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3gt* ueir own; and many able
X _
Fioin hr At -h<pi.e Union.
ILKAL CAUbb OF Aj,ARAL
H t have tec a m the ofiice o : the Serreta
% of State two flrom the
World’s Convention of Abolitionists, unaer
he sea. o! the British and Foreign Abo A lion
Society, one of them r'RANKED by S. M.
GATES, A WHIG MEMBER OF CON
GRESS from New York, and both addressed
to “II is Excellency James K. I’oik, Governor
of the State of Tennessee.” They arc IN
CENDIARY, or we would lay them before
the public. We have permission, however,
to publish the letter of tire Governor in reply
to Gates, which is as follows:
Nashville, Ten. Oct. 2d, 1810.
To tire Hon. S. M. Gates,
Member of Uongrtrtjro the State of N- York.
Sir — l have received through the post-of
fice a communication, under your official
lrank as a member ot Congress, containing
certain proceedings oi a hotly of men s.yiing
themselves “A Convention of the friends of
the negro, assembled from various parts of
the world, convened for the purpose of promot
ing- the immediate, entire and universal aboli
tion of slavery and the slave trade.” This
convention, it appears, was lioiden at London
in the month of June last. The envelope
covering the communication, which comes to
me under your frank, is pest marked at the
city of New York—is sealed with a stamp,
bearing a pictorial representation of a person
in an imploring attitude, and encircled with
the words, “ British and Foreign Anti-Slavery
Society.” The communication itself conta;ns
an “ appeal to the < governor of Tennessee to
employ all the inlluencd and power with
which Divine Providence has entrusted him,
to secure immediate and uneondiLionel liberty
to the slave.”
The fact is ind sputabie that you have lent
your ofiicial frank to tins self-styled “ World’s
Convention of Abolitionists,” as a means of
enabling them to send their infamous publica
tions in manuscript through the United States’
mails free of expense, and the presumption,
therefore, is, that you countenance and ap
prove the proceedings which 3-011 aid them to
circulate. In a postscript to live communica
tion bearing your lrank, 1 am requested to
acknowledge its receipt in a letter addressed
to the “President of the Convention at Lon
don.” This request I shall disregard. 1
cannot recognize, by any act of mine, official
or otherwise, the right of foreigners to make
an attempt in itself so impertinent and impu
dent, to intermeddle or interfere with the
domestic institutions of this State. But you,
sir, are an American citizen, and by the part
you have borne have made yourself equally
criminal and responsible with the foreign agi
tators and fanatics with whose proceedings
you have identified yourself. Were it not for
the official station which you occupy, I am
free to declare, that i should treat the part
which you have borne in this dark transaction
with the scorn and contempt which I entertain
for the proceedings themselves, and which I
am sure all patriotic citizens, ardently at
tached to the Union, and desiring its preser
vation, will pronounce upon 3-our conduct.
It is to be regretted that the atieeted and
hypocritical philanthropy of British and other
foreign Abolitionists, With whom your official
frank identifies you, had not been reserved
for the suffering subjects of their own domi
nions, whose unremitting toil even in seasons
of profound peace, is in many instances scarce
ly rewarded with the means of procuring
wholesome food and decent raiment. Unac
quainted as the Convention, whose proceed
ings you endorse and circulate by your frank,
seems to have been with The peaceable rela
tion of master and slave m the United States,
their advice is as worthless as it is gratuitous.
The foreigner, in extenuation of ins crime,
may plead ignorance of our form of Govern
ment ; but from you, sir, his American aider
and abetter, no such plea is admissible. Tie
may be actuated by a desire to produce insur
rection in the heart of a rival nation. But
what apology have you, st, for lending your
official privilege as a member of Congress, to
aid him in ah attempt to produce anarchy and
confusion in one of the constituent sovereign
ties of your own Government ! Have you
seriously reflected upon the dangers of the
crusade in which you .are engaged—a crusade
in alliance with foreigners, which not only
threatens the peace ana harmony of the Union,
but may endanger its existence if the wicked
agitation to which you give your countenance
is persisted in ? Are you so deliberately
reckless of consequences as to be willing to
lend the aid of your official privilege to coun
tenance and abet foreigners in proceedings
calculated, if not designed, to excite sectional
jealousies anil heart burnings—to divide the
States by geographical lines—to array one
section against another.; and that, too, at ihe
imminent peril of producing domestic insur
rection, and a servile war ? Have you yet to
be informed that slavery existed in the Colo
nies long before independence was achieved!
Have you yet to learn that at the adoj ion of
the Constitution, the adjustment of me slave
question presented one 01 the chief difficulties
to the formation ot Ilia Union which had to he
encountered —and that it. was ultimately set
tled upon principles ot mutual concession and
compromise I Would you disturb the funda
mental compact upon which the Union of die
States rests l Ilut I will not. argue the ques
tion. Vis not one which is debatable.
It is matter of sincere regret that any
American citizen shouid no guilty of such high
treason to the rirst principles upon which liie
States became united. Your official frank
covering these proceedings stands up in judg
ment against you, as a witness whose testi
mony is not to oc impeached.
The only further notice which 1 shall take
of these nefarious proceedings of foreigners,
with whom you stand associated, will he to
expose them to the indignant reprobation of
the people of Tennessee.
JAMES K. POLK.
ANOTHER FRANK REVELATION.
Judge Saunders has addressed a powerful
letter to the Republicans of North Carolina.
We will attempt to publish n. in the course of
this week. Among other items of informa
tion which he gives us is the following:
“ 1 did not feel myself at liberty to call on
Mr. Van Buren to sav what ho would <i
during the session of Congress, when such a
hill was actually pendmg before that body.—
But I have since, turough a friend, a niemi or
of the Cabinet, iiad the question propounded
to him, lequcsting in reply simply a categori
cal rnswer. Here is my question, ami here is
his answer:
“ ‘Should Cengross pass a bill for the admis
sion of Florida as a State into the Union,
without any restriction in regard to slavery—
would such a bill be approved by you !’
“ ‘ I answer, yes.—M. Van Buren.’
“ Thus is Mr. Van Buren committed to th
South in every form in which this delicate and
important matter can present itself.”
When will Wm. 11. Harrison thus nobly tee
the mark ? Citizens of the South, will you
never awake to your true interests i
AND ANOTHER.
“To Gen. TV. H. Harrison, ('in. •innati , Ohio:
Orange Cos. \’a., Feb. 10, ISIO.
