Newspaper Page Text
r
tSTenquirer
aaJStSi
OOLPMBXJ8—GEORGIA • ,
BjjjljlU, AWMT g, IM
i NOMMATIOm.
1ACHARY TAYLOR,
HILLARD FILLMORE,
lun Ouruid,
Ita. I.Lb*u», | ftth. Waiih Ann.
K W.JLOu«NKk l | «*. Ancmr Hcu-,
N. A.W.EMMM, I ■». Y. P. Korn,
I ftth. Q. aunrm
CMUJAMM* a. CALHOUN.
MttVM-NDMN,
OA ALLRM r. OWN.
IPOE THE CAMPAIGN.
» ■ MMfa srare (rap),” v* my ta Hi mm
■fata hstaDteffesOs dews, “coots ami TAKE ■*'
PAYMENT m ADVANCE.
NIM*. • I 00
ft 00
woo
trVfM tadtatodto Cd. OdMAftr a Oh
9IF,MkMdted»mlfibmwlMsmMdta dto Into M*x-
Imm. AtxxmvetaeutlimewewD pehtah aO
■ me Mt axsemovy hr Ik* benefit ef these hxvtaf
tataxnte
THE OLD NORTH STATE
ft* hag (grey is erer. The fin* gea, over whleh
famxcnxy bra mewed mired,is ipiksd. Thegtori
MdftWiO Nadi Centtaehra taeetoda Wmo
aad • a^nHy at wets >uhm to the
We had akaat dmpeked ad Ikk cheer -
tof (era* Aa hre* tael ta aa Isgillisstely before
Dto Mk, aa aW apa hy dii Diaima aad
apd with aft the paara eft writ tntaed party.—
The whig* niytof aa their aara ialialda rtraeflh,
mm akaal (Motive la Ika aaatort, haMaatof dia Ikan
ana aa daafar, aad aaaatofty farfotiisg thel their op-
psranta. Em fat fctaaaa paaaiaaa, aam deep. Under
the ehumMtaeew they here mode a pawaftd ran,
aad aaan out of the naalat a* 1 * aaeapaetod aaaaaa.
Tkajr herebaiaad a baaaa that alba profitable to
Tklakady adiaail, laaitu to a naakadaa paa-
itoady adapted, aa Ika Idlk iota, aSar a aaadaa ef mem
eerier, bow that the wraegbeg h fare trite empeudeA
A targe perries ef dntkaa kn tea pa* *■ “DV
aadaWydakaH akaat tkdhaaSdMdM*Warapa»-
•adeftty
flex sxadUatostarflwPNridmxy.aad tka priUsamd
kaa kaaa aaaptotoly aartttod arkk artadaatlaM aad re-
aa worthy, la srasy laalaaaaa, af dto aaaaa-raad ka«y.
at dto pal kaM piftdriaa Tka CeertMetira kn
ehdtod Ika rapraaaatolhraa af dw paapla with hi* aad
Mpaatoal aarta, kata kaa raHrrad to tka paapla than-
aatoaa dto ifphlte Judge af Ika qlsllfiisliios af Ika
ill nil ' “ Ptoridnsy, xadlesrieet Mrralar
whre tostjxdgmml kn kaaa Brand Wa rapid H
ee era «f tasked rigm if dw tkaaa,(kat tka anadiri
af Oaapaaa an at every liuuwrire abadaa, ere* aid
■aaa, dhpaaad toaaaa Ika vatoaa af Waaaaalry tka
Uaaklaaf thtoktag da fttaaha, la dda kapattoal
MUM As me* they ere entitled te their individual
pnhmera { kat aa mmiboa af tha aatkaal lagWa*
ter* Ikay herearihtaf ta fawkh tka ekatoatkal tka
greet Baartkaney af tka aaliaa may an ptapar to
auk* In ear batable eptatou, end *• say •• with
M Mtop aT dkaapaat, tha mamkata af Coagram,
with Ikair pnanl aapirattaaa and futara kapaa ot pro-
hrairat aad pattar, tfcalr aapaatodaaa ad aaaaattra fa.
tan, aad *a any add, tkatr fcaraafaaaaatlraftawaa.
ata laaa qeslfirf to tarignli a ndar tkaa aay poaltoa
at rat iiaatiyia, with tha a«aaptlM,partiapa,aflha
trtba ad htaffuge paaaraly kaaara aa effioe-heideie.
Wa waaUaatptra tha hosrrt, aad aahaaght, aad aa-
parabaaahta eptafaa ad aaa istaIRgeat farmer ad Geer-
gte, hr the uaatlaady kaKaapraaaad aad half eaaaaal-
ad aatlan ad a half dean mambara ad either branch
ad Caagraaa. We angled, tkaa, that thayha*, ad-
jaarai it, kattof hit hr aaato man tha that thay trara
datof m pad, aad hying tka foundation hr maah
TENNBMSS WIDE AWAKE.
Tha pM adTanmuaa la araaaad to aar aiah
State, aad paitolaan to aaap arary ttta( hahaa I
Iha lataadad aaaa ad Ta
dAat.hr ha State at larp, aad kaa paahrth to
daaaahdt tha antadM Aaiaa V. Rmra, pba traa aa
mhanUy maabad hat hi by Ma gnat aamaaaka
taaa /totap la a trhala latea, aad will kaaa anareaty
a apat ad graaaa (a mark tka pteaaa whan Aaiaa kaa
atoad. Than ara aim Oaatry, Jaraagaa, Haary,
Nathartaad, Paalar, aad Brian, aad a boat ad athaaa,
whan aiagaaaca baa aAaawakadap thaapMI ad tha
Whip la hnaar aaateata. Tha paapla ara araaaad,
aad tha atoteat aaUnaiaam parradaa tha aatha party
Ta.nM.ii Barer did rate far each a man aa Can.
Tkara la aaaaag bar patriotic aaaa too mack hoaatoy,
tea maah ladapaadaan, la da aaab a tktog. Ska
aoaated tha pMaaatoaaadTaa Sarao, haokad aa thay
warn by tha aadamaanat ad Oaa. Jaekaaa, oa twa <U-
ktoterhM Caapate Aad yto, waaaatoU ttaMad. OOb A A CAURMmw ACCEPTANCE
tehalr dahnl aaa ad than Sialh lartog pdklail war. It wdl ka aaaa. p ha Mtowtog anprad—
thlaa, klatopaitaal to oaaaaataah
In high aln'Ti -f g—m*—1
«HH ImE «0M^|e4M|H MHiMtiaKtHIHfliAll
kathia ram. an hhhdr laadand hton kr ha I
COL JAMES A CALHOUN
hr Caa-
ad
WHO SHOULD CMOOM THE PRESIDENT.
Ike eaaaladp ■ tha gnat apeanh ad Seamier
Mnaaca, girea kalew, wE b at ad with pradt by all
(ton af tha paapla. Wa weald, bat hr Ma grant
leaglk, paWth Ike wketo ad dp panel Id aad Ui-
KENTUCKY.
Oa hto Ditto latp eahatathaa ware auuh by aar
appaaaaln Jaaa J. CirrraaDtM, tha artglaal hat
ftdaadadSioa TarLoa, aad wta at the ahlato ana in
Dm Uatoa, waa tha aaadUato hr Oeraraar. It waa
add hat Mr. Clay wnaappaaad to hla atoettoaaad
hah with Oaa. Dadar'a ppalarlty Hang tola dm
^Mbp Ike immntk oasMtio nmmI noonA Onki
Ctoaatf Wlwa tka DaatlaaaaawaHaary Clay la head
DflatMyadhatorto.hr Critliadn, Bathr'r pep-
dhdly h haad aaaafterr, aad the mat that aihoned
dtotoandagdratlw Alaait ahtoadhytkaanahaa
Dtoanah ad rate. Ikhhlhaaanalaatadad. Oar
ppaatoMr had kaaatod ad tha appadtlan ad Mr. Clay
hDm whig aaadUato; Tkay did aot knew the maa.
