414 c peopleo lbuorate. ; IP Here shall the Press, 414.. enitle ' 's rfghtimainta maintain, Unwed by influence, an hnbribed by gain." _ . MONTROSE. por. 8. 1846. Election, Tuesd4 Oct. . 13, 1346. Dentocrft FOR CANAL CtAINISSIONER, WM. B. FO TER, JR. OF BRAOFOTOD dOUNTI FO COtIGRES, ROBERT G. . WHITE, of Tiog4 county. FOR REPREOENTATIVES, DAVID THOMAS, . of Su 'a co. SCHUYLER FASSET, of IVyo4ting co: FOR CaMISSIONER, INAITHA.NIEL- WEST, of Thkinson. FOR AitalTol, FRANCIS QUINN, of Chiiconzit. Whig Norninations. FOR RRPRaENTATIVES, DANIEL ISFARLE, of - St4q'a co. S. D. POELPS, of Wyiiing co. VOR COMMISSIONER, JOEL tAMB, of Tkentson. FOR A4DITOR, THOMAS NICHOLSON, of Springrille. Liberty Nominations. For' COngress, GEO. F. lIORTON, of Bradford co For Beprsentatives, - JOHN 11I'KINNHy, of Great Bend IRA KINNEY, idt Wyoming cu. For Corninissioner, THOIIIPSON PECttEl‘iS,ofßridgewater. For leditor, ABEL BOLLESi t of Rush. For Canal COmmi.Asioner, Wm. ELDER, E 1 of Philadelphia .. To the Indepen4ent EelectOrs of Susquehartnit Otlay: F ellow- C itizens :--4:We have endeavored, faithfully, as Sentiqls upon the Watch- Tower of your rights, to represent through the columns of the Advocate, your true in terests. It now remains for you, under standing the genuine ,principles of enlighten ed democracy, and believing as you do with Mr. Niles, 'C. S. Senator froni Connecticut, that " the greatest liberty to the greatest number, and the greatest good to the great est number, is demecratic doctrine,"—be lieving as did David Wilmot, twice, when Mr. Reid was a call date for Congress, that the one term principl# is soundly democratic, and -knowing as you all do, (who understand the subject,) that Mr. Wilmot, influenced by Southern flatter} or awed by Southern dictation, misrepres4ted us in Coagt-ess by voting against the , atinterests of our debt: ridden State, to ca your votes in accor dance with your Chia . victions. If all will vote understandingly and independently, Ma. ROBE= G. Will Tr. of Tioga County, the real friend of American industry, will receive full two-thirds of the votes to be ' polled -on Tuesday aext. Rally then, and as wortliy ;re emen,lvote for the candidate who is ready and itilling to advocate and promote your interests instead of his own, and all will be well ~with us in the result. If 'any one assert that Robert G. White is not as.good and oitlicidox a Democrat as Dr.. Leet, John Blapding, George Fuller, Joseph Gaige or ay Dunmore in Rush Township, " he is aqiar find the truth is not in hint." ' To support Pennsylvania interests is democratic. Tgoppose them, in us is folly and madness. FREEMEN, p TUE POLLS! Every Freeman of this Congressional dis trict who is not so suckled with the fetters of party,as to rote, bndfold, against his own interests, and the interests-of Pennsylvania, should turn out on ,Tuesday next, for the exercise of a duty villich • is enjOined upon him by 'every coninderation of patriotism, and by every hope of%ture prosperity. The crisis ia'a very imporXant one, and one which may not soon again Occurin this district. The Tariff issue i 3 now fairlykefore the people of the districtilin the principles avow. e if d by the respective ,:candulates in the field. On the one part, Mw White is pe firm and unflinching advocate:of 3. rate of duties pro tective- alike of our home industry and do inestic manufacturef, while on the other, Mr. Wilmot is the +wed champion of the Tariff of $.846, ,a syst em of duties anti-pro waive i n ,theirehar4ter, free-trade in their tendency; and ruitiolis in 'their effect upon every bianch of hinni-induitry:* The contest is oz of principle ; and a deep - ititerest - folt - 4 4 everf 'pardon of the co2 . itry . for - the . restOti . ,. , -The tiliple goes whether the togr-Copgresaional ths to_qt,..mip ostracise heeelf#fun, tile, Fpntillon isaceapipf every othiiv p0t:4911.a ourcoin nionwealth, isolibeeoftte, politically and inor- Alyiten - integral portion of iSouth Carolina or Georgia—or whether -she 