Newspapers / The Weekly Raleigh Register … / Aug. 27, 1856, edition 1 / Page 2
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iHE SPEECH 61 JE1 CLEMENS, Delivered Jr. ALa. OQ Ue2Cth-f Jaly, 1844: -If ws ton from the party to the candidate tbey batt poroinitol. there U still nothing to relieve the shifting, time-eerving, doable dealing policy that distinguishes alike the om and tb . other. U 1S15 Mr. Buchanan made a speech hi which ha denounced the war of 1812, and the Administration of James Madison, and lauded fhtgh term Bask f tba United State. In 17 ha wrote a letter to Gen. W. Jones, in Vkh ha admitted the naa of the language im-J pa lad to htnv bat aaid that he waa then a very Young man. and that he very aoon after regretted od recalled it. What he means by my soon afterward, be dees not eoodoicend to inform u. hut the record of the country upply the infor tAtkm be is disposed to withhold. In 1820 (fire vmrs afterward) be waa elected to Cor grata aa a VnhTmWL 1b 1S22 he waa reflected aa the c-Ufcfidateof th Federal party. Here then la a rvd of years during which he certainly bad dU regretted hia youthful indiscretion; and it mk.s ne that ia nut repenting Tery enun. la 1828 be waa elected to Congress aa a Jack eon mas, but Li old Federal partialities clang to him, and he ruled fur the tariff of that year, which drove Sooth Carolina into nullification 41 almost iato revolaoon. In 1819 he partiCl tied ia a pobbe meeting in Lancaster, 1'enn-, ud waa one of the committee who prepared the Wlowing reaotutioca: JSwoJWd; Aa the opinion of thiameeiing. that a the Legislator of thi State will abortly be in irrimi. it wfl be highly deeerriog their wiadom end patriotism to take into their early and most rriotts oauaderation the propriety of instructing tur BrprearnUtiws in the National Legislators to nae the most sealuo and strennoiu exertions to Inhibit the existence ot slarery in any of the Territories or States which may hereafter be cre ated ly Congreaa; and that the members of As rrr.b.y frun this county be requested to embrace the rar5t import unity of bringing the subject Ufure the IIouws ot the Legislature. JUscired. That in the opinion of thia meeting, the mem hers of Congress who at the last session MHUined the caue of jtwtiee, humanity and pe t riotfaen. In tpusinc the introduction of alarery in the SUU tUa rtkieavcred to be formed out of the MsnaTi Territory, are entitled to the warm est thanks of every friend of humanity. ,., JAMES HOPKINS, WILLIAM JENKINS, JAMES BUCHANAN." In IM7 he recanted these opinions, and wrote a letter to Berka county, Pun., urging the exten sion of the Missouri Cbmpromiss to the Pacific. In 1S6 be Ukas that back also and plant him sHf uputt Squatter Sormgcty. In 1844 he made a speech upon the annexa Urmxjf Trxaa, ia which he declared that he bad only bees brought to farce the measure from the con notion that it wooJd be the means of limiting feat! of enlarging the area of slaTery. He prrarwud petitions again and again for the abo viit of slavery ia the District of Columbia, and eat Mr. Calhoun 'a resolutions recorded bis bm ia favor of the rrligums agitation of the eUwry question, and in Urorof the constita- rjonal power of Congress to abolish alsrery in the District of Columbia, In hia latter to Mr. Sandfurd, he deliberately asserted the exclusive power ot Congress over the subject of slavery in the Territories, or in other words, that Congress had the power to establish, prohibit, or abolish it. JLad now be has placed himself upon the Guctunaa platorm says that be is mum from thie day frh that be is no longer James Bu chanan and haa no opinion to express upon the great questions which divide the country other than they have seen fit to express for him. Contrast with him the candidate of the Ame rican party, Millard Fillmore. Look at hia re coril Loo at th man I There be stands, a light and landmark for future generations. Com mencing his career a poor boy, friendless and pen niless, be worked hia way up, slowly and labo riously, to the highest offices and the highest hut. II is is no mushroom greatness no acci dental c'evaUon. Called to the Chief Magistracy at a time when the "viUl storm of faction waa rsjritig through the land, he discarded the preju dices of a lisa-time forgut party furgot sections, and gave himself up wholly to his country. Driving from hkn with a lofty scorn the narrow minded euunasflors who sought to sway his ac t to their own selfish ends, be took to his bo som Cay, and Cass, and Webster ; and the Angel of lVace once more spread its wings over a dis .tracted laud. And when his work was done, m ithout a murmur, without one repining thought, he left the sphmdid mansion of the Executive fur the humble home of the citixnJ TimeruUedon, and another cloud gathered in the borixon. Like the old Bumaaa, when a great calamity had come upon them, the American party turned from the politicians to the walks of private hie for a man ntto be their leader. They found him, not in deed like Uncinnarna, at the plow, bet Ur away from the din, and strife, and trickery of parties; addinr. to the intellectual lore be had already ga thered, and learning, in the shadow of thrones, to lcve still more deeply the free soil on which his inUocy waa rocaeo. Asaing no qucauon out whether his country needed bis services, he came to assume a leader-ship which looked gloomily enough at the time, but whch, thank God I haa been hrightening every hour, and now promises a a a a ? - to end ia a gorioua triumph. "Not hi the heart the Phrygian victor bore: Not hia the brand that gleamed on Grauic's shore: Not hn the race au-crnquering Julius ran r N4 his the star that led the Conican : Hat cuontry called him called ia wild despair. The patriot came, ana all nis soul was tnere." no the firit exoeot be landed on our shores, hi heart haa been in hia hand. ' He haa sought na votes by slippery evaaiona or unworthy con cealmest. Firmly as a man, and bocestly ss a pttrkrf. he has given utterance to hia sentiment. rVeaing no abetter oenina ine reeuiuuona oi aa irresponsible conventiuo, be tells you be would despise himself if he could conceal h's opinions. Listen to what he saya at Albany. After de irfxmdrg Northern agitators in terms no other sandstate ha clamJ to uv, be says: "I tell yon, my friends, that 1 speak warmly on thfa subject ; for I feel that we are in danger. I am determined to make a dean breant of it. I will wash my hands of the consequences, bat tier ther mar be : and I tell you that we are treading ca the brink of a volcano, thai is liable at any moment to break forth and overwhelm the nation.' I might by soft words bold out de lusive hopes, and thereby win rules ; but I can never consent to be one thing to