Newspapers / Southern Citizen (Asheboro, N.C.) / June 28, 1839, edition 1 / Page 1
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r i ' i c WHAT DO WE UTE FOU, DOT TO iaPBOVE OCSSELVES ASD BE USEFUL . TO ONE AKOTUEE ? VOLUME III. A8HEBOnO,,.(ir. C.) FRIDAY, JUNE 28, I88&. NUMBEIl S3 f utM?'- 1 X w . h ' hi' ta-l ! ITt ft ftf, - v. Si TO IS. 3,1 itlf 103, ft. IS tk'1 ml li1 altf iad:. riff' iur rang M. TCfl IBB u : f. : i - nila a V rUIILlSHED WEEKLY: re Dollar per annum, in advance or Tni CO iAUiars,, n no paia wunin three months from tho data of the first cun.bcr receive J. --. Jo-subscription to bo discontinued till til arrearages ue paia; unicss ai me discretion oi mo sailor. , failure to order a discontinuance be fare the expiration of the subscrip tion vear.is cquivaJcnt to a new engagement IJ Letters, Communications, Arc. to come post paid. . , Prices for Advertising. Advertisements will be conspicuously nt Hirwl.wmelv inserted at $1 00 per CI" mf : " uire of 18 lines i and 25 cents for ev r subseouent insertion. No adver- jement however abort, will be charg Court Orders and judicial advertise- .cots will be charred 25 percent high- jr t (we sometimes have to wait so Iptig kthe pav.) I "pose who advertise ty the year will Je entitled to a deduction of 33 per cent ' A ft ft ft irovided they pay in advance. 1 Vom lAe Raleigh Register. ' fTbe subioincd liniofOijromrmnii ;iuon is no uouoi loicoueu at a cut at V Montgomery, the administration lahdidate f r ConCTcss in this district. i is certainly a very good analyses of .eUictora t;ircular.J 5 t Hi the Yurfciw -ur w Aivii, ORANGE AND PERSON. Feilur'Ciliatn At tlie solicata -intnfa vast of mr routilrvmcn. 1 are candidate to rrprasint you in the next j.nfnl Uongrcss of America. r t i 1 am Bobe cf yoor'auristocfaey n6 !ieral or bank VVbigeiv I was born a roanjprrled w a pi troft," and iivvfu Mj SjMiiisv rj irw vvu aii- Jition. It you don't believe me, there Ire my Mother Tabby Snout and Gran iv Horn, who can prove it edzactly. h I at. a real Van uuren Dcmorratic itue touclicd with thr' Snapping t ur ic hall horse and hr , Jack-ass. nsht airt of the AHIgatur.' Now I will tclf on my sinlimcnti as a Pohticker. I am agin all Banks and Mobopolies -Tlieyhord i;p all the money in big ong the coj.)ic , Nickibua Biddler'a eat II :er bank has got all the gold ,J silvci i f the, country. and" thai is hat kcr; i the farmers from getting a l trice for their produce. Down with ve tanks and enternal improvements, ill bate better times. . i 1 1 am opposed to theCofigo at Chapel 1.11 It taxes the poor popple, and 'Acs from them tlieir hard earnings to !p up the f ich ailk stocking rufllcd ,'irt gentry; and ; learns them cunning ,id grammanaty, to cheat us Common ! Iks, w hom they think noi better than j ggers. This is ft great imposition up a us ; -we must tear up the very mud 'I. .f ,1.1 j :ii H discomfuddlcd, if we ddnt show 'em badly hack ; and if I am 'lected, I r lra ncnua 1 d wt ribtilionoNiePub- Ji i .l. v.aJ 'rfc i a.J. ii .k- e i .ZlMcKiiv. Aim. is running wiihourla i Miuua uiiiuilif iiki II Willi;!! VI in Ktutcd Kiatcs. It is the gift of God to , aiiamf no man has a right to a grca ponion oi land than his neighbor, or n than is sufficient for tho support A himself and family,' I I am for reducing tho taxes of the F l i00 im! as t means of doing it, I am vi reuucing tno salaries oi ine public rwecn. uc us nave a encap uovcrn Pat md one of Republican simtli UT. ' 'eHur-Citisens: Tlicso areny ainti- ruui pix, or uie. i snail uo ai Ckoi me puihcK places octore tno L.a" ft . . " ft ft ft.A cuon,and r will circumbiunditicate rrnsonoricalof the confid unction, on patters openly and above board. If LM ' lect me 1 will serve you to tho best 7 nubility j if you should think oth e and prefer my opponent, I will nun iumwjiiui uuicrcnco iu ui - IT .1 ' '. -' ' . t-aoi me people i our obedient servt. , IlIfJ.V-mtTTflM. "vv Fields, Orange co., N. C ill r.. May 5th, 1833... fVow the New J'ork Weekly Whig. NORTII CAROLINA. We approach the election' in this State with some misgivings as to the re sult. We have hopes withal, and right clad shall we bo to find them -realized. till, it is best to show the dark side of the picture. The peoDle ef North Car otina are essentially honest, and' very naturally Whig. JI he ; State has been Whig for the last three years, though the Presidential Electors were lost by the miserably thin vote of November,') 1830; IMo biate is more decided in its detestation of the Corruptions, the Pec ulations, and the goneral iniquities of the men in power, than she. And yet the Whig ascendency is in danger, not from its open enemy but from the machina tions of Calhounism. This State bor- dcrs on South Carolina, and isy greatly influenced by her. Many of her lead ing men have been perverted by this in fluence, and by reason of their implicit reliance on John C Calhoun we nope not enough to lose us the State, but it is well to be apprised of and prepared for the worst ; At the election to lake place some 6 weeks hence, only members of Congress are to be chosen. The 'lay of the land' is as follows: In the First District, (Pasquotank, &c) Mr. ALT. Sawyer, the late Whig Member, boi apostatized, for Laihoup ized,) and is no w jruning aa aSub-TreaU sury, inaepenaeni canmaaie, ana sup ported by the .Van Duren party. .The Whin bavs brought out Kenneth Ray- tier, Esq. the eloquent, and able Whig leader in the last House of Commons, as their candidate, and we hope they will elect .him. (Sawyer was chosen t - - ft a . m in 1R37 oy a v nig majority oi wz.) In the Second District. Jso A.'By num, the Van Buren snarlcr of some no toriety, who was tomg to challenge w m and teyurr rwo' or xnrcc t ears since, is Jf fone&hy-f'olrl ni. Long Whig, who has been a candidate un successfully once or twice already. litis is a close District, but Bynum has great advantages in being strongly con nected with the Whig families w ho do riot like to oppose him. Beside this, Hon. John Branch, the thinking Jix Secretary, has followed Ms. Calhoun, and so have Julius Anuis, and a number of leading 'State Rights men, formerly Whig, in this District (Mr. Bynum's maiontv in '37 w as 70.) In the Third District Hon. EJoard Stanly is a candidate for re-election, onnosed bv the Hon. Thomat H. Halt, lAdnu who for many years represented ! v . . ll ! . L.. tno uisincu iiau is a siring man, out so js Stanly, and we do not believe the latter ca'n be beaten. ; V k In the Fourth District, Hon. Charles Shrpard, (ditto & T. Sawyer,) is a can Pi- I - 11 &.' aiaaic tor re ciociion, opn ysca oy oam ucl S. Biddle, Whig. Our fnnds speak confidently, but the District is natural ly against us, and we anticipate Mr. Shcpard's re-election. (His majority id '37 was 488.) " In the Fifth District, Hon. Mlcojah T. Hawkins is a candidate for re-elec tion. oopnscd onlv by another Locofoco named Hilliard. The District is against us by 1,000, and nothing is to be hoped from it -- : ' . ... Id the Sixth District Hon. . James I . rri . . i . opponent as ycx. - i ne v nigs inea to t'lj - t .: .i. : niIU a yonvcuui'ii a iiiuuui, j:vft uu t was a failure. ISotlnng to hope here. (McKav's majority in '37, 2,093.) In tho Seventh District . lion. lua tnund Deberry. hig is opposed by ,imi ... a ii ir n... Tk:. iiiiHin A. mums, f ftii uuicii.. , uia District borders on South Carolina, and candidate, has been selocled by tho adversary from the strong Whig border County of Anson, in order to divide and delcat us. we navenrong lann, now ever, that Gen. Deberry cannot ba bea ton. "s ' ' In the Eighth District. Hon. JFttfiam Mont ranter v. the present Van Buren Member, will be vigorously