4viil spurn-the managing of demagogue leaders, and say to the world lin a triiimpliant voice that she yet has fee l ings in common with the North, and intermits that may nbt'survive a Wreck of prosper4y,in every other portion of our comtnonwCalth. It has been loudly -and triumplitto y asserted - by Mr. Wilmot and his friends that his vote l on M'Kays bill was in Oecorda 'ce with the Will of a majority of hid constit ents—this we have denied alrea • d ny it now, mid we are glad that • the issue i before the people in such a way thit we in y soon know 'Whether we are not Icorrect in our denial. IWe are under the "'chef that Mr. Wilmot obeyed the instruc tions of a few party leaders—that be was the repre : • ntative of a party, and not of the ,people, eh• that, if unsuccessful for a re- Ticket. election i amply pri base betti disregard Mr. 1161,,', with a tria l whom be, election a We repe and ahoy issue is an[im.po taut one-.a contest between foreign inerestsi, and die home induitry of : our own dandi—a contest in which all the' desperate .means of an anti-American fac tion will le broUght to bear against the peo ple and tlieir best interasts. We therefore call upOn y - ou, as, you vitlue your own and the proSpOrity of your country, to rally in the maje4ty of your might, in support of RonpriT 0. WHITE, Esij., a Pennsylvanian, in the true sense of the word, who will not• betray yon, nor'barter away your best inter ests at thci shrine of political ambition. • Tariff !democrats, now is the time to strike ! • 'you have lieen held in tcrrorum long enough byte ambitious and designing leaders ofithe party. Remember that White is as good a democrat4s Wilmot, aye bet ter, for th re is no democracy in the odiouP= and unju t Tariff of which the latter ii a . champion Remember that every democrat ic menthe Of Con grt s'lig --- 'romour State, ex cept Wil ot, are *WI qs, and will stand by us in sue ss or deteat :' fear not being read. out of the Party—apreem an has to do with his own conscience only, and ho is no freeman who truckles to paky leaders, or fears their threats a 0 frowns Step out promptly from the servii i ' fear of any clique or faction, and strike for • ennsylvania and your own rights. VI II ilmot at Frientisville. This re oubtable hero in the cause of hum bugging enlightened constituency, has been tmv fling about the County with two or three.p4nsioned stoolifigeons in his service, apologizing for voting against the interests of the people of Sti - squehanna. On Satur day last, agreeably to appointment, after his Man-Fridny Sullivan from Towanda, who precedes him, had rallied a little meeting, one Sanderson, from !Towanda too, made an introdirtory" address / in all fidelity to his, faithless master. Mr. Wilmot followed; ind made a leech in direht opposition, so far as. coal 'and' iron are concerned, to what he had said in hils speech on the floor of Congress, and to the vote which , he there gave. In Congress he was in favor of a specific duty on coal and iron—here, -in Susquehanna County hk. is in favor of an ad valorem duty ; else, lie siqs, there is danger that gOod iron from EuMpe will not pay sufficient duty.— Away with such hypocrisy! Despise such quibbling and prevarication for office sake ! Notwitlnkanding the grossness of his pen-er- I sions, th elicited great eclat from Sander son and mith from Bradford County, and Dr..Leet f that place, who, ever and anon, with the •d of Judge Tyler, and a few oth ers who enjoyed the sport, clapped their hands most sensibly. blk the whole, 3lr. Wilmot's effort there, was ' a compound of egotism, Buck-shot War, mitireptesentationtand perversion, most unhappily blended. An the arguments used by h, could have been overthrown in twenty minutes, by any; person of common understanding who understood the subject. List oC Letters Beinnining is the illoo4rose Post-Office September ao, Ip4L6. We tilis week advertise the uncalled for Letters i# the Montrose Post-Office, agree ably to the -act of Confess, passed