MS THE PUBLIC GOOD SHOULD EVER BE PREFERRED TO PRIVATE ADVANTAGE Volume 4. Lincolnton, North Carolina, Friday Morning, September 1, 1848. Number 30. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED WEEKLY, BY THOM AS J. KCCLES. Tkrms. Two dollars pei annum, payable ii advance ; $2 CO if payment be delayed 3 months. A discount to clubs of 3 or more. Advertiserrents willbe conspicuously insert ed, at f 1 pel square (14 linea) for the first, and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion. OREGON TERRITORY The Washington papers contain the Message addressed by President Polk to the House of Representatives onMon- day morning, on eigning the Oregon Territorial Bill. The Message, it will Tbe recollected, was not read in either House. It is as follows: Washington, August 14, IS IS. To the House of Representatives of the United States: When the President has given his of ficial sanction to a bill which has pas sed Congress, usage requites that he shall notify the House in which it origi nated of that fact. The mode of giving this notification has been by an oral message, delivered by his private Secre tary. Having this day approved and signed an act entitled "An act to establish the Territorial Government of Oregon," I deem it proper, under the existing cir cumstances, to communicate the fact in a more solemn form. The deeply in teresting and protracted discussions which have taken place in both Houses of Congress, and the absoibing interest which the tubject has excited throughout the country, justify, in my judgment, this Jeparture from the form ol notice observed in other cases. la this com tnnnication with a co-ordinate branch of the government, made proper by the considerations referred to, 1 shall frank ly and without reserve express the rea son which have constrained me not to withhold my sigrrture from the bill to establish a govt nent over Oregon even though the twoTerritories of New Mexico and Calitornia are to be left for lie Dresent without overnments. None doubt that it is proper to establish a'government in Oiegon. Indeed it has been two long delayed. I have tnado itoeated recommendations to Congress to th'i9 e fleet. The petitions f the people of that distant region have been presented to the Government, and ouirht not to be. disregarded. To give to them a regularly organized go vernment and the protection of our laws. which as citizens of the United States they claim, is a high duly on or part, and one which we are bound to perlorm unless there be controlling reasons to prevent it. In the progress of all Governments questions of such transcendent impor tance occasionally arise as to cast in the shade all those of a mere party char acter. But one such question can now be agitated in this country; and this may endanger our glorious Union, the source of our greatness and all our po litical blessings. This question is slavery. With the slave-holding States this does not embrace merely the rights of holding property, however valuable, but it ascends far higher, and involves the domestic peace and security of every family. The fathers of the constitution the wise and patriotic men who laid the f foundations of our institutions foresee ing the danger from this quarter, acted in a spirit of compromise and mutual concession on this dangerous and deli cate subject, and their wisdom ought to be the guide of their successors. Whilst they left to' the States cxslu sively the question of domestic slavery, within their respective limits, they pro vided that slaves who might escape into other States not recognising the institu lion of slavery, shall be "delivered up on the claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due." Upon this foundation the matter res ted until the .Missouri question arose. In December 1819 application was made to Congress by the people of the Missouri Territory for admission into the Union as a State. The discussion upon the subject to Congress involved the question of slavery, and was prose cuted with such violence as to produce excitements alarming to every patriot in the Union. But the good genius of conciliation which presided at the birth of our institutions finally prevailed, and the Missouri compromise was adopted. The eighth section of the act ofCongress of the Cih of March, 1320, "to autho rize the people of the Missouri Terri tory to form a Constitution end State Governtner &c., provides. "That in all that territory ceded by Trance to the United Stairs, under the U3iue of Louisiana, which bea noith of limits of the State contemplated by this act, slavery and invoiuniary servitude, otherwise than in punishment of crimes, whereof the parlies shall have been duly convicted, shall be, and is hereby fore ver prohibited: Provided, always, That any person escaping into the same from whom labor or service is lawfully claimed in any State or Territory of the United States, such fugitive may be lawfully reclaimed and conveyed to the person claiming his or her labor or ser vice as aforesaid." This compromise had the effect of calming the troubled waves and resto ring good will and peace throughout the States of the Union. The Missouri question had excited in tense agitation ot the public mind, and threatened lo divide the country in to geographical parties, signaling the feelings of attachment which each por tion of our Union should bear to every other. The compromise allayed the excitement, tranquilized the popular mind, and restored confidence and fra ternal feelings. Its authors were hailed as public benefactors. I do not doubt that a similar