Newspapers / The Weekly Raleigh Register … / May 21, 1856, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
f . I- SEWARD AND THE DEMOCRACY A I LET ALL THE SOUTH DRAW' NIGH T"T" . VT "W gl O T 1 . I ' I A-tAS mA,wm AiAiM14Vi 1 VV kin tW'v Vi'nt:fv1 thmt a TWnn. I w . . . .. ... ' m . . . ' ,, . .Tr- r: T.7r-,rrr nave tne auuionry or tne waaamgwa oti tarty of th . Srth-that iatht pohua- Sentiari for sayiag, that the following Abolition !trt0fjrTPtlth C7" rhapsody .ppesVeJuut week in PreridSnt PW. wpreJrftbettaof Sw.ror U-o hotorgsi, the Ntw Hampshire Patriot : The or Sumner, to thePremdency to that of Millard putioos of thTSstosI and effect of Fiacre Tie evidence of th amgular and on- yeb ppMr fa ost every demo- Ptnotk k ccnmnlted upon us la rapid b m North occeen, iiatd tier, can Bolongtr .be a parti- Xorth Let all the South draw nigh and cle of doubt on the subject. The preference of these Democratic fnp!mi aren hr In Tirri. S sia, tor Seward orer Fillmore, ie now openly, fcoMly, tmuoaiasgij.prpclauned. I A writer in UerrJerkksouxg Recorder, whom r the editor of that paper describe as "a gentle man ci eminent talent, puhuahe a communi bear how loudly If r. Pierce'a home omn crows over what the Nebraska bill U expected to do for abolitionism. Let them take note of hi de claration that "German immigrant are univer- ; - ' THE DUTCH MINISTER. Fnrwf im minister in Waanine-tnn laat a nrr : U UM. UUUUU I I V. 1I1B. mm K VB1IBI U LI LI I V KIH1 it ia rtrt rare that thew ir .war riMrvl nf acratri after their credential lare been delivered ; but u. iJPBora, the Ambaaaador of hi Majesty of the T . a a . a . neioenana. na acarceir aec ni foot unon oar horn when he ha become famous. It must shock the nerre of even so phlegmatic' gentle man tVi. Trlt-ri A mKftjlni tn GnA MmeJfftnu toriety so suddenly without any effort onhis own part. 'M. Dubois, it will be remembered, came . . a M m . m mx m- paaseBger in tne jurago, in company witn Mr. BccHAXAir, and he was eating hi first breakfast ttT . . . - tml . a .a THE RALEIGH REGISTER li " Ovrt" are the plant of fair, delightful peace, Unwarped by party rage to live Wet brothers" RALEIG H, C; WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAT-2I, '"? r""': I that the German, united with emigrants from I nouao waa amj oy a memoer oc congress. cau theTto, w which he preeae hi decided 1 1 . Nortb d We, ia . organizing J The newly-arriTed Ambysador looked quietly and etnphaao ffreference lor Seward orer Fill-1 1 K,., v. Ji .i - 1 on. with characteristic nnv-JuiLinr mL? no andcmphaUo pYeference'ibr Seward orer Fill more for the Prauroy. He aays " Were we compelled to choose between Se ward and KJ1 ox r j for President, we should not ktaiiaU a momtent toprtfer the former." Afrain . " Srward ia a man of far greater abilities, of much more courage, and possessed of mere inor dinate ambition. He would hold the jcepfe - with a firmer grasp, and wield it with greater aver. His whole "action would be directed to resrmc the Union fur hi first term, and to s uhcg hi election for a secood. There could be no President of a divided Union, and he would court the South to prevent a dirision. : We neTer shall hare a radical or Abolition Pre tJeot." ' Tbeae ara the bold annouDcementa of a Virgi nia Democrat of " eminent talenta." He comes tu' ia fa tot of the rankest, shrewdest and most unscrupulous Abolitionist in the land of a man bora all parties at the South hare agreed in re . garding and denouncing as the arch-agitator and arch-traitor of the Union of one who daily threatens, from hi aeat in the Senate and from the stumo. to drirs the South out of the common Territory, and to struggle for the extinction of Slavery wherever it exist; and to that end", if need be, eren to ravage th South with fire and word? wm aav this Virginia TVmvrat rt " eminent talents," and, of course, of correspond ing influence with hi party, . takes the broad ground that, as between Seward and Fillmore for the Presidency, he should not hesitate a mo ment to prefer the former 1" We have long be LsTtd, as we have laid above, that such was the general sentiment among the Democratic politi tians of the South ; but it is the first time that the fact of their preference for the. acknowledg ed leader of the Abolitioa forces, over the moat ha been so explicitly and .pubBdr exDreaied ciArmuoa uxu "jtnxuan unmizr&ziu are uniTcr t va w uuk mm mmi. uicuh - sally anti-slavery men both from principle and H Washington at Willard's Hotel, when the ter- NATIONAL AMERICAN TICKET ! from taste, and his joy-inspiring expectation 1 "' uu-u' " wuica one 01 uw waiiers that the Germans, united with emigrants from I J" was aouw oy a member 01 uongress. I PftpQTnFVT - MILLARD FILLMORE, OF m TOBK. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, J ANDREW J. DONELSON, THE HARMONIOUS) HOW THEY LOYE ' The tliraa, factions Piercaitfifl. Buckitea and Douglasitos, aire engaged jn a merciless iutestiue warfare. which increases in furf as the time for the meeting of the, frea Cincinnati conclave ap proaches. Jl he "Sentinel" j at Washington Uty of ofessintr to be the oeculiar euardian of- the I a a , A. J Buckites," has opened with a savage venom on the other factions, headed ' bv the "Grej'town hero" and the "Little Giant." and if the broad side has not scattered their ferces, it has left the ' leaders hers du combat The '? Washington City Star" (a satellite of the Pieraeites) returned the fire a few days since with considerable spirit. frea Stata on thm anil of a!avrr.B Horace Greely and Wm. Lloyd Garrison, can scarcely give vent to abolitionism as rampant as this, and yet such are the party editor held up to the South a the champion of ."conservatiam and National it v," by our Democratic organs. The blackest Black Republican in the land ia quite aa national as this man of the New Hamp shire Patriot, and Black Republican help at the late municipal elections in SU Louis and Phila delphia, and late State election at the North, re- im.l Is. Id. n.nuvn.i iu)i.na Arm-n out of him this effervescing abolition effusion. We hare no room for further comment on such an article now, than to a&k