opposed by our lricnas, wuo iavo nuuuuaicu vev . i i i i - : . J r?j Wi Havwood. of Raleigh. The chan ccs are rather against us, but tho whig! will do their duty manfully, and win hoiws of success. (Montgomery's ma i : vt xM-mm ml ; juinjr hi ' . Tn tho Ninth District Hon. A. Rhenncrd. "Whig is a . candidate for re election, opposed by John Hill, Adm We consider Mr. Sfacpperd's election as certain. , In the Tenth c District Hon. Abram Rencher declines', as we have already stated, and the contest is between Chas. sACalhouaSubTreasury maand Dr. PleasanIIendersbkn a staunch whiz We can hardly doubt Df. Henderson's slocUon, though by far iesshari the reat Whig majority in the District, which is over 3)000. , - In the Eleventh District, Hon. Hen ry V. Connor, the Van Buren Member of he last ten br,fteen years, is oppos ed by Gen. B. MVEdney, Whig. The iisinci nas nuneno oeen so stronjr a- gainst us, that we I have littlt hone of In the Twelfth district, Hon. Lewii Williams, the veteran Whig Member, has no opponent No man,1 Whig or Tory, could come witltin a distance of him. -j : . ' In the Thirteenth and last District the renowned State of Buncombe Hon! James Graham, the Whig who was once denied his seat by 'a Tory Com miuee oi Elections is running without in opponent ,He is able and faithfuL - oo stand the Districts at present In 1837, we elected eight Members to five an unprecedented victory. In the ensuing session, two of them were Cal hounized away from iui, so that we have nad practically but six to seven. We shall be well satisfied with seven to six now. jr.COMAION SCHOOLS. , We republishT to-day, lhi3 Act ofAs sembly on , this important subject, to which we solicit the attention of every fjood and patriotic citizen. We have earned, not with surprise, but wilh real sorrow, that many of the worst speci mens oi mo Aamimstration ' party are Ictuaily decrying this first attempt of the w vuucHie i:tt risinij generation, and using every heartless and wicked stratagem to make it jjiipoplar-wUh thsse moughtlcsicreatures whom they can influence I This thev do merely because the bill was passed by a Whig Legislature, and because they know that it would have been passed, and in effec tual operation years ago, had the Whigs ot the Mate bad the ascendancy. We have not had the mortification of hear ing any "man declare his open hostility to this salutary and excellent measure. or we avoid, as far possible, the society of men so depraved as to desire to keep uie minas oi me voum oi ine oiaie in utter darkness r out we know from good authority that we have'among us persons, (rieji thev cannot be.) who have so slight a regard for personal re- spcctability and for the general good,! as to electioneer aratn.it Common Schools! If the hosts of ignorance pre- van in crusning mis incipieni ana iauai - bla attempt, their triumph wjll be butioi in inai respect nasn jfanner, momentary ; for a spirit is around the I . ' ' ;v , -rcw v ' " - State, ay, even within it, which will ere . .1 a.. .a. ft long burst the mental bonds Uiat unre- fleeting and heartless partisans have so having irurdered his wife. ; The decea lon? imnosed on our people. In this factl tno is our hope, & we will not be disappoint- ed. : The puoier classes of North Caro- marks 0f violence on hef person lina will not much longer consent to be f h0 parties had led a disagreeable life, cueaiea oy suca men ui bu umi. iuftc lifa desirable. Newhern Sihctator. " - m At Jdnes Court held this wlek, it was proposed by a Van Buren man that the vote of tho Grand Jury should be taken as a test of the political feeling ol the county. The vote was accordingly taken to oblige the gentleman, when io, ; r of Janury 5, an article upon the su he stood almost alone as a represents- pWior value 6f the Durham breed of live of the Sub-Treasury f r!y, fotr