Columbus sentinel and herald. (Columbus, Ga.) 183?-1841, October 07, 1840, Image 1

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VOL. X.J PUBLISHED EVERY TUTTItfDAY MOKMSO BY JOSEPH STIIUJIS. ON BKOAB SmEKT, PVKK ALIKS AND VOUN'c’s, ♦i’iniomi Kmr. I'Kri.VlS—JSabscriplio.'i, three dollars per an ruin oavablt m a JvaiH.v, or pour. dim.. \it -, (in all ease , es.icied) vvkute payment is not lo lief •retne expiration of the year. No sehseripliuii r> <-> ived for less than twelve months, without pay men: inadvitn*;- . and no pajx r discontinued. e.\cept at the option ot the Kditors, until V,I arrearages are ; aid. aO VEll Tl-SKMIiNTd . .. ti picuou-iy inserted a one Doi.i.ak p. r one hundred \or is, er ie-s, for the first insertion, and fiftv cents for ev ry seiisi - •jitent continuance. Those sent viihouta eith tion of tlio number of insertion-:, v ill lx published until ord trod o’.it, and charged a ■ r .tiii:;iy. id. Yearly auverti.semema. — For over 21. an not exceeding 35 lme.-. .fifty d'lH irs /..r ruiin.n . ; lor ovr la, and not exceeding 24 line , thirtieth ■ doll in per annum', for less than 12 litres, tiunty dollar* ycrannum. 3 1. AH rale and fi;;re work donlrV the above re Legal. Advertisements pub- and: and at the usu*-’ rates. and with strict attention to the requisitions ot the law. All Sale? regulated by law, most he mad b> for the < *oitrf House floor, between ht hours of lu • o : L* muniiiiff apt*, and in tlie event!':! —those rjj 1,.ml in (lie coin:.” where it is it : those of [Vrsou;.: Hropeny, vit re the wot. .• t. stam ritarv.ol a hiun irtration oi of g ianli.e, ! ip were obtained—and are required to h ■ pr viously advertised in some public Gazette, &3 follows : S.iEKirrij’ Sai.Kj iin.ler ren’-ir e\f ciitions for ~ r j i u - tv d.w.s. nndei mortf. .£*• li fas sixty days, l.et-.ie t lie day of sale. Sales of Land and Ntantii, by Executors. Ad mini ’re :rs or (J'.animus, for sixty days beiore the dav of sale. S ices of Personal Property (etcep* Net: roes) roan DAYS. Citations by Clerk? of die Oour’s .if Ordhmr; upon A I’PLIf A TION FIR 1 !) ! TER 1 of ad-oilllslra’ I > . Oil.s• be tiuldished for thirty day s. Citation* upon application for dismission, bv hi Monitors, AdinioLti ators oi Guardians, moat’ . for six monrits. Orders of Court", of Ordinary, (accompanied with i: i (n>py ol the hon i or n rree n-iit) to uxkf. title- | to land, must he ptibushe.i TrißEi-: months. Mo i ices bv Executors A buiuish''T- or L.r.n bao : of apnlicaii-n to the C,ut of Ordi: v for ls *.vf no sell the l.and or Negroes of an Kstab fom MONTHS. Votices by live jut i rs or A-bruif -l-Mors, to me 1 >-o>- ors and Creih.ors ! ar I .stale, spr • v “ f ■'•IERiYFS. Ci.e a ’<’ or Coi'iir, kc., will be allowc< j the usual deduction. ?• J 1 ’ Lett, us on bit’.iness, itnisl be post vaid.J lo entil lv then to ~:te:t’ion. Jil ANSIUIY IIOFsF,. J ACOli I; ARROW. t> ’’.Si'EC rFfJI 1 i informs the public th.V ’ ;,;ls o|i>'lh-u HUl.'Sli i:i iht Ivisii’i'r: par’ <••• j Kroa l Str -.'l foWic aecoinmi-d.ition if Travellers-. 1 n; J lias bo il> ne .v si abte-j on ! e o mi lot by the sobei- j tation of Ins customers, J .Vlarch 21. •* *f I-AW. f subscribers having e..inserted tlsenioelvesa ; a. the prrwTicv of [.AW, wail attend, aii th* j County Courts of the Chnttahoo'uief Circuit, and Ihr (joining counties .! Alabama. Office in M ix ■■ K*w immediately over Alien 5; ‘tig’s Store. ALFItKD ! V F.K SON. Tune Tt. 10r r J . V'l. GTII “ft RV. I I*-> Ij 4. iti 4 O Jt’ ij> ii) Itv 4?). f ‘TV 7 f stlhscnln r r Mp< ctful. v ii.fm tnslns Founts nnr j ["3. the puhlic gonerallv, that he still continues !■: 4 . f.v ’ho above esiii'.iphoj'ii’, where he promises j 7e m- n: and comfort U het.a\‘der an border.! [is ivn person il reteiii ion will b< give.i i a his hu->• li. .4,1.1 w!li~h III’ hopes \r give “ icrai . It metre'.! 11.. I snare a tih-rrai j:air..o i‘>o arn-.r: ;rt Ins h.-o-ie r c.,.ps. .llv'Sh fcj. FEE-YES. j Cos! imbus, Ga., Jan 21,1’ !() 51 tl >r:.VM2U on watki?. 4 v . t .i! cni. ; rs are no.v iirep iiril lofurtt: .iiii-.-u j ;U mi* o:u is an 1 the p"b.ic w. h Garbmated o: • Sola Wa i r, JV. t to rira'uT is c >•)-■'."ict’ il ;t such a ‘OHriiier. i 1.. |of s ich materials as to prev-.ni’ he |.o- Hi.my i l a.-.y .ii ualic or del-in -us nm. e.i:.iti >.i . TAVI.OIC he WALK K J, S*nof ih id rldcii .vl rrtar, liioud •. U ‘"bus Apclil. lO.f j ft ti vdi<lto.v, A FTO” Nfc’.Y.S A.’J:> COl'.V.*F.!,l OHS If LAW, j Linn in i Gie .’.arl county, Lie rgut ‘ ■ \ VI., I. IA !vi A. FOilT, JOHN C. tIAMIL lb N. I P. ptemhe,-8. If 40. SOf j CMliHCll MUSIC. j rHI'IM Southern tla.mu^y. M ii iston, tlandei ft liay.l- n 3*.Ci dy’sCofieet ■u. 1 Huston Academy'... do IVSissoi.ii hTartmoy, I Tver’s S.-lec ion, F. r sale by Nl)K"!'i'22 ct I, A NFI)’ 7.. | (Johiuibus, Sept. 24, 3- 3t A V i,V.\ B7< FOR SALE i 1 >.\ H VINING Two Handled Two end a Ha! j / r.res of Land.iiiitral ‘.v.,h oa!