March Bth, 184, which prolides that it shall be done in khe " Paper of. the town or place where thO, Office advertiging may be situated, having the largest circulation," &e. The Prist-Office Department of course, see us Paid,: notwithstanding the report that our Post-Mater here alle4d, he should "give the adverAising to FullOr Hempsted, any how." Bewit of FaLsehOod and Fraud! since it is evident that Mr. Wilmot will receive itiAard run, the leading spirits who have evthing at stale on his re-election, axhibiF most extraordinary and nothing zeal in h 4 behalf. Poor Col. Blanding pa trols the+ircuit every quarter hour during the day, from -the fire-prnof-to the Democrat office, taping the post-ofee on his mine.-- Others 4 equally industrious, bOth in this county iind. Bradford 4. Certain it is that they ark terribly . alarmed for the suc cess of championcl the great "excep tion," ainld . we would Sot be surprised, if, in thei r _ Jl3 P e ' Y oie ratiOn ti should resort to fraud mid deception, to baiter up , their waning 4 , lttise. Let the honest yeomanry of our , climty beware -the'reprastmtations of these desperate factio*ists. f• his .own di4riet, he would be vided for in 'ponsideration. of his yal of their interests, and utter ,'of their wishes. Yet this same of . nctw covers his face ()Hough k of brass, and insults the people has injured, by asking for a re their. hands. t, felloWcitizens, fellinv democrats, all, fellow Pennsylvanians, the .i. : 1r00_11 AHEAD! . , No state iit < the Onion has been more stead-, fait in its adherence to Democratic priztei , :f -plea than !pansylvartia-ff... rinciples of the old-fashioned Jefferson , d - Jacksonian stamp. iNVO fear there' , ome, however o in our nlids4 who would leave the old plat form, and Olow hard after the new light's of the _firetpro4f., Let them go.. They are traitors to tlipi country and the Democrat ic cause=forgetting the Keystone state in their lova for South Carolina, and seeking to reduce the prices of labor to the pauper standard of r.urope--the two-pennies a day of Russia, and the five-pence of und !—: Even- that false and arch-propffir David Wilmot,: crninot delude . the independent ,electors bf Northern Pennsylvania-into so suicidal an ,!iiibandonnient' of their ancient principles. IDavid, we admire your talents, but do Soirspeet tos read such arreeliPse over the Dolmocracy f Susquehanna' as :to make therniforget that you, alone, of Perin •i syliania's sons, discarded and spurned the rights of her citizens 1 Why did you strike at our dearest interests, and aim a-crushing blow at :did! poor laborers Why did pal, in defiance bf the resolutions of our time honored Cciivention, crouch to England aad yield up Idyll° territory from 49 degrees up to 54-4Nand afterward give over Pennsyl vania, houfr hand and foot, to the tender mercies! of a aireign tyrant 7 The answer is plain T —bKause your southern market de manded it .' And doing all this, can you ask the people of Susquehanna and Tioga to go to : the r polls, like driven cattle, and vote for such a reneg ade and traitor? You may guillotine tote sturdy democrats of Bradford as you 'please, but- here, on the free soil of Susquelianim, you will find your political grave dug so deep that even the hand of res urrection "4nnot reach you. Even R. J. Niven,. oud, of the clerki of the clique, can 'not save yOu, albeit with you must full his ardent desike for the office of Prothonotary. TARIFF MEN-TURN OUT On Tuetiday . next, and give R. G. WHITE, Esq., the Democratic Tariff Candidate for CongrbSs, kuch a majority that the petty " dough foOes" . of the di3-trict may under stand theiti, position. Go to the ballot-box with the cimsciousness that you are -free-- men—indiendent, intelligent freemen.— Spurn front your presence with disgust, the vile politic* demagogue (and' there arc not a few of them in this county,) who would attempti to influence your vote by threats or promisq; in a word, take your own busi ness info four own hands, and we will cheerfully abide the result. 