the ticket)llbut the refusal of the Conved- 1
tic.--7 to make *4 declaration of principles,-Or
pass a single reisolition—after they gave deli
ored so mifeh shout " Whig principles".. - --galls'
them-wipe:44.y. In fact they are ashamddJ ,
to admit- this, .Or to have; the impression go'
-Arced that theW were so 'completely bound to
the care of So4hern slavery; and it is no nO-
Coamen thin it shear the less serapulous, lond
menithed4neuults of the party,plumply' deny
the-fact, and lurkthemselves, into almosti a
t :,
• paroxysm of Igo, when asked show a reffo
:lntion that tb4 Convention ad tell. Let 'Oo,
,tie, be dcceivaithy.this desperate trick, their i
trans, and brag . -..d0ei0.. They eaeryllow
resolution thdt, the Convention adopted!. l ',4-.
-411 Whii princijdes":'Were .huriL4 with tiOrl,
4 5' kmtiodimeeir 16: OlayLt liat vestige',
,{ ..i
rfasainiag biallg comprehended five word if---'
gib 9 - bigentredi4-thret fishes I- , tbey have any
ether priailiitliatbey are to; 'to'fountterniirin
'the 'grm' tr loire. - Aileiniiig, With' l rhiim
!gi4:,* '''
'..,' . . ? ' • ' gft I
Viii4veep 2.;
,;44L„
;61Sa* germ"
Mtnts:ial7ii='Bey =dpi
11 4
ovum' ;reigned •
of
31. 4 - ; •
XXV BOW alia- - - O MAT7gI
footed •
01 . 40111411 , . :
.1410 1 / 4 1 0 1 P0 4 4 40 thivPh 6 e.'
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,where term ores on the 4th •
'x:,~'3~--sen?h=.a:..a•'~+~r=•:-"rta.nr.~4eut~.<r.~.
MOCRAT.
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tKir'Brio3ll; o l .
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reAgkrta I#,o
10,41103-&404'
.
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• „•••.,
416.
I , Mai&
A t- The now's from Ireland whi, h we print
to-day, is of cons'iderable importane and may
Possibly foreshadow an event of
startling mo
inent. The intelligence of the conviction and 1
-banishment of the intrepid Mitchell,, has arons
ed the patriotic impulses of every; Irishman,
ivhethei in Ireland or America, ana fired ,him
with the most bitter feelings of aborrence.—
5b Now York, meetings were immediately held
und many volunteers enrolled theriselves, in
their enthusiasm, for a brieade to 'proceed to
Permian, and set the captive freed In other
placed, similar meetings have been iheld, and a
corresponding spirit manifested. . .
TILE DEM9CRATIC REVIEW. The June
number of
,this magazine has been r eceived. It
is embellished with a portrait of Mij. Gen. E.
P. GAINES, and contains its usual Ivariety of
highly interesting and important reading. The
present number Closes the 22d volume, hence
now is the time to renew, and commence sub
iieriptions. Three dollars expended for the
icf 11.eview" will' never bring regret. Try it.
T. P. KETTLE, Editor and Publisher, Ne. 170
proailwayN. Y.
SONGS FOR TII
Monthly, published by Zeiber & Co., Phila
delphia, is always promptly reeeiVed, and its
pages inspected with much avidity. The Juno
number (which is before , us) is full as attrac
tive as ever, besides it contains a Complete in
dex for the volume, of which it is !the conclu
sion. The July number will commence the
second volume. It is a highly and deservedly
popular work.
"Thirty-Five lean in the Ilt'sular .trmv !"
" We have the surest guarantee," says the
Berks and Schuylkill Journal "that Gen. Tay
lor is capable _as well as honest." " Thirty ,
' five years service in the army of his countiky,
!the Ever gladeS of l':orida, Pato Alto, Rese
;ea de la Palma, lifosterey, an Lorna Vista
prove it.
I Why Henry Clay, their great idel in a speech 4:;eneral Taylor and .the Illak
l in Baltimore, in 14j2.8, hi referring to General Theslate war was bitterly and velnitn t.
