Newspapers / North State Whig (Washington, … / July 4, 1844, edition 1 / Page 1
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. .' i i 111 1 ."ir"" '"! - 1 """"""" 1 ; -"a- , i "" '"" " 1 " r in in - .. 1 1 " - " """"n""r ' "" " 1 "" -s'""." " . 1 -j-. " 11 r"""1 1 t"""" p : ; r?- .. . , .:. . J ,;.:, I" - 4 . - -".-..'. ' - - " A . - . . i V PUBLISHED WEEKLY, BY EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. "BE JUST, j AND FEAR NOT ! LET ALL THE ESD3rilOV AIM'sT AT, BE THY COUNTRY'S, THY GOB's Xr'oLtJRfn S'. KUZiEZrw 11. 4- i - t ... PA YA&L& IN AD VANC1 AND TRUTI,3, ' ...... .... . . ., . . . m A J. T- J ' ! J I SJ:-. - - -:V-- - r ' i I i "5 ill i If: If I-f PUBLISHED ; Every Thursday morning, At $2 50 per annum, if paid within two months from the date of subscription; $3, if paid dur ing the; subscription year and S3 50, if not paid during the year. ! , '; R. I T. R EX, : Printer. : ; j : '". ; j j Adyertuhemehts inserted, ai sixty cents 'per square of sixteen lines, or Mess," for the .firsts and thirty rents for each succeeding in- sertion. : 1 y j Cour orders) and Judicial Advertisements will be charged twenty Jive per cent; higher than, the rates -specified above j . amlje(ry ac!rcrrfeiuem,Ti7rfy Arce. a u"r per cent, lower. id5 Unpaid letters, addressed to the Edit jdou hiiJttnews connected, witli his paper, w ill i -.not, in any case, be taken from the Post Offirp. ,tL3T From the Post Master General.--" A : . postmaster may enclose money in a letter to the publisher of a newspaper to pay the subscrip tion of a third person, and frank the letter, if written by himself." . . f : NORTH; STATE WHIG, , $ " 1 ' iin, ', 1 1 , REPLY TO BISHOP IVES -LRTTBK. ' . 'Washington, June 27, 1S44, Mr. Editor ' 1 see by your pper of ibis morning, tha 'n person utylmj himself' Rector of 'S. Pe rer Ghtircb, baa fiirnilifd yoti fr;publira tjotT wiih a letter from another 'person' whom hn;ityles' (iny Bishop,' in referenres to er tain iniw statrnieiits of f.irt wtiich I charged ' upon the latter, in a communicaiion to you iliited My 2Gth: as having hern .made by him, ' in bis sernion on cojiflr.mniion pre irlinl here during the i la'c Episcopal convention. I - rniisi iigaih throw ni) fdf upon your indul gence iimf thnt nf your rentiers, iw fil I pro ; ceed to notice this b tti r ns it deseires, and io exp'ife to; tltis enlightentd jomnmnity th inconclusive reasonifg, the unfairness ar;d tfie topi istry Atiih which it aboutuls. j I shvll fwU allow riiyself to b! divi rted from the oim nt issue, which I ajatn state, that it nriy be. lttiiir.t!v before. the jainds t f your readers : It U Mrs ; 'Did Mr. Wesley and Dr. Clarke defend the ri'e of c nfii in ition as field and "practiced by modern Churchiucn, and did " Dr. C. long aft'er h .became a Mellioilist MiniV-r, vo toU BUhop and beg-, tiim : for C.iriii's Alike to give him the bussing of the - Holy Ghost by The laying' on of ban.?? ? This is the questicii in i!c? ate. Thej Bishop '.sfTi his and 1 denjv ' i v , It will have i. been observed that iBishop I tea erideavoiiretl to enst suspicion on myjre- - port of th uwrirds used by hi hi in nis ser mon by calling it 'a record of memoty.' It win no such tiling. So far from lepending. ,on'my meniory far the words u.-ed, l took them down in writing at the time they wetc spoken, and as I stated in tny former: letter, a 1 found them to aL'ree with the recollection of :. J , I 'i ...... .i . '! ...... 1' (i ! : ' n number of -cent b'riien whom I consulted anjf who Irive again assured me that tliey nre cpnvinretl of the f rcuracy of rny report, both as to the' idea and the lanijuage. Un- der these . circumstances, I sha not recede from i, itbrjwill I permit the Rr. j Rev. gen t'emait to retreat under rorer of his 'mantis script' Trom the . bold po.-ition he so confident lv assumed He mut defend that position, or ncknovvledce, like a mnrdy and candiddispu-1 tiinM that i: is untenable. Notl ing less than, this will satisfy the public, who know very well'1 th al the question i- not what dr)j Bih p Ivbs manuscript siy, but what did Bish op Ives himself fay ? 