Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1844-11-13 page 1 |
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WEEKLY 0 0 'JESS. '--..'. ' - -'-.vi vSjr; --;"-"ViTi'iX"-:-E, at SI A' II JO VOLUME XXXV, COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1844. NUMBER 14. I'Uill.lHIIKIl KVKKV WKUNKrtlAV MOKNINU, BY CHARLES SCOTT & CO. Office corner of High wd Town HreuU, Buttles' Building. TERMS: Two Dollar rr.n askum, whirh must Invariably be paid in advance, Tree of postage, nr of per coiiUgn to Ageuls nr l!nllr(iiri. Tlie Journal In alio published daily during tlie session of ino Legislature aim innee a wees, me rt-iimmu ui h-c ja for and three limes a week, yearly, lor Jj l. Hepsma fro us ibe Counties). BT Wo give below llic reports from tlie d liferent Counties 111 I ho State, hi received from our friends. . 'J buy will iliow with what spirit nndcntirnge ihe s,ullnnt Wuroi of Ohio entered into the recent eonlvsl, and wilb what glory (hey came out, ROSS COUNTY. From ibe Chilliroibe Gazette Kxirn, Nov. 1. We have mcl the enemy, and Ihey are ours ! We have fnuL'ht die umA fight, ami ihe victory is won ! The good people of ihe Aiteieiil lilelrouolis have come nobly up iodic light, ami have given die last blow lo ir oil rale Lorolorniim. Our Adopted Felltno Citizens, who hnve so lung supported L-ocofocoism, have discovered llieir riror, and come out for their country and hrr candidate, Old Ross will give mi increased majority over Iter Governor vote, approaching JOU! From Ihe Republic Extra, HiirincfiVId, Nov. 111 P. M. 139! IIUKKAI1 FOR L ITT LB CLARK! The Township have, cmnoin riglil gloriously I Instead of A I'ulli gain ol one in ca'h Town. hip, as Mr. Sainivel JVIedn-ry had arranged il, dm gallant Wing uf iiolilu Chirk Iihvc rolled up a majority of Cf.'ll ! Beutjr, a Whig gain of l'M ! 1 Now let Old Alu-kiiigiini send hm k her ihuiidorl Wofrol Droud of the noble Whiir ol Clnrk. Lei ihe result in the Union Imj what it may, limy will feel ihe proud tatialacliou of naviug discharged their aay. Register Ealra Fiinia, Saturday morning, Nov. I, OLD MIAMI N TILL KIUHT. The elcrtinn yelerdiiy, so far as our county is concerned, resulted imblv lor die Wine muse. We have Bullied iA suiro Ibe Governor's election. Then our majority was It W now W. The nggregnto vole is very largr exceeding that polled on the 8di ult., 173. The Abolition vole it A less tlnm at thai lime. Shelby County il jml in majority for Clny, 12! A gain of 21. liood enough! Western Star Exlni Lebanon, Nov, 2. MAKK ROOM Full OLD WAKItKN. As we promised, old Warren ha redeemed herself. Hlie lias Ink en fiur old position in die four figure, and though her majority is not eotnl to Harrison's, yet il it highly llnllcrni. Il oilier counties have done as well a Warren, Mednry's guilt of two for I'olk in earli lowndiip will lie "over die left shoulder." "The. boot will lie on dm other leg." Washington low nliip lo lie heard frnm. Giving her the ninj. she gnvn for Hartley and the Whig gain in Warren, on thu Governor's vole is LiO, and Clay's maj. HXi. have weakened and injured ihe cause limy intended to bene lit by Iheir unholy conduct. No Prcinde iilial cnndidale ever sullered a hundrcdih pari of the abuse that has been heaped upon Mr. Clay, and none, we predict, ever inumplwd mora gloriously over his vile slundereni, than he will. Thcn.'Whij;, rejoice, and lw glad, as you bavca right, for the cmarrvatirr principles wliirh you have so firmly advocated, are undoubtedly iriiimphmil. Tod's majority for Oovcrnnr. 5W Polk's about WO. Thai will do lor the choice Whigi of Culumliiaun. FAIRFIELD COUNTY. Gazette and Expresi Extra Lancaster, Nov. t. We give below, llm reported majorities lor President, al ihe election on yesterday, showing a Wing gain of HI. The Whigs 'have inereaned their majoriiies handsomely since the election for Governor, in several ol the lownhi. And when it is considered that this counly is the strong hold of Locoftw nism nod that they have had Iheir forces under the most thorough drill for the Inst three months, in order In e cure llrnl increased vole of "one in each luwmhip," which was lo carry tlie Stale for Polk, ihe result may be lairly set down as a noble Whig triumph. Republican Times Exlra Nov. Z. "SWEAT THE GENERATION' HUZZA FOR OLD KINOX!! We have the gratification of announcing that the gallant WliifTS of Old Knox are airnin victorious. The Lokiea fouKniwiihdesparaiion, but all in vain. The Whiirshavese- BUTLER COUNTY. Hamilton, Nov. 3, IHU. FJilari Ohio Staff Journal We have fought Locofoenifin once mrc in "old Hutler." Hoth cides have given tbeirlesi licks, but as you know the Whigs have no rlmurc hero in regard lo lownsliip truhlces, Ac. Nearly all arc Locos, and wo torn mi in think ibcy wink nt (he raruhly of their parly lenders. I'olk' majority is !'!. A gain lor Loeofocoism ol a Itttlc lens iImii III IV voles, wln-n tin y conlideuily rlaimed 100 gain. It is enough to say dial ihe W ine stow up to Uiein. In haste, very truly, yours, Ate. PKEHLE RIGHT HIDE UP! litgitttr Ojfice, fcatan, AW. 2, MM. Old Preble, Irulv W his as evur, lias iriven another rebuke to Polkocracy mil morc'si'nal lhau thai miuiterol al ihe late Gnlx'nialori.il elect ion. Tln-rc are A more townships yet to liear front; two of which are larity whig. And Iront our gains exluhiled iti the refxiried lownditM, wa can assure fair friends abroad that llio " rhickens" have not h.ol uicli a chase by ' thai same old coon, since the days of W Hliould proHnioual whig gains be made in the lowmhtM to ruine in, over the late flection, our majority iti the county Will uol lall far short of WSJ! Inmnsed majority thus far,i. (inxelle Extra I Ifllelo ni nine , Nov. 2. LOGAN VICTORIOUS!! A WHIG GAIN OVER THE HTATK ELElTIO.N. "The agony is over," and ihe Whigs rest from tlioir lalior with die satiTaclinu of knowing, thai nil has Immii done in Logan thai it was (MiMible lo im. Thi'ir united elforti have Iteen fro tied will) an incrtaud m'lfnri'if, despite Ihe desMi ration nod uovii'hlnig energy of tlie Oppontion. If every Whig rniuily hu done as well, we liehcve the State has gone for Clay. Tlie Whig majority at the Htnlc election for Governor was 6KU. We annex a statement of Uiu majorities of the difTWent towushijw as for as lMard from, showing a W'lug gain uf IA. ADAMH COUNTY. Inlelligrncer Extra West Union, Nov. 2. TllsT " 0r Votk iw r.AMi Tow nam p. "The returns from all the Townships in this county arc in, and it is with pleasure that we p'ak of the united efforts of our friends throughout the eouuty. Nearly every Whig voter walked up lo Ihe polls and deposited his vote tor Clay ami Frclinthuy-scii. nK'ii'tst I'olk aud Ddllas. In our Township there whs not a Wing but what was as Ihihv as though he thou"hl iiihiii Ins xiiislc ell'orl depended ihe success of Ihe Whig Electoral Tirkei iu Ohio in fai t, we have lieea informed thai the Whigs ia all ibe Townships were npially as active our own Thev were all aware of the aiiniiwms that had tone for ill from die iSialesiitnn (Jlfiro lo lite Umos of iIh Siale. that tach Ttriuhiu iIwhIA pirr t' ltnt an' morr l.nrnfiKO vote, trhick trrtihl n art the State nr I'rfk. The Wltins were delcrniined to a like iurrene, mid thru have mort than mone it. as wdl Im seen by Ihe following mull : Td' majority at the Oct. election uaa .102 I'mIL's " Nov. " " Xi Republican Extra Cadiz, Nov. 1,12 o'clock, night. HU7M FORCLAY! GREAT, GLORIOUS AND UNPRECEDENTED WHIG VICTORY IN HARRISON COUNTY! 77ic citadel of enoennm ttormeJ !Tht black flag of corruption and miirult, torn from tin ramyartt ! the promt ttari and iripei of our natiowtl Knsign. umlimmed in thtir liiMtre. and nntutlied in their purity, with the namet of VJ.AY,atvl FH K 1. 1 SHI II YH I'.N imrribed upon the ample fold of onr Country' a Manner, and thrown upon tfit blue vault of Heaven, 11 in triumph lo wave, O'er the Innd of Ihe Ireo and the homo of the bravo !" ITT The returns arc all in, and though mil official, may be relied upon as substantially correct. Majority for Clay and Erelingnuyseu, 'JHt voles! Reiug a gain of IV over Hartley, ami a gain over Gen. Harrison's vole of lit 10 of 16! It P A more triumphant and utrnnl victory was never nehievel in Ohio or the Union. 'Ihe Wings went into tlie conflict undisguised ! openly ami innuliilly advocating tlM-ir prinriph's, resolving by Ihem (o link or iirim. They luul no roiuoromisc lo innki- they made none. They met the ene my al the threshold ihey foiighl they conquered I Re juice Whigs of Hurnson ! of Ohio! of the Umuu ! From the UaWon Journal. Nov. 4. TIIERESUI.T IN MONTGOMERY. We hnve given the foil returns of ihe votes for Prrsident tn ihisrooiitv. The Whigs of Montgomery have nobly siif Inined their caudidule and their principles. They were thoroughly organized, and entered iihiii the rnntei feeling the iniHirtniice of (lie work Ihey had lo do, find diitrlmrged llieir duty lo their country ni pntrtols should disrhnrne il. No men ever labored more faithfully or more ardently lhau they and have greater cause lo congratulate themselves upon the result of thetr labors. There is a Wing gain in every township in the county ex cepl Jackson. There the Loco ndib'd me in their vote and majority by the ' skin ol their teeth" as a tardy Whig, which is a rure bird in thai town-hip, rrnrlied die polls p,t too late lo vole ! The higH of Jackson are ns true as steel ihey are overborne by a heavy majority but ihey always vole. Let them recollect thai they owe the Locos one, and pay them olT at the next election ! Clnv. Polk. Hartley. Tod. Xl'.H) ;iHfi 'AVili 3212 Whig gain over Octolwr election 8CIOTO COUNTY. PnllTHnTII, Nov. 2, WW. FMtort Ohio State Jimrnil'VUv election which look place mi yr-.tenlay, rewdtrd in an increael hig majority ol M in rnoin eounly over the Stale election. Majortiv al Hl'ale elerlmn, .T.l ' Presidcnlinl " .....4J2 Restfrl1u1ly, Slc. PERRY COUNTY. Wraierti Pol Extra Nov. 2. OfTrn Rurr.a, bit klvkk CoaqunHKii ! We have recffvttl tin n-lurus ol all ihe Township in this count v, and roulrary lo otir expert atmns, I'ulk's inajoniy is only SEVEN Voles over Tod's, tbir W hig friend, have done nolilv thev liMichl bkr li.ers, nml their manly exertion have been well rrwanlcd. The Locos roulideully cxiM-cled aud tiledi-i-d tliemM-Uns to the Locolnrn rlKpte al (ihoiibus W increase llimr majority to mil in tins iticy iml signally tailed, I hanks lo the ralhol h:gs, lit noble W b gs. Ih- true heart rd Whigs of Old Perry. Tliey have often li-eil In-alen, bol like mir Revolutionary aires, Ihey cuiiuol, they will uol be compiurvu. From Ihe Clinton Republican, Nov. 2. HAVE YOU HEARD THE NEWS FROM CLINTON! Mtiiontv lor Clav. MWI V li e cam. 117 ! There lieter ban been a party, since the Inundation nf thi gtivermnenl, dial hns devended to mh h mean bnsine the most tnlnuuMis slanders to blnrknoardmm lo cvery Ibinr rrptlL'unitl In luuh nnudet men as Ihe h'adt rt of lite locoloco pnriy. For the last eitflil months, the locoforo pen have been hlletl wild tlie vilest slander private rliarae ler has Itrrn riHitinuallv as-aih d lite iitl tidenr aiwt oli sreiie laintuasrr ha Iwvri thrown around tbefaimlv rirrstde bv these iiaiters Ihe busnr paotions of man have Ihi'U npealed lo the loreiirner has lieen bcsiMtlrred bv the hienloeo denia gognes aiwl made to lielieve that ll wli-s Were his deadlv i.iiivb mn.i In. 1 1- (iariilifui hna lirn aritl nn l.v lurli ttii-lM men as Amos keinlall a"d Sam Mednry at the I (too i; hi of such a man aa Henry Clnv nllnir the presidenlial chair Private circnlaii were ilisiriUitcd over tins Wiaie and no doubt over Ibo uniiin cool a mill Ihe irrosesl laUehood' Hirauist die whiff, and a solemn tharee made III the rirculHr Ufk'fp it itcret," that is, ito ti'il bi the wings know vi na-e il. I nis is rnaracteriMie ni iih' mnimiiiii n-nt. itui, in all ibe inlamtMi thints iheimriy lias IxenraiiKliI and iMtMih and we hnve im oViuht Imitlial a pil iMttple will mil tln-se e aluniuiators with a rebuke Uutt years will not ell -ire I font llieir memory. oblr lloiir-l rrrl(tM. It will be recollected that the N. York Evening Pntl and Us mndjiitors started out last suniincr, like the Ohio Statesman, in fierce denuueia ion of (he Annexation of Texas. The Locoforo eominillee of Tammniiy ll-ill issued Iheir nddresi Inst week, and the Posl stands "upright" aud swallows il. The Commercial Advertiser copies from Ihe address the fob lowing pa rn graph, and npeinln an extract from the circular on Annexation ii-uud by the Posl. The address gravely savs : The opposition of ihe federal parly lo the annexation of Teias oiiginate$ in it hottdtfij to the prt'grrtt of liberal principle:! and free i unfit itlinnt. Tins uic-lion should le con- ulereii a national ami uol a parl ipicsimri, as uhii the "- moil nt it may dcpi'iul Die sait-iy nun perH'tuity ot our Iih- erties. lexau inleiieudeiicn is ackuuwlcot;eil by somu of Ibe in.isl powerful nations of the earth the makes anil exe-cules her own laws; she has an army and navy sullicieiit lo protect her soil, and these being no mil led, the questionl-n-eomes one of mere exped ency. If 'IVias reinani uideenrl- nl, tier interesl will lend her into commercial alliances with oilier nations, injurious to us in a ecuninry (Hiiul of view, nnd absolutely dangerous when we contemplate the ascen dancy nf Enroiwan turner in a iiciiMihoruii' nation. We arc in favor of the annex n lion of Texru), lernnsc il will rive US command of the Golf ol Mexico: U-rnu-c we will thereby prevent her from (H-eomtng our rival in the markets of the world ; because il will prevent nnv Enroia-an power from en croarhieg upon our soil and iiilerlering with our eloniedir af- imrs i nt, i At it vt 1 1. 1. n r,. a nt.w au i-hit- il. r, i it i rs i iti in i nr.M,A r. t urt 1,1 ION FROM THE OLD STATES, AND PKKSENTM THE OM.Y FEASIRLE .MEANS OF AllOLlSIHMl THE INSTITUTION ALTOGETHER! became il will be throwing ihe broad shield of Ameriean lilny over a young Republic, whose existence Is now threatened by the mncuiiiaiious oi tictpnur -(ovrrnineni-. Can il Im possible lh;il party Jncinhimts io perfect, Ibe fear of its lah so great, as to force the editor of ihe Evening Post lo (Hit forth surh sentiments w ilhoot worn of comment or dissent f Can the editor of thai p,iter be Ihe same man, who, not six month' ago, under his own signature, put forth circular, nf which thu following is the oH'iiing paragrnph T Sir You will doubtless ncree with us, that the late Haiti more convention placed the Democratic party al the North in a position of (real ibtlirulty. We are roiisiandv reminded that tl rejected Mr. Van Ituriii and nnmaiated .Mr. I'olk. for reasons cnunrrieu wiiii ine nnmcuiaie ninirxauoii ot i cia i i.his wlnrh hud no relatn'it lo lla principle of the pari v. Nor wns thai all. The con vent inn wcil)e)oml the ntulio'iiy Jelcgnled lo its ini'mlters, ami adopted a restilution on ibe "Thark God, tlie deniorratic Locoforo parly stands I afiove reproach or suspicion ol wrong, icrrune n mis rw en me conflict. They foiiijht likt noble, Honf.st, UI'HIGHT men, and rfefv Ihe world s scrutiny of llieir conduct." Ohio Slates-man, Aon. 4. This is bold talk. Tlie question arises, is it the language of honesty, or is it the language of the iroffer. The two paragraphs which follow arc submitted as evidence or tit uprightneu of the claim, The paternity ol the first is attributed lo Ihe St. Vlainrille ilatettt, a paper that the Slatca- i is fond of quoting from. I ho second is from the notion I'Uot. A petier thai can "thank God" for such "noble, hon est, upright" companions in political warfare, is easily satis fied, and is clearly beyond "titpuion ol wrong." l no ease il made out without "scrutiny ,"nud muy be laken as confessed. From the Hi. Cluirsville Gaaelte. Dotcmrilk Ihe rulenr gmt-hentlcd Old Wretch! Down with the (lamlilcr and Blasphemer!" Appeal to an "(tiniest and moral people." "Lei the i oo iih Hide their henna mr aimmc, n mey havo anv. lor iioniiiiitliiiff it bloated, vulvar. (ioH-Jbr taken old Blasphemer, and hoary headed Duelist and (iamhler for thu first ollice in the pift of Freemen! Rend nnd blush for tlie ur.n of Basconu and the acta of the infamous coon cohorts, at this enlightened day, who would imprwe on Republican a vulgar, mean, tow, disgraceful and tyranmd wretch as President of Iho ottly "I a ml of the free and homo of the brave!" Down with the polluted leader ot whiggery. w lingo vices stink in the nostrils of honest whit and democrats !" Editorial Decency. Wo extract the following from tl io Jliwton Pilot. What a liberal, courteous. Christian, gentlemanly person must the editor bo! What a delectable shelter would the persecuted tor conscience sake find under the mantle of his expnn- tve benevolence! What a hospitable home would our Pilgrim Father hnve found with this pnragonof charity aud good will, had he dwelt upon the snores on which they landed ! JV. Y. Com Mv. ft e recommend to you no party m condemn no candidate bul one, and he nt TIItiODORti FRB- lilNlillU YEN, Wo have nothing tn say to him as a W hig, we have nothing to say to Mr. Clnv, nor in any other Whiff mutch. HUTTOTIIKPRKSJ- DKNT OF TlIK AM KRM'AN HOARD OF FOREIGN MISSIONS, the friend ami patron of Ihe hirks and Cozes, tve have MUCH TO SAY. We HATE Ail intolerance toe dislike his associates, and tve shudiler at Ihe UUicknessand bitterness of that school of sectarians to whom he behnfrs, and amongst whom he is regarded as a leader and ctnej ! I : "At Cleveland, thev Ixniirlii up the Itomiui Cnthulic 1'ricsl, nnd eu! him on a musiomry tour through this region for Henry ('lay." Ohio St'itemtan of i,eteranij. We copy tho above from n teller in lasl evening's Statesman, written in and conveying the returns from Summit ( oimty. Wo plnce H be lore our tnlholic readers, Hint they may form a correct idea of the value of tho professii ns ol loculocoiim 111 favor of their seel. As long as Catholics and nalurnlixed citizens lend theniselvi-s to promote the interests of liK-ofoeo dcmngngiies, they will he rnjoled nnd fondled with great tenderness, but !el l he in dare lo exercise thnt freedom of opinion and choice our iiililulious guurniitce lo them, and ihey will be set down as vile nnd unprincipled knnves ami fools, who are unlit In enjoy nnd ineapnblc of appreciating rivd and religious luVrlv. The day is not far ditaul when these things will be verified. Remember it. toltprt of I eias, a -iit-jccl not tielore the country when tlny were elected, ujHiu wbtrli. therefore, Ihey Were not ititni led.) which seeks In mterxille into the pnriy rile a new duet rum hitherto unknown aimim us, AT V A It WITH SI IMF, OF I UK i:M AIU.ISMI.II IMtlM'H'I.KS AMI AlilKHt- Iti NT TO TlIK Ol'IMIlNS AMI I'LI.I.INGS OF A GULAT MAJtiKITV OF NOKTIIKIIN r Kl.t.MLN From tho Clermniit Courier, Nov. I. TlIK LLKCTIO.N WHIG GAIN OF BS1 We five below llm Vote of tin county as far as received. Franklin townhtp gives us a tnnjonly of one tieuig a gam of cighti in Monroe tlie lu-os are repotted to hnve increased thnr mniontv one. Hhould Miami (the nnlv tntviihip to hear from I ' ns '-etore, our g;un on lite Governor's vine will be over KlGHTV. Thisriull islnithlv s-ratiUnii'looiir In a it sniut Im dietdv mtHiihiuiriuMir omionents. The Whes have done llieir wlntle duly, and are emu led to Ihe llinuks of their tnrnds lliroulionl the Mule for their tlie mniiiwr in Whit h thtv hnve home ibemsehes Ihrooch tlie rnnltict. It r I.A'IT'.K. Mnimi is ut in Locoforo mniorily r. dnced thrte ratet. So we have gained on them tu all tlie iiwiihjps rxrct Ohtoninl MuuriH n A redueed tliuir majority bi in dm counly ! 