W'j> \'^-> %.*l^v V^V\. °°« 1 » , ^ »»tnl* ^ <^j. *o . » •" *v v .* v ^ °$$Ws /\ v^gj^ * r oY <$> *»«°° .V V *I*J?* q* <^ "*•'•»• ^° ^o^ ^^ V^ 1 PLEASE CIRCULATE ARGUMENTS IN FAVOR OF THE SUPPORT OF TAYLOR AND FILLMORE. From the Richmond (Indiana) Palladium. The following letter, from Mr. Smith, to a friend, will be read with interest by his Whig constituents : 1LETTER FROM HON. CALEB B. SMITH, OF INDIANA. Washington City, 2G7A of June, 1848. Dear Sir: Your favor of the 15th inst. reached me last evening. You say you have heard that I ♦have declared in favor of the election of Gen. Tay- lor. In this you have heard no more than the truth. I was not, as you are well aware, one of those who desired the nomination of Gen. Taylor. Concurring fully in the views entertained by a large majority of the Whigs of my district, I preferred the nomi- nation of another. That question is no longer an open one. It has been closed by the action of the Whig National •Convention, which recently assembled at Philadel- phia. Gen. Z. Taylor is now the candidate of the Whig party for the Presidency, as Gen. Lewis Cass is the candidate of the Democratic party. The issue is narrowed down to a contest between these two individuals. One or the other of them will be the President of the United States for the ensuing four years should they survive. No separate organiza- tion, apart from the Whig party of the Union, can by any possibility secure the election of any third man. In this issue I shall support Gen. Taylor cordial- ly and zealously. The considerations which impel me to this course are numerous and cogent. In a brief manner I will present to you a few of them: For almost twenty years the administration of the General Government has been in the hands of a party which has acquired consequence and power by professing a democracy which it has never prac- tised. Step by step have the leaders of that party progressed in national demoralization. Since the incumbency of John Q.. Adams, the national ex- penditures have increased from thirteen millions to over thirty millions of dollars a year, aside from the •enormous expenses of the Mexican war. A nation- al debt has been rapidly accumulating, and which, before we get through the appropriations which the war has rendered indispensable, will exceed one hundred millions of dollars. This profligate expen- diture has brought with it no public benefit; on the contrary, it. has rather purchased the seeds of nation- al ruin. The mighty West, with all its vast inter- ests, has been neglected. The great interests of peace have been abandoned to an mcessant and cor- rupt struggle on the part of the leaders of the oppo- site party for power and place. A needless war has disturbed every element of society — it has left thirty thousand of our countrymen in foreign graves it has made the Locofoco party drunk with the love of foreign conquest and of battle — it has concerted the one-man power into a despotism, overpowering the legislative arm of the Government, and which threatens to alter and disfigure the entire theory of our constitution. «?. & G. S. .Gideon, printers. The history of the past is only relieved by the brief duration of Whig ascendency, which, despite tlie cruel and unexpected embarrassments which were thrown about it, accomplished the most im- portant results. Under that ascendency the diffi- culties between this country and Great Britain, growing out of the affair of the Caroline and the re- bellion in Canada, and that of the Northeastern boundary, were honorably and peacefully and for- ever adjusted; while the tariff of 1842 revived the business of the whole country, and gave to us an adequate revenue. We must meet the crisis before us. If the nomi- nee of the Baltimore Convention, Gen. Lewis Cass, shall be elected President of the United States, then the power of this Government will be confided to the hands of those by whom Texas was annexed, by whom the war with Mexico was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally begun, by whom slavery is sought to be extended, by whom a war with Eng- land on the Oregon question was greedily pressed tor the line of 54° 40'. The triumph will be award- ed to those, who, unsatisfied with the acquisition of New Mexico and California, are already stretching out their arms for Yucatan, and who loudly hint at the annexation of Cuba, as the next step of their " progress." This policy, it requires no prophet to foresee, will change the entire character of our for- eign relations. It will disturb every element of do- mestic prosperity and concord. It must dissolve the confederation of the States, in whose bond of union we have been so long and so happily linked together, and for whose perpetuity we should pray and incessantly labor. It is evident that our only security against this