Newspapers / North Carolina Republican (Goldsboro, … / Oct. 18, 1848, edition 1 / Page 1
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7tm : - I EITOM C EI)NESMi v UpOBER 118,, 1848, : - . VOL. 2, NO 11. mm wb - ... . - - - . ... p.jjEPUELlCAN Friday October 13th 1848.. jning his position u entirely satisjac is friends. . Neicbernian. o&er colunmn of this paper will be e answer of Mr. Fillmore to certain 3 propounded to him by the Erie MlS anSWCi wow Ivery Society. GATHERING OF THE DEMOC- A eTeat demonstration o ey came of the democra- ofTon the 22nd and 23rd ult. at Beat- ties Ford in Lincoln County.J . The occasion was also embraced to do honor to the retur ed soldiers from Mexico. Hon. H. W. Con- ided. The soldiers were .welcomed npr nrps r b i in the name -of the citizens by" Col. John H. Wheeler. The address is highly flattering fVi a Volunteers. V e nave only room. lor bVS w i .4. -,S y . ,--r,Unr to tWft following beautifttl tribute to the' lament tiifnrtorv to mem, au w. -& - 0 i nsfactoryi w Qf Edgecom .femtft iv tuiations ate mingled with 3Uld suppose that this was clweU 1 Whe!e is your,DraU CoV .Louis D. the " authentic corresponaemc, - Wllson ? Providence did nbt permit ' h.m to t vet been denied, nor can it be. , hi trave spirjt would jhave desired, in would also refer the " friends " ot ivir. the heat 0f battle and amid contending coi ,re to an article inthis paper, concern- umns. But he fell at tKe post of duty, a v.c- Ration to receive a Negro Minister at and Vell. Twenty years ago I contend Wemraent from a revolted slave gov- e(j by nig intne political contests of the it how he voted to receive and act ay. A purer man never lived. The noble .bolftion resolutions in Congress, as bearing 6f a long life was onjy excelled by his abolition petitions, and how he vol- generous bequest a tills death.- He bequeath; j abolition p - ed his vast estate (for he bad no family) " to unst censuring Giddmgs" for justifying -bf EdgeVcombe county a county -proving Mutiny and Murder by- negro that had avvays sustained j him, f ati'di from Voting in this manner was u entirely whose service he departed jfronoAthe Senate, idoryn lo the Erie Anti-Slavery Socie- for the field. ' Lightly mayj the turf resti on id it doubtless is to his friends, here; at his remains. His memory pall he ever dear sosaith the Newbernian. ' Has that pa- to North Caiolina." ) , r jrned organ of the Erie Anti-Slavery Capt. Hoke replied, saysjthe Lincoln Lou : on Whnlfof his brothet soldiers, in a neat V : 1 ij' 1 V- U U.,Uorl Hlnv .CoTWin m. CASS' OWN WORDS. TZTJcVUiei the .Ae Whig press have -given circulation to enemy by thtir speeches, circulated . tWougn f 'r .1 -llPQinr0wr fnr Mpt rn in thp.Snanish lans-uage, eutuuiayn.g the Mexicans to prolong me wa. . uu fprted not the true American soldiery rl,vH nnnn a virtuous executive, an l nendent, a iust,,and a grateful people. The meeting was addressed by uapL tureen Webster declares that Gen. Taylor's nomina tion -was NOT FIT TO BE 'MADE. (jren. UaSS IS acknowledged throughout the world to be one of the ablest statesmen of the age. . Keep it before the people, that notwithstand ing the gross frauds and base falsehoods oi the whig party, the Amencrn democracy win as heretofore, retain the ascendency in this government, and -elect uen. ajs xo me laency oy one oi me laigcsi iiajvin.w cord. TViasA. Union. ' HERE IT IS. We mean to keep the following ,n "3 :, Here is the proof an Abolitionist. type until the day of election that Millard Fillmore is The wmg papers are afraid to publish this letter. We do not Relieve that a single one in N.C has done so. Read also the denun ciations oi the Abohtionists by the Baltimore National convention below jr. abolition of Slavery. A single sentence, I sometimes ohly a part of the sentence, 1 misquoted at that, is made to answer their lose. We present below the whole ex :, which is from the " Pamphlet on the t of search." We ask.every one to read id then show it to his whig neighbor,and him if it does not express his views exact, md whether he is not satisfied Gen. Cass mnd on the question of slavery. J This is ' sttei written after his nomination, to ex l his views, but it is the language