Indiana American, Volume 16, Number 45, Brookville, Franklin County, 3 November 1848 — Page 2
U HOI) Iv VI L Ij K, INI)! A X A . FRIEAY, NOV. 3, i8'8.
FOR I'll KS II) F.N I" IN' S-IS, Ceil. XACHAICY TAVLOIi. 14ln no ca-ec:iu I irnm. niysrlr.n lie f lie canitulalf tt.aiiv lanr.or vitiil iti4t-lf
I hr iimul ..r all .:.rir, ami the Nanynai ?.,,. ; insane impulse which this generation has bap-'Ojk-hu caunui brinifeii u ithmit ptr-lrt-. i-an- tized with the name of Progress will be removJ"',.V!!".fi'i",i" mTl' " "C"".hXV.r. t.anJ llfuta will be full of uncertainty : - ! and gloom. . . lirwnir of Fran,!,! We do not invite you to attend the polls on There will, nndoubtedly, Ik) circulated, :m- ; Tuesday next. As a man of sense, and as a mediately before and on the day of the election, p;,triot, we know you willl be there. We simpreports and falsehoods, intended and calculated , y desigu to urge y0 Dy every motiT8 that cau to injure Gen. Taylor. We have been given to j influence au Americau citizen to labor for the understand that a project of the kind is now I welfare of his country, to animate your neighmaiuring in this copnty. We call upon all i0rs. See th ,t every Whig is at the polls. Pro-
ty.ligslo brand as falsehoods, these eleventh hour electioneering lies. Let those who read this, caution those who do not see it Hon. V. It. Smith. Will address the citizens of F,-ai:kHn Co. at the Court House in Brookville, this (Friday) eveDing at candle lighting. Whi;js and Democrats, are fnvited to attend. The ladies also are reFpertfully invUed to attend on this occaMOn. Mr. Smith will also speak at Laurel, on tomorrow (Saturday) at 1 o'clock, P. M. K- m , j "-. wTparkeTT W ill address the citiztus of Union Co. at Rowburgh, 4 miles south of Liberty, on Monday the 6th day of Nov. This will be the last rally be"fore the question is settled by the ballot box. Will a,!,'!VT ,lnrr"7; tZl" I'"' n Sa'rdaV '" iuuieiigiiung. lie is an able and -.oquent speaker, and we hope to see a crowd i . . vuu me ladies re invited. Heeling nt I'nion. lAHV IT t- . . a. r AKVlL'tlAK, Esq , will address
the people at Luion on Monday evening next. : MF';', delernliued to maintain your rights at all Come out, and hear him. " '".hazards!
IIoetiBj at Franklin. John t. Mccarty, Esq, w, iI(idress Inp rit!?pno .,f P; r i i . . . . Hn on M.J vicinity, at F "SJtVoter, Be early at the polls. Stand there as sentinels npon freedom's watch-tower. P:S chanics, laborers all be -. 1 m. tt ujrjia, 1 1 If armers, meon the ground If you would saveyourselves,and save v ty from the corrupt rule of loco foco ascendency' fill r no. . - Pwer, go early and be found late at the nnlU- :- i . . J"ur ,luo" are now wanted. Go and perforin a freeman's dut i , cause. j jvmi i.uuuirv 8 ' ' I-'reenieu!! Every motive which cau inspire thinking free"en to action, calls upon you to act at once! The prosperity of the land stretches out its hands to yo for preservation! The sacred II I i - eV"nm' aPpel to you by givuuus mstory of the past not to desert inem now! Onr yonr aid to preserve it from i tons titutiou invokes uiutilatiou, and that aome whig policy whi. I. I.- . . , - " "mirrio iiispired yon and your fathers rises before von , Lk your zealous and faithful support ! That policy rjs before you in aI, the august attnbutes of allegory-wilh the cap of Liber, v-wilh the horn of PJe,,,,-.,,,, Lu fee and the hnmortn! sword of Defence! It appeals to you for prote, tion, & i,s ,ppea, will e in vuia! "Don't stand still." These are thrilling words, and let onr friends throughout the Union obey the admonition. As .n the moral, so too in the poluical world, we should be ever on the alert. The moralist exclaims, "Don't stand still " if you do, you will be run over. Motion, acl'ion progre-theseare the words which now fill the vault f heaven with their stirring demands, and make humanity's heart pulsate with a stronger bound Advance, or stand aside. D ct block up the way, and hinder the career of ,h. a. v.. II- - ... iur: ?re is too much to do to allow r : tion anywhere or in any one. ; Yes, MOTION. ACTIOY nno , frienHrm. ..- . "lul,1t . ..revomuiuuoiiaad laws 'now' il... oy and new's the hour r, . .. . ' Be in motion. 'ou i stand Hill. 1 You r principles are again on trial. You i must defend the..,, tn : Advance or ,tand .j,, well guarded. Get out every voter. Are there i any who cannot walk?-give them a ride. Let ns have .clear track and . fair trial, and we' will soon see whether our oft-r...i Js... , w.iioe ventied, of au unexampled Whig viclory j .... . ,r,.sent month. - UM Vrdi. It has been unfort unately conceded that In- I -.aaLehavebe n mo r-! . every instance where I dlaaa will vole ford lified to observe that, v.uuiv.a are made as to tli ..u .... ... Presidential election, our twelva electoral votes I are set down as certain for that venerable ' I i gogue. The certain cousequance is, specially ill rnnni: I I . m counties like our own. mm, a.:a i . r iuvutoco mmnrifv . majority, to amongst the Whigs. 1 1 ny orrauizatinn I w. h. 7 ili eu,ireIy "T0ND ba with a faithful effort made by every true Whig ll UJTM acces, .. 6,"""ueP-M mawly for their ; S e eU Zr Th" ' nanni ' b"8 "pa,'"St " sma!l ! Z To f'TextteL8 00 aS8Urdnee f 1 Z L r ay.' 88 BVery ku0W8 ' that the common school tuestinn ,) I cal issues. eBra .1- ... .. . ' i Willi, the Presidential rn..,V.l , . ! tllin trtf nn . i ded to. . . . - ' , mi u : e have it iu our towr in ... . ,' vuvOfc OSJ I im V ti'lmm. t 88 lllnjl.. ..'I.. i confident belief uf a p. of ,.,7 j Z it" wit nT' that 'he WM ! ' "V i uie election in imiciuuor. in Conner on -iil. .1 .. ii cousiner- f 01 victory. w. -Jj need not tell von th .tnn.l- .ucn'wej .Hing dep J Def aJ n l,-;-';.oeveryj higpa'ty.J: "d ' in the .ffi.fr. of k"PWn don their orgaail?" ' P , eh. of u.e pz i:;;;: TheSonudi0slaal"JZlV o uu vou an iii. a. , ,,Mr" OKIion of shivery into the terri,., . --- . uicriLi'n- : fro. MM Ti,: . r . . . " J ' al"'red ; - This fatal infli ltieiirM r.t , 1 1 ,
,u""' aro eoision anion the l.Bf. .r My from vour fields!