that it be given a free circulation in the Southern States, and to suggest to the Hon. Tbos. G. Pratt, that he ex hibits it to all his old line Whig friends, in order that they may tee what sort of an "only Nation al party modern Democracy is. Read : i Bali. American. "All the valuable land open to aettleflsent is already, 'staked out,' 'and claimed', and eternal decrees could not make freedom more. "Nor is this the beginning and end -of the chapter, though this might be thought enough by any reasonable man. ft is now proclaimed by anti-Nebraska papers that such is the rush of emigration in this direction that, like the too abundant rain which swell" the rivers, it will overflow it natural bank, and passing on to the immense territory of Texas, saoJt two or three nnti fret StaU otd of moH wtkirk LaA hm. fancied to Slavery t German emigrants are universally anti-slavery men, both from principle and from taste, being unable to endure contact with the colored race : and already occupying the western part of Texas, they will unite with the emigrants from the North and West in organixing free States on the soil of slavery I MKor ia thla ell rrnt ami mvl aa it ia Tl im stated that hfUtouri is awakening to thought of a. r ot i r on, with characteristic nonchalance, and made no attempt to interfere, tor the whole scene was so perfectly in accordance with the. travelers' stories he had read of life in America, that he regarded it a an ordinary occurrence, lie nnisnea nis coffee, and ascertaining that the maa who had been shot was dead, walked out of the breakfast parlor, and meeting a gentleman whom he knew, the Minister exclaimed, "What a peoples I If they do such things at breakfast, what won't they do at dinner V It ia not at all wonderful thai tha VtAoriMprAil diplomat should be at a loss what to do, when he waa requested by the Secretary of State to appear before a coroner's jury and give his testimony, nor that he should dram it npraoaarv tn rnnsnlt with some of the sinior members of the corpa be fore giving an answer. - The wonder is that he ahould have been counseled to act in a manner so little consistent with the character of a gentle man or of a humane man The request of the President, throuerh the Secratarv of State, ahonld have weighed more forcibly with him than the advice of one of the. members of the diplomatic corps, remaps, wnen toe trial or Uzbbebt takes place, M. Dubois will have a better comprehen sion of his duty in the matter.-iV. T. limes. ' PADRE YUIL RECOGNIZED 1" Gen. Pierce, in his aminiatratinn nf thm frL. reign policy of the country, has certainly .donaa Kimuwu uuauruuiarj anu inexpucame mings in hi time but the information we have to-day, that the Roman Catholic Priest the Rev. Padre Vial has bean official v rom the Walker-Rivas Government of Nicara- gua,-r-is wnony witnout precedent in the previ ous history of hi unprecedented administration. It ia, all things considered, a crooked proceeding. It ha a bad look about it, w do not believe the -h m . s V. a "OF TENNESSEE. AMERICAN ELECTORAL TICKET,' x ; FOB THE STATIC AT LaBQK. . L, B CARMICHAEL,; of Wilkes, JOHN W. CAMERON, of CuraberlanA, 1st District, " 2d " 8d 4th "" 6th 6th 7th 8th Jas. T. Littlejohn, of Granville. 'A. J. Stedman, of Chatham, Gen. J. M. Leach, of Davidson. , -. ' FOR GOVERNOR, I JOHN A. GILMER OF GUILFORD COUNTY., f Peonlef or . the PeoDle'a Renraaantativaa will sod ro boldly and aWoalaa!y avowei to th I T"? " aoacning totKmgW cj I ,ika. . country. The consequence of the porition thus T "I!: ZCE TTP Waiving, for the present, any enquiry into the natter whom the CSncin-j Vr"-1; "7 l7i . v - LVTlJ- r t oana P"C7 expediency of recognising Gen. oT . , : , . . ; i aiaor, in in present uncertain ana peculiar rt2ZmJ,d7"iLtir BeQ- Pition of affairs in th. State Government he VH1UJ( u HH AVW jnui Ul .UUIUWOT VI NATO has been diminishing as things then were ; and now, when the State shall be nearly surrounded by free States, and the escape of slaves beam so easy, and when so large a portion of the people are opposed to it, both from interest and princi ple, it ia thought by those well acquainted with the state bf public feeling that slavery will give way to surrounding circumstances and 11- I. 1 f - a . ' . at m . . inwii join uw sisiernooa oi free elites i v'i ot u . 1. Buoltd, That m ratify and approra the platform of principle laid down br the Anariean CouranUon vhieh aa- aaaiDica la raiiadaipiua In FaMraary lut, . . , X Ruoltid, That wa are lnfaror of a progreariTe ajsiem the raaonroea of the State, and such as will not burthen the people with oppreasiTe taxaUen. 3. RaaoLTSD, That we are opposed to the policy of the Gen eral Government quandering the public lands to provide homaeteade for IbrSig-n panpara and eonrict? , i WaxaiAs, There ht Tariooa and eonflletiriK opinions """R ' u ixavciBw, wvu mm lu we propriety OI amendin( the State OonstAntion, ai well aa the manner and aatent to which amendment ibould be made : ! . of AmarieaniMn may net be trammelled in the ensuing eon- He has evidently not missed his aim. and the fluttering and shrieks amongst the Buckites shew I conclusively that somebody is either killed or wounaea. We present our readers with the fol lowing, as a sample of the kind of weapons used by the "Star "We do not aeree with the Times and Sentinel in tne Denei mat ne is the greatest man now identified with the Democratic party.. He has been in public life almost uninterruptedly since iozu. vvnere-is uie legislative measure or do mestic , or foreign policy originated by him that bas become a feature in our public history ? He has been at the head of our . State Department and our minister to the Court of St: James. Where is the treaty nesotiated or eohsummatetl throusrh his acrencv. excent tha nnimnnrfant o rf r. ; r I commercial treaty with Russia, which is almost verbatim a copy of manv similar treaties with other governments, before ' and since made: in many instances by comparatively obscure Charges d' Affaires on the part of this government ? The idea of hia peculiar pooularit v at the South ! . 