he held I , ;e the potentates of Europe years ago: ' We are no slaveholder. We never have t . . .i. We never shall be. We deprecate its existence in principle, and pray for its aboli tic i everywhere, where this can be effected just ly end, peaceably, and safely for both parties. B we would not carry fire, and devastation, r '. murder, and ruin into a peaceful commu J.to push on the accomplishment of this I. i- L i : : i lPCl Iuv alter u.viis visii-cvi iuibc yum- . rs of the old continent, we say before God r id the world, that we have seen far more, ad more frightful misery, since , we landed i Europe, andwe have net visited Ireland yet, ian we have ever seen among this class in ie United States. Whatever may be said, Sere is much of the patriarchal relation between e Southern planter and the slave. And as I the 'physical distress which is seen in Eu pe, resulting from a want of food, and from iposure to a rigorous winter, without ade- jaate I clothing, we believe it to be so rare, as t to form a just element m the considera- inn nt this matter. But the subiect of the ImanciDation of two millions and a half of hu Lan beings, living among another population, Jf different race and colqr, and with differ ent habits and feelings, is one of the gravest questions which can be submitted to society to solve. Tt can be safely left only to those who are to be so seriously affected by it ; and there !it is Ieft bv the Constitution of the United States. It is a matter with which the Gen eral Government has no concern. WHO IS TO BE DECEIVED ? The following are two resolutions adopted the WhiVs of PoufrhkeDsie, N, VwV- w t - n cj ' Y. 1 Do thev mean anvthinff or not 1 South V-T j j . f eirn Taylor men will answer : " Resolved. That the doctrines of Free Soi have ever been the cardinal and inherent doc trines of the great whig party, and that the country now looks to us, the fathers of this principle, to oppose the extension of slavery f tnr TfnT"Popntation. m uonffress on whom I we may implicitly rely, to exert their influ ence to prevent such extension. , y Resolved, That by the principles avowed by Gen. Taylor, he is bound not to veto any j bill because it prohibits slavery in a new state or territory; but that Gen Cass has pieagea himself to veto any prohibition of the kind, and that therefare as one or the other must be elected President, every friend of freedom is bound to: -cvie jor iieti. lay Lor. Here is also an extract taken from a North crn Life, of Gen. Taylor by Benj. Poore pub lished at the office of the Boston Atlas, Whig : f Col. Johnson of Upper Piqua. Ohio, who was selected by the Whis of Miami, as their delegate to the Convention a stauch undoubt ed Whig who has in a long life,devoted to the cause done it great service a delegate to Harnsburg in 1839, and to Baltimore in 1844, and who has known Gen. Tavlor lonar j una intimately, writes in a letter betore us, I -i that he is all that we cxmA Hpsirp. unon this very point. He writes that he has heard him declare, with much forr.R tbnt Hp rpo-arded slavery! as a great evil to the country, and exJ iiic&aeu a strong nope that the time might ar rive when we could get rid of it altogether; and Col Johnson, declares his firmest convic- lon that Gen. Taylor is the last man to coun tenance its being extended to any ner terri tory that may be brought into the Union.'" jThe above i found in one of the Northern lives of Gen. Taylor. It is not in his South ern life t i W. Caldwell democratic i-iector, ana uy Wm. Lander Esqr , Maj. Thos S. Slade and 1 . ' . t tv 1 Mr. J. M. Newson. - Every thing, passea orxi m the happiest manner ORANGE. ' Mr. Waddell has relinquished his claim to THE TRUE DEFINITION OF OF THE WORD WHIG. The JVrt Jwiricwi. weaves into one of its late ai tides, this strange admission, " Whig is a Saxcn word, siffnifvine whey or butter- riilr Wi'ffKmH HpmriiKT thft correctness of the definition, orUhe grave; historical author ities introduced to nrove it," it is clear enough that nnr otpmnorarv Jwaa laborinxj under some depression of spirits when ne aiioweu his pen to indite this signincant suiiiucni. He was thinking, no doubt, of the changes that have "marred, and the separations that have