adjust ment of the questions which now agitate the public mind would produce the same happy results. If the legislation of Congress on the subject of the other I erritones shall not be adopted in a spirit of conciliation and compromise, it is impossible that the country can be satisfied, or that the most disastnous consequences shall fail to ensue. When 1 exas was admitted into the Union, the same spirit of compromise which guided our predecessors in the admission of Missouri, a quarter of a century before, prevailed without any serious opposition. The joint resolution for annexing I exas to the United btates, approved March the first, one thousand eight hundred and forty -five, provides that "such States as 'may be formed out of that portion of said territory lying south of thirty -six degrees thirty mm utes north latitude, commonly known as the Missouri compromise line, shall be admitted into the Union with or with out slavery, as the people of each Sta'e asking admission may desire ; and in such State or States as shall be formed out of said territory north of the M issou ri compromise line, slavery or involun tary servitude (except for crime) shall be prohibited. The territory of Oregon lies far north of thirty-six degrees thirty minutes, the Missouri and Texas compromise line. lis southern boundary is the parallel of 42, leaving the intermediate distance to be three hundred and thirty geogra phical miles. 4 degrees of latitude,the question wheth er, in the language of the Texas com promise, they " shall be admitted (as a State) into the Union with or without slavery." Is this a question to be pushed to such extremities by exciting partisans, on the cne side or the other, in regard to our newly-acquired distant possessions on the Pacific, as to endanger the Union of thirty glorious States which ) consti tute our confederacy ? I have an abi ding confidence that tho sober reflection and sound patriotism of the people of all the btates will bring them to the conclu sion that the dictate of wisdom is tofoU low the example cf those who have gone before us, and settle this ; dangerous question on the Missouri compromise, or 6ome other equitable compromise which would respect the rights of all, and prove satisfactory to the different portiot.s of the Union. Holding as a sacred trust the Execuv tive authority for the whole Union, and bound to guard the rights of all, 1 should be constrained, by a sense of duty, to withhold my official sanction from any measure which would conflict with these important objects. 1 cannot more appropriately close this message than by quoting from the fare- well address of t he Father of hisCountry. His warning voice can never be heard in vain by the American people. If the spirit of prophecy had distinctly present ed to his view, more than a half century ago, the present distracted condition of his country, the language which he then employed could not have been more appropriate than it is to the present occasion. He declared : " The unity of government which constitues you one people is also dear to you. It is justly so; for it is a main pillar in the edifice of your real inde pendence, the support of your tranquility " Many cf the citizens of the South wished him to veto the bill. Most of the Northern citizens hoped that he would consent to extend the restriction of this bill to the whole extent of our newly acquired territories of California and New Mexico. The President has done neither. He has signed the bill reluc tantly, from a stern sense of duty to wards Oregon, and from a respect to the principles of the Missouri Compromise ; but he has not stopped here. Knowing and feeling that this question of slavery is by far the most important which has engaged the attention of hia countrymen that it stands ahead of the rest in diffi culty, in delicacy and in importance that it is the only one which can seri ously distract tbe people and shake the Union itself, he has felt it to bo his duty boldly to take a new course, and to send in a message along with the bill. In tht3 masterly paper, firm as it is concili atory, and dictated by the highest sense of public duty, he comes forward with all frankness 10 state that he must with hold his constitutional sanction from every bill in relation to New Mexico and Upper Calitornia which is not framed in the same spirit of compromise in which the constitution was founded, and which does not provide for the rights of every section o&our country. Had the present bill extended the Wilmot Provi so to New Mexico and California, ha would clearly have vetoed the bill. Wo have no hesitation in expressing our firm belief that, in like manner he will veto any bill which indiscriminately ex tends the Wilmot Proviso to these new acquisitions. In fact such is the express meaning and intention of the important message now before us. VOTE OFTHE N.Y. REGIMENT of returned Volunteers at Fort IIstnnN ton, August 1st? Officers. Privates. Cass. Taylor. Cass. Tayto Comp. A. 2 2 37 13 B. 3 1 46 4 C. 2 2 39 11 D. 1 3 41 9 E. 2 2 35 15 F. 2 2 40 15 G- 1 4 2? 