Vevay Indiana Palladium (Newspaper) - July 20, 1844, Vevay, Indiana ANB OP AT THE BAR OF PUBLIC AND INDIA NA PALLADIUM is published every Saturday mo at TWO payable in advance by axiA half-yearly by those residing out of the without which 1.10 paper wilibe of advertising see fourth no ce will the paper be sent to a where the money is in except at the option the and in Buch cases will charged at the raie of dollars a BANNER IN THE our banner to the ' droop or falter never From Maine's lar boundaries to seas the Texan i Our ri- girds oil in might a - v The arms that freemen And with unbroken front unite - form the battle serried phalanx dense and and and lis ocean waves resistless - march with bright shield and And they the gathering rings the thundering From host to distant host ' for Whigs look on in Wild With pale despair in every And vainly hope to the leans and flashes through the sky In vain they hoist their frowzy flap their through air -In vain they and shout and - Unfaltering still flag is o'er the lield of conflict In victory's bright and cloudless Man froni every distant every shores and every beneath birthright of tlic w hat joy shall swelling on the When at the idol's shrine no baselj bend the When and and pass long forgotten And radiant the land shall fall day Ilia t and brings of my and owed my life to determined on sacrificing I imparted my wishes to the five Jewa who accompanied me from the who all felt a regard for as 1 for W posted ourselves on by Grace was destined to and of. recollect what T took out year and in found I wrote a letter in an tho preserver of my life the which he and that a should again apply it as soon as I knew that he possessed Eo At that time I saved but the American troubles and a the unfortunate man died During the interval that has elapsed I your I have more than once had in the and on tiie very the wheel of fortune gave nie - ' - you the sum of which I and you will find which I request you to Have the goodness and condescension to at the same after a poor who during with hospitable attention by that kind ' AVith the rest of my lottery profits I return to the by my five I swear to my by the God of that not a pistol which we possessed was loaded when we attacked We of your we knew that you carried with you a considerable but no temptation should have induced us to injure yourself the trouble of a fruitless attempt to discover this letter reaches we shall have been several days at God of our preserve The Duke caused inquiries to be made respecting the woollen as well as the poor and every word of was His Grace not only sent the nale family all that the letter but provided for several members of it in other give a hundred the Duke any man would show mo the face of that and ' I'd a thousand if any one would bring the hideous fellow translation from tue hy the tate n. following authentic narrative will at least exhibit such a pointed exception to the laid down for the science by as once to render every rule and will serve to that a forbidding M not always incompatible Duke of years travelling iroai town to bis seat in the by no one except his two ije had proceded nearly twenty when the road lay a small and he had but just entered carriage was suddenly surrounded by sis men on Two of these secured one of the two the remaining pistols to windows of the my said one of tlie whose Duke pnt his hand into his drew oui a heavy and beg my said the is your I While uttering these words he weighed the puree with his left and cocked the pistol with Duke retained his presence of and drawing forth his pocket gave it to the who deliberately opened While fellow examined its his Grace the lineaments pf bis It was not possible to imaging an association of more perfectly He took some the Duke's and then returned my and to his galloped with his towards Duke examined his pocket in when he left had and contrary to his found of this sum siili left in his He told the story to aU his and used always to would give at this a hundred pounds if you could only see the for never did nature so completely stamp a man for a His very look augured the course of two years his Grace had ceased to think of the he one morning received the following am a poor The prince whose subject I became a to his in order that he might have tho means of hunting the and giving this animals blood to his I went to England with five others of my hoping there to fiad the means of I fell ill at and the vessel in which I had taken ray A man whom I had never seen sprung from the shore into the and my the risk of his He took me to his me to be well treated by his a was a woolen twelve children I and required of nothing more than that I should visit Some time during of observed that he a slate of war had broken had thousand of goods to iVot confessed to me that ici abbili of exchange drawn by would pay and that if be he T would willingly have assisted but it Andrew number of of HighStreet have organized an Republican meets your are requested to your approval by attending the next Stated which will take place on Friday evening May 24th, at 8 at the house of Sixth Arch where you will opportunity of signing the Constitution and Laws which have been by the is earnestly desired that every man who has the honor and welfare of his country at and would resist the encroachments ol foreigners upon the rights and privileges of the native born will come forward at this important and by making a bold and decided stand in this prove that can and will protect the Flag of their D. G. the President and Secretary of the of Hiak street enclosed circular was handed to me last by a gentlemen whom I suppose to be one of and as I cannot conscientiously accept your invitation to join your it becomes my tell yoa the political party of which your association forms a has existed for some m this city and and having from my youth taken an interest in political and the origin and progress of it was natural that this party of yours should as it considerable and that thereby I should become acquainted with its principles and am a was born and bred in the county of My both paternal and although of German were for two or three generations born and reared on of if nativity inspires 1 ought to be a and if I know I will whenever circumstances require take bold decided in the and the protection of the of my and of the institutions which it is designed to and of which it is the if 1 have a proper conception of my own I would he second to no one in the encroachments of foreigners upon the rights and privileges of the citizens of this and I with equal alacrity resist all foreign or that would in any degree jeopardise or