Newspapers / Fayetteville Observer [Weekly, 1816-1865] … / June 19, 1849, edition 1 / Page 2
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r r COMMUNICATION. cicty wherever that day i . , . . i 1 I ..n ffl II If. ri Ull 11" 1 ?r ami cherish I he memory of rlcire to sec may lmiiiofic lje-' i ho chnrsc"'1 i.'isnco. ii una ur-i-n -- ,,. niuot earnestly FOR THE OBSERVES. Mr. Half: I noticed in your paper loiter from Gen. Alfred Pickery, one T the Candidates for Congress in this Dis trict, purporting In correct some "misrep. r.'-eoiiioii8" f the Editor of the "Char lotte J.nirnal." W ith that part of hi epis t!e I have nothing to do he nnd Mr. Ilo! lon must aeltlo it between themselves; lmt a one of the gentlemen w ho signed the letter written to (Jen. Dockery in Ci.nn.j-ii, I am not willing In permit him to misrepresent the circumstance of 'hat correspondence, and, 1 y innendn, cuM im putations upn the motives il those, "very respectable gent lemon," who w ere en deavoring to compromise the difficulties which, if unsettled, must result in the de feat of the Whig Tarty. Now. to lhe General's Letter. In his introduction ' i the suhjert, he stops to inquire whether yon (how could be expert you "0,v ; any thing of the mallei?) -votM eipla.n why hi (the (ieneral) Wl1." not' while Mr. Little's, "hit" "n,,Pn xverJc after, was ,,ul.li-fc 19 a misrepresentation, and n" ne is more cognizant of the f t than Gen. Dockery himself, Mi- letter appeared in the same pn;er willi Mr. Little' and Mr. Ingram's. And so llir from Gen. Dockery's letter heing written a week liefure Mr. Little s, it wii not written until two days afier wards. Mr. Little's letter was banded to us within two or three hours after ho re ceived our communication. The reason the loiters were not published sooner was because we had not received Mr. Ingram's, and it was thought it would not he right to publish one, without the others; of this fact (Jen. Iockery was informed, and he acquiesced in the propriety t the course. As to Gen. Dockery's courirovt surmises in reply to his own very fair and candid tpirrics, 1 shall mr nothing, let an hon est people scrutinize the facts and judge accordingly. Our whole object was, to have one candidnte fairly in the held, with out taking advantage of either. II that i:j... .1 IJ I... r I I. .... rani uair einiii.u in- ui n. ij - . , ii i - , ,, t.nn ami 58 feet 10 inches square at Hie uoiild support him more cheerfully than ..i.i:t A .. iik i i I I 1. r I .. .1 " 'op, II "Ml "IIK.ll lilt" "iirnrn, ..-.. ...... mvse : and I think I nwhl safelv Mty this . " ' . , -. .. would he the course of every gentleman "who signed that letter. CABARRUS. June. 6, 1849. A SPECIFIC FOR THE CHOLERA AS,ri,ut . -ird communication In PJiriaL it would be !"an,fr Xwine'to of tbe discovery they Zite. W. lrt that for 11.6. Thave the requisite medical and scten ,if.c knowledge which alone can give value to an expression upon the theory ad vanced. There is something, however, in approaching Birthday of oor ' ,he tone of the letter, especially m . c.-o- Z'ndenCe.The Board of """s P"rt- w,,irh 'r ' !m' K ' . " ' iiiiiment oo- ' -n( rronl ,he evident INanonai . . , prcssion u'n iij-i mm . , j;D f tnn-f ine cnnic- atisetice tn am u"n ; lions of the writer upon hrs ol the med- WASH11GT03 NATIONAL MOSCMEST. To the Peopte of the United Stat". Believing, frw the interest ao far e Tinced by the People of the United 8t'e in the erection of the great Ntional Mart, nment hi this city t he memory of the illustrious Father of his Country, that no occasion could be more appropriate for further manifestation of that intere. . i: n;.lwlt' .f mr r""' me Ind ll.A W aariinrrtnn ...,.....t. - rca ham mclrncten fm. t to four of Bulpbur, lias seemed to make tbe remedy more effirietrV., V W. ffl HERRICK, W. Med. and Sur. Jour. Cbas. L. Wilson, Ed, Chicago Jour. OZONE. Tk. ll.T.mlr'i ;zette acknowledges ;,. l,!iiions to Caleb S. Hallowell of that place, for the following remarks on Ozone: "Oxnne. to wliirh Dr. Hir.1 eerwJils th" ehol era, wh li-eoert by Pruf-snor Schoiiheiu. the invrnlor of gun eolton. It is jeni-rat'd hy Ihe n...m of rUrtriritv ihroorli air, and m the rmiwr of a peculiar nAot pereiet tnrui the working of an electric machinr. or iilier if i I "'' men oi planning aim rnnn" ihroiighoiit every community in our extend ed country were to use their influence to turn the stream of exendilme, on the en- ming Fourth of July, towards the fund for ; this Monument, it would he a beamiful and appropriate commemoration, worthy of the People and of the Man to whom the Nation is so much indebted for the results of that eventful day. Vmdd not each and every one he willing to devote the extra expenditure iiMiallj incurred nn this anni- ; versa ry to so holy a purpose?" It is be- ; lieved that ihey vould, nnd they are earn esliy invited to do so. The public Tress, it is' hoped, will aid the cause, and every where recommend this plan; and the Wires nnd Daughters of America are re. quested to lend their influence to the noble undertaking. Let the announcement of such a purjKiso he given some days pre vious to ibe Fourth of July, and commit- mmointcd to receive and transmit to i i i i:i. i .u.i. . .....ini.. nr mir KirfiKfvui iiviiliimik- ioal orofession. until actual exper.m-n., ; ? . - . " . e,. .hall have established the correctness f "J-: ' r ihe theory advanced. j Oxon" it ' it. may readily he r,nentl We have the evidence of a gentleman I l(y rxpoiiin common phoihoros to moim sir, and ( a;, ritv of the Inch standing of Dr. ! it' in j.rob-.ble Ihe ecn liar smell f phwpoonw arw- Ol HUH t o oi 7 -.ii i 11.. r.m ll.. nB.iio at til in " I J J Ilir.l a a man ot srleiililx aiiamm.-ms, nnd the Buffalo Commercial Advertiser also certifies to the same effect. The Chicago Journr.l, in its introductory head ing to the communication says: that "the excitement caused by the discovery has been heightened by the success it has met ;ih in . Ho where almost every citizen nlwf aur. 'The question hsa been asked, what is oxoneT In answer we gi?e the words of Brrteliils: 'We har lima arrived at Ihe liichty imrlanl result tlixt ozont m no peculmr eleuirul, nor any coni liiiixlioii of known elrments. but ia oiyu g Mculiarlv modified. "I,riir"h has aawrted that galtar.ixei mir, ow ,t ia ihe it eonlains, can bo iwod lo ad- APrOlNTMENTS BY THE PRESIDENT4. TO FILL VACAICCIES. ThoaaasvM. Foote, f New York.lo be Chrpi "Affaire ! New Uresada.ia liaef Bonjaniia A. Billlack, ocaMrf. 