reduced, the once fair proportions oi Whicery. The late JNatioml convenuou not only threw away the very cTeam oi us principles, but left instead a miseraDie pon cal butter-milk, sour to the taste, and rniun ous to the health - Gen. Taylor, not to be outdone by the example, ever , since the pe riod of his nomination by the milk- and wa ter patriots, of June last, has been dosing the nation wilt copious showers of whey, in the shape of no party letters, and promises with out point and without end It is right enough therefore, that in such a crisis, when defeat is staring it in the tace when those men uu principles that have long constituted the sub stantial support of its party , organization, re fuse any longer to be connected with it the North American 1 should : fall - back upon the original element, and reward those who have so steadily and permanently followed the flag of ,Whigery, that there, is nomingjnore than buttermilk, and whev at the bottom oi an i i i - . .. - . - ' T A 4-r We suspect the sameuaea nas-occuneu iu others, or else we should notsee daily ac- ' . -. ' - . St 1 1 1 . counts of thousands leaving the t eaerai rantcs, and joining thoe oi the army oi progress auu of equally the great Llemocrauc array. What is the use or any one sticking to me butter-milk: and wney " party f rjr- Mark the Abolitionist ! Platform Millard Fillmore, the' Ahn $ hhonist! ' " Buffalo, Oct. 17, 1838. air. qui commnnirat r.u- t .t. . --uuuii ui iue loin instant as Chairman of a pointed by 11 The Anti-Slaver,, Hn.to, , hhe Countv ef Erie" bnW;,, urY l'" -v1 1V4)L 1(1 fllMflfl lsoTimjraTierto thtrWlowirrgin- " : - s 1st. Do you believe: that petitions t Congress on the subiect of slaverv anH th i ' I ki "i - : . . J siave-nAuc uum t0 oe received rpar respectfully considered bv the rpnrpJntJ uvea w mv jroujttc rnl ' " ' - 2d. Are you, opposed to the annpTjitinn! of Texas to this Union under any circumJ stances, iung as slaves are held therein ? 3d: Are you in tavor of Concrrp.1 pypt cismg all the constitutional power it pos sesses, iu auunsu tne internal slave-trad between the States 1 1 j- 4th. Are you in favor of immediate leg islation for theiabolition of slavery m the Uistnci oi oiumoia f : I am much engaged, andjbave no time o enter into an argument! or to exDlain at! length my reasons for my opinion. I shall therefore content myself, for the present, by answering All your interrogatories in the AFFIRMATIVE, and leave for some future occasion a more extended discussion on the subject. i j ' . MILLARD FILLMORE." name is recorded opposed to, while that oi WM 0. BUTLER, Rayner, Stanly and Vashington, with alLthe Southern members, in favor of the censure. j Mr. Fillmore then is opposed to censuring his brother.: abolitionist, M r. . Giddings, for justifying and approving MUTINY and MUKUKK by MKGRO SLAVKS against and upon their owners. i To Sum up. Mr.Fillmore Is m favor of the insulting proposition for the Government tion to it, and whether the General was in any way guilty of anything Unbecoming a brave and gallant officer," I have the honor toate, in reply, that the charges made by, Mr King relate to the surrender of a detachment sent by order ff Gen. Hull, on the Hth of August, 1812. to meet a convov of provisions "under fthe command of Capt. Henry Brush of Ohio, supposed then to be on the route trom tne riv er Raisin to the army at Detroit. As the actinsr adjutant general of the armyj of the United . States to receive a Nisrsrer 1 1 detailed that detachment and, by the order Minister from a gove rnment of revolted of Gen. Hull, placed Col. Mc Arthur (not Col. Slaves is in favor of Congress receiving and Cass) in command of it. The General direct- acting upon Abolition resolutions as well ed that thte detachment should consist df oner; ass ADOLiTioisr petitions, -and was opposed to hundred and fifty men from CoL McArthuffj censuring Mr. Giddings for justifying and ap- and" thejsame number from Col. Cass's regi- nrovino- MUTINY and MURDER by we- ment, and a few mounted men were, directed arm siIMS. showin0" bv- his vote that he JUS-1 to accompany it Before the detachment ta, . . - n j i . - - T1FIED and approved such M U 11 JN i and MURDER himself. All