iv.. "v i , vi j - - i vm y our nre w ions, aud the recent succnfl r .ulIOM Men VOU Vchf haxr. r. .
higs in Ohio and Pennsylvania, overwhelming " liberties-RALLY! Youn2 Men- ! our enemies with an absolute certainty of defeat.!- Perve our liberties in ,J
no nillog our friends with the ronCU. u 1 Yet to come R A I.T.Vi '
.urever orives into ins-iguificauce those Northern and Western interests that dir. ,, , 'e-'suidt depend uplh. welfare of our mn.nfac.ur. 3, upou ,h0 , rrrrmauency of a home market for the Dgricul- I
r , . . - wuto and :
tural wealth of the Mississippi valley, and upon l llie safe navigation of the rivers, lakes and har- ! bors of our country. The Veto, designed by our fathers as a shield to protect the Constitu- ; tiou, will he more boldly than ever grasped by
the Tres-ident, as a sword to invade the the leI gitmidta power of Congress, and destroy, for 1 party ends, the uecessary legislation of our rep-rt-sentalives. The wholesome conservative re- ; Kir.iints placed by our organization npou that : every hig polh ' v;.le Kur, influence as will arouse up all who See that tickets j are indifferent in the cause. are distributed. Watch against imposition and ! warn our friends pgainst falsehoods circulated j on the day of election. Have the sick and the lame conveyed to the polls. Our country requires one day at our hands. Let us yield it cheerfully, and by one hearty, united, and glorious effort, place our institutions under the
; guidance of Z ichary Taylor, and beyond the i '9 an excellent book keeper careful and sysj reach of those dangers that now so fearfully I tonatic, and h;is an honest heart iu his jacket. ; threaten them. j With them, the-efore, with ail our interest in F R I E r J DS OPT AY LOR!! I the fcrdir, we trs wiliinR 10 ,rusl the honor. the
I ON TUESDAY. THE SEVKXTfT nyi, - PrWp,iy w me order. May
Ut NOVEMBER, you wilLbe called upon to j discharge a high and solemn dutv. On that dw i y must declare hy your votes whether the ' - d of iron ! We therefore trust ! that eveTy man who really loves his country, 'and is de desirous of seeing her once more pros perous, will be at the doIIs nn th 7th r November, prepared to discharge his duty hon1 estly and fearlessly. Turn out. then, aa pbfitI In order to assist our friends, we would adi vise them ta ' Re Cnrefnl ; to examine well and see that the B dlot Box is (empty when the voting commences. The Cass- , no doubt will attempt some of their usual frduc,!i a"J mast therefore be watched. Ati tend to this advice anH . th : t - -" u : is not neglected. 1 See that the Voles arc Counted 33 Sn as tl,e I"01'3 are c,06ed- Remember. 1 Ule ,!allot box 18 'our on'y hope. Guard it with a watchful eye. Also, Ix-t not the Rnllot Box j be taken from the place of voting until the votes are counted. Your opponents are now desperj ate, and may, if allowed the opportunity, resort to desperate means to maintain their power. At the polls j oh will probably find Bullies Panted to frighten you from voting. But be not alarmj ed- Show that you are freemen, and will exj ercise freemen's rights. You must also Wnteh Illegal Voter. i KerP a v''laut eye upon them, and suffer no man to vote who is not entitled to a vote. ..... (,i mil again be cheated out of your rights. ou must also Kent The Polls rain or shine, bailor snow, at least an hour or two before they are opened. Talk to your aciuuiiiiaiicrs wno have been deceived aud misled by the hireling's of power. Many honest Democratsnvy vote with the Locofocos. if they are ...,t ....,.! ... i ... . . J
. n Hu.iiinea wun the destructive nieas- i j, n.c uau oi vuoa. ures which they wish adopted. Be in lime to ' Th eXaCl S'ate f lhe negociitlion i not disclotalk, to se, and you will do your country creat WU'd n0t 8url"''',e us were this true.