'T . Alesauder K. McClnnr. of Mawwppi. to be f Charge rAnairva to Bothrwjp lien of Jobs. Ap pirion, rerpiea. KUphen VgJrotHe, nf iNortli Carolina, in d ion sol at Tork'aTilaud, In lien of J. T. Pickett, re signed. ' REMOVALS. George P. Marsh, of Wrmnt, to b M'"i''" nesidant at ConsUntinopW, in of Dnbtioy 8. 'err, recalled. , ' Tl.on.aa W. China, of Louisiana, to be Clmrgo 'Kr.iM m ihm Kinadom of th Two 8irilis. John Trnn.biill Van Alen, of New York, lo be Charts d'Aftaires to the Republic of Ecuador, in lien of Van Urngh IJviiirton, rrcnlled. John V. B. Ivia. of Mscliiuwtl, ta be Se aretarv of Iegalion lo F.njrli'd. Ixrenxi Draper, of New Yk, to b Consul at Havre de Grace, in lieu of Win. J. Staples, re called. Edwanl Kent, rf Maine, to U Colianl at Rio Janeiro, in lif-u of Gorbaiii Parks, recalled. Kev. Thomas Sewall, of Mirylitnd, tn he Con mil al St. J'i:o de Cula, in lie of John W. Ilold inff. r.call(.ft. Uailey M. Edupy, of Nilh CaroIinaTto l Con sul at Prrnanihup", in liea of C. G. Salinaa, ( furrigner,) reniovrd. col. Benton. Xh Missouri papers are giving llio Gttptt1,1 tet?citly at Jefler. on citjr hf'tfr. Bentoni The portions f it which, bavo reacjird us are d. Toled jrjaiaw to Mr. CallMMin, and are bk. ter enough. He lakes I tie ground broadJy, that r,inrrrss. and nobody but Congress, Ki a at trio ritTrtt to leirinlnte on the subject of! in hia handa; and lie decided it -1 - T.rr;iriethat this was ! H sn immnae boon to the anli-i-laverj party. , '-' . - . l-j;n m.H 1 then ao numerous and ardent; but it waa not tu the diK:tnne of Jefferson, MsjMson, "n ! on, jc, wlich he rendered them. Tex..w Monroe, and all good JJCmoCraiS "1 then onra a part of Ixmh-lana to Ida lower Rio Grande; Urge eoof lo lorm mx rsl or ita common Slate". It was nil lv lemlory, ant looked tn a the liatnral outlet of Die unu'-hi-rn Hi tm, with their great inrreaaing alnvn popolj. Iiqii. It was given lo Hi iving 01 rprtin nir, "lie proceeds to aay that in giving hia eahinet enpport, whore his voice waa so potential to t,. aholitkaV of atsTery over a million of square mi Ja LoabjiSM, Mr. Calhonn did more lhan auy tnne m baa ver done tuwarda abolmhing flavery in the world. Holding aa he then did. the one-rirtli art of the veto power, and commanding hi font! inn was, ana aoathern man and a cabinet minister a leading eawoei nimwer-uie larjf.st rjneatien ?er otarled of Jreo or la soil, w u,eU in lavor oi lr-e. has beheld or experienced its effects, in v.ntajre for bleaching, and is, in fad, one of the the preirnmilvry sunptoms ot cholera. j A. 1". CnmmrrcittL J Dr. mi Sir: In compliance with the re cpiest of. my friend Dr. J. II. Bird, I have mude the following brief s nopsis of a let ter from him, sent to me for publication in the North Western MedHil nnd Surgical Journal, which, together with a few addi j tional remark which I have made, you will please publish in order that ihe mem bers of the medical profession and our oil. izens cenerallv, may have the means of be derived Irom iitnat effective blenching scents known.' Jitrir. Wc would caution persons a. gainst ihe use of slacked lime. It has no more virtue lhan so much snnd. Un slacked lime, according to the testimony of all who have tried it, possesses great virtue. Where the former has leen used it should be immediately substituted by the latter.--JiV,o' Whig. Mr. Calhoun himself has again and again recognixed it first in 1820, nnd again on the Sd of March, 1845, when, as Secretary of Slate. Jie abolished slavery in a large portion of iexas. He charges mat ir. ; BW,V j,y treaty, and that treaty the work of Mr. Calhoun's anti-Wibnof resolutions in 1847 j Monroe's cabinet Mr. Calhonn being a inenilr. were disunion in disguise that his objeCI And here there i. ,m room for denial and .. . . r,. . f. ' rreollection. For a loii(j lune Mr. A.l.irui bor9 is a dissolution of the Union that the reso- j ti A frjf of lutions ol the Missouri Legis.ature were : ))iun p.ed him iih il m Hi Moure of Je. copied from Mr. Calhoun s, nnd were designed t promote his disunion scheme that they were palmed ofTupon the Le gislature and people of Missouri who have only lo undeistnnd ! roudiale ihem. "In he says, Mr. Calhonn boiiijr a mem- her of President Monroe's Calunel, was required to p.ve hia opinion in writing on the piwlion of growth of i!jr rtulea in the wttithvrrxt was tn ' m I .j(ft uyr of ( oiiereux to iiraliibil slavery in lerri- nrt- three hundred ai'd fifly tltmisand square mil 0 are giau lo innii"",u u.mi m .,...r.u tnriMI Bu(j ttr couslilimonalUV 01 me nn arc- anhieet lo Ameri'-nn fiavery, w: mi ( n r in as been appointed be i'fsident 1 ayior ! tiou of ilu Calhoun s, nnd were preaentalivea. Mr. Adams wax then alive, Rn,i preeent. aun soon uifitcatea inn imUi of limiory. Me fhowrd that there Waa a do-minn m the chi nel. iijion llie oiiil: he was neiiinl il Mr Cal honn for it and Mr. Calhoun lienig a eo utlner:i mail, and the majority of Ihe CMlin t roulhern . he Carried the day, and Texan wa lost. Hy llmt ceecinn the eipaiiaion of alavery a n tnied; Hi. has been appointed by J'residenl 1 ayior ! turn of the act for the admissmn or Miasnon into keeper of the Pumficrj'Pbint Light House, lite Caion, and which arrlinn applied Ihe imti i i i i .. ,, L-.-,r f il. Hnttoraa slavery clause of the Ordinance nl lir?7. ! niore and Joseph Jenne.t keerof the Hattcras . Light Horse, iu plarVrf ihe present in- j Jr rilllOIIU hr1 wnlir,t n,H,.io in f- Tho Boston Journal of Fiidav has a record of some 27 vessels, already on ihe passage to California; and this number id beinj daily augmented. both removed four ciiinhents. 1 hey were years ago by Mr. Polk, fir no other cause except that they were Whigs. 'uhin1on (Ar. C.) Whig. lestinL' Ihe benefits lo lie derivi . i ' i . - 1 . .. I. uu-lu ll..ki-aeoit the General Agent of the Society the col- j wnai is stmposi-u o . . I 1.1 . L . 