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‘ jum on po- Our Baltimore Correspondence, vote, which was considerable. He was: with | chusetts demoorat, the mighty shades of Clay and NATIONAL POLITICS, | ne, Prem tame | BES dasate | Wotstar have niacehed ts tas ballot box ole by ipAidihintindtiibiindlanny Te is lao the ‘opinion, informed quarters, The Cabinet via Baltimore. Iaat ond Oe den jaws cs nt Se + he | side with the conquerors, like Castor and Pollux in | Pati? Disiuterested Efforts of the Office Seekers, | {RS 2eneot the Polk secretaries will borvaalleg | 1 navy rooeived a letter from Washington this | sonssten and bonorable mnoecaitapr clamoeous for | tho old Roman legend. Tn the wonderful stampode | all the int ateney collectors, marshals, phndie . than Yo do tnd that | morning, which states that itis rumored there that | harmony when in the minority, but never sparing | that ensued upon the Ootcber elections, Ploroe re- fo hg ten oy wil re would be the appointment of » New 0 the following named gentlemen will constitute |" power—the Van | coived the votes of men of all factions. Old line | Bi bis oa any terms and Anes barnburner is decidedly in favor of > Buren free soilers. Pearson Munday is defeated, and THE GOSSIP OF THE POTITICIANS, | Demburner ‘The country i+ sr oabinet ministers | General Pleroe’s onbinet. The writer states that | the reason why he is Gefentod, in a district wick | democrats supported him beoauso he was an old | King Lear is very epropes in this matter.— se nnnnnnane whose sentiments and ideas have kept pace with the | several knowing ones there confidently expect the | gives Pierce 900 majority, is simply that he is @ | liner, and because, next to Lowis Cass, ho was to That, sir, which serves and secks, for gain, rational of the age. Among Mr. Polk’s | appointment of every gentlomen on the list, vis: — | Dunker. them the most acceptable maa—the man with the And follows bus for form, ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE SPRING | secretaries, there may be one or two who would | 5.04, p, ‘“ pr : Finally, Andrew L. Ireland is defeated in Essex, | fairest record in the whole Nerth, upon the subject Will pack, when it to rain, FRESHETS ON SALT RIVER. come up to the requisite standard; but the balance | re yee; a + sfleoretary Clinton, and Franklin. He had a close district and | slavery. Young Amerios supported him because he And leave thee im the storm. of them may be set down in batch as old fogies of | Charles 0'Conor, of N. ¥. a strong opponent but, had the barnburners sup- | was a young man, ‘and would come fresh from the | And seb, there is to be atromendous effort to place ee een | the most obstinate class; and as they are all, | Gen. James Shields, of ted faith, he must have succeeded. | people, modest and self-difident, but full of the | im the c some man identified with the Van. Opinionsand Hopes of all Sorts of Pe | without exception, understood to be dates for | Governor Cobb, of Ye kes the fifth iastance of party treason in this Bight ideas which throb in tho brains of the pro- | Buren ticket of 1843. You will notioe the tone of ni of People. | re-appointment, one could not well be selected with- | Senator Bright, of ofic Congressional within the present know- | gressive democracy, and strong in the faith of the | the freesoil and goftahell pross throughout the State; AA | out opening the door toall the rest. Mr. Buchanan, Governor E. Louis Lowe, ledge of your it. coming millenium of republics. Barnburnorism | it is unanimous in its tone, for their organization is ‘On the other hand, the of the campaign is rupporied him, because, like Webster in 1842, it | complete, and their “slaves of the lamp” aro not Ithough willing—-and more too—to renew his sor- If. think the abo : Auxlety to Save Gen. Pierce Trouble, ey meme of State, takes a yery sensible | con faon poetic pet Ged page Bled no where else to fe, and because it saw no | slew to respond to the gentlest rub of their oontral ec vices as Secretary rt it, of course without my name. I may | challenged to show hunker defection where barn- : | view of the eubject. In this city, a fow days since, | from time to time hereafter contri! burner candidates wero in the field. Nota hunker | chance for spoiis in Hale ization, and | orgap, the Albany » The whi; apere, $00, &o., &o., &o | he stated to an intimate personal friend, that he not | paper. wiennsiececa saci in your city, orin the river counties, scratched San- | could hope ne none from Scott, on ungrateful | delight in beer aed hunkers with Lge ie Bey only doubted whether he ot any one of the former | — ford E. Church, though every one of them, who | Taylor gave it none years ago. And many Union | Dix or Marcy in the cabinet. They exult upon the Our Washington Correspondence. secretaries would be invited to a seat in the cabinet, | Our Utica Correspondence. knew anything, know sf would be as well for his whigs voted for everywhero, because they | prospective mortification of the national democracy; Wasuneron, D.C, Nov. 15, 1952. | but thought it both natural and per that the | Unica, Nov. 7, 1852. faction to have a whig in his seat at the Canal | hated Seward, and sought to break the iron | andthe Buffalo Commercial, commenting on Cabinet Carving in IWashington | President should prefer to surround himself with 7% Result of the Election—The Defection of the | Board, as a barnburner. Church was even with | rule he had laid upon their - Such | Hera.y article of the Gth inst., considers it ‘“‘an i c men nearer bis 7 0, who would be more likely | r Follett, and Seymour with Clark, in every county— | were the elements of the torn which has | attempt to persuade Pierce that he should eall Tt is @ fact universally conceded by friends and | to bring to the foetal of their duties a greater Barnburners and the Democracy— Candidates for | Howe, in the Gayogs district, Perkins, in St Tare swept over us, and woe be to him who will not learn | around bim nono but well known and national poli- foes, that during the late Prosidential campaign, | degree of vigor and efficiency. In this, “ Old | Congress Thrown Overboard—The Candidates | rence, ke , and Jones, in Onondaga, received every | from it a sober lesson. It has been great popular | ticians,” and predicts the success of the barnburn- the influence of the Herp has been greater than | Buck” is undoubtedly right. for the Cabinet. hunker ballot, and the two latter go to Congress | verdict rendered in favor of the compromise mea- | ers and soft sholls, in the struggle, backed as they tbat exerted by any other ton journals combined. It | But, of all Mr. Polk’s