this has occurred since the year 1841, since which time according to the letter of Mr Fillmore to Mr. Brooks1 he considered the question of Slavery in the STATES set tled. ' 73 . marched a number of volunteers joined it frojrpotfi regiments, so that the', aggrte fdrcSwIsiftB itml the'campjwiuboutio-r Jun dred.mek Col. Casswas not a part of the detail ie joined as a volunteer. When I understood that he desired to go, I objected to two Colonels coing with "so" small a detach- nan. a seat in the State Senate. He is certain; there was a mistake ! in the returns, but bef lieves that" his competitor had received 4 number of illegal votes ; hence he refers it again to the people. Thej Governor as or dered a new election. In our opinion Mr. Berry is entitled to the seajhafmg received a majority of the votes cast, j Messrs. Waddell I and Berry are candidates again. 1 -.!. t .. 1 ; TiUn T-Tillchnrrv' Hainan. I contains a circular iuc .i. j I Vom Capt. Berry, from which we jake the following extract : "Believing that I was duly elected, I could not in fairness to myself or in justice I to my friends, fail to contend tor !mv seat in tne oen- ate. 1 had thereiore aetermmeu, unu uau nubliclv declared mv purpose, to appeal to the Senate, the legally authorized tribunal to decide contested elections; JbJut it seems my opponent prefers to labor in a different field- he likes not to risk himseii-upon. me pacus now in issue, and refers the - matter back to the people, where he canfhave a. second trial for your suttrages. Ke it so : he snail nave the contest wherever he prefers it and i again meet him with confidence before the 'free bnldprs of Orantre. ' I have never feared the nomilar will never wish to avoid it. err .. . Z ., j r should have been content witn tne uecisiuu ui Vvc ScnotP and shall now be content with yours. j . "The Register asks uj if we dp'not believe Gen. Cass to be an AbqlitionisL fe answer no. Standard. j Would you say so, if jrou did believe it ? j Register. . Certainly not, if the ejxample of the Regis ter was followed by his cotemporary, the Standard. BENEFITS OF ADVERTISING. A Pittsburgh man recently ofl&red a reward for the recovery of a valuable note .which he had lost. The advertisement naa scarcely got into circulation when he found the note in his hat.1 , A lady in Buffalo, the other day advertised for a husband, and in a short time received applications from jifty old bachelors; and in two weeks thereafter her marriage was announced in the papers! An old maid in Npw Yoik latelv-advertised the loss of a fcvnriternt. and thelsame hfght the lost cat returned, with about 150 other feats, and mus terine- beneath her chamber Window, gave a -1 v J ' Tl Tkiit. far nf thp. fifteen hnndred thousand million advan tageiof advertising. Oh folks ! dorit be blind ' j - . . - w . . tWr- n .1 Ull, to your own interests w aitc upiu uie-cuan. mark and advertise, li s me way to mane yourself and business known tq sell your wares, and fill your pockets'. iae utuiiy o the thing is settled beyond doubt. Tell the people who you are and what you've got to sell and crowds of customers will be sure to seek you and buy your goods. ptxenange. Taylor Endorses the Abolitionist. Gen: lay lor, in his seccond letter to! Capt Allison,' dated i" East Pascagoula September the 4th, says : And I may add that these emotions were increased by as Isociating my name with that of the distin guished citizen of New York, whose ac knowledged aDiimes and sound conserva :ive opinions might have justly entitled! UIM TO THE FIRST PLACE ON THE TICKET." The friends of Fillmore say that he con- ment ; bjit the service was considered by us all tended for the right of petition nothing more, as extremely perilous. - oi. uass ciaimea n Pan that be true when he voted to receive as a ngni to suare iue.uaugcvuiu knA APT TfPON abolition resolutions as well as and he was permitted by the General, not or- . i . I i i . j ' I .