;Jackson, said: "If jetleed we have incurred -opposed. Like the present, its objectlii . et
the divine displeastme, - and it it be necessary ' misrepresented, its causesideaied and fie ei
to chastise this peiTle with a rod of vengeance, - f tcd, and its champinns ridiculed and den ut
I would humbis prostrate myself bsfore him and' cod. There is a striking similarity litit e 4
implore him in his merry .-to visit Our favoreil : the arguments used against the war witsli :A
WhiggerYlis decidedly at fault in its mite- land with war, pestilence and famine, with any Pico, and th&arguments used against ' tll
1
rials for assault against the demos ado caedi- , scourge other than Military rule, OR A' with England. T__,..he ISORESpallstantail k s _,
. _
iaate for ittrui palneiellsontrir. -Anew's— 1.4.. eft -- -*111Ww" BLIND AN D HEEDLESS Iis.NTISISB.I 4gaitralettintrater;outi , eaSP 0 9 las
have mot yeediad the audacity to ttempC s to l'l'lli MsE4RE,llll"isiXtle.Wailirtleetabodi- the very language common to, 'the oppo
~..:..a. But; we hear from that quarter the I
1 /141 PBOVLIS Annlde 'iilLTI - T - 11. 11/I.—ln Gen. 1 meat of Whig .principles, a mad who has served . !
Cry that Geri. Cass, who enjoyed the confidence i
I TayloOs letter to 3. R. Ingersoll, of Philadel- Of the latter. • The anti-war orators' in- of
trieir party faithfully Or twenty-two YEARS, gress take the same course, 4nil by thise yi
'of a Jefferson and a Madison, and around whom the party has always hereto- , living who opposed the late War, it is 4nl te
. .
and Iwho by the \. . t •
phia, ti says that; s' he greatly doubts-his pas- i .they should ,strike mit all hi' Cl
,favor of democratic administrations, was the . J
sesein the necessary qualifications for the
fore peen proud to rally,, yet he is now aban- cessary that . i .
doped, and his principles with him, and a man cos to Great Britain in their i speeches,,, d sir
incumbent of responsible posts at home and 1 presi envy e
• SO do the people ; besides they is nominated as the standard, bearer' of the i that crisis, and fill in a little
Ileacan ''tsY Pi
i abroad, for a long series of years and who iS
t are nitres going to iaspose so unsuitable a task i
!upon atm.
t: - thy, and they have a strong lagai st he
I fused to recognize' their principles, and says country ready made to their hands . e t
' they must take him independent of party tram- I hide to these facts ; not so much to s o t
I
' foughtthe battles of his country • the second ,_ s.
war of; independence—was " a fed mlist in his
; vouth V Can effrontery and part an hostility !
go further than this? Were it tame, which it ; Th# sixteen millions loan has been take.--;inels or pledges; atid they assert his qualifica- close relatienship between treason nisiv a
fourt%en millions edit by Corcoran & Riggs, of , tions for office to be his experience in the reg- ' treason thirty-six and thirty-three years a
M not, that of all others, should be no ground'
Was (for themselves and the Baring )d b 'l
i it •
ular army for T HIRTY-FIXF YEARS. Oh ;as to remind . our readets that,! unavoldibl :
:at anpiverage of 3,02 per cent. above par. ' • poor Whigeery how thou hest fallen in the eyes just as the late war tin ou ti. ly wash
lof objection on the part of fedmilists. Who
• 1 S of all men' o`ti . ritidiple and honor.—Democratic quite as vehemently slandered as the iptt
believes that the whigs, the identical party 1
A FACT.—The Whigsmade ; or 4
i known in former times as federalists; andw,hich , measn'''re or principle of the Whig party that) - Whig St esponses. !theii! Services rendered to thecountry d
Ilias.in no respect changed' its principles, Weald Gendial Taylor has definitely declared himself) The Eve. Journal promises to make room
'' • that period, added to extensive civil epe
i oppose one who had ever had the taint of fed-!. t fares of ! • for sonic " emphatic public smitiments from
1
', eralisne about him ? Who does nut see . that k;
~ - made them' acceptable : to their rOsp
friends. We allude ,of course, to IA I
7) - GEN. TAYLOR is the candidate of three '
the hostility of federal whiggery to Gen. Cass, ; minations—whichrespense, it says, is "unapt- • Jackson and William Henry'. Harrisan.
mous and enthusiastic." Among others it ,th ush the first was emplritiCall • thti spi
polital factions—the Native Americans, !enumerates the, N i .y F and this Auburn ° b , '' • 3 '
arises from the fact that they knisw him to be ..
i and No-party, factions.Andyet the
1 a d e 1 1 Whig, fac • '
mocrat from his youth up, n uncompro- ... . Y. Express an
Daily Advertiser, as having made that kind of . however regarded, of the latter, otth r
. the hero or as the civilian—yet General II
i • .s are coquetting for' the votes of natu- : i
response.