1 1'olk's majority is WU. Reporter F.i Ira Luna, Allen Co., Nov. S, O. K ALLF.N TKIUMPIIANT! im WHIG GAIN! l v lh returns received (M-r private espresi, the vole will aland, Clny WKt Polk ?itWhig gain, KICK There are three townships to hear frmnt tiny will probably swell tlie Whiggaiu to 1hhiI 110. Hv this result it will be seen that onr prediction in the F.i-tra ltetnrter of Hilt nil., thai we would reduce the Loco majority in Allen eounly one third, on the firl dnv ol nvemler, was not made at mere hatard. Our Inends throurhoul the Stale must nrknowledgn, thai wi h tho oltacles wehaoto contend with hs-re. Allnt counly Imt done her duly. If the Wings tbrounlHHil the Stale hne done but half at, well, our oinjonly willBemlcoustemaiioii tike hot bol into the liHuforo ranks and joy to every good whig henrl. Palladium K lira New LisUm, Nov. L Thnt same old Coon's alive and kicking, Fat and sleek, Im dines ou cluckeu. TO TlIK CNIVKIISAL WHIG PARTY. GHLKTlNtl The iudomilulile W hig of nld tM'iuj:liiedCilunibinna,haw Stain met llm dei I rue lives and I'olk ites. and made such in- ru,ids upon llwir hitherto impregnable phalanx as lo strike terror and dismay into the hem is of tin dastardly rcviler and Irs flu cers nf ihe great, pure, pninotie, ami honest Miles-msn, IIKMtV CLAV. Il the Wlna in the other counties have done as well, Clay's majority m Ohio will not le Irs than l(I.IMK). We return our sincere thanks to the nobk Wings of ihe roonly for the tralnus and untiring Hlorts Mit forth by llu m in every lown.lnp, in dikalaisv llm public mind and lo instruct the uiiimfonm'd and dereivid in rrlerrnce lo Whig principles. The result proves, thai the low, beastly. rWl like faUrhomls puMishctl agauisl Mr. Clay, by the Ohio Patriot aud llm Locofuco Couuly L'ominillsa ot Vigilsucs, I lie Kill Totlnaj. Tlie necessity of a registry Inw, or some suitable enact-enl lo prevrnl illegal voting, llmmglKNit the Stales, is lie coming more and men- appnrenl every year. In New York, some three or four years ago, Iho Whigs enacted a registry law which nnswcied an cirellmt purjMite in die city of New York, but no sooner o'ld the Lotos get the ascendancy than it was repealed. Why f it w ill te akel. There rail Im but once answer. In this State, the Locm pretend lo he very anxious for some means lo restrain illegal voting. Let us lake them at Iheir word, and ns the Wings have the power, let them at ihe neKl session of Iho lgiihiture lake tlie suit- ject into serious rotisidera'inn aud pas a fair ami wholesome law. If our opponents oppoo it, we shall then be able tn expose their hollow pretensions lo tlie ieople, and c shall elTectunlly lest llieir horror of " pipe laying, ' about which they talk much.b'it practice more. he Mip'r-, sinre lla1 roinineiicement nf the fall elections, have Ivcincd with delected instances of fiiiudiileiit toting. Cincinnati lias had its full share, ami the whole Slate suffered much al ibe Governor's election from the fraud of our opim- units tn carry the local elections. We have our eye on a county where much nf it was practised, ami its presence in inosi of ibe counties will be apparent on a contp.in-on nf tho vote east al the Smte election, am) al the i'rcsnlenluu t Ice- lion. Much of Iho Whig gam wc think al iIm latter, will he found lo have arisen, not so touch from an increased W his vole, as front tlie rbsence of " piro layers," arising Irotu llm wiuil of siillirieul loc.il rafrrpriic, stiiuuhitt d by the ilnlr fur counly and di.lnct oflici-rs, lo secure the sHeodnnre of pv triotic subjects. Williiut H'archiug for cases lo iuptort mir position, ihe iwn following present themselves. We gi ihcnt as evidence of the necessity of preventive euacluieuis, and promise to recur again to Ihe subjerl. ll.l.t.OAl. VnTiao. 'I'bo work is iMynn. In einminglbo poll list ol the voles M iimuiintl, hmulieila ol utimes nie eorh-l in soino ol ihe wants unknown lo any rilisen, and winch cnnuol acre Ite Iraretl to miy liuuinn being. Oim ninn was arrested on rsniurday who UMtl a ileiul brother s natural, isalion pers, aud wore in Ins vole upon ihrm. More sun ilnr caies will be brooch I lo light. Cincinnati (tax, Oct, 'J, From the Baltimore American. Nov. 1. ll.l.Kntl Votino. The remirl nftlie trial ami convict inn of a vi it Mii.i.IlH, on a charge ot mm piracy with lourtes-n other persons to vole ilhfiUly at Ihe Hnlierii tonal elVeliou, ihwhues furls of a very ugmlirniil kind as to llm moile bv which iho Locoforo iimjoiiiy iu this r il v was twehvtl lu its i extraordinary sis e on Ihe occasion relcrn il to. How many vote were cnsl by those lnurleen iersniis no not appear. I be testimony shows that they were voted in tlie Third, Fourth and Fourteenth Wards) but tl is tint con- c bive thai llm wliole number volctl m uarh iH thoe W anh l el H is altoelber Hisibhi thnt llienst fourteen ersons did miutllv rast forly-tuo voin, on llm sccmid ol October ia llm CUV of Itnlltmorv. I'h s trial has been conducted tn oiien Conrti witnesses on both sides have testlied( aide roun-el have argued ihe cm an impartial jury nns oeeuieii it; nnu me retuii mow iianos as one ot tiioc uiiniivraiHe yurrj wmrn mt sopmiry ran ti ginte, wnirn uo uijrctiuiiy ran aner one oi inose mosi preg uaut Aiifft which demomirate bevotid doubl that dm trim ril iseiis of Italiunorr have hud Iheir jul sovereignty invaded, tlie:r nuhts as freemen mlriiiircd, and dm true expression o their w ill vitiated by the loul iiilumou ol Iraudulunl and illegal votes into the bidlol box. ( hher rates ol conviction lo the numler of some thirty and more have occurred. TIm hnvt Iteen mosily iiiiltvidual eaes decided Imiorr but ices of llm neare. In all these iit stances Ihe illegal voting was rouimilled al Ibe election of Oriotter sim, imr lias any inlance crctuieU, withui our knowledge, of the rnnvirmoo of any Wing for thai olVvuc Bunuisl tlm laws ami the r it hit of Irral voters. When il is remeinlered how dilliruli li must Im, from the very nature ol the case, In detect illegal voting, if il is not di-eovered al llm lime of the prrtctraiion, the extent to winch it was probably carried, when in man- miet hare been drteeted, may tm in some degree inlerred. In most mslmieei of illegal voting, llm guilty ernus are from llm reumry, nr from other towns and cities, and ol rourse ihey eo Ihiuw Willi ns much esmnbtion as pouihlc aller Iho coiuuiuuinliou of uieir irauiiiuiui purposes. DiiTni'CTiva Flits, A rrioui fire oernrrcd al8i Lou is, on 1'iwsdav, Iho tMU inst. Tim Huw Mills, consisting of a Untiring mill-and carding factory, owned by James C. Hut' ion, Hr. Culver and Mr. Hlack, and valued al 5tn,ixH) nr flfl.OCO, were entirely ilestro.ied, logcther with some tlO bureli of Oour. Tire fire was accnkuially rommunteaitd. Abntm of the frimkiiiii privilege bv at Cabinet Officer!Wo learn from ihe Greenbrier Yn. Observer, thiil a large package of vile parly tracts were recrived at the Lowjslmrg I kI ollice, on Tuesday, the 'JVlli ull., directed to the corresponding conniiiltec of ihe lleniocrnlic purlv', and franked by U. A. Wickbllc, rosl Muler tieucral. When one of Ihe highest ofiicers of the Government, whose peculiar province is, lo guard agtiiust mhI ollice abuses, tints prostitutes the ihority vested in him, il is tune for Iho friends of Ihe country lo enk (Hit The present corrupt ad.nniiilraliou hm for some lime ninuifcsted a disposition to abandon every li me honored and houoruble prnrlice, but wo were hardly prepared to witness surh a movement on llm part of one who lias preteudrd lo cxerrise Ibe severest survcdlnucc over the officers connected with his department. Famiio akii Ilosot'il. It it said that seme of the Lon- Inn clubs hnve adopted, ul lie suggestion of the llev. Sidney inilh, tlm plan of rejecting, I'er complimeiilDry nduusiou or memlmrs, Ibe citizens of ihe repudmluig fsintes in America. If ladiion and honour could be nmde once in llic world lo unite elferting a g'Mnl thing, how uiiexiectetlly rniniuon sense ild hnve occasion in rejuico. Honour has failed in 'In in stance of die Htules her voice is lienrd no longer. Now wlm knows bill tlie fear of licing culled "no pentlemitn," nmy once ugain enkindle Iho chivalry of the South and slir up the tn- terettof die Notth. Fashion manufactures its hero, find con. n.ikes llm coward, Mny not llic two inllueiicci be combined! The Prstecl Brfortt I'm, Tlie election is mew over, and wc ere at leisure lo turn our nlteulion lo the pro ec I hetnrv us. Tim pnriy who have so irr al)iiieil tne rouli'k'ure oi trie pmuie, wno nave neceiveci llieir own frieiiils, and opprvsM-d H-eir opKiieuis, have leeu rletl I nun inmer liy nil luiiiuiiui iMopii!. I'itiiiiui, 0 cll ns coniipi, IIh-v liiive broken every prom i to miido to ir coiistiluuiiis, auu dtsnpponiieii ine noiies or nit wnoeou- liil in them. Instead ttt leci-lnlinc lor the comt nl I lie pon xtcinhnif to all niuid juiliee, und eii,al protection, llicy ItHve practiM'd ihe groel frauds, and per)'! ruled ihe mo.t iiitu enl nt: cream n uiHtn tm ri"ius uuo propem oi iiirge ri it riliens. onr prete ami orators itHveoonuy pro-lined war iiimiii uidintrv, orosrribing not only Ihe wcuithv, but tluHi nmUol (MHir aud laborious cilucus, whuarehtnr it v emh'nvoruiir to aniiure orn oeny. And why this wnr uimhi pruiH iiy t look at ineicnuen oi Locijfitcni-iii, and see wla they are : men who m-ver latxir, nor wuh their own good will ever enrniil mi iHine.l doll.ir. by the sweat ol their brow or llm exercise nt tlie nienliil Incot- i'ii who hint upou llm mibbc, aud live by holding pule he o Hires, wurh are the men wim nave nit ine iremoenuic party for llieir own private ends ( who h.ivt u-eil ower lor ie imriNise ol iktih.-oi.hiiii' pn y nteemiiiiKy , nun nave pnniiiuiod i lull party atcembincy liy llm grostett abuse ol the r sitcress. 'I'lie people have indignantly spurned those bhonest ami worthless servants from ollice ( ihey have lieen dnvmt out iku hungry dog Iroin a meat )ioum. I m-ir own pnriy, dis. u-ieil Willi tlioir r.ipncitv and worililrs-nes., hnve, m mt iy of Ihe Fstiile, dcserle ami repodinted tlie knaves, wli hrtve so loin ilevmin-! Ihe suhslauce iH llm iMiiple, whom- ghls they liave Irnuiplvd on, and wliu-e mleretU limy liuve ill-regarded. I liosu to whom the owrr tins imon transirrreii, nnvo now uiknin duty In N rlonn. I lie ps-opio nHk io uu'in lor re inn I h'V are extieeteilio UMMiH'ir imitv exertions io re lore llm punly of the laws, ami secure to all jotriie their iusl Kills In vimiiraie tneir own innmixnii u iiei ini ti, -too io restore lo the peiipleol Ohio lb, d nubt and eipial goteimmeiil if which thry have necn uepnvetl oy uiMittiii and ini-rmcV' iius deinni!ojues. W hile ihe nin ordv thus assert their rignis we mm inai nolhmtf will Im done iu a vindictive spirit. As a unity ihoiild diMMtin reM'tumeui, nun lorgei nnsi iio.irics. as moil, it in.vv bethlbcull lo Imni.h Urn rernlliTiton ol Urn aim. and in.ihunsnl course ol our npimiM-nls llu ir loul nml tndi-ceul rabimiiv of ourlmsl nmn, their tuvnsinn ol iwir riclu. ih-ir dnnug aitub uHm mir proiM-ruy. J Im laws that were ile lo plunder our Imnhs anl destroy our rmnm'rre, are till on our statute bKiks, Hint Ihe judge pledgul in toidniLlhl lo eiilorce I new l,iw, nre on Ine Itencn i nml we run not rhe mirev to iliee living moiiiiim-nls of a degrade twrtv loeislniion. nut we mut mH imitate surh wirlche niiMH'l-- we nii.t do nothing tor ntrrr mny triumph nuih' mg in relnlialion lor wrung none us. i.ei us aiiair iiuisanrei winch olfiwl tlie public seii-o correci evil leiiore nghl Inn loi all be dune in cilnum, under a due scute o rrMMii l..l,t nml wuh I In? ni:ien.iiimol v whirh iK-cotne ereal people. ( iKriNNfffi AUai, rtuf. 4. sllhU. The tide is told. Ohio 1ms spoken wiili a Whig energy rhilienricnunf In btes, iut el'idiening to iricno. sim o niikcn the ihrnll ol l.ocoloeoiim, and dec I red lor Ihe cause nnd ihe rounlrv wuh mi rmib.ilic voice We neeil not sav how we feel mi ibe necnion. never loublinsT ir a moiimni llm tnlcgriiy ot the good people Him to those luiHl.iineuiai h-piiniicnii pruieipics nexi mere liv our Ml hers, wewore.nl rHHe, prepnren lor a mnjoriiy. (bit . know mg iIh' mlene arliviiy of onr opponents, hihI the rekles amount of fraud practiced, aud ol IhUi IukhI circulated, nguuist Mi. lav und Urn W lug I'nriy.liy tm-ui, n ft-ared oiilv that n ionion nt thorn Ineudlv in the goiil mi so might Im misled or deceived through an hoimsl riodub-v. Our fears were cmindloss. Tim rruh, mi nr, how a ' tieady W lug gam, and a robust, hontthlul publir seiitinH'iit, 1 encouraging m cvtrv wjy io ine wno vntueii tne nmnu, or Imped lo leel Us tindiliiy imvomi ine reirn oi inenon. a friends of Mr. Cl.iy, we rejoiro nl this result. We re juice thai a patriot so v rsecu led thnt an Imuest nmn so blackened bv bad men lor dithoimst purposes thai a public servant so Iriithlul tu every irwl, nml mi devoted In the whole country, ycl so abused lV lJ narks, ami lout tinrnmrers, wno unoti aim bed nt Iu elevntod purity, and unyielding ori has U-en dins d, fended by tlie vi toe nnd inlt'liigeiice ot Ihe people ot Ohio, not we rejoice still more in the glorious con i derm ion. Unit, as tnr as the ll'ickeva nlnlu enn do it, llm Nation, nml ihe Government ul the Nation, u reieurd Irnm llm h.uid of a nbal wlm, had ihey surreedrd, would hnve overthrown eve ry etlnhhslmd iititge, ami every established principle, declares! r Imhers and imiven tiy onr rinertence. lo Im Urn on IV tnleitunrd of llm Repul-hc. There Is joy nl our party and lersniinl succetsi mil tlie re is deeper J"V Ui Uie ConvKtion, lliut NiMfl titt count i tf it .i' Cinri'itrtiJJi (MrirlJr, I'iik III MvniTAttf Wino lli.tittn or WgTniKSTrR. Among llm banners tioriie in the prnrrstimt on tlm 'M, wnsmm Irotti tho W etlrtmtter Clny Club, im which was in-cribed, "Old W rirheicr llnl -h Gold count not laiv Imr in I TOO, and raimul iu UIU." llm poruliar signilicauee im the tl.iir wns nniug lo the furl tlml it vv.u Imrue bv Colonel John Paulding, one nl die fnmily nf the enpinrer nl Andre, ted bv lnnc nn wen, n gMnn-on ot aiioincr oi tlm r,vpiurersi both of w hout are like iheir lathers, active hg ui Wcstr hosier. A. J'. F.ipren, Cottosj Cnor is AsiHit a Tlm F.ditor of the (la- relle. puMithcd alCahswalm, says : "Not many weeks since there were rmnplitim poured in from all imarteis, aliotil tlm worm. Urn waul ul nun, ami various oiimr tluugt all lemtiiig In injur i llm present nop. We hnve had orcn-ion to Im nh-tent fiom CnliawKb.1 a good dcnl widen a wrok nr Iwn, and speak ffem ac'ual observation, ns well as from Information gained among our farmers, and truly we have never seeiiMieli rrnfM bvioftt. Moil nt nttr planters have ma 'e largely over wIiai limy ran pick out, and even dm nil hills look white so luxuriant is dm rot ton. Those wlm. a month or Iwu ago. wore complaining, havo since bad tu hire hands to gu their rtops out. ' From Ihe N. Y- K vetting Mirror. " Tiiru.i.ino Incidknts" is a phrase that will no longer keen." bin if we may use it once more Imioro il is pul bo- youd uoslril'dom, wo should say il described very, well Ihe following escape : Ou ihe even i ng of Ihe 17lh ull. Thos H. Talford, a respectable citixen of Tuscaloosa county, while in piirsuil ot hit horse, fell into a well about 70 or IH) feel deep. He remained there lluil nighl and llm next day, crushed by ihe lall on bricks at llm bottom. No person heard his cries lor help, until a 'il-lle buy, Imlwcou sunset and dark, threw u dead pig into llio well. 01 r. iidlord then stroke, ami the news mioii spread. Hopes were brouirht and Mr. Joseph T. Fierce, a wnrthy me chanic, descended llio well with a ro iBstened lo his body, ami nxmg aiiniiier rom rounn ihe enett oi Mr. I aiioru, uoiit were dravvu up. The Monitor stales dint Mr. Talford wns in the lust singe of exluiusinlioii. He had been in llio well about i hours, doubled up as lie tell, unable to move his limbs. Ho was unable to stand or to move lux legs die concussion of the spinal nerves Imd purnlyted him. He was taken to a dwelling, where ho received tlm attention of several medical gciillcrueUj nnd the prnM.'rl ot his recovery is fair, though Ins extremities were still torpid. Mr, T. is fifly-ouc ye rs of nge, nod ihe lather of six children, llm preservation from a dreadful nnd lingering death, was truly providential, and hid he uol been discovered, his disappearance would have been a painful mystery. One more " thrilling incident " positively the last time:' Okkahiiii. Ai eioKNT. The modier of a largo family, whilst croNsuif the rail rnnd nt the Gcrmniilown depot, Hpriug Garden, was run over by the loconiolivt,. Hlie was humid y mangled j nnd a bystander, who was drawn lo the spol by the groan of Ihe injured individual, mercifully put an end lo her suffering, by inserting the blade of a dirk-kuile inlo a vital part. A coroner's jury was immediately called, who found a verdin of " served her right," uud gave her body lo be made into mintages. Why will mil n cerlniti editor who lives not a hundred miles from Columbus, and who gels up " incidents " on dm shortest notice, Biid on llm slightest possible occasions, lake a liiul from llio above, and pire his readers the thrill of disgust induced by his favurilc exclamation over llm performance uf Mime bungling demagogue. Nuvki, Aftit Intkhkhtino. Wc U iiiii thai our oM fellow citizen Mr. K. Downey, now living in New Albany, has obtained a patent for a machine lu aid in tunning leather, by which Im can manufacture the article iu hull' the lime it has herelolore laken, nnd save one-hall of the hark. He uses no sletm or chemical agent, but simply deprives the Indus of a sort of mucus, and introduces llm bark li'pior, by means of his machine. The oily council of New Albany have appointed n coinuutleeof practical und scientific men, nt hu reipieit of Mr. Ilowjiey, to examine the process nnd machine, and lo rejmrt lliereou ul as early a day ns practicable. We under-ttiiiid that ihe committee are favorably imprinted as btr as ihey have gone in their (jsuunnniious. l,ouitrille Journal. FitorntF.snvK Dkmuchacv. On the evening of dm 7tlt of October, a letter was left hi thu lieouumy Hotel, iu Leon-ouiy, Heaver Co., l'u., in which il was stilled tliut il llm Kcoiiomiles voted ibe Whig lickel thfir town would lie bnrtifd down, and le-id would be und, and they would be treated Mor mon-hkr. The day before the election, the citizen of thai industrious community held their regular annual meeting, and resolved lo vole the Whig lickel- Thi the Locos did mil like, uud they threatened those adopted riiieus front Germany with id noalli, il tnov exerriseii llieir rights us iroemeii in nc- inlani e with ibe dictates ol llieir own vies of right. Aud this is the kind ul regard ibe laller-day lVuiocruts liavu lor the people. I'lie Idler mentioned above prevented Ihe Lcononnles from ott lie nl die fSlale elertion on the lilh lift. The Incts nre uiv- 'il by Mr. Maker and others, iu ihe lleuver Argus. Cltve- ma tletala. CnilllTT IS I'ol.lTirs. The New York Observer, liM the following eihlotinl paragraph, vvliich we cotuineud most imi-ly lo tlie consideration ul n good tunny mople of our pinhitaiitf. 