“ Dear Sir —Seeing that you have been
recently nominated by a portion of your fol
low citizens as a candidate to nil the highest
office within their gift, and believing that it is
the duty’ of candidates to make known, as
well as of constituents to demand of them,
their views of the principles by which their
administrat on would be governed, if elected—
we, therefore, must respectfully solicit your
answer to the following questions :
Ist What are your views of the constitu
tionalitv and expediency of a National Bank ?
‘id. Is it constitution:! 1 , and if so, would it
ha expedient si..wry m the Distinct
<. Columbia?
3d. In the event of your election, should a
bill to abolish slavery in the District of Colura- {
bia pass Congress, would it receive your sane- i
tion ?
4sh. Are you in fave’* of a Protective Tariff
for rib? exnusivc benafi.oi dr’ manufacturers.*
5.1i. is i:, in your opinion, con n, uxenui or
expedient to carry on Internal Improvement
by tne General Government ?
G in Your opinion of the propriety o# dis- •
lribu-lng the proceeds of the Public Lands
and other surplus revenue among the several
Elates ?
Till. What are your views respecting the j
best method of keeping and di- oursing the |
revenue of the General Government?
“ Your opinions upon several of the prece- ,
ding questions have, we doubt not, been al
ready expressed ; at the same time, there is a
large number of the honest, hard working
Democracy of the country, that are almost
entirely onacquainted with them: therefore,
your compliance with the above request wili
ue gaateiuiiy received, and much ouiigeyoars,
very respectfully,
JOHN 11. GRASTY, M. D.
JOHN BAYNE,
PAUL NEEDIER,
ROBERT DEDMAN,
GEORGE S. GRAFTY.”
Cincinnati , March 30, 1810.
Messrs. Grasty , Verdicr , and others:
Gentlemen —Your letter of the 10th ult,
addressed to Gen. Harrison, has been placed
in iry possession with a view to an early re
ply. This disposition has been made of it in
consequence of the very many communications
of a similar purport daily received by the
General, and to which Lis reply in person
would Le absolutely impracticable.
A Committee in this city, consisting of the
personal friends of Gen. ilarr.son, are now
publishing in pamphlet form many facts and
incidents m his past, life, together with all his
expressed opinions upon the important and
exciting questions of the day, embracing those
subjects referred to in your letter, and which
will be forwarded to you at an early moment.
Yours truly,
11. E. SPENCER, Sec. Con. Com.
IIAZARBOUS ADVENTURE.
A correspondent cf the Madras Herald
gives the following account of an adventure
with a cobra di capelio, which occurred to a
gentleman who was reposing under a tama
rind tree after a day of shooting.
“ I was aroused by the furious baying of my
dogs; on turning round, 1 beheld a snake of
the cobra di capelio species, directing its
course to a point that would approximate very
c!oe to my position, in an instant I was
upon my feet. The moment the reptile be
came aware of my presence, in nautical
phraseology 7 , it boldly brought to, with expan
ded hood, eyes sparkling, neck beautifully
arched, the head raised nearly two feet from
the ground, and oscillating from side to sale,
in a maimer, plainly indicative of a resentful
foe. 1 seized a short bamboo, left by one of
the bearers, and hurled it at my opponent’s
head. 1 was fortunate enough .0 hit it be
neath the eye, The reptile immediately fell
from its imposing attitude, and leg/ apparently
lifeless. Without a moment’s reflection, 1
seized it a little below the head, hauling it
beneath the shelter of the tree, and very,
coolly sat down to examine the mouth for the
poisoned fangs rs which naturalists speak so
much. While it the act of forcing the m< OTI
open with a stalk, 1 felt the head she tng |
through my hand, and to my utter astonish
ment, became aware that I bad now to con
tend against the most deadly of reptiles In its
full strength and vigor. Indeed, 1 was in a
moment convinced of it: for as I tightened
my hold of its throa*, its body became wreathed
around my neck and arm.
I raised myself from my sitting position to
one knee; my right arm, to enable me to
exert my strength,-was extended. 1 must in
such an attitude have appeared horrified
enough to represent a Deiiy in the Hindoo
mythology, such as we see rudely 7 emblazoned
on the portals of their native temples it now
became a matter of self-defence. To retain
my hold it required my utmost strength to
prevent the head from escaping, as my neck
became a purchase for the reptile to pull
upon. If the reader is aware of the universal
dread in wh ; .eh the cobra di capelio is held
throughout India, aud the almost certain death
which inevitably follows its bite, he wili, m
some degree, be able to imagine what my
feelings were at that moment; a shudder, a
faint kind of disgusting sickness pervaded my
whole frame, as I left the cold clammy ibid oi
the reptile’s body tightening round my neck.
To attempt any delineation of my sensations
would be absurd; let it suffice they were most
horrible. I had now almost resolved 10 resign
my hold. Had 1 done so, this tale would
never have been written; as no doubt me
head would have been brought to the extreme
circumvolution to indict the deadly wound.
Even in the agony of such a moment, I
could picture to myself the fierce glowing ot
the eyes, and the intimidating expansion of
. the hood ere it fastened its venomous and
fatal hold on my face and neck. To hold it
much longer would be impossible. Immedi
ate iy beneath my grasp there was au inward
working and creeping of the skin, which
eemeu to-be assisted with the firmness with
which I l.sia it. My hand was g m ed. Find
ing, in defiance of ail my eilurm, that my hand
was each instant forced closer to my face, l
was anxiously considering how to act in this
horrible dilemma, when ait idea struck me,
that if it was in my power to transfix the
mouth wi;h some sharp iuslruiaenb it would
prevent the reptile from using its fangs,
should it escape my hold.
My gun lay at my feet; the ramrod ap
peared to be the very thing required, which,
with some difficulty, 1 succeeded in drawing
out, having one hand disengaged. My right
arm was now trembling from over exertion,
my hold becoming less firm, when I happily
succeeded in passing the rod through the
low er jaw up to its centre. It was not with
out considerable hesitation that I suddenly let
go my hold of the throat and seized the rod
with both hands, at the same time bringing
them over my head with a sudden jerk, disen
gaging the fold from my neck, which had
| Utterly become almost tight enough to pro
jduee strangulation. There was then little
j difficulty in freeing my right arm, anduiti
j mßely throwing the reptile from me to ihe
earth, whore it continued to twist into a
j thousand contortions of rage and agony. To
j run to a neighboring sue m, to Eve my neck,
hands and face, in its cooling waters, was my
first act after despatching my formidable
enemy.