1 lections which may then le made. n meoy ior rmm-ra. ; - For Ihe information of the Public it may I The facts stated in the letter referred to , Thf Mran9 fM. 1 he New be propr to slate that, since ihe last above, are briefly as follows: Orleans Delta publishes a map of the in- I'ourth of Julv, when the conner-sione of About six months since, Dr. Bird nnd Iin(ia, district, and gives fho number of We do not ih nk that President Taylor h:is shown cither want of talent or want of fairness iu turning out men w ho. previ ous to his election, abued him in the most libellous nnd digraceul manner. On the contrary, we lament the want of vor of the conetiluliniiality of the at; and no whi'P'r wa eer heard from him lo th contrary. ; nut. I the iiilroJiKtion nf hia fire-hand reaoliiliona twi-nly-aeven yenra after. Tnrae reaolnlions, Mr. 1 Benton aaya. were introduced by Mr. Calhonn. lo make a tat for himself at the Presidential elec tion which no Xnrihnrn mall eoilld aland. Hefore (he debate came on. however, Ihr proof of the opinion which Mr Calhrnm I "20, were lioiirhl forward to la utter confusion and I he en tire prostration of hia resolution. These jM-nnfs consisted of Ihe original interrogation proinundd lo his Cabinet bv Mr. Monroe, in hi own hand- fro.ii lum to a . ! friend, statiuir that these qneetioiis were answered decency and hb'hmindedncss in those of- '; wrfting. and i!e draft of a letter a i i i .1 : fHend, statiuff that these qiieetioui HCe-noiiMTS vv no, w lint- ammo imi; .m- .-..i.. u.. . i... r ,i.- i'..k;.,.t . ii. f. ' amnnaiiTeiy v ri ry niriunri ui didnte before election, would sloop alter- ( Mr rwim, "r rminit. included. In add.tion to .i . ni i..:.i ,k ...rl- ka ' mvaelf were led into a conversation tnion . ..j. .. ,, t irm. il, number I wants to retain office under him ay these records is a piaf-affe from the liary of J. Q llie iiioiiwuieiii us uiio, im; j . euuniiB uiiw i .m.i ... vv, .... . , ii . ' j . .- . r ... il.. i i : ..A h. .,:ih- elTects of atmospheric influences in ..7 . fl....i , nan. ih- nml,,r of whine tor il. Philadelphia Bulletin. . Adams, sial.ng t!ie aa.i.s facti eeneermng ihe ac- IH t II Aiiilj uinaui tiit ivj iaj ' j - i ii utniprs . - - f reached an elevation of about twenty-six producing epuiemic. irom reaoing an nr. dwelling in them 8,000 oi , - feet above fhe surface, willi a foundation j tide, from a German chemist, in one ! torn f the members ef Mr. Monroes t almiei. '.-7- it i I I J. i -w.,,-,7. r.f These testimonies, Mr Beaton insisls, are over- j trcirr ituruircu tutu -..... j ' u i m r !k of solid masonry Si feet square at the hot- j our periodicals, in which it was contended, jj ad ttr J)ea,l Sea. Gold arrirett at this pttrt from Califar- beantilul white marble and elevated five hundred feet, is to he erected. The walls of gneiss and marble are fifteen feet in thickness, leaving a cavity of twenty-five feet square, in which the staircase of iron, ascending to the summit, will be placed; and the whole structure, when finished, will be. it is believed, the greatest work that influenza depended upon the presence T , i ,.nru f,r ,k- II. S. Navv. had of uxone, and that the severity and numlier cofnrnlln,j ,,f te American Expediiion to of the attacks, as shown l.y chemical ana- ,hp Do,d s He hBS rjen .t Narra lysis, vvns always in proportion to the a- Miv, f(r,hat Uxpeditioti an elaloraie woik ni.mnt of this substance in Ihe atmosphere. f 500 e. j8ira,ed by numenms Taking thui statement in connection wail n ,.,..,-,. h is p!enlidlV Uosesox CniNTV. N. C. June 7. 1849 Coi. J. (. Tutttn Dear Sir Mwl heartily do I wish yon sneers in your very laudable enter- jri of aiding (lie farmers of .North Carolina in ; ()f jj1(, ntTe reflecting im"rishable honor j l...k.i.K H.e.r r,ch la.nl. rrrher, and their poor ' ,hc roiMI and ,,ra,i,de of the A- lunos pooa im iifiprovenirm wmv-o jv -p-r- , - . . , .. . cally vindicate-Bonimer'a patent for ,n.k.oC me ncail People, by whose contributions compost manure- one m hich promise to put a alone II Is expccieu lo lie compieiea naw face on things wherever it is appreciated. Under ila influence, the odious and sinful practice : of wearing owl lands, and then turning them out 1 to grow uj in hrooin and plunt hulie, nnd mel ancholy puis thirkets, must cease, anO a stale ol oov. jirosperily to the fanntiijj interest of Ins rtate must set in, which rannit now be anticipated. It is a maUer wlorh is easily lestet. and for a comparatively tr. fling conideralion, every farmer j can te at liberty to prove it for himself. SSonie lime since, I mlde two small heaps upon Hommer's pnaeipte, and fully leated its virtue. ' thousand. orv iiise sirsw. mm m. mnL rn wen rmien. . . , ... i i- i ' r. , ..... .. .. and twenty thousand ocniiie wit run the inn in o or u weeaa, ana inal. too, wnen me weainer , - . the fnct that cholera is generally preceded by influenzas, as shown bv its history, we were led to ihe conclusion that both dis eases might be dependent upon ihe same influence, modified in degree nccording to the o-realer or less Quantity of ihis delete- rious agent iresent in the atmosphere at ! the time. The next step in the invesliga. GEO. WATTERSTON. lion whs to determine what ncent would Sec'y Wm!i. Nat. Mon. So. i romltorart the influence and destroy the The TuWic Journals thmu-jhout I lis eotmtry : de!eleriou properties of o:oC. The ae friemlly lo the object are reqnrs-.ed lo copy Ihe ,-hemical knowle.liro of Dr. Bird enabled him to suirirest at once the well THE CITY OF CINCINNATI. ' known substance sulyhtir as jwissessing From lie Snranmak RepubUf. ,he properly of acting upon it in SU h H Th riiv of Cinciiinaii "fiuirteen vears manner n to neutralize its influence. aso contained a poiiulalion of thirty-four i Now there are one hundred : whelininff Mr. Calhoun altempls lo esrape it hy ..i-ih. ik.t f iaAAiiri kt ll.e nrefedi nir HMsioil . had nil Arrival of the U. S. hip lA-xing. I reaj.m herself tor admissiou as a member of ton. the Union, sit bad fw md a eonavrtmiM ana The U. S. ship Loxingt.m, whose nr. govern, in accordance with an act of Ch- i i i i i I ' g""- Her admuaaon was refus-d on the ground rival here has been so loner and anxiously c,mtimH m4mlU of ,ry: ..d eh- expected, arrived off Sandy Hook early on , w remanded back t have the objeciinnahie pm- ,,nrl , m,,niinit and is now snfflv imuired ' vmion rtnaniril Klie refuwrd lo oillDlv m ilh the maps and engravings, it is Miieuomiv J . . : . r . ' - . , l S. e. I i .. .I. ...I I.. .. . . t. RX ... - renn is: I mn. and at th aieirt aeKanoii arain kins ked got op, by Lea & Blanchard, of 1'h.ladel. wun ner v r.ao .... ..v ; ' V Con fvr ad.,.".n. w,lh her phia. and constitute one of the most use- ! N7 anl. Ihe Lexington I.ns been enw4iM&m it orini,,v Mr. Calhoun ful and deeply interesting volume which absent 3o months, and has on board, as lh,( MB-onri W,M then . Siats.