Tkay kad kaaatod at tha ppuliiky ad Ikair candidate
hrV|aaPntodaal.to Kaataoky. Ikay did net knew
hha tohar. Jaaa J. Caiman man aaa taka a daaaa
aaab haa« Wat. a Mulltr, m kh hack, tad beat
ap ateatodtokaewn wartd hr Oararan ad aid Kaa-
4miyOd*mim li iraeo. Hm dmcoral> oohUmH
Mhna m kap dewa hh nptrity; Crit weald alip la
ly a Dda atoto tkaa " Ikt aki* af kit Irttl.” Crit
ftaaEak a^aWy wE map Am anar to tnn raeo
Oaaaon Taantraar—Tha BE, atoaUMbtog a hr
dtoatolpratototeto toOnpa, kaa paaaad hath Wnackrn
adCaapM aad malted tha Matha ad tka Praaldaat
It naatolaa tha Wlkato Praaiaa which It waa tkougiit,
If aaaaa, waaM aaaara the exeeadre Veto. Bat Mr.
ME, hkhhttoap which aeeanpeatod hh appmrnl
ad ha ML lahaatoa that aa the whah unitary kaa
atoh ad Dm Mknari Caaipraadn kaa, ka oenld ■
Dp ha law aHtkaat rhhtlphh prlaaiplm lib
to Mr. Pdh, htoCitoty that baatmagly totiawUa aho
that kad aayadha territory kaaa math ad tkat kaa, ka
Ogaa ^LnwaDA^^ffUa mmjR Ltolw AtolnMi^LnJ
^EHEi^MSP A ME*D RED^IHI^ QMWpEiMDH
dBnr kaa kaaa appakaad by the Prad lral, wMk tka
adtoaa ad Dto diaale, Oarianen or Onaaon. Na
aDtobaa,at aS MMy take aaab by tha Eaaoatira,
apftd hare ham toaaa cat that ary to tka eaentry —
UA|h hi in y ,l. da__
W EfEB^E^ WED^VMHa DftRMM ■ IM MOB*
MMtotr,aadhwbkal a amaadhb ahSHha. Wa
(HP ahpt p apa ad that peeheed Dmaapth >aa-
OtocaMAwatodawtedatkebaanawaato Ika war,
to ear ad hapahtoto partita Shltoh, appaaad to aa
dtodkablalhrhwaadpaUh ptohy, h Jail aaok a ana
«flpfllkaMP toOaipa,aad want glad that tka
(MAPI aad hb party haad amb aaaagh to aaa ad
AfthppiadlhaMaalaaa war to raamrd kaa far kb
PHtonato datohbaA aaatoat. Sbatod OH Saak b
OuPdlMhahwa whraaah hr hhtatolaiaghha
EaOaa,tf ha
THE GAME THAT IS PLAYING.
We hare, la a format number, eanliooed tha Manda
af Gan. Tatloa that arary pnebaad fraud, hltehnad,
tad fargnry, wsald kn naartad to In order to defeat hb
nl ant ton Than thinp hare bane tried an tha old
eeldtor bfanaaif, and hare failed. Tha game, new, to
to attach Mr. Piixaoan, and through Mm wound our
enadidtto hr tha Praaldaacy. But wha b it that dma
thbf Daman, tkat eapport Lawb Caaa far tha first
offloa ad the country, ary oat apinat Mr. PiLuroaa,
wbe b a eaadtoato far the raoood f What eouabtaacy,
what haaaaty b than in each unadulterated impoai-
ttoa, aad humbug 1 Mr. FUlimm baa dacluad htoda-
larminattoa oarer to latarfan with the righto of the
South, tad that alaatt, aa thay ara aitaatrd here, ara
tha raoraiTT of Ikair ownera. He held three spin-
ton* whan ha waa aot arching a namiuallon for olHoea
af high traat. Haw aUBda Lewie Cam 1 Ha ban
ultra an tide very maa, waa born aad rabad, and (till
Urn in the hat-bed af aboliltoabm, waa a aoppottor of
Ibr Wifaial praatoo, aatil ha waa lahrmad that he
moat taka earn, other tack or be oould never be nomi
nated far the Pmldaaey, and haring bean ao Informed,
atralghlway piahmad that hb miod, ao that aobjaot,
waa ohaagiag, aad that the new light, in farmed him
that tha degraded papulation of tha newly ecqeirad
tenitoriea'wM the vary fallow, to .01110 thb qtxatRn.
Can waa la alight pl.oa. Ha waaaa abolition bt.
baHarad In tha Wlknot Prorton, but ha wanted .bore
aN thinp to be Ptotodant Ha oould not raoaiva tha
aamlaalien without awuBowing hb prinoipln 1 ao he
•hat hb ayn and gulped them down. It b the aup-
portato of aunfa a maa n thb, that am attempting to
defeat Gan. Taylor by charging Mr. FillmalB with
being an abclktonM. Think af It aarimnly.
Tha Mead, of Gan. Tavlou have aakafi Sam and
agnla far aaan proof af thb ebarp igaiPI flmlr oan-
dldata far the Vice Praeideucy. Hie pahka Ufa baa
beau ranaackod, aad aaaa baa been ftml la dm
abaiaaa of all taagibla laaUmaay, aim af dm denm-
oradn atoctota, the on-hon. Matthew Hal MoAliater,
kn raatond dm aanrttoa that to a apeanh, fa the
Warfare part a/ New York, ha beard Mr. FlUmore
attar abeUtian nalkaanto Thto waatora part of New
York to a very todaWto looality. Whan waa It,
where weak, and what did Mr. Filtmora ny I
we kata dm tame IkMh, audnamen, to tha
af Mr. MoAUrtar that wa weald hare to aay
party maa datormhiad to oany hb petal at all haaalA.
Wa have la ear lima beard maay moh atalemabb,
(tom the Kg men of the land, aa datoitato af tralbn
we believe Ihbtobe. Mr. MnAlblor aadertakeftto
atoto what he beard foar or five yoara ap without py*
lag when,or what It waa. la thb tha way tonal
aaadMy tewarda aa opponent 1 la thb the waf to
01 aot tha oradouoe of the people T The traih apat
tka matter b, that Fillmore never wa mi abolitldftbt,
aad M. H. Me Albtar new heard hint alter a afaU-
awat hvoriag the dootrlaea of that infamooe clan. Id
ha did, let Mm like aa home! man aay whan it
tea,the preeeat Preeldeat; aad Aa retraa dm efibrt
BOW m.kiag to biad her to tha fartaoee of tha aatra-
charger. Old Zaek b dm maa far them, aad they
have tutored the uatraaa drtrnataad to give him a
tromeadoue majority—aad they wW do it.