on- cattle. It js; there stated that a farmer ly of tho other seventeen )urors goting can afford to give 500 dollars for a full with him I This was tolerably discour- blooded Durham Bull, and the calcula. arihg, after the ranguine anticipations wliich had urged ' the gentleman to so desperate an attempt in so law-loving and sterling a Whig County as Jones is but the result on tho day ot election will be yet more so. Here there were hve demos out of eighteen, on that day he will not find five out of every twenty. to, breed, or any other that can bo produ - - t , m ; ced, and let our farmers treat them, as ' BOARD OF TRADE.' they have-hitherto treated our native A meeting of the Merchants of Wil- cattle, hogs Mid sheep, and in a few gen rninirton was held on Tuesday evening erations they will be n poor and mean. last, for the purpose of consulting t to- gethcr upon the expediency ol csiauiisn imr Board of Trado for this town. Jeremiah Lippitt was called to the Chair, and John JMcltae aDDointed Secretarr i IteivT" Waf T by the Chair, when, discussion took place! upon thQ necessityand efficiency of) wese TJominercia Trto " a: - " ' v.pauu,ug uHumerce nmmg- long as our larmers wUlntinue tp sell on. The meeting appointed the fol'rjcSrcowa that are worl W fci,rJ,i mg named gentlemen a committea to further the object of the meeting. P. "T'F- w! .J.obn.- ajiuwu, iwciiaru xuorris, ana jonn wc Rae. The establishment (tfsacb an institu tion as is contemplated by our Mer chants will, f we feel assured, have a yery beneficial eflect upon the rade of mo piace, na raise mercantile charac ter to its proper standard. , ; Wilmington Chronicle? J ; Rail Road . Stocks. The Boston Atlas; in an article upon Rail Roads, says their stocks is every day becoming more and more popular for investments even among the most timid. It alludes to one circumstance as an element of calculation in favor of Rail Roads, not generally thought of, viz : the act that the population of the country doubles it self every twenty five years f so that it is fair to reason that tSia increase of population will furnish a Rail Road with the tame rate of increase in travel and freight Thesbusiness of a Rail Road being thus doubled, there will be more than double the present netf income; becauso the expenses do not increase in the same latio with the business; Wilmington Chronicle THE GREAT-VVESXERN. The following table exhibits the - dis tance of each daya run. , ,K " - Miles. ' :. Mites. Way 10, ! 160 May 20, 240 -' . ii,;2so ; , 2, 248 29, 247 23, 3101 30,, 240 21, 240 . .31101. . ' , 25, ,234 a to 11 o'clock, P. M. The weather was good, and Winds moderate nearly the whole time. There was however a good deal of fog. . Wilmington Chronicle, , A CHALLENGE. " CoL Polk, in his late speech at Knox- ville, alluded to the Senior editor of the Banner as "little Allen A. HalL" Now that' personal, and I feel in duty bound i ujc iituuciiu uicci me si 'be earliest day his convenience will permit, in order to have a trial at leap- "Jg, wresuing, racing ana any oiner mniy exercise he may choose N. R The Colonel is specially re quesiea io oring an the 'little folks', a long, boya and girls, that the public may iucic""uc wwih uiusuus musnu ooasi A few days ago a man was commit le4 to the jail of this town, suspected o: Uwamo near her hnshnnir and pUD,c port 8ayg ,nat tn IS I i mi vuu ii iu!ajaiiiiiiui cviuciiua ui ana guilt oT tho accused. We have not httitmslwbefnSpeclaldK Jrtm the , Yankee ., Farrier, : NATIVE STOCK, VS. DURHAL Mr. Editon I observed in the Far- tion is carried out to show how quickly, easily and certainly he will get his pay back. V ? ? - I affirm that we have no need to go abroad for stock for our farms. The j only wcret is in mannttrjs; well the stock that we have. Take tha best Durham The whole art in having good stock of - i any aino, is io sokvi, iroin year loycar, the best fotbt ecdirs. : The preset goodness of our native f,ml treated iom 7 "o year, by the owner, is ampb proof of it, real goodness. The only tL- wanted i il - ""T cquai W any.' AS ' dollars and keep those Lai are hardlv worth five, we may never expect to JL . ? 