i. - 1 tx i ; .'(, ((J ,- 1 ! " Life ! only to bo valued as It is usefully employed.? VOLUME Iir-NUMBEM?, ASnEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 10, 1842. WHOLE NUMBER i 101. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED WEEK LY, BT K- J. II. CHRISTY & CO., htllshen of the lm of the United States. - .- -. This piper is published weekly, at Two TAu Mu amd F.m Crr. per annum, in advance , or TiiatK PM-UM, if payment be delayed after the (occipt of tha lmhNumberfrom tnotfmeof tub. bribing. BT r wi all eases, itrU-tly adhered is. ' . ' , . No mibscription discontinued (except at the op. lion of the publisher) antU all arrearage! are paid. : T MISCEIMEdUSJ"""" " f From 'the Pittisbwg Adoeate.J Au Iionr In a rxmdcr-uilll " The Pittsbure Powdor-mnis aire situatfi on tho North bonK ol trie Biononganam, btKut two and a half milea from th city, for the ipurposc of lcsacnnlng the dfaasters attending explosions, tho buildings cover a largo extent of ground, and each ottho many processes to vhich the material is subject before it w turned into the form with which the world is but too familiar, is performed itt a separate building. These buildjngs are of stonej' and are connected together by a railway. " " But to begin at the beginning. Good gunpowder, such as Mr, Watson makes, requires good charcoal; young and sound wood is require I, the -water mnpie being the most desirable. -. Of these Mr. Watson has large plantations which yield what wood he requires, besides furnishing a considera. hie number of young trees to the citizpns for ornamental purposes. There are also on tho premises plantations for, sycamore for hoop-polcs, which yield at about 5,000 per year per year per quarter of an acre. From tho plantations wa went to tho steam engine. And here tho dread of fire, which habit has made a second nature to the pov. der maker, has suggested a number of in geniouscoutrivances to prevent its coming iu contact with tho" villanous saltpetre." Tho smoko from the fires under the boil, ers is conveyed under ground some 3000 feet, nd then by a chimney 60 feet high it is carried off, at a supposed safe distance. In directly the opposjto direction the steam is carried .a considerable distance under ground to the engine, which is distant from the place where the last processes which t.B ita ni,l tlm nowder undercoes, some " 7000 feet. The engine has 6 boilers at- -Uahcd;-to it, each 30 inches tn aiameicr, and 22 feet 8 inches long, inu guusumus busaclsJXoaLPCUia y. Tho wood is converted into charcoal by Sn larpo cast iron retorts, and the gas that is evolved is conveyed by pipes into the Jire unaer mo rciun oy which one third nf tho fuel which would otherwise be necossary, is saved. Tho pyroligncous ncid which the'wood contains, and which nmnpas evolves, it is tho nurposo of Mr. Watson to distil it into vinegar, as soon ns his arrangements lor that purpose can do cuectcd. . ... Wa fultft wed tho charcoal into tho 1 ' com - riinitiner hno., Here . after having been -crusliedJHJlwecn roUers-kislacefLin a largo hollow cast iron globe, in which are a considerable numoer oi smau oraas uuus , these globes are made to revolve rapiaiy, which speedily reduces it to an impalpable powder. It is then put with tbd "other in gradients, in tho proportion of 15 of char coal, 10 of sulpher, and 75 of nitre, into a imixing harrclylwhich is made to re solve a0 times per minute. From the mixing barrel it is taken to the " millhouse," where 4 largo rollers of cast iron, weighing 240 lbs. each, of tho shapo of mill-stortes, placed on end, chase each other round a cast iron circle weighing 70,. 000 lbs. Under these rollers it is crushed for about five hours, and then it is taken to the press-room." In the press-room it is put in layers between cloths and boards alternately,-and -subjected to tho immense pressure of a hydraulic press. . This is dono to condense tho powder into a solid . substance. .Tho cakes or slabs aro then taken to another buildmgand passed ihrough a pair of coarsely grooved rollers," which breaks it' into small lumps. This is the first process of " graining." -Thcso lumps are then placed upon shelves lifOoorahcafcrty slcaionpurpose rtiallv-dried when. lhey are ngatrpaunriroT the desired "grain'' is ooiaineu. rrum lhn ml r: Ihn minnOWUCr. DS U limy iiuit 4kj termed, passes through a hopper in a-reir volving wire cylinder, tne amercm ugrw of fineness in the length of which, screen it into as. many kinds of powdor; the finest, which is mere dust, is taken back to be re-worked. Tho remainder is placed in barrels, about 250 lbs. in each, which are made rapidly to revolve for the purpose of glazing" it. But ono operation now remains, and that is tho final drying, which is effected in the. manner which wo have before described., It is. then taken to the packing-house, and fror that to tho magazine," which is a fireproof building at a long distance from the rest f tho works. Bots, o too hear that. There is a society of young ladies in Hartford, who pledge themselves not to receive the ad dresses of any young