Bed Bugs. —Recent trials have established
that the plant known to botanists as the Pole
gonum jjunciatum, commonly called water
pepper or smart weed, and which maybe
! found in great abundance along ditches,
roads, lanes, and bain yards, is an effectual
and certain destroyer of the be i Dug. It is
said to exercise the same poisonous effect
on tiie flea. .V strong decoction >s made of
the hero, and the places infected with s he
insect are carefully washed therewi ii. The
plant may also with much advantage be
simvn about the room.
Elderberry leaves laid upon the shelves of
a cupboard, will also drive away roaches and
ants, in a very short time.
TRAIN TRUTHS.
He who votes for William Henry Harrison
for President, indirectly votes for Daniel Web
ster and Henry Clay, who will, if the Federa’-
•sts triumph, direct for four oars the desti
nies of this republic.
He who votes for William Henry Harr'son
votes for the establishment of a United States
B:mk, w tli r.n Increased capital, and for aj
li.iuufi v tie’r*, Ly the assumption of more than
•3200,000,000 of Stale stocks—a favorite and
cherished measure of both Webster and Clay.
Hp vim votes for William Henry Harr Goa
votes for a re forlvti .1 of the elective fo'V-mse,
i • w , arty q 1 .. •” on, such re
I -having b re a stoutly supported 03 Ge:\ iiarri- j
•on uvA a majority o c ii r j.ariy who have uho- ,
I sax him as .hen* leader.
I II? v,ua vot-.-s for William Fonry Ilarrson !
; votes for men who wrii take from the po pie
I (or their own appointed and responsible agents(
the public money which has been drawn from
! their pockets by tax, and place u in a bank or
j banks, to be loaned out to speculators -and
j stock gamblers.
j Ha who votes for Gen. Wm. H. Harrison,
being a naturalized citizen, votes for a iris n,
| and for a party, who are opposed to the very
law that created him a voter.— Seneca Ob
server
From the Bittimore •Republican of the loth inti-
THE BLACK FLAG.
We have had occasion frequently 7 to notice
on the part of the negro population of this city,
a strong disposition to throw oiTthe reserve
which has heretofore characterized their move
ments, and to join in the singing of Harrison
songs, &?. but we have uniformly abstained
from taking ony no’ice of the same in our pa
per. Recent occurrences forbid that we should
longer remain silent. We clearly see that the
slaves of this S ate are strongly impressed
with the belief that the success of General
| Harrison will secure their immediate einanci
’ pation. So confirmed are they in this opinion,
j that they cannot repress ♦heir feelings, and
iare evidencing in the strongest and most une
quivocal manner, the anxiety with which they
look forward to the ele-forion of General Harri
son, in whom they recognize a liberator. On
Monday night, m the hnnv-fonle neighborhood
of the city 7 , in the 12.0 district of Baltimore
county, a considerable number of negroes as
sembled with BANNERS, and marched up
and down the publfo ro ul, singing Tippecanoe
song®, and using the most offensive language
towards die members of the families of the
friends of Mr. Van Buren. Some of them had
firearms, which were not taken from them
until alter a hard scuffle. The leaders boldly
and openly declare.! that the time would soon
arrive when “Harrison would be elected, and
then they would be free.'-'’
We are not alarmists, but, on the contrary,
we de-ire, if possible, to sustain that confidence I
which the Southern portion of the Union have
for some time felt, and therefore never endea
vored to excite the fears of our papaiaxon ns
to the probability of an out brea k among the ne
groes. When we see, however, slaveholders
ieagued with Abolitionism, in an unholy and
unnatural alliance for political purposes, and
the unvnindfuhiess of the first oi’ their own se
curity is but an encouragement to the latter
to excite their negroes to deeds of villainy and
murder, we feel compelled to speak out. We
call upon every friend of peace to unite with
us in crushing this demon like spirit. It is all
in vain for our opponents to say there is no
danger, when gangs of anneu negroes, with
banners flying, shall march through the coun
try at midnight, proclaiming that the day ol
their emancipation is near at hand.
Every At-oiitionisi in the land is undeniably
am! actively engaged in electioneeripg for
Harrison, whilst they are secretly impressing
the negroes with the belief that Harrison’s
success wili be theirs. We ask our Southern
friends to listen to what Mr. John Q. Adams,
the especial guardian and champion of the Ab
olitionists, in and out of Congress, and a good
Whig withal, has to say on his subject, in
h.s letters, published in die National Intelli
gencer, addressed to those persons whose Ab
olition petitions and memorials were given to
him to present, to the House of Ilepresntatives,
he says:
“The immediate abolition of slavery in the
District ol Columbia is utterly impracticable.
“First, because Tie public opinion through
out the Union is against it. This public opin
ion throughout all the slave Slates is unani
mous, or so nearly so, that no one dares own an
opinion favorable to the men.- lire.
“N or is the public opinion in any of thenon
s,avehold.ng States, with the possible excep
tion 01 \ ermor.t, favorable to is. The party rs
tne present Administration ore universal':/ a
gainst it, if not in opinion, at least in hfion.
All Mr. Van B urea’s strength in the South
rests exclusively on the pledges that he has
given against tins particular measure. Ail his
friends in the North must and uo SUSTAIN
HIM IN IT.”
Again—Mr. J. Q,. Adams, referring to the
action ol the Legislature ot Ohio, in dismissing
trie nited States Sena.or of that Slate, in
consequence 01 h;s Abolition doctrine®, soys:
“It is also a notorious fact that the same
Legislature, by a major ity denoted to the present
Administration of the General Government, dis
missed from their service, as a memner of the
Senate ot the United States, an individual of
their own parly, lor no other cause than that lie
adnered to the principles of the Declaration of
Independence, and spurned a oroifered pledge
of servility to the peculiar institutions.^
V. e now append the more recent remarks,
ol one 01 their confidential and approved pres
ses. Remember it is a Federal Whig press
that we extract the following from, and there
fore. must suppose it to be entitled to implicit
oeiief by die Whig party.
[From the Hartford Review and TeFgraph.j
There is a subject at this moment warmly
discussuig in lh;s State, and which ibrlutia ely
draws a /narked line of difference belioee-Ti the.,
WIHGS and Ihe DEMOCRATS, and on this
subject we have not noticed any remarks from
me Con-rant justificatory of the course pursued
by Wings, it. is one on which the SUCCESS
OF WHIG PRINCIPLES AND WHIG
ASCENDENC Y MAY M AINLY i) E TE N i ).