'No. memory,' he tf lis lis, 'can be as gb;d as rt manuscript.' especia Jy, I will ad 1 for ban, when one ge s into a difficulty ; how convenient then jto siyj 'The i follotving nre the word ', which the manusrrip', fVoin which I preached, says I Used. Iii the absence then of any positive disclaimer on ithe pirx of Bishop ves, With hi acknowledgement that his manu script 'docs not differ very - mate rinfy from the report I have given, and under just tense of my position boforo Ud, the church ? hnd this community 1 re-aflirm tint he as eftd that Drs. John VVesley and j Adam Clarke defended as apostolical the rite'of con firmation, and that Dr. C. bing afferj he be came a Meihodlat minister,' went to a Bishop, 1 antl begged hi. nf fir Christ's sk to giv Ivm the blessing of the Ho'y Ghosi by thedaji ig ' on bf hantts ;' and that these are very 'nearly ; the exact worth used by the Bishop, hot re- - curucti ruin iuc run w p ii inniiu-...j"j . -j p "'ifStce of iny:: assert ion ' jorthV eontrarr, mil iwriitea down at thejimetliey wered'IyKejlj We come now to the evidence adduced sby hmi to sustain his assertion. As to Mr.; Wes . ley opinion, he quotea hw commeilop HJr iirewslVi c. 2 V. where he say s whoa they .'fbelirvetr they were to be hipiizd with the "bj4ptim,tn lh i,ftW or of JonnJ bul f Christ; nestt thing was to lay hands up on them tlvt they might receive the Holy hoi. "Bof doe Ibis prova y thing more ihan 'ihai:Mr: ''Wealay believed, what nr jiizWWYiMOlttf, '-ttnttho Afos!s:had lh& j it have the rimjtest reluiion to the point at J Ustie, oi can jit with any show of fairness or locir. ue urcjpfrni io susmui iue oBscnwu that John jWesley defended the modern rite of confirmation, and believed thai Bishops r any oiher inen are clothed with the auful pow er of the Apostlea-even that of bestowing the Holv Ghost bv the lavintr oit of hands 7 It is manifest fhat he is spealinjj of the usage of the . Apostles! nor is there a particle of evidence in the whole passage that he believ. ed that: the rower of conferring ' the Holy Ghost was to be! perpetuated in the ri'e of cotiflrmaiirn. And yet for this purpose is it quoted Such nnfl edged dialectics rould hard- jrfvyTTv!j"tJ r A sl rn - pie Mr.' much less. from one who has attained the higher distinction of D. D ; such mis erable quibbling niight be looked ' for from a sophist, not from! a successor i of the Apos- ties.' But the B another passage hop tells ua 'he haa seen in his Notes on the ActsJ which makes thfc laying on of hands the same as confirmation in the Eng ish Church. I have searched these Notes and have been a ble to fi.id no such passage. I defy Bishop Ives to produce iK or to bring j one line from Wesley's nuniereus writings in proof that he defended confirmation as held by high church men! So far Irorri 1 1 iisv he declared his belief that the keystone nf the. arch ofHigh-church- ism was rotten this doctrine of md the very fotindrttion of confirmation I iiien the ipostolical succession--was rotten ami unr sound. He. belie led that the Apostles were sui generis ; that! iu conft-rring thj they had no successbis in Holy Ghost,- ivhich was y lirul temjKrary power. an extraordina He. deelarcl that 'he knew .the uninterrupted succession to be al Jahle which no man . ever and' it wt8 Iis elorv to did or can prove,' preach a salvations not of forms and ceremo- nies, but if jfaith express my mdig tempt to pervert ! S only.1 1 can not suffieieni ly h'Uion at this shameless at- the opinions of. thi holy loi rcnce of the. motives of i man, nor my no proeelytism wliiih prompted it, ncr shall I ever fail to exposejahd denounce both the one and the oi her, while I have a tongue to speak or a hand to writa with. j f In regard to Dr Clarke, the Bishop ref fer to a letter of us to a lady who ,rcqurstr ed his opinl'iniof confirmation.' Nothing can be more evithrnt ian that the views of con il in this letter differ tola firrnation coi taine cceto from these of J5ihop Ive-yand confer quenlly tbt. it does not answer the purpose fori winch be haf l.a bluceil V. For do we n.:d tr. 0 1 mailitaining with the Bishop that confi. m ition We medium of im;ai'ing the spirit of iGorl Noi t a I.1 H ea r his o