JEFPERSQNIAN REPUBLICAN JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN Thursday, November 21, 1844. Never, even in ihe days of His palmiest glo ry, did the character and principles of Henry Clay, display themselves to the same advantage, ihauhey do. now, in this his. hour of defeat. The services of Henry Clay, achjm every page of his country's history for the last thiriy-five years ; and cast a halo around his character, which now, more than ever, excite the admira tion and love of his many friends. The princi ples of Henry Clay, never were so universally acknowledged to be just and good as they are now. In order lo defeat ihe man, his princi ples were passed by undiscussed by our oppo nents, and a torrent of abuse and falsehood, un equalled in any former political contest, poured upon his devoted head. The supremacy of his principles were tacitly acknowledged, by men who knew that those of James K. Polk were exactly the revexse. , The Tariff the Ameri can System Protection to Domestic Industry, of which system, he was the undisputed father, were unattacked by the loco focos in Pennsyl vania and the confiding people were led to be lieve that they were belter friends of the S3rs tem than Henry Clay and the Whig party. By such means, our opponents have gained their ....... d..i .u. ..l . i !- r THE LAW OF NEWSPAPERS. win mo tuaracier auu principles ui 1. Subscribers who do not ghe express no- j Henry Clay, have suffered nothing, by the re Jice to the contrary, are considered as wishing : suit. Henry Clay is just the same noble spirit to continue their subscriptions. 2. If subscribers order the discontinuance of their papers, i he publishers may continue to .send them till all arrearages arc paid. 3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their papers from the officers io which they are directed, they are held responsible till ihey have settled their bill, and ordered their papers disconiiued. 4. If subscribers remove to other places with out informing the publishers, and their paper is sent to the former direction, they are held re sponsible' 5. The courts have decided that refusing to lake a newspapor or periodical from the office, or removing and leaving it uncalled for, is "pri una facie" evidence of intentional fraud. Terms, $2,00 :n advance: $2.25, naif yearly; and $2,50 if not paid befoicthc end of the vcar. ff?" V- B. Palmer, Esq., at his Real Estate and Coal Office, No. 59 Pine stree't, below Third, two squares S. the Merchants' Exchange, Phila., and No. 160 Nassau street, (Tribune buildings,) Jtf. Y.,is authorised to receive subscriptions and advertisements for the Jcffersonian Republican, and give receipts for the same. Merchants, Me chanics, and tradesmen generally, may extend their business by availing themselves of the op portunities for advertising in country papers which iiis agency affords. To all Concerned. We would call the attention of some of our subscribers, and especially certain Post Mas ters, to ihe following reasonable, and well set lied rules of Law in relation to'publishers, to -thepairons of newspapers. IQ3 No paper was issued from this Office .last week. The Result. The great political struggle in which we have been engaged for months past, has result ed In the election of Jas. K. Polk to the Pres idential Chair. New York has cast her thirty six Electoral votes for him; and, as we predict ed in our last, settled the grand question. Jas. K. Polk is President elect of the United States; ;and Henry Ci.at, the great statesman, patriot, -and friend of America and American interests, is' defeated. Of the means which were resort-' ed to. to bring about this result, we will speak .hereafter and in such terms as they deserve. For the present, we will content ourselves by stating, that Henry Clay, is beaten by James TC Polk; but not, tec are proud to say, hy the votes oj Native American citizens. The victo ry of our opponents, is not an American tri umph. In order to secure it, sixteen thousand foreigners were naturalized in the City and State of Nw York, during the past year, and Nearly half as many in Philadelphia and other ;parts of Pennsylvania. Had it not been for this large increase of the foreign vote, James K. Polk could not have carried either-New York J)r Pennsylvania. As it is, therefore, his elec tion is a