M7ioc JYo. 900. Tax-borough, (Edgecombe County, JV C.J Saturday, June 3, 1843. Vol XIX N o. 28. The Tttrborough Press, BY GEORGE HOYVAltn, no, :r' f: i i ... . tL Jj"ar.?at the expiration of the subscription year, for anj period less than a year, Tiocnty-five y,nis per month. Subscribers are at liberty to f gr;1tih ltigihe love of money & the love discontinue at any time, on ?Win? notice thereof of.po.v(Jr i, js one of the Kre it leading And paymsr arrears those residing at a ilistanre, - ft must invariably pay in advanee.orVve a respon- niami e ot a party which will never be ex sible reference in this vicinity. I ""CM" this country. It ts essential to the Advertisements not exceedinir a sipiare will be acquisition, as well as the preservation of Inserted at One Dollar the first insertion, and -Jf) $ power; and will never be relinquished cents for every continuance. Longer advertise-i ,vh)c t,1fre ex;s,s a h of j,s att;ljlimt.nt meats irj like proportion only security against its revival, is in dicial advertisements -2a per cent. nirlier. ai . j n rertisements must be marked the number of in-, the p ibli,. opinion; and even that has more . .. ii i . ,;.. I until 'than OIICP. hcpn frmiwl Ia Kn .. ', ........ iTi sertions required, or ineywiu e uoiKi'"" " " otherwise ordered and charged accoruin iy. Letters addressed to the Kditor must be post paid or they may notbe attended to TOM $324. THE PRESIDENCY. The Indiana State Sentinel contains let tera from Messrs. Calhoun, Johnson, Cas. Buchanan, and Van Buren, in reply t certain questions propounded to them by the Indiana Democratic Convention, touch ing the prominent political topics of the day, they areas follows. REPLY OF MR VAN 15 U REN. Kiu(ferhook Feb. 15. 1S43 Gentlemen: I have had the honor to receive your letter, written in behalf ol the Indiana Democratic State convention, and asking my views and opinions in rela tion: 1st, to the chartering of a national bank, or any other national institution, by whatever name it may be called, authori zed to issue bills of credit for banking pur poses, or to regulate exchanges, and ol the constitutionality and expediency of such an institution; 2 1. to the distribution of the proceeds of the public lands among the se veral States of this Union; 3d. to a protec tive tariff; 4th, to an amendment of the Constitution still further limi-;iug the veto power; and inquiring, in conclusion, whe ther I will abide the decision of a national convention of the Democraiic p irty, iu tnc selection of a candidate for the Presidency, and whether 1 will give my support and influence to the election of the nominee of said convention, if not myelt nominated by it. It affords me much pleasure to comply with the request ol the convention; ami I have only to regret that the number and . . ... i l ! impottance of the subjects embraced i their interiogatories, and the necessity of some explanations to elo justice to the views I entertain in regarJ to them, vi!l unavoidably extend my reply to a much greaterjength than 1 could have desired. 1 am opposed to the es'ab!ihmeni of a na tional bank in any form, or under any elis guise, both on constitutional grounds and of expediency. The power to create such an institution h is not been given to Con gress by the Constitution, neither is it ne cess iry to the exercise of any uf the pow ers which aie granted; ami if exercised, would be, as il always has been, highly injurious to the public welfare These opinions, alike advetse to the cons'it ;tional ity and expediency of a national bank, have been fn q iently and extensively laid before the people, and sometimes on occasions of deep interest. They were expressed in my letter to the ciiizens assembled at Shoe CO Springs, in North Carolina, when my name was before the public for the Vice Presidency; repeated in 136, when stand ing in a similar relation to the olhVe ef President of the United States, in a letter to the Hon. Sherrod Williams, whi h was widely disseminated ; and rei crated in my first message to Congress, at tin x ra ses sion in 18.37, when the ait n'io i of the whole country was again drawn to the sub ject by the failure of the deposne banks to fulfil their engagements with the Govern ment. The opinions ami pi inciples avow ed on these various occas ons have under gone no other change than that of addition al conviction of their truth, derived from events that have since occurred 1 might res' he re, content with this ex plicit avowal, and proceeel to reply to your other interrogatories, were it not that this "years to me a proper occasion to ailveit to the deplorable calamities n flicted on l"e people by ihe coneiuci and linal catas trophe of the late bank, through the pei Version of its means and the abuse of its power. It is true, that this institution is ncw no more. It has sunk umler the eighl of its own enormities, and has left nothingbehind but the wrecks of its ca reer. But the interests, pecuniary and po litical, the parents who first gave it birth, and the nurses by whom it was fostered; still survive, with the same means of pro- uuc.nSanoineroi,pri..K, ana me same (lis- i..