wn' jangu.ige Ml is su . ' ! n - - V it mncoil frt t H rAe 111 iT1 takm offithe shoulders of t." k.,i.i.v the moral burden is sponsors, and Iran slerred lo those shoulders to which it proper I y belongs. Now as lo?ig as tuse opinions ijnd feelings prevail in the minds of all parties I say in God's name let: the! rile duly : adimnistcred, be humbly re ceived ' Now, do these 'opinions tmd feeling; nrevad 'as to confirmation,' in the minds of High Cl'.urchmen and is this the only light in which Bishop I es, views it as a mere re lieving ef sponsoi s and taking on one the vows of religion'' Why then does he offer to confirm those who have hid no sponsors? Why f!o'es he assert that as the 3000 on the day of Pentecost received the Holy Ghost by s laying on of hand, so this Is still an 1 shall forever.be ihe medium of conveying it? Cer irtinly, he will i:ot piretenu that any sut-n view of confirmation as ibis, is contained in the letter to MrsJ Wilkinson. With what face then can he tidduce.it to prove that Dr. C approver and defended confirmation as held hy Hiyh-Chi rchmen ? Equally clear is it that this let ter affords, no ground for the as ier!ion that Dr. C. long af he became a Me' lodirt minister, went to a Bishop an I begged him for Christ's sake &.e.' All whom I have consulted in regard to the correctness of my report ,cf these wonls, a yree that the Bidi r.p laid. peculiar stress up- on tne iermroi?i after? Now what are the Dr. C inlced informs us e had received confirma - - V ftcu in the case ? in this letter that 1 tion since he bee i me a meihodist preacher,, but hib:ogrphy will show that Ihe 'long af ter1 if Bishop L a, only amounts to three months at finheit. Ha preached his firt sermon June 19, 1732, though it does oot ap pear thai he h.nl bueii clothed wiih any regu lar authority to! pi each, but belieyed himself c.'lld of God am was influenced lit doing so by the private advice of a clergyman, f In August following , he was received into Kingswood school where he remained one month nd I fp days, during which time, bing about eiheii years of age, he was confirmed by the Bishop of Bristol, After his fonfirmation he left Kin us wood and became an Itinerant minister under Mr. Wesley's di rection. These fJcis may be found at fages 73, 90, 91, of the pit Vol. of his life, and ful ly sustain me in the position of my former let- - i- - I' Tbia wa the proposition the Bishop at tpippted to prpva in hi j coofirrantion sermon. T : -tRcv. Mr Breciato wboca no wg at that . ?........ ; .... .. j 1 1 die on a viiist. ier that Dr. C. instead of being confirmed long after he became a : minister received this ritehrfore becoming an Itinerant melfr odist preacher. - ' : , : 1 As to Dr. Clarke's begging the Bishop for the Holy Ghost I refuted it sufficiently in mj first communication, by quoting his language He, like Mr. Wesley, did not believe tha the Apostles had any successors in the pow er of conferring the Holy Spirit Speaking) of what is called the uninterrupted succes cession, he says : 'It does not exist ; it ne- ver did exist ; it is a sily fable invented by errlesias'ical tyrants and; supported tj rjeri- cal coxcombs a septimeJin?J be-r TlIyt eumcTASe . ' ' v - Respectfully & truly, Your obedient servant i JOHN T. BRAME. For the Whig. AMOS & THE CONVENTION. In Baltimore sure, the true Simon Pure, Called Locos, late met m Convention ; i Traitors John ran, and Wily fox, Van, Also Johnson and Cass I must mention. And now I must say, the intent on that dayf Was to get for the chair of our nation, ; - i One of their clan, an I reject a good man, As good as can Ibe found in creation. No matter. what' way, 'twas Patriot Clay They intended to juggle byM irch; ! But the well sown seed of the whig creed Shall nobly defy all 'that's arch. I What do you think ? All hands took a drink And came to the happy conclusion, That Johnson and Cass, they surely must Ia6s That in Traitor or Fox was delusion, i So one merry tcllow-perhaps he was mel low ..' - I Said cimning brought men to, the gallows ; He made one long stride, 'Mr. chairman,' he cried, : .'. i ...... 