Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / Sept. 5, 1828, edition 1 / Page 2
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political. Electoral Tickets. We present to ?ur readers the Jackson Electoral Tick et for this State anil, in consequence of their being no other press located in this vicinity, we have concluded to pub lish the Adams Electoral Ticket also, that our readers may become acquainted ...:t- .1. . r .1 i T"l l wan iuc names oi uie lnuiviuuais cum posing both Tickets. NORTH CAROLINA Jackson Electoral Ticket. (Election on Thursday, 13th Nov. next.) For President, ANDREW JACKSON. Vice-President, . JOHN C. CALHOUN. ELECTORS. 1st dist. Robert Love, of Haywood county. 2d - Montford Stokes, of Wilkes. 3d - Peter Forney, of Lincoln. 4th - John Giles, of Rowan. 5th - Abraham Philips, of Rockingham. 6th - John M. Morchead, of Guilford. 7th - Walter F. Leake, of Richmond. 8th - Willie P. Mangum, of Orange. 9th - Josiah Crudup, of Wake. 10th - John Halt, of Warren. 11th - Joseph J. Williams, of Martin. 12th - Kedar Ballard, of Gates. 13th - Louis D. Wilson, of Edgecombe. 14th - Richard D. Spaight, of Craven. 15th - Edward B Dudley, New-Hanovcr. -::- Mams Electoral Ticket. For President, JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. Vice-President, RICHARD RUSH. ELECTORS. 1st dist. Isaac T. Avery, of Burke county. dence that he was on the pinnacle of nrnsruiritv. wlinn the frulohwas UlUUUIUlOt) UUV vi v iiiuiuiivii X " J" J7 - - : A bottomed on corruption. In proof yawning at his feet which was to .-. ... 1 i . I in-' i j But Hamilton was not only a Monarchist, but for a monarchy j. of this I will relate an anecdote, for the truth of which I attest the God who made me. Before the President set out on his southern tour in April 1791, he addressed a letter of the 14th of that month, from Mount Vernon to the Secre taries of State, the Treasury and VVar, desiring that, if any import ant cases should arise during his absence, they would consult and act on them, and ho requested that the Vice-President should al so be consulted. This was the only occasion on which that offi cer was ever requested to take part in a Cabinet question. Some occasion of consultation arising, I swallow up him and his deceivers. Tor when ijeneral Washington was withdrawn, these energumeni of royalism, kept in check hither to by the dread of his honesty, his firmness, his patriotism, and the authority of his name, now moun ted on the car of State and free from control, like Phaeton on that of the Sun, drove head-long and wild, looking neither to right nor left, nor regarding any thing but the objects they were driving at: until, displaying these fully, the the preservation of this point of ralliance to that opposition . Much of this relation is notori ous to the world, and many inti mate proofs of it will be found in these notes. From the moment where they end, the Federalists got unchecked hold of General Washington. His memory was already sensibly impaired by age, the firm tone of mind for which Ip had been remarkable, was begin ning to relax, its energy was aba ted; a listlessness of labor, a de sire for tranquillity had crept on nun, ana a willingness to let otli- the eyes of the nation were open-jers act and even think for him. ed, and a general disbandment of -Like the rest of mankind he was them from the public councils disgusted with the atrocities of tooK place. Mr. Adams, 1 am sure, has been long since convm- - cod of the treacheries with which invited those gentlemen (and the Attornev General, as well as I re member) to dine witUme in order he was surrounded during his ad- to confer on the subject. After .11.1 1 1 me cloth was removed, and our question agreed and dismissed, ministration. He has since tho roughly seen that his constituents were devoted to republican gov- the rrench revolution, and was not sufficiently aware f the differ ence between the rabble who were used as the instruments of their perpetration, and the steady and rational character of the Ameri can ueonle. in which he linH nnt i i i - -" - 1 C . . , t c it' " conversation began on other mat-! eminent and whether his judg- sulhcient confidence. .The oppo ters. and bv