-:. ii . rr . i -i . io,. u, c.p.uv mcu, wnenever a ta-j presenting aggravated pictures of publi vorahle opportunity presents, itself. The' distress, inflammatory proceedings of nub question ol a national bank is still before the )C ple, and win continue to be, so Ions; as avarice and ambition see in it the means - . n ui-uin'icin oamer. r..r tins reason, I conceive it proper that every occasion should betaken to recall to the public recollection, bv way tola v.irninr eximnle. wh.it ni Iwrwio it might be better for the honor of our coun t ry to bury in oblivion. Th -mischiefs indicted on individuals by the abuse of the, powers of this potent institution, have been so general as to i n press the public mind with a sufficient ly rlear perception of their magnitude; Inn tht: extent of its power can only he justly ap preciated by thos who adminisieri el the Government during the pe riod of its hos liliiy. The agency which the unparalleled abuse of this power, exclusively conferred for the public good, had in producing those e nbarras:nents iu the business con corns of the country, as well as the pecuni ry affairs of the State and Gcne-ral Gov ernments, it is believed, is not so clcul and generally understood. Mut even il it were, it cannot be loo often or too deep lv impressed on the mind and memory of the people of the United Slates. Tin promptings of political ambition; the pas sion for money; the embittered feelings of party strife; the apprehension of di-grace; the fear of punishment; the artifices ot long practised deception, and the strong bond of a community in frauds, have all exerted their influence in hiding from the public view the seductive practices of the bank. Hut the people will never rest satisfied, I trust, until they know what has become of the almost countless millions of which the States and individuals have been de frauded by a long-continued series of mis management ami corruption. The truth will yet be known, and the purposes of jus tices at length accomplished. The two great measures by which the late Bank of the Uniied States operated most fatally upon the prosperity and hap pitios of the people, were, first, a wanton contraction of its loans; and, next, a snd-! den and icckless expansion; boih having ( terpi ist. It accordingly expanded itself the s ime object in view namely, that of into every species of extravagance, eveiy wie-liuga charier from a reluctant people. variety of visionary and desperate uneler It cannot, be forgolien that President Jack-. taking, and every schemewhich men with so , in the exercise of a power delegated out property, but who could borrow at will, by the Constitution, refused his assent to a bill renewing tbe charier ot tbe Hank ol the IT . I . . I x I r. . I' u niteu maies, aim rum neu n io congre ss, where it failed of the constitutional mjoii- ty. For this he was assailed with every pecies of denunciation by the arlh rents ol the bank, while triumphantly sustained by the people, who re e'ected him by a great majority. That ihe bank refused to sub mit to this decisive expre ssion ol Ihe pub lic will, indicates the consciousness e! ex traordinary power, and a ele erminat on to exeil it to the utmost. Accordingly it renewed t e cone-t, on the recurrence of thrt first preliminary ste p taken by Prei- iieni .i.icKson lor carrying into e u ct me decision so s demnly ratified by the peo ple. This was the removal ef the public money from the custody of an institution i i r - . itt . i in which, if it had In en stiff red to remain. it is now morally certai i the Government would have shared the fate of the destitute, widows ami orphans, who are now lament ing iheir confideiKc, in poverty anel dis tress The bank determined to coerce the Gov ernment into an abandonment of this neces- r ii sarv measure ot pre "auiion, oy a stnhlen n.irf:iihnent of dis-ounts. which would he severely felt, and the odium of which it emplove'd all its arts and infl tence to throw upon General J ickson. In the short space of fourteen months, it withdrew from the exigencies of trade eighteen millions of dollars; and this contraction was followed by that of the State banks, either from ne cessity, or a common sympathy (on the purl of some, at least,) in a common ca 'S''. I he result ot mis commnea action was a rapid eleereis of accommodation to the trade and business of the country, amount ing to at least sixty millions of dol Ins. It must be obvious that the sudden ab str:ci ion of such an enormous sum from the general fund f business, would be se vet ely felt by those who traded in whoh or in part on borrowed capital, and. through them, in a less degree, by othei da ses of the community. These paitial inconveniences were magnified into uni versa! distress and wide-spread ruin, b newspapers ami public speakers, either un derthe direct 4Jfiuence of the bank by tin strong bond of