Aurear a Fiowr.—A dUBealty, which occurred
between Saaaton, Bantam aad Sailer, jart befan the
adjournment ad Ceagnm, prom iced at oaa time to ter
minate ia a dual. Ratlar mooned Ronton at divulging
the eocret prooeodiap af the Senate. Beaten replied,
that he Hoag Ike ito in the teeth ad aay oma that
charged hha with dhhaaonblo naadael Butter aaul
him u challenge by Phot, af MbaWppi, aad Benton
not rrprdtog Keel a geatlemea, would net nooapt the
nriUtioo from hb haade. Johneoa, af Md., waa thea
aabatilutod, aad Bantea aoeaptad. Thb baabart hto-
lary, bat b loogar parhapa than ahould be girea af an
•Shir aa dtagvaceful to tha partba oonoarued. A
Telegraphic dbpatoh eaya that dm affair he. bean
•mioabiy eetllad. We dont care much whether it be.
gTCat Jab B. Camoob, tha Taylor candidate far
C’aagma la the adCaagraadaaal Datriet, will meet the
people ad the several coantiee of the Dbtriet, at the
tint# ud pltoM IkhIhAit
Cat CAUWtra hopea and axpaoto to be accompanied
by tka Hen Wa H. Ciawtoid, tha Taylor candidate
farPiartdpltilBaetorlallmDbtrlat,aad«tkarffb.ta,
wha, with biraeelf, wiU be pteaeed to addraai Uw ptepta.
Marfan. Satarday, Mth Aagart, at BoeaaVaU
Maooa, Taeaday, »d> - « Lanier.
Haaataa, Satarday, 9ft Sept, “ Parry.
Palatal, Wadaaaftay, (Ik - “ Hawkiaarilfa.
Daaly, Satarday, 9th “ “ Vbaaa.
Irwia, Wadanftay, 13th “ « InriarUb.
Bakar, Mtmftay, 18th « « Albany.
Daaatar, Witantoy, 90th « « Bala bridge.
Early, Saturday, Ud “ “ PartGataca
Randolph, Maoday, Sftth “ “ CathbwL
Laa, Wadoaada;,9Td> “ “ StarkvUfa.
Sumter, Thoraday, 98th " “ Aamrieaa
Stewart, Satarday,
1 WPP Ma
y w i*
> anaiDba
aay aPH
GtEgUP'a AourrAnca^-Thfa giadimaa baa
ftp AaVtaDEpy, |1*A« hhantf. aa a matter af
ids
C MfkfarhbpAMaalkimaty. Waflpphtffmfhl-
haft hag aton lap tan to pteaaa, and tha ftag-
DSMapPtaaaftlaftbawkata. Aay Etta ptaab, haw-
dtop nay hawHaaaaaAto ban Aawaigbt ad aaaa
df EaQpandb haA. Aalakbpaalaalalkaaaaalry
•Elppaaa ERa EBsAy ta haatlag Dmp. p PaA
*kta«p«h^thptaptaMaadwabaAta bate*
«MMy PAteftatohb pMaayAEMd applty
(9 apbai Aa aatftpaa ftaaUmd by kb paid Ufa,
paaapAlydapanaaft hpaMUSyhp Hawn
Pkipn pitaaftOppiki ia Alif ad Aa Away
(tor haft Aw A Dm ftgbltag, aad
IPbiAaa. WhEMpaalamawania
• EahpdaTAa Aaay Aay wan bapl than 1 wkaa
aftnaara» It wp aarag otey.
MM> EMHEM EHEg MM w^E MM*
aDWtaSMaga fcppAta Maalto, kn Dan hb aa-
ftpbbpapaA AM fttP tpp aaan aaaataaa,
CMRaakk A tmtj aAp
t Itb
M. Oa
DAP Oanb Aa pal ftaart
I tana Otft EA pay aaaatenaffy
, papApPhta mm dateaaaltea
paAft bpEnaptal
A Aa daaaaaate, aagm 1
A yrtaaftpfta, aad PEAT far Ito
vppynbaaftftnbflto
SSSSikfSSm. BpE jaa DAk Act
>—•» J
MpMEppaMte
tEbaA Eta wan
SOME DIMES.
It kn ban mid that Lamia Caaa lave, tha paapla,
aad arary thing that kaiamga to Ihrnt That ha kn
aa npralal oflhetba far their maaay, aad tin mioifod
to fab a gaadly taara at it, anmaata to a Head hat—
Withia tha laat forty year, he ha. baeu paid la aatariaa,
lirau, Ac., tha aam ad two mi.naan tun utvn.Tr
ma TNotfiAND oottAta from dm public treaaury.ha
ouwnaku au offloa dm .alary of which, far oaa term,
wE ha uaa avanun thouiand mliau Varily, if
wa kad a faw man af dm aaam met, tkat great finaa
otal gaataa, Ika Ulaterlon Bab Walker, would be pul
tokblnunpu to ftiralta the pewter. Giouuu Wteu-
tuarou wa paid nboat half af dm above aam far all
tka rateable mrriomhc raadarad hb oouutry. Prob
ably, kuumtmr, Watalagtaa am evea overpaid far what
<Ule ha deaa, far, aooonliag to Uam'a aaliaa, dm Im-
amrtal ban at aarglarton raratalba wa at but
aparyaaanialkaaulublbhmiatafeurfareftnu. Wa
know that eaary patriot, that tarn hb aaaalry, dif-
fan taaa Can to thb aattamn ad the attrlan raadarad
by Waaktagtaa, bat atill Caaa b tha ibamcralie candi
date far tha Fladdiaay, aad if ha wa to daoclmra it
P kb rptaba that the mriotar af kb eaaatry wn a
nMbh hypocrite ta A ha acted, than an maa, n ia
tkaaamaf dm hnlua award, that weald rwaar to iL
fapaiklig af Cap restate m ta (again if M b ate
akaat lima to pat ateep to hwaakitea, kb eannaem
aatra Aatgn.aadkbmulfaMpaAa retinal Dea't
il ^iik itnN| ImI Um ** amI in(HiM N
Sacaar Hrmar—Tkaa, which prana d thing*
btatagtag prate af aaam Inpirtaat at anew hitherto
maaealid kaaa Ike pabfk eya. Fraacb P. Bkir tad
ai-Saaalar Tappaa, te Okta, am anktag araaa rich
aad totaraattag dbAptafa ia mspft to the aaaaaa-
Itaate Taaaa. Tbaaa tadtaUrah an kata pramtaaat
dramanl* aad dan Ikab part lawaata tke tiaram
■alba te fttotaat te aattaaal aaWda Aam wkioh the
praralpadte the Uataa ha. arlgtaatod. Thay ara
aaw mablag ahaagto tea rariara Aaraalar agairal
Ptoteftrat Nk, ad haidbg himaphtetea tka wartd
raaaaaaanpateaa dtaaatatar.whalydateitalatetoaar
•ad Terra. IDay paara hha to hara daifaamtoty n-
pafaatofta artataa paftp, aad hy m datag to hara
ptaagod tka aattea tola the war wt* Man*. Them
Pa tortam Aatgm agataat tka Eat aErar te the gar-
•Panel, aaiaaaaiagaa thay da bam dma wha mn
daaateadlp kb dapfaAy.wE apb aimi agtaa-
DA. Oarawaptoteab,dmtif Atotetetyamumat-
ad dE Dto Ibap aaBMattea, aate Aa aaaaaia-
Pdfaft# pAgHte b. aaaa dam aaam tol^M.
SwEbatagAaMpkad Aaaa tothaAaAte arary
1EE
DlWt
MARTIN VAN BUREN,
And hia format Bufpartara ia tka Baulk.
