Whole Xo. 438 Tarborough, (Edgecombe County, JV. CJ Tuesday, January 22, 1833. Fbi. IT JVo. 22, 77d? "AVM Carolina Free Press," BY GEORGE HOWAEDj Is published Weekly at 'wo Dollars and Fifty Cents per year it" paid in advanceor, Y'rrtr ans, at the expiration of the subscription year. For any period less than a year, Twenty-Jive Cents per mcnth. Subscribers are at liberty tb discontinue at any time, on giving notice thereof and paying arrears those residing at a distance must invariably pay in advance.orgivea responsible reference in this vicinity. Advertisements, not exceeding 16 lines, will be in serted at 50 cents the first insertion, and 2.5 cents each continuance. Longer ones at that rate for every 16 lines. Advertisements must be marked the number of insertions required, or they will be continued until otherwise oi dered, and charged accordingly. Letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid, or they may not be attended to. HON. J. SPEIGHT. Letter from the Hon. J. Speight lo the Editor of the JNewbern Sentinel. Washington, Dec. 22d, 1832. Sir: The Proclamation of the Presi dent of the United Slates has ere this reached you, and has doubtless under gone that rigid scrutiny which its impor tance is calculated to elicit. I have heard as yet very little of public sentiment as to its merits. 1 see when it reached Ra leigh, a distinguished gentleman moved to have it printed, which produced a little kicking from a certain quarter. 1 also see that some of the politicians of the Old Dominion are seemingly sensitive on it. Pray, have you seen the Report uf their Committee on Federal Relations! a rather curious move now-a-days. It is strange indeed to witness what an ad mirable tact the Virginia politicians have of steering between Scylla and Charyb dis as for instance, their 3d Resolution re-affirms the Virginia doctrines of '98 and '99, and the 7th, I think it is, de plores the doctrine of nullification and the mad career of South Carolina; and to cap the climax, .the 8th condemns the doctrines of the Proclamation. Now can any thing be more absurd? The Virginia doctrine of '93 and '99, is nullification in embryo there the doctrine was first main tained. All the difference between the Virginia doctrine and that of South Caro lina, is, that the former is nullification in theory, the latter in practice. Vet Virgi nia condemns S. Carolina nullification! For myself, I have attentively read this inestimable State Paper, and I look upon it in the same light as I do upon the man who is the author of it. Next to the Farewell Address of the immortal father of his country, for pure and undefilcd pa triotism it stands unrivalled in the annals of history. Its production has caused me to reflect much on the nature of our institutions. The imminent danger lo which they are exposed by the damnable heresies which are now prevalent, is pro duced by the ambitious demagogues who have been disappointed in their expecta tions of political preferment; and i hesi tate not to sav, (regardless of any thing which mav attach to the assertion) that the doctrines which Andrew Jackson has set forth in the Proclamation, are the on lv ones which can sustain the Union. Yes, Sir, I have nothing to fear from a vowing the "federal doctrines," as they are called here?, contained in that paper. I am willing that those opposed to them shall call them what they please. 1 am a plain man and have nothing to fear from mv opinions being known. The moment the Proclamation made its ap pearance, letters were wrote from here to contain sections of the Union, priming the public mind beforehand against the President for doing what no oiher man in the United States-has the moral cour age to do. I rejoice that Gen. Jackson has bearded the lion in his den. What, 1 ask. was he as President to do? Stand siill and see the laws trampled under foot, and the Constitution violated in the nost flagrant manner? No, Sir, Gen. Jacksou has done what his duty required him to do. He has shown that in this as in oil other emergencies, he is equal to the crisis; and politicians rony quibble a- I bout abstract riotions of the Constitution, out the people will stand by Andrew Jackson in saving the Union. I hope the people 1 represent will rally around the old veteran. He has once saved the country from the rapacity of a British soldiery, and he will now defend it from disunion. At the last session of Congress we re duced the Tariff at least 5,000,000; and if a further and satisfactory reduction should not be made now, it will assured ly he effected during the next Congress. What more can any reasonable man de sire. Is this governmentthe only free one on earth, to be destroyed because the evil cannot be removed in a moment? God forbid. But if the Union is to be dissolved if indeed it has become necessary to sepa rate, let us have a Convention and part in peace. Heaven avert from us the hor rors of civil