Kuou,aria prevent them from assisting to destroy l,: r j b J their own freedom V. hot, the PolN are Open, vote yourselt, and then look out for your neigh bors. If one be missing Start out after Him, a., ue.-eecn nun by all means to go and voteIf Ku j i , . i If he wo, t g0 and leave his work, stay and oraforh,m until he returns. Do all that is I fair and honorable to ti. .k Our opponents alway, manage to get their frien.T. T. : .. "Kellne,r " " ' ineume8 to learn of onrcnemus. We should all Rear in mind th,t we have votes enough to eive the mioritj; " the 7th of November f ni,i n " KrMlv jf M opponent. ! h 0ut f T their part Sha trM of T.ylor be less active when the best i '"ere.t of onr country are at stake, aud we have i it in onr rower to (T,rt r ! roriM fremen! Rather let us all do our I W II I V fnrl VII. r- - j , . ..... , bk REDREMEO! Frermra! tnn.l at the Inlt. " " " ,losw,'ad 8 bo old and Z l I " t0 ... ' . v,u au uiiim voters irom the polls. n . i . i .... , Wel1' lhMefoM nd kwP tho ay j r.nrmirM: Tl. -. . . . "T 11 C rVU ia l . i ney win circulate every manner of falsehood tune oiiifirs'titiiiffftaiia. Don't believe them. T iw 1 l r .. . . uuu Lue ersinrtm t 1 .-. uii our apponents, and has already U-en begun by the office-holers in ! Washington. e ot neeeired bv Them nit. ij a OF BATTLE IS NEAR. Constitution aud Laws-f Are Soon Wages, good Trices for Produce, good M' nd T thing.-p ed fr U,e bl,ltie " tho of November J Let th - yo uXhb We thal ",an- who country i ,!.,i .;.. 1.:. .... . ... coaa"y, ' ' ' "luP paPer D"e the dread Ivruntn .. .v 1 t. r ." - w rest friend-tol tllfl4IL I 1 1 I I Ilm llul il kIiOH t i II I., t K- Iwl l t I ... iiini ,rv' nv TiTcniv titi. EMBErT 1 " F NVST,,,0,," ,heS" ,h!npS- frieni,S' "nd y -try ""t rr, triiim Frrnn nra, Rallv! Kid t fr..... I.:m -
.. . I I .. ." iw 1 rurivKallyfrom every vale! . ag a quarter of a million' and faring sumptul.'ull,. r ...i 1 ., . .. r"
,. , RALLV, ONE and ALL RALLY! Voi from the Orare. The Rochester advertiser furnishes the fol. P -fHUical history, ex,c,ed from V ,eU" by Silas Wright to a ntlna. ia county New York, under . Dgthe had lTrru KUffesiua as lhe nrobah Mmiiiiai. of the a t mi iiniii'nir nl Ina 1 ",. "'" ?' '"' tasltfs alld r.. t 1 - . '"' aiiu " - " " nurauon. fu,uMui so.uit-rs Have thns mmlin.,.: "'--". "i some have not a single one of "'T"" "'.evil situar.ons are wlToly destitute of moral linnness. Our friend Gen r. --e c f the.,,-, good soldier Vi i dBV' C l"' Uis owu ' civil off.ee and a IK - ruct tune Reiver and demagogue ." . . Tmn.uuus m
Vrciid Division S. of T. The annual communication of the Sons of Temperance of Indiana took place, commencing
on luesdry the iUih October, at Indianapolis. There were a larger number of delegates in ati tendance than at any previous meeting of the Urand division. About seventy five new members were iuiiiated into the G. D. From the reports of the officers we learned the order was in a healthy and prosperous condition. On Wednesday the24ih, the following officers were elected for the ensoing year, to-wit: WM. I1ANNAMAN of Indianapolis, Grand Worthy Patriarch. FAB1US M. FINCH, of Johnson Co. Grand Worthy Associate. JAS. G. JORDON, of Indianapolis, Grand Scribe. THOS. L. PAYNE, of Madison, Grand Treasurer. Dr. S.SCOVAL, of Hanover College, Grand Chaplain. DAVID DINWIDDIE, of Centreville, Grand 1 Conductor. Dr. DAYTON, of South Bend, Grand Seni tinel. j These are all good officers. Ero. Haunaman, j is a man, devoted to th order, and has a jsou' lu lle work. F. M. Finch, is a gentleman i and scholar. Mr. Jordan resides at Indianapolis j they be instrumental in doiug much good. The narvest is great, and we pray they may have talents and industry competent to the great work. Krand IHrision Hon of Tempera nee. The Ohio Stats Journal says, this body adjourned last evening at about twelve o'clock, after an arduous and laborious session of three !dayS' Ths a,tndance of R epresentatives was i larS'" and nearly all sections of the State i Wer rpPreseted- Many of subjects of interest ; wer disposed of, and a feeling of brotherly love narmony ctiaractensed the deliberations of : tlle Division. The following gentlemen were elected officers ', for the current year. Joshua Mathiot, of Newark, G. W. P. Kev. James B. t inley, of Columbus, G. W. A. Geo. M Young, of Cincinnati, G. Siribe. Samuel Galloway, of Columbus, G. Treas. Benj. Pritchard, cfCatinl Dover, G. Conductor. Rev. D. E Thomas, of Piqna. G. Chaplain. William Wall, of Dayton, G. Sentinel. The quarterly meetings for the next year are beheldasfollaws: At Springfield, the last Wednesday iu January. At Zanesville the last Wednesday iu Apail. At Cleveland, the last Wednesday in October Pennaylvania. The success of the Whig Govrnor, Johnson, of a Legislature with a Whig majority of 9 on joint ballot, with a certainty of a Whig Senator in Congress, and the election by the Whigs ofj two thirds of the members of Congress, are "fixed facts," yet the Locofoco leaders insist that If j the result there is in doubt, as they say it is in .,, nhii i Ohio Annexation of Cuba. icner iruin .uaoria in we JNew YorH tieraid of the 19th September, 1S4S, states that the A letter from Madrid in the New York Her- ; American Minister, nut' er instructions from !".V '"V".re'' u'.c' '"""-ucuone irom ! non, with the j Washington, had opened negociations with the : " P ' ernment for the purchase, for a larcre sum nf nmh.i. r ,1... T .1 J -r-..t ' ""u"" imrsis ior more slave terriI inrw nn.1 nr PT.. .:il I... l-i . . . .v,-..uuvwiUiii,m uj rparei calculated to obtain it. I-'rom Venezuela Rattle at t'nrora. New York, Oct. 30. An arrival at this port from Venezuela, reports " '",lUD Bl varora, oeiween the Government troops and a party commanded by Paez, in which ,h JL : u. ... ' , , -. . v ... u , cia nunureu suiea aud taken prisoners. loiter from Vneatan and .llexiro. New Orleans, Oct 26. By an arrival at this port we have advices from Yucatan of the 17th inst. Ten thousand T.