Tha candidacy te thb romewhat uotork.ua iadivid.
ual for the Presidency at the United SUtee, b one
umang the at rouge thinp of these strange and disjoint
ed limes. Hb former anociatea, both here and elm
whan, hurt bean taken all aback by hb unexpected
position, tad admit that dm character girea te him by
the whiga in a former cancan, wa juat and true—
No maa at thorn now denies that the Prince of Kia-
derhook was a scamp from the ftrat, sod all that ia n-
quind te them b a candid acknowledgment diet lliey
knew it aa well before aa they can pomiUy know it
now. Why not coma out and fully erow that he wa*
dm enemy te the South in 1840, and that they knew
H7 Van lluren haa changed no priociplrao ,fer ax we
ean dweaver, xtnoe he waa promoted to the people of
Georgia by tha Democratic party, aa the ahiekl and
helmet te all their righto If he hn ao changed, wilt
eur opponents ba good enough te inform ue ia what
particular I
We hare more thau once eaid that they have mau-
ifeeted oa most occasions a desire to impose 00 the
South candidates far the Presidency whom priuupln
nod fmliuge were n.turally, end elmcst necenorily, it
wur with our domestic itieliluliom. They hove, it
would mem, an inatiuctlve tare far polilicisna who |we-
tead te groat frientfahip for tha South, whilat auoh pre
tence will adv.aoa the preteneiooe of the pretenders ;
but wha turn upon ua all the power, of their wrath, the
moment they an creased in their schemeo of penouel
aggraadbement. Martin Van Buren b a living ai-
aatpleof dm lore, aa well aa tha infamy, alluded to—
He waa, Wa well remember, the piuk of all politioal
perfeoltau acootdtag to the any m of the democracy ;
ha new atanda breaded by hb own aota aa the head
and front te that horde of fenulioe that mek the hu-
inillatioo and the degradation of thb people. We re
peat, that he ha. changed no pnuciple, disavowed no
opintao, in reference to the great qumtiua which now
threatens to shake lit# Union to its centre. But in or
der te hold power it wan sues thought politic by our
opponents, to premat him aa the great chmnpiou of
Southern ineUtutbaa, and hb New York clique ax the
rapeoial and peculiar friends of the cotnprombce of
our glorious Coualilultau.
Il b now admitted that Van Huron has proved him
self to be what the whiga, oa a farmer occasion rep-
him | that ha was, if ha waa nu worm, a
wolf inaheep'. clothiug ; that he purpomly allowed hb
leading friend, in the Sooth to deceive and misled Uw
houml voter, of tha oouutry ; and tlint between them
there waa a game played te hind ue to the car te featt
ic bvn uuder the epecioue prcleuoe of sustaining the
Democratic party of tha Union. Happily for the
country thb gnat enemy of the South waa, together
with hb Southern allies, defeated and put down, by
the people, in the Iriumpheut election of the lamented
Haaaiao.. But of what service waa hb defeat I—
What good can result bam the rejection of ono double
faaad demagogue, one northern mau with southern prin
ciple* If we tarn round and elect mother with aot
antra tkaa half Urn talents, and much lem than half
the haaaaty T What ua wa benefited by the farmer
triumph over Martin Van Buren, if uow we place the
destinies of thb oouutry to tha hawk of Lamia Caaa t
Remember that tha HUM men that are loudest for the
Uttar te them geuttamea, new, are the same that sup
ported ike farmer in 1840. And remember, too, that
Cam b supported, new, far dm same reaaona that Vau
waa 00 the former occasiuu. Can you stand such
barefaced iaaolance on the part of thorn wha, having
failed ance to aril you to the enemy, are even attempt
ing a second time to acoomplbh tha docdl We do
not believe yan will.
Bat Mr. Van Butt, haa brea nominated by dm
Bmfmla Canvantian, aad tha qomlkia ovary where
naked b, what effect will hb candidacy have on tha
final remit 1 Southern Democrats ara feeding them-
•elvee with the belief that the aoa-alevrholdiag States
wifi abandon GEN. TAYLOR, tad fell into tha aup-
paatte tftafr farmer democratic file leader. The darn-
•onto to thorn States may, ud wa believe a large
parttau te them will, bat the whiga would aa soon ha
•acornbend, like the malefactor, te antiquity, each
with a bedy of death, m (boulder such a oaream mV an
Bare* Na Indeed He b the peUed mu at demac-
Hb aamiaatiaa waa a movement te the party
la tka unteavahoWiag Stale* that have battled with
Ika whip aa every great national qauiaa tepabke
Ha area .exntaatod by a Cooveutioo te Ah*
IMratato ud maadita firm tha deamcradc rank* ud
with A aomi.alMa dm whip have neither put nor laL
Giddiap may p with him, and a few each scattered
through ma at Dm Stataa, hut a majority te hb sup
port trill ba pthered Item Dm hosts of kb old puny,
wha Jwpbi Caaa far puisftiaatagn tmmintUu by ata-
trayal te A friend* aad are determined te defeat him
tar 1 want at finnntm What have tke whip to de
with uy ouch mam t North. Sulk, Eu, aad Wert,
they Ara factored Ikair prefers am A Oa* TAY
LOR, aad thms dalrrmiaariaa u cleat kirn te the
PimHinay. lah lappinlUral they w« uy wham
tayftaara naft abaafaa all theb ekarldmd hatred of A
Mura te Kiadsrtmta. a mu that te A attrare they
faaplaad and sAesred, a poktictu wham daplicity aad
draA faalbf kaa kau m amialiafty demecsalic « to
laear man thu dm aqba te ovary burnt nut
Never. Yu Barm may dhlfa the ftmawab teflm
North aad Nwta warn, tat I to ran to ao amra. Hb
aabir- y aatil 1 -y
Go* Com aad lamwaa Aa tliatiia teflm palrite
TAYLOR.
lApaapta te dm Santa are, awftw tab atoto te
*top,otetodapuA am gptak nSy to taa
raggaal te taa paidMl MAAate MtaMpa, to aafatr
•alkayator, tofafaataA amartag plmDhta te Haw
Ye*- lehibtoftptote dm Santa ara ra
A MalbteA laaw te At ««fatoA Au At atan t
fataa>Ciagism Aa fafmu to
fwMNwyliii
OJTOn WEdnesdEy, tha 16th inst, o«pd»y wotd Um
eountananoE of gloom and EMkncbolf at tha Ioee of an
••Umablo young dtiaen In Um doath of Nr. Benjamin
R. Cowdbrt. At 9 o’clock Um City Light Guards, to
gether with the Csdets of Temperance, proceeded to
the dwelling of the deceased, where they were met by
a deputation from the Neptune Fire Company, No. 8.—
From this place the re meins were escorted to Uw Baptist
Church, where the appropriate Eenrices were conducted
by the Rev. John E. Dawson. At Um close of which,
the procession moved to the place of interment, where,
after the peculiar rcremoniee of each easfK-isiion were
eom loded, the burial rites were ended and the train re*
turned.
BifooTiNo an Eaout.—Col. Haekkll, of Tennca-
•ee, speeking of Uie impotent aemulte on the eharee-
ler of Gen. Teylor, eaye, the! they remind him of an
attempt he once made to kill an Eagle. 41 The noble
bird was perched on the summit of a lofty mountain,
aeoure from smoothbores and eeieII shot. I shot at
him twice. The first fire wus a clear mim. The se*
coad shot, I kit him precierly where I mitttd him the
first time.” Just ao with the sens Hunts of Gen. Tay*
lor, if they hit him at all it i* precisely in the spot
where they mieaed him before. Like the bird of Jove
he ails ou nn eminence beyond the reach of that kind
of amnll shot that tha office bolder* nod demugoguea
of the day, are incoaaautly fir ig at him.
ARRIVAL OF THE ACADIA
One W«ek Later From Etiiopc.