11 H. 1 3 33 13 I. 4 0 40 2 K. 4 0 48 2 22 18 405 89 18 89 The President's Protest. We pub lish the President's Message on return t a i cj at home, your peace abroad, of your ing with his signature to the House of safety, of your prosperity, of that very liberty which you so highly prize. But, as it is easy to foresee that, from diffe rent quarters much pains will be taken, many artifices employed, to weaken in your minds the conviction of this truth as this is the point in your political fortress against which the batteries of internal and external enemies will be moat constantly and actively - (though often covertly and insidiously) directed it is of infinite moment that you should properly estimate the immense value of your national union to your collective and individual happiness ; that you should cherish a cordial, habitual and immovable attachment to it ; accustom ing yourselves to think and to speak of it as a palladium of your political safety and prosperity ; watching for its pres- Representatives, the bill for the estab shment ot z lerntorial Government in Oregon. It is, we believe, the second message cf the sort since the origin of val of a bill with a prctestando. Under j Gen Taylor was a whig expected that the President should refuse ; . . f his signature to the bill ; and certainly, .r "7 . uw a, Tua r a:...:-. l -..'.. fa letter be taken from the name of the nominee, it leaves "ass" 1 retorts, that the whig nominee makes an ass of himself every tiroe Jie writes a letter And it is because the provisions of j ervation with jealous anxiety : discoun this bill are not inconsistent with the terms of the Missouri compromise, if extended from the Rio Grande to the Pacific ocean, that I have not felt at liberty to withhold my sanction. Had it embraced territories south of the compromise, the question presented for my consideration would have been of a tar different character, and my action upon it must have corresponded with my convictions. Ought we now to disturb the Missouri and Texas compromises ? Ought we, at this late day, in attempting to annul what ha3 been so Ion-; established and acquiesced in, to excite sectional divisions j and jealousies ; to alienate the people cf different portions o! the U nion Irom each other, and to endinger the existence ot the Union itself ? From the adoption of the Federal Constitution, during a period of sixty years, our progress as a nation ha3 been without example in the annals of history. Under the protection of a bountiful Pro. vtdence, we have advanced with giant strides in the career of wealth and pros perity. We have enjoyed the blessings of freedom to a greater extent than any other peeple, ancient or modern, under a Government which has preserved order and secured to every citizen life, liberty and propcrtv. iVc have become an example for imitation to the whole world. I he friends of freedom in every clime point with admiration to our institutions Shall we, then, at the moment when the people of Europe are devoting all their energies in the attempt to assimilate their institutions lo our own, peril all our blessings by despising the lessons of experience and refusing to tread in th footsteps our fathers have trodden! And for what cause would we endanger our Morions Union? The Missouri compromise contains a proniouion o slavery throughout all that vast region extending twelve and a half degrees a long the Pacific, from the parallel of thirty-six depress, and east from that ocean to and beyond the summit of the Rocky Mountains. Why, then, should our institutions be endangered because it is proposed to submit to the people of lenancing whatever may suggest even a suspicion that it can in any event be a bandoned ; and indignantly frowning upon the first dawning of every attempt lo alieniate any portion of our country from the rest, or to enfeeble the sacred ties which now liak together the vari ous parts. " Fur this you have every inducement of sympathy and interest. Citizens by birth or choice of a common country, that country has a right to concentrate your affections. The name of American, which belongs to you in your national capacity, must always exalt the just pride of patriotism more than any ap pellation derived Irom local discrimina tions. With slight shades of difference you have the same religion, manners habits, and political principles, lou have in a common cause fought and tn umphed together. The independence and liberty you possess are the work of joint council and joint efforts, of com mon dangers, sufferings, and success With such powerlui and obvious motives to union affecting all parts of our country while experience shall not have demon stratcd its impractibihty, there will al ways be reason to distiust the patriotism of those who in any quarter may endea vor to weaken its bands. "in contemplating the causes which may disturb our Union, it occurs as mat ter of seious concern that ?ny ground should have been lurnished for charac terizing parties by geographical discrim inations, Northern anaSoutkern, Afan tic and fVestern, whence designing men may endeavor to excite belief that there is a real difference of local interests and views. One of the expedients of party lo acquire iniluence within particular districts i3 to misrepresent the opinions and aims of other districts. You can not shield yourselves too mush against the jealousies aud heart-burnings whicl spring irom these misrepresentations. J 14 m fur Ca, SI 6 Cmam m. Where the Soldiers cirr.c from.