-Ji .... r, . ga,n a,lac aqoaba, and ob-; - 6. . reure. 1 o Hundred whites n , . f T T P'C W'lh te lhUSand T1 . r ,. , Boston, Oct 30. 1 lle briS Camelite from Fayal for this oort. capsiied a few days since, drowning nine passengers. Steamboat .teriileat. Lovisville, Oct 30. The steamer Rio Grande, Capt. Connelly, from Cincinnati for Saint Lonis, suuk nearGolconda iu the Ohio river. The boat and cargo ' are a loiai loss tlie machinery may possibly be saved. No lives lost Cin. Gaz. 'Extra IaT..M.iugion Liiion, the slavish orran of F.olk Dd h" adminstration, and the servile gloriherof Chss ami hin l. .1 . . Kr" lr,-- " me meanness l ini,inua,e ,hat Gt"- Taylor has received and .u.Ko pay exira allowances. Now. who and what is this Ma Ritchie. He is the glorifier of Polk, Cass & Co., and has received from the People's Treasury, by Locofoco votes, the enormous sum of $277,43S:P2 in the short space of a single Congress. id mK.i.Mn. I . .. These Locofoco official favorites mah I i eel. gold mmes support princely establishments, fcMt'd '"T k"1 "I"6 feaStBUd be feasted, and then ahus iha K,o... i 1 -.11van 1111 v m 11 si ; . . " "" 'u suiuier ior tl .1 '"S earned wages which the law allows him never one cent over. nil.. l. . L. ,i iii , I. and then to the ZL 1 T, . ,. e T T - 7 v II'hlM .V. Ilieo .a" .r.. . I 4uauu j senary i ay ior, 7,393 6() Thus, while these Cass supporters uuy every uay, me nraveold chieftain is-leen iug on the ground, taking soldier's fare and gets ! r. 1, 1 j 1 1 ...uuwuu uouars 10 pay the expenses of hi. family, and bis own military expenses as a MainGeneral. This, the Cassites say, is too much, while they attempt to conceal the fact that Gen. Cass charged and received, frnm li ... . , ...... p mta, assoc;aies the enormous sum of $91,574:11 extra, being twice his leg-il pay and regular salary. The people, who pay taxes, will mark this extraordinary official plunderer. Wabaxh Rapids. From the Vincennes Gaz. we learn that the improvements at the Rapids are going on rapiui y ana in a lew weeks the canal will be ready to pass.
Political Blunder. It is stated that, in rtspect to the northern part of Pennsylvania, where the Democrats are in fovor of Free Soil, the Congressional Committee made a mistake, and put the wrong life of Cass into the neighborhood.
Whu wil! my rote do? D"Remember," says one of our exchanges, "thut It takes 'jut ONE majority to elect a candidate for office. One vote sent Bill Allen to the United States Senate from Ohio, and he has staid there ever since. One Vote elected Marcus Morton Governor of Massachusetts, one of the most reliable Whig Suites in the Union.
One Vote sent Martin Van Buren on a Foreigh Mission, at a salary of $9,000 per annum. One Vote sent Rnfus P. Spaulding, one of the most hitter Locofocos iu the country, to the Ohio Legislature from one of the best Whig counties in the State. Que Vote gave Darke ca., Ohio, ia 1844 to James K. Polk. Every vote counts. ONE VOTE may decide the coming contest. Let every Whig see to it that we loss not the contest by hia negligence. " Who ia CioTcrnor The Offical Krxult. The Ohio State Journal of Tuesday, furnish es the official vote for Governor, from all the counties in the State, save three, and in these ! t''"e' the VOte 'S authentica,y known and given rrom these returns there is a majority of 336 for Gen. Siabury Ford, and he is the Governor elect of the State of Ohio. Horace IJrecIj-. This great man is now doing noble work for Gen. Taj lor. The excellent address In this day8 paper to the free soil whigs of Ohio, is an excellent document It will read well to free soil whigs in Indiana. Iu Greely's last paper we see an equally eloquent address to the laborers of Pennsylvania. We give below his introductory words iu this address, as a specimen of the style! to wit:Mk.n and Brethren! For the familiarity of this adress.I make no apology aud ask no pardon. Your State is the chosen home of my kindred. I have worked on her soil and as a mechanic among her sons. She embosoms all I own of mis earm s surface but a grave. But, more than tli stlA lino n.n 1. .1 . ...j, icauner in me noble scie"Ce f Nationi11 cy- When but a child I listened to the words of wisdom that fell from the lips of her Snyder, her Tod, her Baldwin, her Forward, as from her chair of State and from the halls of Congress they appealed to Intelligence and Patriotism in bthalf of the policy of Protection to Labor. PENNSYLVANIA. j Tha Blairsville Apalachian, edited by R II j McCabe, Esq. has taken down the Cass ticket j and goes for Van Baren and Adams. It is printed on the boarders of Westmoreland and Indiana : Counties, aud has been always a Loco-Foco advocate, supporting Longstreth an! Painter at I the recent election. Votiug. In this State we are called upon on the 7th day of November to vote