1*,000,000 Non-Producers. According to the estimate of the Grow-i> portion of he Clique, made itt the Court house, pa i!Thursday evening last; " There are, in the United States, but 897,000 per sons engaged in all the various branches o manufaCtitte, and 3,000,000 in agriculture." Now, ifthi4 be true, will that expounder of new dogintis inform us what occupation the other 17,009,000 follow ? When sfieakers make statements, such as the above, before an enlightened audience, 4 there can 4e, no reliance placed upon the inferences "which they draw, or respect he paid to their judgment. We cannot so dis trust the itikell4, - rence of the public as to be lieVe thar t :?_itch:?_itchdisplays of prnsuniption and arrogancelvill have the slightest effect upon their votesi; at the coming election. This;satne youth is now traversing this County, dOivering speeches an trying to humbug tqose he deems ignorapt, into the support. of the Anti-American Tariff of '46, and wesopine he will be caught, if watched, making statements equally gross, as the one just mentioned—therefore we warn the pub lic againsti i his misrepresentations, and vile innuendo,. ThUrsiday Evening's Meeting. Theo was an attempt made at getting up enthusiosni in favor of the ,re-election of David 'Wi(snot, in this Borough, on Thurs day evening. of last week. Notice was given, ierlally, on Wednesday, and Thurs day morning published in the down-town Organ,!thet Hon. David Wilmot, the great champion of the Anti-Protective Tariff act of '46, .would address the citizens of Mont rose, at! chi Court-house, on the evening in question. ;Expectation wagon tiptoe. The Orgaiz gripders were trotting up and down street, !drumming up the doubtful, in order to strengtken their faith, as they felt sure an attendance to the meeting, and hearing the 5 oraclesifrotn the lips of the Apostle himself, would .do, J., The Meeting comb off, but what "a change came over the spirit ..or their dream. 1" 1 True, an audience collected, though huite a sparce one,a majority of which were tke fiJrn adherents to R. G. White and proteetion.f; . The excitement, (Oh, that this record could be avoided,) was got up by force. Twice or thrice, during the discourse,, hen something '. l ,tharir was said, we heard a few of those itho had received particular in structions from the great guns of the Clique, clap their hands, but this was done merely as a piece f mechanism, wide:tut life or on) Aftjri M. Wilinot had done, G. A. Grow was calied on, probably to follow an ancient Jewish !cuitom, the audience being well druuke9 vtith Wilmot's political wine, that which Vrasireorse (though worse was - need less,) wits placed before them. Enthusiasm then to4k lienite entirely and could n9t be in duced, eitliier by bribes or threats, to show its din4istied head in this vast coneourse. Thus_passeid off this grand effort of the Of fice-holders, . o fAce-e'xpectants, ana Demi ! goguev, to wheedle the peoplq into the belief 'the David Wilmot, alone, is theirirul friend. " The mountain labored and trough a nude!" For the reo pie's. Advocate DEMOCRATIC FELLOW-CITIZENS : Although unaccustomed to the use of the pen "; when I look upon the present, and then turn back and view the past, I cannot 'forbear, this once, the attempt. For several years past, there has existed, in the Borough of Mont rose and vicinity, as desperate and graceless a faction as ever polluted the political at mosphere of any community, who have from year p) year assumed the prerogative of dic tating to you who should .or should not be your officer* and such as they presiimed to favor, and such alone, in most instances, have been elected. We have gone into con vention, and in a spirit of mildness-and con cession, asked for reitrencliment and,reterm, until ashamed longer ter ask. One year ago, we presented our cause boldly before jou, determined tothrow off the trawls of would be-dictators, and , exercise - the inestimable privilege of Freemen. No sooner