The Rtuaniship Aoadia arrived off Bontou on the 13th
inrt. She auilrd from Liverpool ou the 29th ult.—-
There lud beeu uoopen outbreak in Ireland; but the
affairs of that country had reached a crisis. The groat*
eet preparation were made hy the Raglish government
to meet it by a tremendous force. In Liverpool great
excitement prevailed ou accouut of the political excite*
meut iu Ireland, and the great number of repealers
and confederates who reside there. The police force
has been strengthened to 3300, and several companies
of the line had arrived there. The Queen's Messenger
arrived in Dublin on the 26th ult., with a copy of the
act for suspending the Habeas Corpus. The Govern
ment has determined on a considerable number of ar*
rea a Mr. Hinilh O'Brien, and several other
and attention to Uw wUme of hb friends. It b bb
purpoM to vbb tka eountba of the dbtriet in order to
become bettor personalty known to the people, and to
give them kb views ea thd various mattora connected
with Um present front national straggle. He wdl, aa
a matter of course, give hb friends ia the reepscUve
Counties, dno ndtioa of the tka—and plaoea, when and
when bo ean bo with thorn. Wo have not time at
pro— nt, and if wo kad it would bo entirely superfluous,
to pa- upon tke nominee of otr friends a lengthy en-
■—i— Ho b already extensively known to
vote- af tka datriet, aad be will make it hb ba-
bn—• to tom a mo general aegaaintoaee. Hb pat
riotism, hb ability, kb bouse— habits, and hb entire
dsvstisn to Um dnti— of every public traat, a— wall
known thfsughoot the eMe of hb entire cssbitaoncy.
Active, energdtio, all untiring in Um —rviot of tka
oouutry, no man would carry to the halb ef Um na
tional legialature mom Capacity for u—fnla—i,sr more
practical kacwMgo of the wants of the people.
Amekicus, Sampler co. t July 26th, 1648.
Od. 4as. 8. Calhoun—Sir:—It it with ooaf-
fected satisfaction, we aimounce to vou, that this
day you were unanimously chosen by the Whig
Convention of the Second District, their candidate
for the next United States Congress; and which
nomination we trust you’ll not hesitate to accept.
The rncloaed resolution will more folly show tne
action on the subject. You will please bate your
acceptance, by tne earliest conveyance, and oblige,
respectfully, JNO. G. 8LAPPEY,
WM DOUGHERTY,
PETER J. STROZIER.
Columbus, Ang. 21at,1848.
Gentlemen:—This morning I reached home
from a short visit to Washington City and New
York, which will account for the delay in acknowl
edging the receipt of your letter of the 26th of
July,from Americas, announcing, in terms truly
acceptable to my feeling*, that the Whig Conven
tion of the 2d Congressional District had unani
mously n tinintled tne a* their candidite for the
n^xt Congress, and urging m y immediate nccep
lance
The nomination is accepted; and I beg to assure
you, and the jh-o;-!o of the District, that I shnll
proceed a/ once to meet them in ihf ir respective
counties, prepared to as*un!t the enr*m> a nnd tn»-
.incerjt of that dinliuguished soldier—that honest, j f .•
faithful, and oitccessTuI defender of our fir soles 1
from I lie attacks of tie* liritish, the Indians, and
M xicans—that man who is alike retn irkahle for
his pxn.l ,,, d jail riot i Hin. ois sound nnd dircriminat*
M',» mi'*d. ait l p’a- tical gorsi (tense—G^n.Z.vciiAKv
Tavlo*!. Upon whose ■plnifnriUa the ConMitution
of 'he United States, 1 plant myself; and from
winch-impregnable position I will not nor . In
a word, I intend to do my whole duty, relying upon
Hie justness of the cause in which we ar* engaged,
and the patriotism of an intelligent cun tituency,
for a right result.
With h profound sense of gratitude for tho man
ifests! hit of the confid'-nee reposed in mu by the
Convention, whose organ you hre; with many,
the United States. Arraigned by Um low-brad deader
of Foot, akd a—suited by patty loaders of mors daeoat
poets—ions, tho fair fame of Md Zach, natil lately «o-
fudbad nod uotarabhed, w— made tho target far
the po—msd weapoua of malovotoaeo aad detraction.
But Maagara w— there, who— aabieocbiag eye aevsr
yet quailed beneath the frown af power, aad
masterly mind h— proved, ou many etmilar
aa overmatch far the opriarto that are put forward ou
•uch eccibons to do the dirty w—k of party.
Iu thb extract it wiU be otoerved that the Uwtrio—
patnot of North Carolina leav— the eeuatl—s riandots
against Gea. Taylor to die a natural death. He at
tempts aot to paint the KtHy, — pstfuaw tha ruse, a—
yet to adorn tho simple majesty aad bsaaty of a char-
actor which h— imp—sd it—If dee ply upon the proa-
oat times The shimato viodmatioo of the Hxao or
Buena Vista he leav— to the groat tribunal of Um
people, to the calm doebiou of tho public judgment
In thb ho b right The intelligent people, who are
looking for ao offices at the bands of the President, nod
have consequently no temptation to be dbhooeet, are,
— Mr. Maitgum says, better qualified to —led a ruler
than oven the Senate of the United States, who—
members, looking for office and hoping for the rewards
that are too often bestowed on party brawlers, are not
sxacUy the sort of men to do thb important work.
Wa hooor, — woshonld, the intelligence and general
patriotism of the Senate; but when a President b to
be choeea, give — the anoffidal sovereign constituency
to do it In the hands ef a free people the reputation
of such a maa — Goa. Taylor b safe from the a—salts
of official hirelings Um bteckguaidbm of Mbabsippi's
low, mbsraMs apology for a Senator, and the censures
of Jaoeb Thompson, Lowb Ca—, A Co. Partba—,
— contradiatioguiahed from patriots, will make it their
btMiue— to blacken hb fame, and tear down tho fabrio
of an unsullied character reared by years of hard ser
vice and a —two of the na— splendid victories recorded
in the world's history. It b their vocation. But the
people are just, nnd aa between the three now pre
sented for i lie first office iu their gift—TAYLOR,
Cam, and Van Buren—they never cau hesitate which
to choueo. Head and reflect on Mr. Mangum'e re
nin rkn
Sir, to be serious, this studiod disparagement
PUINBt TO VOLUNTEER*.
Itwffiks—sa,ky ffistovbnU— hstotft dbnetod to
Cel J. 8. Calhoun, Into awnmaad— ef Um Georgia
Mounted Volant—, that tha chi— af Ca- wiU
give a Dinner to tka Yatantoera Aa— that esity on
the —tenth ar flu n—■ nkxt. We are rsqanted
to pakfirii thatovitaUiaef the C—drill, asthi awat
oertaki mods sf esaveyteg It to tha rib- s—braced
mb: ‘ ’ ' •' ...
Ca—villb, Ga., Ang. 18th, 1846.
Col. Jah— 8. Calhoun—Dem Sir .—At a public
meeting held in thb place, for Um purpose of oMklng pre
liminary anaag—toats foraDk—sr to bo given to the
officers and their eo—and* wha want to Mexico, from
thb county, we are appointed a eo—toil— to Invite you.
with the officers of your ra—and, to —rite whh —, and
yoor fan—r follow aoldbfe oh that a—itn. hb with
great pleasure that we now extend to yeu tha Invitation
to meet with— on Thumhay, tbs — v—hh Harr km-
aaa nkxt, k> honor of the nrrari—i wfarwd to. May
we ask yon to extend thb invitation to |ha office*! ander
your command, — amay of the— a— Hakaown to na.