triumph of the foreign, over the Native American vote. Henry Clay has not been de feated by American born citizens ! Let it be very whew known, that he has received a large majority of the votes of the countrymen of. Washington. he ever was, and towers a full head and shoul ders above any other man in the land. His principles, although ihey may be crushed to earth, are just as pure and wholesome as they were, when they afforded protection and labor to the countrymen of Washington, against the workshops of Europe. Henry Clay is defeated but his defeat, by such means as were used, is more honorable to him, than is triumph to his more fortunate competitor. He lives in the his tory of his country, and in the hearts of his countrymen. He has already acquired fame enough pnd to have been even President of the United States, could have added nothing to his fame or greatness. The loss therefore is nothing to himself but great to his country. Suicide. Daniel Ryan, a resident of Dingman town ship, Pike county, aged about 56 years, Com mitted suicide on Thursday the 14th instant, by shooting himself with a rifle. From the nosi- lion in which he was found, he must have been standing when he committed the fatal act, firing the gun by touching the trigger with the great toe of the. left fool. The bail entered his left side between the first and second ribs, passed through his heart and coming out on the right side of the neck back of the ear, breaking the neck bone in its passage. He had been ad dicted lo habits of intemperance for many years, and subject to delirium tremens, and appeared. wild for several days before he committed the rash act. A Newspaper Wonder. . We have received the "Mammoth Pictorial Double Brother Jonathan," published for Christ mas and New Years by Wilson & Co., New York. Nearly one hundred beautiful and ap propriate Engravings embellish its immense pa- C!", uiiu aiiugciuci ii ib two piciucoi dim v-iicajj- bi holiday present of the season, the price be ing but 12 1-2 cents per copy. Postmasters (re allowed by law to remit money to the pub JUhera, for this great pictorial newspaper, free f postage; and one dollar will pay for ten co pies. Tke Papular Tote. ' It is now pretty clearly ascertained that Jas K. Polk, although he is elected President of ihe 'United States, has not received a majority of Uie, popular vole. He is the first President, ever elected by ihe peopl, who has failed to dob. Birney, the Abolition candidate, has re ceived probably fifty thousand votes. Clay vs."JacksH and Pelk. ' In the Hermitage District, Tennessee, Me home of Gen. Jackson, the vote at the recent election stood, Clay 116, Polk 50 last.year it stood Whig 63, Loco 58. This result 6peaks Mrongly in favor of Mr. Clay, and ihe estima tion in w'hich Gen. Jackson and his friend J, K. Polk, are held, where -they aro the best knowj Tiual Result. I he returns received, insiifv lis in' Ktntiiicr ,-vf : ' J J v -o that MrIayAas received 105 of the 275 Elec-' tbral voles iMriPblk receiving the remaining 170 ; 32 inore'than are necessary to ensure his election to the Presidency. Massachusetts. The Old "Bay State has gallantly sustained her:honor arid dignity by the result of the late election.1 Although New York had just proved recreant, and it was rendered morally certain that Mr. Clay could not be elected her noble sons buckled on their armour, and came victo riously out of the contest with a majority of Fourteen 'Thousand Seven Hundred and Fifty, for the grdat Western Statesman ! God bless her. ' ' Tennessee Returns have been received from all ihe coun ties but four, in Tennessee, which seem to m dicale that the Slate has gone for Mr. Clay by a small majority. Tennessee is the home of James K. Polk, and if this news should be re alized by the full returns, ii will show a new feature in the history of Presidential elections. He will be ihe first President ever elected who could not carry his own Slate. In that event we may witt much propriety continue to ex claim. "Who is James K.Polk?" Next week will tell us all. i . Kentucky. Mr. Clay's.roajority in 53 counties is 11,526. North Carolina. Returns are in from all the counties in North Carolina bat onej and so far ihe Whig majority is 3,987. Hydef; the county to hear from, usually gives fronY200 to 300 majority for ihe Whigs. yerraont. Returns over about one third of the Slate show a Whig!gain over the last election. The majority for the Clay ticket will be at least 4000 over bpth tho other tickets, and 12000 over the locofoco licket. 