'We have often seen the necessity of mutual charity in tho linrch, but iu lhee high partv tune we lind greater iM rasioii ir its uerciM' nut of tlie 'burch; we ini aii niiioig (.'hristmut ii the iioliiirid liebl. We hear alinot drtilv, from mm side or Ihe oilier, 'I do uol sec how n I 'hmliau can vole fri a lick- l, wlnlu ll l probable that the speaker htinsell is ipule as iicii a matter ol nslomtlimenl to the one wnose eomlucl ex cites his surprise. Now nil nieu do not see wuh the same ')i's, nor ponness the name light, and il is our duty to accord oilier me ame nneriy in uihiuts oi opinion mat we rimin ' our-elves. And il is well lor Us In bear in mind thnt while we mx iurtwMiteurij in our neighbor, Im is perhaps la-liohlni greater mcouiuieiu y m us. .Mednrv, the loafer editor of llm Ohio Hiittesman, said nl hi: lliilliinore Convention, thai his Wlaie would eo for no oth er l.orotoro but Van llutin. rnm stumbled on tlm truth lur once Ohio will Uol go for I'olk! I'hila. Forum. firn J nekton Jlr. Ailniua We find tho following letter from Gen. Jackson, in ihe Cincinnati Garotte. It is a reply lo die addre- of Mr. Ad mits, whirh we hnve just published, and H is right therefore ihnl wc ahouhl give the General a hearing. W e sludl make no roimnenls none am needed ou such a production. Tho letter is given as wo hud it, italics and all. IIkrmitaoe, Oct. 23, 1HI4. Dear Sin: I thank you fur the copy of tho In telligencer containing the address of Julm O.. Ad-anm to tho Voting; Men's Club of Boston, delivered iiitbcytli insl. This address is a labored attempt on the pnrt of .Mr. Adams to diecrcilittliett'Stiinnny of Mr. hrvino;, wlmno stntcuionts were rt-t'errud to in inv letter to the Hon. A. V. tlrtin n, of February I'-'tM, and iko most ot Iho nniductions Iroin n dt-a'nseu nuiiu. proves little clfe but its own weakness and fully. iI v letter to Mr. llrown was publmlicd on the Wilt of Match, Ir-l l,iii Washingluti city, whuro Mr. Ad ams was nt llitil time. II lias been tin; subject nl comment in tho ncwtpnier presses nf both parlies nail portions ol Ho union; und tne stnU'tiif nis ol Mr. Krvniff, and the inferences from them havo not been deeiuctl worthy of tho holicu nl' Mr. Adams until now, just befuro iho clorc of tho l'residunlial cativnss, lio pretends to havo (lucovered I hut jjrent injtisticti has neon dnito linn, and he innkes a child- iidi appeal to his own diary, to screen mm I ruin tho udiur.i which has fallen upon his treachery to tho bent interests of Ins country. Mr. Adam litis been snven months in nrennring this lisiiuo of deception fur the public, 1 pledge my country men. as soon as 1 can obtain tho pipers not now in my possesion, referred to in tlie letter to Air. llrown. In pruvo, nut only that Air. A dims lias no eniiao of complaint nninsl me, but that Ins veracity, iko his tliplomucy, cannot bo propjK'd up by his PIART.1 1 sny, in advance nf the review I shall tnko of this extraordinary production, thus hernlih d before iho public on tho ove of thu IVsulcntial election, ilint tho asHertion of my having advised the treaty of I mil, is a bare I need falsehood, wiinout tlie siiminw of prtmf lo sustain it ; and that ihe entire address is lull of statements at wnr with truth, and ot se n lime nl a boslilo to every dictnto of (Hitriotisin. Who tint a traitor to Ins country can appeal aa Mr. Adams does to the youth of Hosion, in the clrmo of his address? H)onr trial is approaching. The wirit of freedom and the spirit at sfactru are drawing logtthrr for the deadly conflict of nrmt. The annexation of VVxij (o'ti L'ninn is the blast of the trumpet for a Joreign, nrd, terile and Indian imr, of irntrA Ihe Utirernmrnt of the United Stairs, fallen inlo faith-Irss handi, has already twice given the signal ; fii st., by n shnnwliss treaty njtrUd by it virtuous iin(e; rriul fitrijin by the glott. of defiance hurled by the ojimt He o nutlijirahnn at tlte aroirtit policy aj the Ifnlish empire, peacefully to promote the trtinrtton of slavery Ihruughuid he uvrld. Young men nf Boston ! burnish ymtr armor prepare for Ihe conflict ; and I sny to ifou, in the tanauage of (lalgaeus to the ancient Britons, think of your forefathers think of your pnsteri' df!" What is this but deluxinn, or whnt is wore. a direct appeal to arms lo npKo the decision of tho American people, should it be fnvumble to tho an nexniion of Texas to the United States? I tnny be blnmed for spelling Mr. Kr vine's namo wrong" ; but I trust 1 'It nil never deserve lite Mlinmo of miBtakiiiir ihe path of duly, where my country's riirhta aro involved. I believe, from the rlmi'losures inn dc to mo of the transactions of IH'.i, thnt Mr. Adams surrendered tho intercsis nf tho United States when ho look Ihe S.tbino river as the honn- diiry between us and Smin, when ho nnht havo on no lo Iho Colorado tl not In the Hin del ISorle, Such wns the nnturnl inference from tho facia staled by Mr. Krviiitf; and there is nothing in tho nrcount now iriven ot tho netfotinlion to alter this impres sion. I ho atldress. on tho contrary, does not nt all relievo Mr. Adams, It proves that he was then, sa now, m alien to the true interests of his country j but he had not then, as now, Uio pretext of co-oper ation with (ireat Britain, in her peaceful endeavor to extinguish slavery throughout tho world. is there an American patriot thai can rend tho above extract, and other similar ones that may be tnken from Iho adilretm of I his monarchist m disguise, without t feeling of horror ? Grant tbnt the tlintt-sands of those who think, with mo, that tho addition uf Texas to our Union would bo a national benefit, aro in error aru we to be deterred from the expression nf our opinions hy th rents of armed opposition? nnd is it in this manner tint iho peaceful policy of (ireat Ilritiin is to bo carried into execution, should tho American people decide that wo are not inorror? Or dives Mr, Atlanta mean to intimalo thnt iho will of (ireat llntniti should bo Iho Inw for American Internum, and will bo enforced nl iho point of the bayonet by those who descended from the patriots ol our llevoliitmnr Instead of going lo British hislnry for trntimenti worthy of tho republican youth of our country, nn an occasion so vitally allotting our national n'ntVty and honor, 1 would recommend thorn in lien. Washington's Ks re we II Address, and particularly hit warning to us tu avoid entangling alliances with foreign nations, and whatever is calculated tu create sectional or geographical parties at home. i am, very truly, your obedient servnnt. ANDKKW JACKSON. (ion. Robert AaMiraofo, The Ciller Iel. The letter below, which we copy from ibe North American, fixes the responsibility of tho duel between Cilley and Graves, on the friends of Mr. Cil-ley, where we have supposed it rested. This letter contains new evidence uf this fact; and it is due to Mr. Clay, against whom, in reference to this affair, calumny has done its worst, to lay it before the pub lic. Tlie American vouches tor the high character and integrity of the writer,: Washinoto.t, Oct. 27th, 1844. Ge.itlf.mf.si, Much is said at this lime about the duel between Messrs. Cilley and Graves. I wn living in Washington at the time this duel occurred, and wns on terms of familiarity with several of Mr. Cilley's personal frtends. I was with the late Mr. William Ward of tho War Department, the bosom friend uf Mr. Cilley, the evening before the duel took place, uud was informed by him what weapons were to be used, and who were to bo on the ground ns seconds and friends. I expressed my great surprise at these sudden arrangements, and asked him if it was not possible that the meeting could bo obviated through the intervention of Mr. Clay, He stuted in reply that Mr, Clay had already exerted his influence to prevent it, and hud so worded thu communication of Mr. Graves to Mr. Cilley aa seemingly to throw the responsibility of the meeting on Mr. Cilley. I asked him then why Mr. Cilley did not avail himself of this circumstance and allow an adjustment of the difficulty to take placo. lie said thnt Mr. Cilley himself was disposed to this, but his friends were in favor of his meeting Mr. Graves that New England men had so generally declined duels, that an impression had been obtained that they were deficient in courage, -that they consequently suffered indignities to which they would not otherwise be exposed, and that it wu8 time for some one to show that there was chivalry nt the North as well ns the Smith. I asked Mr. Ward if ho would not go to Mr. Cilley ond his friends that night and try to prepare the way for an adjustment of the difliculty on tho field. He said it would avail nothing; that Mr. Cilley's friends wcro (inn and determined; that tliey hod every confidence in him with his rifle; that he was a dead shot at the distance at which tlie duel was to bo fought. Meeting with Mr. Ward, after tho fatal termination of thu duel, I remarked to him that attempts were made to etist the responsibility of the duel on Mr. Clny. Uo replied that is ungenerous and un just, 'I he responsibility of the meeting and of the lirst nre, rests with Mr. Cilley's friends and I am one, but the responsibility of his dcuth rests with his see on tls. That you may know to what degrcoof confidence the statements in this letter are entitled, I apjwnd for Jour use my name. Very truly yours. Another llurrtenue. of I,iTo nnd Destirac-liou of I roper I y. Wo learn from the Western Kx post tor, printed at (ndeieiidence, Jackson county. Mo., that a destructive hurricane visited that section of thu Slate about !) o'clock on iho night of Ihe WSlh uiu Its clTecls were lamentably dimistrous. Thnt paper says : It camo o cross the prairie, nnd the first we henrd of its effects, was at the Mission, Jl miles from Wettpnrt,which it injured considerably, from whence it passed over nur county, in anorlh-enst direction, striking the river shout one half mile above Wayne City, at C. N. Hall's mill, and have heard of its keeping down the river fur some miles, but as yet we have not heard where it commenced nor where it ended. It varied from five to soven hundred yards in wid'h, and pursued a straight direction. Wo give the following list of the killed and wounded: Mrs. McGiU, Livingston, killed; Mrs. Stone, do.; Mr. Ken had three children killed, and himself greatly wounded; Miss Mury Middleton, and Dr. Martin's son, near Wcstpott, were killed. A stranger who had been moving a family In I'lalte, and encamped opposite Owen's landing, wits found dead, his wngnn blown entirely away. Thomas Hedges had all his houses and furniture blown oft', aud several ot his family badly crippled. Samuel Latnbett, houses, itc, gone, wife and another person badly injured. J. Head ley, houses, &c. blown oft; J. King, do.; Mrs, Hoggins, do. and herself badly crippled; Mrs. Ha- gnn, do., nnd herself and negro man crippled: Calvin lctoy, no,, and several ot Ins family crippled; Dr. Martin, on; Mrs. lluckhsrt, do.: 1 nomas hmilu. do.; C. N. Hall's steam saw null, roof bluwn oft, grist mill nn nouses blown entirely away damage about $roo. We have henrd of several others killed and wound ed, and it inch more property injured, but do not know the particular. Wo hove no idea that the half has been told, or yet heard, of Ihe loss nf lives and the instruction ol property occasioned by this awtul lornauo. The wkw rRHKinr.jiT or Tbxas. ll has hcen asserted (nays tne Albany Argus) that the new Pres ident elect nl 1 exas (Lr. Jo.xks is against annex ion nnd that Ins election may be regarded aa ex prcsaions of tho people of Texas adverse to that measure. This is not so. The National Vindica tor, published at Houston, contradicts the story, on the authority of a letter from Dr. Jors, published in ine nnrnson I lines ot me v.ith July, excusing himself for non-attendance nt the political meeting of his friends during the campmn of which the following is an extiact: "Wcro I to make a lour through iho count rv. I should either bo compelled to neglect my official mailers or to resign. The latter would, indeed be very ensy; but in tho present crisis of our neirotia- ions, it would, perhaps, look like a desertion of inv post Secretary of State.) I am not yol without holies of annexation, and as I have had a irrnat deal tn do in this matter, I h-tvesome pride in wishing tn go in rou iMi wim 11. 1 lie chartrc that 1 am 'inimical to further negoiintinns willi Iho United States for he re-anncxniion nf our count rv to that.' is wliollf without foundation iu fact and a base slander.11 Lf 1 his is just as wo havo nlwava understood it. Jones belongs lo the Houston party, which will consent to Annexation, if thev can obtain their own terms not otherwise. I tiey expect to make Undo oam pay wen lor nis wntstic. j rib. Tim Wooi, TnAiir. Acconlintr lo the best enl milium, it is supposed that thero are about U4,(XH)- tnni ot sheep in the United States, worth on an average about per bead, aud yielding about iXMXK) 000 pounds nf wool, worth, at JtO cents per pound, about r,7,(HH,rK). These sheep at three to the acre for summer and winter would reoutro 1 1 .'CCi.Ittlacres of Innd for their support, which, at$l'i per acre, wnirn is consutered a lair average, would bo worth i-h..hmhhj. To mantilurtiiro this clip of woo will require about 4,000 hnnds, who, with families aver aging three persons each, and amounting in all tn 10,000, at a consumption nf dollars per annum each, would reipiiro $1,500,000 worth of agricultur al priMiiirui lor their support, winch, nt a not yield ot sj ,-u per acre tor the market, would require , rXHMani acres ot land, wnrth at per sere, ,M tiOO.000. Tho capital invested, then, by the fanner in this business alone, is about $.Y(HH),(HH), and the annual value accruing to hitn,abouti!4l,.p00t(MK), wnne mo capital invested by Ihe mnnulsctiirer him self, in buildings, machinery, Arc, to work up the wnoto annual product would not perhaps exceed 15.000,000, ur about one-huh of that of the agri ctiiiurisi. The Heafrlin mf Iho Jewa. The New York Sun contains tho following nlotrh nf an interesting discourse on the restoration of tho Jews, delivered at the Tabernacle, on Monday evening, by Mujor Noah, and listened to with great attention by a crowded assembly, composed of all religious denominations: ilo made an appeal to this country to tnovo first in favor of that important project gave a brief his tory ut tho Jewish people, and re ler red to the position of the Jews at the birth of our Saviour, and entered into some interesting details of his trial and condemnation, lie referred to the prophecies lo show that the restoration of the Jews was distinctly promised and in their unconverted state took a view of the political condition of allUira in the Kast, and proposed a simple plan for Iho commencement of that great work. Our limits will not enable us to do more than merely glance at the prominent features of this discourse, which we presume will bo published. We have room, however, to transcribe the following paragraphs from our notes: 1 am persuudeu that Uio great events connected wiili the Millennium, so confidently predicted in the Scriptures, so anxiously desired by liberal and pious Christians, so intimately connected with the latter uuys ; mat consummation ut a great and providential design iu the union of the Jewa and Gentiles. and the l'u Hi Intent of the prophecies, can alone bo iookcu lor, ajter tho Restoration ot tlie Jews to the land which tlie Lord gave to them fur an everlasting possession. It is your duty, men and Christians, to aid us peaceably, tranquilly and triumphantly to repossess the land of our fathers, lo which we havo a legal, equitable, perpetual right, by a covenant which the whole civilized world acknowledges. That power and glory which were once our own, you now possess; the banner of the Crescent Bunts where tho standard of Judah was once displayed ; it is for you to untun it again on Alount .ion. It will redound ! to your honor, it will perpetuate your glory. You believe in the second coming of Jesus uf Naiareih. Tliut second advent, Christians, depends upon you. It cannot come to pass by your own admission until the Jews aru reslorod in their unconverted elate. If he ia again to appear, it must bo to his own people, and in the land