man who has not sign ed the tee-total pledge. At a temperance meeting not long since, a fair ono offered tho pledge to her friend, saying, " John will you sign that !" I le hesitated , and fi- - nally declined. " Then," said she, "you will understand, I shall not be at home next Sun. day evening." Ancdoto f Dr. Franklin. The Doctor was walking one day on Front streatv near Cheanut street, in tho city of Philadelphia, at the dawn of the Revolution, when he was thus accosted by atari: '''jv 'V"V;;' , . ' Is you name Ben Franklin V ; 'Yesv'f V . Are pu the man who invented tho saw. dustpuddjigf " : : ' j , ; Yes,' tepBed the Doctor. : 4 Then J1 saVl lio sailor, f dbnY give the recipe to jnako I to old F , our mor. chant, as ho wilfeed all bis crew on it.1 r - f The stow of ie ' saw-dust pudding,' as ft wtij eiW, arose in this manner: The Doctor had conducted an independent pa- perin Philadelphia, which gave oflunco to a class who wanted to rule everybody in their own way; and the heads of this party, some fifteen or twenty, informed the Doc. tor that they would frown him down unless ho would submit to the curb. The Doctor proposed to explain, und fixed the time at his own house, where the gentlemen were invited to dine. He . requested his lady to employ two pence in the purchase of a peck of wheat bran, and to make two puddings of it one for each end of the table, as he was to have fifteen or twenty friends to dino with him. The company met the two puddinss were served on the table, without any other dishes tho company sat down, and each friend was served with his slice of pudding. Their curiosity led them to try it they examined cacn otners counte nances, and at length were satishcd witn tho pudding. ' Friends,' said the Doctor, ' will you bo helped to more V 4 INo,' they all replied, we nnve enougn of your pudding. But what docs this meant' .. ! 4 Why ,' replied tho Doctor, it means to tell you that these two puddi rigs cost two pence, and fifteen friends say they have had cnoush. Know, then, as long as Ben- iamin Franklin can satisfy fifteen friends with two pence, no never win sacnuco mu independence of his paper.' Coloring Walls, It may not be gene rally known, particularly in the country, that bluo vitriol, when mixed with lime, forms a very beautiful as well as exceeding ly cheap coloring matter for walls. Take good lime and slack it as usual, one and a half pounds of blue vitriol, dissolve the chrystals with boiling water, when dissolv ed mix it with the white-wash,-rnd odd ono pound of glue well dissolved. This should bepreparod in & glue pot if possible, to pre vent its being burned or scorched.' When well mixed the first coat must be put on ho rizontully, or from side to side, and tho se cond coat vertically orup and down. Tho wall will bo a brignt color resemDiing uie bottles some times seen in apothecary shops. By following tho directions, women can put on the coloring is smoothly and as well, generally, as men. s' , From the Cretcent City. A short time after tho conflagration, on Sunday last, we entered the San Carlos, which had been especially opened for the accommodation of such Washingtonians as believed in tho sovereign virtues of anchor branJ Cogniac. There was, of course, a tall gathering of patriots, who had distin guished themselves a short time previous by inn efforts to arrest the destroy- ing.tlemcnt,ike. rnarinr3 cast upon a Incndly shore, tne meeting was vuruiai, and all felt tliat a cordial was necessary to restore the usual flow of spirits, which had been dampened by the mournful occurrence of the past lew hours. Tho glass passed freely around senti ments were given, and every ono appeared as happy as a. bank director on his way to Te"xas. when tho hour for parting was On- nounced. M this auspicious moment one of the party a well known out and outer drew a bcoline for the stairs which led to his room in the castle; but it was evident tn all nmsent that he was out of his reckon- in" mid was nul exuclly '"' in town." Hr D . . .. .. . I fl-.l 1 floundered about like a aismasieu numum in a eale, but finally brought up at the foot of tho stairs, the bannister of which he grasped with the tenacity of an Arkansas bear. ' Torrnvoure w fuddlecrasn sailor in. port ,31 said a friend ,-wlia had-:watched Ms gyrations. Pn.r.t not n a dron-fliiccunW-1 tha v-'oWhiccup)fcaud-porW pon honor ! The exertion to wncci aooui n vw mnoh (nr Tom. and he made a pirouette towards the- cijmr-ahop adjacent, against which he brought up. ' "stand back sir niccup wuu 7" hfl thundered to the unconscious door, at tho same time putting out his foot; with th evident intention of placing it on a step, judging all was right in that quar- tor. and thai ne was on nia way vu iu w room. Again and again ne raisea n ngm treadcr, but it was no go he could not make an ascent , any way it could be fixed. 44 Who the movea tne uie sians (hiccup) here, waiter (hiccup) bring me alight," bawled our roysterous blade. 