for twelve electors for President and Vice President of the United ? every man Tote tho fun ticket of twelve ' name8-as ,hree is no district voting, but a voS l'"8 f lhe e"lire Slate he that 8trikes from j I "is ticket a name looses one twekh nfliiar:K: is ucsei a name looses one twelth of his riffht of suffrage, and he that vote3 for a single elector, looses eleveu twelths of his suffrage Twelv- nih - .u i .. I '1? ' ZjtJS"' ' .rbiuiui lICKei. ' fneu Iu view of these facts, we call n frieuds nor lo cut tf;h'"Z Tote thorn entire, .nd they will have d . ' ""j nut nave u one their duty as good citizens and nothing but their dutyTaylor Enthuxiaanf The Tli iladelphia Inquirer says, that the enthusiasm in that quarter in behalf of the old Hero of Buena Vista increases with every hour. The meetings in Philadelphia city and county are immense. "Hundreds of Democrats have already joined our rauks, and not a day goes by that other accessions do not occur." ITlorc New Ooods. Mr. R. Tyner has just received his splendid assortment of New Goods richer, finer and cheaper than any lot ever opened by him in Brookville. Customers Bra CrnoMinir ,mnn but a few more can be aecommodated. 5 wfrvM Ullll, ' That large pile of Stoves just above the i I ... rr . J 1 ongs to John H. Fudge. It w wonaer wnat was to be done with them, if you did nnt Irnn. - A .u - v " gum; mcy were, and how cheap they were sold. To the Free Boilers. Dr. J. II. Jordon of Indianapolis, and a member of the Free Soil State Central committer has published an address, two columns long, caning upon the friends of free soil of Indiana, in eloquent and earnest language, to vote for Gen. Taylor. Severe Sentence. We learn by the Lexitgton (Ky.) Observer, that the man who was arrested for enticing tway 60 slaves from that vicinity, has been sentenced to twenty years imprisonment. The indictments against him were all withdrawn except one, on condition that he would plead guilty. Itlr Rhett aud Abolition; Mr. R. Barnwell Rhett, in a recent speech, advises ' the Southern Slate, t rt lncli.i.nl 4 1 ..' Sennit. . I
., .,4u u.eir Representatives, to oate ior liovernor, and Edward C. Cabell the eave their seats iu Congress, should abolition, j candidate for Congres,, have both been triumnhin any of its forms, prevail in the legislation of' antly elected. The Whigs have also eleo
Congress." The Unmet Ilonae It is stated that the Burnet House, now hein g j erected in Cincinnati, is to be one third larger 1 .1 a . . 111:111 i na a cinr ar . ... 150, 000. It is Zni a" cVmp'any Z K Pth.t Mr. Coleman of the' .So, . .... " A"ur "ouse, iew 1 orn wl hernm iu 1 "The Work sor brarelr nn. The Cincinnati Ch rnnirlA -. ci T :J.. jjcaiues ' O. "i 7 Z ! " ' "iniipri r X- i , iorx, nave entered the field Tl ' hav rn.J . -aa .u . .. . 1 ' ...fe D.UITO, ,B peple lnro,ighout the "" iew I ora tteinv nerfeetli, ..c ' fur OI. I 7nh thcki. u I Z 1 ITJT. a 1 " j Duiu the old patriot; and who doubts their success!" THE CRY IS STILL THEY COME The Boston Journal saysi We understand that Col. Isaac II. Wright, well known as a prominent and influential Democrat, and eommander of the Massachusetts Regiment of Volunteers, has come out for Taylor, and will sneak at the Mass Meeting in Lawrence on Tuesday. at it. The Holy Spring Mass.) Gazette gives the following specimen or abuse by a a speaker at the late mass meetiugin that State: "He called Gen. Tavlor ling, who entered his; country's service for his bread, had served her and fought her battles only for her money and had drawn $7,000 per annum out of her treasury. An ignorant old hireling, who if elected, wocld not have sense enough to kno that hs had to appoint cabinet umeers, or wnat a cabinet was.' " Lethonest patriots of everv nnliflcal o.j look at this. I any Such attacks must recoil fearfully, if there is patriotism, grratitude or decency left in the land. 1
ARRIVAL OF THE EUROPA. One Week loiter from I nrope. New York, October 25.
The steamship Europa, after a passage ofonly eieven aays and live hours, including stoppage at Halifax, has arrived, bringing Liverpool dates oi lib i i;n in.sl. I lie i..-w is important. relit n I. O'Brien was found guilty of hieh treason. The Jury rciconuneniWl him to mercy, but j events winch followed hU conviction forbid all U r i i ..P .0yal clemency, and it was confidently asserted that the sentence would be carried fully m o execution, audit was even said "this day will close his earthly career." Mnin .u , McManus another insurgent . t;A found guilty. ..:,. . b T ' QUU xxe was arrested at Uork, aboard ot an American ship. The question was raised . H raisea, wiicuicr wneil under nrnlpi-linanfih. Am.: flag England had power to arrest him. ' " "iui Lord Morpeth has been elevated to the peerage. m . . N, n.7T , r . . , X ' . ' ' By .. w.,tl h we have date, from Vera Cruz to the 13th inst. The latest i,.ll: r .t ro .,, ;::T 7' "'ly0,iV1X1C ., , lne KepUDlc . g-.u,n a d,sturbed and troubled condition, hemdications strongly portend another revonau DroclaimeH thi. :j H .. I i i .... fT. i- i , . of Tamaulipas, and dec ard in f... r 1r"wJ ui me oiaie tion to the United States. Yucatan. An atbct huA prison otlabyl ZtjtZ thousand Indians 1 m. -tack, uth!dkL .asx soldiers. Many of the Indians 11 .1 TT -ed, but the numb"; I 1 Snn. "dUunore I-oiu the South. theWNlwle W!!griUg 'P'' disp3tCh Memphis Oct. 24. Ex-Governor McNutt, of Mississinnl. AA yesterday. The body is now in this city on the