1 is worse than a mistake. It is a dangerous mis- apprenension or tne trutn. ; The south entertains no devotion to men whatever Tn har (Kifimatmn they stand or fall altogether according totheir 3- 1 ,1 1 r .a recoros, ana wnenever oeiore tnem lor omce, their records only are considered: I record of Mr. Buchanan is as palpably against the doctrines of the South as that of any gentle man c-1 any party wno nas ever been m public " I e 'fm " it '. ' ' r' - a . . e - , d -m wnicn had to decide, upon its tate,-Wi mmstiji 1AJUST1CE AND OPI'RFIOV ! was its eneiny t : . i v. . j , Oa.Moriday last. ab.ut sixty voters. mn if not all. of them, residing in Swift f!r.lr tkJ SRfJW ITS WtfAT BE WAS : nrilTRI i 1 1 presenter! ' through thAi-ir w ' . " ' " "" " " I - O" -"- vuuunci, u . JllJLLER rtow, we put the question to every candid .ana j w tne County Court of-Wake, (about forty, fair-mi nl-d voter, what has Governor Bragg ever j fior fifty Justices being on the bench,) a peti 4one for the honor and prosperity of fVStite ? tion couched in respectful and earnest laugiage Where isthe act or vote of his, since he became for the establishment of an election precinot at of age, which lias contributed fn the-least, to VVillisFrankiin's about half way between Raleigh better, the condition of the people of North' Car- and Nat. Jones' election ' gronndj All the re olina? What did he ever do. what sacrifice. Quirements of the law had n.vi did he ever make, wbat amount of money did he ever contribute, to develope the resources of our good old State t What speech did he ever deliver, whatj did he ever ; say 'or write, to en courage those gallant, liberal, and patriotic meu, who battled so long and zealously against fearful odds, for. the improvement of our condition as a people Is there a single- acre of land, in any sec tion of the State, which has been made more valu able, or a single family w'hich has been rendered more prosperous and happy, byt liberality and exertions as alegislator ? His friends can point to IIO SUch Vote-l-no such act nn mirh OTPrtinna ! Hiswhole career, as a public man, has been bar ren of good toj the State. We chal'euge them to this issue. What claim, then, has he upon the people of the State ? In this important crisis of our State affairs,- this CQnjuucture of our sy item i j ' ? 1 I oy" ""'wi ut uear me test oi examim of Internal Improvements when we should have Would it have injured any one ?' Would The petitlohers represented that the distance most Ti. f ITf.l 4a . .1 I . wt iu get lue elections was a grievance, which the granting of their prayer would remedy. After some discussion, tlie pray er of the petitioners was rejected.l Every effort on the part of the friends of the petition to have the yecw and way placed on the record, was de feated by the opponent of the juat and reason able request of the' freemen of that section of the County, but enough appeared to show that it was opposed oa party grounds, every Justice vot ing against, being a Democrat, and .every one (with but one exception) votingytr the petition, being a Whig or American I Now, what excuse can be given what just reason was there for refusing the prayer of such a Urge number of the freemen of the' County ? None can h giy-n which will bear the test of examination. if riva Would it not one at the helm of our State government who is deprived anv vi..r r . - Ba J wa va AtES 1 IL 11 St I identified witli the, great improvements now in have facilitated the Sr,iM r ,,vL r.:u progress, is every thing, to be swallowed tm in I Ieee. the rinU nf . ... . . , ." National politics ? Is party spirit to rule, and it not, in accordance with the fundamental prin overnde ewryjeonsideration of State j,ride and ciples of our Republican form of government domestic advancement ? Are . our people to be have carried th i 1 . .. . ' - - " 'av isvsl. ucumr rr i r no hAfnaa . ' say ajvaAJCS bliudd by partizan zeal and led en by partizan tactics U an .jutter forgetfulness xf what ' is" for their best intejrest as". North "Carolinians-? ' Let the farmer, the jmchanic, the citiaen, the miner. the merchant,) whose energies and resources were J . a or tne people -of that HAnfi'rtr. v . - - " Jnu uua WOUIQ have-been. compelled to go there, to vote, against his wish, or to go elsewhere. Each voter would still have been left the right to select his precinct and vote at it. The decision of th rv,... wvaais UUUCr w m. er 1 O vumiuvu VI V n U UJ (B 4ilg" life If in the consideration of the tariff question gardly policy, which opposed every scheme of he has ver made any but a high-protective-tariff iv" . X- i. 7 rT, speech, or given other than a high protective ta- V9eH look at this matter calmly and de- so long trammelled-chained down-by a nig- all the circumstances, was most unprecenteS atrtA I m . a ja . . W riff vote, the fact has escaped our recollection. - upon ine racinc railroad question he certainly differs as widely from the Democracy of the South as any gentleman of either party now in public l.r. .i . . . me. upon me siaverv Question, thono-h -nnti Li- j " . . 7 . i 5? . liberately 1 Who has been their best and most steadfast friend ? Has Thomas Bragg f Where is the proof? Let his record peak 1 Has John A.Gilmer? j Look at his votes through a loner and act of injustice to the freemen of that. tion of the County 1 ' This is modern Democracy for you, with a vengeance I. In the facepf the earnest appeal made to them, in behalf of the people of. that section, who 'are lahnrinar niolm the grievance set forth in ,the petition! the Dem4 rrociaimd ia. th it m matlar k sati Coovention may nominate wbetxWTt be m a . &au, ur odi i an ourvn, or jLmvia Wilffiot, or Seward or Wiisoft the writer in th Recorder, and hi political aaaodatq in Virginia, would promptly rally to hi support, rather than enc tribute the remotest aid to the' election of Millard FUlmore. We invoke the serious atten tion of the voters of Virginia and the South, of all partifa, to the declaration here made and pub lished. Eich. Whiy. . Hsving beec ahaent vv ainr th ntnri te nauoo of Mr. Gilmer, we must confess although we knew that be waa Vcrv nnnUri)it are aurpraed and highly gratified at the degree