We meant the ABOLITION QUESTION.
We are favorable to the question; we deprecate
slavery; the WHIGS, as a body, are also in
imical to the system.”
Add to this the following extract from “The
Voice of Freedom.” the organ of die Abolition
ists in Vermont:
“MAINE—The annual election for Gover
nor and Congress was held on Monday last.
The Whigs have elected five of the* eight
members ot Congress, and will have majorities
in both branches of the Legislature. Mr. Kent
is a brother ol George Kent esq. of Concord,
X. 11. and is considered as far in the advance
of h;s competitor in his predilections on the sla
very question , His course in the case of the
two fugitives from Georgia reflects great credit
on ills kead and heart.”
W e warn the South to beware; the hour is
fast arriving when tin horrors of Southampton
may be re-enacted. \V ill ii be accessory to
its own destruction? Time Will show.
THE ELECTIONS.
The Federal patyr are in ecstacies, filling
the city with me thunder of camion for the
result in Ohio. If they could look within
their own hearts and our?, they would find
thet the paroxysm of transport, originating in
the successes of a system of fraud and loul
corruption, is nothing to the calm conidence
which true Democrats eve: - where feel in the
conviction that “honesty is the best policy,”
and the heartfelt satisfaction they enjoy in the
consciousness or having exerted themselves
wnth prob.ty and patriotism to their country.
The Deni'cra’ -of Ohio have nothing to re
gret in the late event, but the depravity of
their antagonists, and the temporary cloud it
may cast upon the republicanism of the Scale.
The increased vote of ilia Democracy, the in
flexible virtue it has shown in the contest
against fraud—corruption—‘die power of the
corporations, and a thousand local difficulties,
is earnest of a brighter day and a more con
firmed ascendency.
The foul system which, as it appers from
cur letters, the Opposition have brought to
hear in Ohio, would doubtless have failed of
success if there had not been u vast body of
Republicans carried off ty considerations of
State pride, which has invariably operated on
masses of honest De nocijis ta vote the Chief
M gi®. racy te ‘he r owniState, rog.cdless e*
he j tn.. mil hi os. 1 . - p
jnat re to lock at home ii vn dispeus'tto 1 oi
~.ux ir and eiij.iin n rii' —ii house*Gao: De
j mucrals, wo have iwcimir, hays. beeuinfiaen- ,
! rej ny thfo consideration, I 1 mesc hid voted
j widi Uieir brethren, rviib have without them
i given a greater vote than the Democracy ever
-•a-'t. in Ohio, before, even the misrepresenta
tiviis and frauds of the enemy would have pro- ;
veil unavailing. Bat if this natural bias, which |
has contributed effectually, with the sinister
means employed by Whigery, to give Ohio to
Harrison, should operate in New York, have
we notieascn to expect that it will bring that
powerful and patriotic State to the Republican
standard? jit the last election for Congress,
Ohio threw t majority of ten thousand for the
Republic an bor'y. At the same election, New
York gave aiouc five thousand majority for die
Federal ticket—a falling olf of at least five
thousand Item its majority of the year before.
If partiality i>r a citizen who had in vain, of iafe
years, sought the confidence of Ohio for Sato
tru-could convert a Democratic majority of
10,000 at thfc last election, into a greater Fe
deral majority at this, is it unreasonable to
anticipate thot New York, which has been
gradually returning to the Republican ranks,
will do as much for her own native sen, as
Ohio for hers by adoption ? Is it to be ex
pected tint New York will reject her own
favorite, who never lost her vote during a long
political life—-whose principles are thoroughly
known to be such a-= led the way to the State’s
highest prosperity —for one who was never
able to command th * n pular vote of his own
State for its Chief Mag stracy for a single term,
nor even tint of the district in which he lived
for che place of a Represenative tor a second
term ? In voting for Harrison as Chief Ma
gistrate of the Union, many of the honest
Democrats felt as if they were voting the na
tion’s first honor to Ohio, not the individual;
and will New York discard both me individual
whom she has invariably honored with her
suffrage, and me proud distinction of the Pre
sidency, which, wi’b. laudable emulation she
has repeatedly sought, at the sacrifice of over
throwing, possibly forever, the Republican
party,, to which it has ever been her boast to
belong? We cannot believe it. There is
but one way of producing such result, and
tini; the plan whicu we have no doubt was
employed lu elect the late cry delegation to
Con. rc-sri, and which gave Seward die Gu
bernatorial chair of me State. More than
two thausand imported votes wove given in
the city of New York alone, at the election to
which we refer. This was made manifest in
the falli ig off of the subsequent election. A
mult buds of circumstances conspired to prove
it at the time; and since, the whole system
has been revealed. It was then that Naylor
triumphed over Jxgrrsoli. by the thousand
false votes registered in the Northern Liber
ties. It was then that Thaddetjs Stevens
voted the 1,500 hundred at Miderstown, a
precinct containing only annul 300 vo e-v
It was the: 1 Gov. Hennington and Lis clerks
Fitiiiax and Bookaem, took the short cut, and
carried the represe nation of New Jersey, by
fraudulently lopping off the returns of two
counties, instead of adding to theta by false
votes. At lbe fa 1 ! elections in New York 1 it
will be remembered that to carry the State for
Governor, as well as the Whig delegation,
;here was a Grange influx of voters at Pough
keepsie, Hudson, Albany, anil all the river and
lake cities'of magnitude. The accession of a
foreign strength at these noinrs, m vie up the
whole of Seward’s majority, and mom. Now
that the Presidency and the office of Guver
nor are both pending, on ihe same vote, there
is no doubt tb it with millions of British gold
to aid the operation, -he came system of fraud
and importatie is of voters wili be rttemm sd
upon a slid wore ex ten-fire scale. If the De
mocracy en m Use .fond up for their rights,
(Lev can repress die fatal blow now meditated
against the pie ••five principle—‘he freedom
and sovereignty 7 of the peoo’e. If New York
sustains Mr. Van Buren, the Republican par
ty of the Union wii] triumph in bis ie-e:ec 7 ion.