- " petitions whether presented by a member oi aerea, tp accompany iuem- Congress on his own responsibility or sept - On the 16th of August, Gen. Hull aurren there by an anti slavery society. . dered the tort andvarmy, DycapiiuiauoH, iu KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEO- - I'M- M. That the Whirr Executive Committee . . . . p. f i Washington city have itwo sepeiat in rooms m one of which documents ar" prepared lor the North, renresentiner General Tavlor as 1 B -' i agooa aooiuionist. and stxeneraf An Honest Admission. The Baltimore American, one of the ablest and most respec table, Whig Journals, in the United States, administers a cutting rebuke .to those Whig papers that -have labored so hard to make capital put o(the "3Xtra allowance" charge against General Cass. n Hear it :i i "This is a small business. General Cass when Governor of Michigan and Supennten- dent of Indian Affairs, sent in claims for extra allowances, which wpre finally grr.ted by the Treasury Department. VVre think there has bren more stir made about this than the matter called for. There is no n aon to sup pose that the Department acted without due investigation and knowledge: and if the claims were just, there was no impropriety in the presentation of them by General Cass, or in the grnnt:ng of them W the Secretary A Presidential caovass ought to iturn on other issue? thnn these, or the like of these." The Abolitionists denounced BY THE DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION. I The following is one of the resolutions forming a part of the Baltimore Platform. That congress has no Dower unctet tne con- Q 1 stitution to interfere with or control the do-i mpsti msititutinnis nf the several Stater, and that such States are the sole & proper judges of everv thing appertaining to their own afj hv the constitution : that nil prpnPTS OF ItME ABOLITION ISTS OR OTHERS! made to induce con aress tn interfere with the QUESTION OF SLAVERY, or to take INCIPIENT step? in relation thereto, are calculated to lead tq the most ALARMING AND DANGE ,T?nTTcj rTkXTcroTTF.NOES : and that all such efforts have an inevitable tendency to di the. neoDle. and en- otcKilitv and nermanency ot tne Union, AND OUGHT NOT to be COUN TENANCED BY 3 ANY FRILND Ot OUR POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS. Jongress Mr. Fillmore also declared himself "oppo- the Britiish forces under the commarid of Ma- sed to the annexation of Texas to this Union, jor General Brock, and included Ool. Mcat- under any circumstances, so long as slaves are thur's de tachment in tne capiiuiauon. ub held therein?' He is opposed to any moje slave Colonel had been ordered by express to returtt ie rritory. This opinion stands -against him to Detrpit, and he was within' three or four undenied. miles or xne ion wnen ne re-eiYc- ( His late letters on political matters, refer gence ofthe surrender.." He fell ; back about only to SLAVERY IN THE STATES; three ro les to the river Huron, where he re- SLAVERY IN THE TERRITORIES, the ceived the articles of capitulation, with an or- Smportant l&ue, is carefully avoided. der from Gen. Hull to; surrender. sme voi. j On every question between the iNorlh and was. l qeiieve, do unu ;i gwHu the South, during his Congressional career, der; bujt whether he was orot,he wascom- iMr. Fillmore voted against the South and -its pelled to submit, for he had not a day s subsist- FRiEN.DS. ence, nor a dozen rounds of amiinition for nia r The Senate of the U. S. is now comjosed command. He was as gallant a soldier, and !of 30 members from slave states and 30 from as patriotic a Icitizen, as the 'country could free states. If elected to the office of Vice boast; and he did all that was possihle under President, Mr. Fillmore will be president of the circumstances ; but whether the surrender me Senate, and possess the casting vote be- of the detachment was right ot wrong, ho tween the North and the South. Can the alone was responsmie ior u vu . u- South rely upon him as sound, on such ques- eral) Ciss had no more to do with it man mo tioris, when his every, act has shown him to honorable gentleman wuu m.ca m v.bv be directly the reverse. against him. - . Freemen ot iNorth fJarolina! Are you t rom tneioregoingsiaiemein, juu iv,w. willing to support a man whose whole Con- thatthere was not even a single regiment td gressional career has been one series of Insults surrencjler nor was Col Cass in command at to the South, whose votes are