secretaries, the one most | The result of the eleotion of last Tuosday is a along with Sage, Bennett, and Matteson, to record | sures, and against an imbecile administration of the | will be by the State administration of Now York, ox ee _ “| amxious to secure an appointment is the one, in my Sheri ges Tuosday isindeed | their votes in favor of Gerrit Smith’s notions and | foreign interests of the nation. The moment of | and perhaps of Massachusetts. As for the bunkers has spoken with ‘‘voice potential—double as the | opinion, least likely to obtain it. Iallude to Go- | overwhelming. There are, in reality, few mon who | resolutions upon the ba et Slave law, and to re- | such a victory is the moment not for wild exulta- | themselves, pf rely upon Pierce’s clean record and Duke's.” It is not to be denied that it has done | Yernor Marcy na ry general objections to any ‘ct expected to see the whig party routed so utterly, | turn ae wen ‘ Sout of demopeatls har. bo? but ar calm aperpcatt. Aver Se ity past cpt ay one ee geen yas More to secure the election of President Pierce, and | °f the old secretaries, apply to him with greatly in- | although, after any denoucment hastranspired, there | MO"Y» aud, secretly, of ‘the corrupt bunkers. augurated, new questiens are sbout to enter our | guage of the Boston Fost, which assumes (ov! ~ creased force. But, if it were not so, there is one (e The latter were determined that tho sin of bolting | arena of politics, and ‘ies of government and 0} with the ition of Wm. LL. Marcy and the coali- to defeat General Scott, than the party papers on | objection to his selection, which Ihave no where *T@ always enough who say, “I predicted it.” | should not be charged upon them, and so went oA position i about to divide the ear of the sree tionists, Ae eye,) that ‘Pierce, judging from his oither hand; and none are more thoroughly aware | seen stated, and yet which, of itself, is sufficient to These same persons, had the result been precisely | ticket straight through. Who bolted the Coi s- | or distract its juégment, with questions whose im- ublic declarations and condust, considers # union “ d 4 ae 7 |S (one + iy oo 2 P ' of, or moré readily acknowledge the fact, than the | #ttlo the question against him. Ho seoks the a the opposite, would have been the first te assert that | sional nominations has been shown, and who bolted | port, if equalled, never been surpassed in our | with free goilors as repugnant to demooratic feeling, distinguished ontestants themselves—th ith | pointment, not from any motives of public they always secrotly distrusted the chi f | the electoral ticket appoars by the returns from | apnals. : and inconsistent with the welfare of tho democratic P ® selves—the one with — good, but only to gratify a personal feeling. It is ohgigg peepee chanoos of Gen. | Horkimer, St. Lawrence, Onondaga, Steuben, Os- | No man can doubt that the idea of extension of | party.” They believe, too, that the announcement thanks, while the friends of the othor oonfoss them- | well known that he is laboring under tho idea that | Pierce. We have been amused heroin the rural wego, and other dark-colored counties, in each of | territory is favorite one with republics and ropub- | of » prominent leader of tho Warnburners, to the Selves with ‘“‘curtes loud and deep, which, like | his nomination for the Prosidency was defeated by a districts, at reading in a New York newspaper that | which Seymour leads Pierce by hundreds. licans. " Greece threw out her colonies in every di- | effect that their return to the democratic ranks in @hickens, always come home to roost. | ene demoorat oeBe oun State ey its io a sudden discovery was msde, the morning after | F set oe — a Alas pe sey for ae reagan, till ne Tevant Sag acbalan. and hee ities, isa was ee ntention ofpeeaeetts ey party A ‘foed fat the ancient grudge” he bearshim an‘ i hege | bunkers of this learn same lesson, whether under Hercules, lomus or Nici the great anti-slavery o: ation of the count & This being the state of the case, so well under- | friends, that he now Taken sack: ‘unusual and extra- | tbe election, that tho omployés in your oustom- not know or care, further than that it is sickening | penetrated the Italion and ian shores The | has to been pesky forgotten by the euler oe stood, it is but just and proper, under the cirzum- | ordinary efforts te be recalled te now r. But, he houre were all democrats, and that the collector of | to a eis pe a ee on Cu me every me of ere bee ae fet ey berm ae the Rew Raccienre aes aie eg + will — stances, that the HERALD should now stand by tho | Will signally fail of his object. If Mr. Pierce had the port had been imposed upon in appointing them | ational and catholic views on the subject of slavery | the land flowing milk and honey. Carthage | sanction the style in which William L. Marcy, Ho- i im i | not the judgment and engacity to avoid saddlin, ii iti sacrificed. while the advocates of sectionalism suo- | extended her possessions till sho met her great rival | ratio Seymour, John Stryker, Erastus Corning, and Prosident elect, and not leave him just as the perils himself’ with this “Old Man of the Mountain, aswhigs. Bo itis, that the strongest side hasal- | se to office, and to such influence a8 office may | faco to face. Romo ruled tho world under the re | the Test of the oft shell leaders, have deserted tried of bis exalted position are making tnomselves appa- the democracy of the country wouldnot ealmly look | W8Y8 charms for the weak and venal, and the suc- | confer. Ifsuch repeated instances of Punic faith on pels, to lose it under the empire. Venice spread | friends and patched up old quarrels with old ene- out. It ought to be the province of the journal | on and seo tho power of the government prostituted | cessful army carries away from the battle-field all | the part of the ingrates whom the democracy have | her sails on every sea, and, secure in herimpene- | mies. The veracious history of Aladdin I have al- + | to any such ignoble purpose. MONTICELLO. ea | taken back to their arms, all impenitent as thoy trable lagoons, bought and sold the kings of the | ready once alluded to. It teac! moral as valu- = tae 80 much to place him in power, to s00 id be pete igg ca ik ie east followers and vagrants in its train—even wore, can afford them any iuzasement, so beit. | earth. It was a Centon republican who gave @ | able in political economy asin domostic—nevor to ox- Bumerous combinations, permutations Our Washington Correspondence. Bg pre Only one drop is now needed in the coup of their | new world to Castile and Leon. The Dutch