--j .v. u iauj nome. , isive iriumpni v hat good end is even proTampico dates of the 6th give us information Posed-by 11,080 who counsel that course?: Supof a serious disturbance there, resulting in the i p0Se 11 Were P0SsibIe to g the vote of the rejection of the Government troops by the citi- i State 10 Van BureD (and y must know it is zens. The New Orleans Delta considers this as ' nf,) d yU Dot 866 " ia effect Biv'D? " part of the Sierra Madre movement. r to Cass? Every Electoral Vote against TayDates of the 5th from Victoria, xas, informs ! 'r eilher TOte for- Ctt8S 'reclly. or 'against us of frontier disturbances, caused by ludia in- ! a choice of lhe PeoPle. and so in favor of Cass cursions, which resulted in barbarous murder, i i,,dire"y : for he and no one else will assuredly
1 lie citizens had gone out as scouts In everv Sir. ectiou A man named Beck was stabbed this evening by an ther named Wilson. They were partners in business. The fire which occurred here on Sunday last, was supposed to be the act of incendiary. Six hundred bales of cotton were destroyed, valued at $14,000. No Insurance. Mexican Revolution ftupvremed. New Orleans, Oct. 25. The British West India mail steamer Forth, has arrived off Shi She bri!,&s advices from Mexico to the 14th inst TU p..i.: , ... - ria ruz. The Revolutionary outbreak, of which ther were threatening indications forsome time previous, took place on the 9th. Ths Government was fully prepared, and acted with decisive energy; troops were called out; cannon were planted to bear on available points, and before bloodshed eneucd. iIia incnrru.11.. ... fmstrated. Iturhi.Ie. n.1 ' u. '. connected iviih if 1 . , .j "hici umuers .., Wcu orresieo and imprisoned. The object of this movement is said to have been to bring back and place in power General Santa Anna. Gen. Bustamenta was raising a force of 4,000 men to quell the revolt at Tampico. destructive fire occured at Alexand the Red River, on the 18ih .. rtn. rn "" 1 v rijuures, all stores,containingan amense smount ofpronertV. Valllorl nt 1 ir t. - . .. were destroyed. The Republican office wa. - ' " " ootiars among the buildings consumed. "Extra." The New York True Sun, the organ of Gen. Cass, urges the Cass men to p urchase an elegant rosewoad bedstead, now exhibiting at the Fair, for the use of Gen. Cass when President. "When curtained," says this Locofaco organ, "it would form too good a place for Kings to ..cep .a- cannot the people carry this bedstead into the White House and give Gen. Cass, as he deserves the best bed in the nation to sloep on? It costs but about fifteen hundred dollars." Certainly, all very proper and appropriate. The man, who for forty years, has been receiv ing extra pay who has always reveled in luxury, at the people's cost who is courtly in his habits and tastes, and has written a book eulogizing Courts and Kings: why should he not be laid out upon a fifteen hundred dollar rosewood bedstead ? We say buy the bedstead by all means. All Right in Florida We are gratified to learn, from the Southern DaDers rpppivpt :i. ..... t, ... for the whigs by a majority of from five to eieht . r ...gin, mat r lorida has eone hundred , . - " " w nig candiI hnmaa V it tyti . ...UJv,,njr Ul ...emoers in both branches of the Legislature, which secures to them ..!, . Whig Senator in Congress, in the place of Mr. eHlco, wnose term orservice will expire on on the 4th of March next. Mat. Intel. Georgia. The Augusta Chronicie has the full returns from ninety of the ninety-three Counties in ii' ..... 1 Georgia, which give ninety-three Loco-Fiw-n : :. rr.i .. "injuruy. ineiu reeremainmgConnlies(Mont1? 1 I Allowing them to do the same this .1 . 1 nr.rt .... i vv iiiaiuuiy. J J . . i " w anead in the whole State on a poll of 80,000 votes. If anybody beli... - j ul Euuu lur mm numI"':.!:8 10 hiS "P'nion.leaving us free hi, 1 11 a . Jen. Taylor is not good for that numto differ from them. .Horn In of Boo ton. A Boston correpondent of Ned Buntline's .1 wwn, asserts that there exists in that city a gambling hell, supported solely by females, among whom are many looked upon as highly respectable. r.issand Van Buren Coalition. In Vermont there is an attempt makiug to form a coalition between th P... .j v.. . UUU UU Buren men the former yielding to the latter wilh the view of throwing the vote of the State for Van Buren. The game won't win, however. IT Horace Greely, has been nominated for congress by the Whig, of the 6th Congressional district, of New York. O Thadeus Stephens has been sent to Congress from Lancaster County, Pa. by a majority of 4,101 the largest, we believe. vr largest, we believe, ever rivn in Congressmen by that plorioun pnn nt r. Stephens will prove himself worthty of such a county and such a majority.
To the Free Moil Wohf of Ohio.
Ah, friends! we have sad news from you! While the great Whig heart of the Union was bounding With eulUtini: ni, lUiinlU.!,..! r, and astounding victory in IVnnsyl ! came news that you had chilled the vania, there atmosphere ano dimmed the general sunshine. Pennsyl vania had settled the contest of 1848 until news '
came that Ohio had faltered! You should have , , ""leot 'uKewarmnes. or seen how that revived the hope, of the stipendi- ! Z ZZi ZJ?? Smeof them' ThatCoaaries of Polk, the devotees of Cass, and trT.,- i ? , PrCedd - "e Whig policy.