of his birth and his affections, on the spot where he preuched and prophecied and died. In almost every page uf tho Bible, we have directly aud indirectly, in positive language, and in parable, the literal assurance and guarantee for llio restoration uf the Jews toJudeo. We have cone through the fiery ordeal, according to prediction, we nuvc Buneiuu uiu cornea, nnu now awnu uio penou ul the blessings. The pusl bus been dark and drca- Hie future is full uf hone and splendor. God himself has been our ruler, our law-giver, our leader, and to this hour our true friend. In the midst of ppalting dangers his eye has been upon us, his pro tecting shield has been ovor us. To us be committed the Inmp which has illuminated the world, and we liavo held it with a steady hand lur a hi! lit to the Gentiles. No, no, mr friends what would be to us our blessings, ourredemplion, our sal ration without our restnratiun ' Our lund is blighted with the curse, shall it nul enjoy the blessings ? It long bath mourneu, suau it not rejoice f innumerable are the promises which present themselves, wherever the eye is turned. w The remnant uf Jacob," sailh the Prophet, "shall be in the midst of many people, ns a dew from the Lord, as showers iipon the grass." And Isaiah, wrapt in the contemplation of the glorious future reserved fur his brethren of the Jewish Church, says, "Lift up thine eves round about and sco all, they gather themselves together, they come io i noe, my sons snail come irom ntar, and my daughters shull bo nursed at thy side." Again, linen lo Ihe Prophet relative to the restor ation and rebuilding uf Ziun. u Behold I wilt gather ihem out ut all countries, whether I have driven them in mine anger, aud in my fury, and in great wrath. and I will cause them tn dwell safely and Ihey shall ne my people, aim 1 shall bo their liod, and 1 will make them an tverhtsting covenant, and I will not turn away from them, lo do Ihctn good, nnd I will plant them in my land, assuredly witn my whole heart and my whole soul, lor thus saith lite Lord, like as I have brought all tins great evil upon this people, so will I bring them al) the good that I havo promised llicm." And now, my friends, in conclusion, let ine im press upon your minds, the important fact, that Ihe liberty and independence of the Jewish nation mav grow out of a single effort, which hi cutmtry may make in Iheir behalf. That effort is simnlv to pro cure from the Ottoman Porte a permission to purchase and hold land in Syria in security and pence, their tines anu possessions emmrmed, iricir nobis and llocks undisturbed. They want only raoTKCTiopr, and the work is accomplished. The Turkish gov ernment cannot be insensible lo the lact, thnt clouds ;ire gathering round them, and destiny, in which thev wholly confide, teaches ihem to await the day of trouble and dismemberment. It ia their interesl tu Iraw around them the friendly aid and co operation nf the Jewish people throughout the world, by con- conferring thcro reasonable nnd just privileges Uwm them, and when Christianity exerts its powerful agency, and stretches forth its friendly hand, the rigm soi ic lieu win be cheerfully conicrrcu. When the Jewish people can return to Palestine, and feel that in their persons and property they are aa safe from danger as they are under Christian governments, they will make their purchases of select no-aitions, and occupy them peaceably and prosperously; confidence will then tako the place of distrust, and oy degrees, tho population in every part or Syria, being greatly increased, will become consolidated and ready to unfold the standard, when political events shall demonstrate to thuui that Uio tiuio has nr rived. A C'lsllst sr Mrrw During tho late festive season when tboso who thought at all. reflected lint, eighteen hundred ai d forty-ihreo years ago, the religion uf the heart, bringing peace and good will on earth, came to soften ihe rigor of the religion of form a little girl not six years old, had been observed by a lonely Indy, sitting day after day on (he step of a door opposite to her house. It seemed to belong to nobody; but at a certain hour, (hero it was, wrapied in an old shawl, crouched ou the cold stone, and rocking itself pensively backwards and forwards, more like an ailing old woman than a child. Other children played a-rotind it, but this melancholy little being mingled not in their sports, but sat silent and solitary. Soon afterwards it was seen to peep about the area of the lady's house, nnd look wistfully at the kitchen windows. Tho lady who was kind to children, thought that the little girl might be trying to aitrnct her notice, opened the door suddenly, and offered it some gingerbiead. When the door opened, thero was a strange, eager expression in t ic child's eves: but when she saw the lady she looked scared and disappointed. The kind voice and manner soon re-ussured the startled child, who thankfully took the iff mug, broke it up into little bits iu her hand, and curried it to the door-step opposite, where she again took up her station. Another child, seeing the gin gerbread, came up to the solitary infant, who gave the new comer some, and, by her gestures, the Indy thought that she was informing the other child wiicnco tne gut came. After waiting a considerable time without eating her ginger-b rend, tlie poor girl rose dejectedly and went away, still looking back ut the house. A day or two afterwards the same child was seen lingering about the pavement near the area, and holding out a bit of sugar candy in its tiny fingers through the rails. 1 he lady who thought that the child was come to offer It out of gratitude for tho ginger bread, went own into uie a rev; out as soon ns she appeared mo hild ran away. Soon again, however, the child was at its old station, tho door-aten opposite. Tho any nod mentioned this to her only female servunt vury ouu, uiu received no ouservaunn in rcpiy. One morning the door was opened to receive a piece of furniture, nnd the same child again sudden ly appeared and advanced stealthily towards the door. The lndy. who was near. said. H see vou!" when the child immediately retreated to her door step. "ihis is very extraordinary," soul the Indy to her servant; "I cannot innke out whnt thnt child wants." "Madam, said the servant, bursting into tears, "it my child." "Your child! but go. brinir her in. Where dues lie live?" "With my sister, and she rroes to school. ! have told her never to come here; but the poor thing will come every bit of playtime she gets. That day you uiougnisne was ottering you some sugar candy, I had been to the school and given her a penny; when iiwii was over, she came to give me a bit of tho sugnr enndy she had bought. Oh, ma'am, have mer- lorgivo ine: Do not send me awoy!" Tho ludy, who had known adversity, and was not one of those rigidly righteous people who forget the ursi principles inculcated by tho divine Author nl the Christian creed, looked grave, it is true, but did i snrniH i rum the lowly sinner aa if she find tho ague, although she had become a mother beforo lie had been made a wife, bv the irav cavalier who had deceived and forsaken her. Nor did she turn her out upon the wide world, in the virtuous slern-ncss of her indignation. To llio great horror of Homo of her neighbors, she told her servant Unit her hi Id might come tu see her every Sunday, begin ning with the next When the child, who was no longer tho moping creature which it had been beforo was admitted lo the mother, heard this, site tinmc- lintely and anxiously inquired. "How manv dava and nights is it to Sunday?" Home may sneer at tl is: to me there is nomelhing painfully alloc ting in the quiet, subdued demeanor n mis oitspnng ot shame, timidly wntching lo ob tain a glimpse of her who had borno it, at an ago wncn (nippier children are never without those great est ot enjoyments, tho caresses nf a mother. llnnK I Uio misery ot this poor child, driven, from tho mere instinct of longing for its parent, to the staid emcanor oi age, wmist the other merry liltle ones wore sporting around it. Think what sho must have suffered aa she gazed, day after day, at the frowning door, that shut out more than all tlie world's value lu her. Think of the suffering mother, dreading lo lose, with her plnce and character, the means of supporting her hapless, prematurely old infant. Oh man, man, uiou hast much to answer tor! Our Coi'NThtxan Catmn. The Irftndun corres pondent of tho Boston Atlas furnishes the following iiiiurin.iiinii, "Mr. Cnllin has just issued a prospectus for ancle- gnnt work, which ho rails "I'utlin's North American Indinn Portfolio." It is lo ho published only by sub scription, and the patronage of Queen Victoria, tho Kmneror of Uussia, and the leading nobility, is already secured. 1 ho work will contain twenty five views or sub jects, tnken from the most admired pictures in Uie Indian collection. Theso will comprise Indian hun ting scones modo of catching and taming the wild horse tnvnrilo Indian games landicniw scenes ni the Rocky Mountains and Prairies aim tho Chiefs of several Indian tribes. The prims will bo executed in tho most finished stylo ol lithograph, on & roy al sheet, eighteen by twenty-five inches, accompanied by letter press description of equal sixe, fully explaining all the plates. The work will be handsomely bound in morocco, and the price in printed lints, will bo five guineas, I have seen specimens nt the engravings, and must pronounce ilium, moil finished and superb works of irli-hcnl skill. Tho whole work will do credit to Mr. Catliu, and bo an honor to his native laud." A paragraph in the Ixmdon Tunes says that next spring the emigration from Germany to the United Stales will be conducted on a large scale, and with greater regularity than hitherto. Thero are two companies nnw forming, the first of which is under tho auspices of the Prince of Holms and other Ger man noblemen, who have the intention of butng lands cither in Texas or in tho United States, and then regularly sending out such persons who cannot nnn worn or are niscomentcti in ineir nonunions. Tho Prince of Holms is now in Texas, and, so soon ns ho returns, it will be derided whether the land is lo bo bought in Texas or the United States. The second company is organized by Mr. Mark, lite gen tleman who took so active a part in the 'oil-V ere in treaty, nnd who, in conjunction with some landholders in Western Virginia, are forming s large com pnny ot emigrants, mostly farmers and merchants, wuh cnpilnl cnougn lo buy the land on which Ihe' settle, and they intend emigrating soon, and to caf the settlement "New Germany." Although Ihe lands in Western Virginia are somewhat dearer than in States beyond the mountains, they are represented, in nenun, mgnur prices tor pro nice, and oilier advantages, to be very favorable In emigrants. There ap pears every prospect that from fifteen In twenty thousand Germans will emigrate during the next year to mo united males. Mn.i.xnisM Disavowed. On Tuesday ovoning, in the M tile nf uiurch, corner of Chrystie and Do lancy sttecta, Mr. Storra publicly recanted his en re grious folly and madness in the matter of the second advent. Ho said, what indeed others boisido his congregation nnd already found out, he was deceived ns lo tho day of tho second advent He said he had been led sal ray by excitement and deceived hy Mes merism,! and now most penitently acknowledged his manifold sins ana wickedness, lie now exhort-od them to stick lo work, cVc. I limes next took his stand in the confessional. and forgetting, we presume, thnt he had been both Ihe deceived st.d tho deceiver, rated the people pretty harshly for their infatuation, and urged them all to go home and lo work, snd stopped down from Iho rostrum. Storrs has also acknowledged his error in the Midnight Cry, but we do not recollect seeing anything more about .Vrsmr rt.tm This is tolerably cool. Confession is easy, hut how is restitution to be made ? Perhaps the leaders think they have furnished as much excitement as could bo expected al the price. V. s. lonu sido. -Vou. l. Massif.!) Men. -The more married men you have says Voltaire, iho fewer crimes ihero will be. Kx-nuiitte the frightful columns of your criminal calen ders, you will their hud a hundred youths executed tor one lather ol s tamily. Marriage renders a man morn virtuous and more wise. The father of s fatuity is not willing to blush before his children. t, I V.. Ht'lT. We lenm lrm the Journal of Commerce, in tlie rane m II. M. Idmievn Nfainst the rimnrs nl Dial na-par tor an alledgrd libel, the buy have Riven a venbrt id $.410 lur ino pi tint in. iKkinJam s count) movnu fni a imw utal. A llonsr-rmuT. Several fine barb stall ions, hold by ihe Hakksms slaves, were led forward. mongst which a powerful black colt, who, hnvini managed, hy rearing and plunging, to break loose from ilia conductor, attacked, with thrown bnck ears, open mouth, and tail erect, another ol tho stud ; anil notwithstanding the ctlorta of llio Arabs, ncciialom-cd to such freaks, a desperate ficht ensued: w heel ing round as quick as lightning, rearing, and lining tlioir fore font as dexterously as an expert boxer; ihcn gnlloping away from lhoo wlm endeavoured to catch Ihem delcrniined to havo nut their duel, simr- ling and squeaking moat wildly. 1 his was s moment for llic admirers of bono Hesh lo sco every muscle and nerve come into play in their line action, unrestrained. The black cult was, st length, seized by the neck by his more vigorous adversary, who pressing him to the ground, held him there till men came lo the rescue and separated tho combatants, Orvmmond Jet'i Water Barbary Amnwairsi sf m ,T1sssriN Sin I tun. The Meshaw Herald now proclaimed thatShosha (the blow-giver) aud the six-fingered Alee, esch of tree win, were about tn test their strength, and thnt a royal donation of fifty gold mitznkel would be tho reward of tho conqueror. "May Good bless our Lord!" shouted by ten thousand voices, drowned tho rv of the herald, "the deafener." as the neoblo rail ed him, from his astounding voice. Both the clmmn- ions wero already on Uie appointed ground, when there arose tho question which should receive Ihe first blow. On this tho sturdy Alee spoke: ( Li., ui..i.. .i r .i.. i c It i. -. Mi, , j nnoua, -jiavu ui me icieiiiier oi uio rami-fnl, the Sultan uf the world ; it is my duly lo grant u-ii nuvnniage even to uie meanest servant ot our Lord." The blow-giver replied: Y onr courso nf life is run; it has reached its goal ! Where shall I ileal the blow.-" Alee pointed to the lop of his head. The long and muscular arm of Iho black was now raised and poicd in the air over the skull nf Alee, who with knees slightly bent, stood undaunted beforo his antagonist, a broad grin upon Ins features, as if certain uf his power of resisting all human strength. uown came uie list nt tne biacK, sounding like the sledgo hammer when struck with force sea mot an anvil. Alee staggered, drops of sweat broko out upon his forehead, his eyes rolled with pain and seemed starting from their sockets; but, recovering. no shook ii i in sen, and, rubbing his bullet shaped bead and looking around, exclaimed -Allnh, that is wnaiyoucati a blow: ami what a blow tool Allnh! But now comes my turn. O Hokhary ! snd if it plea ses the most mighty God, Shasha, the blow-giver shall never deal anoJier!" Then, turning to the Sultnn. he craved to be al. Inwcd tn place himself on eniial heiirht with his tnll opponent. This was granted: and four soldiers wcro entered to letch a marble block that was st hand, uiu muy touna n wo nuicn mr uie in. Alee ran lo Iho spot, and having with their assistance put it on his soldiers, brought it and placed il in front of tho Sultan. Then, having doffed his gelab, he took his position on the block, and clenching Ins six-hngered list and throwing his body slightly backwards, rnised his arm, and seemed to choose a posture w hereby ho might secure iho greatest power. He hesitated, and (iroppcu ins nnn, as it to consider a little longer. A nd now the black man trembled, and over his soul v face there seemed lo come a horrid paleness, as Alee resumed, in a yet more decided manner, his post tiro of nltnck. Do n, rapid as a thunderbolt, fell Alec's tint, and with it fell the blsck, never to riae agniu. Tin iiI,ki,...,v.L..u ... r.;a.r..n . ...n. . "nnu iiiLMiiiuiir nnkiiiii-u, mini nn who had so often denlt iho blows of death was now but as one of those who had met a liko fnto fmm his own relentless arm. Thcro is nn power or strength in sny but God," exclaimed the Sultan, as ihe black expired at his feet. Kiive the clown," pointing to Alee, 'the fifty ducats, and let him have safe con duct Shasha, in truth, ia a great loss lo mv houso- old; but who can avoid God's decrees, which n re written in the Book of Fate." Alee look the nureei ami ore the Sultan's ma ml n to for Inm In be escorted could ho put in force, ho had mingled wuh the crowd, nnd wns seen no mom. Sotnesuid that Iho brethren of ihe blnck murdered him that night. lluy$ H intern Barbary, The Trias H-teesilniar. The Richmond Whiir handles without elovos tlm speculators in Texas bonds nnd lands in that quarter who are so eager for ihe election of Polk as the Candida to nf immediate annexation. It say , As the hour approaches, the gentlemen who manifest the greatest anxiety are the Texas Speculators llioso disinterested and palmitic gentlemen, who, having a much greater interest in Texas than they hnvn ut this country, are extremely solicitous for annexation by which their worthless lands, and still more worthless scrip, may be made of some value, Gentlemen, who fcntiAruWi to-day, may, to-morrow, by mtitm of annexation, become millionaires, nro excusable for displaying a little ntnrv zeal than ol tiers; but ihey aro scarcely justifiable in denouncing all whit do not ngreo with I hum ns traitors. Fur llio snke of decency, some littlo moderation should be observed." t'etmi sir mn Inturrretitm, The cost of an insurrection in Cnnndn has just come out almost tour millions and s half! A pret-t y round sum that, and milter costly fur a Colony I ror inn year im me military expense amounted lo jCleO.OlK After that it was as follows: lrW, JC 570,21$ lK'Kt, I.IW.070 IHIU, I.IU.WI Tho army expense in Canada in liMo was ItHkl,-007. Colonies cost something!