608 brc?d tfcattlft The farmers mav A. Until I how . import what breed they please, and pay as high prices as they please, it will bo all the same thin? m the en learn to manage better. The rules for -' selecting for good stock are principally ! these : deep wide shoulders, wide and deep hips, short aqd straight back bones, , short strong necks, small j short -heads, and small pomted hoses. Jf these rules 1 were observed from generation to ge- eration, by our farmers, the meanest t breed of cattle, that was ever seen, would soon become just rate. Just, so with our hogs and sheep. A very large -creature of any kind, is not so profitable to the farmer, as a good iddling size. -The main thing is shape. And no far- V mer should ever sell at any price, his best and finest shaped animals, if he in tends to keep up a good and profitabb kind. A gentleman told mo lately that ' he began farming about twenty ye-rs : ago. He then took a good deal cf " ; Mini . sx CtrA mtA k..mhL. ' - w uuu auu puiuuaso. a superior , ' kind of sheep. , He could find nons cnii an average better than his own, v I'zlx were mean. He adopted the r -t -a i of selecting his best.iambs c- - r ' or stocL . In a few vcars h ? 1 l ' V raw oi neep,i7it3 r . ;s3 will produce the same1 eftcij u every , losteaU of paying five hundred dollara for a DurhamBulL let anr farmer lav 1 out tha ,um w.wtra' keeping and caro of his present stockand sclact ! best , cans every year for stock, ftt the end , ol five years he will be better o I do not deny the notion of purchasing a su perior quality of stock, when it can bo 1 ' done at a lair and reasonable price, but only the notion of running into such . great and extravagant prices. A Iittlo care and patience ,will serve our far mers a much better purpose, and, in the, end give them, full as good and proGta-' bie stock. : : FlllLOL Portland, Jan, 8, UZXi.: ; - Correspondence of the National Ly , . telligencen:- '.:-,j:f-, i: - . New York, June 12C The Government yesterday got a ver dict in the U. S. Court for $12,278 73 . cents upon goods entered in the Custom House below their value. This is the first verdict the Government has got in New York for some time. . : . The topic of what Whig candidate' for the Presidency begins to be agitated here. -There are two rrop6sitions: the one, to go on and choose delegates to tho National ConvcnUon notof the oth- er, to postpone action till the Nover' elections over. "'T i , fr New York, Jur. 4 The GreU Western left this ir at her hour. Large crowds at::: bid " good bye" to the numero sengers. The weather in the r was unpleasant -' S The Great Western took cu mense number of letters. T! .3 c room, pri6fldlhohbur tl v bags, was full of persons wi:!i ; of letters. , The amount t she took out could not have t large. The rates did not v. those ol yesterday. I The cotton market revive J : day. Prices vary from 12 to I but there were some transacts portance. Flour continues tc supplies being large. ' ) Professor Lspy, 44 the stom making a decided impress!' city with his theories of st: audience is intelligent and sc. his arguments have paodj found impression. , The money market ii t Stocks have not changed r. - 5,47A.-The Clovcr-hi'J ( near Mount Holly, New ' nearly 100,000 worms in f wedding. A crop of bea'j was brought to Phila'delpl day last from this establish had been perfected in twer C v"1 f If
Southern Citizen (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 28, 1839, edition 1
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