' :.u it t ,r L , ,.i- it : n!; J their inmates, so lay dmb M cowering to ... . 7 . ". r ? lo I yell over their victory in Ohio. If you, intellii '. J ' i gent. conscientious Whig farmers and mechanics who have fit ,0 . vonr . . ... k- f . " ' "m ; because of their misfnrtnn al Ph;iHl;. i .. . r "T " " i rnnl.l h... 41 I J Z Z "A " ET 6.' .a .v. ,uuii auu Kium over me nrsi l eie- ) rraDhic rennrt nf vnnr cu.. T ti: . C 1 - I J ..- .IVIIJ, A uv UCICHO I V0U WOuld have been compelled to hesitate, to j doubt t0 review e position you had takea, I 'entreat vou to do it now! j.. . fr,end8! the re8n,t in T Stte 'trous' " whether Ford or Weller is : : Governor by a few hundred ,n, that Cassism enn eIaim r . : " .J .'" ,u
Ohio is enough. We MJZZn " - "
aaiy disap- . uuiuiea us DUl . nninie ,wK,, r. t.. i . ., r - vm lEuinvitauia vuu woma i 8tanei U8' A" H is we "re able to nc- ! Ceed w,thont you' bnt we don't like the Idea. Tl therK.Whig Stote f '44 i firm' hoW we to Part company with ?e n? the roblest of tt,,t i Pennsylvania came forward to admit ? contest, how can we surrender our flag-ship in mat glorious though nnfortunate struggle? We cannot, will not do it! You have shared our defeats you must share our victory ! Success will hardly be joyful without you. And why should Ohio fall out of the line I Wilh the Wh'g "ray justas we are achieving a ' be chosa election goes to the House. "u me jjeiegations lrom fifteen States for mm, oniy twelve ,lu all against him, aud the other three divided, and in view of the knowledge that, if no President Jbe chosen, the Senate will certainly elect Butler Vice President and thus put him in the pweidenttar Chair, there is no chance for the election of anybody but Cass by the House. And why should any Whig vote so as to humor South Carolina and elect Gen. Cass? Why? The grounds of demurrer are three Gen. Taylor the Philadelphia Convention the Extension of Slavery. Let us consider them in order. You know how little I like Gen. Taylor, or rather, how thoroughly I disapprove his nomination for President. Personally, I think well enough of him, as almosteverybody does. The uniform testimony of those who know him proclaims him a shrewd, sensible, practical, humane, honet, unassuming man. Ifitweresimply aquestiou of men, I believe at least threefourths of the Union would prefer him to Gen. Cass. As to his being a soldier and a slaveholder, I should like him better if he were neither; but I never did and I think I never will oppose any man merely as a slaveholder for an office nnA. 1 1 .. '...1.. . r. . - . . . ii iv 1 cuciai uuieiDintini, ior 1 Delieve I 8Ucn PP081tlon contrary to the plain intent and scope ot the r ederal Const itution. If it had been understood or suspected in 1787-8 that the ;,,,. t- 0 ,, 1 " mo 1 reeouii.es wouia ever come to proscribe and to vote against the Southern men merely as slaveholders, I am sure no Constitution would have been adopted. J do, not believe Washington would have signed the instrument; I am confident that Madison and Pickney would would not. I cannot unite in a proscription which seems to me faithless, ill-directed and worse than useless. Nor will I make the soldier's calling a reason for opposing any one so long as the Nation requires, trains and employs soldiers. I am more than willing to unite in any enecuve movement for abolishing the trade of War; but, so long as the Nation encourages, auU uP..UIUB mai iraao without ob ec-
tion or cavil, I cannot unite in proscribing war- Unfs 1 believe the Extension of Slavery unriors who have ever been blameless in nrivatJ ttl T!7Ior a? li"!e probable as under
life and obedient to the civil power. But we heartily agree that the Philadelphia nomination was not the right one that a candidate for President of superior qualifications and merits should have been selected. Th
choice made was not mine, nor yours. Some of ' r!S8; on t,le other, Government by Presidenyou I visited and conferred with last year con- 1 1'!. P ""V,88. a".d Presidenlial Vetoes. On the
certingthe defeat of this selection. Many of y0 mUSt know that 1 8Pared no effort or J late, to defeat it yet it was made. And now me oniy question to be considered ia this Is it your duty, is it mine, because of our disapprov al 01 me reasons which induced and the influ ences which affected this nomination I a, to oppose eleetinn? election 1 I it and thus contribute to Gn r. i i . . . . . iqiiuu xuavecareiutiy weighed, ! have calmly delibcraieu, and my conviction is clear that I ought, in view of all the circumstances,to vote for Gen. Taylor. I shall do so. Hear my reasons, and then judge my course. As to the influences which prevailed in the Philadelphia Convention, I do not respect and A . J , - 6,1811 not natter them. A low expediencyPipW cornel - CI r W..JJCb 'ance t0 those who promised, if Gen. Taylor - U IJ 3 should be nominated, all and South Western States which they had no more power to take over than Satan had to give 1 u,ct luia odun naa 10 pr J '"' "iomsof the earth.'-, aaw'.l, this and detested it But this is of the nnL mil 1 ' is no longer of any practical consequence. The intrigues and the intriguers have alike shrunk into their natural proportions. Gen. Taylor is nominated; but they who suddenly expanded into great men on the strength of the votes they were to secure for him and the U. S. Senators they were to carry by means of him in Alabama, Mississippi, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas. T Ace. have been proved men of swellinr words ana no real lorce. Every day renders more and more apparent the fact that Gen. Taylor will not be elected nor materially helped by no-party nor by Southern-party yptes, and that he must be carried by old-fashioned Whig strength and Whig means-by appeals to understanding, the patriotism and the conscience of the country against the policy and measures recommened by polk and supported by Cass by Whig himself been constrained hv th - -, me the oa ,.! r,. yllw necess.ties ofjand -& , uU ulg T0les- TayI0. r.,ou..iIBeu uisunctly on the Whig 4'iallorm. I am a pretty determined Whijj, and I