'From the N. Y. Tribune Our defeat in ftfeVv York. Early in the campaign, when it seemed lo us impossible that the Van Buren men of this Stale could be rallied to the unanimous and hearty support ofJaines K. Polk, in view of the circumstances of his nomination when it seemed to us impossible that avowed and stren uous anti-Texas and Protective Tariff men should be brought to .support an avowed Annex ationist and notorious Free Trader, we estima ted that Mr. Clay would carry New York by 20,000. At a later period, when we found that Uhe parly drill was stronger than we had deem ed it, we estimated the majority for Mr. Clay at 10,000, and this we believed ho would most assuredly get, down to the State Election in Pennsylvania, the course of the Natives and Whigs, and the defeat of Markle. These things made against tlx, yet we still believed and slated to friends, in reply to private letters of inquiry, that we must triumph in New York. Yet we are beaten but how? 1. By the throwing away of some 15,000 votes nine-tenths of them Whig on all ques tions of National Policy on the Birney licket. We did believe that at least half these would finally vole so as to prevent the Annexation of Texas. Yet the false representations of Bir ney, Leavitt & Co. thai Chy was as much fur Annexation as Polk, and more likely to effect it, See. etc. have carried all these votes obliquely in favor of Annexation, War,, and eternal Sla very. 2. The Naturalized Citbens have alt been carried for Polk by appeals to their Religious and old-world feelings and prejudices. They have been told that they would be deprived of iheir Political Rights and reduced lo vassalage in the event of Mr. Clay's election, and this, with still more monstrous bugbears, has driven from us those who were formerly with us. In one little town in Tioga Co. nineteen voters of Irish birth and Catholic faith who had voted Whig for years turned against us only the day before Elecijon. In every county there were some such. In Buffalo alone, there have been fourteen hundred naturalized since 1840. Of this class we have in other limes had one-fourth Who is James K. Polk ? Who is James K. Polk?" Let his neigh bours answer the question. Henry Clay's ma joriiy, in Columbia, Tennessee, Polk's place of residence, is One Hundred and Nine. Toting on borrowed Papers. The following shows ihe way Locofoco votes were multiplied at the October Election in Bal timore. " We have the fact from a collector of rents, who had occasion lo make frequent calls upon the widow of a deceased foreigner, occupying a smallieneraent under his charge, and receivo his rent in small installments. A day or two after the late election, he made her a call, and was surprised to find her fully prepared and honestly willing to pay up all arrearages. Upon inquiring how she became possessed of the am ple means she replied with a complacent smile, perfectly unconscious, no doubt, of the impropriety of the act, that she 'had loaned the paper of her dear old man peace to his ashesfor a dollar each time, to seventeen persons, and by that means was able to pay her rent.' " Here it will be seen that ihe naturalization papers of one were used by seventeen! and this way a naturalized citizen may often neutralize the votes of a dozen others! Every American citizen, whether uaiivo or naiuralized, has a right to vole once; but the native has no paper to lend, he cannot vote by proxy a dozen times, as others may and do." Christian Watchman. The editor of the Pennsylvanian, yesterday in an article relative to the carriage lor which JVIr. Palersoti contracted, a few months since, to be delivered to Henry Clay, at Wheeling, in December next, should he be elected, asks : "Will Mr. Paterson turn that carriage over to Jimmy Folk He will nil it juu as well as Henry Clay. Ii was made for a President a President oujjjjt io have it." Jimmy Polk canum fill " that carriage." Ii was made for a President not for a tool of a corrupt clique; for a man not for a mere image; for a Whig not for a Tory ! Forum. Mississippi. Polk's maioritv in the eleven counties heard from is 278. The