44 Here I is what, is your pleasure t" 44 Show me up up stairs d'ye hear V 44 Aye, aye, sir," and up went tha bac chanalian under an escort of ten of Mudge & Watri&n'a body guard. - J 44 What's tho cause of that bell ringing !" inquired Peter. . 44 Iris my deliberate opinion that some body is pulling at the rope," replied John. v The wifb. It needs no guilt to break a husband's, heart ; the absence of content, tha mutterings of spleen:, the untidy dress, and cheerless home ; tho forbidding scowl and deserted hearth ; these, and nameless neglects without a, crime among thorn have harrowed to the quick the heart's core of many a man, and planted there, beyond the reach ef care, the germ of dark despair. Ob! may woman before that sad sight ar rives, d well on the . recollections of her youth, and cherishing tho dear idea of that tuneful time, awake and keep alive the promise she then so kindly gave; and though she may be injured, hot the injuring one the forgotten, not the forgetting wife a happy allusion to that hour of peace and love a kindly welcome to a comfort, able home a smile of lovo to banish hos tile words a kiss of peace to pardon all the past and tho hardest heart, that ever locked itself within the breast of selfish man will soften to her charms, and bid her live as she had hoped, her years in match, less bliss loved, loving and content the soother of the sorrowing hour the source of comfort, and the spring of jory-Cwm-hers'1 London Journal. A horselaugh. This is the sorry hack upon which buffoons and jesters are fain to rido home, when they want to make a re. treat, and are at a loss for any other con veyancc. Such Merry Andrews save their credit as tho Romans did their Capitol, by tho cackling of geese. To succeed in this object, all expedients are considered fair; to win the laugh, is to win the battle; if you cannot, therefore,' check-mate your adversary by reasoning, dumb-found him by your superior learning, or surpass him by tho brilliancy of your wit, knock him down by a poor pun, the worse the better ;' set the example of a hearty laugh, for this is citching, though wit is not, and make your escape while the company are exerci sing their risible muscles ; they will gener. ally bo with you, for they like to see a con. queror capsized. The late Jack Taylor, of pleasant memory, who was nomcan proficient in turning the tables upon his op ponent, when ho found himself losing, has recorded one of his exploits. Ho was ra. pidly losing groundirfa literary discussion, when the opposite" party exclaimed, 44 My good friendyou are not such a rare'scholar as you imagine; you are an every day man." - . .t Well, you m eoi one," replied Taylor, who instantly jumped upon tho back of-a horselaugh and rode victoriously! over his prostrato conqueror. The bumsellers excuse. Ono day a Quaker woman kindly asked a mmseller some questions about his whiskey business, ii i. i . if i. : n i.n wnicn, uisiuruiny iua cuiubiuuw u utw., ire eased himself with tho oft repented salvo, that ho 44 sold to sober persons only. 14 Ah," said she, 44 and docs that better tho easel Is it better to make drunkards out of sober men, than to kill tho poor old broken down drunkards V This came up on him like a thunder-bolt; it overset his best excuso, and he stopped the business of making drunkards. 44 Sat Qtrrr That." When you see your son making a bud trade, say quit that. - - - When you see two urchins fighting in the street , say quit that. W hen you see your oaugiucr casung sny glance at a fop or loafer, say quit that. When your littlo children make so much noise that you cun't understand what you are reading, say quit that. When you see your wifo buying lacing strings, say quit that. ( . , When you hear a politician say 44 Torn going to a People's Meeting," say--quit that When you see a farmer buying lottery tickets, sny quit that. ... . When vou seo a person taking a news paper from another man's door before day A Fact. A man from an adjoining coun ty called at a store to trade a few days ogo, and after purchasing one or two articles,- nulled out a five dollar Monroe- Railroad note ToTiSV forthcrnrbut wasTrarprised 1o bg-lnfoTmcd:'that it was only worth" about 15 cents in the dollar. He put it bp and took out three dollars in Kincannon Tick etsrwhich he hetept back as he might need change, to nis utter asionisnmem no was told That those Tickets were not worth 44 shucks. r With a sigh, he said 44 well I reckon I can suit you," and handed out a ten dollar bill on the Bank of Columbus. This was his last, and that Bank also was broken I He trembled with rage to find all his money worthless. We inquired if he took the newspapers. - He replied that he never had done so, although ho had a large family and several of them could read. Thus for the small pittance of two or three dol lars that might have known the worth ol money every week and saved himself from being imposed upon by trash and broken Bank Daoer. besides bavins the news from all parts of the world for the edification of himself and tamiiy. L,nauanooga uazcu. CUmnin'T GUt. The French mode of eleaninf fine glua utensiU, etc., rives them rreat brillian cy.. It done by finely-powdered indieo, and dipping into it a moistened linen rajr, with which the glaM mart be nneared and wiped off with perfectly dry eloth. Ae a eubiiUtuta for thi. fine iftad aahes. applied by rar dipped in spirit will also answer very well ; bat Spanish white i apt. to .1 .v. ougnen aau wjujo . - Corn-Stalk Sugar. The experiments of Mr. William Webb, of Wilmington, Delaware, prove the prac ticabihty of manufacturing sugar from the juice of the Cora stalk,. at a much cheapef rate tban can be done from the caltt. . 