-ihat if re ),. u,.,, tl,..iv issued from the ores, freight from California, twelve hundred ' fused admiaon in the Union she would still have Ii !. ,r orer iih rra nh iisitiict ..res 1 nnd eighteen ounrs of grain gold, having , been Slate, independent of ,lUe Uni-a. and Ihe C.r the poetic, slirring ailvenlure for the ; landedat Valparaiso fo.ir hundred and fifly. common reader, and deep science and .hi-, r-ight kiiuiI- inking ihe ..B amount losophy f..r Ihe slulent. It will at once brought from CalTmrnia 1,676 jH.unda troy add greatly In the knowledge .r the in- weight, va.uea at Jiu,uuu, j nis is uc- wh en tn .-south accepted. ii i .L II 1 lif vtul tn lu ihe biro-est amount of old Mr. Hen'on saa lhat ererv pari of Ibis slate- lereshng regions exploretl, ami to the well. , Uexl to in the I. rg. a,"" 11 ; nwill erroneous,-. nd ,e Wh a decree . to de earned fame of its accomplished author. j "h.jped to the IJinled h ales at any one nmnu. Calhov,,.e.n..rV. j lime previous lo the sailing of this vessel. ., , f rol!ml, ,,, ol- xjjsurf follow .!, anddid not r,rw,. .'n Ifljo (V.e rrinir Pari The Lexin.totl also bring a number of ' nrreede the compromise act. Thai a. I was nnsaed American dominion, and peeiit--d lo a fnmvn king- This was nii"llirr prent grrfic:ilioii is il,o allilioiiils; Wut ii was n-t all. There w:is a strip of land, about large enough f-r t vi plains, ly i nr upon the Arkansas and Red rivers, snd heiern Texas and the 36 deg. 30 niin. of north lai.mdV. Thia atrip having e-eaped Ihe cnmprninise Imp nn one side, and Ihe Trxaa pension on Ihe oilier, open to the formation of two resprei -Uir. Slates. Mr. Calhonn was then still catum-i nun-ii-ler Secretary al War had Ihe IioIiuuk i n!r h:s care and was ridinj t lie hohhv of tln-ir nn!i. Talion. He required this slrip to be civu nn n the India oh for their permanent abode; and it, also, was lost to the slave States. "All Imisiani was then gone fron". Iliein ex cept the fragment which was contained in Ihe SlHles of Miaeoitri ami liiisiMiia, nnd in ll.e Ter ritory of Arkansas. Even this frnj;meiit ajijareil lo he loo much lo he left lo the slave !St;ilrs. ami a nhco forty miles wide, and Ihrre hundred nule Intijr, was cut ofi from Aikansnx and J ven lo llie Ind. .ins; and the slaveholder wi'liihr -les iijh m , the siice. were required lo remove from lln- eui t,tf part, and f.ill back wilhni li e cm. trailed lini't. This was done hy Ihe I ml nn ra'y Ihe lieaty neulialcd hv a jn-nlrge of Mr. t 'hIIioiiu'k. He waa then Vice Piesjtleiit ol Ihr United Si atea, and President of the Senate I waa a memlier f the Senate opposed to the ratification of Hub treaty and came a it Inn one or Iwo votes of deflating if. 'I'll' slightest help from. Mr. Calhoun wmild have defealed il, and sav.d ihe slave Male nf Ar kaiixns that territory, am! those salt spnnr, ll.e loss of which she now has lo lament. 'I'skm nl together the compromise Ihe Texas c-mimi Ihe Indian domain and the slice from Arbnnrn., and Mr- Calhoun did more, in leaa time, tn (k. ih shivery. dunillisJi its area, and increase lliatrf free soil, than anv man that has ever appeared nn the face of the rajih; aud of I his the a ni -si;i i e probable centre of a new confederacy.- n party of Ihe North were fully aensihle. ami duly were willing to contribute to such a result, and lo griil- ful. 'I h'-y grave proof of their prniinnl.- avoid it, the Northern it.eiiilarra opoed lo Iter j ,J r. ('ullioiin was lh n candidate for Vice I'ipm adinsMon, were forced to projiueo, COinjiromise, ; ,,1 Df (Jinled Slates; he beeame ihe f.ivonie of the North h.-aiii(r eveu Add I. Mi ou fre-e (toil trn'k hT .him hi rolm c . i 1 1 wda not very favorable. The degree of heal, in " ,nc cny proper, aim it win noi re my heaai, waa not an great, the bth day, as it ia ' quire many years to double this lust num. in your now decomposing in Mr. t urtia lot iu her. Kxyetleville Ihe 3d day. I trust that many of Ilia farmers in Cumberland, and the adjoining Coun ties, will avail themselves of the opportunity which your evpenment there will afford them, to see aud judge foy pteinselve. Thai heap of crude mate- . rials, catalog probably nni mire lhan 5 lo 7 dol lars, in I ha coarse of a few weeks a ill be a mound of pulverised mauure, worth, I should suppose, 30 j to 4U dollars. A ROBSON FARMER. The secret of all this is not so much the position ol" the town, for lhat of t?t. Louis In searching for facts to support this conclusion, it was found that cholera had never prevailed in the vicinity of sulphur springs, or in situations where this sub stance abounds; hence the conclusion, that sulphur might be, and probably was, the antidote for cholera. lo one of our recent medical journals, e- ... . l g , .a f . . correspondent, in a private note relating curiously wrought gt.ns cn (Hurra irom me . .w.ren on,, .r-u .,,e consriinu to some li.He matters of l,u8,ness, drops ; -. ns, o urass , 4 n guns, ' w - tH V Co i. , the following remarks: Tin year will, I j pouuuers. .veir iw. rw. ; think, bo niorf eventful and extraordinary j j in Europe than trie last. Your commer- We shall not lei ourselves down to the ; cial relations may be more aud more dis- J lvcl occupied in lhat Convention by .Mr. tnrbed. Never were the dcslinies of; Badger. Standard. France more uncertain." iV. Y. Journal of Commerce. The man who shot at lh Queen of and some other places is yet more f.rtu- i n nrtrcle appeared describing the method Kf i;,Ild ,ri k)av(.ri rom Limeri. k. The first instance that we have ever heard, "by tale or history," of a man's falling vp stairs. A regular Iri.htr.an's hoist, thnl! Ralrigh lirgitler. naie. n ties mainiy iinne enrcrprise ami , - r?"" V Ireland, named Jame Hamilton, aged 22. R. 0. BriUon, Esq. of Granville, has, 1 ( persevering indu-try of the population. In ! supplying ihe means of deiermining wnetn- ( Thc Lndl,n (ji, . e learn, been appointed President rf the (Niu-'mnati l.lmri konnnl.la nd wlUno.o er or not it was orescnt at the verv lime -..r . ... i . . n n. . - rr.. i - , ... - i "Lnon fhe shot be nir Bred her Maiestv 1 uaieign ann vjqmoii ivaii tioao, vice j . j L: l:-l 1.1- Tf. . ! . r .1 . . n-knn ekjan ltrinninrr n m.L. Ila U Mill llie ril'n in IIIK 411 rI, IU I .null "M . O . . . . " in u iiumnrame. ine aruiocracv oi too i " ' v .ii . .. ua K. . . - , . .. . - - . vi: i.. : 1 ri..j. - , , P1 lace is composed of croeers. ilrv-iroods dealer, Hid mechanics. Maoy of these last bare amassed immense fortunes, made subsequently liy Itimself and by Drs. Bird, Dlanev- and myself from day lo day, since that lime, show lhat ozone is present in oar almosphere, and lhat the amount is in jiroportion to fhe severity of the disease About a week since When this Administration came into power there teas tint a Whig in the thirty which they use with commendable libe Ftrreign Missions maintained by fhe Uni. ! rality; and to (he subscriptions of mecban. ted Slates; not a Whig fJling the office' ics Professor Mitchell was chiejfly inilebt of Marsha, District Attorney, Collector. 