'I nominate Polk and George Dallas. . i The Chairman was proud in this wiseacre crowd, ' j And instantly cried aloud, 'bravo.' i i And so they went on in uTbrious nem. con. Counting Polk do Geo. Dallas as salvo, i This ludicrous scene was quite unforseen ; Nonia'n in the nation expected the ticket ; Yet Dallas and Polk enjoyed well the joke. OI ousting brave Glay by devices so wicked. One word now to Amos I pray you don't blame us A ! Thouh your censure is eulogy clear. i V'11 ,ie anf! y"u'I! cheal in y'" sheet. But ali v Pur Cod Hicks we don't fVar. , But all On the first of last May, we rati twble Clay, With good Theodore umUr his name ; i And you shall yet feel, if you're spared from I ihe Deil, i Our nation enjoying their fame. r Now one little hintit's Gospel in print Ingratitude is a great sin ; i Yet'you are the man, in favor with Van, ;Who has taken the cursed draft iiu r -For I plainly say, that towards noble Clay, You have acted the part that was evil ; t Yet I will not say, though friendly to Clay, That I wish you to goto the l-v-l. Though some have declared, you cannot be .:" spared, - v As you've acted the part of an elf, Your. fondness lor sin, shews 'you're 101 ten within ; '. i l Give you rope and you'll soon hang yourself. '' S . ..:. i Poor Creature ! what next will be your pre text ? On the fourth lay of March, forty-five, You'll surely Cave in by your damnable sin, So sure as you now are alive. I do not allude, nor am I so rudy To think you'll cave in with a spade ; But I really hope, on that day you'll slope From diplomacy back to your trade. 1 Away, base miscreant! your own recreant Love for foul deeds you may blame ; j -It nvy truly be said, and in print ever read, That self infamy caused Amos'a fame. PETER PORCUPINE. NEVT YORK. The New York Tribune, whoe Editor hn recently attended a Conveniio in Wes tern New York; gives an estimate ihe re sult of comparison of views of me nberg from every section of the Staie of th pro bable vote of the SiHte in ih fall, between Clay and Polk. Giving the Locos tnc benefit f any doubts they set down the --.Whiff ma jority at 20,000 certain And probahly 40000. Col. Dick Johnson concedes n Thig nia jority of 35 000! . r , - From a well-mfr fneIsourcftat Washing ton, we a re ail vised thai the three great States of &: York. Pennsylvania, and Ohio,, re car tain for the Whig by an immense majority s ho ! in that eitv, it is generally balirVMd tliat polk wiU not receive a singU rtectotial vote tfoiih pfthe Potomaeor Ohio-mnless, per. that cf New Washington, June b, 1814. .COL,, JAMES K. POLK. To the Editor oft' Baltimore Patriot : : Considerable curiosity is manifested, on the pnri of the people, to know nisre than is yet known, generally, about the Jackson Van Bureii canuidnte forthe Presidency Col, Ja'mes K. Polk; not colonel because he ever ibuglit under or with Gen. Jackson, or any body else, but as aid to a former Governor; fThe Democratic Review, and other eulo isiofCoIonVl Polk, tjy hard to make n he rpt of him by .prociimmgihat his ancestors were glorious fellows in the daya-nrh Itavdi ihe" celebrated Mecklenburg Declaration of "- .. -v-- Independence. So some, aye most of them were; but it is not too much to say, seeing the subject has been opened and merit attempted to be drawn from it for the new and curious ly nominated candidate fir the Presidency, thotEzekial Polk, the grandfather of Col- .: .... " Jarnea K. Polk, was not of the number ve ry far from it! The least the friends of Cbl Polk can say about that old matter the better. 'By gones are by gones.' I In his campaign with Gov.) Cannon he produced many old documents to prove, as he exultingly proclaimed, the inconsistency ol John Belle Baliey Peyton Judge While and others On these occasons he would say, 'old documents ar dangerous thingPand then contrast the course of ihose he was tradu cing i with his own course. He said he wa where he always had been he never ch myed never found it convenient to change! Well, he bent Gov. C. 2500 votes. But tvhen he next run for the same office, he found his competitor, 'Lean Jimmy,' opening a bunch of papers and proclaiming to the people. In Cal Polk's own thunder, that 'old documents