' 'rasing and able champion of dem cratie princi- kWIII 0• •
risen had rendered his country good 4er et
.
1 We too, have not been inattentive to these
ales, and astern opponent of federal doctrines i rali+d citizens! ' the field, and had filled many highly iinp irt
and measures? From the start, ?ten. Cass has responses of the Nellie press, and have already ' positions in the great West. • t
noticed some of,th ens .We add a few more,: During the canvass for the Pre4le y
been all this ; and hence the bitter and mot
s - which are certainly ‘ " emphatic" enough.—Al- I isoe and 18132, and 1840, parties were
_re
unexpeCted or undesirable assaults of the fed- bany Argus. Ily excited, and the clairtis, trillitary*d iol
ri~
era) press. !
'' It would be hypocrisy in us not frankly 'to `cal, of the respective candidates, we l s isji
admit that in• placing the name of . Gen. Tay- ed to the sever, scrutiny.' ff3tit nopu ,
Who Illds !ft-Prise' for in that position, rats the head of its col- traordiaary spectacle was- s presentitd as
mans] wo perform 'the most mortifying and friends of Jackson or Harrikon asit)iliig
unwelcome duty of our editorial life."—Auburn last war. Although thefirtit was prfse t
Daily Adv. • • the Democratic and the latter by this '
party,.both agreed in delearipg the .te
- ih.
I be just, righteous and unavoidable-4tht
GEN. 7ssensaY TAYLOR ~„Kg is TUB
preferring to be ehatged with
bIAN ! The excitement in the city is intense,
. sistency, to destioying their- Chances; 5 w
and we will not here attempt to describe the! arali st-8
deep feeling this announcement has created in
the Whig ranks." . ---N: Y. Expreis. ; people. What would havebeen said
(friends of Jackson had debited- foi ,h
' ular suffrages while they opposed
" The news' of the tnomination will be- far
from gratifying-IP - ea great majority of the whips `war? ' , , .
1 And what would_havo been)sat
Of M a ssachusetts."— Hoston Daily Adv.
I friends of Harrison-had enclOrsedtli4 !I ,
.
" Theannouneement (of Gon. Taylor's no-
I Webster and the United States z
mination] 'is enough 'tor-, to-day."—Boston They would have been hooted by
- odor
Courier. ' I man in the land, and their banners ) i
"We 'know not how the delegates to that' floating in triumph, would have trail .
'convention reasoned themselves into the pro- en and soiled in the dust. s
.
priety of making the ii nomination 'they have ; But what is the huntilititingpoaittlon
but it seems to us that the vihig.party of the eral -Taylor ?, Ho is in the, hands Of.
North has bean •most grossly compromised." whose proudestibeast it - ii that it Opp ,
"We sincerely trot, that in the eagerness 1 war in which- he has established. *
of the whigi toinomi ate, as the most availa- ;Presented as an exclusive military Can
years, I for unlike either Jackson or Harrison ble man, 'one who, in a life of over sixty
hal not yet formed ati,npihion upon the great I not }mint tskassingle day's service as,
idliticalquestienewhieh divide the people in 1 tor or statesman, or executive—mite
parties, they May not ins second time elect a l i. vote at a general election•--41/I.his cla
Jobb Tyler to the Rtesidency."— 'Worcester, upon the war . with Mexico. lie*
.
Mass.., Spy. • : -.! _
'friends present him to the people lt
.. G ee. 'Taylor is liy far the weakest of all they escape this strange dilemma ?a . 1
those who „, t , been; named as whig'eandidates I not defend the war in i which he. lets
I for the . Presidency.."—Portland, Maine, Ad.' brevet.--for they,would ()gime tip f
I-
i vertiser. .. I the very flower °lethal. party-teazle '
" Perhaps, when we shall all have had time ' Webster en.the iturnP,:in;the.ca4,: ,
It o examine, an reflect, we may pretty geneild. win on the hustings ; inlihe4est, i , w'
[ly coneln4, 'not th 4, the - nomination of 'Gen. reds wbtifeellike'these*rbrito erst
j'aylorrwo just, or.^expedient, but that the versing the country, !=his
o n f pp T o a si y t l i o o r n m i t o ta t t il ' b bti ai tt . i i3 fie eli dil i i!hl e th ir,
support ofPcn. Te,)ilor, now that be is
Llama sad:tite,thingicannot be . .helped,' ,
' D i
s w I t
' h i e
,beet Ours!): - tact to WI, . Perhaps se--and 2 i er . f desired to bp silent in'regaltid to"
laps not. ' AOl - il °Vents; let the 'l'eoplo t i o e i how can they, ?frith its.eVeitts'yet y'lre
, t ime. ter co,l Itnature sAeistiet,"..----.N,.r r e i s t memories, and its stArtedittidsbletdlit
ittlits , ! • -.• ' ' - l arts - in Or titidst.?'iLlfie War ,- an . a all
.i- ! •
-•, • .