dependence, or who were united with that institution in a system of action calculated to subserve ihe purposes ot both parties. Speeches in Congress lie meetings, memorials, relief committees, and an infinite variety of other appliances, which a great moneyed institution, gifted wnn ample means ot corruption, and tin scrupulous in employing them, could com mand, were brought into requisition, in order to create a panic among the people, and overawe the inflexible and just man who then administered the Government. These measures of the bank proved, however, unavailing in shaking the firm ness of General Jackson, or in deceiving the people, whose own experience taught them that, though there might be some partial inconvenience, and some reduction of prices, there was nothing like general public distress. Years of successful indus irv and well-regulated enterprise had laid the solid basis of a prosperity not to be sha ken by the abstraction of a portion of that capital, of which very few had shared the uenefits. They saw, too, the motives for all tln sc exaggerated pictures of public suf- lering. these inflammatory appeals to the most sordid passions; they knew there was d'-ep-laid, widely extended plan of. de ception, and became indignant at the at !empt to cheat them into the abandonment of their principles, by an appeal to tbosej iiiieiesis, wnicn tney leit haet not oeen se riously affected, or, if so, not by the meas ures of the Government, but of the bank alone The bank, perceiving that, an appeal to he appiehensions and sufferings of the peo ple had failed in producing that revolution m public opinion so confidently anticipa ted, changed its course to a dire ction pre cisely opposite, and, unhappily, far mjre extensive and fatal in its consequences. It resoriedto expansion instead of contrac tion; and notwithstanding the necessity of preparation to wind up its affairs, which had been made a pretext for sudden curtail ment, still existed, and had become every ilay more pressing, it suddenly opened the flood gates of accommoodation, with a view of corrupting those whom it could not coerce or deceive. In the course of eight months, it extended its loans to the amount of nineteen and a half imllions of dollars and the State banks, as they had followed its lead in contraction, now followed it in expanding. This sudden influx of paper money pro duced its inevitable consequences. There was no employment for it in the ordinary channels of business, not in the usual pru dent, restrained sphere of well-directed en- could device for wasting money in the sum tost pos.Mhle time, in the most unproh- TVT I I c lame manner. iew nanus sprung irom the bowels of the old, and the same real or imaginary capital tiansmigrated from one corporate body to another, until in hssthan two years, bank capital increased from about two hundred to two hunelred and fifty millions, their circulation from riucty-live to one hunelred and forty mil lions, and iheir loans and discounts frcm three hundred and twenty-four to four hundred and fifty-seven millions. To ibis, if we add the vast amount of credit ac- quired abroad by foreign loans, and by luvish accommodations of foreign dealers to our merchants, we may form an estim a e of the extent to which this unparalleled expansietn of credit and currency was car ried, and the deplorable consequences which would necessarily follow its sudden downfall, which no legislation, no public prosperity, nothing but miracles, could pre vent. The final results of this extraordinary delusion, which may be distinctly traced to the operations of the Hank of the Uni ted States, anel its successor in Pennsylva- nia, are known to all. 1 here is not a citi ' z " of the United States, be he rich, or be j he poor, who has not felt the blight of this all pervading influence, in some way or other, in his habits, his morals, or his pro perty. In the brief period of three years, it beggared hundreds of thousands of citi zens, impoverished States, well-nigh bank rupted the General Government, inflicted deep, if not indelible stains, not only on our national character, but on our Repub lican institutions, and rendered all the ble ings of unexampled abundance incapable el administering either to private happi ness or public prosperity. In short, il has be come one of those wide-spread, univer sal calamities, which have been hitherto on ly looked for in the direct dispensation of Prenielence. The greater portion, if not the entire mass, of evil resulting from the sudden contraction and subsequent expansion ol ;Minency and credit, is distinctly chargea ile to th desperate and unscrupulous ef forts of the Bank of the Uniied Stales to vrest a renewal of its charter from the peo ple first, by inflicting upon them pecuni ary distress; and, next, the still greater cvila.of redundant means, which could not he beneficially employed. Had it pro ceeded to wind up its affairs, with that steady purpose, united wiih tht salutary delay, (of which the history