the North, and another to lh-ooth. I should despise mj self if 1 cutild be ruutv of such eraaioo. ror my con science would still ask with the dramatic poet - ! there not some secret curse fttne bidden thunder red with immortal wrath To blast the wretch who owes his greatness To his country" nan !" -In the language of the lamented, immortal dav ! bad rather be nent tnaa rreskleut.' . And this ia the man you are asked to abandon tecanse hi enemie say that be has no chance to Ve elected 1. If it were true, aa it is false, it would be more than base to desert such a man in such m crim. It is the coward s plea at best. What w ild you think of the soldier who on the eve of rjuu told you tnat ne nau no nunc nts own re giment would discharge 114 cuty manjuuy and wu, but anotner regiment on me ten woum ran awsr. or be overwhelmed by the enemy, and tLercfure he would take time by the forelock and run away find- Yet the conduct cf that soldier wti!d be no more indefensible then that of the ritixia bo shrinks from the manful assertion of Lis iajTiucsJ principles because he is afraid he may le dekated. it waa nut so our fathers an swered in thedajsof t be old revolution. If they Lad, the chain of 'iritiah tyranny would even Uwv te rwatiag around our limb. It waa not so theisnawrtal Travis answered when urged to abend the Alamo. When told that if be re anaiasl be sauat be cat OS, and every man ef his littWbasd aacxvfiosd, Le answered, "I know it, Lofi want to teach these barbarians what A me. r sari raw do." He did give them m lesson which Bros than acy other one Ling led to the hbera- EXTRACT of Texas. Let us imitate the example of those who have rone before u. Discarding all weak, unmanly doubts, let each ooe do hi doty in hi owa sphere, with hi whole soul, and I an swer for it, a crowning glory awaits you m No vember." . VOTING FOR MR. BUCHANAN WILL NOT DEFEAT MR. FREMONT I V. There is point In the following extract from a speech of C. a Henderson, published by authorw tr of the American Executive Committee of Oua chita, and ws commend it to our readers : e a.0 insidious argument hasbeeri indus triously urged in favor of the Presidential candi date of the Democratic party, which, though false, as it is unfairly presented, deserves a reply. W are called upon to rote for James Bucha nan for the purpose of defeating Fremont, the caudidste of the Republican party. We are urged to do this oa the assumed ground that Millard Fillmore cannot be elected ; and the ap peal ia made to us, as Southern men, to present an undivided Southern front against the North by uniting om Iktduautn I . r In the first place, the argument i purely a sectional one, and calculated rather to' aggravate than avert the evils impending the country. We intend to defeat Fremont, but it shall be done by a National rote. 'Whoever ia for the North as against the South, or for the South as arainst the North,' ia not of our political faith. Thia i the sentiment of our great leader, Millard Fillmore, and it is endorsed by every truly national man from Maine to California. Again : Those who use the argument are not sincere in it. They never deny that Fillmore is a national man that he has been tried and prov ed pre-eminently worthy of American confidence. Yet, it never has occurred to them to vropot a umonodkimt This oversight comes of their pecu liar habit of looking forward not to the good of the country but solely to the success of the Democratic party. '- The argument is unsound; because, if Bucha nan should go ep with every Southern rote, it will not elect him. He must have, in addition, twenty-nine Northern rote and these are hardly to be obtained, by laying aside every other consideration, and defying the North to a sectional issue and a trial of strength. If Fre mont is elected, it must be exclusively by Nor thern rotes, for he cannot get a rote from tne South. The North haa a majority of the electo ral rote, and if ahe chooses to cast them for Fre mont, what difference would it make whether the South were united or divided T Mr. Fill more and Mr. Buchanan will, together, receive every Southern rote, despite the treacherous ac tion of the Democratic party in Missouri, and they will, together, be more likely to carry twenty-nine Northern votes than Mr. Buchanan alone. Aside from the main question, 1 believe that Fill more alone will receive a sufficient number of Northern rotes, which, added to hi Southern rote, will give him a majority in the electoral oolkge. But if be does not, and be and Bucha nan together can take twenty-nine Northern vutea from Fremont, (which they certainly can.) it will defeat Fremont in the popular election ; and. thus defeated, he is forever defeated. It is undeniable that if the election goes into the r se of Representatives, there are conservative mvj enough in the House, if united, to elect a National man. If thia union cannot Ac be ef fected, it will be the fault of the Democratic par ty ; and I go aside here to remark, that if the Democratic party had not sulkily rejected every proposition at affiliation with the American par ty, Banks never would have been elected Speak er. But ' suppose the Democratic party to be as stubborn aa ever, and each party in the House stands by its own candidate, the result will be no election in the House. In this event the Vice-President, by tlie Constitution, becomes d e facto President. The Senate will have the se lectinc of the Vice-Presklent ; and the Senate, being Democratic, will select Breckenridge. I am sure Democracy will have no right to com plain at such a result. Nevertheless, if the party is not satisfied with thia reasoning, and remain so patriotically solici tious on the subject. Id than ncaBow ikeir own praeription, and mthdraw tXar own candidate ! This can be done with a better grace, because Fillmore ia a tried man a true man more gene rally beloved oy and acceptable to the American people, than is James Buchanan. But the Republican party of the North have discovered, as have the Democratic party of the South, that Fillmore will defeat tiess, and tiuy are making the same complaint. The truth is, foUow-dtixena, our candidate is very much in the war of his opponent everywhere. I will dismiss this pet argument of our oppo nent with the mere remark : I believe their ob ject in urging it, is, they are afraid FXLmort wiU be elected, and are endeavoring to make a scare crow of Fremont to frighten the timid into doing their will, when they will laugh at them a the dupes of their sophistry and the victims of their Ulse alarms. Fear not, fellow-citizen I Fremont can never be elected. The party that nominated him are famous for enthusiastic convention, but when I their action comes before the people, the enthu- tt:l . i j: . r j siasm suosiaes. iia an aoKung connoence in the patriotism of the American people, we will present no sectional issue as they would per- suade us, but meet the aectionaliat on national grounds and overwhelm him with a degrading consciouaaees of his own moral treason. Alrea dy the fatal blow haa been struck, and nobly waa it done ! The voice that so recently echoed along the shores of the Hudson heralded the doom of the reckless agitator, and smothered the whole Republican artillery I Strong and fear- leas in his purpose of right unmindful of his own success or defeat, and determined with all the resolution of his own great heart to detect the traitor Millard Fillmore, with irresistible hand, tore the surer veil from the face of the false prophet, and exposed the loathsome thing m all its bom bie ugliness, tlow toe Be wards, the Gieeleys and the Wilsons howled, when. In the language of the Washington Union, "till more exposed the disunion purpose of the Black t VI:- 1 V - .1 J (kcimuuoui UMiuiuuuu, wu uuw wsro tug ue ceived masses of that party brought to a sober reflection 1 You will remember that Filhnore did thia at Albany, while all the tune James Buchanan was playing "hide and whoop behind tne lJemocratic platform. I ce Democratic organs of the country hare adopted what they call Mtne unanswerable argu ment" of Mr. Fillmore against the Republican party, and yst they insist on our supporting Mr. Buchanan with the bermetical seal on his Up. for be nas declared nimeeir an absolute and incorri gible "Say Nothing I I would ask: are men to be rewarded for doing good, or are tbey to be rewarded tor an inveterate pledge to silence and inacoonr The answer shouHl be, that in an Hour of peril uxe this, America expects every man 10 ao nis aaty. 1 ne American principle haa teen recently most triumphantly vindicated by the conduct of tne Uennana of the North, who have Uirown off the disguise and now stand in the full light of aboUUoniam, as we always demonstrated tbey would and shall we now for sake a principle ao clearly Vital to the best inter est of the country, and unite with those who, for party purposes, have so carefully fostered this foreign element of treason and all vote fur a man who shakes hi head in determined silence when the country is calling on every patriot to come to the rescue? It cannot be expected of A Ftxht Messaoe. The Utica Observer say the following message was handed into the tele-1 graphic office in that cify a few day since ; to . 1 " Third Epistle of John, It and 14 verse. J "Signed By refenioz to the text, it will be seen that there i quite a respeoUble letter contained in the venea designated and a small amount of money saved, viz; " I bad many thingi to write, but I will not ! with ink and pen write to the. , . ... , ' But I trust I shall shortly see thee and we shall speak lace to face. Peace be to thee. Our mends salute tbee. Great thy friends by name." ti John, It and li. SOUTHERN MEN. . Read the subjoined "article from thV trury mv- tiocal joumaL the New York Express rt NV -Bal Rllmor ba t chance," we'are told, and, therefore, between Fremont and Buchanan,--we take Buchanan. In ieply to this, nrst,w4r U no danger qfJremonCs election. Thi thing ia nMUiematically'fmpoasible. He start with fif teen Southern States dead against him, and in the sixteen Northern State, he must carry about all "of "themT certainly TPenMylvamvwhich, it is not pretended even, that be baa a chance of carrvinr aeainst the friends of Fillmore there. Dispel then this illusion, tnat tne contest is tweet-Ttemont and BuThananfor the practical rHsneJ then this illusion, that the contest is be- contest, where that is approached is only between Fillmore and Buchanan. ? One or the other must certainly be President: Fremont never. 1 . Now, what right ha anybody South to say, Fillmore haa no chance in the North T Hare we not, within tie two past years, twice carried this SUte for his friends ? Is be leas popular now than those friends ? ' Ha he not been the. favor ite of this State ? , Was he not even selected to be put on a ticket to carry this SUte ? When Gen. Taylor was run, the programme was to run Abbot Lawrence with him, but was not Fill more Uken in his stead, On purpose to save this SUte ? Are hi friend inactive ? Did th South ever aee such a canvass as we are now only be ginning to make f - Were ever such public meet ings heard of before, a we are having T Did the Labor and Industry of the work-shop ever pour out, as they are now pouring out for Millard Fillmore ! Waa there 1 ever a party so well, so thoroughly organised, as the American parry ia in the SUte of New York, so much of a unit, or marching so well in harmony toward almost certain victory? Berlin 1ke Empire Stale, is IJU bmttLe orowai, and we know it, and, if we gu for Fillmore, we believe so goes the prise in the end. - Men, however, ought not to gamble, as it were, in politics, especially when parties become ge ographical ; but, without regard to results; dp right. Ia it right to elect Fillmore over Buchan an T Or, rather, is it not wrong, not thus to elect him? ; ' What Fillmore' policy ia, or U to be, we know from the record of 1850 and on, but what Bu chanan' is to be, ws know not, because hi party, for the first tune, hare interpolated for- SLrrS D . w a -a 1 1 l 1 L - U0UUBUVII V Stw mvmm-p mm w . . . a- m t 1 i try with all the world. Buchanan ia pledged to that policy. - I am ma aw James Buch anan, be tells u,but Ike Cincinnati Pa' form ! Thus, war abroad and continued discord at home are the promised froiU of such an election 1 Is it not wrong, then, thus to rote 1; Ny,isit not a crime, and without any- regard to Fdlmore'a chances, ought not every man to do right, know ing that God, in the end, will maintain the right ? It ia a crime too, to make this election sec tional. eeorraphicaL as the Fremont and lin ehanaa men are making it. Millsrd Fillmore alone remove the canvass from this danger of sectionality. Fremont's strength is all North. Buchanan' practical strength is all South.' Fill-, more alone embodies the conservatism of the whola Union. Fillmore alone ha the hands and heart of the conservative men in all parts o' the Union. It is a folly then to try to triumph over the North with Buchanan, or over the South, with Fremont. Now, the Express Is not a Journal that proph esies, or predicts, s some other Journals often do. Do right without regard lo results, has ever been our maxim, and our policy. Hence, we here no predictions to make, but we hare a right to say the canvas, on the pirt of the Fillmore Party in the North, has scarcely begun. The history of Fremont, Fillmore's real combat ant here, is not yet xnown to our farmers. They have heard of him only as a geographer, but they have not heard of him yet, as a bUtesmaa, .?rorsinhinrinrinW Thfl fl rr nn-nfF ia alreidv oone oif. The Northern neoDle are not long dupes, and when duped they soon enianci pate themselves from the dupery. 