of enthusiasm which his name ha insured and awakened in every section of the State. Mr. Gilmer i so well known throughout the Stato. anil ha so often in ocr Lrialatir ir.li. r?;.t;rZ guiahed himseli both for hi ability and patriot ism, that his name and acta have become iden tified with the hinory of the State, and when the future historian come to gather up the event of the past few years, when the wheat shall have been winnowed from the chaff, and when truth, pure and ondefiled. free from nrrm.4i an.1 v. ty strife, shall have made her impress upon the records of the country, no name will be more hon ored, and the memory ef no man more fondly cherished, than that of John A. Gilmer. Tore tile the dead, and, after they hare paawd from the stage of action and gone down to the grave, to traduce and defrh tlirrknMM j ered base and nnmanly, and we dislike to speak I-. A . . V a m m. . tu ux tuga terms oi i&e living and e those whom the people have chosen has improvised in Central America, we should like to know why an American wa rejected, wnen ne came nere.witn diplomatic credentials quite as good a those of Padre Vijil ? : Wt are not the especial Jmirer of Col. Parker fl. French, indeed we do not Jcnow that ws hare ever said a word in his favor in the Express but if the OUestion Of moral rhmrmtmr la tn. Ka rm;amA m.ill Otn. Pin, or Mr. Mwcj, or Mr. Cushiog pltue co, ISebraska, the territory of a dozen future in- j nat aahamaVl tn h ; . ' J dependent Sutes. and Kansas, aU sure to be free, iSltl h? h Vif aL w 9 V"- beside, two or three tobTcarved fromTexS SSSaT The lttZL"1 and Missouri itself to be free t - Bit, cmdd 3 r!.is? ' i n0t .xpected to an- Pinuchf Whoa.k. formore? The aboli- T' ttomsUhave haranflued for freedom. nrMrhd I j L . . - i "j.zrur-vz. -'.w; uw. upon me siaverv auesnon. though -unti l : - - e i me grievance set lortn in ,th ru.nti- n eai orgaaiaationa, the party, chewing actional issues in I recently an advocate for the exclusion of slavery 8nd Pa"01"5 par in the Seuate of North Caro- ocratic (Heaven save the mark fi ,.! , T !S - J?" f '. th. purpo-of from all United Statea territory north of thirtv- Una 1 The Raleigh and Gaston IW1 th n. tne mark I) majority of Ju-,. onib vy aoa munwaiag tat RprNDUUn nau oi fVsiarlrnrtAH ' LKMOiauoni or tn urtratboro' UonTvntioa. iet we re accusca oi a desire to natter and to pay court to thoae in power, but so well are we acauainted with the character of John A. Gilmer, so long and so often have we admired hi talent ar,d patriotism, and to deeply and honestly are we imprmed with the belief that he is one of inc purest men or tl age, that we cannot refrain from adding our mite to the many just and well merited eulogies with which t the papers of the State are now timing hoping that before the over this vast territory. Should they not thank Heaven and be content then ihev receive what then askedt . "Indeed, they now admit, almost without an exception, that such results have been secured bv the Kabraakn hill rtml'm tmmmA w.. and glorious, such as no single act of Congress ha ever before secured. "The Nebraska bill works gloriously and tri umphantly for freedom I Ab act of any Presi dent or anv Conaress ham atrurA an aurl nA m especialfv of "V"1'."" men ?ru n to honor -l . wiu g raowieogt, witn the ... . . ' I iweuigeni ana 1 honest National JnteU intelligei on the day after the passage of the bill, that toougn tney opposed it from beginning to end for the sakeaof Deace and imnA ftwti M my -a aw a vr uv A V the nation, yet truth and honesty required them to confess that the North an1 SrknrK va.a4, BUVUIU change their positions, and the North go for the mu uu uie oouw oppose it. an American ? Is this Romish priest taken bv t At. 1 m a ra. a. - . . tne nana, iwcause ne u a rapist, and, as such, the recipient of a sued! cnmniimnt tn th Crimean Hierarchy in this countrv. wWli thing to will orer tb Administration to the 200. 000 voUt which Archbiahop Hughct is said to he-naff rf ISleMVIV at U?. I a.. . vi u asn v ' at ama. i iai uuniiiBnii tj m waa k tha xTesadentisI oandidsta. who will An tha Rome? tf. T. Express. j IWU The aUtement that the United States military Commission, which recently returned "laeeept the nonUnatloa with the Platfoem annexed'; and I aeceot tha Pumu with tha nnmln.IInn m-nmmwmA - Jno. A. Qilmer's Addrees before the Oreensbon' Convention. FOR THE CAMPAIGN 1 CIRCULATE THE DOCUMENTS 1 j To meet the demand that there will , doubtless be for a paper, which, during the ensuing Presi dential Campaign,. will keep folly informed upon the points to be discussed in the Canvass, the "Raleigh Register" will be issued as a cam- ; - j paign paper, at a price so reasonable as to place it a the hands of every man, commencing on the first of May. . j Terms, weekly, fob six months. Clbs. rive copies for- - - -. - - - $ 4 Ten do do - - ... - $ 7 Twenty do do- - - - - - if 12 AH to be sent to one address. j APPOINTMENTS. j John A. Gilmer, Esq., the American ! candi date for Governor, will address the people of the respective Counties named at the following times and places : 1 THE BRITISH NAVAL REVIEW. ' August eierboii. tliruennl ikmimVw .1. I Ine grand review of th m Tin'tinK pM r o:. tP.I - . . 1 ...... -1 1 . I Kaav4 m . V t . 1 w ouiie wiu tome to thorough-1 wts umcu me most imposing .naval l.r undersund, and mill show that they fully ap-1 0e5tac,e wbic.Q the world ha ever witnessed. .- - . v.i wiuicntKU. think of two hundred and forty steam-ships of war drawn up in parallel lines, and occupyinga space of twelve miles I The purser of the Her mann, wnicn vessel nass&l thmnrrh m j ronon the night of the 21st nitron her way from Bremen, says : "As the Herman passed be tween these two leng line of Old England' woodefl walla.' whmut 'UM ... " by the two bells announcing l o'clock A M pasasg from ship to ship until lost in the di . meet Tina taea of the power and vigi lanm nf rnr myr. . o rrtnate, his character, by elevating him to the .i;t t uicrj arunin tneir gift. Residing in the interior of the State, he ha everWn firm and true to the lest interests t4 his constituents, and hi own immediate section, and yet so liberal were lis views in regard to State Policy, that while the West has ahray, found in him her a- tr!t C-tAITDlOn. thm EaUi hm kA a t eter f-ond him aide by side wi'h her own son. truggSng for the beat interests, the honor and -eiArw ff Xnr V -v ... . i'Uiifl more urerai tnan I mu iue 01 tne power and vigi- none more constant nA nt,- : I lance ofonr WW wmf s . 