• TUE PIIRENOLOGICAL JOUItNAL for June,
has been reeeived It contains 4 " Om-trait
ivith pen andlpencil" of John Banvard, the dis
tinguished Painter, l besides disquisitions on the
Tendencieti: of Phrenology," " IThistrations of
the Law , of *indness," Benevoleiiice," "Fas
cination," kb.
The Cleaveland Pain,Dciiicr proposes now
upon the start, to offer the felloing premiums
i
for the following rederal service :
- Ist—sso to the Whig editor 'the will tell the
biggest lie about Gen. Cass.
-2A-425 to the Whig writer Or speaker who),
will convince any man in his, senses that Gen.
Cass is opposed to River and Herber improve
meets. i •
J
' 3d—sHlo to- the min who will slander Gen.
, Wm: O.
~ Butler . .fi any pszticulitr. '
I. 4 .szeit..L- The Bids Takeni r f- , --As we ex
pected, the announcement of lie foregoing a
'few weeks ago, caused a prodigtous air among
the whip corps editorial, and desperate efforts
w t ere instantly put forth on all lands, from the i
North floreci' cam down, throuih• all g r ades to of
the most de picable sewers ofitis par-bald elan- I
delis; to wi . It appears, ever, from the
snhjoined p , ragreph which w en d in the Lan
cesterian, that the agony and +pease has ter
minated : ;• , .. l.
1 -
-: The Prize , T ales , Which You desire, Mr.
P/ainj beater, have already nutdeitheiriappeaz
mice in the -:Heading 1 Journttl, and we, z4ink
you hell twitter "fork eves?' th.' amount of, our
bids to the editors -of thit pa r im*ediately.,
'Hohi .
o hat 'few more . on , lusnil 1, . h will he puh
gibed in the course of:theitio t six Mouths.
' The rumor is very current, d pr4bly not
7itbont some' fennflatton, - th
, quite a large
4umher, of the Whig i t ripod I 're - :: 'Oeedingly
dim' ptisfiederid indignant 'with this Aii i r44. ~ We
•
ITO not certain whithersur neighbor, of the or
ga:ri` hile is iiinong,tbn number or net+-think
.. 'net,'!;sythe tone othie,iiiii - p4r seeniii to indi
ie .11.4004eid OtiOt#Teieiitii . 14 :t4ird''fro'
aylor'robtation. - ; - - 1
,
_ flrkar
° Black Cockade.
..
Tie 1
1 ,
' stlalsehoOd ofthe redCral press is
that Gen rat: diss Wigs the " ISlackcockade."
T!e be ' ate Gaz .. 'thus soitles the ques
tion :; . 1 1. 1 -''
iiiibori; in Ceti:lei; 1782: :rlie era of
the pre
. nCi' i of the black •Cookadi ai WaS in 1798
and '99, iluid aoriseqmently Gen, - Cass Was
thenol4l 9 0r , 17 i , eirs,of ay.: Aethh ado
io
of 17,11 m raigrated the-Nortlieestern tern y
tory, indiettled'at arietts. ' 1 „ '
Ifotieff obarge; f r a wrotehaslanderer to
issue against a boy of sixteen,,.who, with his
revelutio4tuy sire, was sojourning among us.
With 04 simple statement, the whole of this
miserablißoorback must vaporize and dissipate
into thin s ir. '
P 4
Horace Greely, of the Tribune.
The Oliladelphia Bulletin relates a good
story of ! oraco Greely, of the Now York,Trib
une. T 4% :Bulletin says :
As th ,labors of the convention drew to a
'close, it . came evident that, General Taylor
was to b the nominee. - Greeley groaned in
spirit—hidstill, hope had not deserted him.--,
He would not, for he could not, believe that .a
Whig °invention would nominate any other
but Homy Clay. He waited for the fourth
ballot. rrhe Chairman announced—" for Gen
eral Zallary Taylor, 171 vett*" He heard
no mores-the t, deed was done—and Horace, no
doubt, mentally exclaimed,but with mare truth'
than th inhospitable Scotchinan, " thou canet
not say 11 did it I" - .
