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Mr. Clay's Position

Mr. Clay's Position image
Parent Issue
Day
11
Month
December
Year
1843
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Cláy said further: It is not true, áñd IREJOICE that it is not t'icüe, that eitker of the two great parties m this country has any design of aim at ABotiTio?í,I should 0eepi,y lament it if it were true." Gloriólas Republican! Resplendent Statestnánf Spotless Whig! Righteous Leader! Hisname will go down, don tb poáterity,down - inevitably down. Such' philanthropy deserves to be recorded in lettel óf fire. Who but a philanthropist, a' patriot - would réjoice that his country was undeï" the control of parties that would continue to keep in hopeless bondage millions of his' coüntrynïen.- Bangor G-azette. What sentiment has Mr. Calhöuh eV'ët utteid or writteri that goes more thoroughly for perpetual Slavery than thisfronT "the embodiment of Whig principies"? Who wishes for a President who "laments" that his countrymen aim at removing their greatest curse? 0?= Hon. Leicester King, of Ohio, Who presided at the National Liberty Convention al Buffalo, in conformity with a resolation passed at that convention, has appointed the following gentlemen as the "Correspondí ng Committee of the National Liberty Party." AI van Stewart, of New York. Joshua Leavitt, of Massachusetts. J. F. Lemoyne, of Pennsylvania. S. P. Chase, of Ohio. Francis Gillett, of Connecticut. Titus Hutchinson, of Vermont Daniel Hoit, of New Hampshire. Samuel Fessenden, of Maine. Eliezur Deraming, of Indiana. S. Hoes. of New Jersey. James H. Collins, of Illinois. Luther F. Stevens, of Michigan.(Cf The Democratie majority on Senators in New York is 21,459. Attrt Arbor, Dec. 9, 1843. The season thus far has been mild. We liave no sleighing yef, but occasional flurnes of snow. Business p.'ogresses with considerable activity, espccially on the Railroad. Last Wednesday we counied 28 card and three locomotives at the Depot, The receipts of the Rtiilroad for the month of November were more ihan $13,000. Wheat sells m our villaje t from 56 to 58 cents per bushel. We learn that many substnnliu] farmers are keeping back their eniire erop preferring to run the risk of the spring rnarket, rather Ihan dispose of them at presnnt prices. We notice that at Cincitinati Wheat has been stationary at 70 cents for the last two monthF, and that for a period of 6ix montlis beginning in May last, t has averaged 73 cents. Beef commando frora two to threo cents in this market, Pori from 2 to 4, aecording to ihe qualit)'.

Article

Subjects
Signal of Liberty
Old News