Pe t.-rlvania ami Virginia, the oid flag ships
of Democracy, still bear the ensign afof:.—
South Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, M:ssis
. I}-;)?, Missouri, Fii-aols, Arkans-nn. New Hamp
shire, can be safely counted on. Maine, no
longer .vermsir.g in confident security, will yet
be the Eastern star co lead 0:1 a brighter day ;
and the.-? (w thou 7 counting on New Jersey,
Georgia, North Carolina, Louisiana, or Michi
gan, of all of which we have hopes) will put
an end 1o the Lard cider hallucination, and its
hugger mugger concomitant. . — Globe.
Prom the Ri Eaton 4 Enquirer.
More Warnings for the South! — In
diana Abolitionists —At a rtcut Couven
lion, as we are informed by a Louisville pi
per, ihe Abolitionists of Indiana unanimously
resolved to support G.n. Harrison for the
P residency.
‘The l ine for argument is,* said Mr. Clay
last spring at Baltimore. The s- nlimcnt
seems to have been thoroughly adopted by
ilie whole Wing parly of the South. Tne
I friends of the Administration and ( lie Presi
, dent himsell find their most deici mined cue
: lines in the Abolitionists —even negro votes
jure used to put them down, — and what <io
; the Southern Whig-think of iii Instead of
1 pausing to consider the consequence*, they
join the Abolitionists and free negroes in ‘hen
effort and ‘go it with a rush!!’
More Warning Still!—Abolition tn
■ New Yonx —Tne Abolition voters in N.-w
York are suppled In bead ml SO 000 tu mini
her. Some time since, a lew ol Ihe Aboliiion
ists met and nominated separate Abolition
: candidates tor President, Governor. &o. &c.
Thesese men were called by the Whigs, ‘a
Van Buren force?’ Not because they will
vote for Air. Van Buren; for there is not a
| man of them wiio is not dead against him.
! But they were called a Van Buren force, be
cause they were thought iikeiy to draw oil
j votes which would otherwise go for Gen. Har
lison! Could there be a more direct, admis
i sion, that the mass of the Abolitionists are in
1 favor o! Gen. Harrison?
As long “go as the 2 : -M of August, Mr.
Gales’ CorrcspotideiH at New \ uk. comfort
>d himself with the reflection, that the sepa
i rate Audit ion Ticket would not probably get
over 1000 vo-es, while all the remaining Abo
lition force, twenty nine to one, would go for
: Harrison.
| Recent events make it probable, t!sat this
| whole movement of a separate Abolition or
gauizalion, instead of constituting ‘a Van
j Buren force in disguise,’ was a mere ru -e tie
guerre—a miserable mask, under which the
Abolitionists were to vote for Gen. Harrison
without alarming ti e South? So far as we
can understand the real state of the (acts, it
is not believed by any party, that the sepa
rate Abolition ‘ticket will obtain over 5000
out of the SO POO Abolitionists m tlte Slate,
and the Whigs say they will scarcely get
1000. It is incredible, that the Abolition
| ira lers should not be able to concentrate m
| themselves a more numerous vote, ii they re
| ally dt'-ired it. in addition to the inference
| fairly dc tucihle from tins fact, vve kirn that
I some of’die candidates of tffis sepraate organ
J ization. among ti etr friends, declare their in
i million to vote fir Harrison; and one ot the
1 third,party a fate Abolition Slate Couven
! tiou, held at. Utica, declared, ‘lf we keep up
the tiii r d party it will nr ke the South vote foi
Harrison, because they will then think that
Abolition and W’higgerv are not both one.’
(See to lhe letter we publish this morning
from toe interior of the State of New Y ;rk-)
People of the South! you will find oot, (will
it he too late?) that YVt.iggery and Abolition
are both one throughout ai! the Northern.
Middle and Northwestern States. At ibis
moment they are supporting the same candi
dates for State officer the same candidate*
for Congress! (he same Electors of President>
and Vice President. And Southern Whigge- ]
tvis*i 11 : rd pa. ty to this fun! alliance! North-!
efii W t:gs oave aaeady solo tne rights oi tite:
South i. r other; and .1 lew .Soothe.a Wing
’ lead vs submit. in ssituce to the outrage. AU
’Ue jteoj ie ti* tin So ah, who wise to rfsuly ,
.he bargain. tvi'i vote ifir Il.imsoi.. All who
thei’ trie fids more J<. b inis.ed than their
r enemies, will vote lor Van Buren. Men o(
the sunny South! Freemen of North C nohna,
[Georgia, aud Maryland, what do you say to
; the Northern men, who are bringing your;
! dearest rights into market—selling your birth
right for liie gratification of tiieir own unhal
lowed ambition? When you see these men
coming manfully forward from D. Webster
down to the lowest slangwhanger, and de
daring in the litce of the people, as an orator
declared the oilier night to the Democratic
j A isociulio of H ohm md, that theie was no
j imng in the gift of the President he would ac
i ce,h —tiiee in ly you repose m ire confidence
lin the sincerity of their pro essions. Then,
| may tliey pretend 10 pass for pure patriots
: whose only aim is their country’s good. Dss
-1 interested politicians they may then pass I‘oF,
but stiii most misguided and iuiuiiated politi
cians.
SENTINEL & HERALD.
COLUMBUS, OCT. 28, 1840.
“ 2’ais Institution in one of the m-ot deadly hostility
existing ag tinsl thi principles and form of our Co,oil
t-i ion. The nation is. at t is time. so strong utid united
in its sen time -is. that it cannot beshaken at this mo
ment. But suppose a series of untuwurd events Should
occur, sufficient to brio - ii.to t.ouU the competency of a
Republican Government to m et a crisis of great dan
ger- or to unhinge the cojideuc,-of the people in the
pub icfanett-maHes; an insUlntio 1 tike this penetrating
by its branches every p eri of the union, acting by com
mand and in phalanx, may in a critical moment upset
the g overnment I dean no government safe, which ts
under the vassalage of any self constituted authorities,
or r...y other authority than that of the nation 01 its reg
ular fanctionaHes. tVhat an ef-lructi.iu e-ruht r t this
Bank rs the Unit'd Stat s with nil its branch banks,
be in time of war / It might dictate to us the peace we
s!v,old ftcet :t, or withdraw its r. : t. Ought we then to
give further growth to an institution so powerful, so
hostile ? — 'Phobias Jeff* k&ojv’.
DEMOCRATIC REPUBLICAN TICKET.
FOK PRESIDENT,
MARTIN VAN BUREN.
FO a VICE PRESIDENT,
JOHN FORSYTH.