uniformly re- the time and on the occasion referred to by corded against our dearest interest Will Mr. King. That gentleman has been so un you not rather support WM. O. BUTLER of fortunate in the random statement of his facte Kentucky, who has always maintained South- as not jto have stumbled upon a single t0 ern rights, and whose votes on this subject (His charges I know to be utterly unfounded are always given in opposition to Fillmore? from beginning to end. Inhere is nothing m THINK of these FACTS and ACT in the histoiy of the country, written or unwrit-isM-rUn--. k r?;-f ofoa of Pnmmnn RoncA tpn tri liiatsfv anv one of them in the sm ail - GLsKsJl. J lUU U1VHVW v w v m.MM.s. m v -- wv-w --w j "-r and with reference to the principle oi self pre- est degree. As to Gen. Cass, I served with serration. From the Washington Unions CORRESPONDENCE. V . Washington, Sept. 23, 1848. Sir: A speech recently delivered by the Hqii. Thomas Butler King, of Georgia, at Patterson, New Jersey, contains the follow ing : " Gen. Cass is the hero of Hull's sur render. Ordered away by Gen. Hull, before the attack upon Detroit by the British, Gen. Cass received no intelligence of the disaster till he was summoned by a single British of ficer (fourteen miler from Detroit) to yield, and he did yield. With two or three regi menls of men, General Cass surrendered to a single British officer, fourteen miles irom any other enemy. If Gen. ftull committed trea son, is not General Cass a traitor ? Yes ; h.e is an ass and a villian. He should have been tried and hung ; he should have been tried and shot at that xery 'time " Believing the! above statements to be direct perversions of historic truth, and that they him in two campaigns, a part of the time un der hijs orders, and attached to his brigade. I have seen him in situation and under circum stance that would test the courage of any man, ind he never faltered ; but always acted inaccjoraance with the dictates 6J high cour age apd patriotism. Whatsoever may be the course! of others, he is never tjie apologist of the enemy, but is always found on the side of th country. c I aim, sir, with great respect, your oVt-serv' : i TH. S. JESUP. Hon. Robert Smith, Washington City. Cu. i : i Is milliard Fillmore, The Whig Candidate fx&icePency, I safe mad for the Souther Read the following siatement.of facts and then ju.lge.' House Journal, 27ih Congress, 2nd Ses sion, 1841-2. i n ...' Ho o-reat iniustice hot only to Gen. Cass, but Januarv 2lst. 1842; nag-. ' '"T to th other officers and men composing the r . . i .. tl,r, ru.llIWir , ""w. detaehmsnt of troops referred to, and learn ing that you were, the Adjutant General of the army under the command of Gen. Hull, which position gave you the best opportunity pro(-ee,!ecl to th, enn- 'c printed yt,n ay j, M V . of Mass, from 2 i,h- D!ians FOR THE ESTABL. OP DIPLOIC RELJ- tions with (3 o i x i.-,t hi netition w. muyeu 10 lay r nr,..h. fQr which all the members '.um - on tht tab of knowing all the tacts and circumstances connected with the sending out of the detach T t:ilce the libertv of - i . r ir,v.-i..r M;in v i . . na voted, inrludmg xvu.vlJ" , , ye calling your (attention to the subject, and ot i ;i i iiii uii' i - - i . t-v-. iavor ot tne extension oj slavery ; in ra:v .ir;.T t documents are published for the South which, j .aepresent Gen. Cass as a free-soil man,, and Gen. layloras the interested friend of tui slaveholding portion of jthe comity. j' I Keep it before tne people, in at uih wmg pa ty have published FOUR TEEN LIVES OF GENERAL TAYLOR miking him out " ALL THINGS TO ALL JHN,' to humbug and deceive the people. Keep it before the people, that the whig can didate for the nresidencv, bHsi ies his .regular - 4 . - i .iv- orre young Ladies, feeling ijijrtrrievi'-l'by th(- severity with which a friend sT:'cnlated on their gay plumec,nt cklacos,rings flounces. &c, went to their Pastor, to learn his opinion. Ci Do you think," said they. that thf-re can be any impropriety in our wearing- these things V u By no means," was the prompt reply ; "when the heart is full of ridiculous notions, it is perfectly prop- to hang out the sign." una Washington, nuw j . yti iRF Gates requesting lniormation in regaru iu uic onu electors, while Adarhs. Fl i tion of the detachment at the lime of Hull's Giddings, SattonstalK Slade, T capitulation; whether it was not included (now chairman of the yhig:V10?V r thpTPin. and: by the laws of war, was not mitte ,at Washinirton City, aisiriuu c , bound to surrender with the rest of the troops tioneerino- documents -to iarn ' who commanded it: what was Gen. Cass's Freemen how to votej i-ntntCm, position in connection w.' , . 