t want a Piesident more deril. f anil with no iK... i .. 3 ! The Stl, " 1 , . T make hin, ""' "r mm will thereby approve the general ' ,r ..i, fw,"-jf with him will h vi.: " " '"en. I lie Lomrrpoa .I.j to viWWU i congress, only the - ""guiy commuted to that he h Lwn . i . . onr principles , i M " B"a" ve power. And Gm TVi. ,ar 88 U8naH have power. And Gen, ' Z hhnlel'f ea' !s011 to Cong.es, and a.y0f 1 hlmseIf to his Evecutive duties T .v rihtT T . .. oulles- not this ngm; is it not al wa n.,u j,.: wM . urar,M n Q0 - fastened opoa j ine ""ntry through the potency of pm' I .-i . . ..8 poiency of l'reidnUaJujfluence? WhatWhm i - . country governed and iu polcy ,h. ped as the Representatives of the people .hall direct? For one, I am content with this, and shall do my best to seen re It: And now the question of slavery extension, which, after all, is the great difficulty of the peesent contest. If your Sute U lost to the Whigs, it will be on this issue alone. Let u ."so niicuirr a snouin i i I know nothing of Gen. "ow Dothu, of Gen. Taylor', or Gan Ior is a glare holder-that he opposed the Anuexation of Texas that he has often spoken in reprehension of Slavery, yet, with the nsual Southern inconsistency, insists on cherishing the evil and repelling all Free State interfeaenco with it-so much is or may be generally known. That he desires or contemplates any Extension of Slavery, I do not believe; nor do I beKeto that any considerable portion of the Whigs of the South do so. In all my conversation, with Southern Whigs on this subject, I have not yet met the first man who expressed a desire to see Slavery carried across the Rio Grande. Some, indeed, insist that they will not be excluded J that a Souther n planter has a right to take slaves into the new territory as clearly as a Northern wool-grower has to take his sheep there, aad they can't agree to simender the priasiot,;bt as to desiring the practical Extension e Slavery I know not one of them who does so. On the contrary, their general sentiment is not dissimilar to that of the great body of intelligent conservatives at the North namely, that Slavery is an evil which it were better for them to. he rid of, and which, though they shrink from the. sacrifices and hazaids of abolishing it, they have no wish to impose upon others. In defiance of the noisy manil-stations of zeal for 'Southern rights' which the lynx-eyed jealousy of fla, grant wrong naturally incite. I firmly believe h-t u every Porahern Whig could vote Yea 01 Nay on the question of Slaverv F,i.B.i. s such manner that no J "-woawava., am man s vote should be ex pose, iwo-tmrds of them would vote in the negative. The jealousy of the powerful classes of slavebreedersand slavetraders may long prevent any open exhibition of this sentiment, but it ia there nevertheless. Now let us suppose Gen. Taylor chosen Prest. dent, and with a Congress (Hoose) Whig by 20 to 30 majority the Whig strength consisting of ninety Representatives of Free and forty of fha wvale8' TU J"10" nnder what iafloence the W hig members from Free States are choseo and what are the sentiments ou this subject demanded by the public opinion of their constituencies. ou know whether a President could afford to commence a deadly struggle with two, thirds of his supporters in Congress. You caa guess whether the Loco-Foco Members, whatever they might be impelled to do for a President ofthe.r own stripe, would be likely to do tonh . P"!S .a 3 WhiH P'"t engaged in such an undertaking as Slavery Extension. Tl inducement to such a self-sacrifice for a Ptesir dent of adverse politics would be nothing, the peril everything. I have looked over the whole ground carefully, and it is my deliberate eonviction that, should Gen, Taylor and a WTbig Congress be chosen, there will be no Extension of blavery during the ensuing Presidential term LIT 5?J euVer after A-n-d do not 808 bw any candid observer, after a survey of the whole ground, can come to a different conclusion. W hat would be done in case of Gen. Cass's election I cannot so clearly foresee; but the prospect cannot be better in that direction-it mav be far worse. The South will trust a Southed President farther and bear from him more than irom a rorthern politician whom she knows was against her claims until she bought him by luring his inflamed ambition. J,t is the pride, not the interest, nor the calm judgment, of the bouth that stands in the way of the establish-, ment of the Free Soil principle dread of being overruled or overborne rather than an earnest wish to diffuse Slavery over the wilds of New Mexico and California. To secure tranquillity and success to the Administration of a SoulheJ President or general and deserved popularity, the South will concede what she nevr will cede to the mere numerical preponderance of "lenorin. Takintr nto account all theeirnm. any other President whatever. And if not on this account, on what should any Whig falter? Since Gen. Cass or Gen I aylor must be President, how should any Whfe hesitate? If the d ifferente in the men be nothing, is not the difference in their principles somethlilff? On the nn I.i..:.; i.e.. - . v , jutrgioiaLIUU UV VUU"! 1 f I. . . 1 r . 0 . . J 'the Tether. h-rjS.1" te"ce in the policy which is now the 1 3 p.iutip.e, ana pereis I f fl j w vv OUW aiuti iau,oc 5, ou,r moneyed contractions and coavujsfons. mam. cause On the one side, neace and mn.en.mant ,;tu: ' u. niiuiu our own boundaries; on the other, the IusJ of conquest, the glitter of arms, and the bottoc"fesa abyss of Public Debt. On h nn. 1 . . w uiuy UXAJ Oir fI,caUo.n of tbe National Revenue in good par ' 6 ,mPro"ement of Rivers, Harbors and tho means of intercommunication generally: on the manna n 1.. - ... .. . .. ,, ikiiuiiiuiuiiicaLiou frpnem iv nn ih other, the policy foreshadowed in Gen'fW. Ipitur In f"1 .1 ; .. .1 .1 . n 1 . - ' . y . vi.ivogv ouu me naiumore Resolution condemning any general system of Internal Improvement On one side, the policy of celled ting and disbursing the revenue in snch manner as shall tend to facilitate Commercial Intercourse and exchanges; on the other, the eleyV enth-century Sub-Treasury, with its rigorous exactions and its complaisant relaxations its smiles for the Palace favorites and its frowna tor uuaiucao tuiiiui u in iv. j Deueve not, men of Ohio! that the Whig party perished at Philadelphia or anywhere else; it lives, and must liveV for the Country has need of it; it wUl live, for it has important duties to discharge glorioiM de. times to accomplish. Whatever the faults of IS . .i al al,y ume 11 ,s tne same party still-the party of generous Impulses, of enlieht-' ened judgment, of true and steadfast patriotism. Other parties correctly regard particular objects or measures; but this alone has that just idea of the natu re and scope of Government which make Its great end Beneficence and its existence a struggle for the widest diffusion of positive benehta and blessings They who now call most loudly upon you to repudiate and destroy the w nig party are generally men who never unl u lU aims noj" concurred in its views who, having for years bitterly opposed and der cried it, cannot see why any one should deem, ita r;iiiiiuu ana ascendency nf any consequence whatever. But you, true-hearted Whigs of Ohio! who have stood shoulder to shoulder with your brethren in other States through years of endurance and depression who have stood firm ' when they faltered and triumphed when they fell will not hear with indifference the voice of even so humb'e a person as he who here tells you that Ohio is wanted in her proper place in the Whig line, and that her charging shout is needed to nerve th Wliio- hnai fn, .Win nrl for victory. That she will be found faithful in hour of trial, foremost in the path of duty, proudly eminent iu the achievement of the cro wing triumph, is the hope and prayer of Yours, Horace Greelev.
I don'