> and pu.c. 3 here j :i.e. e e .dy acres cleared. Also, a comfort able dwol h . „oh all neces.rai \ out otficcs, a stood gin house ai 1 miekins sen w, a peaeli and i.rpb- orchard. The ,- ,|j -c tm.ittr good fence. It is ritun I within 4 miles nf F liu iihns. joining the plauiation formerly owned bv i'b no is G. Kva is, I si]. Persons wishing to p> r c'. *e ivinuot find a in ?re desirable locuux’.i than the fill • oiler ed tor sale by the subscribers. JOHN Cf'OE, p.ie.6. 44tf JOHN atllN t oo li’Mt.vs rrKßis’K ‘vki;> s ,7.i effectual and radical curt for p<jl;.p.n uleru fKTVI'j; s ! '.l)s*:riHi'rs have tak-a t!.e agency f,.*r ih, LL nh'ive valiidhle instrument, and have now oi |. in ! and will c,rtant>v keep a v..it j;y oi pa:torn*:, whu ii they will sell at JVf mufae’itrcrs’ jrcos. Thes i'lii-s.s are superior to an - nsirunu Ot of the kind * vi r invfii’wl, and are no.v exiuisiv ly .-..ttpiovud lo s’ mi of the most, e.ruaent practitioners in the Untieo \V, annex the, cortiScatoof the late Professor 12V R, ,vlto used them with great success m his o-.vn pvict.c; . * C inc'inn ITT t. Oh tv), >1 a v II th, IS >9. ‘1 bare cat efullv examin’d the Uterine i rnss in i ated by Dr. Tliomjs’n of this R r.tt , and I ca.. c‘n tt tet*!!v declare, that it is uneiitsti n b.y the u. ;s iric oi and useful instrument ot the kind that has <-vci U,:ii offered to the public. It diUt-rs essentisi.v it i ons t met ion from the Uteri* Abdettji'.al bn; •;>•*= let coustrncted by Dr. Hili, anu ism ai; respects a .upi rtor instrunu at.’ i'ite subscribers have r.’so received the amnoy fi t Dr. Chase’s Improved Sursr'eHl Truss, wlm h,s md *er-a!iy admitted to be the most certain a.td lasting cure ev t discovered sot Hernia or Rupture. TAYL'>ii x WAKJ'.R, of the Goidtu Mortar, Bro.ul-st. Columbus. June 20, 13a3. 2tiif XV AUK HOVSiS AND CO.'l.MiS.biUN BUSINESS. FZX IE unkrsipttv’d would inform h;s !imods utid § th’’ public generally, that he wi . eoit intte .in a >,.,ve business at his Old Stand in Front street, o; ;.u ----suio the new brick bniidin jof James H. Shore-., :-.sj ? i I tit it his personal attention >vi!l be x.va :\t ‘ J i I the saute. B>’ suin’ at:,ntion thereto,l. •It e have a con'tnuance of the rilv-ra! patr >na-e h - fire bestowed upon him He will as usual a 1 •o. to Lie sale of Cotton, from wagons or in s.ore ;an : trim, a -eneral aequaintance with the purc iSsc’ o . I < siutation of the market he be.ieves he ettn - rn ire than save the coiniaisston m ‘h-sm - C-himbtis, Sept. 13. H 33. 33y He his in store for sale, Liverpool an I Bl.vwa Sait in ks, Chc'-vinsr Tobn co sid Se-ats. Win**, in b istu vs ua i a?j.v.B, I?aii \ H il ‘ Rope 1,0011 AT Tills. I -a !7\ T V WAV f. > n ihe subscribers, a’"' v -:‘ •’ March la-’t, a i.-g-o ma.i by nimr 1.,- y ah Jt forty years of so u-whai an*y rr, vry j thin, or perhap* uo hair o tl.o • <*,* ■>! .>•. f *. <l' < ; black, eye* small a.l deeply ;.u.k ... Um* h a.i. wj c j t-.v -j i tcetn.'bioi.l siio Ji'i ■r'>, ami ni i> , r ’ -, icr* tiii-'liigcn*, thn.'h iinj>refMisossint: in apj.**ar . ” ~,,'tos .*oa !>rof-ssion of r : i; >a, and ;■ ays p■ I,i 11 i’ e"v ■r v o*j>r■ ■ 11 .i 1 y• Ho ava, b-h, n-, ? hbo. h, ‘„f .;r-„riii,-. M i'vt Mit’r I’oMirv *<mc • iv-, S.erLvin-this whorl hold ontteMth nil. , . his Wlfo with ma, who h. -m, : > y'r-cman ; M •>•. liv <Z near urecnv.Me; *!.• is o% Uv : of ih.i. w..„ty years ot a S i-. c-. • :• bright co;v:i r cV-> . and vr ..k-!v. I, r tbv wer I lieen <>!! bv a white mu\ ami p. ■ -a- ‘ , v-t I-I a 41J, as i II iif*rma.ion rea-u. f.- MaC’-ilon. •; ‘• 3 V, rc ■v3 :• he C JV r. for rp a;>;> i i n { “.lid : rxeca z:\ i 1 •’ , • n >e*.Tn^r r ’ f * •’<’ . ‘'.*■> - *° ,J ‘ r:r.;-Mh VI.! .SMIN IOHI-i 0. MA\o iAM. . 4. nil IS, IS 19. F.om ’he W.i ’ inrt-.n Globe. THE ELECTIONS. Then? is tiotisinjr in j.he results of the State elections of the present year, iittlieaHtto- any soltletl ehamre in llto jtuliiie mind iclative to the adiiiinistrntion or its measures. In-j deed, there is nothiitg 1 in [he recent metis ii res or conduct of the \dmin istrntion ealetilaled, in any dc^roc, ; lo (dl’ect stidi ti lie had been left to form its ow n o- j ; pinions and pursue its own course, without the influence of extraordi nary means of electioneering, it ran i no! he doubted? that Mr. \ an Huron j i would have been re-elected by three- 1 fan; lbs of the electoral votes in the; i Union, Yet there is much in pass-] ] imr sr.-nos to excite the alarm, and ] i call out the energies of every friend, I not oniv of our free institutions, but i Os t!i:* ri.'.iiits and digniiy of man j ’ himself. Look at the means use;] , by the Federal WSiig parry to con- ii• t * i i t rol a t innkmif peop.f*, vr/.: j OGt.IVS OMMlifs OF iJiVw. i ti F. s r.WIHNK Ah.MV HUMBUG. | THE HOOK HUM BULL ! THE LOW I/kiCES HUMBUG, ]/k; cabins. IT A it!) CIDEk. hid BALLS. COOX Sk:NS. (TO I BUS j EWING GINCEBBREAD • V.'fuHH’LVG AND YELLING. 