some circumstance. Iment is re-settled on its ancient sition too of the republicans to ters, and bv some circumstance. was led to the British Constitu tion, on which Mr. Adams obscr- basis, or not, he is conformed as a good citizen to the will of the sition too of the republicans to the British treaty, and zealous support of the federalists in that ved, "purge that Constitution of j majority, and would now, I am unpopular, but favorite measure of theirs, had made him all their own. Understanding mnrnnror )0- 2d - Abner Franklin, of Iredell o.i tii i. T-T n r t : i - ou - rvuucii n. mu ion, oi ijiiicum. i corruption, and : .vrr, v ; .? . su - James i . iuoreneaa, KocKingiiam 6th - Alexander Gray, of Randolph. 7th - Benj. Robeson, of Cumberland. 8th - James S. Smith, of Orange. 9th - William Hinton, of Wake. 10th - Edward Hall, of Warren. 11th - Samuel Hyman, of Martin. 12th - Isaac N. Lamb, of Pasquotank. 13th - William Clark, of Pitt. 14th - William S. Blackledge, of Craven 15th - Daniel L. Kenan, of Duplin. its corruption, and give to its i pular branch equality of repre sentation, and it would be the most perfect Constitution devised by the wit of man." Hamilton paused and said, "purge it of its give to its popu lar branch equality of representa- A. . L ' - III uon,cc. u wouiu uecome an xm- practiaune government ; stands i , 1 r- . . per ever ex persuaded, maintain its republican structure, with the zeal and fideli ty belonging to his charactar. that I disapproved of that treaty, For even an enemy has said, "lie and copiously nourished with is always an honest man and oft- falsehoods by a malignant neih en a great one," but in the fury bor of mine, who ambitioned to and follies of those who made him be his correspondent, he had be their stalking horse, no man who come alienated from myself per did not witness it. can form an sonallv.as from the rnnnhlirnn hn. itiidea of their unbridled niadnnsa. dv irenernllv nf hi fVdlnw.f.Jn.nc- O ' I 7 J O J vjw if llllvllOy s at present, with all its sup- and the terrorism with which they and he wrote the letters to Mr. posed defects, it is the most per- surrounded themselves. The Adams, and Mr. Carroll, over Ject government which ever ex- horrors of the French Revolution which in dfivntinn tn liiaimnprkli. as isted." And this was i i nnr.nvn11.. thon mmnrr From the Virginia Advocate. Extract from the Introduction to the unpublished Jlnas of Mr. Jefferson. . In these three volumes will be men. lhe one was for two he reditary branches and an honest elective one: the other for a here ditary Kind with a House of Lords and (liimmnns. rnrrnntorl Wtc c. i : c i ... . luuuu ;upira ui me omciai opini- will, and standing ons given in writing by me to and th nonnln. r nr . a: i -i U . . 7 " r. jeii. M asiungion,wnue Jecreta- indeed a singular character. Of ryof States with sometimes the acute understanding, disinterest documents belonging to the case. led, honest, and honorable in all Some of these are the rough private transactions, amiable in draughts, some press-copies, some society, and duly valuing virtue in fair ones. In the earlier part of nrivnte lifn. v it hmviUwi r.,i . ju.ww UUIIUVIII UIIU my acting in that office, I took no perverted by the British example other note of the passing transac-j as to be under a thorough con- uons; out, alter a while, 1 saw the viction that corruption was essen j j ij i - j 7 v 7 v . i the exact line which separated thend using that as a raw head and as monuments political creeds of these gentle bloody bones, they were enabled, Til importance of doing it in aid ot my memory. Very often, there fore, I made memorandums on loose scraps of paper, taken out of my pocket in the moment, and laid by to be copied fair at leisure, which however they hardly ever were. These scraps, therefore, ragged, rubbed, and scribbled as they were, I had bound with the others by a binder who came into my cabinet: did it under my own eye, and without the opportunity of reading a single paper. At this day, after the lapse of 25 years or more, from their dates, I have given to the whole a calm revisal, when the passions of the time are past away, and the rea sons of the transactions act alone on the