of the first bank furnished an instructive example.) its final extinction would have led to no great er distress, or inconvenience, than accom panied an I followed the dissolution of tha' body. Mm its managers, before anel b- hind the curtain, chose to act otherwis1 . They combined political and pecuniary ele ments together; they kept, the whole coun try in a state of feverish agitation, which Ins not yet subsided; they administereel additional fuel to the fire of party conten lion; deranged the entire system of trade and commerce: corrupted political parti sms by loans anel douceurs, for services which tln-y did not elare t specify; de frauded widows and oiphans, and stock holders, foreign as well as elomestic; bank rupted individuals; destroyed the credit of he Mates; and, after a series of injuries. under which the whole Union is still smar ting, finally sank beneath the weight of their own transgressions, leaving a blot on ihe history of the country which can never be wiped away. I hough all but omnipotent for evil, it sufficiently ele noustrated that it wanted either the will or the power to do good. It neither regulated the currency, by re training the issues of the State banks, nor the exchanges, by accemmoda' ing them te the course o: trade On the contrary, in the various stages of its progress anel de cline, it set tin: example of unbounded ex pansion; it set the example in suspension ol ?pecie payments; an. I, to ihe last moment of its existence, was the great enemy ef, and obstacle to, resumption. The only mode by which it ever sought to regulate exchange, so lar as my inforuiatiinextends, was by an arbitrary rule ef the bank, in stead of leaving it to the natural law of trade, which is the best of all regulatois, because it regulates itself. Such is the case at this moment. There is no United States Bank in existence, and no legislation on the subject; yet the rates of exchange between the different portionsof the United States, being thus left entirely to the opera tion of natural & inevitable causes, are now far more uniform and equitable than they were during any period in which the bank exercised its boasted power of regulation. Whatever diversity exists, beyond the mere cost and risk of transporting specie, arises from a difference in the currency, and cannot, therefore, be justly ascribed to the want of a regulator of exebang- s. My views on the subject of exchanges, and of the propriety, necessity, or ex pediency of any int rference of Govern ment in their regulation, were communica ted to Congre-s in 1S37. To rep at them here, would lengthen this communication, from whichadeMie to answer your qoes j lions fully, frankly, and explicitly, will, 1 fear, be extended to the ve rge of tedious- ness. I must, therefore, respectfully refer ,m,t redeem.' y ou to lhat document. You will there see addition to this deception I a clear, broad distinction between that spe- j might almost say f.aud on the people, cies of exehangos aptly denominated 'ki there is a decisive object ion' to the issue of ting," (which was little better than an in-! paper currency by (Jovrrnmenl, upon strument of fraud.) and bills drawn for the!"'"tever principle it maybe founeleel. transler of actual funds from one place to an- 'l'he experience of all nations, where this other. 1 endeavored also to satil'v Con-j expedient has been adopted, demonstrates gress of what is now so apparent that ihe hat his is a prerogative which will always exchange s would here, as they do in other be abused. It gives almost unlimited fa countries, regulate themselves, if Congressicilines for raising money, and has eve ry would but leave V em as they are left else - where to the managment of private enter prise. It is doubtless within your recollec tion, what a tempest of denunciation I le ceived from those who thought proper to overlook these consi'lerations. The opin ions then advanced would, it is quite cer tain, be receiveel with more favor now; and I have only ?o add, thai they have under gone no other change ihan thai of addition al conviction arising from additional expe rience of their truth. The tremendous power of a bank for evil, when impellled by avarice and ambition, self-pies' rvation or vengeance, has been seen. Il is a maxim in every government constituted on free principles, to withhold all power from rulers which is not inelis pensable to the preservation and defence of the rights of persons and properly. And this maxim is foundeel on the experi ence of mankind, which has taught them, by a long series of suffering, that net only is power much more liable to abuse than to benefi'ial exercise, but that with the pu rest intentions it can do far less good,'ihan it can perpetrate mischief when perverted to evil. The people of the United Slates have repudiated despotic or disci etionary power in all their political institutions, be cause of its propensity to abuse Yet they have been, and (mark my words) will be again and again, called upon to crcte a de