1 lie more time is given us, the more we increase our strength. In the New England States we have not as yet fairly approached the people, certainly not beyond the SUte of Gmnecticut, but as we come before the public, we rapidly dispel the Fremont delusion. The whole Fremont sham is daily coming out, and daily emancipating-men from it. When the people are reached on the stump, the friends of the Fremont Pre& will soon raniah before a free discuaion. : The most alarming element of this canvass, especially to the South, is the abandonment of the Democracy by the Germans, and to some ex tent by the Irish. The Americans do not court foreign rotes, but accept them gratefully, if. given to American principles. The Democracy of the North, however, exists on, nay, breathes on iu foreign vote. Take away iu foreign vote, and it is no where in the North on an electiou day, especially in the villages, towns and cities. Now the German rote, to a great extent, ugone over to Fremont, and this abandonment of this portion of the Northerd Democracy, shows how little reliance the South' can really place on the Northern Democratic Party. In. the very first sectional onset, the Foreign Democracy of the Democratic Party enlists in . a sectional warfire against the South. The "Red" Germans and the "Black" Republican are in close alliance against the 8ouu, and all are equally the ene mies of Fillmore. What is the duty of the Southern men, then, in such a crisis as this ? to keep up IU alliance with such a Northern Dem ocracy ? Certainly not, but, on the contrary, is it not iu duty to ally itself with the constitu tional conservatism of the North, that great American Partv which Millard Fillmore heada and which he illustrated in his administration of the Government, when President. Fillmore is no Northern man With Southern principle, nor Southern man ...with .Northern principles, but a sound, national, conservative man, of the school of Washington and Madison. Equity to the Union is his great characteristic, to the North as well as to the South. We do not nfTr him fn thm Smith firiithu m.n but as a Northern man, tried and true to all pans 01 tne union, and so satisfyinz and naci- I m . - .1 lying all part of the Union. : He waa President . .... ... . not of lft slave States, and 16 free Stetap. but of JJ1 United Sutea, and he united all in 1850, and mad all happy and content. Elect hhn once, and peace once more is returned, to the country, and in lest than six months the Rtnsa war will be hushed m that equity which will satisfy all but extremes. North and South, and Peace wQl once more be restored to tne detract ed States. . But keep up this sectionalism of candidates or of men, pledged, as Buchanan Is, to re-open old wounds, and to make new one?. and there will be peace no more, nothing but that prolonged bitter war" of words, which ever ends in the clash of arms.". ' Gossir at Watering Places. Belle Brittan write to the New York Mirror: - I liare talked politics" enoush for one day. Now let us listen to the ladies a mo ment. Ribbons and laces, what precious chat terboxes they are I They , cannot open their mouths but ouKhere flies something piquant and spicy ; such as : " O, hare you heard of the en gagement between Mr. aud Miss, who are piomenading so pertinaciously, aud with such a lite insurance policy of happiness written on their shining faces ? The lady is worth ft30.Qa: and if ahe erer marries him, the gray mare wtU be the better horse. Paired, not matched." s "There comes Mr. r- . a widower, with six millions of dollar, walking with the handsome widow from Jsew York. Wonder how many children h has. Eight is too large a number to begin with." - v - t v? " O did you know that Mr. " who lives in a Rfth Avenue Palace, haa bad to put a mort gage on nis nou -e tor oo,wu r And do you know that the child's Pa' is not iu father I" This is a specimen of the feminine eossin ef a rainy day at a watering piaoej and if J hadn't moved my seat, I just then might possibly have heard more than I could have written. Verilv a new fommendmant should be added to the deca logue; and it should read : Thou 8 halt not talk oadL B.ETOlNCFROM THE ' QpXTEJT. Itts amusingitj wituea wit&'"w$ailnesH and s-eaHfactionHlirtBuccaneei: prcss'here at the South: still dwell uWfhe Wea that AlrTFUl- snore' will ceVtainly retire Irqm the, contest, ana ', ; ,5 vA Vltii v- L:;X,r Ik- teive me issues owia uKnijtu ma iuuj Locofocos and,BUck Republicans. Because" the tat elections in some, of the Southern States, from purely local considerations, have resulted favorably to the spoils" party, the leaders of the I Democracy affect t consider Mr Fillmore .out of the question, and.. that tney now nave every thing their 4ytn sway. t forourselves, we at-; tach but little- importance' at any time to State olantinna in tKoir w ri n T iiTMin national Contests. ri , . , i " j .fl f Kta- with any degree of certainty the course of events in future; - and, least of all, snouia we over-esn-tnate their influence, when the public mind is in a sUte of such extraordinary, confusion and dis traction as it hi at present. In a word, none of the SUte elections which have yet Uken place, nor those which are yet to fojlow, should prop erly be oonaideredas having any weight in deter mining the Presi'lentidl election in November. We apprehend, indeed, tna' scarcely a third of those of either party, whf , ted in the late elec tions, had the Preadenual content in their thouihU at all. It is sheer folly, therefore, for the Locofoco orators and presses to be making themselves ridiculous over so small and insignifi cant a matter. '. 