6 effort than he to bcild up her sea-port town, 00 11 who hd remained upon deck. P" to improve her narjgable rirers, to cooajruct her Pctcl of such a fleet must soothe the iIT1.60"" which th rich and tt-ftion of England at ber military deficien- varied product of the East might find a quick m the Crime. may also moderate any and readier PMg to the great emporium of H116 exulution on the part of Louis Napoleonl th world. atKi by and through which that pow- Tha preponderance of Britain upon th. 32? i er andincreaae in waalth. Uis true the East " dld1 a that of Franca upon the lan? nfased for a kng tim, to mete out to the Shc4ild apolaon dream of universal empire, the , : -s'w ui liorrauiy ldv nave I ""vu as uai as ispitnead must art Unded toher.unni even tb. hbial Sd "P tU ind like MordecaCg? tt1 t W.wt mds. DP jocs bouI of Hainan.- - iMucu. .usijiu sinn r n iia aa , s l.j iiiicr wits smsm nsm -eaamricf-iw .,, a. . . . . .. , vwwi sani unon I v-Mueu unui ne can aecura for the bit-amarur ODar the conviction that tZ IWe uiispntJ naritim- aw!rU.r! . Uiey enter d tlier pro-1 P00 hkh ia not likely ron to be realired. to.t, and-the much talked of WeaUra Address .rwl;' i wnirr Mr. Gilmer signed, nd in dunar so he onhr r!.;i r i.: r . . j rx aur turn own ate. t, -, ww reuizea. It iny rxiaail)! V nrrar tn mnmm.m ri - .. fLS PVJ tnat itwiU nolV S its good effect in the Western hemisphere. W t ,, -um m iue same amm 1 1 uowvver, oi such admonitinn Usull cornnoed to exhibit that same hberahfy tNo " America pretend, to denize rrS toward thm aaat wl.ioh V. -I v . ' . I intnrw arktof, J- .V. f . , ' W" K11 ... " - mn w a ta rr.iru-r.n I j j mu- uj ujv itcqk oi var nrtm mua. i fttis public sets. And. if our Extern brethren mmerce would suffer from the nTvalwerTf w.. 5 llUUu7 Commis- millukette rnsto examine the rTt Eogl " inrolt tojthe United can cry easily determine who has iWt h W Ut i a the bite review. But a laroi tvT:"J "Tl nuer uiew nrcurastances, can he pass friend to their SM-tinn . . . , . , poruon ot over It without in-rro, emrxts, MrTBraor ifr G lmrr YT ha th flU wonSUrTarw fifS ? , t" -a- he Wt them go, for the ke of anain iS. f.' ith British gooda and Ufa S1 "S1! ? mr PP1? .d our Government. sr wwwasa. . - - w vi 1 nijMi in ni s mnrinnstai rn vam aaaa . - j - - - .. - nr sunVr tK,m: "J t would be given to th fl. VIC ? ou uown our wroata. A h v.r York. Philadelnhi. Rf a- TTT. ",D!! .uur yemmeni na a perfect witn me 1 r t- : ' . . . -v Zigencer frT P-s w" treated Wlth marked incivihty il that . u ,uututa " rrencn uovernment oHicials. is w a aria Z w mi m- a . ... . iiuiy couurmeu. 1 nia uommisaon, it wiU be re membered, waa mmrirauvl rt r sa iami TVnl m C nl J and Mordecai, and CoL McQellan, all officers of the United States Army, -worthy and accomp lished gentlemen, who were sent abroad by the President to acquire information of value to the ujui wjr aeroce 01 ine united states. Wherever they met British officers, the members of the Commission were received with a.wwe WlUiailbT and kindness. While in the Crimea they were handsomely received by the British commanders but Pelissier refused them an audience. On their return bv the wav nf Pari. tk.. ..1 P??1.11111 viUar' who met them with xtr I ao you want r The answer was, We have called aceording to arrangement made when we were last in Paris, to get aome books then promised us." . Vaillant rejoined, in sub stance, and witn a manner as offensive as his mwnmAm ttllr- V . t . . . yiu, iiiiutc uoming to give I i bere are misunderstandings between our Governments. I -uv. vi ioiwuiu mm aucu as not to justify any such civilities I" Major Mordecai, who was spokes man of the party, wisely forbore to retort the in solence ; and, as they bid tha Marshal farewell, he expressed the hope that they might meet again wu wucra mw sajui would ne tne Hostile can non shot. All the correspondence In mlatmn tn tv;. a:. graced affair has been laid before the President. What will he do about it ? Our Government ia perfectly well satisfied that this conduct is only one of the modes by which Louis Napoleon and his subordinates have, time and again, indi '.ir toP of ""led hostility to and W a fan nef fT.A.J Oa-a rm . otatew. i nev xnow that this r , " IUllJ V?"1 by M- Sartiges, the French Minuter at this point, who ha been visi ted by not a single Senator in two years, and whose social position here is very low. Indeed Sartiges boast of hia tnnvlnl ment of hato of the United Stasis indulged by -- r . .... . wu. fierce anown full well that the insult to our MUIitary Commis- Burnaville, Marion, Rutherfordton, Halifax, Jackson, Murfreesboro', Gatesville, Hertford, Elizabeth Gty, Old Trap, Camden, Eden ton, Plymouth, . Windsor, six degrees thirty minutes of; north latitude or, in other words, a Missouri compromise man he now stands on the Kansas bill platform ; a posi tion whicn every man must necessarily occupy who dreams of being a candidate for the Cincin nati Presidential nomination. Left to himself, if elected,' we could have no doubt that he would administer the government ttrlfk on Aira mn.l. a .V . f - . " " '-j " ouifjw u vug purpus ui caprying out I j the policy of the present Administration upon faithfully refuse to urauuu. xjui. trc mow peneciiy wen mat jxvJ I every man in the non-slaveholding States, who, while claiming affiliation with the Democratic party, stands opposed to it upon the greal(pver shadowing issue of the times, is an ardent advo cate for, Mr. Buchanan's nominati6n,--avowedly because he hrrw9 fhat in orlmi'ni'.fnnr. t.l, ernment Mr. B. will make the principle of the Missouri restriction his policy rather than that of the Kansas-Nebraska act.: . We frankly confess that We have oreat'diatrnaf indeed, of the peculiar class of politicians out of jremiHyivania