1 cd for the many thousand reouired to e- .Stiral Officer, Inspector, Receiver of ' rect tbe magnihcenl Olrservatorv of Cin- fr"'n lime to time lie Moneys, Krguter, 6e.; not a Whig 1 cinnati, now the admiration of the country, Dr. Bird determined to try the effects of Jill tag a Post Office the .emoluments of and to place in it all Ihe necessary insfni- sulphur upon himself and others troubled, vhich were tcvrthu the attention of a De- ; ments for astronomical purposes. Amonxr " nearlr all have been more or less of mocratic partisan, certainly not tilling an them is the great refracting telescope, -j on ice ot tne ciass wiucn requires i tic in- second in tho United States lo tqat .of c. unbent to pass the ordeal of tbe Senate. Cambridge alone. " In no place does a At Washington, two Auditors, whose whole more healthy state r morals and good adult lives hare been spent in office, nnd habis"exist. Public npinbn requires ere whose knowledge of the pecular duties of ry young man o wmk. Any one not their bureaus rendered their retention de- ' havinc some visible and resnectable r. ployment would solicit in vnin the hand of appeared immediately aware ot the escape t i-L i iai .-ii.l i jf i . t Dr. Bird's experiments, as well aslhoae ! wmcn l pro loenna.iy naa. ana or ; - , - A iiiiiiiiriH rust- no .ii i imt raiiinj:r unoi. i , 1 appearance nmong tis. sirable, have leen succeaaitvly npared by Jackson, Van B-uren, and Polk, ns mono, ments of Democratic liberality, though in fiict, constituting, under (lie circumstances, exceptions which go to prove that pro- i soi iTicit Piitvrn or up in tne carriage under , . . . the fi'elrngs f excitement naturally ercat- I I Jit. v t.Jj I. ed by such an occurrence. Tbe people, The Cincinnati Dajy Atlas publishes a however, loudly cheered fhe Queen; and J sta'cment to show fhe-4ncrease of ihe vote she rose, recovered her presence of mind, j f ihe North Western Stwtcs since 1840, and warmly acknowledged the expressions ! as lul.yv. ofjoynlty and affeciion towards her person. ) Only fhe Princess Royal and ihe Prince of Wales were iu the carriage at the time, j late, with uneasy sensations, slight pain, calculated that 300 mem- A-c. in the digestive organs. Iiersofthe new Legislative A-sembly of Thc result was entirely satisfactory, so 1 France are or have .been journalists. j much so lhat Dr. Bin! came immediately 1 j to my office, and requested me as a friend ' Death of Maria Edgeirorth.Tht: lile- i Ohio. Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa 1840. 273.439 1 lfi.90G 93.(117 4l.nfi8 CI 63 Total, 1P43. 32H.5C0 i5..:.vi 125.IJI fa. II If. 3!I,M'.G 2-I.-293 731,47 constilnlion ftanird under Lhe sania year; and presented to t ongretai in ttu- nionlh l flo- vemher following Congresa in that year having met on the aeo-nd Moitdiiv in NoVemUer. Here ; llieii is an error of a venr in viinl nf lime, nml a 1 I rjiir position of events in ptrnt of fact. The ' con-litnlion of Missonri was rrade after llie rotn : promise, and in pursuance ofi:; and uol fo know i that inncli waa to khnw nothing at all about it. I Mr. Calhonn says llie admission ws refused, and 1 the eonsliltilion remanded bark, hecanse il admitt J e!s4avery in Missouri. T'lia is a gTent ei ror. The , set of Congress under wliicltjlie Mimmil coiikIi- I iHliA.Sr., mail. Mrlmi. ffw. l ...Mt in t i m 1 1 1 M a lift her conel it ol ion could tint be, ainl was not, refused on lhat g round, llie admission waa not refnaed fur lhal canee, nor for any thing like it, nor for auy thing in relation to slavery, but llie direct op posite for a clause in relation to free people of color, ami hy which, it was contended, llie cm Xriia of .-llier Stairs mihl he prevented from re moving to Ihe Slate "I Missouri. The rlanse whs Ihiar'-Vo pt rrrut fi e negro ami miillattn from cowing to, ami renting in tKit Suite, under any ' jiielext whatever The provision was found in , clause 4, section 2G. of article 3, of the ronslilu- !tion, and was ohjeeled to as being incoiLxisteti with the constitution of the United Stales, and Ihe rights of Ihe Slates, as in some of Unw Stales tree people of color in'ghl In- cilizeiM. 'I Ilia was , lhe clan objected lo, and not lhe ue aancliun 1 ing "lavery. Mr. Calhonn says lhe State refused r comply j with lhe requisition of Concreee. This is more ! error. Tie- Slate complied immediately; the le gislative assent to the required construction uf the to test iu efficacy in my practice, bul to rary world and a hot of juvenile readers ay rmihmg to others iih regard to the wilt learn with sortow,jhnt fhe celebrated ingredients used until facts should justify.) Mafia tdgeworth, fhe once popular novel- I .ki .: 1.1. i i .: : ... nr.i .1 ... pi . - - 1 uuin ruuiisuie clause iirmr iriveii on llir u.n ii.il Showmg an mcn-ase in the vote of for- I fJJin,p- iu , Mnr ,rr- ,,e M the Shl,; ty per cent, in eight years, equal to 6fiy per cent in ten venrs, equal to the forof a daughter of one of the wealthy men oft'"' public announcement as a discoverf. i 'sl dead. She died after; llie place. Nearly every department of human in dustry has lis followers in Cincinnati: and 1 The benefici! use in my practice effects resulting fromjta riilncss. Monday, ftfay 2IH, at Edgewo ce were such as to con. 1 town, in the 'County -f Longford, Irela . :.. ...:i:. i ' Clu ! I o l 1 a few hours till- I and. knrwked again with her constitution at Ihe door of Congress al the next sewioii. and thai misgave vole of Virginia, North Carolina nnd Lou- ltirr Xn ue mrmX agitaiing-ihscuasion thai erer look place in I ongresa. I Ins is tlie very error m ine monii. TI7e Slale never applied lo Congress a- vince mo at once of its utility iu lhe class lh was in her 63J jrar. ol case described above. During the last few days Drs. Bird, Rlaney and my - n nsre continued t use thia uppnrexrtly scnption is the rule. A tew subordinate everv imamnable nrodue.t .P the ail finrl. clerks, useful in their respective spheres, a ready sale there. The-ctry ia pnved, it and maliciously called Whigs ,y ihnse ; is lighted witn eaa. it is covered with who wished to get their places, escaped churches, academies, and common schools ! simple remedy to the exclusion of nearly I .. I .l'L I . 