federa- | change old lamps for new. and arrangements formed, and in process of for- | WasuincTon, D. C., Nov. 16, 1852. That General Pioroo was destined to succeed Mr. | humiliation, and that would be the appointment of | tion penetrated the secluded commerce of the East, rey mastion, shall not overwhelm a manof such frank, | The Different Sections of the Democracy—Opinion | Fillmore was, however, 60 gonerally believed by | John A. Dix fp Shs oe at, Recereryt a Trea. = anes a Roe Bee tind feb Our New Haven [Correspondence. Reble and generous nature as the President elect is | of General Pierce—A ‘i i cool and experienced men in the democratic ranks, | *™7; or else of William L. Marcy to she ae s i f, i “4 Naw Haven, Nov. 10, 1852, a } of verce: nother Slice at the Cabinet, , » | of State. Irish, and subjected Scotland to its rule. Tho The Re C i known to be. To any one insido tho works all theso | In casting an eye over the late political battle ‘hat am active struggle has been, for sometime past, | And the mention of these gentlemon rominds us | French republic of ’93, distracted by traitors at eport from Connecticwt—The Cabinet Ar- Manwuvres, ra, om and emrriate operations, | grounds, and considering the nature of the foros | SIDE on in caucuses, held in back parlors and ee pba Bs agelscants,. nea 0 Koh Heer | ign me (een re tsar yer wy le ra Peirce that Reston. ~ u t u tl ’ i ces to ic] ave nt 5 - talkin, . Pi " Sr ceca th muir rage aut per egngedyey one oendg tay som | legs nN on hg he Bat lef ‘ Arn ang ih oe of Gana spe | | laim of the Empire State to a cabinet officer | through Europe, and spared the cottage while they + | on Sreclait night of, and it wa, perhaps s good razed the paleoe ernibligans are iit forget- | #onal friends, who has seen him since the election, when she gave Captain Polk his election in | ful of conquest and annexation than crowned heads, | and from what I can gather his cabinot wilt be —the only occasion in the history of our Presi- | and yet the sun has never shone eo @ people or & | something like the following :— ite expansion a8 | 5.1.65 Buchanan. Secretary of State, half an eye, cannot seo and read them all under- | °F discrimination in such matters will not fail to tive to the spoils. The little cliques and coteries | j, sanding! . | recognize the peculiarities and anomalies of the Bich cluster around the “leading men” of the ving elected Franklin Pieroo, the H ; " i " is must now com ed eran ee area, the HEEALD | contest. Elements, therofore, of the most opposite | Party» havo been active in parvelling out place and | Gontia] elections, singe Jefferson and Adams ran | government so calculated for inde Be - | and discordant character, were brought i wer, and making capital for their respective i ee. . Old Sam H ht : land- ‘ Ruturute Suineted it tiftimiotaticg | communion, and acted io concord ond tah, esr ua hmmm, he thee os | Atta ban behind aad intvevig bar | ving Zep Avent ou tentald covet | Ren caneg CrP eee urge of the general government, #0 that such men only | Some there were in the democratic ranks, of more ' democracy have separated, have ooouplads them: share of cabinet influence. Van Buren is the only | times the spac which they were framed to protect. | 4 Buel, Michi Seoretary of War. i nam ° gan honorable disch f thei al duties, | Vitdom than discretion, and of more cunning, as solves quite as much in laying plots, forming coali- Te oe eee ibs pont at Beowtary tate; | pe Ket by eee valk Tanmesoal Stephen A. Douglas, gad honorable discharge of their, several duties, | they thoy thought, than either, who at-one time at- | {108 opposing each other's movements, and secur- | {yt Alexander Hamilton and John Q. Speneer have | on the Pacific. Less than two years will suffice, | {hatlet,O Conor, NY de; Pay ae! the Scotia pee po eat tech | tem uae sort ae duplicit But they were a ing here and here a fancied slice of the coat po- presided ore the United: States ees Gen. | when the moment comes, to pass our future State of Edmund Burke, N. H. Pr | Pegs. 2 puloity. ry ven | litical Tost, aa in the active, open labor of the cam-) Armstrong, P. B. Porter, and Marcy, have been | Cuba through the probationary stages which will | That Burke will be Postmaster Goneral, and bof be selected ae by the strict, faithful, zealous, Seoretary of Interier. Attorney General. . Postmaster General. ‘ me, and let us reason together to understand that the distinguished candidate for aign. The victory has rather 001 into tl of his administration, will bo the scloction of his | tenance or wink at anything like “cheating round | °*jetperate exertion. and Nathan K. Hall have superintended rapid de- | about Cuba. They sco that her government is an : Mossrs. Seymour and Church being elected, as | capitations of postmasters and the slower epera- | anomaly upon this continent, for no where else will be mostly composed of young, energetic men, ‘the great and honored names” presented for his a4 | Your correspondent predicted, the now Albany re- thos of the melee ‘and stated- aching Butler has | upon Tea soil—unless upon ber sister island | and no two in the party havo more of the latter desea bidh'and a0 teane S20 kk lesitios | Prior to the 2d of November, a politician, some- gency will commence its first session at the capital | held the place of Attorney General. Now York, | of Porto Rico—is wanting at least tho form and | quality than Cobb and Burko. Th ral forscunding the subject, that it might “well cause | What prominent, visited Concord, and purposed thi the beginning of January. Ita complexion is | then, hasnot hitherto, bech overlooked by either | somblanco of representative government, and of | 0..7 lesaihcrdomiegged: apie frost saxisty ak aa of any men les aah enlightenment ‘and instruction of oeear" ‘Pierce oan te oad sual oe reeqearam leet rity j and if she be omitted the lst ot sare Rees es here rsp’ Sucbanan will ibe ludteca ce bale peatuere te . * . % 8! considered choco! \° dg i | e an. James Buchanan, of Pennsylvania has been wide- | touching men and things. In his view, as sot forth rae ae dingy white and halt pare black. peek tenn ali co ma a be aeaine ne oe at Givitized nations-—flourtab. ia" ita fore, and knows, the: duties, and thow:to doithemm fever Slory leer ay Melilcteney | to General Pierce, no free soiler or barnburner Mess Seymour, Wright, Chatfield, and ex Gov. | choice. ideous atrocity. No other power, since the peace | With credit to himself and the administration ; the a i 4 Marcy will represent in its councils th ft shell ; 4 a State De ent would be safe in such able hands nd im thie ehould receive apy portion of the benefits