war. But the time has not come when such a course is even to be thought of. Let the South still cling to Jackson. lie will reneal the Tariff and ( . . ...... save the country. All will come right af ter a little while. South Caro in:i mav bluster and rave, but the Union will be preserved. , Respectfully, J. SPEIGHT. drawal of all the supernumerary forces lately sent to this station. Nullification. We find the following para graphs in a review of the President's Proclama tion, recently published in the Telegraph, by a Member ol the Convention of South Carolina, supposed to be written by Mn McPuffie: "I feel called upon, by the respect I entertain for the opinions of the other States of the Confederacv, to remove all misapprehension as to the attitude of South Carolina in a few prominent as pects of tier controversy with the Federal Government. And in the first place, I utterly deny and disclaim, on the part of the State of South Carolina, any design to resist the laws of the United States by force. The Ordinance of nullification upon its very face, and the' explanatory documents which accompanied it, expli citly declares that the Slate intends to act exclusively through the political and civil organs of her sovereign power, as a State. She does not intend, and never has intended, lo carry the interposition of her sovereign power to the extent that a neighboring Stale, with the countenance and approbation of the President, as it is generally understood, has carried the like interposition, by the almost unanimous concurrence of all the departments of her Government. "The State of Georgia has solemnly nullified the laws and treaties of the Uni ted States, disobeyed the decision of the Supreme Court affirming these laws and treaties, and threatened bv her constitu ted authorities to resist the enforcement of that decision by actual force. South Carolina, on the contrary, explicitly dis claims any purpose of resisting the offi cers of the Federal Government, in en forcing the judgments of ihe Federal tri bunals. If the Government can obtain judgments in the Federal Courts, the Marshal will be permitted to enforce them peaceably. All that South Carolina claims in this respect, in virtue of her sovereignty, is the right to enforce the judgments of her Courts in the like peaceable manner; and it is absolutely impossible that any conflict of force can take place between the State of South Carolina and the Federal Government, unless tin process of the Courts of South Carolina, shall be resisted by the military force of that Government." The Army and Navy.X?mm the pub lic documents accompanying the Reports of the Secretaries of War, the Navy, and the Treasury, it appears that the Army of the United States consists of 594 commis sioned officers, and 6540 non-commissioned officers and privates-tutal, 7134 men. This number is somewhat larger than Usual, which is owing to ihe addi tion of six companies of Rangers, com prising 685 men, as directed by an Act of Congress passed at the last session. ! The Navy consists of 12 ships of the line, mounting 74 guns; 14 frigates of the first class, 44 guns; 3 frigates of the second class, 36 guns; 2 sloops of 24 guns; 13 sloops of 18 guns; and 7 schoo ners of 12 guns lotal, 51 vessels, moun ting 1978 guns. In addition to the above, the frames and promiscuous live .oak timber for 4 siiips of the line, 7 frigates, 4 sloops of war, and 3 steam vessels, are on hand. The estimated expenses of the Navv during the year 1833, are 83,176,766 87. li this calculation, provision is made for holding in commission 1 ship of the line, 3 frigates of the first class, 11 sloops, and 7 schooners, with an aggregate of 5025 officers and men. The ships in ordinary are in various states of preservation, but most of them would require extensive repairs, before being ready for sea. OTAlr. Ball Hughes has just comple ted a statue of Bishop Hobart, for Trini ty church, New York, which is commen ded in New York papers as admirable for its beauty of design and execution, and its likeness to the original! The New York American closes its notice with the remark, that it "establishes the claim of Mr. Hughes to the highest rank in his art." Such praise from such a source, inspires us with some hope lhat Mr. Hughes is not the impostor that he has been represented in this State to be, and that he may yet return to redeem his cha racter upon our Statue of Washing-ivn.