130 LI iJO•\ Nft Kill T L VIN G a houi ever'v man ami every tucasure <n the i,iminist ra: ion, by every gr uie, from the goiiiike Webster, down to ‘be i-Jiuuvay LacUeye Blacks.milh, m concert timi mieoasiu'r, Mi L LIOTv iS OF MiL\ u Y used in mi.sieatii'ig voters and buying vot es. FriATIKS A'i ELECTIONS, by ! menus of false registries and false js'.veanug, putting fitHe votes into | the ballot, boxes, and taking true j ones out; false returns covered by ] omen* I certificates a nd “broad sen la” | Li LLYSNG A T POLI.Sto pr - ! vent the excreisc, of the right of suf • ’ I'rage by weak Jinn timid men. S A:\ ORGAMZA riON to bring | to the polls every man they can in j dnee, by argniucut or money, blan | di.-diments or tiireats, liiptor or lies, ; to vote S be W hig t icket, j As to their political creed, and as to the measures they intend to pur j me if’ Ten. M u nson be elected, they are carefully silent; nor ran any 1:1- | formation lie obtained by reference jto (heir e eduhtte. In ins various speeches am! letters, ;>,!! you can find ;*■ ala ici'rnce to tlie p.ist and a de- j ciaraiion a- to tlie future that he! o il! not veto any ;;t*t which Congress may pa s\ For the first time i:: ;ur 1 Ooveriimcit, tlie Democracy have; to contend with a PARTY i fit-- ()FT PIU.NC*; PLUS AKi> YVi'i 11- 1 OUT SCRUPLES. In opposition to those menus of j electioneering, the Democrats pre- ; sent tlio iionest, (fisintcrosictl timl fearless course ot the Afiministra tion, m relation to ike bunks anti public revenue, its strict adherence to the political creed of Jclierson and Jackson, its inipailialitv towartl overs - class rd citizens, mnl i; s mea sures tending to give the working man bis due weight in society, its 1 measures to redeem the country, as ! fir as i; can, from an irredeemable ; Whig currency, its Uiitlsful ndiie ’ renco to the compromises ot tlie ’Constitution, in maintaining the ! : igkts of every section of the ( nion; am! in is commending it and repel : lii:,; the assaults of its enemies, its friends aim only to speak “the words Os truth iiml soberness.” r i'hey j look upon the means ot electioneer ing adopted bv the Fetleralists as | destructive of all honor and hones i\ in politic i matter®, as fatal to • In: morals of mall it rules of our peo ple, and if imitated by the Deino i cratic party, fatal lo ail popular Go vernnient. t hey will not resort to the fa!.- hoods and frauds ot their adversaries even if they knew sue ! ct s? deptm led upon it; for what is !an ephemeral triumph compared with the tit struct inn of every pros pect upon which the Democrat and philanthropist bases his faith in man's advancement? No; every true Democrat ought to prefer the elec tion of Han i-on to being instrumen tal in destroying that morality a- wong our people on which u!! his future In pes depend. Power ob tained bv t;;o men and the means’ now used b\ the I edered party, can-, not now bo retained, unless the De mocracy lo<c their own character i,>- tiit: list? of similar means. •• i'rutls iuirlt ti to cart.: wil rise again— The er,ii!css days ot diixi are hei>: Dai ai't_iiood, snwtten, wii'hes in pain, 1 And u.cs amidst her worshippers.” In j In? contrast which the honest j and fair means employed by the. Democratic party present to the profligacy of their opponents, they expect to recommend their prinei | pies to all moral, truly religious and honest men; to loose moans tho\ ’ !„ok for triumph now, or if over j whelmed Im a tune by tne msiru!” of falsehoods which, life the locu?i i ,j* .. :v; 1. overspread the laml, for ~ 1 ,** r \c *. •'*. •;’ lin emUir: iir 1t;■1; 1< 1 r 11 r 1! •* ■ * ‘WE HOLD THESE TRUCKS TO BE SELF-EVIDENT, THAT ALL MEN ARE BURN EQUAL.’ COLUM’itJS, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 7, 1810. In the New Hampshire election, the Democratic party more ti.jin maintained its usual ascendency. in the Connecticut election, they had no right to antipate success.— ! The ancient Federalism of that (State, strengthened by a close alii j a nee with the Abolitionists, and aid pul by the money power, was too •Hong for the Democracy. i In* people could net be made to com prehend so soon the profligate means employed to mi-dead them. The apparent Federal <ram in the [popular vote of Louisiana is attribu- Itable altogether to new made voters, : and the absence of many Democrats jiVom the Polls. None but freehold- : |ers can vote under the Constitution [of that State. We-have obtained j information from the Land Office’ !shewing that no less than one thou- j | stand six hundred and tnu nJu-two per- : sons were made freeholders at three | sand offices, by entering 317 84-100 | teres of’ public land between the Ist > Jane and the ifttii July, in the pre- j sent vear. In one case i74 men j were made freeliolders, by enicring \ | a fraction of 3 1-2 acres at $1 25 I (per acre, the right of suffrage cost- ; ling about Til RUE CENTS apiece'. | jOf the L6ii voles thus created,! 