With semi—p—a of petsoual *
we are, your —ail olri aerv’to,
‘"TV SHACKELFORD,
LANIER H TRJFFE,
JOHN J. WORD.
for I’tc honor conferred bv iheir nomination,
I hnvn ’.hr hour* to be.
irb’t serv’t of the people
of the 2d (.'ongresfainrul Dialrirt.
J. 8. CALHOUN.
now organixiug the clubs, are to be taken iuto custody.
The royalbt and the well disposed of all parti—, have
come up to obtain anna for their tenants to defend their
families against the inaurgento. The squadron of Sir
Chari— Napier had arrived at Cove. Large quanti
ty— of amM are —id to have been removed from Dub!hi.
The authorities have ottered a rewaid of gO&uO for
the arr—tof Smith O'Brien, and *1500 for Thotn—
F. Meagher. The printers of the Nation, eleven hi
number, were arrested by the police. The repeal of
the Union debate came ou in the British Parliament,
but waa eventually adjourned. Meetings have been
held in London, Manchester, Liverpool,and Edinburgh,
with a view to excite the people to videuce. Iu Liv
erpool and Edinburgh —veral arr—b have beeu made.
Precautions have been taken ta keep thinp quirt in
Manchester. In France they are still engaged iu
formiug a conatHatiou. The sta— of siege still oou-
tinu—, and no lime b now fixed for its dbcontina-
ance. No other outbreaks Have occurred Tbs mil
itary tribonsb are still occupied in trying the insur-
puts. The chief cau— of uneaeine— teems to be
the affiura in Italy, and the return of General Audinot
to the remnant of the army of the Alps In Ger
many the reluctance of Gen. Wraopi to sign the
armistice between the Dau— and the Garment b— not
been e—ily overcome. In Italy the warb carried ou
with vnrieble succ—a. The A—trie— had entered
Ferrara, levied euppii— and withdrew. By the meal
recent accounts from the Boys) camp, all communica
tions between Mantua, Verona and Legnago, are com
pletely interrupted. Lord Palmerston a—tiled some
days ago, that up to the latcel dates, the Runia—
had not entered Wallachia, neither had any Turkish
force. The Queen of Spaiu has beeu officially declared
to bn ear foals. At the tailing of the et earner, nooeob
closed at 86 1-3.
LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET.
Since the sailing of the America the eel— amount
to 34,180. The pneral tone of the market has been
quiet and without auimatiou; prices of all descriptions
remaiu the same. The etock on hand amounts to
585,830 bales, against 413,120 at the same period in
1847.
[For the Enquirer.J
MOOTS! BOOTS!!
I have opened a shop in Girard, Rusaell county,
Ala., wlu rel am prepared to dispatch orders upon
short notice. I am making the real Parisian
etyle. Aa soon aa I can ace Judge Wellborn I
will borrow hia, that he bought in Pari#, that you
may wo that mine are of Iho Parisian cut. Ism
right from Paris, and think it likely that the Judge
got hia ef mo. Call nt No. 14, * f asw ntreet.
NOUB^VERRONS.
fttewmrt County Taylor Club.
A Tavl<* Chib was formed in Lumpkin on the 1*1
in«t., a c« mail iu Oou proposed and adopted, and the fol
lowing officers elected:
vicR-rasfainBNTs:
Lumpkin District—B 8. Worrill, Dr. J. W. Storm.
Twentieth 41 —Wn. West, Wn. H. Perrins.
Tweaty-fimt “ —Dr. Wm E Winsbslt.H. J. Port.
Florence 44 — L. Sevan, Wa. Carter.
Min. 8 print “ —'Twos. Gilbert, Ga kin Hill.
Twenty-third “ —J. Wai.ikr, H. L. Wriri.
Sir 8* amps
Hiirty-fai
—Edward Harris, Jno. M. Scott.
.. recond" —James Field, Jas R. Cox
Eighteenth 41 -Wa. Stali.inos. Jas. G. Peal.
IxannaHaasee 44 —Jmbph Wood. Sampson Bell.
Twemy-fourth" —J. W. Gregory, Dr. N. C. Alston
Nineteenth 44 —If. J. E. Romes, Jno. Talbot-
An executive committee was clp «en, consisting of the
following gentlemen, w lime duti— are tha organisation
of the party, and the promoting the Taylor cause by the
most pflertiml, yet honest means: Willard Boynton, Jaa.
M. Clark. Esq., A. 8. Hays, E 8. Vernal,hL L Win-
beriy, Eaq.
The meeting waa well attended and entirely hamtoni
* i— were made by Mewra. C. 8. Ganlden,
, and Jaa. L. Wimberly,
n requesting the publication in the Colnm-
of tke— proceedings was adopted, and the
] of Gen. Taylor, need nut, and ought not to excite
„ of indignation. The raving* of despair
are objects of co.mniwration, not of resentin' nt.
They can <lo no iutnu. 1’lie people of Uiix coun
try have m uw, they havowigacity, they have judg-
nicnt. J’l* yon* lietier judge* of rnen and the
woilh ol rnen, aa 1 verily behove, ihr-n even this
S»*mt»». I inoan no diapartgement of this body—
which f<*r talent, virtue, and patriotism, may not
shrink from a comparison with any other. But I
mean the people live, move, and nave their being
in a ciuar, pure, and calm atmosphere ; tin cliques,
no pa»*ioiM, no prejudice*, no artificial standards,
no oeraonal inierretn, strong as we have to bias
ina thwart strong, sound, plain, common senan.
No, sir, this studied—1 must think—ungenerous
dieparugement, can do no harm. I have no pur-
pose to eulogise Gen. Taylor. It would be as of
fensive to hia simple taHtea nnd delicate sense of
self-respect as it would be unbefitting tne. I am
not, by nature, strunp and tuned to give out the
music of eulogy and encomium to men in power
or to be in power. It is not my wont-~to me it
would be s new vocation. Sir, I leave him in his
aim pie dignity and grandeur of character, 4 when
unadorned, adorned the moat.' Would you have
the Venus de Medici furbelowed and flounced in
Uie tinselled finery of modern millinery 7 Would
you have the statue of Hercules crowned with a
tawdry cap and feathers 7 Would you have me
weave garlands for the pinnacles of the Nforru
Madre, tliat lift their heads and bathe their naked
brows in sunlight far above the region of the
elouda ? Given down to immortality, aa they are
in history, in poetry, and in song, by the associated
f lories of the hero of Monterey su’d Buena Vista,
leave them in their simple grandeur. The peo
ple well know how to estimate him. His strong
sen—, lino — gacity, and unerring judgment-*
firmness of purpose, incorruptible integnty, and
hia open downright frankness and honesty of heart
—firm and fearless aa it is kind and humane. Hie
expansive views—looking to the whole country aa
hia country, and every part of the country as hia
part of the country—knowiug no partisan cliques
or mere sectional intereato—planting himself upon
the Constitution, and the whole Constitution, and
serving the people and the whole people. All this
HUMOROUS SPEECH.
It k stated that Mr. Lmoolh -ads the orach
speech of Um 8—non ea the 27th inst, hi the
Ho—s of Representatives. He is the present solitary
whig repre—atative from Illinois, and is aa able, sc
ents, uncouth, hooeet, upright —an, aad withal a
tram—de— wag. Lincoln, srronkag to sO accounts,
paid hb reap farts to oar immediate repre—atative in a
way that will not basooo forgotten. TTm speech, token
altogether, in manner and matter w— oaa of ’em.—
We give a short notice of it below
44 After answeriogall the objections raised against
Gen. Taylor be turned Jus battery upon Gen. Cass
and the Baltimore platform. After showing ihst
Gen. Ca— and bis supporters had s curious set of
principles, vaiying with the breese to suit contin
gencies, wearing one shade at the North, and an
other at die South, be turned hia attention to Mr.