had the. first note of liberty been sounded, :carrying dismay and alarm into the midst of the &YR• ricious clique surrounding the Fire-proof, than the epithets of Disorganizers, Traitors, Barnhurners, Political-shuifiers, &c., &c., became the burden of their graceleSs print, and you might almost look in vain • for any thing else. The conflict finally Came, and the struggle passed, not, however, without inflicting a mortal wound upon that despe rate Junto, the festering and nauseating cor ruption of-which is weekly disgorged , throo gh the columns of the misnamed Northern Democrat. Democrats, can you look upen , such graceless efforts and "not be convinced that a desperate faction is now straining ev - - ery nerve to retain the high places of power, in order to do Which, they would sacrifice , tneir country and its interests, and trample its sacred rights; and institutions, .beneath the ponderous hoofs 'of desperation. The motto of this faction is " rule or ruin." Whilst upon this.subject, let the advert to the last primary Meeting in Choconut, at which a number were present, and see the course there pursued; after having-appoint ed delegates, a resolution was presented, in structing them in convention to support cer tain persons therein named, which resolu tion was opposed, bin being finally pia, some two or three voted upon each side. The chairman declared it carrieil, whilSt the op posite side declared_ it a tie—nevertheless, the house was overruled, and the resolution returned as carried, because they.dare not again submit it to the house. Democrats, will you again submit to become the pliant. tools of this central Clique 3 or willyou take the field, ori the second Tuesday inst., with " One Term" for your watchword, and for your motto, " Is he honest? Is , he capa ble '?" Say to thein in the language of free men,-we will exercise that Heaven-born pre rogative, regardless of fear or denunciation from any quarter 'whatsoever. Yes, there speak in a voice whose silent but reverbera ting thunders shall cause that desperate Junto to quake with fear. Four years ago the Democratic .Conventili of this. County, through its Delegates, recognized the One Term Principle as democratic ; .but how has this Junto treated the principles then . put, forth as the future guide to action ? They have trampled them beneath their feet, and becaUse you have dared to speak, the mark of Cain has been placed upon -your brows--your names have been rejected from the Jury-boxes, and their Committees, -and instead of being met as Democrats with your country's best good at heart, you are de nounced and insulted at every turn. With such treatment staring you in the face, I ask, can you again return like the sow to her wallowing in the mire, or the dog to his vomit?' Whilst I answer, for thyself, NO, I trust it will be caught up, and on the wings of revelberating thunder, echoed and re echoed throughout the length and breadth of this county. With regard to most of the candidates be fore you for your suffrage, on the second . ( Tuestlay inst., I have nothing further to say. Francis Quinn has been presented for Audi, tor. Last fall he was consulted, and gave his free consent to be placed in nomination, on the -People's Ticket, for Coroner; but, after having been visited by a certain politi cal, office-seekitg Gent, not a thousand miles distant, he saw fit to desert the cause, and publicly witharaw from the conflict.— Had he remained, I could not have given him my support, for I did not deem him sufficiently competent to discharge the du ties of the said 'office, much less those of the one to which he now aspires. Democrats of Tax burdened, Susquehanna: can you, will you trust the settlement and final ad justment of your County accounts in, the hands of guch a man? if you Will; murmur not at the increased burden of taxation, for it will be virtually your own doings. For myself, I have sdunded the alarm, in t?uth and verity ; and having discharged my duty to you, I shall have no part nor lot in the matter, except to deposit° my ballot, upon the day of conflict. , In this I have present ed nothing but the candid opinion of those who are acquainted with iFellow -Democrats: Having discharged tny duty, to myself and you, I again lay aside my pen, for. the present. - A JACKSONIAN DEMOCRAT. Western Susq'a, Sept. 30, 1846. QuEnfr.