731 WERE MANFFACTt RED I j IN NEW ORLEANS BETWEEN j i Til E Ist A ND Bth .1 CJuY, l NULL- i 8: \lk All these, we are informed,: j were \\ bigs, tlie Democratic party j an the city having declined to resort I | to such an expedient. Now let us! compare; the recent city vole with j (hat for Governor in 1838 | Whig vote ol'lßßß : : 1,542 j Democratic do : : 1,550 lotnl, 3.092 And the new made voters of 1840 732 ! And it would make the present vote 3,324 The vote actually given at ihe late ! eh ciion ivas— Democratic : : 673 : Whig : : : 1,793 2 463 i Winch, dedue!> c] from the rfbnve, shows a (ieiiciency of : : 1,353 | Thus it is comhiseiy shown, that 1,858 men who voted in 1838 were j absent from the polls in 1840; and |by deducting the Democratic vote oi 1840 from the Democratic vole jof lbbS, it. appears that no less that. ‘51 7 of Ueo-o were Democrats. That they had not gone over to iho VVlik's is shoivM by lbo tact. :i!).it. witii the aid of 732 new-made voters, that party gained only 251 lover iheii vote of 1838. WhaUhadj ■ oecomo of these 877 Democratic! i I voters.” U is Svtioun that it portion’ of them did not attend the election;: I but not enough to account for the !d i lie re ace. The ballot boxes were j deposited in a i7NK, after the ! election was over, lor safekeeping, :aud there arc suspicions that the Democratic votes were LITERAL LY’ 1)18(:O V INTE i>! SJO thetas H may, these farts leave no doubt |as to the means by which the Fed eral party have shown an apparent majority ol the popular vote in that j Elate. lu Kentucky, the Democratic can j didate for Governor lias received a 1 vote larger than the Democratic vote tor many years; but the Federal vote has been increased in a greater de gree. Ah hough in Jefferson, and j perhaps oilier counties, tlie number <>f votes is much larger than the number of rot rs, indicating great frauds, Ihe Federal increase is un doubtedly to be ascribed in a great, deg roe to a sup rioTorganization and ’ g renter industry. In Indiana there are evidences of Federal frauds at the polls, amount ing to many thousands of votes; and after all, the Fed ere. I majority va ries little from that.of 1830. There also the Democratic party were des litme of that minute and effective organization which the times re qnii e. In Illinois, Missouri, and Alaba !mu the Democratic party lias not •only maintained its ascendency, but ia two, if not all oft hose States, con siderably increased its popular m'd ’ jority. In North Carolina, the Democrat ic uL.jorities were increased in ma- j ny counties where the arts and false- | hoods of Federalism were explained ; and refuted, while the Federal ma-j jo: ui's were more largely increased , in counties where they were not ! counteracted. In no ."State in the . Union have tire foul means used b\ ■ hat party to obtain ascendency been . inoie industriously and unscrupu-. louslv applied; ami it is alleged that ; fraud lias been resorted to tor the purpose ot completing the work oi falsehood. So tar as the State au thorities .are concerned, there is, .however, little change; and it G j undoubtedly in the powei ot tuc De moeraev, by an eiicctual rally, to jcairy tire State in November, as they did in l''-'3G. altera similar de- j feat in August. • l*. a v cnnoiit nothing was ex ipecte l bf fond a -nigh? member ot Conifi ■ ?■=, and through t he dose oJ.li • j * i-'.d li \-c-~ i- ’ -:*• t - rth ha oj ’ the Whigs and AboUUeni.de, even | that lias been io.st. Democeats, so the rescue! Your I only danger is from WANT OF ORG ANJZATI OX, IN 6 i STR Y, and VIGILANCE. You must or i ganize as the Federalists Imve, so • <is to l>e able to count your strength j in every city, town and county, and must take effective measures to ral ly every man at the polls. You must use half the industry and make half the sacrifices to spread t lie trut 1 1 , that your adversaries do to dissem inate falsehood. You must take the oust effective measures to prevent Whig frauds at the polls and viola tions at the haliot-hox. Determin ing to commit neither fraud nor outrage yourselves, \ on must be pre- j pared firmly to resist them when! commenced by others. I if you do not take these measures.’ YOU ARE IN DANGER OF DE- j FEAT! If defeated now, it will j take years of controversy, if', is.deed, von shail ever be able to overthrow THE STUPENDOUS SYSTEM OF (JGURU FT!OX which will he engraft’ and upon your institutions A sixty days’ effort and you are sajel if ha (tied in their present fearful as sault upon the Democracy, tlie Whig : part ywi: Ibe annihilated. Asham-j ed of the name they will have effeo- j tualiy disgraced, they will attempt j lo throw it off, as they have done! other names before, and seek a par-I tin! accomplishment of their person- i al ends under new disguises. TO THE RESCUE! Let no] personal sacrifices he wanting lo j save from the withering grasp of the MONEY POWER, those pre- j cions rights which were won by the ! blood of patriots, and, it was Imped, j secured by the wisdom of sages,— ; Save your country from the tavni ! of monarchists, that a people who] can be induced to make a Pie sident through the influence of ‘■'•log cabins” and u hinl cannot be fit for .self-government! Save man kind from tin; deadly injury which such an exhibition must bring upon the cause of free government i throughout the world! Ogle's Speech. —The Globe has j dissected with u masterly hand, this ! man's speech, ami we never recol-j led to have seen a more disgusting ! sp; dacie than it exhibits oft he base- j ness and falsehoods with which it a-| bounds. As tlie Patriot liasannouim j rod that the speech has been trans- ! hik'd into the German language, and circulated largely for the purpose of imposing upon the honest foreigners who speak that language; and as the name and character of the au thor of a work generally adds to or detracts from its worth, wo suggest that the following from the Globe he appended to that speech, that those whom they pretend to wish to enlighten, may see what credit is to he attached to the statements of the compiler. — Bali. Ii (pit Hi v an. From the Globe. We intend to add a commentary on the absolute villany of this man Ogle. He knew that Mr. Monroe's extravagance in originally furnish ing the house had been sanctioned by Congress; that Congress has put i at too disposition of every President j since, appropriations to keep up the j furniture in the same style; that out of these appropriations, Gener al Jackson and Mr. Van liuren not only kept up the old furniture,, but j had furnished the spacious east room i for which neither Mr. Adams nor Mr. Monroe purchased a single ar-j tide; that in expending the appro-j priations, Mr. Van Ruren or his a-j gents have but performed a duty ! imposced on him by Congress; that j Air. Van Buren never lias asked f*r i a dollar for furniture, and that it was his duty to see that the form-j tore of tile people's House, not tlie; “President’s Palace,” should he’ kept up in the. style the representa-; lives of the people have times and again sanctioned and approved. If Ogle wanted reform, if he had in tended any thing honest, any thing but an electioneering humbug, he would have introduced a bill into the House directing ail these “tabby cats, - ’ fringes, tassels, plateaus, gib chairs, silver plate, gold spoons,gilt clocks, lamps, &c. tAe. to be sold and replaced by plain furniture, ap propriate to the tastes and habits oi the people whom be seeks to cheat and mislead. Ia any measure of j practical reform, he would he aided j by every true Democrat as cordial- j ly as every honest man now abhors j bi> lying, ami detests hi? hypocrisy. The appropriate name for ln= ! speech is j. AN OMNIBUS OF LIES, And this is whirr electioneering. • capital with an intelligent people. Truly did Ogle's brother deserbe him in tlie annexed letter, tor which, j upon prosecution for a libel, we tin j derstand Charley got a verdict, un der the common law, against the primei, for fifty cent?, the ailega ! lions in ihe let icy iuvFng been fully pfovyvf; vizf - ‘ Frotn ilu Somerset (Fa.) VN'htg. TO THE PUBLIC. f- ‘ Inasmuch as lyina: and falsehood have b'e : come tlie order ol ihe day, 1 deem it proper ! and expedient, as well to justify myself and I character, as to clear myself from improjier j charges, to publish to the world ilia! thepub- J i.eaLuns which appeared in the Herald of this i p'ace relative lo my renunciation ofFreema | Sl >nry, are unlhnnded, false, tied not my own | p.odaction; and that the author is a liar, a j scoundrel and not worthy of truth. I have | always been, and am ai this time, a genuine i mason. I luvc no idea of having my name j palmed upon (he public ns an Antimason.— ; D >es Cimriey Ogle and his little antimasonic I junto think to regulate Pennsylvania, or the political matters of ii, or any other sister State of the Union, by fraudulently putting my name before the public, tor the purpose of an swering their political ends? No. When revolutions in political matter take place it requires greater men than Charley to do it.— Il is useless, and more than us* !<-ss. to attempt :o pul down an institution that has stood tin iest. of ages, iti all countries, an institution whose precepts are morality, justice, and bro therly love; an institution that lias produced tlie greatest men in the world—one that the tongue of calumny cannot touch. View the men that are its opposers, that is enough. “ALEXANDER OGLE, Jr. ‘■'Somerset. Marcii 2d."’ From the Washington Globe. HARRISON LAW. OKS CCHRENCr FOR THE RICH, AMD ANOTHER FOR THE POOR. A law of Indiana, approved by Gen. YYiiiinm Henry Harrison, on the 7th September, ISOT, contains the following provisions, viz: “Section 2. In ail enses of penal laws, “bore free persons are punishable by fines, servants shaii be punished bv whipping after the rate of twenty lashes for evt ry eight dollars, so that no servant shall receive more than sot ty lashes at any onetime: unless such offender can procure some person to pay the fine.” “Servants,” under the Harrison proconsulate, meant all persons, black or white, bound to service by agreement or purchase, according to the peculiar laws of the Territory. Tiiis provision! was applicable to l emigrants, or others who might have agreed to serve for a term of years, and to men sold to pay fines and costs. He.ro, therefore, we have DOL LARS as the currency for the rich man, and LASHES as the curren cy for the poor. Even the value of tlie lash is denned by Harrison law: ‘■'■twenty lashes for every eight dollars ,” equal to FORTY CENTS A LASH. Be it known, therefore, that in the tables for Harrison cur rency ONE LASH is equal to FOR TY CENTS; and ONE DOLLAR is equal to TWO LASHES AND \ HALF! Forty cents of the RICH MAN’S MONEY 7 is equal to one L'.sn on the I*ooll MAN’S BACK! Say, poor men, how do you relish this currency? What do you think of the statesman whose feelings would permit him to take payment out of men's backs at forty cents a LASH? Ls there not something in expressibly abhorrent in thus bal ancing’ money against hi sues ? It must be recollected, that there could not lawfully be any slaves in Indiana, so called. These lases were for freemen’s backs—free men who were bound to service on ly for a lime. THE QUESTION SETTLED. It lias been a mooted question for some time past whether Harrison was on the side of Abolition or not. The State of Missouri has spoken. She goes against Gen. Harrison.— It has been erroneously stated that Harrison lost his election to Con gress in IS!? for having voted u guinst tire Missouri restrictions.— ‘l'llat. State came into the Union in 1821. How could the elections in 1818 or 1820 he influenced by what was done subsequently ; Nonsense. —Gdllutin Union. Fro m the Louisville Public Advertiser. CHARGE UPON THEM! -This should he the policy of the Democracy throughout the Union. They should keep up a constant charge upon the vile assailants of the free institutions of the country. | Charge them wilfully lying about i the expenditures of the General Gov- j eminent —with complaining of ex penditures for whicn they voted, al most unanimously—with proposing expenditures, intending to complain of them when made—and with indi rectly giving aid and comfort to the .Indians in Florida, for the purpose of harassing the Administration, and increasing the expenses of the war. Charge them with.practical con duct, in fighting, u about daring to raise a common flag, or to avow the principles and policy they wish to establish. Charge them with base lying in relation to the expenditures for fur nishing the President’s House, and suppressing the speech-of Governor Lincoln, (Whig evidence,) which shows that Congress directed the appropriations complained of, w ith out solicitation or recommendation on- the the President. The conclusive speech of Governor Liu buLn.iijis only appeared in one, Fed eral paper in the United States —the National lutelhgeucer—and that print Would have been ex cused from disseminating such a triumphant vindication of the Proi i deep- r *-**'• * • ! Charge them with bank subser viency—show that subserviency, In, j showing that wherever banks an* I large lenders to the people, ami the people slaves to the hanks, Federal ism boars sway. Charge them with striving to sub stitute the power of incorporations tor that of the people, and demon strate by the present influence of the banks, that, unless the people arouse themselves, their liberties may he overthrown by hank con ! spirators. If, when suspended, hank- j | rupt and disgraced, hanks can hold j ! hundreds of thousands in bondage,; what might they not do, if sound, and conducted by able financiers. They are now in the hands of un scrupulous partisans, and no change tor the worse can take place on that score. Charge them with base lying; about the increase of Executive pat-1 ronage. This is a complaint Fed-; eraiists never make in sincerity. If’ the President were guilty of all they charge upon him, on this point, and more, they would rally around him, and proclaim him one of themselves. It is farcical in a fiee country to hear monarchists complaining of the increase of Executive patronage — to hear the advocates of exclusive privileges—the champions of incor porated credit—hypocritically de fending simple government and e qual rights. Charge them with vile lying about the character of ihe Independent Treasury hill, and prove the charge by referring to the fact