Iverson, who had —id, in his speech the other day,
that the Whigs had turned out Henry Clay, like
an ohl broken down horse, to root! He asked if
the gentleman*! party had tamed out ne old horse 7
Hsu they nut turned nut Martin Van Boren to
root ? And wax not that old hone now rooting in
e manner that mode them uneeir and uncomforta
ble?
He said the frienda of Caei were attempting to
ancer tl the Whig, for nominating a military
chieftain for their candidate, and yet th-oe very in-
nncenta were driving with all their might to make
it out that Uen. Cast waa a military hero who
who had broken hia sword, marched into Canada,
and all that; and who now had oa the ticket with
him another military man! The Cara men had
two military chieftains for candidates where the
Wing, hod one, and yet they premimed to rebuke
the Whiga for going after a military hero!
He reviewed Uen. Cast’ military exploits. He
id that the Ueneral did march into Canada,
when nobody opposed him, and be marched oat
again in tho same way. As to hia breaking hia
ry dear ape* the
but Enquirer
Club adjourned.
B. W. Cull, fart 1 ,.
JNO. T. PALMES, Prra't
LATEST INTELLIGENCE.
By telegraph to the Charieoua Courier at the 19th
toot.:—“ At 19 o'clock we reoeived iiiformetioa from
W aehtaftou, that Gen. 8htrtfa bed declined the ep-
poieuneut of Geveraoref Oregon.
" At the tame hour we lea need from Baltimore, that
Mr. Crittenden hod been elected Goreraor of Ken
tucky, by • majority of tight ibeaeend.
- Iu New Yerk, oettao wee eeUiug ia oeueiderable
quantities et • decline at e fourth ef • cent holdne
ftne el that rate."
FROM ALBANY.
TaaataLa fa Doaraucriri CoarLaoxaTiea.—
About K> o'clock tart night, wt received e '
dree that hoe taken piece to the United
On Widoiifat tort,eftre broke cut. which dortmy-
ed ft re hundred huu.ee. Several reraili were involved
to the dxtoructien, tarattog that the r neftagiarioo mart
have token piece near the baeie, the burtnera part at
>k Th( 1 lca xratolnid to eetii
dcitore, and the dtrtreee end rniranr that raott mult
therehm, con only be appraetotoft by thcra who rat
ar aipratowired the eftefto at the anrftrt
to ear city ta MW.
DEMOCRATIC CHEAT.
of lira Sautkrra Jfteceitenp, oaos-
itw party to told have appetot-
Jftft a time and place pxavtoeely
dxwgaeled far the (Meeting ef the Brava Aeatcv ltv-
aaa Fai* What to the improvement at the agricei-
tan at the Stale to the lie leaden ef Ga* Cm? What
•tie they that, el the Stem Meant am or aay when
•toe. they itunogaeft the brataeto eta moiety that to
ftxtolg mere grad, to rare year, tkaa democracy, rata
■eRtotoow, wift ever fat TMraeMtag olll»t tarn
and ptooa area eppototod potpemiy becoeoe the Fere
wee to take ptara thrae etod tarn They weeded a
n^aatofato eiei, ewd ftkto waa the ewiy way to get
' A Coir Ceeewr.—Dmtag tae talfag «f Dra Baf-
Jh|p Cbnwnftos, fax g—fori ot ffit Mou* Jte—
ftfataftft. ttaOftta wwptalradeafthto prahta kata
IFor the Enquirer.
Jvdoe WxLLaoaa—Curiaaily ie anon tiptoe to
•ee your Bnatt. To eave many trotiblennmc rail*,
will you plmtee leove them it" the “ Commerciel
Exchange,” end give yottr conelituenta e chance
of seeing them ! Fhekch.
[For the Enquirer.]
Keep It before the People,
That no man can vote for Willinm O. Bntler
for Vice President without voting for Lewis C»t».
the Northern Abolition) et fur the higher office of
President. Boa Short.
[For the Enquirer.l
Bo'hovs let us art up another Fanlattic mutter
and invite Judge Wellborn to join ua and appear
in hi, Parisian Boots. There ia great curiosity to
sec them. He will take the xkinc off ua, but' no
matter; we had some Linns at our last mutter—
let him be the Lion this time.
CAPT. FI NNY
From Mexico.—The westers papers eaatato very
little of interest horn Mexico. The eteamtoip Ohio,
rays the Piepaacct the 15th, arrived the day before
from Vera Crus, vis Gtlvaato* She teuught pepeta
of the 3d from Vera Crux. That paper extneta hum
the Guleuctou Civilian tha faltawtof memoraoda of
bows ham Mexico
The Arto Ha pebliahea a letter from the city
of Mexico, dated July 39, which tprxkt of the
complete eupprexsion of the revolution—the dis
arming of the Indiana—and the discharge of the
pritnoere upon their pledging themselves to the
support of their Government.
'lira same paper announces that most of the
idlers left from the American army bad volun
teered to oarve in Yacatas. They 'were enlisted
under u pledge to obey the orders of the Supreme
Government of Mexico. The Area hit says
that their commander iu u Louisianian, who haa
shown hinraelf to be a good officer while in the
service af the United State* That
the people know well.
Sir, I ahull support General Taylor, and aup-
port him cordially, ax the true representative of all
the great conservative charscteri.tier of the Whig
pony. 1 shall support him as a man of peace—
aa opposed to all wart of eonqueet—at opposed tn
that rapacious policy that would pick a quarrel
with a neighbor, and then eeiae hit goods. I sup
port him for hie sound conetflutional views in re
gard to the relative dutiee of the respective de
partments of the Government. King Veto will
not be put in chain* but confined to hia proper
sphere. He will not be permitted, at a morander,
to make forays upon every department of tha Gov
ernment, end upon every public end private inter
est. I support him alao, because I believe he will
•ttficr the will of the people to become the law of
the people within constitutional limits; because I
believe thut things that lie before us in the unknown
future, limy be uf vastly more magnitude than all
the transient party questions of the day, and be-
cause 1 have confidence in hia moderation and
good xettar—above all, in Ilia moderation and right-
niiiidetlnesa. If I have learned anything in public
life, it is that pure intentions and singTe-miuded-
neo* with strong good sense, are worth more than
the mast splendid abilities, and the largeet experi
ence, without them. Il would be sad were it other
wise. He who seeks what is right, and seeks it
with singleness of mind, will rarely mitt it. What
care I whether Gen. Taylor can or cannot play at
a game of sophisms with expert and dexterous
political dialecticians I What hare 1 whether he
can, with “ metaphysical scissors,”
“ Sever and divide
A hair ’twin north end nonhwart ride I”
What care I whether he hee exact and preciee
views (do we ail have them ?) upoe many of the
tranaientaad unimportant questions of the day?
Might nut Washington have been worried in pofit-
sword, history was not very
Uie subject, excebt that, ax the LootavUle'Joonml
well tays, it he did break it, he didn’t do anything
elte with it!
Mr. Lincoln eaid he waa himself aamething of
a military hero *, he warn owl ia the Black Hawk
war, and wa* juat about a* near a fight ox Gen.
Casa ever was. He broke no swonT for he bod
none, he was very sorry to aay, to break—he had
a musket!