wno nave lairly mounted on-Mr. Buchanan's back. . Nearly every notoriously-unsound man claiming affiliation with the Democ racy is among them. The latter is unscrupulous and energetic in carrying their points, favoring special legislation, and, indeed-, everything that the South abominates and for whiph aha haa l. erroneously held federalism alone responsible ; as one has but to. spend some time around the fed eral capital to comprehend the fact that those by far most dangerous to the cause of the continued administration of the Government upon the doc trines of the constitution as made by our fathers and interpreted by the Democratic statesmen of the South, are individuals whnrlaim j ha r.om ocrats,s though only the better to enable them ,aVA J A.1 . J ... i t) t it i a, ' fcurueu ai ear to their complaints and tralfioad, the Eastern extension, the Western ejected a prayer so reasonable andTttie extension the Wdm ngton and Weldon Road, gating of which would have been a t the Manchester Road, the Deep River Improve- the petitioner,, and wronged or injured no one tSuSdl T T WOrtS WLif COn - and PresnJopTL tnbuted to develop the resources of our oeoo e. pt i I V mwncr or IMlcr. ottiCt luci .r; ni;. J All t:x I - I ' . And will those ichom .he ha ia ' . - rally to his support t N01 PIERCE'S TREACHERY TO THE SOUTH. We were jtold in honeyed phrase, during the last Presidential campaign, that Pierce would prove true to the rights of the South that he had no sympathy w.ith Freesoilers, and would bes tow upon nojie such the patronage of the Go vernment. JJut no sooner was he secure in bin ' ANOTHER" WAR CLOUD. Just as the country was beginning to congra tulate itself (says tie 'Petersburg Intelligencer',) on the prospect that alL our omolicationa Ath Great Britain would be peaceably and honorably got rid of, another cloud (if Mr. Crittenden 1 to be believed,) has risen, dark and lurid, and por tentous of that greatest of aircalajnities. except a dishonorable peace War; 'and war, ; too, be tween two nations capable of doinir each other and the civilized, world more damage than hestili- place, than hi began to hug to hia bosom miny tleS between n7 four nation on tho face of the worst jind most dangerous of that vile and f-the gIobe could inflict. Upon the dangerous faction. To say nothing of his di- TOnuct of the aonktration la j receiving the Wednesday, 2 lit May Friday, 23rd " Saturday, 7th June I0 aid tQe enactment of propositions opposed by jionaay, ytn Tuesday, 10th " Wednesday, 11th " Thursday, 12th " Friday, 13th " Saturday, 14th -Monday, 16 th " Tuesday, 17th " Wednesday, 18th " TO YOUR DUTY. AMERICANS ! . , I cijr UU1WC1U UK We would most earnestly urge the friends of soiler is for Mr. B's. nomination 1 the mass of the States nVhts and atrip. PAncfmA. democracy oi uongress. Such, then, is the evidence of a leading Demo cratic Journal, and it establishes these positions : 1st. Ibat Mr. Buchanan is now and has al ways been for a Protective Tabiff I ' 2nd. That he has heretofore been in favor of i excluding Blavery by .act of Congress from all the territory of the United States north of 36 30' j 3rd. Inat everv northern nmwrtif pw. recting Judge Bronson to be dismissed for not appointing Free-soilers to office, and the "substi tution of thej infamous Cochrane in his place, wielding the jmmense power of the New York Custom House, his gi ving "the office of Governor of Kansas to lthe arch-abolitionist and agitator, Keeder, is enough to damn him in the estimation of every Conservative and true man of the South. Nor was his jcendu- less, but more, culpable, when, learning that Reeder was using his official influence torfbrce abolitionists into the territory of Kansas, and keep slave-holders out, by an ar ray of fire arins from the north,, he refused or Heglected to remove him I And who was ap pointed Reeder's successor, when Pierce' feund it convenient to idismiss him on the eround of fn. Minister from Nicaragua, and thereby acknowl- edging Walker's Government as j independent, will depend the solution 'of the question a to who will have the right or the wrong end of tha mdfal side of this, war, houIdNMr Crittenden' awful prediction be fulfilled. It will be inewn bent then on the administration to show the soun try and world, T that previous to the reception and recognition of Walker' Minister it had as certained that the .Government he! claims to re present had really and truly established its inde pendence. , JMot by temporary success in arm, but in such a substantial manner as warranted its application to be received into the gWat fami ly of nations., llnless the administration can do this, there can be no question of the right and the wrong of thematterj for if war doe come il . leaf... op"1 rrviiwwLuj eta waiw xjuuuii iauua I -we. wuiO We have before us " The Debates in the Califor- Upn. . . adminirtion wiU rest the terrible res- n,... n lt-. I nonRibilitw nf rtWn AaooA1M 1 i uu vajuvcuuuu, euitea Dy j. t. Urowne Esa I' J "-ooaiuj onngng it on. the American cause to prompt and efficient or ganizatiori. There is no time for delayjin this important matter. , Those who are resolved to sustain the American nominations and stann hv the Union and the Constitution should meet to gether in every section of the State and organize iortawitfi, so that there can be concert of action. Let none hold back. Every true American should go to work, and circulate documents amongst his neighbors. Our cause is just and will prevail. But the most holy and just of causes cannot suc ceed, if its friends are lukewarm and inactive. uur leader is doing , his duty manfully in the West. He is in fine . spirits, haa ;a 4th. He is for the Pacific; Rail Road and in this "differs widely from the Democracy of the South." 