Late Pie same afternoon, Mr. Greeley waa
seen quilling down Walnut street at locomo ,
tive op*, his coat tail standing out at. an an
gle 0140 y-five degrees. The ends of both
legs of llis pants were concealed in his boots—
the buckle of his stock under one of hisears—
his hat over his eyes—and his shirt collar 119
where. k Ile carried his Carpet bag by one, of
its handles, and as it was (df course),unlocked,
an oppatunity was offered to ascertain the ca'
i t ,
titre an extent of the ward-robe of a man
whose . me is almost daily on the lips bf eve
ry mangwoman, and child in this great- and
growingeountry.
He clied the wharf, and exclaimed, sadly
broken On wind—
" Whore—where is the—the—the—New
York bhut ?"
Sem§ one informed him that the boat bad
startedfan hour before.
A leis determined man would have returned
to his lihtel. But when AVM Greely ever known
to turnOs back on a friend, foe or journey ?
1 He diknot care a tpss of a copper for steam
boats 0 . railway cars—not he. All that he
wantecLwas to get out of Philadelphia—to
,lengthnn . the distance between himself and the
IWhig Vonvention—and to get back again to
New Yink. He announced- his intentiou, to
muss Abrs oy on foot I The people stared, but
Horae4, walked— on board the ferry boat.—
; Whon last seen, by any of our citizens, he was
making tracks nut of Camden, the carpet bag
still Millis hand, and his coat tails perfectly
' horizontal.
~:,
! Bete were freely offered that he.would reach
jJerse4City in advance of the cars. His back
jers nooloubt have won, for the. lending article.
in the tribune of the following morning was
I not oi4y written 4 Horace, but it could only
[have *ion written lin his sanctum at ,an early
!hour ciii the same evening he started for New.
York. k .
[Wi: learn from the,Pennsylvanian that Mr.
, 436......14"..11...1.•...1,....E.D.
=1
e.
Cbuncit BURNING, and Catholic perseen
,
tion ft t are in a fair way of being renewed, as the
t 5
Nat r American party has been lately rein-
fore , by the Whig and No-party parties of
the entry. Look out for more riots in Phil
adelibis soon 1 "
~les.
, ICHIGAN IJ. S. Sziesroa.—The Hon.
Tads. FITZTERALD, of Berrien county, has
bteli' l appointed by the Governor, U. S. Sena
torgto fill the vacancy occasioned by the resig
ti
lon of. Gen. CABS.
a7l
• ...
Le
ye
dnewnoracea
set of
l i u n t a ie n ee art w i h c i l e c il in be esy
which
b ,}W hig National Convention ought to have
p r
-ilea, calls that body a ‘' National Slaughter
1.. se."
~7 .7
".
_ _ ion. D. Wilmot will please accept our !
t,-,,,,,. for a bound 'volume of the Report of
th d Commissioner of Patents, and for numer
i
'+' other public favors.
la
_olipi DONKEY continues his regular weekly
is to our table. He is as " stgpid" as ever,
occasionally a little more so.
.
,
:• 4 The Cey Is B.thl They Come."
AVe could fip. columns 'with, the Complaints"
iihe Whigs . against the nomination of TAY
. 16..; _Tba,dolaffection seems to extend over
1; parts of the Union; ease in the South.—
ie den'unciations‘fulminated against him are
ter aud'uttpqnivo*, and it will' reljuire . all
4 s r . efforts of the peace-matters to ' quiet them'
i ;;time for the; cleetiiin. We fear that the boil
i witera of liig anger will 3efs all the' of
ftik is and corn andi'of the -Whiz Canntes, who
t ' that of , -'Jiii'lingp,re,aelled.for years a
,iiist Northe ,dougti-fsees in the Democrat
i *!party, they Wl', (wry into 'effect what they
Op
L of lora: and, that:their partisans will
, limit litho Vikuluimer,r. lint it, seems, that
. e,,lrt le li:L!pirit:of.itsistitice oven in Wh'ig
-11;1- - I;a lV ni l it I°.t3"-Th ' 4.4 ' °lelliestidi.
li , .
i
.M'
ME
IMO
}
The NatMON wad Gin ral Taylor.
At the greitt clapak.etingh ld in NoW Yo+
on the `..!(1 of ljutiO,' enys the con4yrianiaf,
`Hon. Dudley Selden;.One of the eatest.spokis
in the Whig: Wheel,',., tisekte :following lei
'
11 zuage : , --.