Object Description
Title | Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1844-11-13 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1844-11-13 |
Searchable Date | 1844-11-13 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
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Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn85025897 |
Reel Number | 00000000023 |
Description
Title | Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1844-11-13 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1844-11-13 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
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Full Text | WEEKLY 0 0 'JESS. '--..'. ' - -'-.vi vSjr; --;"-"ViTi'iX"-:-E, at SI A' II JO VOLUME XXXV, COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1844. NUMBER 14. I'Uill.lHIIKIl KVKKV WKUNKrtlAV MOKNINU, BY CHARLES SCOTT & CO. Office corner of High wd Town HreuU, Buttles' Building. TERMS: Two Dollar rr.n askum, whirh must Invariably be paid in advance, Tree of postage, nr of per coiiUgn to Ageuls nr l!nllr(iiri. Tlie Journal In alio published daily during tlie session of ino Legislature aim innee a wees, me rt-iimmu ui h-c ja for and three limes a week, yearly, lor Jj l. Hepsma fro us ibe Counties). BT Wo give below llic reports from tlie d liferent Counties 111 I ho State, hi received from our friends. . 'J buy will iliow with what spirit nndcntirnge ihe s,ullnnt Wuroi of Ohio entered into the recent eonlvsl, and wilb what glory (hey came out, ROSS COUNTY. From ibe Chilliroibe Gazette Kxirn, Nov. 1. We have mcl the enemy, and Ihey are ours ! We have fnuL'ht die umA fight, ami ihe victory is won ! The good people of ihe Aiteieiil lilelrouolis have come nobly up iodic light, ami have given die last blow lo ir oil rale Lorolorniim. Our Adopted Felltno Citizens, who hnve so lung supported L-ocofocoism, have discovered llieir riror, and come out for their country and hrr candidate, Old Ross will give mi increased majority over Iter Governor vote, approaching JOU! From Ihe Republic Extra, HiirincfiVId, Nov. 111 P. M. 139! IIUKKAI1 FOR L ITT LB CLARK! The Township have, cmnoin riglil gloriously I Instead of A I'ulli gain ol one in ca'h Town. hip, as Mr. Sainivel JVIedn-ry had arranged il, dm gallant Wing uf iiolilu Chirk Iihvc rolled up a majority of Cf.'ll ! Beutjr, a Whig gain of l'M ! 1 Now let Old Alu-kiiigiini send hm k her ihuiidorl Wofrol Droud of the noble Whiir ol Clnrk. Lei ihe result in the Union Imj what it may, limy will feel ihe proud tatialacliou of naviug discharged their aay. Register Ealra Fiinia, Saturday morning, Nov. I, OLD MIAMI N TILL KIUHT. The elcrtinn yelerdiiy, so far as our county is concerned, resulted imblv lor die Wine muse. We have Bullied iA suiro Ibe Governor's election. Then our majority was It W now W. The nggregnto vole is very largr exceeding that polled on the 8di ult., 173. The Abolition vole it A less tlnm at thai lime. Shelby County il jml in majority for Clny, 12! A gain of 21. liood enough! Western Star Exlni Lebanon, Nov, 2. MAKK ROOM Full OLD WAKItKN. As we promised, old Warren ha redeemed herself. Hlie lias Ink en fiur old position in die four figure, and though her majority is not eotnl to Harrison's, yet il it highly llnllcrni. Il oilier counties have done as well a Warren, Mednry's guilt of two for I'olk in earli lowndiip will lie "over die left shoulder." "The. boot will lie on dm other leg." Washington low nliip lo lie heard frnm. Giving her the ninj. she gnvn for Hartley and the Whig gain in Warren, on thu Governor's vole is LiO, and Clay's maj. HXi. have weakened and injured ihe cause limy intended to bene lit by Iheir unholy conduct. No Prcinde iilial cnndidale ever sullered a hundrcdih pari of the abuse that has been heaped upon Mr. Clay, and none, we predict, ever inumplwd mora gloriously over his vile slundereni, than he will. Thcn.'Whij;, rejoice, and lw glad, as you bavca right, for the cmarrvatirr principles wliirh you have so firmly advocated, are undoubtedly iriiimphmil. Tod's majority for Oovcrnnr. 5W Polk's about WO. Thai will do lor the choice Whigi of Culumliiaun. FAIRFIELD COUNTY. Gazette and Expresi Extra Lancaster, Nov. t. We give below, llm reported majorities lor President, al ihe election on yesterday, showing a Wing gain of HI. The Whigs 'have inereaned their majoriiies handsomely since the election for Governor, in several ol the lownhi. And when it is considered that this counly is the strong hold of Locoftw nism nod that they have had Iheir forces under the most thorough drill for the Inst three months, in order In e cure llrnl increased vole of "one in each luwmhip," which was lo carry tlie Stale for Polk, ihe result may be lairly set down as a noble Whig triumph. Republican Times Exlra Nov. Z. "SWEAT THE GENERATION' HUZZA FOR OLD KINOX!! We have the gratification of announcing that the gallant WliifTS of Old Knox are airnin victorious. The Lokiea fouKniwiihdesparaiion, but all in vain. The Whiirshavese- BUTLER COUNTY. Hamilton, Nov. 3, IHU. FJilari Ohio Staff Journal We have fought Locofoenifin once mrc in "old Hutler." Hoth cides have given tbeirlesi licks, but as you know the Whigs have no rlmurc hero in regard lo lownsliip truhlces, Ac. Nearly all arc Locos, and wo torn mi in think ibcy wink nt (he raruhly of their parly lenders. I'olk' majority is !'!. A gain lor Loeofocoism ol a Itttlc lens iImii III IV voles, wln-n tin y conlideuily rlaimed 100 gain. It is enough to say dial ihe W ine stow up to Uiein. In haste, very truly, yours, Ate. PKEHLE RIGHT HIDE UP! litgitttr Ojfice, fcatan, AW. 2, MM. Old Preble, Irulv W his as evur, lias iriven another rebuke to Polkocracy mil morc'si'nal lhau thai miuiterol al ihe late Gnlx'nialori.il elect ion. Tln-rc are A more townships yet to liear front; two of which are larity whig. And Iront our gains exluhiled iti the refxiried lownditM, wa can assure fair friends abroad that llio " rhickens" have not h.ol uicli a chase by ' thai same old coon, since the days of W Hliould proHnioual whig gains be made in the lowmhtM to ruine in, over the late flection, our majority iti the county Will uol lall far short of WSJ! Inmnsed majority thus far,i. (inxelle Extra I Ifllelo ni nine , Nov. 2. LOGAN VICTORIOUS!! A WHIG GAIN OVER THE HTATK ELElTIO.N. "The agony is over," and ihe Whigs rest from tlioir lalior with die satiTaclinu of knowing, thai nil has Immii done in Logan thai it was (MiMible lo im. Thi'ir united elforti have Iteen fro tied will) an incrtaud m'lfnri'if, despite Ihe desMi ration nod uovii'hlnig energy of tlie Oppontion. If every Whig rniuily hu done as well, we liehcve the State has gone for Clay. Tlie Whig majority at the Htnlc election for Governor was 6KU. We annex a statement of Uiu majorities of the difTWent towushijw as for as lMard from, showing a W'lug gain uf IA. ADAMH COUNTY. Inlelligrncer Extra West Union, Nov. 2. TllsT " 0r Votk iw r.AMi Tow nam p. "The returns from all the Townships in this county arc in, and it is with pleasure that we p'ak of the united efforts of our friends throughout the eouuty. Nearly every Whig voter walked up lo Ihe polls and deposited his vote tor Clay ami Frclinthuy-scii. nK'ii'tst I'olk aud Ddllas. In our Township there whs not a Wing but what was as Ihihv as though he thou"hl iiihiii Ins xiiislc ell'orl depended ihe success of Ihe Whig Electoral Tirkei iu Ohio in fai t, we have lieea informed thai the Whigs ia all ibe Townships were npially as active our own Thev were all aware of the aiiniiwms that had tone for ill from die iSialesiitnn (Jlfiro lo lite Umos of iIh Siale. that tach Ttriuhiu iIwhIA pirr t' ltnt an' morr l.nrnfiKO vote, trhick trrtihl n art the State nr I'rfk. The Wltins were delcrniined to a like iurrene, mid thru have mort than mone it. as wdl Im seen by Ihe following mull : Td' majority at the Oct. election uaa .102 I'mIL's " Nov. " " Xi Republican Extra Cadiz, Nov. 1,12 o'clock, night. HU7M FORCLAY! GREAT, GLORIOUS AND UNPRECEDENTED WHIG VICTORY IN HARRISON COUNTY! 77ic citadel of enoennm ttormeJ !Tht black flag of corruption and miirult, torn from tin ramyartt ! the promt ttari and iripei of our natiowtl Knsign. umlimmed in thtir liiMtre. and nntutlied in their purity, with the namet of VJ.AY,atvl FH K 1. 1 SHI II YH I'.N imrribed upon the ample fold of onr Country' a Manner, and thrown upon tfit blue vault of Heaven, 11 in triumph lo wave, O'er the Innd of Ihe Ireo and the homo of the bravo !" ITT The returns arc all in, and though mil official, may be relied upon as substantially correct. Majority for Clay and Erelingnuyseu, 'JHt voles! Reiug a gain of IV over Hartley, ami a gain over Gen. Harrison's vole of lit 10 of 16! It P A more triumphant and utrnnl victory was never nehievel in Ohio or the Union. 'Ihe Wings went into tlie conflict undisguised ! openly ami innuliilly advocating tlM-ir prinriph's, resolving by Ihem (o link or iirim. They luul no roiuoromisc lo innki- they made none. They met the ene my al the threshold ihey foiighl they conquered I Re juice Whigs of Hurnson ! of Ohio! of the Umuu ! From the UaWon Journal. Nov. 4. TIIERESUI.T IN MONTGOMERY. We hnve given the foil returns of ihe votes for Prrsident tn ihisrooiitv. The Whigs of Montgomery have nobly siif Inined their caudidule and their principles. They were thoroughly organized, and entered iihiii the rnntei feeling the iniHirtniice of (lie work Ihey had lo do, find diitrlmrged llieir duty lo their country ni pntrtols should disrhnrne il. No men ever labored more faithfully or more ardently lhau they and have greater cause lo congratulate themselves upon the result of thetr labors. There is a Wing gain in every township in the county ex cepl Jackson. There the Loco ndib'd me in their vote and majority by the ' skin ol their teeth" as a tardy Whig, which is a rure bird in thai town-hip, rrnrlied die polls p,t too late lo vole ! The higH of Jackson are ns true as steel ihey are overborne by a heavy majority but ihey always vole. Let them recollect thai they owe the Locos one, and pay them olT at the next election ! Clnv. Polk. Hartley. Tod. Xl'.H) ;iHfi 'AVili 3212 Whig gain over Octolwr election 8CIOTO COUNTY. PnllTHnTII, Nov. 2, WW. FMtort Ohio State Jimrnil'VUv election which look place mi yr-.tenlay, rewdtrd in an increael hig majority ol M in rnoin eounly over the Stale election. Majortiv al Hl'ale elerlmn, .T.l ' Presidcnlinl " .....4J2 Restfrl1u1ly, Slc. PERRY COUNTY. Wraierti Pol Extra Nov. 2. OfTrn Rurr.a, bit klvkk CoaqunHKii ! We have recffvttl tin n-lurus ol all ihe Township in this count v, and roulrary lo otir expert atmns, I'ulk's inajoniy is only SEVEN Voles over Tod's, tbir W hig friend, have done nolilv thev liMichl bkr li.ers, nml their manly exertion have been well rrwanlcd. The Locos roulideully cxiM-cled aud tiledi-i-d tliemM-Uns to the Locolnrn rlKpte al (ihoiibus W increase llimr majority to mil in tins iticy iml signally tailed, I hanks lo the ralhol h:gs, lit noble W b gs. Ih- true heart rd Whigs of Old Perry. Tliey have often li-eil In-alen, bol like mir Revolutionary aires, Ihey cuiiuol, they will uol be compiurvu. From Ihe Clinton Republican, Nov. 2. HAVE YOU HEARD THE NEWS FROM CLINTON! Mtiiontv lor Clav. MWI V li e cam. 117 ! There lieter ban been a party, since the Inundation nf thi gtivermnenl, dial hns devended to mh h mean bnsine the most tnlnuuMis slanders to blnrknoardmm lo cvery Ibinr rrptlL'unitl In luuh nnudet men as Ihe h'adt rt of lite locoloco pnriy. For the last eitflil months, the locoforo pen have been hlletl wild tlie vilest slander private rliarae ler has Itrrn riHitinuallv as-aih d lite iitl tidenr aiwt oli sreiie laintuasrr ha Iwvri thrown around tbefaimlv rirrstde bv these iiaiters Ihe busnr paotions of man have Ihi'U npealed lo the loreiirner has lieen bcsiMtlrred bv the hienloeo denia gognes aiwl made to lielieve that ll wli-s Were his deadlv i.iiivb mn.i In. 1 1- (iariilifui hna lirn aritl nn l.v lurli ttii-lM men as Amos keinlall a"d Sam Mednry at the I (too i; hi of such a man aa Henry Clnv nllnir the presidenlial chair Private circnlaii were ilisiriUitcd over tins Wiaie and no doubt over Ibo uniiin cool a mill Ihe irrosesl laUehood' Hirauist die whiff, and a solemn tharee made III the rirculHr Ufk'fp it itcret," that is, ito ti'il bi the wings know vi na-e il. I nis is rnaracteriMie ni iih' mnimiiiii n-nt. itui, in all ibe inlamtMi thints iheimriy lias IxenraiiKliI and iMtMih and we hnve im oViuht Imitlial a pil iMttple will mil tln-se e aluniuiators with a rebuke Uutt years will not ell -ire I font llieir memory. oblr lloiir-l rrrl(tM. It will be recollected that the N. York Evening Pntl and Us mndjiitors started out last suniincr, like the Ohio Statesman, in fierce denuueia ion of (he Annexation of Texas. The Locoforo eominillee of Tammniiy ll-ill issued Iheir nddresi Inst week, and the Posl stands "upright" aud swallows il. The Commercial Advertiser copies from Ihe address the fob lowing pa rn graph, and npeinln an extract from the circular on Annexation ii-uud by the Posl. The address gravely savs : The opposition of ihe federal parly lo the annexation of Teias oiiginate$ in it hottdtfij to the prt'grrtt of liberal principle:! and free i unfit itlinnt. Tins uic-lion should le con- ulereii a national ami uol a parl ipicsimri, as uhii the "- moil nt it may dcpi'iul Die sait-iy nun perH'tuity ot our Iih- erties. lexau inleiieudeiicn is ackuuwlcot;eil by somu of Ibe in.isl powerful nations of the earth the makes anil exe-cules her own laws; she has an army and navy sullicieiit lo protect her soil, and these being no mil led, the questionl-n-eomes one of mere exped ency. If 'IVias reinani uideenrl- nl, tier interesl will lend her into commercial alliances with oilier nations, injurious to us in a ecuninry (Hiiul of view, nnd absolutely dangerous when we contemplate the ascen dancy nf Enroiwan turner in a iiciiMihoruii' nation. We arc in favor of the annex n lion of Texru), lernnsc il will rive US command of the Golf ol Mexico: U-rnu-c we will thereby prevent her from (H-eomtng our rival in the markets of the world ; because il will prevent nnv Enroia-an power from en croarhieg upon our soil and iiilerlering with our eloniedir af- imrs i nt, i At it vt 1 1. 1. n r,. a nt.w au i-hit- il. r, i it i rs i iti in i nr.M,A r. t urt 1,1 ION FROM THE OLD STATES, AND PKKSENTM THE OM.Y FEASIRLE .MEANS OF AllOLlSIHMl THE INSTITUTION ALTOGETHER! became il will be throwing ihe broad shield of Ameriean lilny over a young Republic, whose existence Is now threatened by the mncuiiiaiious oi tictpnur -(ovrrnineni-. Can il Im possible lh;il party Jncinhimts io perfect, Ibe fear of its lah so great, as to force the editor of ihe Evening Post lo (Hit forth surh sentiments w ilhoot worn of comment or dissent f Can the editor of thai p,iter be Ihe same man, who, not six month' ago, under his own signature, put forth circular, nf which thu following is the oH'iiing paragrnph T Sir You will doubtless ncree with us, that the late Haiti more convention placed the Democratic party al the North in a position of (real ibtlirulty. We are roiisiandv reminded that tl rejected Mr. Van Ituriii and nnmaiated .Mr. I'olk. for reasons cnunrrieu wiiii ine nnmcuiaie ninirxauoii ot i cia i i.his wlnrh hud no relatn'it lo lla principle of the pari v. Nor wns thai all. The con vent inn wcil)e)oml the ntulio'iiy Jelcgnled lo its ini'mlters, ami adopted a restilution on ibe "Thark God, tlie deniorratic Locoforo parly stands I afiove reproach or suspicion ol wrong, icrrune n mis rw en me conflict. They foiiijht likt noble, Honf.st, UI'HIGHT men, and rfefv Ihe world s scrutiny of llieir conduct." Ohio Slates-man, Aon. 4. This is bold talk. Tlie question arises, is it the language of honesty, or is it the language of the iroffer. The two paragraphs which follow arc submitted as evidence or tit uprightneu of the claim, The paternity ol the first is attributed lo Ihe St. Vlainrille ilatettt, a paper that the Slatca- i is fond of quoting from. I ho second is from the notion I'Uot. A petier thai can "thank God" for such "noble, hon est, upright" companions in political warfare, is easily satis fied, and is clearly beyond "titpuion ol wrong." l no ease il made out without "scrutiny ,"nud muy be laken as confessed. From the Hi. Cluirsville Gaaelte. Dotcmrilk Ihe rulenr gmt-hentlcd Old Wretch! Down with the (lamlilcr and Blasphemer!" Appeal to an "(tiniest and moral people." "Lei the i oo iih Hide their henna mr aimmc, n mey havo anv. lor iioniiiiitliiiff it bloated, vulvar. (ioH-Jbr taken old Blasphemer, and hoary headed Duelist and (iamhler for thu first ollice in the pift of Freemen! Rend nnd blush for tlie ur.n of Basconu and the acta of the infamous coon cohorts, at this enlightened day, who would imprwe on Republican a vulgar, mean, tow, disgraceful and tyranmd wretch as President of Iho ottly "I a ml of the free and homo of the brave!" Down with the polluted leader ot whiggery. w lingo vices stink in the nostrils of honest whit and democrats !" Editorial Decency. Wo extract the following from tl io Jliwton Pilot. What a liberal, courteous. Christian, gentlemanly person must the editor bo! What a delectable shelter would the persecuted tor conscience sake find under the mantle of his expnn- tve benevolence! What a hospitable home would our Pilgrim Father hnve found with this pnragonof charity aud good will, had he dwelt upon the snores on which they landed ! JV. Y. Com Mv. ft e recommend to you no party m condemn no candidate bul one, and he nt TIItiODORti FRB- lilNlillU YEN, Wo have nothing tn say to him as a W hig, we have nothing to say to Mr. Clnv, nor in any other Whiff mutch. HUTTOTIIKPRKSJ- DKNT OF TlIK AM KRM'AN HOARD OF FOREIGN MISSIONS, the friend ami patron of Ihe hirks and Cozes, tve have MUCH TO SAY. We HATE Ail intolerance toe dislike his associates, and tve shudiler at Ihe UUicknessand bitterness of that school of sectarians to whom he behnfrs, and amongst whom he is regarded as a leader and ctnej ! I : "At Cleveland, thev Ixniirlii up the Itomiui Cnthulic 1'ricsl, nnd eu! him on a musiomry tour through this region for Henry ('lay." Ohio St'itemtan of i,eteranij. We copy tho above from n teller in lasl evening's Statesman, written in and conveying the returns from Summit ( oimty. Wo plnce H be lore our tnlholic readers, Hint they may form a correct idea of the value of tho professii ns ol loculocoiim 111 favor of their seel. As long as Catholics and nalurnlixed citizens lend theniselvi-s to promote the interests of liK-ofoeo dcmngngiies, they will he rnjoled nnd fondled with great tenderness, but !el l he in dare lo exercise thnt freedom of opinion and choice our iiililulious guurniitce lo them, and ihey will be set down as vile nnd unprincipled knnves ami fools, who are unlit In enjoy nnd ineapnblc of appreciating rivd and religious luVrlv. The day is not far ditaul when these things will be verified. Remember it. toltprt of I eias, a -iit-jccl not tielore the country when tlny were elected, ujHiu wbtrli. therefore, Ihey Were not ititni led.) which seeks In mterxille into the pnriy rile a new duet rum hitherto unknown aimim us, AT V A It WITH SI IMF, OF I UK i:M AIU.ISMI.II IMtlM'H'I.KS AMI AlilKHt- Iti NT TO TlIK Ol'IMIlNS AMI I'LI.I.INGS OF A GULAT MAJtiKITV OF NOKTIIKIIN r Kl.t.MLN From tho Clermniit Courier, Nov. I. TlIK LLKCTIO.N WHIG GAIN OF BS1 We five below llm Vote of tin county as far as received. Franklin townhtp gives us a tnnjonly of one tieuig a gam of cighti in Monroe tlie lu-os are repotted to hnve increased thnr mniontv one. Hhould Miami (the nnlv tntviihip to hear from I ' ns '-etore, our g;un on lite Governor's vine will be over KlGHTV. Thisriull islnithlv s-ratiUnii'looiir In a it sniut Im dietdv mtHiihiuiriuMir omionents. The Whes have done llieir wlntle duly, and are emu led to Ihe llinuks of their tnrnds lliroulionl the Mule for their tlie mniiiwr in Whit h thtv hnve home ibemsehes Ihrooch tlie rnnltict. It r I.A'IT'.K. Mnimi is ut in Locoforo mniorily r. dnced thrte ratet. So we have gained on them tu all tlie iiwiihjps rxrct Ohtoninl MuuriH n A redueed tliuir majority bi in dm counly ! 