'Ve can' only account for it up ou the ground that it ia a sort of inveterate and disgusting hbit of theirs to make themselves laughing-istock on all occasions, pig ana mue. Tf it i a pleasure to them to do so,' however, we are willing to let them enjoy it. : Reviewing tho result of the recent elections at the South, in its yesterday's issue, the Richmond Enquirer, in ad ranee of all of its contemporaries in the art of prophesying, maaes bold to predict that "Mrl-iFUlmore Will retire from the contest before the day oif election." Our readers will re collect that) this.' same sagacious sheet affirmed,' with immense owl-Tike gravity and . se'riua neis, that M-. Fillmore would not accept the nomina tion of the Philadelphia Conveution. That pre diction was' Bpeefily upset, and It now has the temerity to venture another equally, silly, and which the event . will as surely disappoint. The wish was father to the thought in the first in stance, and it ia. .not less so iu the latter.. All the Enouirtr' vaticinations and hopes to the contrary nc4tyithUnding, Mr. Fillmore will not from tile conteat, but wiU remain lirmly in the field, giving battle both to the Black Repub licans snd the. Democratic spoils Republicans, aid rallrlntf around him all lovers of the Constitution and the Union in every section of thn cOunrrr .' t Strange to say, in the yery act "of predicting and advising Mr. Fillmore's retiracy from the contest, the Enquirer admits that such a step on hi part "might fapor. the success of the Black Rt publican candidate f .. And, stranger still, with thw yiew of. the effect of Mr. Fillmore with drawal broadly confessed, it goes in for it, heart and soull ' Whars the necessary and only infer ence? Why, that the Enquirer is really m favor of the "success of the Black Republican candi dates'' ! ! No. .other deduction can be -drawn from iu languap. Or why should it insist upon Mr. Fillmore retiring, when it sees and confesses that his abandonment of the field would "fa vor the success of the. Black Republican candi dates?" If would be' most natural to suppose that a man animated by a truo regard for the rights of the kuth and the best intresU of the Republic, foreseen g such a result, would earnest ly entreat Mr. Fdlmore to continue a candidate, instead of continually urging him to retire from the contest. Siicli, we apprehend, would be tho course of niuety-nine out of every hundred gen uine Southern men. no matter what their party predilections. But not so with -the Richmond Enquirer, the oriin of the Virginia Democracy, and the self-elected champion of Southern rights, par excellence, it urges Air. r mmore to witn Jraw though admitting iu the same breath that his withdrawal "might favor the success of the Black Republican candidates 1" And herein you see illustrated, fully and emphatically, the patri otism and regard for the South of the Southern leaders of the spoils Democracy. Depicting in gloomiest colors the effect of Mr. Fremont's elec tion upon our iustStutions'and our liberties, and yet strenuously advising and urging that to be done which they themselves confess would con tribute in no inconsiderable degree to. his trium phant success ! Here is consistency with a ven geance ! And here is an exhibition of patriot ism, too, which will excite the wonder of honest and patriotic men, if not even the spoilsmen themselves. We invite the attention of all true Southern men of whatever party to this curious aud as tounding revelation on the part of the Richmorid Enquirer. If it does not open their eyes to the game which is being played off upon them, for purely partisan and selfish ends, we are at a loss to conceive a hut will. The South, it is evident, is to be sold out to the Black Republicans, if the Southern Democracy shall be able to consum mate the sale. .. Anything to "favor the success of the B lack Republican candidates," but noth ing in behalf of Fillmore. The party fiat has gone forth to. this end, and it remains to be seen whether the xpeple will obejr. If slaves, they will do their master's will if freemen, they will exercise aud give effect to their own. Elchmond Whig. THE BOGUS DEMOCRACY IN TROUBLE. The bogus Democracy are in great trouble. The following' ii reported aa having fallen from Mr. Mason, in. .the Senate, recently : : - The true construction of the Democratic i4at "ormfusf prepared at Cincinnati was demanded bxi Mr. Mdson,"xk order that the peonle he represen tee sou urc iiiinuruy in me rvMiin mi&mt nave a full undersUnding of the meaning hereafter to be attached to that portion ' relating to a general system'of internal improvement We once had, he said, d Cohstlluiinn which was reverenced and respected as d safegtutrd for minorities ; but now all its barriers were overleaped, . and the will of a ."J "e exercised, without re- VT wr mtdim r if msi susIias " 1 ' J- We art not surprised, fsavs the Richmond American, mat irie people of the South, who nave so loug aiiowea tbemselvee to-be deluded by the shallow trickery of locofoco nlatform: should at length begin to see that they have been iiumnuegea atui oetrayed, but we must say, that j we were not prepared tor the spectacle of a "De mocratic senator rimne m his D ace to demand .t . A . .., T . - .1 " cZ?.irHZum V pworm prepare that the " platform prepared at Cincinnati" is nothirfg more nor less than a gull-trap ? Has lie not seed millions upon millions voted ut of the public treasury for the improvement of the rivers and harbors of the West, by men who profess to be disciples of the creed which denies the power of Congress "to commence and carry on a general uircfjatm r.f it . -.n . . 1 . r. --.wnr. ... tr 1 T 1 77 . .. ' I "JMViu VI I t. m UU'IVIV UI.14IP 1 11X3 UOt seen the public lands squandered by millions of acres, to make railroads and canals in the States in which they lie, by the votes of membes who endorse a platform which declares " that the pro ceeds of the public lands ought to be sacredy ap plied to the objects specified in the Constitution, and i:.ai we line democracy) are opposed to any Jaw for the. distribution of such proceeds among theSutes. a alike . inexpedient in Dolicv and repugnant to Vie Constitution t" '-. . '.-,, ; i Has he not seen munificent donations of these EiWic lands made by Democratic majorities in ngress, to enable the New SUtee te pay for thousands of miles of railwaycontracted for by Stete Legislatures, and these donations made, too iq iue yery teetn 01 tne aeciaration or th a Rum platform, which affirms " that the Constitution does not confer (upon the Federal Government authority, either directly or indirectlyj to assume the debte of the several SUtes, contracted for lo- t f A ! m vi uvciu4Miijj..uvciuein,or iut otneroiate pur-1 poses t". - And has he not seen all these instance . t w..mnl ' . ..... A- 1 . 1 . r i . of grosr favoritism and manifest injustice prac- tiosd by a party which solemnly V declares' in its SA';riVUi nJDaU' 44 that justice Qd sound pohcy forbid the Federal Gowrvurnt to cherish the iutereste of one por- tioti to the injury of another portion of cur oom- mon COUntrV IT I THE RAIIIfifl REGISTER; A nlnikm of ir fdeliahtful peace, yswygu yyry ruyj r- ,. ;j - - J v r-, 1 1 lj A LEIGU NT WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUG. 27. 1856. NATIONAL 'AMERICAN TICKET J"OR PRlIDENTj, -rw t -1i i" 1 " stow ? -rww,st7-,ni . ..awi'aftsajaisaaw ' MILLARD FILLMORE,; "..i;.7 .'OF NEW. T0BK, 'j.Vj'i if' FOR VICE PRESIDENT, ANDKEW J. DONELSOC OF TENNE8SEB. , , '. .". , f i 'AMERICAN ELECTORAL .TICKET, . FOB THE STATE AT LAOOE. . . - L. B CARMICHAEC, of Wilkes, JOHN W. CAMERON, of Cumberland. 