dreadful and impending peril lies in the success of the Whig party in November next. We cannot now indulge in other hopes. Had this party been successful in 1844, it must be now evident to every mind, the Texas annexation would never have oc- curred, the terrible war with Mexico would have been avoided, and the question of extending slavery, with all its agitating and frightful consequences* would not now be distracting our councils and threatening our peace. From the past let us correct errors and take counsel, and resolve on action for the future. The nomination of Gen. Taylor, has been made by a convention of our friends representing every portion of the Whig party, and in which we were fully represented. If we be true Whigs, true pa- triots, anxious to defer selfish and personal consi- derations to the high, enlarged, and noble aims of patriotism, our plain duty is to bow to the will of the majority of our friends, whatever may have been our cherished individual preferences — to unite every element of union and energy that can be ral- lied, to oppose the further progress of war, of slave area, and public debt— that we may develop the fruits of peace, of freedom, and public prosperity. Passing from these general reflections, allow me to refer you to a momentary consideration of the political attitudes of Lewis Cass and Zachary Tay- lor, for with the election of one or tlie other of these gentlemen we have to deal. Lewis Cass, has been many years in the public employ. As our representative abroad, at the Court of France, he signalized himself in the pub- lication of a fulsome eulogy on the despotic and profligate Court of Louis Philhppe. His public course at home may be recorded in a few sentences. When an assemblage, without party distinction, convened at Chicago, to arsert measures for the im- provement of the rivers and harbors of the West, General Cass, claiming to be a western man, shrunk from throwing the influence of his name in favor of our interests. When the veto of President Polk prevented the passage of a bill, looking to this im- portant end, Lewis Cass shrunk from encountering the veto of a southern President ; and he has now resigned his place in the Senate, and thus escaped the responsibility of action upon that measure, during the present session, as well as upon all others. The course of General Cass, with respect to our foreign relations, is a beacon of warning. Up to the last moment did he insist upon embroiling us in a war with England on the Oregon controversy. On the annexation of Texas, he has occupied ad- verse positions, having first denounced it and after- wards advocated it. He stands alike convicted of an advocacy of, and opposition to, the " WUmot proviso." He has played the demagogue instead of the statesman, and the only policy to which he is committed, is that which lias been adopted by Mr. Polk — the consequences of which have clothed the land in mourning, and its progress must inevi- tably root up every ancient land-mark. He stands forth the champion of increased territory from any and every quarter, no matter what amount of blood and treasure shall be wasted in its acquisition. He is the advocate of an interposition in the civil war in Yucatan, in contravention of our cherished policy of non-intervention, pleading humanity as the justi- fication for this proposed violation of the Constitu- tion, while doubtless his secret purpose is that of extended boundary. General Cass is a mere party politician, the head of the ultra-Polk wing of the Locofoco family, whose cry is : WAR AND LAND ! His public life has been matured among courts and politicians. Even an influential portion of his own party secede and revolt at his nomination. He is the candidate of our bitterest political opponents, and if he shall succeed, he will owe his success to the inactivity or discord of our own political friends. In that event, we must prepare to see the odious policy of Mr. Polk's administration fully matured and carried out, the "progressive" schemes of aggression and con- quest now secretly cherished, openly avowed and acted upon ; and our whole foreign policy subverted and changed. Patriotism demands, as an impera- tive duty, to omit no means by which such mon- strous evils may be averted. Zachary Taylor, deriving his blood from the re- volutionary stock, is emphatically a man of the people. His personal character isabove reproach, simple, hoin st, luml. si, republii an. As a man, all wIki know linn love ami honor him. He is a stranger to politicians, and refuses to consort with corrupt and ambitious art- to promote selfish cuds. To use his own noble words, he has "no enemies to punish, no friends to reward, nothing to serve but his country." Personally, no man enjoys a more universal popularity, or a more solid fame, based as it is