11 n ... ... .. . . i .. .. J aiso me nurrtcane. i tie last aim icasi oi and it is supplied with goid wafer, which a11 olaers in all cases with,chn!eric symp- Dt-mociatic I'residonis turned out every ; is forced up from fhe Ohio river to reser- I turns. The result has been wonderful. Whig he could, and hia worst enemies, voirs on the heights, and thence distributed ; All the premonitory symptoms, such as among his own party, cannot accuse him over the town in pipes. There arc many ' P"'". a sense of fullness, unnatural move, of ever appointing one to an office which hundreds of acres about the town covered ' ments, slight diarrhoea, Scc have uniform a Democrat could be found to fill. , with the vine, and Mr. -Longworth, for- j h yielded at once to a single dose of three Speaking generally, we may say, w iili rne'rly an humble mechanic in Savannah, j r four grains of sulphur, truth, that all the offices of the country now a man worth 3,000,000, and liberal j ' rases where either cramps, diarrhoea TevvCi!,nSKl,'e, 88 ,,eJond ,l,e e41C,, "f as a Pr'nce, manufactures a champagne j rr vomiting have been present, and in the Whigs i, at much so as if they were con. scarcely inferior in delsjhcy of flavor tn i fact, where all these symploms have ex. slUutumally ineligible. A Whig would ( the best French wine of that. name. Ho j istfd in conjunction, the use of sulpUur,in have stood a better chance of receivinrr 1 has ncrf.-cipd tl.; i.., !.,:: i ih a,nrn amA - .t c... r, i -......r,,i,. w. in i ii i; i ii tiirr, ' v. HiHiiu ui-Bu.ifiuM i ii i irv ut wiifc J j .i . ..ii. i i.i-s. .. .. nours, nas naa me etwcl to ameliorate. the patient's condition at once, and when used isiana in the South and to the total vote of Massachusetts, Connecticut und Rhode Island in the North! By fhe census of 18')0 fhe increase will .b"e fast deal more than these totals. Tbe population of the North ""Western ; ARRIVALS I S,ate" wns 2.900,000 in 194Q, The edi- Jnna 14.-Slearor ov. Graham, willrGood. ' ,or s0,s il d,nvn Rt 4,0U04000 1111850, and for W UHall, J Weasel, II A MItlbar, F J Hill, ; adds: n "-TH: ivF, Vw' 1 " I - P'-i" l- '" yeas, will not elans before COMMERCIAL RECORD. nicuaaiet, 1 MeUamelrlt A London. T Hill. D : ih. r mi. vi-i... . McNeill. N Marak.r: A Cmnhell t- :n i ... .L " . e. Y. J - "J cabinet of which Mr. Calhonn was a member, aud wr.z r i w... tmiri nifiii ine True oi ait ina siave'i ... . . .. an Executive appointment at lhe hands of the Emperor of Russia or the Grand Sul tan lhan at the hands of James K. Polk the President of the Democratic Party. ' Lynchburg Virginian. vine dressers and others acquainted with all fho processes used in France. The German emigrants, of whom perhaps some thirty or forty thousand have fi.und a home in and about Cincinnati, produce a gen- llitlA rirwlr flnrl tltine I7k!n., . U . The only paper in lhe Lnion lhat has, ! K d n .t,- i j to our knowledge, taken ground against hotels of the cilv President Taylor for responding to the re- rpieal of lady Franklin (hat our Govern ment would aid in lhe efforts made by lhe English Government, to discover, ifpogsi ble, her husband, and the crew of iht Ex- ploring Expedition under bis command is the Nashville Union. The editor says: "If was done to please her Majetty Quern Victoria, and to tickje lhe British aristo cracy." Was there ever tuch baseness? How would the heart of every American beat wiih joy, if an American ship should be the happy means of discovering the veteran navigator and his crew, rescuing them from a continent of ice and snow, and restoring them "to their home, country, and frienda!" Boston Whig. We saw by a letter yesterday lhat the Aina Fire lu.ur.nce Company" of Hart, ford, Conn., have instructed their agent at St. Loui. to draw on them at from one to three dayf a.ghl fi,r all the Jo.ae. .u,uin ed by the fire at that place, as rapidly as those 8es can U adjured, without waiU ing Tor the expiration of snrty days. This commendable .act of punctuality will be appreciated by the public. ' , Irfvisville Courier, :.e a f. u,.. . " j - . ,- , .- . -I ow w iow, wnn gooaa ior i,mn cc worth, snel for a few hours, to dissipate entirely choUUy & r.eldsJ VVorth. A Hnnt, Salem Co. F II n it symptoms. , -. bo far as its efficacy has been tested in the worst stages of collapse, most satis lactory , results have been obtained. In two or three cases of the kind tbe effecM ofibo remedy has been tobritfgTiack pulse, to the wrist, restore wffmtfiio, lb surface. and stop the profuse diarrhcEa and vomit. In truth, the results obtained so far How to obtain Pure Air. Dissolve one pound of chloride oflim- in ten .rnlb.i.a nf water, one gallon of thi m;,fr- he,.. i inr?. into a sink every day at noon. -ili lx it.- have been such as to convince all f ... surrounding atmosphere pilre and healthy: who have administered it, and witnessed or, if preferable, half a peck of q(lick lime ! cfs, that if any remedy descrYes the !hrwmTlffect CVPrJ' Wek' WUl ,,aVe i aPrH?llation' ,hia ' tha pec'flc for cholera. T i j " j , I' having been determined to make this In crowded or damp rooms, the a r mar n..v.i .v ... h t .. l :' r .1 J. etic aiuiement, it is expectea in return be purified by keeping a saucer full of : that no ha.,., 1...!2 r..;il v, mnJ- chloride of lime, or a plate full of unslack- eo lime, on the floor. As soon as the lime slacks it is unfit fur use in rooms, but may be used to purify gutters or sinks. Ihe chloride of lime, when it has lost the odor, which distinguishes it from the com mon lime, is no longer useful as a purifier. When it isdes,rablo to obtain the pu riry.ng v.rtue of chloride of lime in large mutnuty sprinkle . littJe vioegmr uprtD Oil of ritriol, sprinkled upon chloride of hate, will disengage the chlorine still more rapidly, but this should be done only under the direction of a physician, as tbe chlorine gas, wnen breathed in large volume, has avery injurious effect- upon the lungs. . .. way to use cniorlde oj Hme a room is, (o kvep it in a saucer. in . 