1 1'olk's majority is WU. Reporter F.i Ira Luna, Allen Co., Nov. S, O. K ALLF.N TKIUMPIIANT! im WHIG GAIN! l v lh returns received (M-r private espresi, the vole will aland, Clny WKt Polk ?itWhig gain, KICK There are three townships to hear frmnt tiny will probably swell tlie Whiggaiu to 1hhiI 110. Hv this result it will be seen that onr prediction in the F.i-tra ltetnrter of Hilt nil., thai we would reduce the Loco majority in Allen eounly one third, on the firl dnv ol nvemler, was not made at mere hatard. Our Inends throurhoul the Stale must nrknowledgn, thai wi h tho oltacles wehaoto contend with hs-re. Allnt counly Imt done her duly. If the Wings tbrounlHHil the Stale hne done but half at, well, our oinjonly willBemlcoustemaiioii tike hot bol into the liHuforo ranks and joy to every good whig henrl. Palladium K lira New LisUm, Nov. L Thnt same old Coon's alive and kicking, Fat and sleek, Im dines ou cluckeu. TO TlIK CNIVKIISAL WHIG PARTY. GHLKTlNtl The iudomilulile W hig of nld tM'iuj:liiedCilunibinna,haw Stain met llm dei I rue lives and I'olk ites. and made such in- ru,ids upon llwir hitherto impregnable phalanx as lo strike terror and dismay into the hem is of tin dastardly rcviler and Irs flu cers nf ihe great, pure, pninotie, ami honest Miles-msn, IIKMtV CLAV. Il the Wlna in the other counties have done as well, Clay's majority m Ohio will not le Irs than l(I.IMK). We return our sincere thanks to the nobk Wings of ihe roonly for the tralnus and untiring Hlorts Mit forth by llu m in every lown.lnp, in dikalaisv llm public mind and lo instruct the uiiimfonm'd and dereivid in rrlerrnce lo Whig principles. The result proves, thai the low, beastly. rWl like faUrhomls puMishctl agauisl Mr. Clay, by the Ohio Patriot aud llm Locofuco Couuly L'ominillsa ot Vigilsucs, I lie Kill Totlnaj. Tlie necessity of a registry Inw, or some suitable enact-enl lo prevrnl illegal voting, llmmglKNit the Stales, is lie coming more and men- appnrenl every year. In New York, some three or four years ago, Iho Whigs enacted a registry law which nnswcied an cirellmt purjMite in die city of New York, but no sooner o'ld the Lotos get the ascendancy than it was repealed. Why f it w ill te akel. There rail Im but once answer. In this State, the Locm pretend lo he very anxious for some means lo restrain illegal voting. Let us lake them at Iheir word, and ns the Wings have the power, let them at ihe neKl session of Iho lgiihiture lake tlie suit- ject into serious rotisidera'inn aud pas a fair ami wholesome law. If our opponents oppoo it, we shall then be able tn expose their hollow pretensions lo tlie ieople, and c shall elTectunlly lest llieir horror of " pipe laying, ' about which they talk much.b'it practice more. he Mip'r-, sinre lla1 roinineiicement nf the fall elections, have Ivcincd with delected instances of fiiiudiileiit toting. Cincinnati lias had its full share, ami the whole Slate suffered much al ibe Governor's election from the fraud of our opim- units tn carry the local elections. We have our eye on a county where much nf it was practised, ami its presence in inosi of ibe counties will be apparent on a contp.in-on nf tho vote east al the Smte election, am) al the i'rcsnlenluu t Ice- lion. Much of Iho Whig gam wc think al iIm latter, will he found lo have arisen, not so touch from an increased W his vole, as front tlie rbsence of " piro layers," arising Irotu llm wiuil of siillirieul loc.il rafrrpriic, stiiuuhitt d by the ilnlr fur counly and di.lnct oflici-rs, lo secure the sHeodnnre of pv triotic subjects. Williiut H'archiug for cases lo iuptort mir position, ihe iwn following present themselves. We gi ihcnt as evidence of the necessity of preventive euacluieuis, and promise to recur again to Ihe subjerl. ll.l.t.OAl. VnTiao. 'I'bo work is iMynn. In einminglbo poll list ol the voles M iimuiintl, hmulieila ol utimes nie eorh-l in soino ol ihe wants unknown lo any rilisen, and winch cnnuol acre Ite Iraretl to miy liuuinn being. Oim ninn was arrested on rsniurday who UMtl a ileiul brother s natural, isalion pers, aud wore in Ins vole upon ihrm. More sun ilnr caies will be brooch I lo light. Cincinnati (tax, Oct, 'J, From the Baltimore American. Nov. 1. ll.l.Kntl Votino. The remirl nftlie trial ami convict inn of a vi it Mii.i.IlH, on a charge ot mm piracy with lourtes-n other persons to vole ilhfiUly at Ihe Hnlierii tonal elVeliou, ihwhues furls of a very ugmlirniil kind as to llm moile bv which iho Locoforo iimjoiiiy iu this r il v was twehvtl lu its i extraordinary sis e on Ihe occasion relcrn il to. How many vote were cnsl by those lnurleen iersniis no not appear. I be testimony shows that they were voted in tlie Third, Fourth and Fourteenth Wards) but tl is tint con- c bive thai llm wliole number volctl m uarh iH thoe W anh l el H is altoelber Hisibhi thnt llienst fourteen ersons did miutllv rast forly-tuo voin, on llm sccmid ol October ia llm CUV of Itnlltmorv. I'h s trial has been conducted tn oiien Conrti witnesses on both sides have testlied( aide roun-el have argued ihe cm an impartial jury nns oeeuieii it; nnu me retuii mow iianos as one ot tiioc uiiniivraiHe yurrj wmrn mt sopmiry ran ti ginte, wnirn uo uijrctiuiiy ran aner one oi inose mosi preg uaut Aiifft which demomirate bevotid doubl that dm trim ril iseiis of Italiunorr have hud Iheir jul sovereignty invaded, tlie:r nuhts as freemen mlriiiircd, and dm true expression o their w ill vitiated by the loul iiilumou ol Iraudulunl and illegal votes into the bidlol box. ( hher rates ol conviction lo the numler of some thirty and more have occurred. TIm hnvt Iteen mosily iiiiltvidual eaes decided Imiorr but ices of llm neare. In all these iit stances Ihe illegal voting was rouimilled al Ibe election of Oriotter sim, imr lias any inlance crctuieU, withui our knowledge, of the rnnvirmoo of any Wing for thai olVvuc Bunuisl tlm laws ami the r it hit of Irral voters. When il is remeinlered how dilliruli li must Im, from the very nature ol the case, In detect illegal voting, if il is not di-eovered al llm lime of the prrtctraiion, the extent to winch it was probably carried, when in man- miet hare been drteeted, may tm in some degree inlerred. In most mslmieei of illegal voting, llm guilty ernus are from llm reumry, nr from other towns and cities, and ol rourse ihey eo Ihiuw Willi ns much esmnbtion as pouihlc aller Iho coiuuiuuinliou of uieir irauiiiuiui purposes. DiiTni'CTiva Flits, A rrioui fire oernrrcd al8i Lou is, on 1'iwsdav, Iho tMU inst. Tim Huw Mills, consisting of a Untiring mill-and carding factory, owned by James C. Hut' ion, Hr. Culver and Mr. Hlack, and valued al 5tn,ixH) nr flfl.OCO, were entirely ilestro.ied, logcther with some tlO bureli of Oour. Tire fire was accnkuially rommunteaitd. Abntm of the frimkiiiii privilege bv at Cabinet Officer!Wo learn from ihe Greenbrier Yn. Observer, thiil a large package of vile parly tracts were recrived at the Lowjslmrg I kI ollice, on Tuesday, the 'JVlli ull., directed to the corresponding conniiiltec of ihe lleniocrnlic purlv', and franked by U. A. Wickbllc, rosl Muler tieucral. When one of Ihe highest ofiicers of the Government, whose peculiar province is, lo guard agtiiust mhI ollice abuses, tints prostitutes the ihority vested in him, il is tune for Iho friends of Ihe country lo enk (Hit The present corrupt ad.nniiilraliou hm for some lime ninuifcsted a disposition to abandon every li me honored and houoruble prnrlice, but wo were hardly prepared to witness surh a movement on llm part of one who lias preteudrd lo cxerrise Ibe severest survcdlnucc over the officers connected with his department. Famiio akii Ilosot'il. It it said that seme of the Lon- Inn clubs hnve adopted, ul lie suggestion of the llev. Sidney inilh, tlm plan of rejecting, I'er complimeiilDry nduusiou or memlmrs, Ibe citizens of ihe repudmluig fsintes in America. If ladiion and honour could be nmde once in llic world lo unite elferting a g'Mnl thing, how uiiexiectetlly rniniuon sense ild hnve occasion in rejuico. Honour has failed in 'In in stance of die Htules her voice is lienrd no longer. Now wlm knows bill tlie fear of licing culled "no pentlemitn," nmy once ugain enkindle Iho chivalry of the South and slir up the tn- terettof die Notth. Fashion manufactures its hero, find con. n.ikes llm coward, Mny not llic two inllueiicci be combined! The Prstecl Brfortt I'm, Tlie election is mew over, and wc ere at leisure lo turn our nlteulion lo the pro ec I hetnrv us. Tim pnriy who have so irr al)iiieil tne rouli'k'ure oi trie pmuie, wno nave neceiveci llieir own frieiiils, and opprvsM-d H-eir opKiieuis, have leeu rletl I nun inmer liy nil luiiiuiiui iMopii!. I'itiiiiui, 0 cll ns coniipi, IIh-v liiive broken every prom i to miido to ir coiistiluuiiis, auu dtsnpponiieii ine noiies or nit wnoeou- liil in them. Instead ttt leci-lnlinc lor the comt nl I lie pon xtcinhnif to all niuid juiliee, und eii,al protection, llicy ItHve practiM'd ihe groel frauds, and per)'! ruled ihe mo.t iiitu enl nt: cream n uiHtn tm ri"ius uuo propem oi iiirge ri it riliens. onr prete ami orators itHveoonuy pro-lined war iiimiii uidintrv, orosrribing not only Ihe wcuithv, but tluHi nmUol (MHir aud laborious cilucus, whuarehtnr it v emh'nvoruiir to aniiure orn oeny. And why this wnr uimhi pruiH iiy t look at ineicnuen oi Locijfitcni-iii, and see wla they are : men who m-ver latxir, nor wuh their own good will ever enrniil mi iHine.l doll.ir. by the sweat ol their brow or llm exercise nt tlie nienliil Incot- i'ii who hint upou llm mibbc, aud live by holding pule he o Hires, wurh are the men wim nave nit ine iremoenuic party for llieir own private ends ( who h.ivt u-eil ower lor ie imriNise ol iktih.-oi.hiiii' pn y nteemiiiiKy , nun nave pnniiiuiod i lull party atcembincy liy llm grostett abuse ol the r sitcress. 'I'lie people have indignantly spurned those bhonest ami worthless servants from ollice ( ihey have lieen dnvmt out iku hungry dog Iroin a meat )ioum. I m-ir own pnriy, dis. u-ieil Willi tlioir r.ipncitv and worililrs-nes., hnve, m mt iy of Ihe Fstiile, dcserle ami repodinted tlie knaves, wli hrtve so loin ilevmin-! Ihe suhslauce iH llm iMiiple, whom- ghls they liave Irnuiplvd on, and wliu-e mleretU limy liuve ill-regarded. I liosu to whom the owrr tins imon transirrreii, nnvo now uiknin duty In N rlonn. I lie ps-opio nHk io uu'in lor re inn I h'V are extieeteilio UMMiH'ir imitv exertions io re lore llm punly of the laws, ami secure to all jotriie their iusl Kills In vimiiraie tneir own innmixnii u iiei ini ti, -too io restore lo the peiipleol Ohio lb, d nubt and eipial goteimmeiil if which thry have necn uepnvetl oy uiMittiii and ini-rmcV' iius deinni!ojues. W hile ihe nin ordv thus assert their rignis we mm inai nolhmtf will Im done iu a vindictive spirit. As a unity ihoiild diMMtin reM'tumeui, nun lorgei nnsi iio.irics. as moil, it in.vv bethlbcull lo Imni.h Urn rernlliTiton ol Urn aim. and in.ihunsnl course ol our npimiM-nls llu ir loul nml tndi-ceul rabimiiv of ourlmsl nmn, their tuvnsinn ol iwir riclu. ih-ir dnnug aitub uHm mir proiM-ruy. J Im laws that were ile lo plunder our Imnhs anl destroy our rmnm'rre, are till on our statute bKiks, Hint Ihe judge pledgul in toidniLlhl lo eiilorce I new l,iw, nre on Ine Itencn i nml we run not rhe mirev to iliee living moiiiiim-nls of a degrade twrtv loeislniion. nut we mut mH imitate surh wirlche niiMH'l-- we nii.t do nothing tor ntrrr mny triumph nuih' mg in relnlialion lor wrung none us. i.ei us aiiair iiuisanrei winch olfiwl tlie public seii-o correci evil leiiore nghl Inn loi all be dune in cilnum, under a due scute o rrMMii l..l,t nml wuh I In? ni:ien.iiimol v whirh iK-cotne ereal people. ( iKriNNfffi AUai, rtuf. 4. sllhU. The tide is told. Ohio 1ms spoken wiili a Whig energy rhilienricnunf In btes, iut el'idiening to iricno. sim o niikcn the ihrnll ol l.ocoloeoiim, and dec I red lor Ihe cause nnd ihe rounlrv wuh mi rmib.ilic voice We neeil not sav how we feel mi ibe necnion. never loublinsT ir a moiimni llm tnlcgriiy ot the good people Him to those luiHl.iineuiai h-piiniicnii pruieipics nexi mere liv our Ml hers, wewore.nl rHHe, prepnren lor a mnjoriiy. (bit . know mg iIh' mlene arliviiy of onr opponents, hihI the rekles amount of fraud practiced, aud ol IhUi IukhI circulated, nguuist Mi. lav und Urn W lug I'nriy.liy tm-ui, n ft-ared oiilv that n ionion nt thorn Ineudlv in the goiil mi so might Im misled or deceived through an hoimsl riodub-v. Our fears were cmindloss. Tim rruh, mi nr, how a ' tieady W lug gam, and a robust, hontthlul publir seiitinH'iit, 1 encouraging m cvtrv wjy io ine wno vntueii tne nmnu, or Imped lo leel Us tindiliiy imvomi ine reirn oi inenon. a friends of Mr. Cl.iy, we rejoiro nl this result. We re juice thai a patriot so v rsecu led thnt an Imuest nmn so blackened bv bad men lor dithoimst purposes thai a public servant so Iriithlul tu every irwl, nml mi devoted In the whole country, ycl so abused lV lJ narks, ami lout tinrnmrers, wno unoti aim bed nt Iu elevntod purity, and unyielding ori has U-en dins d, fended by tlie vi toe nnd inlt'liigeiice ot Ihe people ot Ohio, not we rejoice still more in the glorious con i derm ion. Unit, as tnr as the ll'ickeva nlnlu enn do it, llm Nation, nml ihe Government ul the Nation, u reieurd Irnm llm h.uid of a nbal wlm, had ihey surreedrd, would hnve overthrown eve ry etlnhhslmd iititge, ami every established principle, declares! r Imhers and imiven tiy onr rinertence. lo Im Urn on IV tnleitunrd of llm Repul-hc. There Is joy nl our party and lersniinl succetsi mil tlie re is deeper J"V Ui Uie ConvKtion, lliut NiMfl titt count i tf it .i' Cinri'itrtiJJi (MrirlJr, I'iik III MvniTAttf Wino lli.tittn or WgTniKSTrR. Among llm banners tioriie in the prnrrstimt on tlm 'M, wnsmm Irotti tho W etlrtmtter Clny Club, im which was in-cribed, "Old W rirheicr llnl -h Gold count not laiv Imr in I TOO, and raimul iu UIU." llm poruliar signilicauee im the tl.iir wns nniug lo the furl tlml it vv.u Imrue bv Colonel John Paulding, one nl die fnmily nf the enpinrer nl Andre, ted bv lnnc nn wen, n gMnn-on ot aiioincr oi tlm r,vpiurersi both of w hout are like iheir lathers, active hg ui Wcstr hosier. A. J'. F.ipren, Cottosj Cnor is AsiHit a Tlm F.ditor of the (la- relle. puMithcd alCahswalm, says : "Not many weeks since there were rmnplitim poured in from all imarteis, aliotil tlm worm. Urn waul ul nun, ami various oiimr tluugt all lemtiiig In injur i llm present nop. We hnve had orcn-ion to Im nh-tent fiom CnliawKb.1 a good dcnl widen a wrok nr Iwn, and speak ffem ac'ual observation, ns well as from Information gained among our farmers, and truly we have never seeiiMieli rrnfM bvioftt. Moil nt nttr planters have ma 'e largely over wIiai limy ran pick out, and even dm nil hills look white so luxuriant is dm rot ton. Those wlm. a month or Iwu ago. wore complaining, havo since bad tu hire hands to gu their rtops out. ' From Ihe N. Y- K vetting Mirror. " Tiiru.i.ino Incidknts" is a phrase that will no longer keen." bin if we may use it once more Imioro il is pul bo- youd uoslril'dom, wo should say il described very, well Ihe following escape : Ou ihe even i ng of Ihe 17lh ull. Thos H. Talford, a respectable citixen of Tuscaloosa county, while in piirsuil ot hit horse, fell into a well about 70 or IH) feel deep. He remained there lluil nighl and llm next day, crushed by ihe lall on bricks at llm bottom. No person heard his cries lor help, until a 'il-lle buy, Imlwcou sunset and dark, threw u dead pig into llio well. 01 r. iidlord then stroke, ami the news mioii spread. Hopes were brouirht and Mr. Joseph T. Fierce, a wnrthy me chanic, descended llio well with a ro iBstened lo his body, ami nxmg aiiniiier rom rounn ihe enett oi Mr. I aiioru, uoiit were dravvu up. The Monitor stales dint Mr. Talford wns in the lust singe of exluiusinlioii. He had been in llio well about i hours, doubled up as lie tell, unable to move his limbs. Ho was unable to stand or to move lux legs die concussion of the spinal nerves Imd purnlyted him. He was taken to a dwelling, where ho received tlm attention of several medical gciillcrueUj nnd the prnM.'rl ot his recovery is fair, though Ins extremities were still torpid. Mr, T. is fifly-ouc ye rs of nge, nod ihe lather of six children, llm preservation from a dreadful nnd lingering death, was truly providential, and hid he uol been discovered, his disappearance would have been a painful mystery. One more " thrilling incident " positively the last time:' Okkahiiii. Ai eioKNT. The modier of a largo family, whilst croNsuif the rail rnnd nt the Gcrmniilown depot, Hpriug Garden, was run over by the loconiolivt,. Hlie was humid y mangled j nnd a bystander, who was drawn lo the spol by the groan of Ihe injured individual, mercifully put an end lo her suffering, by inserting the blade of a dirk-kuile inlo a vital part. A coroner's jury was immediately called, who found a verdin of " served her right," uud gave her body lo be made into mintages. Why will mil n cerlniti editor who lives not a hundred miles from Columbus, and who gels up " incidents " on dm shortest notice, Biid on llm slightest possible occasions, lake a liiul from llio above, and pire his readers the thrill of disgust induced by his favurilc exclamation over llm performance uf Mime bungling demagogue. Nuvki, Aftit Intkhkhtino. Wc U iiiii thai our oM fellow citizen Mr. K. Downey, now living in New Albany, has obtained a patent for a machine lu aid in tunning leather, by which Im can manufacture the article iu hull' the lime it has herelolore laken, nnd save one-hall of the hark. He uses no sletm or chemical agent, but simply deprives the Indus of a sort of mucus, and introduces llm bark li'pior, by means of his machine. The oily council of New Albany have appointed n coinuutleeof practical und scientific men, nt hu reipieit of Mr. Ilowjiey, to examine the process nnd machine, and lo rejmrt lliereou ul as early a day ns practicable. We under-ttiiiid that ihe committee are favorably imprinted as btr as ihey have gone in their (jsuunnniious. l,ouitrille Journal. FitorntF.snvK Dkmuchacv. On the evening of dm 7tlt of October, a letter was left hi thu lieouumy Hotel, iu Leon-ouiy, Heaver Co., l'u., in which il was stilled tliut il llm Kcoiiomiles voted ibe Whig lickel thfir town would lie bnrtifd down, and le-id would be und, and they would be treated Mor mon-hkr. The day before the election, the citizen of thai industrious community held their regular annual meeting, and resolved lo vole the Whig lickel- Thi the Locos did mil like, uud they threatened those adopted riiieus front Germany with id noalli, il tnov exerriseii llieir rights us iroemeii in nc- inlani e with ibe dictates ol llieir own vies of right. Aud this is the kind ul regard ibe laller-day lVuiocruts liavu lor the people. I'lie Idler mentioned above prevented Ihe Lcononnles from ott lie nl die fSlale elertion on the lilh lift. The Incts nre uiv- 'il by Mr. Maker and others, iu ihe lleuver Argus. Cltve- ma tletala. CnilllTT IS I'ol.lTirs. The New York Observer, liM the following eihlotinl paragraph, vvliich we cotuineud most imi-ly lo tlie consideration ul n good tunny mople of our pinhitaiitf. 