to be de- y unc! je soft she! Imprimis is Gen. Dix, the candidate of the pure | of 1815, has dared to insult our flag through its , da hed ind ype ae nee | rived from the prospective result of the election. | ete ae hurch, Randall, Benton end Welch | freo goilore, an abio man, and a thorough geile. | military organs: ho other dares og lampoon us wie 2 pepince ed woud ‘eee amr a tho ooanelly of the late lamented Prosideut Pet, | ¢ is understood that the gentleman leftNew Hamp: | Will maintain the barnburning interest. Mr.Oss. | man. Chosen to fill a vacancy in the Senate of the | thiough its venal press. _ Finally, the rumors of | {vieers, but aa & Sonos is fo be Atainey Genes im Mr. Buchanan bore an able and prominent part. | ‘Hire for his home with an uncommonly large- | Thus “a the roe Foes higeke aes be a | United States, he associated himsclf with the little | monarchical coalitions in Burope, proposing to Btockt nea eet talleed fs 9 f rth ans but Fer the ame position in the councils of President | *ed flea in his ear; for he was told by General ahh he herp attitude of our democratic State | tea party headed by Benton, and inolading Bagby, | vent our further geographical inorease, havo ralsed N ars N 7 Y, _ teint iat copa 4 Pieroo, he will enjey the advantage of many warm | ieToe, in effect, thatin cago he should ever bo so for- | adm: leit ion hostile to the old hunker party, and | Niles, Iaywood, and Tappan, who aro remembered | our curiosity and stimulated our appetite. alle served, Gon. Gass would like Buel po inte fad importaoate hiende and advocntes, rot theleast tunale_ as to reach the digaifed and rosponaible 2yytyemmany bankers, with the frends of the | sa bo og opposed the, abnczation of Tozas up to | | We have all heard ofthe glorious nateral aaution | £14 tiretana\l thiok he wil ; he isa JOuNg et uber teeanuncoar Vesacd the Clerk of the | Position of the Presidency, no man must suppose | a rgus, and of Daniel 8. Dickinson, in the | the }ist moment of Tyler's administration He | of that lovely isle. Our invalid frionds, returning bel cabinet anc Ager robe He) 2 young mad, House of Horrenantatives the present principal edi- | that he would proseribe any sestion or branch the | tural districts, must soften Feapar peau a was a» active barnburner in the days of Hoffman | with invigorated frames and elastic step, have ‘Some. seve Rees 7S ‘alike * hi Ser of the Gaton te) Se elec oe nna oti: | democracy, and least of all that section, prominent or look out for the application of the sorews and the | and Young; but in 1848, after the nomination of | spoken to us of the noble headlands, the picturesque | 447° eat aoe in th sabi Ni th hi 0 ar bal Col. Forney has great advantages for operating | Members of which wore at that very tims upon the | peine forte et dure. , | Lewis Cass, he is reported to have pledged his sap- | mountains, and the deop savannahs echoing to the | & te be es his: bse eat . sith . fhe heal among members of Congress; but it is not to be | Sump in his behalf, doing yecman’s Lea caeaa sneer of, he course of a long ex- | port to the Baltimore nostinee, upon the spar of the ret behabyey pen. ay pate pre tee lene teh ra not, 1 think’ the Intern Departament would come supposed that Gen Armstrong will allow the claims | 5 eervation was understood to levelled at Mr. peances of a cli liane “Moment If so, he again withdrew it, for he re- | extensive tobacco elds— usands of unculti- | fom Virginia. To have the Union equally rej 4 ‘ ohn Van Buren. And there can be no question tances of aclique or alliance of men formed for ceived the nomination of the free soilers for Gover- | vated and idle acres—its primeval forests and rich Lipp beget i esmtancd oo fbinrireezchaaessts | Ut Cem Fn mig re mada tn fson aganeomas of age ateal pln em Se of hintaan nd wean | Won ate and te tn efor teva | STOR SMR Cer Vane tee, of the leading organ of the democratic party. But, | '0Mr. Van Buren in every degree of justico and pro- | Yas entered into under the advice and leadership of | /b0%e4 for the Van Buren and Adams electoral | Wits & mellem Net Ot vough this feiry “sland, ‘an. | Obio and Illinois but it is not always’ com on the other hand, Mr. Buchanan will mect wits | PTicly; for no individual labored more honestly, |G ares e TSOO aad ein a catarehip of ticket His associate for Lieutenant Governor was | mitted to wander through this fairy island: un- | 4,” sake selections in this way. Some of I. L orous opposit y | @8D , and we may add, effectively, than he, not | COVvernor Marcy, and which is to this day | Seth M Gates, an out-and out abolitionist, and the | trammelled by passports and gendarmerie and un- + yi pbk Net of Pe a i ae cricdeaidig tate ee | only tovsot himbelf rectus in curia, bu to seourethe | tHumphant in every particular. Two whole years | game man who ran on the ticket with Minthorne | watched by spics, and to nots the rapid improve- hee Hh en but he ote areata Becretary, would himself not object to some place ‘lection of General Pierce. The same observation have ithe members of this embryo regeney —poli- | ‘Fompkins this year. Since the nomination of | ment whia would dawn upon it with the infusion Mi eared Hy oF vy able ind:strious man, and ia the cabinet, and is most decidedly of opinion that | would have had force ifsupposed application of ithad | ticians though they be—kept absolute faith with General Pierce, General Dix has made the route | ofanew andenergetic race. Saxon, Celtic, Teu- | Soi Ree ant, oitasoloay pie letaves qaes Pennsylvania cannot have tre faronte enon “het | been made to Hon. Pierre Soule, for up to the nomi- | C2ch other, | The trophies of their soseases lie | to New Hampshire his expecial study, and the | tonic, Scandinavian, Gallio—we have them all now | T2t..0‘ths laborious dutios of a Secretary's depart hae in a Seaator, bis opisions will of course, in ail | B8tion of Goneral Picroo, which healed all divisions | Glwuerehirean tt phat tmentt Tass Revco eveg | Hardy Yeomanry who never touched the free soll | among ws; of the Creole transplanted descendant | np °° . ee policy, have due weight in the sottloment of the | 04 discontents, Mr. Soule had suffered under the | fhe "re'nominatio oot Lewin 6 - ealefontod | abomination, his especial love. He is evan reported | of the ee en ees ae eaenuve | _ General Cushing, ef Massachussetts, Governor @ase. And, again, Mr. Buchanan must expest op- | Se of van See in bing leg as | Sed ncenlateamustee ie conor ae so uere ae with apes sehen) ey recy pyrene fect prs Gren of rene Seymour, of Conectiout, and General Pillow, of i obnexious asMr. Van Buren. Yo' luring one of ¢ jens. ‘ven ; sition from the Cameron interest, 90 called. | Obie and eloquent speakers, yielding there newoaioce | BAYS, damaged the railroad interest, in which seve | ing Post, of your sity, hee ‘afeady devigasted nim, | Leon. We do not beliove him unworthy of liberty, | Tennemes, are the persoual friends of General ii ner sanded sobs some tants Tk Yt tPee te take Deore of he Gor stata tng osigtee aE Wan Ls neg | ene eyed me, os candate yt che Tron | sahiszrantyhnrogniy nada would all in 3 | tise Culbng wil goto, Peanoe Beynon Will oppose the interest of Mr. Buchanan. Ia this | Dtion, went to work with a will, and probably oom- Pyasigent pple mare of Wm L. Marcy for | sury Department; but it is no more to be expected | brother.and invite him to our equal board. Already os. Cusats sm of to France, Seymour to eategery Young America, or Senator Douglas, is tributed quite as much as any other mon to make ae Hoy acmores but they did not, in fact, | that the South, which seoms to havo unani- | in our Sena‘e sit the Irishman from Illinois, the oped and low will be Consul to Liverpool. Dot inoluded, for he has positively and repentediy | the election of Pierce and King a fixed fact. The | Oceire nor intend to do ao. Some of them used his | mously for Pierce, would tolerate tuch a appoint. | Frenchman from Louisiana, the German from’ Mis- | The latter stands s chance for the Navy Department; lared \y ides, therofure, that such @ President as has been | 28me to defeat Cass, and others supported him on | ment, than that Pierco himself would droam of | souri, and there is room yet for tho Spanish- | but I think he profers a foreign situation. No three paterwbort ry Tecrpag) tary pa per ly choren would proscribe any seotion of his party, or tah Sot of the 3 onder. 4 obtain hisentrance into the | making it. tongued Senators from Cube. 3 men in the party did so much towards having Sion in tise enbitiet, o& of any forcign mission’ "An: | any men of any section, wouldseem tobe somewhat °* ane i the next Heep pp iy ordid they suc- ‘As for Governor Marcy, his present doubtful posi- 0 side there are indications that the policy Pierce nominated as General Pillow, General Cush- rt cf eminence hasbeen frequentiy | ‘liberal. It is something General Pierce never even | °° 3 “3 spring in making the At/as—that support- | tion in his party is simply the result of his own jeal- quisition will be a favorite one with the | ing and Edmund Burke. aad que ‘asfavorably mentioned in this convection | dreamed of. oe ne Or a rcorncr stone-the State paper; but | ousy and love of intrigue. Up to the timo of his | incoming administration. Tho letter of Frank eee eae ‘ae Mr. an—ex-Becretary Marcy, of New York, | _At™ong those prominent members of the party | O/0o ied as he was ¢ ittle import. Maroy, bitterly | taking a seat in Mr. Polk’s cabinet, ho was the head | Pierce, addressed to the democrats of Philad Our Boston Correspondence. : 4 | and front of New York hunkerism, and his triumph | on the ith of July last, speaks of “his heart’ Boston, November 24, 1852. | in obtaining that situation, instead of Azariah | ing most earnestly for the disonthralment of the , ° rs ted as he was to the Argus, was sati=fed wit! W. who have been considered as having in a measure oppo! Led hese Beorwiary of War at the time Prosident Fierce WAS Changed front, thereby making thenssives, botore | SLO"INE 8 new proof of his good will to the barn- | The Elections—-Triumph of the Whigs—~The Je in not eottled that either of these distinguished snd... the election, obnoxious to partial animadversion, we | DUmers by making the attempt, and so ssouring | Fagg, must be fre:h in the recollection of your | Presed nations,” and ‘‘for the establishment of con- Thereo sional Electii bi cither of these distinguished and.) - sy reckon ex-Governor Hare and his firm friond | *Peir Feped to Seymour, at Syracuse. The pur- | yeaders. Mr. Dickinson’s remarkably.successful ca- | Sstitutional liberty throughout the world.” The ome fhe Conares se ware: Eisiven soppentag’t sal’beCndees =” | Hon. "Horate, Seymour, ‘th thos gunmen | $o*tand gis of ue ten recy than, havea er he Beanto—a carver ompbatoly alluded to | borin of the mlnabe Cranley over hitaefont wand | | There cannot be the last doubt of he culton With your permission, these and kindred subjects be tece thd aeeat pon titel tee 2s | and fomiliars, and in the whole programme no | ee LA re apolitical coponiat, oe priate _ oy ney tineean bid aed fn Ue e | having been Beaten, as the reals of the. repressae Wil reosive farther notice, as time and events may tyes of inotives—thote of coneiliation and har. | Toticeable flaw has occurred. How tar fortune may gg “‘advaneing, with firm end macly step, where | idol. The Washington Union already peaks of perpen gla tna! ead cl rcakar Bl ay Warrant. It will be suggested, whence isto come | To sara to secure the au ‘of democratic prin. | Serve it hereafter, remains to be tested. It | Gthers had fallen”—seems to have excited the envy | the manifest destiny which will incorporate Cuba | Whigs over the coalitionists and hunkers will, how- the support of and opposition to Governor Marcy? | eigles and) Neinseens en bee Hesttated oe to | Will bave to manage adroitly to secure, in of Mr. Marcy. He obviously feared @ man so ae during the next Presidency. There [sno dissent | ever, be small; and it may be that the hunkers wil In conolusion, the fact should be noted, that | fiples and demooratie men, both hesitated not to | onposion to the hard-shelled hunkors, the disttibu- | inching aud prominent, The patronage of the de, | anywhere, save in the rabid. freo soll and sbolition . t .. is ameng all the names of statesmen and politicians | Forthis act the more unpielling and roll rie | ton of federal offices, and to exclude your New York | partments at Weanin ton, Pied ers 1 igh diverted | press, whore editors, in theso days of compromise even yet Bold the balance of power, which would ee — a age ba of coe | hupkers are and have Deon in hier opposition ‘4 fif:h of August boys from their anticipated custom Deaads the Albany ass and saatlar papers, in triumpbs, are fast finding their ocoupations gone, | Prevent the choice of a whig to succeed Gov. Davie ShutetFcan ines BM LE append: | hem iL ie arid ant when he properion wag | Hi, SPinnumeni admin, tas Pome | thin and other Norcarn Sate, wish ip tho Wil | and ave boginrng todevote,emucivas to Gyne | s+ Unite States Benaor. [8 not impo, though 3 a =| peel 4 General Pierce, to voto for him and | gry be almost entirely in their bands, and from | biel Ale bop Lgtee coe lip teree cece ork Aer vor a sr ouitinons