- On a call from the War Department, it is made to appear, that of the Volunteer seldiers that were engaged in the Mexi can campaign, there ere 43,213 men from the Southern states, and 22,136 from the Northern Accordingly, the South, on every principle of justice and fairness, should have two-thirds of the conquered territory, for the introduction therein of its peculiar institutions, tf she so desired. Instead of that, however, she is likely to be chiselled out of the whole, through Northern fanaticism up held by Southern parlizatis, such as A. II. Stephens, of Georgia, and several o thers of tho sume kidney Muscogee (Geo.) Democrat. Taylor's Politics. TheBelfsst Jour nal gives the following conclusive evi dence that the Philadelphia Convention nominated a whig. The question as te Taylor's politics may notv be considered at rest i "Mother Hopkins told me that she heard Green's wife say that John Glane's wife tcld her that Capt Wood's wife thought Col Hopkins' wife believed tiaf -! rt Mice r.amn rttmnnA that Ram the Government-President Tyler hav , Dunham8 wile hadrlold Spalding's .wife ing set the i only precedent for this appro- j lbalBhe heard Granny Cook say ah at after the stormy discus3ions,threatening " " "utr b still worse slorma for the future, that mocratic marked its progress, he could not very eQI-or r well pass by the occasion to indicate his opinions, and try to exert the influence of his high position. I he President lays great s'.ress on the Missouri Comprom ise, renewed again in the case of lexas, nd says jn very plain terms that, if any portion of thi3 territory were to the south of that line.he should interpose the veto; and further, that, wmle he is President, no bill excluding slavery from the region South of 36 30 can receive his approval. The justice and the importance to tho peace and harmony cf the Union of Compromising tho Slave Q.uestion he enforces with much earnestness. The tone and sentiments cf tho message are highly pairiouc and commendable. Mercury. From the Democratic Flag. Bless vs just listen a moment.- Would anv Doav believe it A ter accenting the Philadelphia Whig nomination, and praising its patriotic constituency," tjen laylor has actually written to Mr. Lippard, ot Philadelphia, as follows : Baton Rouge, La. July 24. Dear Sir Your letter of the 5ih inst. asking of me a line or two in regard to my position as a candidate for the Pres idency, hae been dulv received. In reply, I have to 9ay that I am not a party candidate, and if elected shall not be the President of a party, but the Pre sident of the whole people. I am, dear sir, with high sespect and regard, your obedient servant, Z. TAYLOR. Laconic, truly! And Gen Taylor not a party candidate 1 'Veil, well, well ? Won t this be news up in Stanly county, and all along there? Who knows but he will yet come out a democrat? C7 Hold vs, or we shall cert tinly "BUST."-Since writing the above, things have positively come to light, as we pre dicted. Silence! Compose yourselves for something decidedly wealthy in the candidox'a line. Here it is from the Charleston News (a Taylor paper) and addressed by Gen Taylor to a citizen of lhat place : Mr. Adams and Gen. Taylor. The North Carolina Register contains s let ter from the Hos. Trios. L. Clingman, in which he statea that the late John Quincy Adams was ftvcrable (o the nomination and election of Gen. Taylor. Straiigely enough, Mr. Clingman pub lishes this letter as an argument for his support by Southern msn. Col. Benton. The telegraphic des patch in regard to the difficulty between this Senator and Judge Butler led us.and most probably our readers, to the conclu sion that the affair had been adjusted, which cf course, impiifd that Col. Ben ton had made the amende for hie ruffian- like attack in the Senate. This wo learn is a mistake. The matter is end ed in consequence of Col. Benton's fail ure to reply to Judge Butler's invitation to a meeting, though notified on tho third day xhat unless some answer was given before 5 o'clock that evening, he would be considered as having declined the meeting. So much for Col. Benton's anxiety for "indemnity." Charleston Mercury. Popping the Question. Some writer who takes the soubriquet of Jtremy Short, thus giving his experience on thissubject. Jeremy has been "about," and is "one of "em," decidedly: "It will pop itself. nonsense thu3 lending your young folks a helping hind lake tny word for it, all they wish is to be left alone and if there be any confounded youngsters about, let them be put in bed or drowned, it don't matter a fig w hich. If lovers havn't no tongues, havn't they ye, gad! and where is tire simpleton that can't tell whether a girl loves him, without a word un her pari? No one adores modesty more than I do, but the most oelicat nngel of them all won't disguise her lit tle heart when yotfre alone wrth her. A blush, a eigh, a studied avoidance ot . i i : you in company, one a low, uirioing, They lend lo render alien to each other i l,'C nomination of many primaiy acni "1 have accepfed the nomination of j irernl:tjnfr cf the voice at timt s, w hm no the Philadelphia Lonventiou, hs well hs those who ought to be bound together by fraternal affection." JAMES K. POLK. The ' Washinzlon Union, speaking the remainder ol our newiv-acquired of the Oreeon lerntorial i5ill and tne territory, Iving south of thirty-six de. President's message, pub'ished above,! one c!te s by, lell n're than the smil of a thousand con-iettc. Ab'ynu needn't. bhes gotten tip in variuu bCi;tions l the j Amy, hhahb your hearf, you H no d obt thirty 6ix decrees anJ thirty minutes north htiuide, not included within the rees thirty minutes embracing less than j 8av; : Union, in some instances irrespective ol party : and would have accepted the no mination of the Baltimore Convention, had it been tendered on the same terms." That letter, as somebody once oo-J naturcdly said Mr Clay's mouth. speaks for i'self ! be sr on enough but tf )ou fall in love, a? vou will, my word on it, the very echo of one fo'tep will make your heart flutter hkc a frghiened bird." Rrincn.br thu Printer, and his works shall the belter please tho. .