1 . (-liner lor or lir.iml what (1 niua rm tn t.a proposition to accomplish much by very simple means Although tbe results, so ebTaio"- l' "SV i"y in- Continue L'3 l J- will the moat errkient practice, in bad ca. f cholera, until they shall have leatej Ji, matter themselves, and formed taeir on conclotions; and also, that whatever be the confidence of individuals in this or any olher remedy, the? will not deoend their own judgment in any case, even of "gni symptoms, whenever it is possible to consult their physician. 4 t is snggested by Dr. Bird that a esmi binatroa with powdered charcoal, one part - " " " Zrr f 'f. w T IK,WlnK Blt Their vole ia also er.,,.1 (o ll.nl of McNeill MHrt,JBrtkar,k WTilline- Vermont. MaaMehiMrUa, Cnneetcnl, Rhode .-I " - " "-'" vj. o.Ki, . j.iuri . niora popntons, moat wealttiV. and mast Kyis, C A Brown, II Erambert, VV J McDairmid, cial of the Nortlieru Stalea! w l-nor, 1; h .Mallett, K t nller, Kev J Sim biona, T S MeCobbiM & Co, Jenkiu &. Roberts, Craven 8t McCain, Jacob Reich, Lnng, Webb &. commer- Co, Milieu Caia, J4R Lindsay, Williams, Hay wood &. Co, G 4tT Hobbard, Joha Stafford, R W Framming, R & French. June 17 -Steamer Rowan, with boat Odd Fel low -an low, with Roods for Coffin & Worth, Shel II Triese, Rankin ft. McLean, K A Schwentie, R Q A I ten, J II Thompson, ITCIewell, Washinir 4on Mining do. Smith At McNair, F Garret, J At R Gilmer, Tomlinanu, Lines Sl Co, J Newlin, C J &-"R S tfidmes, Isham Cot, Nail St Hall, II Sl E J Lilly, McRae Sl Monroe, Ri.-hmoud Co, E flale. Rowan Co, Marsh Sl Motrin, Tyson & rersea. Worth St. Sanders, Brown Sl James J II St X Marliaie.fl L My rover Sl Co, M C Gardner, J St'C J Cewles, J H Enais, T S I..tlrH6h, C A Brown. C G Yates, Blonnta Creek Co, A C Free man, S J Ilinadale, II Rose & Son, Randolph Co, Union Co, P Adams, J R Sl J Sloan, T R Tate, A S Holmes, Sl II McMillau, Cedar Falls Co, TT Hanf, G Makepeace, II Branson Sl Sen, J W Strange, II A London, C E Smdel. UNION HALL, SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y. THIS extensive Establishment has been great ly improved, by additions, by painting, &.C-, aud ia now opea for the reception of company, un. der tbe immediate supervision of the Proprietors, Mrs. Washington Putnam and IIr'nbv H. Ha THoan. Among the improvements is a new Par tor, 40 by 36 feet, and 15 feet hig'rt. making ia all a Parlor 90 feet long and 36 feet wide. Jnna 1649. 73 -3 w ' FISH! FISH! " JUST reoeived 10 qoarter barrels extra larga No. 1 Mess Mackerel. FULLER. Jns 18, 1849. 78-tf LONDON PORTER. CASKS snpMV LONDON PORTER, in nana nee mots. For sale hy SAM'L W. TILLINGH AST St. CO. Jaw 18, 1849. ' TStf Catwliy. A distressing accklent hap pened if the Hoofer Bill, in this county, on Friday last. Mr. Anderson Gallimore, in preparing a charge to blast a rock, waa instantly killed by nn untimely explosion of tho charge., He was an industrious and esteemed. laborer, and left a large family in a destitute situation. Ashborovgk Herald. ts Methoditt Church, South. The total numher of member of the Methodist Church South is said to be 491,786, viz: whiles 354.258, colored 134,153, Indians gam, bul was adni'lled in lhe recess, and Define the next meeting of Congree, and by prnrl?inatiiii from Prraident Monroe. The proelanuitinii was issued the ltltli of Angnrt. 11-120. in pursunnce lo the joint reaadiilinu of I "on press nf Ihe Sd of March of that year, expressly framed to ease the State I from api lying to C.Vurress again, hy refi'rrKng it to ' Jlie President Iu pnicluiro her admission aa nwti as she assented to the required construction of the New ork ru Iwad and neck with Imn lliroi git New H;iiujliire, Vermont and Klioile 1-I.umI was even throutjli MeaarluuM-lta snd (dine a nose jliead on the northern tra"V He actiiiilly beat Mr. Ail una in abolition stales url mlh jnn tiee. He had d ii more than him for tee mi!, and willi more merit, being himself an m.IiuI.iikiiI of slave e,ul. told him all lln in my tir.t " hoamnr, in tl e Seimle ol the I'uiti d Male", futir dsx afl'-r lie put in his fire-hranil leMilnlious, ;n niv speech In how him to lr tiie true mulior of the MexK 'in wsr " "I hare shewn that Mr CiiHionn supposed the ahol.lion of slavery in the Territory of LniiiMn; I lisve no Iu khew Hist he did llie hiiii e tlnlif; in a StHte in llir atale ol Texas, Hie case witn this: In the seseion of l4'-'43, two rewluti.n. wrrt adopted fr t',r admission of lhe Stale of Texas, oue, siusle and nheolnle, W'lh the Miwniiit eompremise in il: Ihe ..-ll.er aiillii.riing negulia liona aaith Texas for her ar'misMon w u equal fooling with the original Males. The S.-imtur fiom South Carolina was then Secretary M Mnt'-, and Tirtnnl President of lhe United Stie; ..i d in lhal capacity he reived upon lae atieolnlr irni'n tton, seh cled it, and ap.lied it lo the M;.te of Texas, and thus ran lhe Missouri cnniprumise Imr through that Slale, thereby aboli. hmp " "y h StHte in a prt ef a Slate inukm; om-part of lhe same Stale free soil, and "ne put I slm r oil. and so it stands at litis, da)! Before thM set l Mr. Calhonn, the whole Slate of Tex was flai" sil mad" mn by ihe saws and roust iintion ol J'exaa. The qnealion with our Courrv , Tiow lo admil her eonsieteiitl y with her r'gf.ls i a sovereign Slate? The Howe reeolnl"ii tnipcwJ a resiriclion an aholilinn, in fact, rf alavery. in all her territory shove 3Cd. 30m.. nnd llual was prei.t deal, for lhe State exten-'ed in ne prt in 4 di g.: the Senate's amendment .mpnsed n-ilnnc. but proposed In treat with Texas, and t" adinil her upon agreed lermR. Mr. Calhonn veiled iiponllis House resolnlion, adapted it, and lhrteb i:lof'-ed the JVIiaaoiiii coinprnmise, and imposed it. i ' "p on a Terrilury. bnl Uwn a State. lie nlo i.lu'l slavery in a Slste; and in 1 his he carried alw'i I oiiismi further than any Baruborner erer pro posed, for Ihey limit their abolitionism In Territo ries. This Mr. Calhonn did, and did a Ule a March ?d, 1845 There ia no dispute aiyi'it " lie could not throw Ihe blame upon Tyler, for he had nfieii boasted in the Senate that he liniiwlf hiid seiectrd thai resolution. 