tatauas cal , mi rr atapesirlo iraagh arth sivedak hie ease Presid - Lot alah 16, so ‘F. idsaread scirhateuliy made oon Wh gscett | this citadel Pierce can be threatened, as Polk was } ph plage myer ape ence seatonia i opting Geka. homie ta ganteCrigt seid coalitionists elected to the Senate from Essex and restdent Pierce's as fen vs. Old Fo- | that'be should consider any such action in regard to | by aot ee Gos athe 697, ae LS ebaces * that gentleman himeelf, were refused a decision upon If Cuba ever enters this Union, she will come in Briatol counties, which, if the House should be gie—Mr. Buchanan's ieee : | Sey tour, regularly ‘and fairly nominated, ase blow eke oppealtts Pt set oy by Piaane dean re she ee fe TepsiaeE ye the barabarnecs < = : Lehr h © yaad hey je pee ‘nicely balanced,” would cause the sonstortal va- There area great many wise people here, and | aimed at him mour has been most ti bantly | ca ‘ rs | mitted equally with the hunkers. In spite of tl of England in the West Indies, the American people i - vorywhere else in the alters my high and de- , ¢lected Governor “Of the Empire State, cud Pierce ples Me ee of his ee) against coalitions with the aeniaicnh aaa of the Cass democrats, Benjamin, | will never commit the mad folly of suddenly a 9 page Ax wae maperye give the anti-whigs oon- bedi ty Taeat the roast hori. | 2S been more triumphantly choten President of the | {°C eVunaranter ot the sac ad ce umently na F. Batier and other free soilers were continued lishing slavery, without adequate provision for the of the Bensie, ‘and virtually of the whole State moorats, who can t you, without the lesst hesi- | Union. ‘Fhe same results might have been arrived | “ = eA ors and of his position— | in office almost up to the day of election. All | emancipated. Civil convulsions and revolutions may | government,while the election of United States Sona- tation, who will be invi:ed to soais io President | at even if General Pierce had not poured oil upon | Prgvut hmenaditicutt for them, to overroach or | these things, justly of, unjustly, aro ascribed | Feduce our, slavaholding torritory to a condition of | tor wonld be passed over until noxt yoar. A whig Pieroo's cabinet; and if you doubt their ee weuld tok hevaTneeten i , per walntigly titer the last trial of strength between the uncontamina- a ey to chi esate, ae ae orate at tatinng a Henting Boel rie ta ithnate ieaalbeion See hee ieee sond up the names of Bishop tions, they will endeavor to convince you with all ted hupkers and the soil and soft-shell strongth | been adoubtful one between the factions of the | Will never, among our people, imitate the British sone: hove ah ail Wate rg ett » Mr. % Ps | phant. : . porta of reasons, until you finally yield the point, or | ” For the position among the constitutional advisers | fthe State; and the patronage of the general ad- party. Men esid he was prudent, and was waiti Parliament in its emancipation opener. Cuba 8) ern ees, : iS re her to jsia the strongest. ie breach of promise made must enter the Union as slavcholding State, the would be chosen Governor, Tho chances, however, to forever in their good opinion. Ofeourse, | of President Pierce, which it is supposed tuat Gov, | ™nistration is the best hope of the former, driven | i ‘are damned forever good op! “glgee trp leche jen. Casa, tothe effect that he weuld not bea | Buffalo platform to the contrary notwithstanding. | 2%¢ in favor of the whigs having their gh RS people i i ‘i Maroy aims at, and would be glad to reach, and to | *8,they are from every State department. a i see 26 in ca eg ge age ne 2 : 1 Just now, too, they are especially exesperated by | candidate against him in 1852, all politicians know Perbaps your readers remomber the language of thous ae 4 he By bee, popstar majorit; of. Tortuous as his public course bas beon, how- ‘ion, passed at the famous multi colored . i the largest over thrown ads really know nothing more than any one elso of the which allusion bas heretofore been mude, he count the defeat of several of their candidates for Con- ¢ vention, which pledged the party then | Y°st® to theis party. with hearty confidence upon the potent support of | i matter. Bat although it is impossible to tell who New York. Gov. Baymoue is his Pt firm, es ield- | [ seed who have failen victims to the perfidy of the | yer, his ability has been unquestioned and his ox- cohen b The causes of the defeat of the coalitionists ace crema inte Leay th fea Ne oh plain enongh to us here. Mr. Mana’s nomination ae 7 - f; - burpers. The case in this district is one of the i the new Seoretaries will be, for the very good and | ing friend, was his most active and influential sup- | sos noticeable of these. Mr. Moulton, the demo. | Pezionceextensive, although of late age has much aufficient reason that the President elect has not yet eee erast aiealoeeraninrer sie tere cratic candidate, nominated after a hard struggle yp eeeates o¥ Llaapolien oe eee onal yee vpristigle of ‘no more slave States!” Pom | &8ve the lockjaw to the coalition from the a made up his own mind on the subject, it isnot at | yet clings to his fortunes with a tenacity worthy in the caucuses and conventions, is an inflexible | democrat of Massachueetts, who voted for him in | the positions taken on that platform, those members sl the Ciseaee hes eevee, Ceeel, | The) Banat cae al difivalé to foretell, with a reasonable amoant of | sxempliication in Damon snd Pythias. Goveracr , ber hell, pledged to the, support of the compro- | the Baltimore Convention ; but. the appointiment | of the free soil organization who have singe return- | H¢ would be chosen United Staves Senator disgusted, Aaa Eeymour. with euch astocintions clustering sround | Mites and especially obnoxfous to the soft shells and | ouid not fail to be offensive to the South, who seo | ¢4 to the rauks of the democracy claim never te | MARY democrats wis. havo no sympathy with the certainty, s few of those prominent and anxious gen. eth mek, iemely Lara peuae walek Yet barnburners. At Saltimore, it will be rememberod ie pst he aster of Nutr York tories Stet re | have departed. Every foot of territory acquired hunkers in their hostility to the coalition, and they tlemen whe will not be of the number. This Precident Pierce may find his policy panne ate of by your readars, he was a Cass man to the bitter | and the eA eae ‘opponent of Dickit son, 4 from Mexico, say they, is free; and its freedom was — ee ee gate Monee tens rbd ia easy enough; because it require but a small dwarfs izstead of giants, and that the stately for- fis iricuds, tho twenty-two of Wm. 1) Marcy and | staunchest