were dangerous things!' He there saw and heard read an old circular, which he issued, under his own name, when fiist a candidate for congress, in 1823, in;l which circular he boldly advocated the constitutionality of the. Geueral Government's making interunl iiri provemenu in the States, if I recollec t aright for I have seen and read the circulars-more ihan on e,and maintained that a branch of the National Road ought to be. extended through Memphis to New Orleans! He there 8;tw, too, his speeches in 1331-5 against the Sub-Treasury and in favor ofi Banks, con trasted with his subsequent speeches for the Sub-Treasury. and against the j Bank! He found himst-l'exhibited, . also, as having vo ted in I83:f tolevy a tax oh Tea and Coffee, when there was no tax on those articles, and subsaquently ridiculing and denouncing and slandering a Whig Congress for taxing Tea1 and Coffee, when in fict !no tax of the kinil had been levied! And Jit the conclusion of alt this, and much more like it, the people were called upon to remember Co'i Polk's ofi-re-peated boasts, that he never had changed never found it convenient to chamre,. but was wheriS !?e always had been! 'Old documents are dangerous tilings i ' i l i After! Wise hissed that burnihg deriancia- lion :n Col. Polk's ear, in the Iobb as he, j was leaving the House for the Speakers room 'You are ihexi d petty tool of aL tyrant I mean that as an insult; pocket it,' a letter from this city discribing the scene, and say, ing. General . Jackson was so much vexed because Col. P. did not resent the gross insult in some way, by throwing his bundle of papers at Wise, if nothing elS, that he would not fulfil his mtention of making the submissive Colonel his Secretary ol War ws puhlishf ed in the Nashvile papers Balie Peyton al so commented upon the same facts in his speeches in North Carolina and elsewhere. And such was the ridicule heaped upon Col. Polk in the matter that he deemed it meet, when nexi canvassing for Congress, to red to a portion of his constituents at Sheloyvilje, a a part of a letter, purporting to have been written by General Jackson, declaring that he wag no coward, but behaved bravely and prudently in the affair with Wise! This ai once subjected Col Polk to the charge of having procured a certificate from Gen Jack son of his bravery ! and such was the handle made of it to the Colonel's prejudice, that Old Hickory, 'by the eternal, came out in the Nashville Union denying that he ever wrote any letter of the kind to Col. Polk! Where upon, Balie Peyton, before some ten thousand people assembled at Nashvilb, In 1840, sta ted the facts in the case, and asked, if there were any gentlemen fiofti Shelby villa or Bedford county , there present, who heard Col- Polk read at the time refered to. the said certificate from Gen. Jackson, thtl they would say o. Instantly i some t wentyor thirty voices in the ctewd from Old Bedford's sterling yeomanry, sung out. l heard him read iY 'antl so did I, &c. ci-cy The casti gaiion which the gallant Peyton then gave the shufiling, skulking, trimming Polk will never be forgotten by those . who had the gooI Tonune to listen to it. Oh, it: was ter-r r.blel J , ....,. , : - One in ident more, and I wil close this skeich.V Ir is well remembered that Cal. Bell and :C6U i?lk ws considered as rivals wh'Jjt In CJopgrew together. It is also sftll remembered that Judge White wai very popw ular; in Tenuesse. and in fact with the 'De mocrcy,' so called, every where. When in 1834-5, the effort to bring out iJurJge Wh?ie for the Presidency, by the Tennessee delef gation, Mr, Bell purposely,or sometime, kept hi the background, in order to get Col. Polk com mil ted: and he succeed, j The Colonel fully 'pledged himself to support tha estima ble ;Hngh Lwon White. But when he found out that Gd. Bell would ? support him also, and. that Gen. Jargon would not prob ably ceuntenance the movemen,he unscrupu lously brake his oledffei. and nfterwanU ma. 1 .J. i . t--rr . : - ! .""""m .tiii.1 motinLu his very grave! BylHTs courseTfie kept upon the sunny side of Gen. Jackson where he i has basked as much as a many twice badly run down, could