1 he machinery is of very simple construction an 1 cheap. That used by Mr. Webb, is tho cylinder, such as used for grinding Bp. pies, r three upright wooden rollers, from twentj to forty inches in length, turns to run tnie and put into a strong trame win answer. The power is applied to the middle roller by means of a sweep, as a cider mill. Mr AVebb describes a better machln, made entirely of iron, three horizontal rollers erected one above and two below, tho stalk passes di rettly ihrough , receiving two press. ures beforalt escapes. ' ": I ho lower cylinders are contained in a small cistern, which receives the juice. Mr. Webb thus describes Ms process ot manu facturing the sugar after tho juice is ex. pressed : The process which has been employed in the manufacture of Maize sugar, is as follows : The juice, after coming from the mill, stood for a short time, to deposit some of its coarser purities ; it was then poured off, and passed through 0 flannel strainer, in order to get no of such matters as couia bo separated in this way. Lime water, called milk of lime, was then added, in the proportion of one or two table spoons full to the gallon. It is said by sugar man ufacturers, that knowledge on this"point can only be acquired by experience ; but I have never failed in making sugars from employ ing too much or too little pf the lime. A certain portion of this substance, how. ever, is undoubtedly, necessary, and more or less than this wilj.be injurious ; but no preciso directions can bo given about it. The juice was then placed over the fire, and brought nearly to the boiling point, when it waa Carefully skimmed, taking care to complete this operation before ebulition commenced. It was then boiled down ra. nidlv. removing tho scum as it rose. The juice was examined from time to time, and, if there was an appearance ol feculent par tides which would not rise to the surface, it was again passed through a flannel strain er. In judging when tne syrup was sum cientlj boiled,a portion was taken between the thumb and finger and it, wnen mode rately cool, a thread half an inch long could 6o drawn, it was considered to be done, and was poured into broad shallow vessels to crystahzo. in some cases, crysiamza. tioa commenced in j2 hours 'L in other, not till icvcral days I And in no case was this pneess so far completed as to allow tne 8ujar to be drained, in less than 3 weeks frm timo of boiling, i he reason why so gisat a length of time was required I have nt yet been able to discover. There is no doubt but that an improved process of man uficture will cause it to granulate as quick, lyis any other. I From the Farmer's Monthly Visitor. Weeds, leaves of trees," and all the 8UEulent plants which grow so abundantly inilitches and waste lands, under hedges, ani by the road side, if cut or pulled when in flower, and slightly fermented," furnish frm twenty to twenty-five times more minuro than straw loes. These plants, carefully collected, furnish to tho agricul turist an immense -jesourco for enriching life lands. Besides the advantage arising frmlhe manure furnished by these, plants, the agriculturist will find his account in pievcnting the dissemination of their seeds, which, by propagating in tho fields, deprive tho crops of the nourishment of the soil. The turf that borders fields and highways, may be made to answer the same purpose bt cutting it up with all the roots and the earth ndhering to them, rooting tho whole in a heap and afterwards carrying the mass upon the fields, or what is still better by burning it, and dressing the land with the products of the corr bustion. 44 If straw did not serve as dcus tor ani- time to their health and cleanliness, it would be better to cut the ears of corn and leave the stalks in the field, since they serve only ftr rarmersin'Ncw"Eneland would set their boys to bringing leaves from the roads and by tho sides ofiheir fences, they would - - . -r - ; r n get as good beds lor tneir stocn as mey have in their straw and refuse hay, and would make much better and more manure. TnSiybe36ne in the faTITafter harvest! ng , at a very little trouble and expense. Make a light rack with stakes close together, and weave in poles in a sort of wicker work, put this upon wagon wheels, and a boy or two, and a horse, would get up several loads in a day, where leaves are not at a great distance from home. OCT An exchange paper has these perti nent remarks : " 44 Many a man sees tho poor starving around him without a sigh ; and when his day of departure draws near, gives bis whole substance to some