invaluable of and freedom of under which our country has so long existed in peace and you ask me to aid you in resisting the of foreigners upon the rights and privileges of born Your your party assume that those who were by accident born upon the soil of the United rights and privileges those born elsewhere have In. this I most decidedly differ with The of the wisely provided that every office the even unto the be attainable a citizen of no matter where man who seeks a home on our even if born in the deserts of or on the icy shores of when naturalized according the Constitution and laws of the an American not a and is justly entitled to all rights and equal vvith those whose accidental birth place the soil of the United ' ' why should to country against encroachments of did to be born in the same place c- jit not the differing in that waved so nobly and some whom so under the of the dead body of that Richard fell fighting jin its Is it not the Banner under which many Others of foreign birth fought the battles our and in of which of them shed their not the same Banner which in triumph on the ramparts at York the victorious allied of anid * Why then do you ask me to aid excluding the fellow countrymen of these men from the and support of this And do you that in noble band which assembled in House on the morning of the memorable 4ih of 1776, and there signed and sealed that instrument our there were many In that body there was no seeking to exclude or proscribe any of his -or but joined in pledging their fortunes in support of the of think you that patriots pledged ' their lives and all that was dear to them on merely that those born on one spot of earth should enjoy blessings of liberty and free Think you that those soldiers of foreign birth fought side with with merely that oh should enjoy the fruits of their toil and no. fathers fought for and established a government that was to the oppressed of all where the defeated patriot of all lands and whether he bore the cross of Christ or the crescent of should find a home do you want more recent of the disposition of those of foreign birth to sustain and defend star-spangled Go to the plain of the of Bridgewater and Fort there will find that the of foreigners was poured out in defence of the American flag and American and there you find the bleached and mouldering bones of. foreigners mingled and commingled with native without becoming recreant to the principles and purposes of our join with you in proscribing men because of their or in depriving them of any of those invaluable that it was the design of those they should there is another equally powerful reason why I cannot join Recent events have shown that the party of which it forms a would be a very dangerous one to entrust with In above all other should the and the law reign No however whether committed on a single or a body of under any justify or excuse a resort to mob or violence on the part of those to redress their grievances or avenge their and the party thai resorts to such is unfit to have power in a republican and in my humble no orderly can consistently become attached to it. I cannot belong to a party that would wrest a man from the control and custody of an officer of the mangle and beat his head with paving and when in the apparent agonies of hang him by the neck in the public Christianity shudders and humanity weeps at the recent outrages of your and God grant that we may have no more evidences of its there is another reason I cannot join your The whole energies of tho parly of which it forms a are almost exclusively devoted to the proscription and nunciation of one set of With the Roman Catholics as a religious have no part or having been born and raised in the but I know that the of my country declares that men have a natural and indefeasible right to worship their Creator according lo the dictates of their own and I hope that as long as God me I may hold in sacred remembrance this wise I saw from the roof of my dwelling on the night of the 8th of the bright flame that enshrouded lofty of St. I thought Constitution of my 1 thought of those departed sages who declared that in this land there be of conscience for all 1 of that ancient bell whose tones first proclaimed the glad tidings of American I and saw the reddened spire roof of that sacred Hall of and the whole high vault of in deep at the I turned aside and for the edifice or its they were but but I wept over a bleeding so soon forgotten admonitions and precepts of our the introduction of religious intolerance and religious bigotry into our favored land the bright and glaring evidences of the existence in our midst of a spirit of persecution for 1 I not hear the thai ia said to been given at the fall of the cross that the dome of for it have given Those who could exult at the fall of the emblem of that system of religion given to by meek and lowly of will mercy rather and a knowledge of than burnt forget that we are one and unto as that others should do unto us of the same spirit that brought 3Ii-chael and John Rogers to the Roger Sherman and from i their murdered and maimed the unoffending That burning and has implanted a stain upon the character of our city and our that endure unto the It can no longer of in the language of call it holy spot where first they trod have left what there they Freedom to worship more reason why I your association that I have from my youth upwards and am still attached to a political party that has its origin in the institutions of our party on whose principles depend the preservation and reputation of those party that has as all others have by the action of those it elevated to place and but has thus possessed energy and vitality sufficient to enable it to throw the humors that have disturbed party that has always sought the of suffrage instead of would allow a man lo participate in the affairs of government because he teas endowed with reason and and not because he was born in a certain possessed a certain amount of or professed a certain party that has never to my knowledge disgraced itself by resorting to mob law and mob violence to revenge its wrongs or to redress its party in which edifices devoted the worship of God and ihe purposes of have always found favor and Belonging to this political so much superior to yours in all I would be acting very foolishly did I leave it for purpose of joining your with May 24, 1844. AND love friendship fall brothers subjects never let the sacred bond be cracked twixt son and have at an indifference in children to the wishes and precepts of their as well as a show of on the part of parents toward their arising from their