New Orleans Bulletin ofjor onQ' with us; now they went in solid the 9th instani says " We have received reports of majorities from various voting precincts in the counties of Mis sissippi, bordering on the river, which indicate a very fair -Whig vole but several citizens from that Slate give iheir opinion that Polk will receive a clear majority of the votes. v . i Polk's majority in Virginia is about 7000. Louisiana. So far as heard from Polk's majority is 52 being 36 more than the locofoco majority in the same parishes last year, when the locos had 121 majority in the Stale. : Illinois. Hancock county, in which the Mormons re side has giver Pojk a majority of 700. Adams county about 100 maj. St. Clair do. do. 900 ' Missouri. TheiSt. LoufojRepublican. gives ihe follow ing returna'jr, i Clay. St. Louh(,' , 360' Warren,' ' 23 Montgomery, 125 50$ In these counties, in 1S40, Harrison's major iiy was 717. j- The Whig loss is in St. Louis. Delaware. Clay's majority in Delaware is 212. . Maryland.--Whig majority 3308. Rhode Island. "Clay's majority 2475.v . Michigan, has gone for Polk by about 3000. New Hampshire, dnto'by 9320 Maine, ditto by about 6000. New York, ditto by 4500. Georgia, ditto by about 2000V Omoi Wing by 8000. New Jersey, ditto by 900. CoNNECTipuT, ditto by 3353. Indiana has cast her vote for Polk by about 1 JniHinrnv. J. Q. Adams. lnejNew xorK J rioune, oi the 13tu insl., says : We rejoice that John Quijicy Adams, that "old man eloquent," has been elected to Congress from the Eighth District, by an over whelming vole., This j one of the most pleas ing incidents connected with this election and ihe fttct speaks well for the citizens of Nor folk county. ;'ln Roxbury, the vote was as fol lows A dam ,1059 Wright 5S7 sca. 18. - i f t: ? v " T h an k i vi n H i s Excellency Daniel Haines, Governor of New Jersey, has appoint ed Thtusdaythe I2ih day of December next, as a day of public Thanksgiving and Praise, column against us, cutting down the majority in Erie county from Three Thousand to Eighteen Hundred. Monroe and Niagara counties ex hibit similar results ; so do Albany and Cayuga. Our Whig strongholds where ihero are few Adopted Citizens have not fallen off, except un der the influence of Abolition. Bui not merely is the Naturalized Vote against us, but it is many thousands stronger than it would have been but for the Philadelphia Riots and ihe Catholic dread of Nativiatn. All our Courts that could Naturalize were crowded with ap plicants for citizenship for weeks before elec tion, and voters were turned out at. some of them with astonishing celerity. We hear that some of the judges have been employed for days since tho election in signing the affidavits, &c, which they appear on ihe record as hav ing executed before the Election. 3. But even this would not have availed to defeat us but for nn overwhelming Illegal ,Votc, beyond any precedent. Thousands of Irish men employed on the Canada Public Works came over here id help their brethren in the contest, as they understood it, for Foreigner's rights, and did help ihem most effectually. The Alien (unnaturalized) population of our own and oiher Cities gave a large vote, gener ally offering at least one ballot each, and many of them more than ono. From ihe siatemonts of those who know, but who could make public what they know only at the hazard of iheir lives, we infer thai not less than Three Thous and votes for Polk wero cast in our City alone by men who were not citizens of ihe United Slates. Right gladly would wo risk our life on this, that a thorough sifting of tho Polls, so as to throw out every illegal vote cast in the State, would give its Thirty-six Elector's Volo to Clay and Frelmghuyaen. But ihis cannot be had, and a South Carolina dynasty is by the foulest deception and most atrocious fraud, fas tened upon ihe American People for four years to come. Bitterly will this bo rued by many who cannot yet allow themselves to get sqber for joy ai the consummation. Orie,man,-who had given orders to buy twenty, five thousand barrels of flour" in otlr city, ha countermanded ihet order. A general depres sion pervades our business circles. N.Y.Tri bune. " We have heard of several conditional con tracts for work to a very large amount, which since the ceriainty of Polk's election, have beeu' cancelled. We have heard also of the actual or intended discharge of several hundred hand in various manufacturing establishments. Most of ihem no doubt voted to bring about the vetv calamity which falls first upon themselves.