'We have often seen the necessity of mutual charity in tho linrch, but iu lhee high partv tune we lind greater iM rasioii ir its uerciM' nut of tlie 'burch; we ini aii niiioig (.'hristmut ii the iioliiirid liebl. We hear alinot drtilv, from mm side or Ihe oilier, 'I do uol sec how n I 'hmliau can vole fri a lick- l, wlnlu ll l probable that the speaker htinsell is ipule as iicii a matter ol nslomtlimenl to the one wnose eomlucl ex cites his surprise. Now nil nieu do not see wuh the same ')i's, nor ponness the name light, and il is our duty to accord oilier me ame nneriy in uihiuts oi opinion mat we rimin ' our-elves. And il is well lor Us In bear in mind thnt while we mx iurtwMiteurij in our neighbor, Im is perhaps la-liohlni greater mcouiuieiu y m us. .Mednrv, the loafer editor of llm Ohio Hiittesman, said nl hi: lliilliinore Convention, thai his Wlaie would eo for no oth er l.orotoro but Van llutin. rnm stumbled on tlm truth lur once Ohio will Uol go for I'olk! I'hila. Forum. firn J nekton Jlr. Ailniua We find tho following letter from Gen. Jackson, in ihe Cincinnati Garotte. It is a reply lo die addre- of Mr. Ad mits, whirh we hnve just published, and H is right therefore ihnl wc ahouhl give the General a hearing. W e sludl make no roimnenls none am needed ou such a production. Tho letter is given as wo hud it, italics and all. IIkrmitaoe, Oct. 23, 1HI4. Dear Sin: I thank you fur the copy of tho In telligencer containing the address of Julm O.. Ad-anm to tho Voting; Men's Club of Boston, delivered iiitbcytli insl. This address is a labored attempt on the pnrt of .Mr. Adams to diecrcilittliett'Stiinnny of Mr. hrvino;, wlmno stntcuionts were rt-t'errud to in inv letter to the Hon. A. V. tlrtin n, of February I'-'tM, and iko most ot Iho nniductions Iroin n dt-a'nseu nuiiu. proves little clfe but its own weakness and fully. iI v letter to Mr. llrown was publmlicd on the Wilt of Match, Ir-l l,iii Washingluti city, whuro Mr. Ad ams was nt llitil time. II lias been tin; subject nl comment in tho ncwtpnier presses nf both parlies nail portions ol Ho union; und tne stnU'tiif nis ol Mr. Krvniff, and the inferences from them havo not been deeiuctl worthy of tho holicu nl' Mr. Adams until now, just befuro iho clorc of tho l'residunlial cativnss, lio pretends to havo (lucovered I hut jjrent injtisticti has neon dnito linn, and he innkes a child- iidi appeal to his own diary, to screen mm I ruin tho udiur.i which has fallen upon his treachery to tho bent interests of Ins country. Mr. Adam litis been snven months in nrennring this lisiiuo of deception fur the public, 1 pledge my country men. as soon as 1 can obtain tho pipers not now in my possesion, referred to in tlie letter to Air. llrown. In pruvo, nut only that Air. A dims lias no eniiao of complaint nninsl me, but that Ins veracity, iko his tliplomucy, cannot bo propjK'd up by his PIART.1 1 sny, in advance nf the review I shall tnko of this extraordinary production, thus hernlih d before iho public on tho ove of thu IVsulcntial election, ilint tho asHertion of my having advised the treaty of I mil, is a bare I need falsehood, wiinout tlie siiminw of prtmf lo sustain it ; and that ihe entire address is lull of statements at wnr with truth, and ot se n lime nl a boslilo to every dictnto of (Hitriotisin. Who tint a traitor to Ins country can appeal aa Mr. Adams does to the youth of Hosion, in the clrmo of his address? H)onr trial is approaching. The wirit of freedom and the spirit at sfactru are drawing logtthrr for the deadly conflict of nrmt. The annexation of VVxij (o'ti L'ninn is the blast of the trumpet for a Joreign, nrd, terile and Indian imr, of irntrA Ihe Utirernmrnt of the United Stairs, fallen inlo faith-Irss handi, has already twice given the signal ; fii st., by n shnnwliss treaty njtrUd by it virtuous iin(e; rriul fitrijin by the glott. of defiance hurled by the ojimt He o nutlijirahnn at tlte aroirtit policy aj the Ifnlish empire, peacefully to promote the trtinrtton of slavery Ihruughuid he uvrld. Young men nf Boston ! burnish ymtr armor prepare for Ihe conflict ; and I sny to ifou, in the tanauage of (lalgaeus to the ancient Britons, think of your forefathers think of your pnsteri' df!" What is this but deluxinn, or whnt is wore. a direct appeal to arms lo npKo the decision of tho American people, should it be fnvumble to tho an nexniion of Texas to the United States? I tnny be blnmed for spelling Mr. Kr vine's namo wrong" ; but I trust 1 'It nil never deserve lite Mlinmo of miBtakiiiir ihe path of duly, where my country's riirhta aro involved. I believe, from the rlmi'losures inn dc to mo of the transactions of IH'.i, thnt Mr. Adams surrendered tho intercsis nf tho United States when ho look Ihe S.tbino river as the honn- diiry between us and Smin, when ho nnht havo on no lo Iho Colorado tl not In the Hin del ISorle, Such wns the nnturnl inference from tho facia staled by Mr. Krviiitf; and there is nothing in tho nrcount now iriven ot tho netfotinlion to alter this impres sion. I ho atldress. on tho contrary, does not nt all relievo Mr. Adams, It proves that he was then, sa now, m alien to the true interests of his country j but he had not then, as now, Uio pretext of co-oper ation with (ireat Britain, in her peaceful endeavor to extinguish slavery throughout tho world. is there an American patriot thai can rend tho above extract, and other similar ones that may be tnken from Iho adilretm of I his monarchist m disguise, without t feeling of horror ? Grant tbnt the tlintt-sands of those who think, with mo, that tho addition uf Texas to our Union would bo a national benefit, aro in error aru we to be deterred from the expression nf our opinions hy th rents of armed opposition? nnd is it in this manner tint iho peaceful policy of (ireat Ilritiin is to bo carried into execution, should tho American people decide that wo are not inorror? Or dives Mr, Atlanta mean to intimalo thnt iho will of (ireat llntniti should bo Iho Inw for American Internum, and will bo enforced nl iho point of the bayonet by those who descended from the patriots ol our llevoliitmnr Instead of going lo British hislnry for trntimenti worthy of tho republican youth of our country, nn an occasion so vitally allotting our national n'ntVty and honor, 1 would recommend thorn in lien. Washington's Ks re we II Address, and particularly hit warning to us tu avoid entangling alliances with foreign nations, and whatever is calculated tu create sectional or geographical parties at home. i am, very truly, your obedient servnnt. ANDKKW JACKSON. (ion. Robert AaMiraofo, The Ciller Iel. The letter below, which we copy from ibe North American, fixes the responsibility of tho duel between Cilley and Graves, on the friends of Mr. Cil-ley, where we have supposed it rested. This letter contains new evidence uf this fact; and it is due to Mr. Clay, against whom, in reference to this affair, calumny has done its worst, to lay it before the pub lic. Tlie American vouches tor the high character and integrity of the writer,: Washinoto.t, Oct. 27th, 1844. Ge.itlf.mf.si, Much is said at this lime about the duel between Messrs. Cilley and Graves. I wn living in Washington at the time this duel occurred, and wns on terms of familiarity with several of Mr. Cilley's personal frtends. I was with the late Mr. William Ward of tho War Department, the bosom friend uf Mr. Cilley, the evening before the duel took place, uud was informed by him what weapons were to be used, and who were to bo on the ground ns seconds and friends. I expressed my great surprise at these sudden arrangements, and asked him if it was not possible that the meeting could bo obviated through the intervention of Mr. Clay, He stuted in reply that Mr, Clay had already exerted his influence to prevent it, and hud so worded thu communication of Mr. Graves to Mr. Cilley aa seemingly to throw the responsibility of the meeting on Mr. Cilley. I asked him then why Mr. Cilley did not avail himself of this circumstance and allow an adjustment of the difficulty to take placo. lie said thnt Mr. Cilley himself was disposed to this, but his friends were in favor of his meeting Mr. Graves that New England men had so generally declined duels, that an impression had been obtained that they were deficient in courage, -that they consequently suffered indignities to which they would not otherwise be exposed, and that it wu8 time for some one to show that there was chivalry nt the North as well ns the Smith. I asked Mr. Ward if ho would not go to Mr. Cilley ond his friends that night and try to prepare the way for an adjustment of the difliculty on tho field. He said it would avail nothing; that Mr. Cilley's friends wcro (inn and determined; that tliey hod every confidence in him with his rifle; that he was a dead shot at the distance at which tlie duel was to bo fought. Meeting with Mr. Ward, after tho fatal termination of thu duel, I remarked to him that attempts were made to etist the responsibility of the duel on Mr. Clny. Uo replied that is ungenerous and un just, 'I he responsibility of the meeting and of the lirst nre, rests with Mr. Cilley's friends and I am one, but the responsibility of his dcuth rests with his see on tls. That you may know to what degrcoof confidence the statements in this letter are entitled, I apjwnd for Jour use my name. Very truly yours. Another llurrtenue. of I,iTo nnd Destirac-liou of I roper I y. Wo learn from the Western Kx post tor, printed at (ndeieiidence, Jackson county. Mo., that a destructive hurricane visited that section of thu Slate about !) o'clock on iho night of Ihe WSlh uiu Its clTecls were lamentably dimistrous. Thnt paper says : It camo o cross the prairie, nnd the first we henrd of its effects, was at the Mission, Jl miles from Wettpnrt,which it injured considerably, from whence it passed over nur county, in anorlh-enst direction, striking the river shout one half mile above Wayne City, at C. N. Hall's mill, and have heard of its keeping down the river fur some miles, but as yet we have not heard where it commenced nor where it ended. It varied from five to soven hundred yards in wid'h, and pursued a straight direction. Wo give the following list of the killed and wounded: Mrs. McGiU, Livingston, killed; Mrs. Stone, do.; Mr. Ken had three children killed, and himself greatly wounded; Miss Mury Middleton, and Dr. Martin's son, near Wcstpott, were killed. A stranger who had been moving a family In I'lalte, and encamped opposite Owen's landing, wits found dead, his wngnn blown entirely away. Thomas Hedges had all his houses and furniture blown oft', aud several ot his family badly crippled. Samuel Latnbett, houses, itc, gone, wife and another person badly injured. J. Head ley, houses, &c. blown oft; J. King, do.; Mrs, Hoggins, do. and herself badly crippled; Mrs. Ha- gnn, do., nnd herself and negro man crippled: Calvin lctoy, no,, and several ot Ins family crippled; Dr. Martin, on; Mrs. lluckhsrt, do.: 1 nomas hmilu. do.; C. N. Hall's steam saw null, roof bluwn oft, grist mill nn nouses blown entirely away damage about $roo. We have henrd of several others killed and wound ed, and it inch more property injured, but do not know the particular. Wo hove no idea that the half has been told, or yet heard, of Ihe loss nf lives and the instruction ol property occasioned by this awtul lornauo. The wkw rRHKinr.jiT or Tbxas. ll has hcen asserted (nays tne Albany Argus) that the new Pres ident elect nl 1 exas (Lr. Jo.xks is against annex ion nnd that Ins election may be regarded aa ex prcsaions of tho people of Texas adverse to that measure. This is not so. The National Vindica tor, published at Houston, contradicts the story, on the authority of a letter from Dr. Jors, published in ine nnrnson I lines ot me v.ith July, excusing himself for non-attendance nt the political meeting of his friends during the campmn of which the following is an extiact: "Wcro I to make a lour through iho count rv. I should either bo compelled to neglect my official mailers or to resign. The latter would, indeed be very ensy; but in tho present crisis of our neirotia- ions, it would, perhaps, look like a desertion of inv post Secretary of State.) I am not yol without holies of annexation, and as I have had a irrnat deal tn do in this matter, I h-tvesome pride in wishing tn go in rou iMi wim 11. 1 lie chartrc that 1 am 'inimical to further negoiintinns willi Iho United States for he re-anncxniion nf our count rv to that.' is wliollf without foundation iu fact and a base slander.11 Lf 1 his is just as wo havo nlwava understood it. Jones belongs lo the Houston party, which will consent to Annexation, if thev can obtain their own terms not otherwise. I tiey expect to make Undo oam pay wen lor nis wntstic. j rib. Tim Wooi, TnAiir. Acconlintr lo the best enl milium, it is supposed that thero are about U4,(XH)- tnni ot sheep in the United States, worth on an average about per bead, aud yielding about iXMXK) 000 pounds nf wool, worth, at JtO cents per pound, about r,7,(HH,rK). These sheep at three to the acre for summer and winter would reoutro 1 1 .'CCi.Ittlacres of Innd for their support, which, at$l'i per acre, wnirn is consutered a lair average, would bo worth i-h..hmhhj. To mantilurtiiro this clip of woo will require about 4,000 hnnds, who, with families aver aging three persons each, and amounting in all tn 10,000, at a consumption nf dollars per annum each, would reipiiro $1,500,000 worth of agricultur al priMiiirui lor their support, winch, nt a not yield ot sj ,-u per acre tor the market, would require , rXHMani acres ot land, wnrth at per sere, ,M tiOO.000. Tho capital invested, then, by the fanner in this business alone, is about $.Y(HH),(HH), and the annual value accruing to hitn,abouti!4l,.p00t(MK), wnne mo capital invested by Ihe mnnulsctiirer him self, in buildings, machinery, Arc, to work up the wnoto annual product would not perhaps exceed 15.000,000, ur about one-huh of that of the agri ctiiiurisi. The Heafrlin mf Iho Jewa. The New York Sun contains tho following nlotrh nf an interesting discourse on the restoration of tho Jews, delivered at the Tabernacle, on Monday evening, by Mujor Noah, and listened to with great attention by a crowded assembly, composed of all religious denominations: ilo made an appeal to this country to tnovo first in favor of that important project gave a brief his tory ut tho Jewish people, and re ler red to the position of the Jews at the birth of our Saviour, and entered into some interesting details of his trial and condemnation, lie referred to the prophecies lo show that the restoration of the Jews was distinctly promised and in their unconverted state took a view of the political condition of allUira in the Kast, and proposed a simple plan for Iho commencement of that great work. Our limits will not enable us to do more than merely glance at the prominent features of this discourse, which we presume will bo published. We have room, however, to transcribe the following paragraphs from our notes: 1 am persuudeu that Uio great events connected wiili the Millennium, so confidently predicted in the Scriptures, so anxiously desired by liberal and pious Christians, so intimately connected with the latter uuys ; mat consummation ut a great and providential design iu the union of the Jewa and Gentiles. and the l'u Hi Intent of the prophecies, can alone bo iookcu lor, ajter tho Restoration ot tlie Jews to the land which tlie Lord gave to them fur an everlasting possession. It is your duty, men and Christians, to aid us peaceably, tranquilly and triumphantly to repossess the land of our fathers, lo which we havo a legal, equitable, perpetual right, by a covenant which the whole civilized world acknowledges. That power and glory which were once our own, you now possess; the banner of the Crescent Bunts where tho standard of Judah was once displayed ; it is for you to untun it again on Alount .ion. It will redound ! to your honor, it will perpetuate your glory. You believe in the second coming of Jesus uf Naiareih. Tliut second advent, Christians, depends upon you. It cannot come to pass by your own admission until the Jews aru reslorod in their unconverted elate. If he ia again to