He alluded to and ridiculed Gen. Gaea’ extra |
charge* and his great faculty of doing n vast s-
diount of botinexs at the same time, in three dif-1
feranl place* and nceiaing pay and rations for I
OmmkoU! He referred to tlw fable of the ass be-1
tween two stack* of hay, unable te eat either, ftl
would not be so with Gen. Cox* fat be would I
manage ta sat bath of them up at one*
Mr. Lincoln's manner waa so good-natnrtd,and I
his style so peculiar, that ha kept the House in a I
continuous rear of merriment, for the lost half |
hour of hi* speech.”
CRITTENDEN ON TAYLOR.
In tx editorial notice of speech delivered at a pub-1
lie gathering at Ruenitritle, (Ky.) ou toe 9»d
by that eminent and tree-hearted Whig, Jons J. Ca
Tsxnxjt, we have mat with e oatiee af tha Whig e
didete far the Fraideacy which coaeet fail to be i
ceptehie te a large portion of oar reefaix:
“Aeto Gen. Taylor, Mr. Crittenden Mid hel
thought be would give ue the right kind of an Ad-1
ministration. The old eoldier bed panned through!
every difficulty mfely. He had never mid that hel
would do any thing but what, when the time camel
for hint to act, he waa ready to act np to the eater-1
gency. He had had to fight againat the dieadvan-l
lags of two or three to one, and he bod done itl
successfully. No one hod erer charged him in|
his long career with diahoneety. Honor and tan
could not intoxicate him; power could not oedn
him. He was as plain, as unpretending a
* rough,' after all his bnlUant achievements, ta anjj
plain citi ten present. He waa not bedixened wi
race. He was the people’s man, and the man
the people. All could recognise him in his ol|
brown coat Isold Rough akd Rxxdt—as a r
republican. If he wanted to paint Kentucky I
would set up old Zack and have him painted i
the embodiment. j
- Hera woe a men who could heal the wan
of the country. He looked to him with these L
and with all confidence. He knew that the t
party teas striving to draw the people from fail
but ft was in vain, for their hearts were with hi*
When the thy of election came many a Krntuckif
would find every other feeling overcome but
one determination to do hit duty by Old Zueh
his country. He believed Gen. Teylor woul
elected. He considered that tnatterwell a limn
np by the young Kentuckian who went to Phiia^
delpliia ; who said, on hia return, that the People
were much split up in regard to candidates; ti. t
old Rough and Ready had a great many friend*
but he believed General TVjJor would
Itgl
icaT metsphyi
■mutates the country in thu* feCting^rSTaf the
dregs of the American army, by shipping them
In Yncatan.
The Areo fail announce* the completion af ito
ftnt voltune, but declines a retrospect of the year,
an account of the gloomy character of ito hieiory.
Il reNe* however, upon the Almighty to remem
ber and puntah the Americana far their bad con
duct.
From Teas* wt have nothing af much inter-
hem we find in the Civilian
••L The fallowing hem
» fall rearm
tionaf
Pram the I
u appears that the etac-
ntier regiment of Texas
-raeahad ia tha xitaotine of P. H. Ml aa Colonel,
a B. McColoch, UewtraeM Colonel, sad Jqteee
a onto* Major.
Mjm—m Tki Cm**—The Yai
era tof Dm Mthxftyx: “We regret to ham that
iht boll warm lax temmxaotd praytom with con-
•idsnbta xflhct upon lira cottas craps to this end
some of the ijjltalxg couxtta* pnnicetariy
Holmes sad MeSxwUntl the appears ocr at
ihfa fa wraps* tan peseta far n tarn yield, M
tar seen «• taenq wSraqeito faveraUe.”
11 ' Wh»8 I ~
nmmnmmmrt )m ■■'it" -
any the reeulutione of
'99—by mehy a knignt of the green bag, scaroo
out of his - teens,” and one, too, who would not
have been entrusted by hie neighbor with a trial
of a cause of the value of one hundred dollars ?
And yet the people cMreeted in the hands of that
aanra'Waahington the honor, the safety and glory
of this great Republic. Were they unwise ?
What I do care to know i* that hi* views are
moderate, conservative, natioual—all tendiug to
peace, to wholesome and gradual development and
progress. He who ha* tainted by experience the
miseries and honors of war, if be be a good men,
will generally be the meet strenuous advocate ot
peace a* long as peace can he preserved with na
tional honor. Who ao pacific a* Washington 1
Who could hove curbed he wild passions and
preserved peace during the phrenty of the first
French revoletion but Washington! Who so
powerful on advocate of pence on the continent
of Europe ax he who struggled on a hundred bat
tle-fields!—Scull ? Who hoe done eo much to pre-
■ervetke peace of Europe a* Wellington, the
conqueror of Nunoleon ? And Ttylor, with equal
virtu* equal moderation, and equal bravery, will
set upon the wiee maxims of peace.”
* SxA-Sxarurr'
tarurr tx Vx*»oxt!—The largeet
heaxft of in fata part of the world hat
beeu seen far eomc moathe aboet n hedge aa ‘
east tad* of oar Weel mountains; and lata f
day Mr. T. Oweety nv him and dmnribra him
ta follows: He less large as a coaupce stove
and shoot Iff feet hara, ee erer ee he coehl
bat ht due not atotek him. He haft a
Bit cokt ta a dark-hnsr*
J—1*
rather
TheOteeto Minntalmmi ore Intending In
n fwmft aartia and caplin hi* mahmHp.
Mr. Wand, Telegraph operator af tha Veneowt
and Canada line bet* eaya the above ’-■rake
ie well authenticate* aad ftadgr* Dm ve-
of the Tefcgra^etoth* rttaraet of the
iy friend*
heat him;
but he thought one they called ' Old Zack' would
beat both! Mr. C. him talked with Gen. Twigge
before he left,Washington, and the General trad
him, in hit decided way, with an oath, that no man
could look five minutes in Gen. Taylor'* face and
make a proposition to him to do a mean action.
No act of oppression wt* ever charged upon him!
No man had erer paid the penalty of death by
ignt at Palo AI
to the time he left Buena Vieta. He had,
ay without
maintained lt« honor and discipiitto,
without having done sight to sally the (_
character he had ever maintained as on ah
well ax humane man. When tome deserters j]
brought to hint after the battle of Baena
befan the biood they had abed had yet sunl
the earth, be looked scornfully ut them and i
“ My soldiers do not desert—Aaaa ara not md
diere! Take them back to the camp, drum j
out, and let them go.’ When the Govern!
chided him for not storming Monterey wiu
twelve thoueand men, with lux five thooeend.J
was bit reply? ‘Y**’ be raid, ‘he eould !
taken it in that way, but he did not wont to /
fiee the women and children.' When be v
in New Oriean*a friend alluding totbt
pageant which woend through the streets t
city, said to him that' it muttlmvu ba
ifyiugto him.' ‘No,’ said b* ‘it
eras afraid some of the women and children J
be hurt!' Who but he, when tho* receiv
triumph like those of Carer, would have th
of that? But to hi. miod that wax the most]
tiful trait in Gen. Taylor's character. Id
more chartcterietic of him than any of the J
anecdote* told of him. The peoples
a man,end they wantod aa bootet
wax more necessary than fin* talent manly, each
te woe displayed in public yaking. Etacl him,
and the people would have a man apoa whom they
OREGON TERRITORIAL BILL.
Thereto ialhe'U. 8. Senate tm Thersdsy night,
on the paueegeuf tote tO, waste fallows:
Phqmmld.
-Mb. »t—■ii.B-qp-.T—y,
Iblin-i 1
mBk.