1 lam opposed to G4ertil 'Taylor for another
[reason. That elass,4 meniwho ,have"- songtit
to thrust hint forward{; are .60 , 4utine who p
,1844 ruined the country under the cry of NiL
TIVE AMER tO t ineir; lu Again is that partylir
liganizing, under General Taylor, for the Hr.
pose, of bearing down ,the .foreign vote. 1
1
Now read the follo.Wing from the Dimly Mtn
of yesterday, the orgiii of Nativism inrthis c.
We hope our cotemporaries Of the press viill
I
spread it far and wide It speaks 'a langue
of more than ordinitry significance, and shows,
, I
not only that Nativism was-,the first to noriti
nate General Taylor, but that it hopes to buidd
itself up securely under the shadow of his n
fluence,' and by the aid of his friendly counsls.
Read it carefully ; ' -, . . ~•
1 The Native Americans were the first to i•e-1
spo nd, as a party, to the popular demonstr i a-1 ! -
Nom in favor of General Taylor, and formal- ~. Wtiroose I( Is Onte.—The Cleveland - PI • •
•
deal* thus speaks of the 'condition of h* l •
ly recommend him a their candidate for the nious whiggery in Ohio:
PresidcncY. This.thq did, reely and frankly,l
...." A No-party Whig meeting IS called 'r4t n
without exacting froth him' edges of any kind
—confident that one iirho ha( so long served .to be called all over the State. A Stats. An 1
his country faithfully; and whose deeds had' Court House to-night. Similar: meeting (
covered . him with immortal'glory, could be no 1 when a candidate for President, .I Vet
i T u a rn y b lo u r s, Convention is scion to be called at o•
renegade fiom duty or patriotism,
in whatever / President, and Govenor will be put in tio i•
position the will of his fellow-citizens-might I nation. Anti-Taylor members of Coras!
plaoStim. For months the Native Americans
will be put in nomination in every district it
advocated his clainr;whileall around / the sun- , the state, and anti-Taylor tickets in i e el
.
shine friends who lut& been dazzled by the first . county . ,, . 3
flash of his glory from the field of Buena g Vista, . •
fell off one by one and r 'eturned to the worship L MEMOR An II L ANOU ATE. --i:J en. Help., it
of their old wooden gods, who had never yet ' a speech in Congress in 1841, referring te r
been able to succor them in the litiur of need.
Clay, made use of the following langu4e •
And now that the Whigs, through motives of . '
safety to Themselves,-hare ratite the now ina- h, of aparty supported ii
lion made by the Native Americans, shall' wc lname and talents alone, they have ever ;Olt e
1" To the reproach , tOr
g ive up our candidate, s•acrifice our party ; doned him in the boar of need,and left hin4to '
identity, and merge ourselves in the turbid mortification of being distanced by'everi; e
stream of lf higgery?
We appeal, then, to the Native Americans I '
P etit°r."
throughout the 6ouiit'rr, to maintain strictly
their organization, and absolutely refuse to
mingle with either party, to the hazard of the
groat Idea for which they are bound to contend.
[lf others choose to hestow their nomination :
Or their suffrages upon the same great man
whom the Native Americans hare deemed
worthy of their support, we can harc no right
nor reason to object ,-. but we utterly repudiate
the idea that this is to constitute any pertna
nent bond of affinity between us and them.
I
'
1
, ' •
41.1.•
a r
The Now York Evening ,rosi, says of ; th i
recent Damp.: ratification #eitting id, 1
city: , ~ .: - 1- :t1 ti
Grand Ratification-116w aisl f iti.dyette .aft ,
—This affair whichr.chme off isso night, bio ..•
up in a fight. The tspeikersl'Daniel tordia,
James W. Gerard, 'Were greeted' With alterilm ::
cheers and demonstrations. 4 disaivrobaio ,
, t
while a mixture of applause for , Clay end ,a -
1 for made ,the -meeting seem like irakidertio4m
broke loose. , .1-- ;
• An adjournment was moved end.earriet4 13 , -
Toro the resolutions of' ratifimitidnirere Are;
They were afterwards put infonially, afOir a
portion of the assembly had left f,he hall ;,1 t e
lights were then extinguished, and amid cbee s
for Taylor, cheers for Clay, calls for Hdra e
Greely, wrangling, shouting, Wan and pi ~
the hall was ;cleared, after half tin hour's One -
getio debate in darkness. Some two buddr d
took their departure in a body, for the Bioa, .
way House, where the Whig delegate froth. t •
Seventh - district mads a short Speech, sdyi g
he never would support Taylor, as •heyw
creed upon the Whigs by Southern sq, . -
holders, 4-c. i•
Feinale Odd Fellows.