bask, ever since, and where he has now Jsucevded in getting Old Hickory to will his nomination for the Prefidrncy:! allow him jto steal the-thunder of John Tyler, on the Texas hobby, and con sent to his being a third time he ten and far worse than lever before for the poor hope of exclaiming Tennessee ia p-oud State, that will glory in giving a majority of at least five thousand against him POTOMAC. THE COUNTRY RISING. Charleston, Kanawha county, Virginia, May 24, IS 14. Messrs. Gales and Seaton: For the pur pose of doing all the service in any power in aid of the election of the nominees ol the Whig National Convention , 1 have travelled ihrouth this'i Commonwcahh, i pn my way home, on horseback, a disance'of four hun Jeoil and twelve mies, and have now reached the western jverge of ihe State, visited many towns and counties, mixed With all sorts of people,1 had access to the sources of inforrra tion, found our friends every where in the highest spirits, full of hope and confidence, The result is a settled conviction in my mind that Virgini i will vote lor Cay and Feling huysenj. From all tht I can learn; the Tex ian question! will not interfere to their preju. 'dicej.-. ':,) y '..-., ." ('.'' i..". - : r ". The people appear tojunderstand the chief purpose of that movement,- namely, to oper ate op ihe pen ling President!?! election. " Be fore this meeting of the Convention, I travel ed extensively in Pennsylvania and have no hesitation in awarding the Keys'orie State to the VVhig nominees. J have witnessed all the contests for power from jlhe adoption of ihe Federal Constitution, ami feel as confident nf the election of our candidates as I do of my existence. . I pray Godj to spare the life of Mr. Clay forj the good of the country. Yours truly, .:"'' j - , . JOHNSTON. Of Piqua,rOhio, late Delegate from the Fourth Congressional District NOTE BY THE EOlTORS. The writer ot the above letter is the vener able citizen, long a faithful public servant, now a privatea citizen, who, in the seventieth year of his age, travelled from his distant residence in Ohio, all the way on. horseback, to attend the Ute Whig National Convention at Baltimore! Nat. Int. i s To the Editor of the N. Y. Tribune. THEODORE FRELINGHUYSEN. I noticed, a few days since someremirks in in the Pfebian, afludiug to Theodore Fre linghuysenas as an ''old, Federalist,' and 'op- posed to the young man at war.' Mr. F.i, was q iite a the commencement o! the War,and could not have been a very old Federalist. Vbat his -opinions were in rela tion to theoxpediency of the war, I know not; but this I do know that the same patriotic de votion to his country that led his father to shed his blood in her defence at Trenton and Monrnouth animated the son, ; and induced him to raise, at great perso al sacrifice and expetice, a vclunteer corps of Riflemen, com posed! chiefly: of the heads of the'most i espect able families in Newark, who appointed him their I first Captain. They equiped them selves at their own expense, passed resolu tions tendering their services to Che Govern er of Ne w Jersey, and expressed their readi ness to go at a moment's warning wherever he might direct, Captj Frelinghuyscn com manded them during the whole war, and al though not called upon! to Hunt their coun try's Battles, they were thoroughly drilled, disciplined and'prepared for and emergen-. cy. On one occasion when an invasion was threatened, he called together his company hud volunteered to go and re pell i, but sub stqnnt events rendered it unnecessary. At another tiiae, when the City of -New York was supposed to h in daifger.. from its Je- fenceles sitoaiion, Theodore Fr el inghuy sen tvos among the most active in inducing the eitizens'of Wrtark- to come to its aid, and, With upwards "of 0Q able bodied men, with their spades and pick3txes, t enderedr most ef ficient service in throwing up the entrench ments on Brooklyn Heights and SoatbI lyn.;f.;;:"ti'-r !; - '-; - : r , These tety &at mmunlcaied who Hua Jons known rheo, and can vovch for HOW THE WH$G3 SOULD AC T.I The nominal ion of Governor fo!:.,'-; -ed by the whole Whig Party eu-I; perafe mwve fhaf rrrarfy