judgment. Some of the informations I had the government of a na- tial to tion. Mr. Adams had originally been a republican, the glare of royalty and nobility, during his mission to England, had made him believe their fascination a necessary in gredient in government, & Shay's rebellion, not sufficiently under stood where he then was, seemed to prove that the absence of want and oppression was not a sufficient guarantee of order. His book on the American Constitutions hav ing made known his political bias, he was taken up by the Monarch ical Federalists, in his absence, and on his return to the U. States he was by them made to believe that the general disposition of our Citizens Was fnVOrnhln tn mnnnr . VI1U I J . I I . lUUU I K .'irfi : fliir H 1 . i i-x now cut out from the rest, because! as ; ,nnl . V . "a 1 have seen that they weroVncorwnrfc b"PPhme.nt t0 tl,c ,'or"lcr rect nr itn.ilitfnl nl! i VYrk aml llls election tot lcPru Z&Z ' H fl u Pe,f."11' 'rlslecy confirmed his errors. In- ...umtmu auuiesses loo. arttn v i i . J auu Hiuusinousiy poured in upon him, deceived him into a confi ning to do. by their stratagems, their talcs of tub-plots, ocean mas sacres, bloody buoys, and pulpit lyings and slanderincrs. and inani- between hnnjacai ravings ot their Gardners, Hamilton was; their Osoods and Parishes, to spread alarm into all but the firm-! est breasts. Their Attorney Ge- neiai nau tne impudence to say to a republican member that de portation must be resorted to, of which, said he, you republicans have set the example, thus daring to identify us with the murderous Jacobins of France. These trans actions, now recollected but as dreams of the night, were then sad realities, and nothing rescued us from their liberticide effect but the unyielding opposition of th firm spirits who sternly maintain ed their post, in defiance of ter ror, until their fellow citizens could be aroused to their own danger, and rally, and rescue the standard of the Constitution. This has been happily done. Federal ism and monarchism have lan guished from that moment, until their treasonable combinations with the enemies of this country during the late war. Their plots of dismembering the Union, and their Hartford Convention, has consigned them to the tomb of the dead; and I fondly hope we may now truly say, "we are all repub licans, all federalists," and that the motto of the standard to which our country will forever rallv. will be Federal union, and Republican aided .hem mainly, able fame, we must forever weep of mortal decay. JEFFERSOiN. Feb. 4th, 1818. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1828. Low. -The Court of Pleas and Quar ter Sessions for Edgecombe county held its sittings in this place last week. No case of public interest was tried, except ing that of illleti Morgan, a free negro, who was condemned and sold to servi tude for one year, under the act of 1S26, requiring free negroes who are spending their time in idleness and dissipation", to give bond for their industrious and peaceable deportment for one year, or be hired out for a term of service not exceeding three years. Electioneering. It has been fre quently asserted, and as often denied, that the friends of the Administration were endeavoring to enlist in its sup port the Anti-masonic excitement, which unhappily has prevailed for some time past in the western part of the slate of New-York; but the following corres pondence, which has been made public in order to correct the ''garbling" state ments which its private circulation had occasioned, puis lhe matter beyond all question. We do not know how Mr. Russell of the Boston Centiuel, will rel ish this declaration of Mr. Adams: "I state that I am not, never zvus, and nev er shall be a Free Mason" for Mr. Russell has declared that he was in the Lodge at the lime Mr Adams was made M.. .1 f 4 11 T- rrtr.-r,., 1 W UJHMMI. i I I. OlJIJ III W tCK UI .111)311), 19 government, and sure I am. wrLi. ; . may say, that we are indebted, for! by this correspondence; a few months
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
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Sept. 5, 1828, edition 1
2
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