The New York '! Gazette of the Oui
MEI
. _ .
i An Order bearin g the_title of " Phil4al
ails,' has recently been established' in this
and has alre . ady excited considerable atten .
among the ladies and philanthropists of t
, Union, The motto of this ntw Order is ' Lri
t • a- I
THE LAW OF, LI6EL.--+Tlvs, editor of the
ship, Love, and Truth,' from which we Ilia) in- .
1 New York-Tribune - has b - een latelytried forli
i fer that its principles andtbjects are shill. to i bel; in
publishing in the tra3rof business an ad
!,those of our own Order. It has as rn4ny se- Ivertisement for a third patty, of a debt for sale.
cress and my,steries as Odd-Fellowshiii it elf,
, —, le
1 plaintiff alleged that the publication - was
and consequently is invested With an nate est !IT he
1 libelous. Dn the part of the defence, it was
and attraction altogether as powerful.
I proved that the plaintiff did owe the debt, and'
Its initiatory and other . cereinuities, #O, w 9 l' though -repeatedly asked, tad-never paid it.—
are told, exceedingly beautiful and impre . ive, 1
It was urged that there was no malice in the
possessing intense dramatic interest, and b ing 1
publication on the part of, the defendant. A
rich in lessons of wisdom, alid:Ntirtue,.a4ic ar-
j,ist verdict; for the plaintiff could have J.e
.
ay. , • I moved thii'cause of the alleged libel, by paying
__.
„
incident to It', , :zill...bc. fh P P
.toies of ,
touch40 1 (11 1 11111)14 - to ;
cover any,_ tar.' with conteMpt. Peden - 16 m i
is theOtoro committed to do its worst agai nst !
the war; tea lv,hile upholding the claims ofi'
General Taylor. _
No Such spectacle as this has ever been wit-,
bo s s e d ii4l3ii,',or in any, other country.,.
Hovel:4'4e regard• it, hie calculated to stand
against utithOugh all time, a living a n d- a
..burningipon the page of history. •Ls it
'saying too muds that the people of this coun
try will no I*,st party to this' infamous libel
upon their own intelligence and 'patriotism ?
Ile it saying too mach that they -dill revolt
'with horror from the participation by which
they aretobe made parties to such a wrong ?
General Taylor has placed himself--so the Peed.
eralists allege—in the hands of those who have
opposed and denounced aszjitit se war as- cut
caused an honest sword to: leap from its scab.
bard. We-ore-grateful td him for his servi c e s ,
Thousands Will remember him as One of the
'bravest of the defenders of his country's flag,
Thousands Would have rejoiced to have voted
for him, if li r had avoided : thisconnection with
the foes ofhts country's watt. He would hare
1
1 _ been acceptable in otheihinds, but not . , a vote
for'him, is aivote against Ili.; brave soldiers
•who have fought our country's battles, and an
endorsementi of the eonduct , of thOse desperate
men who intim aided and comforted the cm_
mon foe, an advised Mende to give our bravo
i- volunteers 'a welcome with!bloody hands and
'- hospitable graves." .
.
"c It is thism
: at . fact that would alone serve
L - to carry 6d -batmen' of Cass and utl• r to a
! 3 crowning victory, even if they did ! not stand
11 upon the enduring foundations of Democratic
' l2 principles.--Pennsylvaniftit. , '
?law litu7 FunNaexs.--The Harrison Iron
IliCompanyofi the Lackawani above Wilkeshar
.. re are. aildidg to their works two new furnaces
of the largdst class. ' Onuhf the stacks is near
s 'ly ready for: the blast. .
This Company haia very extensive rolling
Imill which turns out 45 tAins of. railway iron
Ie I per everysday( It is at present engaged on a
profitable contract for the brie Railway.
We find that, in spite lof the gloomy fore-
bodings of the coal and. iron men, who were
the most determined to be ;ruined by the new
'n" , tariff there; are no hranche§ of industry more
fully employed. The complete falsity of these.
e _ !predictions ought to teaciu our mechanics that
ty, i little of th4ir success depends on polities, - but
ion , every thing on prudence and industrious ha).
the 'its.