6th. "Every unsound man at the north claim ing affiliation with the Democracy has mounted on his (Mr. B's.) back." -Now, if these things be true, fand surelv the democracy ought to know,and they say so,) how can Southern States Rights, strict construction, anti protection Democrats support him ? But iet the caucus at Uncmnati nominate him, and these peculiar friends of the South, these men who are' horrified at the very idea of protection, these men who swear vengeance r against the Govern- men 11 it snouid violate the Hon art tn from which we quote, fsee page 43) Mr. Shannon moved to insert as an addition al section the following" . iseitner slavery nor involuntary servitude, Should it turn out that this Government bai been over "swift" (in view of the approaching andnnati Convention,) in recognizing the new Government, it may be alleged that it ha viola- .u.vyiiilnijr aorvnuue, i ' ' -j ww Auegvu uiac it na viola- unless for the punishment of rrimaa ,i,n I tnA fV,z ,;-,-t . ! betoleraiedin this State. IS" Jton-BuIwer xnjr uu, uu lue omer nand, suould it be brov it nr 01 t . . ." . i mi. ouauuua s amenament oemg first in or- I . . . . . . . w -r tr.ii-.t a 11.. & ui vi i j that. Mini Piflx n ii ... l reference to tha I , " - . v uuor muniuon of war, der. Mr. Halleck. after debate in . ' vsvawaa.ww V WXAW v " particular portion of the Constitution which the 11476 1)6611 famished to the Coata Rican bv Great provision shmtM um. ir i I r. 5. , . . clara tion against thVuctbn of SlTve in- thtta "latter wffTJ5 to California shall le-inserted in the Bill of ces of the war . i. UWT01 consequen- . , - ' - r . . , duuuiu vioiare tne constitution bv with open Tns by the hardy yeomanry of that building the Pacific Rail Road,-these very men remon. and haa marlo t region, and has made troops of friends for him self and the cause. In view of this, can any true man stand idle? WiU Americans sleep1 lipon their anna, in the midst of the conflict ? j Again we urge tnem to action and organization ! ! Up opaeds akd at them 1" Candidates for thk Liqisiatcbe. Sam'l T-1. . . . . . ' " vun uui W itignts. mr. a. temporarily withdrew his amend ment to enaH Mr. H. to make his motion The motioniof Mr. Halleck was decided in the affirmative, i i Mr. Shannqn then again submitted his amend ment and the;:proposed section was unanimous ly adopted.", j Such is the record from the Dehatealn tha n. niornia Uonv6ntion : and this is the man, who first proposed jto exclude Southern slave-holders from carrying their property to California, who was appointei by Pierce to succeed Governor Reeder I Wjuld such a man feel any sympa' iny tor tne ngbts of the South ? Were not hia ces of the In the meantime, it is tn he famraA ,. it. t siness of Our country will be no bttle embarrassed and interrupted by the doubt and uncertainty involving this most momentous question of War or Peace between the United State and Great Britain. - . EX- re- , r aaac oi ascertain titmice the record and no loom selves to be decMTt mnA ;.u i. . . " "ir1"" tnat uragg nas been Sl- .ih!r.,B,emUi "dth,lt GUatr ha. sa ncu the in eru of the East, or h any wsr pragg. Lennyton I lag York. PhiiA.uTnkia r " ir : .t- i ' i ... 7r oeen weu 1:', ' " J""' to ghah interest, as TZJ.Omr tV7 ?wer & n in the Brit- UI laiaitna . h... nn a. . . -""rpuTer, wnust such a squadron for DurpoaeaofdeTeiw. 4. . j.rl ,i t." v. wnicn might ExTaaoanisaav I .''ll U.not 'Potent for schemes (Ohio) Courier eiv -TZ.T'-'Z . iJmnM. R. .T7r';", c "I MTUcampaigns in the four men from i rl iZl -".A ' -m "T7X iuu7 P"ed. This ZlSUL y S" ? " h" HtJ-m StWipol wilkoot. Ural wt toS aJI'i rL dAJ-" the catastrophe they plof that experience and apUtu n mari rSSai'? Md SS Jicl. few ye.ra.Cld .LbwS E ,WAWP. the bun pa went out. mnA place a large a ann. .?.v.. r r ! M M rre with tf.cm. aiw .ft -.v...-iro: u."?1" I ,- . li-Yif- ?.W9 wn teh for ranJ,upbCTtr. , " "- ;tmtheuofthia, and took a swJln-tr AHn.Wni,... .. r '-V. n.. Australia, had the com. a nau tna W We bar. 'r ., I P.Hment paid to him by hia STiprWra of K.Tl "SKtJotlrhnXrdZ r":? "J ofthVteal -e VN4ariAa his recall and persist in it, why U not thepresent - tv.Viv vffurvuuiiT ior accompusning it 7 j Oor. N. T. Times.- iJWT This week being County Court in David son, we learn that nn n r i American Elector for th nth n;Dt--t . vituivi. uiaue oh of hi best speeches to a large audience : and waa replied to bv Robert P ThV m arm a.w V in a very unfair, illiberal and Jesuitical manner Wnen Gen. I. reinined oitinir If. t ' tcooiUna as ne has nnt tiai-t n. v. i.i . , skinning he recieved at the hand of the Hon donn A.err at iJanviila V. (n ioeo r v . . , , - : wi. rum wnat we have heard of the character of Mr. Dick peech at Lexington, Gen.. Leach did not give him a hck amiaa. VV .t. .v. St. i ., . " v.jlwM Vim Duin- bn but .week, that the anti-American who can vassed the district With O.rt T r U t. C. We hear that Mr tC i"w.'". ' at the first meeting-' The Americans -of gallant' old Camden are prepared to do good service for their country III the t TlTVrV4ftli rm A A. fttl M af ,1 IJAr.." vuuvcb. ine ag Kicht Tw -wa ... ti. nnstian, American, is a catit,, election in the Senatorial District of Moore and Montgomery. . D. P. Williams, loco, is a candidate to repre sent Columbus County in the House ofi Com mons. In Cumberland and Harnett tha locofocq can-" didates are : For the Senate, Daniel McDiarmid; for the House, Messrs. J. G. Shepherd, J. L. Bel thea and Eldridge rJarnett. I The locofocos in Johnston have re-nomifiated their former ticket : L. B. Sanders, for the Sen- aan . .1 1 f m 1. . uu Messrs. lomunsen and Barnes for the House. j Dr. J. H. Drake is a candidate for re-election to the Senate from Nash, aDd N. U. Lewi, loco, is a candidate for the Commons. f ' Jno. D. Taylor, Esq., is the locofoco candidate in tne benatonal District of Bladen, Brunswick -uu vommnus. it u rumored and hoped that Andrew J. Jones, American, former Commoner from CMumbus. will oppose Mr. Taylor. Ralph Gorrell, Esq., is announced as a candi date for the Senate from the county of Guilford "all the chivalry,"- will swallow him and all his odious doctrines, with a gusto 1 What a willing auu convenient conscience does an appetite for tne -spoils give to politicians now-a-days I , GOV. BRAGG AND FREE SUFFRAGE. The - antecedents " of the anti-American can didate for Governor place him in an ugly quaa- uary in reierence to tne darling pmieH: nf .