FOR ELECTORS OF PRESIDENT AND
VICE-PRESIDENT.
WILLIAM B. BE 1 .LOCH, of Chatham.
JOHN BAVKS, of Murray.
MILNER KC -KJ!..S, of Wail on.
SAMUEL BEALL, of Wilkinson.
WILLIA M B. WOFFORD. 0 Habersham.
JOHN ROBINSON, of Jasm r.
S\VI tJ E!. G MOVE S. of Marik-on.
THOMAS VV'oOPTkN, of Wilkes.
SEABORN TON-EX, of Muscogee.
Kt. VAK. i ) }-i ARD KN. of O o.i;.
J \ M ES A-NDlii.iXl*N, of Burke.
PIIR 8.1 D R WTIAL EL EC TI (> N.
Monday next is tho time when
every democrat in Georgia,. who re
gards himself- ti l his country,
will repair to tho polls and do his
duty
Penntv cyan ia. Return s fto m
all the countie;-i have been received,
; yet so variant ate they, taking their
| complexion Horn the channel litre’
| which they g!i :e, that it is irnnossi
! hie to state precisely t!:t: democratic
majority, the federalists putting it
down at 3,8(31, and the democrats
at about. 12,000. The electoral
vote of this State may, however, he
considered sure far V an Enron.
Onto.—All the counties have riot
1 been heard from ; hut enough lias
| been ascertained, to satisfy us tuat
the federalists, have elected their
candidate for governor by a large
majority.
in Arkansas the democratic can
didates for congress have been elec
ted by large majorities.
Florida. — Under tittle of Pilatka,
I.7th instant, mention is made of*
Genera! Arniistead having suspen
ded operations in consequence ol'an
arrangement between him and and
the Seminole chief, to have an in
terview on the 20th instant, prelim
inary to a treaty of peace, which the!
Seminole chief‘declares shall he
faithfully executed. ‘Fee writer
places very lit lie reliance on the
savage’s sincerity.
As an act of justice towards tlie
individual implicated, we insert the’
following article extracted from the:
Ghat lesion Mercury. We concur j
l*iriiv in the sentiment, that the
child ought not to he held accoun
table for the acts of the parent.
Had Mr. Fessenden closed his dis
claimer with his not being an abo
litionist, we should have been satis
lied in relation te himself, at least
so far as sincerity is involved. Hut
his boldly asserting that the aboli
tionists 1.. the north are not disposed
to interfere between master and
servant in the South, ts so outrage-j
ously at violence with truth, honor,
justice, common sense aud even]
with common decency, as to com
pel credulity itself to envelope him
itt the mantle of mystery ana draw |
before him, as a shield contemptible
equivocation and falsehood. Hut
to the article in question.
Mr. W. S. Fessxndeo, recently elected to
Congress in tko ry.a'o ot Maine, was said in
Nor.keru papers to be a member of an Abolition
Society. It was so ■ state.) to us in a private
letter from a respectable gentleman in a New
England Suae and vve published him as an Ab
olitionist ui the Mercury.
The following extracts from a letter of Mr.
Fessenden to the editors or the A dlional Intelli
gencer, deny the charge and also account for
the misapprehension in which it originated:
“My father, Mr. Samuel Fessenden, 01 this
city, has for some rears been an avowed aboli
tionist, and was, I am told the presiding officer
at a convention holden in Boston, in May last,
which has been sometimes called the ‘‘Lames’
Abolition Convention,” from the ract ’rat aadies
were permitted to act in it as delegates and
members.—-Immediately after the election in
this district, the Bay State Democrat designa
ted me as live individual who presided at tnat
Convention. The Boston Courier at on e con
tradicted this statement, and pub! shed, in proofi
tho following extract of a letter written by me
on a former occasion;
“I am not, anti never have been a member of
any abolition society, and have made no se.ret
01 my unqualified want of confidence in the ex
pediency and beneficial effects of such associa
tions.” It is enough for me to say that my 1
i opinions upon the subject of abolition societies j
I remain unchanged and that no man can be more
! hostile to any interference with “die comprom
• jses or ili'O Loiis.iti.t'uii” ita.i 1 an. .on ’a e
; conap.us me to i .id, that so tar as . wave k.u wn
■them, the NorthernAi>pistionis:e haveaiw-tw•
‘disclaimed any initmLOii or deshe to imeue.e
with the slave States m the management oi
the'sr domestic inE'atutibes.
‘•feu will oblige me, sir,by staving cn any
occasion that may seem to you a proper one,
not only that I am not, and never was, an abo
litionist, b’it that my position and views upon
this subject have always been understood here,
from the fact of my undisguised difference upon
this pouit with one whose opinions 0.1 most
matters of importance i have always found it.
most safe and advantageous to follow and with
whom any difference of sentiment or feeling j
has always been to me matter of profound re
gret.”
It was the misfortune, not tire crime of Mr.
\V. P. Fessenden, that Mr. rfamuei Fessenden
was notorious for presiding at a convention of
I petticoat agitators. The laws of our country
do not allow a man to bo hanged, banished or
disfranchised, for the sins or the follies of li'.s
lather. Mr Fosseuder, M. C. is therefore
cleared of the charge and shall be judged by
his works and not tho law c-i descents and en
tail.
From England intelligence is to the 4th in
stant. A .European war is apprehended.—
France is strengthening her navy in the Medi
terranean and her military in Algiers. The
• English commodore Napier, after nine days
bombardment, had driven the Egygtiars out of
Bevrout, and taken possession of the ruins,
The preposition ofMehemet All; to retain Sy
ria during his life, has been rejected by the
sultan; and rumor ascribe.’ to Meliemet the in
tention of submitting to the demands of the al
lied powers, but otners think Franco would
ide er him 11 ;m doing t>\ To meet the warlike ‘
i demons'rations of the hi ter power, Russia and j
| England are inti easing tiieir navai power in j
i the Mediterranean, and appear determined to j
enforce the measures in re la non r.lshemet I
agreed on by ihein and Prussia and Austria.!
The English expedition had reached the Chi- j
r.ese coast, destroyed the forts at the Ik.vc.h
Tigris, taken possession of Macoa, and were j
preparing to assault Canton. In Spain, civil
liberty is making progress. The queen re- j
gent has, indeference topublic opinion,dismiss- I
ed her minis*.y, and permitted idspartero to j
frame such a cabinet as he believed wotud -at- t
isiy ili2peop : e. I=. i’oriugai,ouere,intentof the
line had, under influence of i! officers, rebell
ed; but on discovering that they had been de
ceived, they killed their commander, seized ail
‘he horses and baggage of the officers, and
surrendered to the government General!