—Sliould like to know it,the press eat .nowinatiori ,is the result of n. bargain made in order to"nduce gip aforesaid can didate tolwithdra* from that last conflict, as his declination 4d nomination seem to be the result of the slime Gentle labors. " Sold to the Whiiti" seems to be the accusation of thtse whoJ support the Bri , tish Tariff 4 . d - oppo s the American Tariff of 1842. Now, for want of an argu ment to account for a Democratic Legisla ture and Democratic Memfers of Coogresi sustaining the Fo4d and wholesome measure of the '42 Tara,lhe friends of the Southern free-trade British' . Tariff cry out " sold to the Whigs !" Can, it be posstble that all our great Men,' except David Wilmot, have sold themselves to the Whigs; aid if so, what was the price paid ? who fur4shed the funds 1 and are the Democrats O f f Pennsylvania so easily bought 1 Sildb islandeis upon the honest Democracy of liennsylvania should not go unrehuked, nor ibdced will not. The Peo ple know their interests and will maintain them. ri For the People's Advocate. Progres,ive Democracy. "Olin and th4gs chang." was the head ing of an article.:Which appeared in a neigh boring print a f 4 months since, and wheth er the writer alluded to his own political career, which' it to fitly deScribes, or wheth er to the party of which be is chief fuglc , man, lamat a loss to determine. That it will apply to the latter, any one who is at all observant, -icatinc)t fail to see. I propose to notice briefly wins of the changes Which has come over 'llle . spirits of some of the • would-be-leaders:.! of the D,emocratie Party in this county 04 a subject which engrosses much of the public mind—The Tariff. _ That the Democratic Pt4ty from the time of letierson, to Ivithin a tear or two past, were. the firm awl unflinching advocates of the principle of protection, with discrimina ting rates of duties, none will deny. Even down to 1542,' ,vheti the:present bill was under consideration, our lace Representative; lion. A. IL ,Rtiad, made one of the most able and convineong Speeches of the session, which was publiiilied in Advocate of last week, in favor 4if that principle. Against. Mr. RetuiN political orthodoxy and straight forward and consistent course, none ever have or ever can dissent.: Did -Mr. Rend. faithfully expres.t the opinions of his party in this district inithat speech? The answer comes in his un4iiimous nomination and tri umphant election within three-months after this speech was:llelivered., That the Depiocratic far* entertained! the Same pritteiOcs in 1844, I quote the fol-i lowing emphatic declaration of opinions ex-t pressed in resoltjtions reported by GEO. FUL-t LER, and adopted at one of the largeit con-F ventions of the.' ( party, held at the. Court. House Jan. 15,1844, at NVllich Hon. 11:. La-11 throp presided. Resolved, That we aro.in . favor of a Ta.4l riff for revenue,discriminating and ritovecii Ttv E in its.character and principles, sufficient) to meet-the necessities of 'an honest and mail nomical adminiitration otipublic affairs. Resolved, Tlint although the present Ta 4 riff Law may 4, and_ doubtless is defective in some of its p4irts, yet ;c1 -g believe that the AVERAGE RATE pF DUTIES ESTABLISHED DYI, IT IS NOT TOO IfiOn.; • • There is no mrsunderstnnding these resoi lutions. 