appear, it must bo to his own people, and in the land of his birth and his affections, on the spot where he preuched and prophecied and died. In almost every page uf tho Bible, we have directly aud indirectly, in positive language, and in parable, the literal assurance and guarantee for llio restoration uf the Jews toJudeo. We have cone through the fiery ordeal, according to prediction, we nuvc Buneiuu uiu cornea, nnu now awnu uio penou ul the blessings. The pusl bus been dark and drca- Hie future is full uf hone and splendor. God himself has been our ruler, our law-giver, our leader, and to this hour our true friend. In the midst of ppalting dangers his eye has been upon us, his pro tecting shield has been ovor us. To us be committed the Inmp which has illuminated the world, and we liavo held it with a steady hand lur a hi! lit to the Gentiles. No, no, mr friends what would be to us our blessings, ourredemplion, our sal ration without our restnratiun ' Our lund is blighted with the curse, shall it nul enjoy the blessings ? It long bath mourneu, suau it not rejoice f innumerable are the promises which present themselves, wherever the eye is turned. w The remnant uf Jacob," sailh the Prophet, "shall be in the midst of many people, ns a dew from the Lord, as showers iipon the grass." And Isaiah, wrapt in the contemplation of the glorious future reserved fur his brethren of the Jewish Church, says, "Lift up thine eves round about and sco all, they gather themselves together, they come io i noe, my sons snail come irom ntar, and my daughters shull bo nursed at thy side." Again, linen lo Ihe Prophet relative to the restor ation and rebuilding uf Ziun. u Behold I wilt gather ihem out ut all countries, whether I have driven them in mine anger, aud in my fury, and in great wrath. and I will cause them tn dwell safely and Ihey shall ne my people, aim 1 shall bo their liod, and 1 will make them an tverhtsting covenant, and I will not turn away from them, lo do Ihctn good, nnd I will plant them in my land, assuredly witn my whole heart and my whole soul, lor thus saith lite Lord, like as I have brought all tins great evil upon this people, so will I bring them al) the good that I havo promised llicm." And now, my friends, in conclusion, let ine im press upon your minds, the important fact, that Ihe liberty and independence of the Jewish nation mav grow out of a single effort, which hi cutmtry may make in Iheir behalf. That effort is simnlv to pro cure from the Ottoman Porte a permission to purchase and hold land in Syria in security and pence, their tines anu possessions emmrmed, iricir nobis and llocks undisturbed. They want only raoTKCTiopr, and the work is accomplished. The Turkish gov ernment cannot be insensible lo the lact, thnt clouds ;ire gathering round them, and destiny, in which thev wholly confide, teaches ihem to await the day of trouble and dismemberment. It ia their interesl tu Iraw around them the friendly aid and co operation nf the Jewish people throughout the world, by con- conferring thcro reasonable nnd just privileges Uwm them, and when Christianity exerts its powerful agency, and stretches forth its friendly hand, the rigm soi ic lieu win be cheerfully conicrrcu. When the Jewish people can return to Palestine, and feel that in their persons and property they are aa safe from danger as they are under Christian governments, they will make their purchases of select no-aitions, and occupy them peaceably and prosperously; confidence will then tako the place of distrust, and oy degrees, tho population in every part or Syria, being greatly increased, will become consolidated and ready to unfold the standard, when political events shall demonstrate to thuui that Uio tiuio has nr rived. A C'lsllst sr Mrrw During tho late festive season when tboso who thought at all. reflected lint, eighteen hundred ai d forty-ihreo years ago, the religion uf the heart, bringing peace and good will on earth, came to soften ihe rigor of the religion of form a little girl not six years old, had been observed by a lonely Indy, sitting day after day on (he step of a door opposite to her house. It seemed to belong to nobody; but at a certain hour, (hero it was, wrapied in an old shawl, crouched ou the cold stone, and rocking itself pensively backwards and forwards, more like an ailing old woman than a child. Other children played a-rotind it, but this melancholy little being mingled not in their sports, but sat silent and solitary. Soon afterwards it was seen to peep about the area of the lady's house, nnd look wistfully at the kitchen windows. Tho lady who was kind to children, thought that the little girl might be trying to aitrnct her notice, opened the door suddenly, and offered it some gingerbiead. When the door opened, thero was a strange, eager expression in t ic child's eves: but when she saw the lady she looked scared and disappointed. The kind voice and manner soon re-ussured the startled child, who thankfully took the iff mug, broke it up into little bits iu her hand, and curried it to the door-step opposite, where she again took up her station. Another child, seeing the gin gerbread, came up to the solitary infant, who gave the new comer some, and, by her gestures, the Indy thought that she was informing the other child wiicnco tne gut came. After waiting a considerable time without eating her ginger-b rend, tlie poor girl rose dejectedly and went away, still looking back ut the house. A day or two afterwards the same child was seen lingering about the pavement near the area, and holding out a bit of sugar candy in its tiny fingers through the rails. 1 he lady who thought that the child was come to offer It out of gratitude for tho ginger bread, went own into uie a rev; out as soon ns she appeared mo hild ran away. Soon again, however, the child was at its old station, tho door-aten opposite. Tho any nod mentioned this to her only female servunt vury ouu, uiu received no ouservaunn in rcpiy. One morning the door was opened to receive a piece of furniture, nnd the same child again sudden ly appeared and advanced stealthily towards the door. The lndy. who was near. said. H see vou!" when the child immediately retreated to her door step. "ihis is very extraordinary," soul the Indy to her servant; "I cannot innke out whnt thnt child wants." "Madam, said the servant, bursting into tears, "it my child." "Your child! but go. brinir her in. Where dues lie live?" "With my sister, and she rroes to school. ! have told her never to come here; but the poor thing will come every bit of playtime she gets. That day you uiougnisne was ottering you some sugar candy, I had been to the school and given her a penny; when iiwii was over, she came to give me a bit of tho sugnr enndy she had bought. Oh, ma'am, have mer- lorgivo ine: Do not send me awoy!" Tho ludy, who had known adversity, and was not one of those rigidly righteous people who forget the ursi principles inculcated by tho divine Author nl the Christian creed, looked grave, it is true, but did i snrniH i rum the lowly sinner aa if she find tho ague, although she had become a mother beforo lie had been made a wife, bv the irav cavalier who had deceived and forsaken her. Nor did she turn her out upon the wide world, in the virtuous slern-ncss of her indignation. To llio great horror of Homo of her neighbors, she told her servant Unit her hi Id might come tu see her every Sunday, begin ning with the next When the child, who was no longer tho moping creature which it had been beforo was admitted lo the mother, heard this, site tinmc- lintely and anxiously inquired. "How manv dava and nights is it to Sunday?" Home may sneer at tl is: to me there is nomelhing painfully alloc ting in the quiet, subdued demeanor n mis oitspnng ot shame, timidly wntching lo ob tain a glimpse of her who had borno it, at an ago wncn (nippier children are never without those great est ot enjoyments, tho caresses nf a mother. llnnK I Uio misery ot this poor child, driven, from tho mere instinct of longing for its parent, to the staid emcanor oi age, wmist the other merry liltle ones wore sporting around it. Think what sho must have suffered aa she gazed, day after day, at the frowning door, that shut out more than all tlie world's value lu her. Think of the suffering mother, dreading lo lose, with her plnce and character, the means of supporting her hapless, prematurely old infant. Oh man, man, uiou hast much to answer tor! Our Coi'NThtxan Catmn. The Irftndun corres pondent of tho Boston Atlas furnishes the following iiiiurin.iiinii, "Mr. Cnllin has just issued a prospectus for ancle- gnnt work, which ho rails "I'utlin's North American Indinn Portfolio." It is lo ho published only by sub scription, and the patronage of Queen Victoria, tho Kmneror of Uussia, and the leading nobility, is already secured. 1 ho work will contain twenty five views or sub jects, tnken from the most admired pictures in Uie Indian collection. Theso will comprise Indian hun ting scones modo of catching and taming the wild horse tnvnrilo Indian games landicniw scenes ni the Rocky Mountains and Prairies aim tho Chiefs of several Indian tribes. The prims will bo executed in tho most finished stylo ol lithograph, on & roy al sheet, eighteen by twenty-five inches, accompanied by letter press description of equal sixe, fully explaining all the plates. The work will be handsomely bound in morocco, and the price in printed lints, will bo five guineas, I have seen specimens nt the engravings, and must pronounce ilium, moil finished and superb works of irli-hcnl skill. Tho whole work will do credit to Mr. Catliu, and bo an honor to his native laud." A paragraph in the Ixmdon Tunes says that next spring the emigration from Germany to the United Stales will be conducted on a large scale, and with greater regularity than hitherto. Thero are two companies nnw forming, the first of which is under tho auspices of the Prince of Holms and other Ger man noblemen, who have the intention of butng lands cither in Texas or in tho United States, and then regularly sending out such persons who cannot nnn worn or are niscomentcti in ineir nonunions. Tho Prince of Holms is now in Texas, and, so soon ns ho returns, it will be derided whether the land is lo bo bought in Texas or the United States. The second company is organized by Mr. Mark, lite gen tleman who took so active a part in the 'oil-V ere in treaty, nnd who, in conjunction with some landholders in Western Virginia, are forming s large com pnny ot emigrants, mostly farmers and merchants, wuh cnpilnl cnougn lo buy the land on which Ihe' settle, and they intend emigrating soon, and to caf the settlement "New Germany." Although Ihe lands in Western Virginia are somewhat dearer than in States beyond the mountains, they are represented, in nenun, mgnur prices tor pro nice, and oilier advantages, to be very favorable In emigrants. There ap pears every prospect that from fifteen In twenty thousand Germans will emigrate during the next year to mo united males. Mn.i.xnisM Disavowed. On Tuesday ovoning, in the M tile nf uiurch, corner of Chrystie and Do lancy sttecta, Mr. Storra publicly recanted his en re grious folly and madness in the matter of the second advent. Ho said, what indeed others boisido his congregation nnd already found out, he was deceived ns lo tho day of tho second advent He said he had been led sal ray by excitement and deceived hy Mes merism,! and now most penitently acknowledged his manifold sins ana wickedness, lie now exhort-od them to stick lo work, cVc. I limes next took his stand in the confessional. and forgetting, we presume, thnt he had been both Ihe deceived st.d tho deceiver, rated the people pretty harshly for their infatuation, and urged them all to go home and lo work, snd stopped down from Iho rostrum. Storrs has also acknowledged his error in the Midnight Cry, but we do not recollect seeing anything more about .Vrsmr rt.tm This is tolerably cool. Confession is easy, hut how is restitution to be made ? Perhaps the leaders think they have furnished as much excitement as could bo expected al the price. V. s. lonu sido. -Vou. l. Massif.!) Men. -The more married men you have says Voltaire, iho fewer crimes ihero will be. Kx-nuiitte the frightful columns of your criminal calen ders, you will their hud a hundred youths executed tor one lather ol s tamily. Marriage renders a man morn virtuous and more wise. The father of s fatuity is not willing to blush before his children. t, I V.. Ht'lT. We lenm lrm the Journal of Commerce, in tlie rane m II. M. Idmievn Nfainst the rimnrs nl Dial na-par tor an alledgrd libel, the buy have Riven a venbrt id $.410 lur ino pi tint in. iKkinJam s count) movnu fni a imw utal. A llonsr-rmuT. Several fine barb stall ions, hold by ihe Hakksms slaves, were led forward. mongst which a powerful black colt, who, hnvini managed, hy rearing and plunging, to break loose from ilia conductor, attacked, with thrown bnck ears, open mouth, and tail erect, another ol tho stud ; anil notwithstanding the ctlorta of llio Arabs, ncciialom-cd to such freaks, a desperate ficht ensued: w heel ing round as quick as lightning, rearing, and lining tlioir fore font as dexterously as an expert boxer; ihcn gnlloping away from lhoo wlm endeavoured to catch Ihem delcrniined to havo nut their duel, simr- ling and squeaking moat wildly. 1 his was s moment for llic admirers of bono Hesh lo sco every muscle and nerve come into play in their line action, unrestrained. The black cult was, st length, seized by the neck by his more vigorous adversary, who pressing him to the ground, held him there till men came lo the rescue and separated tho combatants, Orvmmond Jet'i Water Barbary Amnwairsi sf m ,T1sssriN Sin I tun. The Meshaw Herald now proclaimed thatShosha (the blow-giver) aud the six-fingered Alee, esch of tree win, were about tn test their strength, and thnt a royal donation of fifty gold mitznkel would be tho reward of tho conqueror. "May Good bless our Lord!" shouted by ten thousand voices, drowned tho rv of the herald, "the deafener." as the neoblo rail ed him, from his astounding voice. Both the clmmn- ions wero already on Uie appointed ground, when there arose tho question which should receive Ihe first blow. On this tho sturdy Alee spoke: ( Li., ui..i.. .i r .i.. i c It i. -. Mi, , j nnoua, -jiavu ui me icieiiiier oi uio rami-fnl, the Sultan uf the world ; it is my duly lo grant u-ii nuvnniage even to uie meanest servant ot our Lord." The blow-giver replied: Y onr courso nf life is run; it has reached its goal ! Where shall I ileal the blow.-" Alee pointed to the lop of his head. The long and muscular arm of Iho black was now raised and poicd in the air over the skull nf Alee, who with knees slightly bent, stood undaunted beforo his antagonist, a broad grin upon Ins features, as if certain uf his power of resisting all human strength. uown came uie list nt tne biacK, sounding like the sledgo hammer when struck with force sea mot an anvil. Alee staggered, drops of sweat broko out upon his forehead, his eyes rolled with pain and seemed starting from their sockets; but, recovering. no shook ii i in sen, and, rubbing his bullet shaped bead and looking around, exclaimed -Allnh, that is wnaiyoucati a blow: ami what a blow tool Allnh! But now comes my turn. O Hokhary ! snd if it plea ses the most mighty God, Shasha, the blow-giver shall never deal anoJier!" Then, turning to the Sultnn. he craved to be al. Inwcd tn place himself on eniial heiirht with his tnll opponent. This was granted: and four soldiers wcro entered to letch a marble block that was st hand, uiu muy touna n wo nuicn mr uie in. Alee ran lo Iho spot, and having with their assistance put it on his soldiers, brought it and placed il in front of tho Sultan. Then, having doffed his gelab, he took his position on the block, and clenching Ins six-hngered list and throwing his body slightly backwards, rnised his arm, and seemed to choose a posture w hereby ho might secure iho greatest power. He hesitated, and (iroppcu ins nnn, as it to consider a little longer. A nd now the black man trembled, and over his soul v face there seemed lo come a horrid paleness, as Alee resumed, in a yet more decided manner, his post tiro of nltnck. Do n, rapid as a thunderbolt, fell Alec's tint, and with it fell the blsck, never to riae agniu. Tin iiI,ki,...,v.L..u ... r.;a.r..n . ...n. . "nnu iiiLMiiiuiir nnkiiiii-u, mini nn who had so often denlt iho blows of death was now but as one of those who had met a liko fnto fmm his own relentless arm. Thcro is nn power or strength in sny but God," exclaimed the Sultan, as ihe black expired at his feet. Kiive the clown," pointing to Alee, 'the fifty ducats, and let him have safe con duct Shasha, in truth, ia a great loss lo mv houso- old; but who can avoid God's decrees, which n re written in the Book of Fate." Alee look the nureei ami ore the Sultan's ma ml n to for Inm In be escorted could ho put in force, ho had mingled wuh the crowd, nnd wns seen no mom. Sotnesuid that Iho brethren of ihe blnck murdered him that night. lluy$ H intern Barbary, The Trias H-teesilniar. The Richmond Whiir handles without elovos tlm speculators in Texas bonds nnd lands in that quarter who are so eager for ihe election of Polk as the Candida to nf immediate annexation. It say , As the hour approaches, the gentlemen who manifest the greatest anxiety are the Texas Speculators llioso disinterested and palmitic gentlemen, who, having a much greater interest in Texas than they hnvn ut this country, are extremely solicitous for annexation by which their worthless lands, and still more worthless scrip, may be made of some value, Gentlemen, who fcntiAruWi to-day, may, to-morrow, by mtitm of annexation, become millionaires, nro excusable for displaying a little ntnrv zeal than ol tiers; but ihey aro scarcely justifiable in denouncing all whit do not ngreo with I hum ns traitors. Fur llio snke of decency, some littlo moderation should be observed." t'etmi sir mn Inturrretitm, The cost of an insurrection in Cnnndn has just come out almost tour millions and s half! A pret-t y round sum that, and milter costly fur a Colony I ror inn year im me military expense amounted lo jCleO.OlK After that it was as follows: lrW, JC 570,21$ lK'Kt, I.IW.070 IHIU, I.IU.WI Tho army expense in Canada in liMo was ItHkl,-007. Colonies cost something! |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn85025897 |
Reel Number | 00000000023 |
File Name | 0216 |