-r Governor Reid Free Suffrage. We heard no professions from him no public speech noth ing in writing, anterior to the time he was nom inated for Governor in 1854, in favor of Free Suffrage. He was as mute as a coy maiden up ro mat period l uut we have his acts, and tW are said to speak louder than mere words. In 1848, Mr. Rogers was elected Senator. art1 flan. Person one of the Commoners, from Gov. Bragg's county, Northampton. The Legislature had t pass upon the question. ,Thev were Free Suffrage, and did all they could to defeat it Troi- The Washington correspondent of the N. wnen tney reached tne iregislature. , Gov Brag writes mat the Southern delegates ANOTHER LOCOFOCO FALSEHnnn - , . PLODED I . t -, It has been industriously circlated In many rira s.4f atl..' a a J ' 1 W . . ." .. ia venire ana rast, that Mr. Gilmer i in favor of restoring the Missouri Compromise. We doubt not that an article that appeared in th " Standard," a few day since, in which Mr. G. - MWW AAtaW a' t WrW antecedente enough to show, that he would do WM S8' misrepresented, has had a tendency to au in ins power to exclude slavery from Kansas ? f w wis laisenood. Mr. Gilmer was If he was in .kvor of making California a free infonned 01 that thi charge had been State, will hejnot do eyerythingto put down brou8ht Snt by letter addressed to him at slavery in thej territory which he was appointed AsheTil-le' nd in ,nPl7 dated at tUt place, tha by Pierce to govern t Such is tha friandat, nf 16th instant he ay : On all occasions. Dublin the Administration for u and our institutions &nd Private 1 declared I was opposed to and rights I When wUl the people of the South oe aroused toja sense of the danger into which they havebeefa plunged by the treachery and double dealing of this corrupt and unscrunnln. urnasiy t I Abolitionist nr th Ctnciksati Conveu- knew they were the bitter opponents of this dar ling bantling of his party, yet he voted for them and gave them the power to defeat it Nor is thfc all. He did what he could jto elect' them, and not only used all lus influence to secure their election, out twe are inioimed,) actually solicited them to become candidates, knowing, at the time they were opposed to Free Suffrage! Now, how, in the face of these facte, can his friends have the assurance to say that he has been a fast friend nf . . . . aunragel Would they thus stultifv him with perhaps jome few exceptions from Virginia, have already decided upon giving the New York Softs their seats in the CincmnatT Convent . i-"""1"'8 MpyrM1'ao """"" . . ' the Hards. Thia ,. n7ZZ ."7 W 0nt " j ..ua. uiu secure tne SPOlIS to their leaHera I a ; j Al a. Am . ' - - - me resuorauon or the Missouri Compromise. I say this in all my speeches. It i false that I intimated, on any occasion, public or private, the contrary. . - - , . - j . r Pray, what lie and misrepresentation will not the unscrupulous adherents of a desperate cause concoct and circulate to defeat Mr. Gilmer ? Let his friends be on the alert! There are amongst his adversaries, those who are ready, at aU time to . ; - v. . . . ,: ' - a 8t?rt tft0 Vutk accumulate the lie, ' W inadvertently mis-stated in nnr lout leaders .of Currituck have several timeVaWmnt-! rT American .Candidate for the position of favoring this important amend- & icntwm ta Camden, but ' w , ' m vuowan. v uiiam Thomas, J ujeHS OI constatution, and in the next breath aaffioSS! ffy Party in that voting to send to the Legislature, the very body the exclusion 'of the Hards we hive anticipated .and predicted from the be ginning. Southern Democrats -will sit, " cheek by jowL wiljh those Tan Buren Freesoilers at Cincinnati, ; and 4hen return home to denounce Diumore as an Abolitiomst. The Hards, the as sociates and foUowers of Dickinson and Bron son, and the -only national Demnrnti. i . " "v svuiuiy mm, ny i j cuitxjruwj in tne placing him in the inconsistent and contradicto- North' are toJ -be eluded at Qncinnati, and aaa wvgug wttjr w me un uarenites. T-mfltoAftn nV1!nl A e .annuWthVl Filbnore, Andrew j hyS uace" ino of "X temperance ' Delaonwd the national American ticket gen Of Camden love their mnnt ;ii n jPD.? U not the Tlace to fiT ' -yuua soil show thair'devofawln thLJL?. TO" v tit. i.- r : v - ""jwiob uiid oown by Washington Jefferson, Jackson and Henry ClSV. DV marrViinir nn in J t i ! VI' r TrT..3 vr." ,fllnx to tbe "I'l' xuuiore, Andrew Jackson rallj. Carolina Whig. county., 1 It wiil be seen, by rcference'to the r,, tisement in Another column,, that the sale of the XarOOrOUgb llOll.Se " aAxrartA A-1 i ' -.WMv w uiae p.ace nv Ka t ftU 3 At. J ; V-t na peon postponwd until the Aiota oi June. a-The "Register," for one or two issues past, u xu unaviodaDly printed on an inferior arti cia oi paper. This defect will he remei t which had to pasa upon it. men who were - - vaaraVA, ly opposed ton? Can such inconsistency be palliated or excused? No. Come out with the trutn, gentlemen. Cease your equivocation, and 7 r?s!rmy tency Sr Webayereceivedaletter,forpubiicatdon of your candidate, that when he voted for the from the HonjR. S. Donn.ll, which AsuZt enemies of Free Snffraffa fn thari... I.- . . - Bnau VP r - a- - iicgummre i w iii. What a commentary is the present action of Pierce on the fanpu sentiment of William i Lowndes, that " The Presidency is an office not to be sought 1" All accounts from Washington j agree in representing that he is using every effort- 10 secure a reniosnination at Cincinnati. During: the canvass thai brought him into power, it waa represented by his friendsthat bis indifference to public honors and his love of retirement; were o great, that there wa no certainty he would serve j his time out, if elected. His resignation of a seat in the Senate and a commission in the arm v were cited as proofs of hisunambitious and self-deny. ing spirit. Those who elected him 'begin to think different! v of the matter haw . Hi. af ' ) " , mmT MVU.my city of office is equal to a grisly bear's of life, f and is greatly more inconvenient to those who installed him in it than to those who stood in t opposition. . i - i
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 21, 1856, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75