'« - -^ Vv **'% ** °o .*'.i^^''*,. C°\'ii^-°o W*' .-^^SU.'. -t y ••"•' a^\- •••0- .^' ^^ 4""%. ^ % 'V 'o^'^^*/ *«.^*^^5^V %*^^-/ ^.r^.^'^ .♦^'V 'y ^ -^^^^^ >> ^'^ *(CCCsOjio ^ ♦^ *^ /"^* Ought "Yankee" Traitors Rule the Nation? BEJNC A SINGLE FACT SUBMITTSD TO TUB CO*«IDJ&RATlOK OF TlIS f.OTAl WtBH OF TBB KORTH . BY A NORTH CAROLINA BACKWOODSMAN. ftfn forh: W. HENRY & CO., 1YBLI8HEIW. 2'JO Vkaul Stkbkt. . lB6r.. \ y themselves as their guiding principles? Is it possible for the most virulent and vindic- tive enemies of the republic to cherish more malicious feel- ings of enmity and malignity t'.)wards her than are claimed by this "Yankee" as the rule and guide of the Puritan Faction? Are such men anything more or less than emissaries of. the. British crown? Yet these are the men who are ever jeadj to brand as traitor every Ame.rican citizen who daies tp question their exclusive right to set themselves up as it^s supreme supervisors, judges and dictators in American .pol- itics. These are the men who come between the American people, and tell them that they shall not reason itogetheir, that they shall not discusg certain questions in a fraternal manner ; that they shall not liaye the privilege of exchang- ing views upon them, nor tlie opportunity of coijiiiig to -^ii amicable, just and equitable' understanding conoerning them-. Is it not evident, therefore, that the great object of this Taction is to distract the councils of the republic, hopiirr^ thereby, to paralyze the energies and powers of the Ameri- can people, so that they shall be unable to compete with England in peace, or contend with her in war? Tiiis is their main object. Everybody knows, that large as our planet is, there is not room enough ui)on its surface for both these United States and England to exist upon it as first class powers; one or the other must go dovv^n, and in the unity of the American people England reads her doom. Hence the persistent and frantic efibrts of her emissaries, the "Yankee" Puritan Faction, to engender, foster and prop- agate a spirit of strife, dissention and discord between the people of the different sections of this union, hence, also, its violent and continued opposition to any and every meas- ure that would tend to unite their sentiments and harmon- ize their interests. They are true John Bulls, therefore their great political maxim is divide d impcra, "divide and conquer." It is possible that the republic may not find any Catalines in i :they are too cowardly, too craven spirited for that, but she certainly will find many a mean, sneaking, treacherous Hippias in its ranks. We flatter ourselves that we are a free people, a self-gov- erned people, but is this not a mistake ? Unquestionably tlie Puritan Faction rules the nation ; there can be no two opin- ions about that, and it is equally certain that Exeter Hall rules the Puritan Faction ; Exeter Hall directs its intelli- gence, moulds its sentiments and controls its will. When Exeter Hall has spoken the Yankee Puritans can speak, but not before. Not a man of them has ever originated a polit- ical idea, good or bad ; not one of them has ever entertained or held a political idea independent of Exeter Hall. The whole policy of the "Yankee" Puritan Faction is prepared and concocted for, and dictated to thom, by their trans-Atlantic brothers, the English Puritans, so that the lower classes, in fact the very dregs of English society, creatures who are not permitted to exercise any political power in their own country, creatures that the governing class there regard as being devoid of ordinary intelligence, are by means of this Puritan Faction, virtually the rulers of the whole American people, and the absolute masters of the destiny of this mighty republic. Surely this state of things ought not to be permitted to ■continue any longer. Are Americans willing to be governed 10 by the very dregs of English society? Can any intelligent man believe that the rcpu])lic is safe in the hands of such men? Is it not high time for every loyal American citizen to ponder well this last solemn warning of the Fatlier of his Country to the people whom he loved so well and served so long: — " Against the insidious ivilcs of foreig-n influence, {I conjm-e you believe me, fellow citizens,) thejealmisy of a free people (ms^H to be ayntinually aicake, since history ami experience prove thai foreign infliuMce is one of the most baneful foes of republican government f and ask himself seriously, not as a partizan, not as a politician, but as an honest man, as a being responsible not only to his fellow man, but also to the living God, for the conscientious discharge of his duty as an American citizen ; if it bo right or proper to allow this Faction to stand between the American people and their true interests in preventing them from coming to an lionorable, just and equitable understanding in all national matters; and if it be not incumbent upon him to do all in his power to put a stop to the insane and senseless agitation of these foul mouthed, red-handed, black-hearted traitors ? The Roman people had a most expeditious and effective mode of silenc- ing such characters, ne quid repuhlica detrimmU caperet, " lest more serious danger might hapj)en to the republic," through their subtle trickery, chicanery and machinations. Every prudent man must feel that the republic is not yet out of danger; "a house divided against itself cannot stand," there- fore it is necessary to act. The American people must choose between Washington and this Faction with foreign S}Tnpathies, sentiments and objects. They cannot have both, they must have one. Patiick Henry said, upon a memora- ble occasion: — "I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided, and that is the lamp of experience. I know of no way of judg- ing of the future but by the past.'' We know the result of Washington's policy, and we are not -wdthout experience as regards that of this Faction, so that no man can plead ignorance upon the subject. The question is, shall the policy of Washington, or of " Yankee" and his friends prevail in tlie councils of tlie nation? This is the all-important question for every American citizen to decide, and upon this decision hangs the fate of the republic 54 W /\ V ..o*...'^,-V ,**\.2^.V ,,o«...^.,V \ A:i^^> /^-^-X /^'}^^y «4o, - - \*^«^A^ y.:k'i:-/^^ ./*:;^*.V .^^^!J • •0 ^o^ i*-^ i-?* .^v % '..0- A^ v^; rifMHtTTnnr <»*»—»