of thtm, r.o C. Will be disposed to tihk the b.iU r.! woff. We are fnclfnedf o thnt Cplr.: " . elves, for We firnww rrrjf ef e sin-- can carry, with the eXceIcr. el ; olina. Mostassufedly, he wil"! r.ot f. touch bottom, in his own1 Stare I. : undertook the flf cacpaiw cf f Z-l ,', Mr Jones, the letter staked lib' el the popularity of Henry C!a; . Tl ei.r i!rst,JUniiJ'v,.j.t -alihe.tin:?A Hlxa .r-;lit t. x exceeding in severity any lliat . . witnessed In Tennessee the fr iar.rph-r.f c ectjon oftle Whig candidate, by a c . whelming majority? It is not doc'.:::J, t; were the battle to Ye fooght over to-ricr rc;,.f that majority woukl be j'nereased by thu: :::.! , ft is this maft trtterfj rjnsbl? lo tz.tr; " ' ; own State, that theLocofoco Cr.nrcr.tL.; T. thought fitter present as a candidate, -:t.:t c r probably carry a majority. of ell th3 cl:.z: -rial Votes of this Union, T;3 r.birrJ;:; r. this nomination is so appaernt that :z c. : not refrain from laughing out rifit. We voukl caution cur Whig frierr;?r, ever against placing too great reliance in il : weakness of ibeif adversary We ivc, l':::' . a hint to that effect, yesterday Tcd . .: security is .dangerous at all ti.Titr; n:. I though we can imagine.no ca2 i;i w.!:; it could-be indulged with greater safety il.n: the present, we wouldjyei have therri tj crrf if fhey err at all, oh the! safe eidi?. It should be a matter, of pride with all triTJ Whigs, to give Mr.lCEay as large a majrrrif' as possible in his native State.- Wifli ; . r r' exertions, they may calculate upon ten iLao and in the fall wiih extra exertion it i: sible even to double that majority! All i:.!. however depends upon exertion Lc: t, fight to kill to exterminate Locofoccl: A mere victory is not j what we want VA:. want a triumph! a complete and over wFir lr:!--ing triumph! One Which shall z:vc il.'J enemy no ground of hope. It is ir cl: er to achieve it We hope the Whig CIu3 will not Tet their exertions, but continue the contest r:? is they were struggling for their very ei:i.?rcr.r . Activity and energy should be the vairl, Words every where." t is in the por.-cr c f the Whig party to raise! the old Dominica ty a pitch of glory, such as she has not enjoyed since the days of her tone: line of Prcii;r.t: and they 'niust do it.'-Rich Whig. From (he Newark Daify Vdver tiscrv arouse! Arouse i Dedicated fo ihe Newark Vnong"f.icn'-" Cfay and Frelinghoysen Club.' Air 'Lutzo w 's Witd fluni? Hark! harkfto the shoot that is peafing'ami. Borne along on the breeze's swift pinion ?; Like the voice of the tempest it sweepj o'er" the plainy , Arouse ye arouse to the Conflict, awcy, Onward onward, to and Clay.' taule for Frecdc It comes from the snow-crested hill? of .z' North, Anil thunders along her green valleys:; It comes from the bosom of honor and- t.'cri.., The brave and true hearted it mj Arouse ye,? &c- It swe!ls on the breast of the South' & tz gales, Like the sound ol the surge's ccnrr.iiir.; It comes on the breeze tbat sprecii it.Z v, I.; . ails, I ' And rides on i be billows cfocsarhr ; Arouse ye&c Responsive, the West hears it galknily c. , From prairie and fiver.'iis rinjinjr. She is true to our chieftain her r.cl.zzt - - And in might to the Contest i3 7fL:jIr.;;. The song swells aloft! as eh 3 hstQ 13 t! Tray ; j" Onward, onward, to la'ils fcr Vtzzz and Clay.1 The young and the noble, at Liberty' c: , Oppression's stern fetters crc Lr:;Ai They rise In their glory from ha-rbl c.r..i I.il.', In strength from their slurhbers av;aUI : j. Their watchword, ou country,' they I. . ten away, And their leader to victory is Henry CI . On! on! to the rescue ye youthful crJ Lrr. y For ihe causa that our; fathers dzC.z': ; And the spoilsmen shall find wlzn c Jr4 banners wave, i 'That the days of iheir a'.ory croc" -In triumph cur cagls hdl-;.:-;; : : Proudly carcerinj thrcu jh v--. j the ky." ; - ; -' ; - ' wAic fAHn vi zzis' htT.zzi z:.i ihroucn lifiiXndUreaiVovtr . c: ireat htia, rnasi bo uulv p I . 7 im9 j'friTi .i l.i e?c , J
North State Whig (Washington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 4, 1844, edition 1
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