1- . i IIA.in(l l l.rlll -'v" 'i A Token The U. S. shi p North Caroli na drifted from her moorings near the Navy Yard to deep water near Williamsburg, on the 27th ult. Is this a sign that the old State pay as an officer, of th regular army for forty jiwill drift from her moorings in the: shallow vears has drawn from the treasury 874.864 muddy waters of whigery to the deep -and ouoyan- waters ot Lemocracy on tne tn prox imo ? Fayetteville Carolinian. ble ! Gen. Tayxob, only whipt the poor misera e r.owarfllxr T oviVnc Ci. singlo stroke of the pen. foiled the allied Twwierg ca jtirope. - 4 04. not for sei vices rendered, but as a part oi ' . - . . f -r- 1 t 1 the emoluments ot hisprhce while lying i ne in his barracks, or superintending the affairs of his plantation. Keen it before the veMe, that the whigs are endeavoring to humbug the people by declar ing their candidate to foe " the people's man," while his surrounde j'by bayonets, covereu with the trappings of loffice ;and, besides his enormous pay as a major general in the army, draws thirty rations a day, and is so mean as to attempt to cheat tthe government Tout of $7 20 in postage. 1 Keep it before the peopte, that uen. vash never took one cent from the government, ex cept for bona fide services rendered ; and that while Gen. Taylor was drawing from the trea sury, above SEVENTY-FOUR THOSAND DOLLARS, and doing nothing in return for it, Gen! Cass was purchasing from ,the Indians the great empire of the West, and forming it j into sov ereign States and popiulous cities. &cp u befort u peopU that while uamei To N. C. Democrats. We say to the democrats of North Carolina, and we say it with the highest confidence of the truth of the assertion, that if the vote of the State is not cast for Css and Butler, it Will be because too many democrats nave neglected to vote. . IE35" Looking to the anti-slavery movement in this State, and that its moving spirits are whigs, as the Orange Ratoori says it learns to be the case, if every democrat will vote, there can hardly be a doubt that the Cass and But ler electoral ticket will succeed. Ibid. against the motion, a " NEG the with it; and whether he was in anv way ffuilty of anything unbe comiajr a brave and gallant officer I nougn i name these specific points, L shoul.i be pleas ed to receive information on any others you iv-arnf the House all Ahnlii ctt voted a nil ncr; iko whole South 1 t it 1 1 i tn receive GR(i Mi'nmte.t- to this Country, ,.ndp.r it necessarv to notice, in order f i. unt is in the nanus oi j . r iU country whose f'u xkous.pro REVolted SlavesJ , the'South position 1 How lNbULin . r .1. TTmnn ! ! ci ij portion OI lue Mr. Adams, January zim, " LI7rloN (not a g SfttS Aciety 'of t . n .i i Q'Av. oao-e 6ov. ifiM r v,o Ann P-o, ' r 1-nia Which j--moid ii x ennsy i tt oi . j law it on tne southern men voting i j aiuuno- whom ..wc- ,v r i nrl Washington "AlS otanly - i Abolitionists Mr. Fdlmore and all tne uiuc . .i . 'wi.Minn . si vuieu against tne u.-y ,r f VDI.p:,.'rnfr r:ii "Wbn IS in iavij- r-o - llllllUlb was laid on to 63, all the table, BUTLER, while to g-ive I . A. 1 A. lh nr ft a rnrreci nistuiv ui '.uc uwuci. made, the request as a smcere inquirer alter truth ; and it is proper to apprize you that it is my intention, should you favor me with an answer, to have it published. With respectful consideration, yourob't serv't. ROBERT SMITH. Major Gen. Thos. S. Jesup, Washington City, D. C. MILLARD FILLMORE The ' Aua-usta Constitutionalist thus rolls up into a harp pill, the proof of the abolition votes lof the Whj candidate for the Vice ' President, and tosses it to the -Whigs. ; , .." " Millard Fillmore it was, who voted with Giddings, Slade, and otheis, to instruct the