' the debt due, as justice honest dealing re
y quired.
re
Baal; BURNED.—A barn belonging to Mr.
r-
Daniel .Cobh, in Monroe township, Bradford
en Co:, was destroyed by fire , on gaturday the 3d
m _i inst., with all its contents, and a wagon Sre`..-:-
arThe netreel'opea in
ames. The neighborhcitid, with a most com
et
mendable :spirit: of liberality and promptitude,
isl went to work on. Tuesday, of last week, and by
n- I Friday had a new barn upon the-site of the one
et burned.- i Such.a manifegation is worth a doz
e- en lectures on beneoleneg.—Repartcr.
MCC
i g SITORTr.NING TIIE 3.l.lotssarr.--The prc
eess of shprtening a river - may appear setpe
'lrlthing neW under tie suk but it has aching
,
been accomplished in the Mississippi, one of
he; the largest rivers in...the !.United States. tha-
Id :ring a recent freshet, thci river made a ... " belt"
ce , through its banks at Vaei,ouri, Where there
ad was a considerable turn and toolc a strlight
'as :course lei the nearest paint of the, stream, cut
't• I ting off tiventy-eittht.miles in the length of the
31 " , stream. :The largest class of steamboats pass
ast through up and down, Without any diffteay.
I ring
! It is fqur hundred yards wide, and the
ea" banks copfttantly caving
ctive
. .
THE LAFAYETTE FA'7kl IL T. —.Mr. Edmand
Lafayette ;has been appointed Secretary of the
ri- iNation it Assembly of Ural:ice. The family of
as the friend of Washington occupy a large share
Li- l in the national representation. Among them
in I are 111e4irs, George, Edmund, and ()scar La
mt fayette, bon and grandson of the than whose
meinoryis revered in both worlds ;
t Las
in teyrie; another grandson ; 6#celles wad Rem
at- ?nrat, relatives of Madame-de Lasteyrie, his
iti- 1 aaghter, and de Tritey, I:mother-in-law of
et-1 George ;Lafayette.
ex.- .
the Aft NDITOS IN Lum4.—Virlo see by the ma
th° riago lists - in our .New,lHemptshire , exchange,
;,d b y 1 that John S. Walke4sq . . editor of the on
%demi rnont Eagle, was lately married to Harriet. IL
war 'to 1 daughtet of ,1 the lito f • George B. Upham, of
Fed- 1 Claremont. The bride brings to her husband
j am ,. 1 as a dciviry the nice little sum of $500,(?0, left
h 6 0 4 her by, her father. .
if the I
' . the
he late
if the
Oder of
e?—
honest
stead of
strick-
A ra.3.v.4,AL DEAD. LETTER:--4 Totter con
taininda relittance 0t153,000 in Treasury' no
was op'ened.4ll the dead letter office in ,`WaO
ington triday 'morning. ,
Azghod story is told of an . offloer.in_su Od,
ledge, who was rather green in
ti
perfo4anee of his ',kik.. lle.Was 'engaged'
his inirt of the duty of initiatincbrotbers int
tho_dogrees, and made rather molted. work
it. A wag who was. present- was asked h
opinioli of the perforhianeese *4.1 think," w:
the reply, "that should lie, tried for mu
I der trii, the second gegree. 4 _1
.f Gen-
party
ses the
idate—
he can- -lir The Goalie* ileptildigan suits that.
' a lig n _ calf' havingthre4.'h_ etiat4 bodies and e i f t
ea ,-to a legs, bora,at b4,:gaiglies in that Ti ll 4o
ins,rest oh Tiroadeys-lost, ! 9411 ,- eid was in a nab*
ill hi s positien, and 'one
,offAi.-liiihind,onch 41)4
ow w il l FromAhesshoi4lieralie beidy,brinched foto tr
hey dare Parte;.°P - Aotitl
won his the eeers
clings of ,M 0" daps
With Cron.
d Cor --
ass`feat 4 ihdierni
hund-
linily of 'the lio 50, over
hutiarOUthiniiiiiir'hleeding geriiie of ile a
bitterest his : 6 40 mighV b e i t t . tis f i ca ' "
era Fond abolitioi~ls~, no
subjeit, .9! 1 sr ' - uOcin''tti 'Rif for ' Trtylr.ir, *ill not
fail to
Bin • our. 30eithite`thisiaiiir t ilit at biniiti Well sat
,t,gt however, refuse to vole for
,the Vil.b - ritliintuiliee'sr- We ebelk
quest l o l 4 r iv , 4 •,, . t= %,
• t'`
7
12
El
Litt'
blii
imi
al!!
11301
wifi
dor
fort
the
exr
EMI