'We find nothing here of " BlacV Tariff!" " Opflessing the poor man !" and other clap-trap Iparadc4 of the Progrcssivet Dcmocrac y- 7 --btii. as strong an approval ask was ever uttered by the warmest eulogist of the bill. • At the succebdinff April Court we, find-it among other resolutions, the following, Were adopted at another ;Demoem' ticl4lceti ing, called to refpond to 9m --nominations 041 the 4th of Manili State Convention, of Go-4I vernor and Canikl Commil.:sioner. They are!) as strong a cond;emnatiorti of the "horizontalli ad volarum" prnciples as can r well be Milli gilled. - i b- Resolved, That a Tariff for reve nue adapt-ii ed to the economical expenditures of Go= vernment, with Ithe principle of " discrimtio nation in favorlof American Industry and; American Products" agd affording them "reasonable incidental protection," is not{ ; only sanctioned lby- Jon.. b practice of Gover nGovern-`; meat, but imperatively demanded by the inil portance of the great interests concerned. l , Resolved, Tlfarthe increase of the Ttiri by the present ,act was', demanded by tX inadequacy of he revenge in-relation to they expenditures of Govern*nt, and theiiisasi trous operation .isf the 110DIZONTAI: : D VALO REM system of cluties, under t'he oci n of the minimum reduction of the Cornpro list Acc. I —that the duffs upon foreign /My:, Coal Salt, Wool una other products coming ir4 competition with those' great interests of Pennsylvania, ARE NOT niore than sujicien incidental proteFtion to those interests. At a meeting the Democratic ASsoCial ft, , I tion of that ste;rling Democratic township —Lenox, July .8, 18441, the following ems' phatic expression of sentiment, wholly a . variance with the principle of the British! ? Tariff of 1846 as made. ' f Resolved, That we ar in favor of.a judi v ' . csous Tariff, sub!' an on ' as when added of ~,„ the Procecids oti the pu is lands, would bet adequate to the entire ex i nses of the rederat z Govermnent, add such a; one that iniporta4 lions would not ipterfere ' ithdbaerica'n man-; , ufactures. i. 1 . ,'. Such were.* princiles under Which they Democratic paity triumithed in the mama rabic Struggle ot 1 844.11rhati's the Position.' - k of the party inilB46l. iI - need only quotq the resolutions gdopted it the late Convert- 5 f tiou r Resolved, Tliat we hail the modification of the Tariff nels of '42 he another progresi dive step in rho 4igislation of our countr) , ; to free labor from he unjUst exactions of tlim monied power. ! , l; Resolved, That George. M. Drill: (Carless discharge of his duty, has himself to the Dertiocracy.of the 1 tti entitled to the gratitude of. the onsumers, who by the unjust legs, 142, are compelledfrom-dieir hard ~: swell the profits 4of a few brand; ustry. i l Resolved, 1VC0 0 1)17.0 a re . *nd faithful t eats. His i s ib the unjust .0119„ meets th ;bestowed upo: i . , If this is fil A. J. D ;the ground olgy Ivailia, I ca l Of language. 011ictioiis of o Ir. Clay wa i ir . -ould he rep,l , asd o cst t l'feountry." en? !Peen publicly !!eould ever It 'State.' to, prlocipl for s i the old lunar! „ ;mow the he; wt In 1/11Mr51 ion thrown he breezes move, and DI, er of course down-troddeit deprived of t debtednc.ss, we now pay, Whati Merel Southern vis their Northe What the • i.cis 3 shall ,rtisade aga tug fir the selves as too exacting ma Democratic NVhite Esq., regret mina durse the co A few day 31r. Wilmot,l ,places, atte protective in Hand that his with the land of Democrat. Ifthat lion. A against the- I .his speech That Mr. first draven oppose its p amended, 14 1 coffee. Th was sent to ti but he vctoe. 1842, as the introduced- 0 • his objection! became a hil l I ' , much talked When Mr, against the he knew the sertion, wou against whic a law, and Wilmot vote When rue the one abo political rep perate indeed min mad, tu l nothing sh o who di,trust: ened constit i sents the col more worth ;I AGRI The Socit culture an Horticultur•' my in Sus% First Aonur rough of M day of Octo Persons Sheep, or Pruit, - Vege Mechi►nical desirable to invited to 11 appointed. of them, if' them think next sutteei It is provi hut member funds shall but this due', tho,benefits annual cent hope is io will be adrh' led, to be di- . All comp , that dhe foil. by the Botir, servpace of 1. All all mina's on choose, sug similar prod, their specim i noon previa, may be cle and laultalil 'Committee. 