upon the general confidence reposed in his elevated virtues and moral firmness. The public services of Zachary Taylor are com- prised in the devotion of nearly forty years to his- country. As a soldier, he has won a fame as im- mortal as any in history — the fame of a great and humane commander, and he has won it by sacri- ficing his private ease and safety to the hardships of the camp, and by his earnest endeavors to arrest the carnage of battle. The great Captain who fought his way through a quadruple opposing force on the Rio Grande, who captured in an open field,, and without the aid of siege trains or other suitable munitions, the rock-girt and fortified city of Mon- terey, and whose heroic resolution at Buena Vista saved from annihilation the little band of volunteers,, whose determination reflected back the fire which they received from his collectedness, is the same Zachary Taylor who spared the defenceless at Monterey, and who respected the white flag of" peace amid the roar of the conflict of Angostura. He is the same Zachary Taylor who, early in the Mexican war, and while the laurel of victory was within his reach, was the first to recommend a de- fensive line and the cessation of all further aggres- sive movements — glorying to forego the honors of war for the lovelier graces of peace. He is the same warm-hearted veteran who wept at the untimely fate of Col. Clay and his gallant confederates. These eminent services are the just' elements of" General Taylor's great persona! popularity, which the envious and cruel course of the Administration- towards him has only strengthened and deepened! and made resistless. The mind of Zachary Taylor is cast' in no com- mon mould. His firmness was the tower of strength, upon which our little army in Mexico reposed,, while the clearness and accuracy of his judgment have been vindicated in his every action. His des- patches to the War Department and other publica- tions, designed for the public eye, have no superiors of their class. They are all distinguished by disci- plined thought, masterly common sense, remarka- ble force and elegance of diction, and by a digni- fied submission to the civil power under the greatest personal provocations — while an extreme and win- ning modesty is the very soul of them all. As a politician, it is enough to say of Gen. Tay- lor, that he declares himself to be a Whig, that he asserts to the country that his vote in 1814 would have been cast for Henry Clay and against the an- nexation of Texas, and, as a consequence, against all the steps which have led to the needless conflict with Mexico. He has never placed himself in any- other altitude, as a candidate, than such a one as authorized his friends, who put him before the country, to withdraw him, should the choice of the Convention fall upon another. This position was fully asserted by the Louisiana delegation at tin. Philadelphia Convention. The pledges of Gen. Taylor should be satisfac- tory to Whigs. Taking Washington for his model,, he expressly repudiates the building up. of a mere presidential party of spoilsmen, while he distinctly avows his opposition to the extension of our terri- 'torial limits; and we have his word that in the event of his election the Executive veto shall never be interposed to arrest the constitutional action of Congress, orto disturb the independence of the Ju- diciary. The same modesty of mind which distin- guished him in the field teaches him to regard the Executive office as ministerial and not legislative, which imposes on him who holds it, not the duty of making laws, but of faithfully carrying out the execution of the popular will constitutionally ex- pressed; and, in declaring himself to be such a Whig, we have the fullest guaranty of his views of 'the powers of the Constitution which apply to the • questions of Slavery, of Internal Improvements by the General Government, a Revenue system, &c. The nomination of Gen. Taylor by a Convention of the Whigs of the Union, in which every portion of the country was represented, settles the question of his political character. The nomination was fairly made. The vote on every ballot was viva voce. Every Congressional district in every free State was represented, while there were ten districts in the slave-holding States which were not repre- sented, and therefore cast no votes. Thus the North was more fully represented than the South, yet the ■choice fell on Gen. Taylor. As an evidence of his great strength in the Convention, it need only be %-J5wf'A- :. *«. c°*.«J^'% >*\o^.\. /.<^:."\ -**..; v*cr ^°^ r oV tf *°^ -J ^ - ^ 4 V N* vv v-w>* v-*#v v-^> v-!»v 9 <* * » ° ..V * *" 1# ^ ... . «► .• * ? v .•i^L-* *> ■bv **' * ^,0M.\ ' .<&V . v/».^*<{». rt^ ««a- *fc- ^ & *A **« ^ < ;\ '* vl^L'* A t * % ..^.•♦^. ^v* > ^ o^ o • ■ • . V .4> V . . - • . ** ,0*