committee on Territories to introduce a bill repealing a law passed bythe people of Florida in their territorial Legislature, exclu ding free negroes from that territory ! ! . Millard Fillmore it was, who voted with ISlade and biddings against .laying on the ta ble a petition asking Congresajo pass a law protecting negro-stealers and incendiaries m the Slave States, and asking to have the priv- ilege of sending through, the rost umce, into our countries and among our people, their in-, sultins:. and outrageous attacks upon us as slave-holders and citizens oi a eiave noiomg community 1 . . Millard Fillmore it wa?, who said he was interested in the claim to " property in man," in the District of Columbiaj, and want ed to abolish slavery there without the con sent of the people and without making them any compensation ! ! ! Millard Fillmore it was, who voted against censuring J. Jt. Giddings, foT intro ducing resolutions into the House of Repre p . .... i j. i sentatives in which mutiny ana muraer my slaves were justified and approved in " terms shocking to all sense oi iaw or manity ! ! !" tvItt.t at?t .Fillmore it was. against all but the first of the resolutions in- . troduced by Mr. Atherton of New Hamp-U shire ! 11 . : order and hu- who voted Mi and actmsr itinn upon wel! as abolition petitions. March 91 ct. 1842, page resolutions as 567. Mr. Gid- r .Anslntinnc I . ' i CPT1PS iro-i-v.u dings introduced i a series l .. ,mlTV IMIJ iYliV wnerem " MU 1 LUrn xr tp.RMS JUSTIFIED & nv7Tv Washington City, Sept 25, 1848. Sir: I have received your letter,dated the 23d instant, calling my attention to certain rharcres said to have been made by the Hon. Thomas Butler Kinagainst Gen. Cass, in a speech lately delivered by him at Patterson', New Jersey, in the following words, viz : Clem. Cn.SS is the. hero of Hull's surrender. SHOCKING TQ ALL OF LAW fRrn?Tj Axro i HUMAN 1 1 i- . Anese Warning to Females. It was stated at a jury of inquest "that Miss .Emory (whose sudden death in the Globe "milt at Newbury- port, Mass., took place a tewdays ago,) was in the habit of chewing large quantities of cloves, and had been known sometimes to con enme. an ounce a day. This was no , doubt aft indirect if ot direct ms- her death. j i ,. '.u,l,!.wn. un ine -aiuc icaujunons were wi-- ORDER 1 AND i 1 I mt firm Haw M- i5 ffa.. introduce ! a ru.u.- j xui.u . r Mr n-Hdino-s as -.T.I I (,. w U" ! Ordered away by Gen Hull before the attack Detroit bv the British, Gen. Cassrecexo- td no intelligence of the disaster till ne was .,.,, vW hn .a sinrrle British officer, fourteen miles from Detroit, to yield ; and he did yield. upon oiquestidris, in which Southern mter- ixfuii innr three regiments ot men, Lrenerai mm .."".'nT j . Yes!11 Tell them of i," The New York Post, a violent Van Bnren paper, thus speaks of Gen. Cass and free soil : f . Tell them of it When the Cass polity cians pretend that their candidate is in favor ot free soilj just tell them that Cassoted against the Wilmot Proviso in the Senate." Yd ! tell them of it ! By its fruits shall th, tree be known. When the Southern Whig papers or speakers, false to the truth and the South, pretend that Cass is a Proviso man or an! Abolit onist, just tell them that he . voted against the Proviso nay, just tell them thai Cass, surrendered to , a single British officer, fourteen miles from any other enemy." And m comDliance with your request that I should -ivp siirb information as I possess m regard tnntinn nf the detachment referred to v itf- TIr-rr nt th time of Hull s capitula- vole of 125 to 69. Theyoie may of ru. Gaffl in lek. on page 6T8 where Mik kbJuaww. o yv-.- - . p -Jm'nitinn. nt trie veo ular." This resolution was renewed by Mr. wii--lf.. adonted next day by a ests hate been involved, he has voted with ui. ; against us never ! And tell them, lurtneTj i that Fillmore has voted' against us always , . with us never ! ! and that Taylor endorses Fillmore Georgian. Boy What is your name 31006,81 VeU, what is yon. other Hamf V BV i J- i' " ' " . : . ! . " . i .'- " - ' '- ' I '
North Carolina Republican (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 18, 1848, edition 1
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