1st District, Lewis Thompson, of Bertie. 2d Edward J. Warren, of JJeaufort. 8d 4th 6th 6th 7th; 8th O. P. Meares,'of New Hanover. J as. T; Littlejohn, of Granville. A. J. Stedman, of Cliatham, r Gen. J. M. Leach, of Davidson. Gen. A. J. Dargan, of Anson, 7 Jna D. Ilyman, of Buncombe. ; j "Iflther 'e e those. North or South, who desire an administration or the North as- against the South, or for the South as against the North, they are not thimen who should give their suffrages to tne. : For my own part, I know only my country, Hy whole country, and nothing but my country" i-MlLLARD FILLMORE'S AdDBESS ON HIS LAND- IKO AT NUT-YOBX. ; i:;;r notice. , -: NOTICE is hereby give to all those indebted . to Seatoa Galea, sq4 for sabsoription to, or advertisement ia, the Raleigh - Register, that an assignment has been made to me of all such debU, as well as of .the Register, &&, iUelf, and that payment most in all cases he made to me, or my agent, U. S. Smith, Esq. - Those secounU in the hands of Israel E. James, or his agents, or Mr C. C. MoCrummen, may be re ceipted for by them. Their returns must be - ade to m: DAS'L Q. FOWLE. Aug, 21, 1866 l 1 V : " 68 There will be a meeting of the Executive Committee of the American Party, in this City, on S jiturday, the 1 S th of September next. A full attendance of the Committee is desired.' ' V n. W". MILLER, Ch'm'n. ; W. H. Habbisc, Sec'y." "..". NORTHERN DEMOCRATS. There are a great many of the Southern locc focracy, who, from reading lococratic newspapers and hearing lococratic Speakers, sincerely believe that their allies at the North are all "Northern men with Souiltern feelings, and, therefore, per fectly round on every question touching slave ry. Now, this is a great mistake, as will readi ly appear from what follows. The New Hamp shire Patriot, the organ of the Buchanan Democ racy in that State says i "it is a foul libel on the Democracy of New Hampshire to say that they are in favor of the exteusion of slavery.; Yet the Black Republicans make this charge against us every day, knowing it to be false. The Boston Post, the organ of fie Democratic party in Massachusetts, characterizes the charge thus y I ; ' J :r ' ' "It is a slander upon the Democratic Paety to say' that it is in favor of the extension of sla very.". . ..;. j . ... . Here is an extract from "The Age," a Demo cratic organ, published at Portland, Maine, and having at its head the names of Buchanan and Breckenridge. It appears that some of the Fre mont papers had charged that the Democratic party was pro-slavery. To which charge the "Age " replies at length, making quotations from the Nebraska bill, and Mr. Buchanan's letter of accepUuce, to sustain it in iu position, and wirds up with the following significant words ; It saya! to represent the Democratic party as pro slavery to assert that the platform qf the party denies to the people of the Territory the right . to exclude slavery, to declare that popular sovereignty is abjured in that platform, is to state what is wholly and unqualifiedly untrue and known to. be twhen asserted." WHAT THINK YE, OLD JACKSON MEN? The "Louisville Courier" of the ,18th instant, one of the bitterest opponents of the American par ty and staunchest advocate of Buchanan in the country, referring to the letter written by Gene-' ral Jackson, a short t:me before his death, in re gard to Mr, Buchanan, says: "But after all this.' a letter written by Jack son, in 1845, just before his death, mxanlt vil LIKTING BUCHANAH, cAaRUIKQ I1LM WITH COW aedice and falsehood, is shamelessly dragged forth to degrtkie Buchanan. 'The infamy of the affair rests upon Jackson for writing his letter and next upon those who have brousht it to liffht i for political effect dow for the first time. ! Thev. I who heap "opprobMum inotinUiu high upon the grave of Jackson," are they! who have dishonor ed him and degraded themselves by publishing the unfortunate private letter of thk. insanely VINDICTIVE OLD TTBANT WII0, IN THIS VEBT LET TER, PROVED THAT TO THE LAST NO TO0CH OF JUSTICE OB MAQNANIM1TT TOWARDS AN OPPO NENT OB RIVAL EVER ENTERED HIS BREAST, AND THAT HU ONLY JC.E FOR FRIENDS WAS TO MAKE tools or them. If Buchanan had, in 1827, in- stead 1 weati qi iauniuiiy giviusr trutblul testimonvL as be ai I, corroborated Jackson's charges against uiay, dacKson never would have written his in famous secret xettebs of J85 !?. .1 . , Did ever you hear euch abusive iangnage, even from the bitterest political enemy of Gene ral Jacksou? ,'2Ae Insanely Vindictive Old I m . a an -41. i '".;- ' .. '.''-"' .1 syrum Aa in sucn epmiets baa been used by Wl tigs or American,, your hearts would I have swelled with indignation, and vour verv - I blood boiled 1 What think ye, old Jackson men, when those, with' whom you are now co-operating, thus speak of tie , leader whom you were wont to love , and venerate? Because Gen. Jackson was convinced of the "cowardice and falsehood ot James Buchanan, and dared to ex- presi his conviction, is. it proper that a ''Demxh cratic editor " should publish to the world that it "proved thai no touch of justice or magnanimity towards an , opponent or rival ever entered his breast f' s Are such ' means necessary to ' elect Buchanan ? . And will you, by casting your suf frages for him, sanctum these ' foul j slanders against the "noble old hero of New Orleans" , i, j . ' . . ... whom ?on once delighted to honor for the great an impcrtant services he rendered his country ? :- - -r- .--r i ,..... ' llHoo. J. W. Thomasja -Democratic elec- - - j i- - j - . M-. eBadto. in Georgia, declines serving on the electoral ticket, because, as he sUtes, he will not' tr RiwKann 1 . ? DEFEAT. Vlt fa thought by many, both within and with out the Sute, that our recent defeat was owing I entirely to the unpopularity of the; jrnci)ft the American party. , Now, thia, w hesitate not to 8ftT is a very great misUke, , For, in noi T ' z - . i - thejmnclples of the American party ; the whole tinie of our Jococratic opponents was spent; and the' whole power of their force was employed, in misrepresentetion and abuse of the eld secret or ganization of the jAmerican party. Prinriple their would not discuss, but utterly ignored. De- wwrMio candidatee, alaiostBrversallyirdecliBed to engage in discussions of the principles of the American platform hut 'rather sought to divert the; minds or tne people ironi a consiaerauou 01 ihera, by directing ' their attention' to the forms and obligations which were in use when the American party was first organized. It is a well known fact that Gov. Bragg, throughout the Gu- bernatonai canvass, as jar as ne was acne, pur- sued the same course towards the American par ty of this SUte, that his "Gizzard-foot