'I here is no slavery now in Mexico snd Califor nia; and consequently none in any territoiv br- lonjjing to the United Stales; and, onneeijiirnlU', ohnexioiis article. Now this proclamation was i?sncd from Ihe nothing pracliral or real iu lhe whole slavery question, 0r lhe people of the Unilrd Slulrf t" qnarrrl ahnul. There ia no alavery now by l in any territory; and it cannot (ret there hy la" exiept by act of Congress; and no such arl will be passed, or ever arkrd for. Tl.a dgma of no power in Conf reaa lo legislate npon slavery in ter ritories, kills that preteiieiou. .No leg-al ealablieli menl in California and New niexico is then to be looked for. Thnl ia certain. Equally certain il will never I established ill either of Ihem in point of fact. The people of both ternlories the Id inhabitants nre uoaniinonsly against il. Of the new emigrants, all those from hurope, Aaia.Mex- appeara to have been as completely fnrgoUen by Imn as waa the-ca tune I derision the same year in favor of the power of Congress to legislate upon the ubjeel of alavery in territories, aud to abolish it in territories', for lhat waa the effect of the com- ) promise art of 1820. He actually forgets lhat Missouri whs admitted upon a proclamation taaued , from the cabtaet council of which lis via a mem- t ler! and jrnea on to snbstkule the waiideringnt of i hia imagination for llnTyjnl HIT history of the ' pmintrv Niv.r n-. . .iitTf. LIiuJ.mh. I Mr. Bentnu, after tl.ps ertablisliing lhe fact that '0' 1 'lr"' "d Son'h Amer.CS. sndaU those Mr. Calhoun gmr hi. sane, on to the compromise fr",1n1,he non. lehold.o part of Ihe Vt Stales, act which admitted Missouri, goes on to show that , 1 ' ""n",-ly -igaiiwt it- There reinuins, it ta the very words of the Wilmot Prorata tn wrbalaDee all thai unanimous mass, on- H thinks, therefore, that this should be called the I Vi .'IT' r""U from "" "'holding parts of lbs Calhonn proviso, berar.se Mr. Calhonn was er- ! U"."M, Jlf he amallaet branch of the ly thirty years ahead of Wilmot in its support, be- , mlffr?,nn. ""d TVided on the qneatioii-many cause his position was then liiglwr, being a ,rm- o' ihT purpose of Getting r oi ber of th Cabinet, because ho was surceasf..!, ; l"vfT nnd Vry few so far Iu love willi it l" and "Mr. Wilmot waa not, aud finally because K0.,l,al a"rtuce for the plensure of having a hiiv Wilmot's proviso is a weak eonirivance to prevent U" .Wlth '" "w" Brot with the certainly of slavery fnwn being where it ia not. mid where it "om,n on "eeondbsst fn the contest. There is never will be; while Calhoun's nroviso waa a man. 1 !,',",T. "I time, erther in New Mexico or ,J75, exhibiting upon the returns ol last j lv blow to kill slaverr. where, it ll.e ...i.,l Ke ; t-l'trnia1 in taw ar in fact; aud will never br .. al 1 '' y -v It s i . . -r . . J ailKP iu )- !. a Xt . : II l.s year, too large increase ot 'ZH,'Z'AA. "Have you ground all the tools right sharp, as I told you this morning, when I went away?" aaid a carpenter to a rafher green lad whom he iad taken for an ap prentice. "All but the handsaw, ir," re plied the lad promptly; I couldn't get quite all the gaps out of that." Fobkion Its. ms. The proverbial fickleness of tho French character is illustrated by the follow, ing paragraphs from lato French papers; Lamartine, who was elected with universal se clamatioii by ton or eleven departments, that gave h.m more than 2,000,000 of suffrages j April 1848, is not only defeated, bat his name was not even manliorted in his own department ia the election of May 1849. Lodro Rollin. on the other hand, ia defend, ing whom, LamaniDO lost more of hia influence than by any other event aioce the revolalion, has been elected by five di (forest departmtwU. and by tho larfsst vol. polled by aay aftiM aaidjatM Mil OM. p 'IJ? a7T"fk!,li that fowr fi-ii tho f-raneb Natavnal Assembly, Me-ra Bocbea, Ma rie, Seosrd, and Marrast, have not bean ra-elasW. law, and where it would now exu4 in pnim 0f ici, ii tiiai otow nad not been struck. The pro viso of Mr. Calhonn actually abolished etaverv whs Louisiana o oi Mr. t alhoun scltially abolislied etaverv U""'K wnai rannoi oe aoue: ui ere it existed by law in all tho upper half of ; I1"" "ovrritnty of lhe Stales, where ll uisiatia from .16-30 to 49, and from the Mis- I """'V hstractiou! and no reality, sul either in law or in fact What. then. i sll ib prearnt nprnar abonlT abstraction! lhe abfirait rijjhl of doing whal cannot be done! the iimull I" iere u no aubelaiicr or aiseippi to the Rocky Mountains over a territory j IriL"c' ,n ,L nearly a thousand miles square nesrty a million square miles enough to make twenty states of 50,000 square miles each more in fact than, all California. New Mexico and Oregon put together Over all this vast territory fho proviso, anpported by Calhonn. abolished slavery abolished it, then existing by law, and shot it Of from the slave em igration tno sooth. Aad now what become, of lhe dogma, tn his month, and that of hia follow ers, so recently invented, of nepower iu Congress to legislate upon the aubject of alavery in territo ries? What becomes, ra their mouths, of the new (angled point of honor, just felt for the first time in thirty yearn, f insult to Slavo States in their xeiaaioa from settlement to tbo territories bought by the blood nnd treasure of the wbtio Union? Louisiana was a territory, snd aoogvesa legislated alavery out of a million square mile of it, and Mr. Calhoun supported that legislation. Looi stana was a, territory acquired by tho treasure, if not ty tho blood, of tho whole Union; and the pro viso of I820 supported by Mr, Calhoun, shot np i haif o it from slave emigration. If that is' iosott, he and bio followers havo stood bohsg im-" salted most remarkably well for abeoi thirty years. Tho Romnnj had a class of dispnles which lliey called de laim emprintt, that is to say, alsnil g""1' wool; and as the gnat has no wool, tbe d pute was about nothing. So it is of this dispute ani"K ns about excluding slavery from New Mexico and California: there is none there to exclude, and the dispute now raging is ahoaV nothing. PORT OF WILMINGTON. ARRIVALS. June P. Schr. Flora from New York. 10 Schr. Leesburg from railadelphia. 11. Barque Rio from Now York) trigs Sarah Elizabeth from Portsmouth, N. H-, Catherine from Kennebunk, Me., Julia Helen from Boston, Jerome from New bury port, Mass. Bros.ec Brtp Trifoa sad Geame from New York; Scars. Biaaatiam fross MarbU beada Mass Go. Fyd from Saoo. Ms Msriha Aaa (rem Beaufort,. C David Halo Crom New York, HarrisM Frioa from do., Alarie from do ts. W. Davis freaa jpo... 19 Brigs Nonpareil from Boston, Wellingsley from do.; 8ehf. Miaesots from Boston. 13 Brig Coafideaoe freas Boston; Schr. II. Westcott from Thilndelf hia. '' J !-
Fayetteville Observer [Weekly, 1816-1865] (Fayetteville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 19, 1849, edition 1
2
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