Macdonald, one of the men distinguished of j
‘ha French marshals, is dead. The king of I
Holland Las abdicated Ids throne, in order (o ;
marry a lady unpopular with hi.-: su'jecis. In
Liverpool upland cotton is quoted at id to ?d.
Russell County, Ala.—By tho politeness of
the sub marshal, Michael ilevnieymore Esq. wo
have boen furnished with a return of the cen
sus. The total number of inhabitants is 13,-
5.115—0i whom 0,141 are whites, and 7,366
are blacks.
DEMOCRAT 1C MEETING.
According to previous notice, the Democra
tic party of Randciph county a;a-ambled at
Cuthhert on tho 21st ultimo, to partake of a
free Ivirbaeiie, given to their members elect,
Messrs- Graves. Harrison and tlorry.
At halt past 10 o’clock, A. M. a procesaion
of Ladies, about 200 in number, formed in front
of Mrs. G. 11. Jenkin’s Hotel, from w inch place
they were escorted by martial music to the
Baptist Church, where they were joined by
hundreds of the sturdy Democrats of the coun
try, ready to defend worthy matrons and
! >looming daughters by the s.rengih of 1 heir
arm, and liie principles of Democracy by their
votes. The immense concourse was organ
ized by unanimously electing Gen. William
Beaii President, E. -ha White and Thomas
Davis “V ice PreGecnfs, and E. J f. Plat; Secre-
tary. Col. A. hi. Hughes then addressed the
meeting, wi'h his usual eloquence, force aud
perspi ufiiy, tor upwards of an houa; after
which the assemblage in procession to the
table, where they partook of a well cooked
hnrhacue spie vi in true Democratic stylo, up
on branches oi tores: trees cur tor the purpose.
No Leg Cabin war- to be seen upon the ground
as r- catch-trap for the ignorant, or gull lor the
unwary. No “hard cider ” barrel disgraced
ihe liberty pole of our “ once ” patriotic Geor
gia, but an citizens, with the Constitution of
ti-eir country in tiieir hands—the azure can
opy of Heaven for their shelter, with honest
hearts, they partook with cheerfulness of wliat
a bountiful Frovdeueo had spread before them.
REGULAR. TOABTS
1. George Wat.ihingt.on, the faiher of his
country: hones*, patriotic, and always found
telling ihe truth: may his opposition to the
emissions of bank paper live long in the hearts
us ills counTymen.
j 2. Thomas Jefferson. Though gone-, his ad
! mcnitievs arc vet alive, and cheering to every
Dt mineral:.
3. The present political contest in the Uni
ted Slates^..has again drawn the line between :
Federalist a 11a Republican. The Democrats I
alone are true to the interests of the country. |
4. The 1 ndeipendent Tie isnry law, the true |
constitutional guarantee to the Independence i
| and stability of our Government—its influence
i will save us from corrupt and heartless corpo
i rations.
5. ‘['lie Constitution of the United States,
though buried, awl disregarded by the Feder
alists and Abolitionists of the day, it is yet
hailed by the Democracy as the palladium of •
their safety.
6. The President of the United States; vir- !
tuous and patriotic—on hi; re-election depends j
the prosperity of the country and the over- 1
throw other viiest enemies.
Georgia. Though !:er Jast elections have j
shown that she has apostatized from the true ■
faith, yet will the “.'ncond ocher thought” of
her sons redeem her from the presat et:thral
dom, and unfurl agaiu the banner of Democra
cy-
8. South Carolina; her enlightened and pa
triotic aoi'.s arc toe only true and consistent
State Rights men and Nnllifiers.
9. Colquitt, Cooper and Llm k, though de
feated in the late contest, yet will their names
j le found among the most talented and honest
of our statesmen, and the zealous supporters
of correct principles and our hearest r.ghts.
10. Governor !U‘Donald; Ids devotion to
Democracy and the interest oj the South just
ly entitle him to the confidence of every true
heat ted Georgian.
11. i Jon. John Forsyth, one of Georgia’s
noblest sons; Ins talents, patriotism and firm
ness can be equalled only by the foul and ma
lignant invectives heaped upon him hv modern
Whigs.
12. Graves, Harrison and Hendry, members
elect, from Randolph, in their virtue, patriot
ism and zealous devotion to Democracy wo
have the highest confidence.
VOLUNTEER TOASTS.
By A. M. iluges, Col. Seaborn Jones and
John H. Howard, the distinguished patriots
o< the South; their true devotion to principle
md moral courage, in breaking asunder the
t.es ol former associates, entitle them to the
confidence and support of ail true Democrats.
By John Alley. Colquitt, Cooper and Black,
jet them never be forget by the Democrats of
Georgia; although they have heed defeated in
the present contest, ly rotten heart&l Federal -
is s, their names shall dwell among us when
their opponents shall be forgot.
By Joseph Jernigam The I’.eerier Court of
Lc-e County; the orde- recently passed bed bv j
it, requiring the sherilFt burn cerut'ii pack: -:
ges sent them by the Hon. John Forsyth,
snows a wickedness of hear, a depravity of
nature, which con only find an equal m the au- ;
tlaeity of the act.
By G, Shoot: Martin Van IJurv’, the able
statesman; the sound jurist; tlie .-launch de
mocrat and Jeffersonion Repubiicar.; may lie
be r3-ei.ec.lc-d to the Prt sideacy 1:1 cppos.tlon
toryisua, iedera.-sm and r<ii ti.: isms of the
day.
By John 11. Mitchenor. ( per, Colquitt
; and Black: they would net tov.-ake principle
To obiAin office. Paßlcfs -i inspect, tuoih
;ers vviii applaud them and i.u.r memories for
: centuries to come.
By David A. Dunn: Tiia Inferior Court of
Lee counly. This truth is self-evident, that
are but the servants of the peopL—
not the served. The late official acts of Lee
[lnferkr Court exhibit: Ist, ignorance; 2d,
dishonesty; 3d. prejudice; 4 h, corruption;
sth, bribery; (Eh, tyranny; 7th, bank subser
ving; Bth, aid extended to the abolitionists;
j9th, fear of light; 10;h, cringing, crouching,
slavish submission to party, them die
, morally aud politically; let tiieir names be
used to frighten little children uito quietude •
; let their society be shunned by the honest, the
! wise, and the virtuous; let their acts stand a
i biack and damning evidence of the McDonald
(and Arnold treason cf which they have been
; guilty. Let the pen of the historian bo burned
; after he shall have recorded the act, that no
vivuous trace be left of such vile and degra
; ‘led beings.