2.. Person miums oti hat in Hon. David '1 iresentative.true to In the interest of his, !dependent standiu nd labor oppressing ordial approval of t Inin their suffrage.', It ait nbSolute cupied by the party not understand the'. , It iS literally fulfillin I r federal op p onents, that "If defeated, the Tani of '42 • ale& or at least so f r modifi -1 oy- its beneficial effe is on the in ' , nu believe that had the mined in the last r solutions acknowledged, that Ir. Polk ye carried the old " itystone be the effect of this i pmgres _ e` on:ithe party, rem i ns to be mile dread the .aband nrcient of larks' of :Detimeracy. If. we ist iiinovation, we now not - end. Already we harainon,g these new lights,.tl intima e Inc {but -free trade +" free as if Heaven" is to he; the next .... ItECT TAXATION Illtisr as a mat • folloiv in its train. Are you k, prepared for this. Lust poor 4, tax.;ridden •Pennsy vania, be : e means of liquidati g her in nd an addition equa to which be levied upon her.. And for to' - gratify the notion onary free-trade the servants, is our duty at the p e bid theiii God-spe st our dearest inter divid6als who lave to do the bidding ers. If we ennnot Tariff eandirjate mold' we el (have sin;; at laomXathe opponeut. '4 DEMO EM cable - Subterfag. : since, as we are it a speech at Rush pted to shosiE- that is features, is Anti.d course is in strict tarkslaid down by t • , in this district, b i` H. Read, now deco; ariffact of '42, notivi l behalf of its protectiv i ad voted aptinst Ip, is true; but still otectihn. He wisliel striking oft - the duty_ Bill passed both 11 1 llie President, for hi! it. On the 22d 'records show, a ne ty Mr. M'Kennan; fbr Which he voted, beihg the iilenti against liy Mr. Wil Wilmot said " Mr. 1 I 'miff of 18-12,and _inference, drawn fro, d be :anise one, been Mr. Read voted neV he one for which h, • _against. will kW') to subtil le mentioned, to sacs tationi their consent 1 4 Alarm has made d his Madness runic t of niter ruin await . the intelligence of ' encyp. and wilfully rse pursued by tho' of praise than he. ULTUTAL .SOCI ty for the advaneeme the Mechanic Arts d Domestic or RI. eitanaa County, w 1 Fair f or Exhibition, ntrose, on Tucsda per instant. Itaring Horses, Ne ) wine, and those hay I ables t and Flowers, Implements that it introduce into tbe C, Lin g to Montrose r, , A committee will ti 1 he aiviteror persons proper, . and will re, ddy. • . ,ed in the bye-laws,, • and. riersonscontribi' be competitors for not pre-vent other pc ', of tbd exhibition ; i ibution .is only, fifty , ulg,ed that many nob Itted; and thin anion!). horsed' infuture exhi It; „ .., ' ...tors for premiums. a , wing:Rules have bee i: of 141anagers; and a bent Will be reipiired: intend to compete f , 'II,, 'Truitt egetabl r, coe.ooits, s ilk, &A ctionS, are requeste , •ns oi ki die ground' in s to; pip 'exhibition, g :ted}'i't some apprap: arranged 'by . -do: intending to .compe grieukural or Mccli 11 fi 1 s n , md i oe n sat d i r , e f e: and, and lation of arnings, es of in- ilC P o lni n t w s d ti gem t: position Fariff of lose who ment of Penn- meaning the pre- s of sonic ribts and =MEI d in their is by vo- ent them of their T 1 obert G. reason to than ea- 'RAT, in formed, and other a Tariff, mocratic, I cegrdance I e Fathers asserting sed, voted I hstanding qualities. e Bill, as e did not to see it n tea and uses, and • sanctia4; , f August, Bill was obviating nd which. al one so end voted o did I," this as se the bill er became did vote, MEM a slaking t be des- MIME him; for the 'man n enlight niisrepre-- infinitely ELI t of Agri- . including, al Econo -1 I hold its at the 136- I the 20th Cattle, g Grain, • - well as would be unty, are t the time to charge • Ili biting rn on the dint none tin n' to the remiums, ,sons from n d 11S the lints, the members contribu ! . "lions. notified adopted strict oh-- the pre butter, •ors, and to' have the aßer that• they iate place iecutive • for pre- Bleat im-