that, since the hill became n law, the Federal papers dare not lay it before their readers, nor cun Federal orators venture to read it, in any.of the in numerable lying speeches they are delivering. Charge them with scandalous ly ingabout the effects the Independent Treasury law would have—such sis reducing pri?es to the rates now paid in Europe, and utterly prostrat ing every branch of business. Pri-j ces are improving and business look ing up, and exhibiting to the public gaze the Federal leaders, as a dirty set of lick-spittle liars. Charge them with corrupt lying i about Mr. Van Buren’s advocacy of negro suffrage, and his opposition to white suffrage. lie advocated the right of every man. paying a poll tax, working on a highway, or being a householder, if a citizen and of law ful age, to vote at all elections, ex cept free negroes, who were required j to haven ft eehold qualificai ion of the ■ value of $250. Charge them with lying about Mr. Fan Buren’s opposition to the late war. He was, throughout, a support er of the late war with England, and every reading Federalist knowingly lies, when ho makes an assertion to the contrary. Chn rge them with fillliy lying n bout thellooe case—the negro test i mony, Ac. Enough of flat-nose or snotty-nose lying has been done in behalf of the petty tyrant, Hooe, to sink a thousand souls into everlast ing torment. Well, II one and his friends may get their deserts, cer-1 taiuly in the next world, and probn- I lily in this. Charge them with lying about de-( faulters—running through twenty j year s to rake up a list of sixty or seventy, and then reading the list, | as if all the defalcations occurred j under the administration of Mr. Van Buren. Such conduct is too base for a blackleg to descend to. Charge them with lying for years about the war of the Administration on the credit and commerce of the country. No war of the sort was! ever commenced. If, however, the! Administration could have made a successful war on credit, it. would have done great service to the coun try. We should have had fewer gentlemen of capital on other peo ple’s means. Charge them with lying about thej currency. If the hanks had not! suspended to save their pets, we should have had a sound currency. Who wants a better currency than specter And eon there be any lack of specie whilst the banks redeem their issues n good faith? Thej truth is, the Federalists are the; bankers; they supply the paper cur rency, and corrupt and depreciate it. They alone are responsible for the present derangement of the cun en-j cy. Charge them with trying to lie Harrison into a Democrat and an unequalled hero. Harrison was ac cused of cowardice in the late w ar, as the dates of hundreds of his cir tificates of courage will show, and 1 the charge came from those who were then fighting shoulder to shoul der with Daniel Webster and the Hartford Conventionists. The Fed eralists are the men who charged their present candidate for Presi dent with cowardice. They for give his omissions of duty to his own j country, because he never harmed J’a-jbu/d injiciitiun'illy, and now sup- j port him because they think they cat t use him. Charge them with lying about the humbug of a standing army of two : hundred thousand tricn, touit extent i sufficient to demoralize a million of souls here, and damn them hereaf ter. On this subject, more reckless villany has been displayed than was ever exhibited in any political con test since the formation of the Fed eral Government. No Fedeiaits* lias spoken upon it without uttering wilful falsehoods without stint. Charge them with waning v the purity of the press, the j elections, and the rights > : ties of the people. \> n> - thing like a common oi i.aiio.u flag, they are, like pirates, assailing the dearest rights of the neoplo, an i rely for success—not altogctlun cn hard cider, hut haul lying, bribe-v, intimidation, and corruption. It is the last desperate effort of the most profligate set of men .but ever took the position ot office hunters in this or any other civilized country. 4- mericans, if you respect yourselves or value your liberties, trample the varlets in the dost. Show them that you cannot he deceived by such mer cenary, corrupt, brazen-faced liars. From the New Yotk New Era. BRITISH INFLUENCE. MAIISE —ABOLITION. w e give to our readeu the second letter of our London correspondent, which has been necessarily crowded out for some days by a press of other matter, but which should not have been the rase had we, by a more at tentive perusal of it when received, properly appreciated its importance. The idea thrown | out in the letter relative to the Noriheassern Boundary question, and the election in the State of Maine, demands a deep considera tion ; and connected with the actual result of that election, cannot hut attract general at tention and interest. That Great Britain is ‘exercising an insidious and powerful uiflu etice upon our local politics to produce a change in our governmental policy, is n ,v past questioning. That she is deeply, to vitally interested in the results which are > be produced from such a Chai.ge, i 3 *-\ J. jg without having recourse to the detailmtnt of fect.s. The common sense of every man who is acquainted with the relative position ol England and the United Stairs, must lead him to this conclusion—that if the reforma tion of our currency and system of finance, as contended for by the Democratic party, be effec.ed, this nation and people will achieve a complete commercial independence from the thraldom in which she is now held to the moneyed power of Britain. This is the prin cipal reason why we hear the aristocracy in Britain, Canada, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, an t other possessions of the British mown dealing then- nriflltifmac arramnt Mr. Y r an Buren, and vamitlully boasting at the probability of the defeat of the Democratic ! party in tlie Presidential contest. Is not this I fact sufficient to awaken in the bosom of every patriot a determined hostility ag ir.st the cormorants arrayed against the Adminis tration and trie liberties of the American peo ple.’ The history of British diplomacy and British policy is one of trick and peffidy. Where force could not attain her ends, her ineans have been fraud and corr.iption.~r Regardless of moral restraint, when tier inte rest or ambition was to he subserved, she has at times opposed an armed neutrality, insti tuted to prevent the interruption of neutral commerce. She has violated the law of nations, by purposely insulting national am bassadors. She has, alter declaring and b lasting of her love of order and liberty, entered into alliances with and subsidized the p miderers and oppressors of Poland, kite has, pluming herself upon her admiration of the precepts of Christianity, and hypocriti cally professing to detest the cruelly of na tions, suffered Asia to be pillaged, and its inhabitants to be butchered by her own sons. She has encouraged the remorseless Indians, when we should have had her love, to toma hawk women and children, and fire their peaceiuT habitations. She has hired merce naries to do the work of death, in “ the times that tried men’s souls,” and in a contest in which they had no immediate concern. She endeavored to Harve the French nation, with whom site was at war, not only the rulers and warriors, but infants, women arid old people, by inhibiting the importa ion of bread. She has FORGED ASSIGNAIS, the cur rency of revolutionized France, t confuse tier councils, and bring in odium the princi ples of Republicanism. Ye-, her SPIES and SECRET SERVICE MONEY were more powerful in blneting the budding hopes of those who meditated the demolition of the absolute rule and de-potSm oft lie old French Government, than the invadirtg armies ol all tlie European kings. These are but lew of the crimes that Britain has been guilty of in her national conduct. The movements here ai din her own dominions, couthm us in the opinion we have so repeatedly expressed, that the means used to subjugate the French people are placed in requisition to effect the same purpose in this Republican country. An open demonstration upon our institutions dare not be attempted. It is by the exercise of the ir fluence of British gold that she hopes to carry out her designs, even while the form* of our Government are preserved invi ola'e. It sho-.ld be recollected that at the World's Convention, held in London, to consult on the proper plan to consummate the entire Aloii tion of Negro Slavery, at which prince Albert presided, and u> which delegates from this country were present, it was determined that the most effective mode to carry out the views ol the Abolitionists, was to discourage the growth of cotton in tb<* American Slat*;- - , and encourage it in the E ast Indies. This plan v ‘• acceded to by the American dele gates present. SO® Among those elected an delegates iir> this convention, was \\ ILLIAM PIT’ l 1 ESSFNDF.N, the member of Con '.’re s eleo.i for the Cumberland district in tile State of M one._£3 Now who believes that feelings ■ f humanity nd philanthropy prompt ihe arr-tocracy ol Britain and this country to profess so much regard for the negro slave? B'dain i. overrun with pauperism and dis tre.-; ->, ni.d thousands oi her op; ratives would” ob -i'y exchange situations with the Southern’ slaves. England’s Orients] laborers, whom these humane philanthropists would have grow all the cotton, who arc they—and what their condition ? Withcued, shrunk, enerva ted wretches—bearing the form of humanity’, without its spirit—animals leas happy and more ignoble than the boats of ihe field. Their physical condition is inferior to that of lie African h gn&r-tkej possess a native^ [NO. 31