not entertaining a just sense of positions and each to the There are occasions from children are called upon to make some to promote the comfort of those who reared and fostered which they should consider duo for the many hours and days of watchfulness and labor and which have been endured for when all the world else would have beeir Children are too forget these if the reply was their were bound to do therefore no merit in it was their and they did their will a of duty always make us do those things that we should Not I else children would not forget it is holy love that prompts parents to make all sacrifices for their then what must they be who will not return such with world is miserably and if bur own flesh and blood warm not with where are wo to look for It is dreadful to pass a life unloving and Let as far as we promote a fueling of mutual We shall be much happier and make our children We are willing to forgive those who thwart and cross if we think and an intention of vexing even though they are not bound to us by ties of then much more forbearing arid forgiving should we be to our it majr inherit somewhat of their from We are ourselves full of- why should we expect perfection in them? A at weak be appreciated by the most and render the parental rule thrice its reins being the cords of Old gin his cotton for two coon but having the toll was as Another and but coonskins being a species of ready change with the they would not be given of the small quantity of cotlon deducted At length a man came who was followed by a dog that was known to be expert at catching when young Polk proposed to gin his bags if he would give him that The man accepted the tho cotton was ginned repacked upon hia and the coon dog delivered to the young who was all the while delighted with tha ideas that he bad at length found the means of raising the fur and fancying to himself how fortunate he would now after the labora of the day were in sallying out into the forest with his dog at to and skin coons for tho He took the dog from the hands of the and placing a trace chain round bis tied him to a sapling resumed the duties of the Before the settler had gone hundred yards on his way he gave a shrill when the dogi spring towards his old loosened the chain and bounded off with it dangling it his Young Polk look after him the and followed him for more than a it impossible to overtake the dog and his deceitful up the chase and returned to his a who was in waiting for his recover your said the I recovered my trace in every to earn the requisite number skins to procure a hat by the service of the cotton he was compelled to resort toother He resolved therefore to attempt to kill which resolve ha adhered to until he had taken skinned them with his he carried them lo the who reserved to himself the for manufacturing the other half into the first fur hat that ever graced the head of Gov. James K. the nominee for tho Presidency the Ohio of James K. June 20, 1844. Thirty six years ago the father of James K. having emigrated valley of Duck had just then been acquired of the was by emigrants from until a considerable neighborhood in the Each emigrant raised cotton enough for his own there was no cotton gin in this and it was with great difficulty it could be At their unanimous the father of a cotton and entrusted it to the management of his James whose duly it became to every Saturday ginning the cotton of the taking a given small quantity of the contents of each bag for the He the regular ginner of the establishment for always attending it in About that time a hatter settled in the and gave notice that he make luxury by the way in- which very few able to for any person that him or fox skins enough to make Young was so constantly engaged for Jays of the working on the going to and attending the village and in cotton for neighbors that he had no tp devote to the ways and means of obtaining req eo he applied to his father fof the means lo him father replied that he must the means and the of appropriating that purpose the avails Of on the The first man that the gin on that day with an - in the of the New York American gives the following of a visit to this standing problem tho natural history of the Holy The gentleman of party determined to lest the reported buoyancy of the by personal They slate that where the water was 5 feet deep they were so buoyed up that they could only touch the bottom with the points of their Advancing to where the water vyas six inches their feet were suddenly from they were position upon the of the They could not maintain a perpendicular without using some They then to where the water was extremely and endeavored to which it mely even with some to They could walk in the water as well as on the with their heads above the They found that they could sit and converse af easy as on a A strong breeze came from the and with it a heavy They described the sensation produced by this riding on the without a vessel or a plank under One of them had before ventured beyond his depth in water while here he was without the least sense of lo go any distance from the They became convinced that what had been said respecting the great specific buoyancy of the entirely of the Dead Sea following from the U. have the eloquence of truth to recommend business man is a rational and a to the He keeps iti gratifying exercise talents which God has given which of itself is a blessing to He gives an employment to the hands of which is far better than giving alma to the These are the legitimate and rational ends of active business pursuits and the gratification of the promotion of But the desire of growing merely to die is of the most foolish intentions that ever entered the heart of a foolish Experience has fully and emphatically Taught the that much wealth left to heirs is eight out of not a blessing but a lis beguiles the all manly lis possession leads to and exhaustion and The time will yet when men of wealth will Wise enough to make a gradual of their while but thereby have an eye to the use which is made of and participate in the greatest enjoyment that wealth is of it do good to They will dismiss the foolish aspiration of the almost certain reflection that their sooner or yon ever said a Roman Consul to it be a who has judgement enough to superintend tho getting of meal of to dress to wash face sense enough to hold her when she has to replied that he did not any harm in it. harm in said the person you not know the at don't swear at only who bother description Is misses loses the pan of his love to the first tear that the eye silent thrilling choir pt tlie ito modest trickles swellings of the of