Northern supporter of Southern rights Se ete ten eral aren ee rea Unpledged to the support of the Maine ia, WIRY amount of political sagacity, and but e slight Lrg ih of his b ta taal ved be dte by td 4 ar Such a man must needs bo made an ex: le of — Lis pete phen dtrnaent aA ee bor a Nisiat te Prondeat. (Ovke : apelin repealed scores of representatives were lost to the coalition- acquaintance with the political events of the last | S05 i Wei C chat a day may bring forth.” | tbe regency required it at the Lands of the Oneid cachusesis: though the par- | César habet cum Jove. Wo oan’ maintain a divided | ist#- Some fifteen ot twenty whige were chosom to Premier, or Secretary of State So numorous are the board.” It is known, in fact, that some weeks id, “We kn t what a day may bring forth.” Pierce personally in Massachusetts, though t - | fow years, to show that some of tho gentiemea who | slaeaaidir faire Jee faibful ad promptly has the demand boon an: ticulant of te interview hare not tranapied..- "| alloglarge, supporting Prank Piston, while wa 7%: | Wbury’ Rptingteld, ‘Waltham, od bsne ahber ts 7 9 of | ii il i \. , 4 are named for high cabinet appointments, and who Wasarxotox, Nov. 18, 1852. | grajority for Pisrce, had there been no splitting or Rivalry, in politics, aa in love, is not favorable to | pudiate (NT ct Teeth eanes rotiiathé Yate pp places. It has feen altogether a mixed up fight-— @ sort of Donnybrook ' lair combat—in whiok the ‘i ‘ $ , 3 " ihe perpetuation of friendship. How long the mem- | 38 the a are pressed by their friends with almost indecent The Hotels in Washingtom—Where will General ' gelling on the democratic side; and not only the bel P fed oy | ic 8 Py haste and pertinacity, would ifappointed, at once Pierce Stop? §c., §c. electoral ticket, but also the State and Congressional, | bes at Dts oan wane thei goers oa A east caves “fae vis Buren yells his | 8f#nd aim was to broak heads without much regard throw the administration into afaice position, and might have hud it—especially the latter—since | gereement, is a problem el, watchin a a8 in his numerous Speeches, against the to the ideas that the said heads contained The lose it from the start the c-nfidence aud support of Joshua A Spencer had been nominated 3 an inde. ee en ee een ror oft Be many vulnerable points of General Scott Joha A. | Whigs gained in the melee, as they generally do the great mass of the national democracy Luis is" approach of the session, are the preparations pendent whig candidate. In other counties, there to the fated dh ha dea ie ed bch for fin Dix has eloquently enlargod upon strict accouate- under such circumstances rticularly true of Mesers Dix Fingg, and Van which cre going on in all the hotels for the accom- | was an effort made to give the Presidential ticket the feiie vA eu ere ie ‘the poh Mt Flag os rud bility and cconomy at Washington, but who of the ‘The friends of the Maine law fear, and its oppo- 3, of our State, who are understood to b3.can- modation of the crowds which annually ropair here | batdsome support. In Oneida, all the contest was | D)ioation,in {a45, led, wore than any other event, | baruburners who have mounted thestump,have urged | Bente hope, that the result of the election will be Gidates for cabinet places Not one of the thi a Peet upon Governor. To make votes for him, Moulton |}, ths srirmotory conduct of hes friends at the State | the election of Pierce because of hie platform, and | the repeal of that famous statute I doubt of the wake ed without convaltiog and dividing Wihurd’s stands at the head of the list, under the | was pacrificed outright, and the electoral ticket to the refractor es of chee we e State | who of them has spoken of those eminently nattonal | 2¢¥ Legislature doing sip 3 of the kind. All the demotetiie party to itscentre ‘The fact that proprietorship of Mr. Henry A. Willard, the late | sold, (though to s less ‘degree, ery poll; and | (pes gm 1818, there may be nein rotasel to MUPDOM | < antecedents” of bis, which have in vanity mapased | that the whigs have had to fear in Massachusotts is they and their friends, at the recent election, found proprietor, Mr. Edward Willard, haviog retired. | you see the revult. Iu the county, Pierce has about th drema now or fe behind SS cose than | bis glorious triumph? And who of their lead genc—that is, the coalition is destroyed, for it way back into the democraticcamp, and for yy 1 A. Willard isk tothe travel bli 100 majority; Seymour has 1,500; and Matteson, | the ¢ audieno 5 dream of Two things | CoUld consistently advoca‘e the annexation of Cul never can be rallied in its old strength again. The rat time in some years voted aoleandemser tic ‘ard is known tothe travelling public | (Sewaid whig,) gocs back to Congress by » large | gic coheine Frank Pieree pagindependonoe emoure, | a8 the firet step in the splendid career which opens | CoMdition of its continuance was constant victory, t, would by no means justify tacir appoint 88 the popular landlord of the hotel when it was | sjority. And thus one of the most dangerous and Sution enou; ent oe reite cooeene pai Ae og before the fourtbenth Procident of shia Union? Not | 22dit has met its Waterloo ‘The whigs, therefore, or that of any one of them ‘ue friends of first opened, some five years ago. He seems deter- intivential suppozters of the “ highor law” is sent to fo be able eh ted ise tisobs Yaad (oy panteh sertiona one will not array the a ery people against them, n Cass, whom they defeated four years ago by | mined thatthe reputation he thon acquired shail | “8shington froma district by no means fanatioal itators; and Alo past Liste el that he looks | . Wall remember how John A. Dix, now a oandi- | 3* thet might Pie the cause of a third dofoas- their unexampled treachery and bsseness. aud the i ‘4 | wpon the subject of slavery, through the yotes of >2)'*tet he witt pander 1° cm Me lOOKS | Gate for a Secretaryship at Washington, opposod ia | 12At alone could eudanger their position; and whe- tire South, whom they have so leog traduced and not be dimmed. The house has been thoroughly | yen profersing tobe the especial advosatesof “union | UPOm Hl hd Pats ih ¢ lttle evar ak ¢ i Old the Senate, upon purely sectional and anti slave ther they Tove rum or water, they are politicians fied, would rerist and resent 1: a an insult repaired from top to bottom, andin » great mossare | and harmony” in the demooratic ranks, and who, jjchor bimeit ptr, have Sairolca thes #5 grounds, the annexation of Texas, which his friend | #0Us% not to so labor as to croate # temperance Bot t be forgiven. Nor is the ides that their