and Ebo- shiii Excellency" pursued towards the American party of Virginia. He trampocsed the whole SUte, from the mouuUins to the sea-board, and from the 'sea-board toXhe mounUins, denouncing the American party in the most violent manner, stig matizing the supporters of American' principle with the most opprobriou epithet, and apHying to tnem terms tne most ooensive, ana con. a, doubt, from the vocabulary of his "illustrious predecessor," ' Henry A. Wise. He rung the changes, wherever he went, on " dark lanterns," .cuiverte," t "midnight meetings," 'horrible and sinful oaths," &c, &c. In rain did hi competi tor, Mr. Gilmer, endeavor to draw him into a 65;- "' s ' s .1 ' ' ''' ; s ' t- 'w-W' cu sion 01 tne principles 01 Americanism, tits I course was determined on, he had chosen his exemplar, before the campaien! opened, and, though he was well aware that' the secrecy and obligation of the order had been abolish- ed, he everywhere denounced them as if still 11 existence, ana most BtuDDorniy . reiusea to ' touch the platform of the party. ' His example w'as followed by his subaltern throughout the ; State' In no county, we venture to say, were : American principles fairly discussed by Demo ; cratic candidates, but everywhere a system pf de : nunciation and misrepresentation was adopted. Never in any State, haa there bees a canvass i conducted in a more unfair manner than the one we have just passed through, it the cause, that operated, most powerfully in the defeat of our candidate, was the vile and ghameful misrepresenUtion of his ' advocacy of internal improvements. ... v m ne oeueveu . . ., -i itthii.i.ii? ji.L-i in tne very locauues tnat are inueotea to tne in fluence of Mr. Gilmer for the works of improve ment they now have, his support of internal im provemente was used as the mean by which to effect his defeat ? It is hard to believe, but it is nevertheless true. Read the following exttacU from the "Newbern Union," published the day before thq election, and see what mean were used to mislead the people and prejudice their mind against Mr. G'Jmer : . . ' " It has been alleged that the Governor ia ah illiberal partisan,' with how much truth we leave you to judge whea we reflect that this cry come from a party professing the most illiberal princi ples that have ever been entertained by any por tion of the American people. The fact is Gov. Bragg is in favor of a 'judicious system of Inter nal Improvements ; a system which p re-supposes that the State will: be enabled to meet her en gagements with promptitude ; and not those schemes which his opponent would plunge her into, without a thought scarcely of her being ul timately rescued from loss. The- SUte is now in d3bt iii round numberssome 8 or $10,000,000; the interest of that debt is to be paid and finally the principal. Mow is it to be done, save by in creasing the taxes ? . " Let us therefore support the man, who like Gov. Bragg will look before he leaps into every measure of public utility, and who seek not to increase your already burdensome taxation ; rath er than one who would 'go it blind' upon every scheme, so that there is an appearance of alleged imj r .vumeut, regardless of your suffering , a Mr. Gilmer will do. We want no mammoth SUte Bank, founded on great Railroad improvements to govern and oppress the people. Recollect that the great Jackson was . opposed to all such schemes; recollect also that the thing has been tried in Eugland by the great speculator Hudson, the railroad king, and resulted in misery to all concerned ; and in fact was a perfect failure. The idea is (as is the case now in New York,) to get the SUte involved in vast railroad improve- I menU all over the coiAitry, without regard to prac tical utility in a great measure, and then, when the crisis comes, when the works have proved to be unprofiUble and partially worthless, to have them sold for a mere song and. bought in by the speculators, who will thus have perfect control over the public transportation,, and,, by the im mense patronage they will thus be enabled to wieild, to crush every kind of opposition; ; Your lilterties will then be entirely at their mercy. Let us therefore vote for those who will be op- Pusm hi an utw Bout-iiieii, . unless it is cieariy pri they are feasible and would result to thi i md nnA nM i general goodand would not materially increase our present taxes, j Let us see our way clear in oar present efforts of improvement, before un dertaking others of a costly nature." : r , ; .; Thw'extract clearly shew with what gross in juce ud black ingratitude Mr. Gilmer j was treated by those for whose benefit he' has ao in- duatriuuily labored. . i Here is another from the same paper, furtnr shoM ing the unfair mean used to injure Mr. Gil mer in the estimation of the people: "Take Notice 1 1 That every vote caster Gilmer and the rest of the Know Nothing i only, another link in the chain that will fetter our liberties bv building ud a mammoth State Bank. modeled on the plan of the odious United Bute Bauk, which General Jackson demolished ; the greatest machine ever introduced into this coun try to benefit the few at the expense of the many, i " r . j - . . . ; And heie is still another. Read it, and say If ever you knew more wanton injustice exhibited towards a political opponent? "v. "I - - i : - - , "Look Here! Ston and tHnk v- Democrats before you deposit your votes for anv ui uie upposiiion, i wnetner a. now jNotnine or in r .t. ... . , . i rr . . v . . - dependent,) what you are about, particularly if I 3'ou are a slave owner ; whether you are willing to mcrease too taxes on your slaves ; for Uilmer and his friends are' in favor of laying it on you in the way of taxation, rather heavily. ' He thinks . .. . . 