--Fay. Obs. the committee, also, made a report, which condemns every one who has had any connexion with ihe Bank, since its com mencement to its failure; and states, if any exception to this denunciation is to be made, it is in the case of Robt. V. Fort, late President of the Bank. Tho Report concludes by recommending to the Legislature the passage of an act to repeal ihe act incorporating the Bank of Macon. Mechanics' Bank of Alexandria. Wo desire to present and preserve, at full length, the statement of the affairs of this Bank, as reported by the Committee. It is a real curiosity and may be useful aa a "copy" in the new state of things which many believe is about to ensue! In stance, among the demands against the Bank, there is an ilem of 110,460 for noies in circulation but ""the Cashier has burned ihe S20,000 staled by him, only 90,460." On the credit side, the real estate, put down in the schedule at 884,725, is valued at 49.400 the Ca shier's debt, 841,800, is secured so that it may produce 830,000; the amount of "dormant notes protested," is 893,217; of stock notes, "laying over unpaid," 817, 202; and of "dormant balances, over draughts, and defalcation," 862,057; from all which three last "nothing is expect ed." Niks Register. We wish this was the worst of tho affair. Nat. Int.' (r"We are gratified to learn, thro' the National Gazette, that Judge Baldwin's health is much restored, and that the ru mors of his confinement are untrue. Military Garrisons. The Charleston (S. C.) Evening Post of the 31st ult. says: A public meeting was called to be held in Columbia, the 1st January, for the purpose of remonstrating against the fol ly of keeping within the State, more of the United States troops than are usually held as a peace establishment in Charles ton, and request the immediate with- Thc Rail Road. The Petersburg Times says: It gives us great pleasure to inform our readers that the Rail Road is now finished and in complete! order, from the Depot at North Spring to Belfield, a distance of forty miles. A party of our citizens, accompanied by several mem bers of the Legislature, made the first trip between the two places on Tuesday last; and we understand that there was an uni versal expression of admiration, elicited as well by the beauty and substantial construction of the work, as by the con viction of the superior ease, facility and safety which this mode of transportation possesses over all others. The return trip from Belfield to .North Spring was performed in about two hours, deducting the lime lost in the several stoppages. To those who have not yet had an oppor tunity of personally observing the facili ties of this method of tTavelling.it may not be amiss to say, that ihe party above mentioned breakfasted in Petersburg, di ned and spent part of the day at Belfield and returned to town before dark, thus traversing a distance of 85 miles without the least fatigue. It is expected, that the section of ihe road between the town depot and that at North Spring, will be completed by the 1st of February next.' Macon Bank. -A joint committee of the Georgia Legislature has made a Re port relative to the affairs of the Macon Bank, which failed some time ago. The report is of great length and alleges nu merous violations of the charter, fraudu lent reports to the Legislature, and a gross mismanagement of its affairs by every administration. The minority of Children in Factorics.The Philadel phia Times says: It is impossible that an intelligent community can learn, without disgust and indignation, that our nume rous and extensive factories are worked almost wholly by children, who are enti tled to an exemption from labor and care, and whose proper place would be their native hills, as free and joyous as the winds which played around them. Thou sands on thousands of these little slaves are driven by sun rise with pale and sad dened faces, and feeble and reluctant limbs, to their toil from which, with a slight interval at noon, night alone re leases them. Day succeeds day, with the same heavy task, and the same heavy heart to perform it. Wearied, heart sick, spiritless without a joy to enliven the present, or a hope to brighten the fu ture destitute, friendless, forsaken sinking beneath the unequal burden of toil, poverty and oppression they real ize all the ills of age, without the firm ness by which age is enabled to endure them. The children of freemen, they are made slaves at an age when the children of slaves are free. Intemperance. A man by the name of Parkinson Claig, living at Woodstock, Va. was, a few days ago, committed to prison for murdering his brother! The parties it seems were engaged in a Christ mas frolic, when a dispute arose between the deceased and his brother, which ter minated by a blowTrom the latter, with a horse yoke, in the murder of the decea- Ised. Pet. Chron. ' OMr. Isaac Orr, in a communication for the U. S. Telegraph, says: 1 have in my sleeping room a watch alarum, of which I will contract to make fifty thou sand for ten cents a piece, by which tho hand of a common watch, or even of one of the smallest size, will, as sure as the watch is wound up, wake me at anytime of night 1 shall please; and if I please, it will wake up the . whole house, or the whole neighborhood. My own never fails to. arouse me at 5 o'clock. All wooden clock and mouse trap makers are challenged logo beyond this if they (are able.