re-furnished. The ladies’ drawing room has been | While they say, “bail, brother !” cannot rosist the 7 we ‘ fu organ, Bryant, otigmatized ae * © national in- DAG, whieh, Je the sasene se a een a f Among the most prominent notifications of the batteries iti . " ious of i bi * | a ae D tet “por 0 1} its standard all the dizaie and .ndependence, worth » moment's consideration. curtains, from Stewart, New York, whilst Meeks, | Anotner very provoking instanco of the immola- | General Pierce's Position— The Annexation of Cuba Py aire "the lle to bis past oc cree, ROA wihdeat the The whigs will benefit largely from the ooslition’s a honest masses who elected Mr. Picroe, end at paed Rigen ‘en beg ce age te aor oarved en oh a valional democrat a ali) eg —Freesoil Opposition tothe Project—Duirows and | eectiona! chalionge of the Buffalo Convention? If | a Ah Slats ah thar Ita of Dececaber’ Tose 0 came time discarded condemned the sboli- furniture. In the large and spacious dining rooms ‘at district Every man who knows Elisha faved is of th sas ot ap th bh siti | A tion Leresies of the Van Burne. Flacgs, and Dixos, and halls, the beautiful chandeliers have been | Smith knows bis unswerving attachment to na : Ste Oaft ok Ooobesonias, sot gpa (gr nd, be. te Dot the Maka for the bie Orifse | peatinge eomey o Deity ead et tae Tatoos » fi d nanufacture D i u | rineip! n i ri and the So hi ‘oalitionists. ‘ x % are able to custain him, and will nobly do soto the manuf se ag as eas ie Spec dite | tioval principles and to the compromise moasures o If be would approve it, then he is venal ok @ cautious man would be inclined to bot Inst, if true mational demoorate sbull be appointed New of 1850. On the other hand, Mr Bennett is a Sew- You will perocive that, 98 by common cons to aid bim in carrying out the naiional sentiments pattern. Altogether, the house presents an air of _ srdite of the purest water, and the barn and doctrines of the party But upon this poiut . elegance and quict comfort which gives a sufficient Chenango, Cortlend, and Broome, open and purchaseable, and bas no business where his friends are seeking to puthim. His in the annexation of Uuba, rhera Ais | jargely on a whig defeat any where out of the n bre Ninth district, where tho free enilors have » small a momber of plurality. With tho oxception of the old Fourth, press of this State, of all parties and comp! have entered vpon the field of speculation concern. there ir, fortunately, ni i that Mr Bierce can gwarantec thatits reputation, as the “west end” | him at tho polls @ latter is elected, 7 ’ ; dc ntial cabinet, Tas! thh sition f ee ies tthe peor buvepsasnd s mai rnittocus ; Fotel, will not sufler under ita ‘new. proprietorship. | former reepe Che reward of his conslatent opposition | ing the cabinet of General Pieroe. It is admitted | {-'theannexstion of exas, when & seunton repre | graze Moot likely, to be any candidate Nec apaiane and ewphatic verdict of eovde he to Washington what the New York and Union | te trearon and agitation. The district gives Pierce on ali hands, thatno Prosident ever commenced a | senting a State in which agitation was then domi- | di, intention of withd: of ic candidate has signified feotions! Hla are to your city sowe £40 majority, and Seymour etill more | f ‘ett ie i nit. id prove him to be baorvient dema- brates. ohcidl dat oty tise Augoma, his weil ne years pat it hue hoon customary forthe | ‘The Renessiner district, which gives Pi orm of oftoe with fewer restelotions upon Mainie- | Oat Wiad Trecitate: of Vuk inegeliy men Oelr bic Wate Seen Opdents, that the President eleot 'w Presidents elect to make Willard’s their hedquar- | couple of hundred over Seott, chooses f pendence, with lees obligation to cliques and por- 'y which should grace the name of an Amori- benlbaee vada cee yaest simp: ro acarte blanche in every re- | oan ataterman. John A. Dix cannot isbor for the Portiann, Me., Nov. 13, 1858. of his constitutional advisors, | addition of the gem of the Antilles to our confedera- fi te In a straight, | tion, and therefore the democracy of the Union do a2 Kg SHY, | not need his services at Washington. sire to take them into bis councils brirg them promine Cop: -otion with bis for be set down as certa! ters, previous to entering the White House. Gen Taylor cecupied a eplendid suit of rooms there. | preset mem rowd Mr. Pierce will also stop there. Its | New York woolly head whig, over David L. Sey and with as pu ect es to the choic ew Hampshi r, and the undoubted leader of tho gationin this Thirty ssoond Congross, Valwe f the New York Herald in the Campaign-- Election of General Pierce—Opposition to the stration. It may, thore- , that no barnburner will proximity to the exesutive mansion and the several avd whore shell, in the slang of the day, is as hard | as be called to the cabinet. ficould not bedono wilh departinen 2 it great advantages over the | as that of his namesake Horatio is soft. Seymour | Ut, fair etrnggle, he have carried electoral | “ Bosidve, who knows how long these free soil gon- Wire Pulling Demagogwes in Maine—“ Argus o ateing such @ sentence of disgrace upon down tow Is. ae ¥ | wae de d A open, unblashing troachery. | votes enough, and to epare, even giving New York | try, of rhom Dixia ~ ngs ink cam “pee Clique,” “ Hickory Club,” and “ Democratic As- Fan a Laon eT ccltan eee Madaaeted | tases" hen wat aane Same Lone JO us, | Ue the whigs; but nihe extraordinary rl which | St Ply uamtehimedfvemeiaes hal volaeis | aise’, Sekys— The Maine, Lawy— h ‘indignation. The band of f s for the | claiming offices from Frank Pierco, and invoking | 287? bee ed, the great names of Clay and | Cosy, after his approbatery sperh imum CA ak ng he 4 fast by the country and the is co | bypocritical blessings upon the uuion and harmony Webeter, and the ¢ ost which they left in | upon the nomination of 1815 Tie very next tine ‘The p at large hero, and those of domooratia that State, during the seotiona! n this | of the demooracy. | thoir deaths egstust the candidacy of General Scott, k they bd bo aah : are - og capi- | tendencies in partioulai ucder great obligations end "49, eb oded _f finds | In Jeflerson and Lewis, our feiend Caleb Lyon | 5 soy aided bint a st orators, the A eocme Peake obo a arte Vaaee ‘| to the proprietor of the New York Rmeann, for ths - Ahn 5 gnte toeuea they noe. 4 : : ch a | Onidyeig, 2 tue ole p Up OF partinen ma hey ace themaelvon forced to divide the apoita ave ona bigaly eetisfactory manner iu waich ieee i ; languegs of pm oupacas Masa) Wie “che ovteups Buakerw”—saey may “ga | waa condupted during thy recom} Prowldeatial onm- Vm poMare | ROUTES