spotic irresponsible moneyed power stron ger than their Government, because it is expecteil to do what that Government can not of itself perforin. I hope and trust that such appeals will never again be suc cessful, and that the gooel people 01 the United States will always bear in mind lhat an institution which can do what its advocates affirm this can, must, if subser- yifciit 10 the Government, tve it a yasl access Ion of power dangefotH to the rights) of ihe State, and which, if from any cause) it should become hostile, can either subject that Government to its will, or, like the defunct institution of which I have spoken, involve the country in confusion and elifli culty, its Government, in perpetual Strug gels, and its people in an interminable sc-ri-s of panic and dismay. Nothing but an ever Watchful vigilance on the part of the people will prevent a recurrence of it ese evils. The enemy is not ed, nor doth he sleep. The schism in the ranks f the opponents of the democracy turns almost exclusively on ihe quetion qf a national bank, and ihe complete triumph of Federalism will be the precursor of uch an institution. In expressing my opposition to all the? schemes which have been submit teel to C0117 gress, at its last sesioo, for managing the fiscal concerns of the country in vol ng, i'.s they all do, a union of bank anef ftate I do but speak the sentiments of a vast majority of my fellow citizens, as evinced in the votes of their re presentatives, and in the almost universal condemnation they have apparently received at the hands of the people themselve s. The manufacture of paper-money has been attempted in every form; it ha been tried by individuals, been transferred to cor porations by Congress, engaged in by tue Stales themselves, anel has signally failed in all. It has, in general, proved noi the handmaid ol honest industry and well-regu-I iled enterprise, but ihe pampered menial ed' speculation, idleness, anel fr-ud. It has corrupted men of the highest standing; al most elotroyed the confidence of mankind in ech other; anel darkened our criminal calendar with names lhat might otherwisei have conferred honor and bet efit on ihe country. There is strong ground for belie ving that such a system must have some innate incurable defect, 'of which no legis lation can divest it, and against which no human wisdom ran guard, or human integ-( rity sustain itself. The history of the past, however, leaves little room for doubt that paper-money in some form will, notwithstanding, continue to constitute pari of the circulating medium of the country. But my most sincere and, ardent wish is, that its issue by the Fede"d Government may, in all future time, be prevented. The lights of experience have in vain been diffused, the lessons of repea ted and wide spread ruin have been una vailing, if there be any who yet can bring themselves to believe that the Government of the Uniteel States, which possesses nmhing but what it receives from the peo ple, can b'-slow on them any thing other than what it has thus received. If it con tracts loans, the people must pay them; anei and if it issues paper-money, it must be redeemed by the people. How, then, can relief to the people he derived from incur ring obligations which they themselves w,'eie leei 10 extravagant expeneiuures, public debt, anel heavy burdens, alwas in creasing and never diminished. V here extravagant appropiiations can be met by a me re vote of Congress, anel without an im mediate resort to the pockets of ihe peo ple, there? will be found no sufficient check to boundless prodigality, except when the Government finally los s its ct edit by push-' ing it to excess. It is then that it reacts upon ihe peeple; for, this great resource' being exhausted, the whole superstructure' of credit falls on the'ir hands, and they must bear it as best they can. The hi-tory of ihe old continental mo-' ney, issued under exigencies that could alone justify such a measure, is one case in point; the present condition of many of the Stales is another: and both together; furnish ample illustration. In addition to this facility in supplying immediate de-' mands, pape-r money, being the cheapest of all manufactures, can be made at will, and may be increased to any extent that human credulity will tolerate. Hncethe right of Government 10 coin money out of diver and gold, is thn only prerogative re ferring to lhat subject which can be safely exerciseel; because these metals cannot be increased or eliminished, like papei issues, by a mere act of legislation. (to be continued.') Superstition. The Md'on Chronicle tells ol a man" in those cap" "ho in hisj anx ety for rain, recently killed a bla- k siiake'anet hung it upon a tree, declaring at ihe same time tint it would bring showns from above. H happened, says the Chron icle that it did rain in the course of the Jay and the consequence is, that all the 1 lawyers in Philadelphia cannot convince him that the snake did ugt mokeU raiai if f 5 .1' I, 1 ; -.t .T3