--There is a genera sense of insecurity anil alarm among business men, and the consequence that none of them will increase their responaibihues. Retrenchment is the order of the day. The rich manage very well. The poor are the tr . 1 ..It?. . C v ... inn rri t w iit n r n mm 1 1 l. nilliCICIB. 1C1 1410 nnu liriu It H13 lUCIf A . p Mil. J T" II t ft interest iq vote tor roiK-ano. juauas: m shaqel oh misery!" Phijad. North American n 'reference to- his subject the Baltimore Patriot of Tuesday aftentoon says : Loss of Labor to Mechanies.-W e are informed upon unquestionable authority, that thfee mer chants m;his.city had contemplated building.nr having btlt, each a ship apiece in case of the election of Henry Clay, to .the Presidency. Since, however, it rhas.been rendered certain lhat Polk is elected, they have abandoned tin idea, fearing that the policy which will beipm sued by Him and his partywould so paralvM business and ceramerceraa- to render ihe enter prize coutmplaled by them unprofitable. Tnu have th mec'Saaics- a:wl. laborers of Fells Pojii-, in this on instance, been deprijea the oppji tunity of obtaining, employ and sharing irt.tlir distribution of at least sixty thtumantl dnll-.rj. We are well assured lhat the gentlemen wm purposed buiWing.these vessels, would Irave Fil tered into-contracts for having ihem built imm: diately after had been announced that Henry Clay had been chosen io preside orer this na tion as its Chief Magistrate. "Whether times will be any worse nrnnt remains to be experienced. One thing hower- er, is certain, that such men as those men'imi ed above,- who to a great extent composed tfce Whig party, have already lost confidence, asl will, we have no doubt, withhold their nieanv From this course we fear very much many wii1 have cause to Tegret that, they voted for James K.Folk. ... ... , . . . PENNSYLVANIA. OFFICIAL. Tho Result of the Result Now lhat it is all but certain lhat Polk is chosen President, we begin lo hear somo of the consequences thereof: " A heavy block of houses, which was to be built in our city, has been countermanded. So of several new factories in this Slate and else where. One largo establishment has already contracted its business bo ns to dispense with 140 hands, and is preparing io contract still farther. Agricultural produce has generally de clined in price in our markei since the defeat of Mr. Clay was rendered raorajly cortain.-r- Clay Adams 2609 Alleghany, 8083 Armstrong, 1453 Beaver 292 Bedford 3147 Berks 4000 Bradford 3235 Bucks 4862 Butler .2217 Cambria 096 Carbon 531 Centre , I860 Chester . . 6070- Clarion 814 Clearfield 5-54 Clinton 788 Columbia 1738 Crawford 2636 Cumberland - 3092'' Dauphin 3285 Delaware 2090 Elk 101 Erie 3621 Fayette . 2804 Franklin 3901 Greene 1418 Huntingdon 4086 Indiana 2200 Jefferson 591 Juniata 1089 Lancaster 10295 Lebanon 2636 Lehigh 2553 Luzerno -2699 Lycoming 2012 McKean Mercer 2840 Mifflin 1518 Monroe 414 Montgomery 4491 Northampton 2776 Northumberland 1547, Perry 1370 Philad. City 9317 Philad. County 13972 Piko 151 Potter 2 Schuylkill 2571 Somerset 2660 Susquehanna 1802 Tioga 1 169 Union 2788 Venango 066 Washinnton 3873 Warren 899 Wayne 899 Westmoreland 2673 Wyoming ' 814 York 4237 Polk. 8191 5743 1983 2172 2989 8674 3568 5251 2112 1123 905 2425 k ,5550 875 3370 ' 3334 : - 3155 " 2401 1466 128 . .,2226 ,3129 3298 2354 2575 1448 731 1260. 5943 1791 '2811 395Q 2629 maj. 129 2869 15!9 1806 5596 3870 3446 2321 5369 134S2 769 554 3404 1035 2697. 2193! 1765. 13775" 3972: 1146 1657 4978 899 5071 Marklc. 2485 1805 1407 2730 3045 3810 29H7 4801 2197 969 453 M786 6139 793 6lf 807 .'1593 2410' 2971 3213 2069 103 ,..35.10 283B 3797 1425 4032 2098 617' , 1035 9513 2478 2443 2561 1944 307 2765 1506 377 4341 2455 1493 1316 9282 14138 112 20 2390 2450 1495 1049 2721 ' 873 ? 3901 843 811 2778 754 3S02 J609fi ,j67245 156114 m Th WarrgH I?lHvior ia T' In Iks case a.f CaTternv-icaedbf jbI ihe argument for a-suspension of judgme'! concluded or Frkfey, at Trenton, N. J ,c' susnensioa a ranted until February. L'ie 1 oner U laiernain. iriahe cqsiody of: tb.e Sb of Mercer county.