1 . . . . i in juiu titavea uo uut uulou .enougn 1 ... . f . i These are samples of the means used to defeat Mr. Gilmer. We have reason to believe a simi lar course was pursued in j every section " of the k-MoBALs in Hattl A viator of this negro empire states that the propensity for thieving is so strong and general there, that when a fin breads out in any of the seaport towns, the mer chants hurry at once with -their money to the shipping m the harbor, preferring to deposit in the hands of entire strengen-rather tjj expoM it to meviuble loss from robbery by their negro fellow-citizens.' According to a atetistical docu ment, out of 1863 children,; bora in the first tinarter of the vear in three nrovincea in Yrti seventeen hundred were born out of wedlock. only 163 were legitimate. Thi is the condition i. to which CLrealej wishes to elevate the starsv , tioD ofthe State, was the contest fought upm1 TOMTGy IN-FLtTXfTi. The American party has earnestly UUi , , impress upon tho nuuds of the people tin dangers to the fvwith frnm Foreign inflnenoe They told thern that the hr.rles of fiigrT Who were flocking to onr shores, being antil! of j mm J Southern interests; and appeall p thero tu J msc in estiibhshiug a Ie of poliey tlmt. Wj J restrain this tide of ijniinigratitMi, which -ri.HiHr - j threatened our intertwU. How were tlnir wm. ings and entreaties receitl?, Sime arkhowi. edged and appreciated them, and, in obedience ti patriotie wnpwliws, ihrewff the, sharkk ty, and eiilitsted under the banner of the Anmi. tan pariyj lint mii j or'Uie.hone mime ' 1 juimw into a rancieu security oy tna awmrNiMfs J of their designing TeaJerV who" said that " I poor, down-triMlden foreigners were mrsrepressn. I ted that they wre tiot ii:f'rien3ly to the Sf,ui, I but that they slmpiy sought an, asylum from d! 1 piwiuu m uiw jree ana nappy uiia. ' . Ws uow ask the people, by whom have yuu been decei. ed ? Have not the assertions and position of 'the American party hero verified? Look toils North, and the present position of foreien.,. there will furnish you with a niot satifact(ir answer. With uuexampled unnnimity they rl. ! ly around and march under the black rW of John C. Freemont, the antt-sUverv candid.1-1 I and are now the chief clement of the strength of sr no 1 j""-vj, wiuw uss rxciteu tne raojt fearful foreboilings of every lover of this glorioui Union ..'il.-.-ii-': ... . . SETTS. , The Americans .of Massachusetts, . Jike their fathers, he M inute Mwi" of the Old Bay Sute, ljare responded totbr f on ntry's cail, and march"-' d fortn to fluty, at the Up of the drum. Trea- chery and ingratituue hive only nerred tbem f. t 1 nobler deed, and 'hey spring U the work with I will The Fillxnoxfl aud Dbelson American Con to. ! tion asBembled at Boston,. 011. Wririesday, tat ' nominated AMOS A. LAWRENCE, f, Oovr ! nor, and Uomeb Four, fr-Lieutenant Goveraor The Hon. Wm. Appleton,ud Charles D. Stock bridge, were chosea Prfsideutial Elector. -'- BUfiUNtA1f& - ;; .. . The Boston Courier says of this pretender j "Burliugame is' an abolItuteUt a black iad thorough an- aboliti(ust ts lhecdore Parker or txivd GirrisnfLwhis elnrrtiiio was sitsinatt tWrf.v. I ahameles fraud and disgusting hypocrisy., Hi P0?? bimselfjpon theKnow Nothineiofhis S Uoon as he had received the favor from their hands I - .- wnw v Mi-11 mini nil vao II which he had, earned by hU double dealing." 80 hi pretence of a wilUngnea to fight Brooks not his first false pretence. ' SOUTHERN EDUCATION. Bishop Polk, of Louisiana, has addressed, a let ter to the editor of the New Orleans Delta, cover inS circular addressed by him to the Bwhoptof Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas, Texw, Mississippi, Florida, and the Carolina, on the necessity of organizing system of Southern ed ucation, and building up Southern religious insti tutions, as part of a general system of defence, of which the" South is daily growing in more need. The lococraU rejoice greatly at the refu sal of certain prominent "old-line Whigs" to support Mr. Fillmore, but they studiedly neglect t give the reasou which influence these patriotie gentlemen. , Some, we . Jearn hare j no objec tion whatever to the platform of principles pa which Mr. Fillmore sUuds, but oppose him from mere personal pique and ill-will ; 'while others, under the . flimsy, lococratic, and demagoguicai plea "that there is no chance for his election" declare their intention to support the Democratic nominee, seemingly forgetful of the fact that contest between Buchanan and Fremont will most certainty result in favor of the Utter. But we rather think that' ther Jfe many in the prdicamsif "IPeter DoUfiiC and re fuse to support Mr. Fillmore for exactly th same reason assigned by him. ' Hear him : Tothe Whigs (fSaUJZvcr.Frdw. Dearly Beloved. Whigs I did not intend to appear before you again, hut be ne convinced that the political feelings bow abroad, and which are sweeping, tornado-like, over our happy pro vince, are likely to place ur.- tillmort in tb Presidential chair, and to bear to along ia their fury down- the dark. valley of forgetfulnaM sod ignominy, t am constrained to address you. . Of the administration of Mr.., Fillmore I wiU not speak. - That 1 engraven upon the brightest page of oat political history la' letters of gold; nor need I remind you how often ws bars gone to i battle in the can of the great, glorious and un- ' mortal Henry Clay. J wish oojy to speak of iM, I -m f i a .t -T , f V??: iAL'' ?U I self by the recollect on of my former action. Ia votinjr for Mr. Bochaaaa, I readihr admit that I do not like the Ostend paper, and I do not ap prove certain resolution adopted by the Qacin-. nau uonveuuon ; and tnerefor to lustuy my, self for toting , for him, t 'tnurt volanUer my poof and disbelief that be had any annoy la' the slander of Mr. , Clay, Aotwithstandinf Ga Jackson. thought so and. justly censured hinv therefor, , ' ; With Mr. PUlmore's sdmlnWrattoo I hve no fault to find.:. It wa beyopd all cil highly conservative and patriotlo, and justly ebaraoter ized him aa thmodd President; but I would ret mind you that during his term of office there was a vacancy in a certain office of our province, for which I labored incessant' that I might ob tain it for it. was my desire the goal of n7 ambitious hope ; but my effort proved in vain and from that day to the present I have looked upon hint with less personal rvor, and now can not forget that he i the candidate of a party which baa proscribed. Whigs who were not mem bers of "the Order." , . , .' . . - . From these antecedenU I conclude that if b should be elected President, I tv no hope of obuining an office ' for " great -men hT great sins: aw bitiou's mine.". . : . PETER DOLEFUL. SaLt Biveb Province, August, 18&6. a, i ,., , - -. .. . ... ' . 'All Gammon. The New .York Herald Ulki "soft sawder" to the South as follows : "From experience, we know and believe that Southern slave labor, as a practical institution, more favorable to health, happiness and comfort than that of Northern free labor, so far ss num bers are concerned." . k j -.' i -. ' ; ' The HeraH adds, further, to soothe its South em DatronS who can't swallows! t rank Marlpd abolitionism; thai bo State ' should be admitted into the Union ss a free Bute without admittinf at the sarnu time a slave 8ute, to balance it ia the U. a'8enate,and ssysij ''' " 1 1 ' ' .-rtr ' L.' ll.'."tn. t. YH-tr TintiK1.raa To6 I!!!' : tCSminui1 c the rorem- menL" ' . ... , ji,-:i,i 11 Li .. , ' i What miserable gammon 1 What a eoatempu tie subterfuge to serve two maators, and cheat and rob both I
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 27, 1856, edition 1
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