I By Henry MfLsndon : Messrs. Dawson &
: Cos. the federal hirelings of abolition, who
| make principles a pretext and politics a trade,
j By \V. J. Cheshire : Colquitt, Cooper, and
| Black : May Hie laurels tint have been so
1 eagerly clipped from their brows be speedily
ireplaced.
By E. W. Fort: Northern democrats are
j crying to the South with outstretched arms,
“join us in shielding your institutions front
the bends of your enemies.” Shall they cry
in vain.
By John \7. Shropshire : The Southern (so
|called) Whigs. ’Tis but another name for
| Federalism and Abolitionism. They have
i deserted tiieir principles for senseless cries of
log cabins and herd cider.
By William Hatcher: Martin Van Ruren,
i the Republican candidate for the Presidency.
I Opponents to iiim, whose ranks will you till
lin three years from this time! Abolitionism
I and Federalism { or are you engaged in such
j principles now ! The war cry is in our land,
i Democrats bo at your posts on the first Mon
day in November next, and Randolph will
I clear her skirts ot Federalism and Toryism.
| Dr. David A D aim : Democracy: Be
fore it tho enemies of cur country cannot
stand—behind it they will not take shelter—>
beside it they dare not walk—near it they do
not feme; but around and about from a mile
to a mile a id a half Toy raise tue command ;
| load the big gun of Federalism with the blank
j cartridge o; Green, wad with the Constitution,
| rain down with the degenerate disciple of
! John the Baptist, of Fainter, prime with the
Flournoy petition man of Putnam, and lire otf
w .th the Yazoo treat) man of Chatham.
Aker the reading of the toasts, the assem
bly returned to the church, where they were
addressed with spirited and eloquent speech
es by General B. Graves and George W.
Harrison, members elect to the senate and
D use ot representatives, after which Colonel
Alien Moye was called upon, aud he address
ed the meeting, until Hie approach of sunset
warned the assemblage of the necessity of
dispersing, on motion it was resolved that tho
proceedings of tins meeting be signed by tho
President and Secretary and published in tko
■Sentinel & Herald, the Georgia Argus, and
Federal Union.
WILLIAM BEALL, President.
E. IT. Platt, secretary.
N. B. Tiie Georgia Argus and Federal U,
nion will please copy.
From iho Favannuh Daily Telegraph.
IRISHMEN IN SAVANNAH!
Do not call yourselves democrats —do not
call yourselves denizens of the fair soil of
America, if you sufffer the Religion of your fa
thers to be slandered, yourselves to be duped
by base apostates.
See what the eloquent and patriotic, the
noble and the good Bishop England says. Ho
Is a Van Bitren man—you should be the same.
The first Monday in November approaches.
Be up and doing!
Do not spare your fees at the ballot box.
W hoo’e*’ i-s ‘a!sc, do you he true!
The following is the reply of Bishop Eng
land to an invitation to attend a public meet
ing at Detroit:
FROM THE BISHOP OF CHARLSETON.
Chaui.kston, Sept. 17, 1840.
Gentlemen : I was yesterday honored with
your invitation of Aug. 26th to meet the Vice
Pres dent of 1 lie United S'atc-s on the 28th
iiist. at Detroit.
The compliment which you pay him is one
of those political movements from which I
have kept aloof; though i am free to confess
my opinion is, that the administration of which
he form:-so evnupicvous a part has acted for the
benefit of 01 r If non , and docs not. deear re the. ri
tvjieralion with which it is assailed.
It may perhaps lend to show the spirit of
SEie of its opponents, when so humble an in
dividual as 1 am, and for so many years a citi
i zen, though I must confess to the crime of
I having been born in a distant land, and of
| having voluntarily come hither, dare not ex
! press this simple opinion without being de
nounced in unmeasured terms, and the per
sons whose religion J teach threatened with
extermination if it he discovered that, from
any ctnw , ‘here shall he found a majority in
favor of Mr. Van Buren in any district where
Catholics arc numerous.
| I have su ilk red insult and oppression under
| the penal code against my religion in Ireland,
j and i earns hither flattering myself with the
I expectation that there existed at least freedom
j of-thought, and liberty for any citizen to ex
j press Lis oppinions that the public officers of
’ ihe Union were not guilty of that mal-adinin
istration which was imputed to them by their
; competitors. I have been more than once con
. vin ceil of my mistake ; and if my religion and
i its professors are to be made the victims of
I my imagining that in our republic, Catholics,
j like other citizens, had liberty of political
I opinions, expression and action, I would far
i prefer being again in my former position ; for
i the Orageksrn in Ireland is mercy compared to
| the insolence cf those who here insult us by
| their expressions of kindness and condescen
| siqn, whilst they threaten us with extormii.a
----j tion unless we sloop to be their slaves.
1 am aware, gentlemen, that they who are
j thus dli-posed in our regard do not form the
i American people; but I know that they are
j numerous and active, and i should regret, for
lhe sake of our republican institutions, that
| they had the power to work their will. They
i would indeed begin with the Catholics, but
! others would ‘-con feel the effects of their suc
: cess.
1 Lake the fiber:y of sending you a couple
I oi papers, which will show the occasion of my
j remarks.
I 1 have the honor to he, gentlemen,
With great respect,
i our ob’t h mble servant,
fJOHN, Bishop of Charleston.
VIIEE ME N WHAT THINK YE OF
THIS?
Read below lae fiwmving section of John
Adam’s SEDII ION AC I\ and tell us how
vo 1 bke i ! ! This is the law which WIL
LIAM HENRY HARRISON ‘thinks he
did eiout’ in suppoi timr! Remember, t< o,
■he bill introduced io the U. S. Senate in IS3S
by Crittenden of Kentucky, depriving I’ost
Masters and other public otlicers of the lights
| guaranteed by the Constitution to every free
born citizen of America ! Bonder well before
you rai e men to , tiice who < penly advocate
?uch doctrine!
Section 2. And he il enacted. That if any
person shall \\ RI l F PRINT, UTTER or