foreign charity, which to say the best of it is calculated to lay the foundation for knowledge amng- bloody, bigoted and unthankful race. Give us the living, every-day charity ; that springcth from the well of the soul, and not that mean, miserable, deferred charity, which comes from the chambevof. death in weeds of mourning, and causes the heir to rurse the parent for his liberality ere he is laid in his narrow chamber forever. Amonc-the lions which hare recently arrived in Aew York it a dag with nx lege and two Ulis. Speech of Mr. Preston,- On the Loan Bill, delivered in the Senate of i ; ' the Untied, State, Aprd, 1843. -' Mr. Pkestox said that, in the course of the discussion on the loan bill, he did not think that the facts which occasioned its introduction, and made its passage necessa. ry, were sufficiently bornsinmlnd. They were of a verv imnortant and imperious character, and could not be put, with too much emphasis. The Government is out of money and out of eredit i it is in 0 bank. rupt condition. Its paper has been pro tested, and its endorsers held responsible for ruinous liabilities,.- Treasury notoe a at a discount of five per cent; and the creditors of tho Government are thus paid in a depreciated paper a less amount than they have earned and, we have stipulated to pay. It is at once tyranny and trtud a vi olation of contract by the force of power. We should. understand our - position, and not mince words in stating it. The Government stands discredited and dishonored. , The person and the" property of an individual, under such circumstances, would be seized by the minions ef the law. This disgrace has penetrated, and is felt throughout all the ramifications of the Go- vcrnment, and taints every agent of it even in foreign countries ; - for drafts of our functionaries abroad have gone back pro tested, proclaiming to the world oar shame ful condition. This is a serious injury to our country. We all every one of us is soiled by it, and feel our citizenship with a less proud and lofty sentiment ot patriotism. The prido of country is a main pillar of re publics. . National honor is a very substan tial thing, and ought to be cherehed and preserved not less scrupulously in discharg ing the homely duties of good faith and honesty, than in the presence of foreign nations, or on the battle field. Fiom some cause or other we have permitted, it to be touched, and wo should hasten, with eager solicitude, to redeem it. I could have hoped, sir, that, in this acknowledged con dition of things, under the pressure of a disastrous emergency, we should have ad dressed ourselves, with one cotiseat, to the application of the remedy without wasting time in ascertaining the cause or Renounc ing the authors of the evil in bittej and un availing recriminations, when it ismanifest that, whosoever the blame, it is a, common calamity of our common countrf, which should be redressed by a united and vigor, ous effort of all who lovo that country or value its honor. - The case is hardly less pressing than if our flag was oorno down in the tide of rat tle, and we paused in tho rescue to settle some personal differences. I am sorry to seo this, like every other occasion, seized upon to indulge in partisan assaults and com mon strifes, and that the gentlemen of the opposition should think proper to assail us, and throw themselves upon us, and encum ber us with difficulties, and call off our at. tent ion, by taunts and revihngs, at tho in. stant that we are advancing with all possi- bio speed to so sacred an object. 1 will pause a moment, and but a moment, to dis pose of these assailants, so much more in tent on attacking us than relieving the coun try. They say that all this is our doing ; that our prodigality has created tho debt ; that our want of forecast has failed to pro- vide for it ; and that it is wo who have de stroyed the public credit. If it were so- if our folly or our crime has brought on this stato of things can the Senators of the op- position find, in reason, humanity, or pat riotism, an excuse for their lethargy or rather active hindranco of our exertions! But what shall be said or thought of their conduct, when it is known, as every body does know, that the country is brought to this pass by their own mismanagement, by years and years of misgovernmcnt, prodi gality, and recklessness, and that we, the Whigs, have.bccn but this moment sent, by an indignant and suffering people, to relieve the body politic from the ruinous course ol their empiricism! Both tho Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr.Buchanan) and the Sen. ator from New Hampshire (Mr. Woodbury) charge on us the mighty evils which oppress the pegple, and that we, in thirteen months, and not yet at the end of the first constitu tional Congress, have done all this. Sir, this vigorous and young republic could not be thus struck, down-at r ooe -blow ; these grey hairs arcnotrof one rJghtV growthrr this decrepitade is not of paralysis, but or long and wasting disease, aggravated by onskiltfutTreaTm requiring time as well as potent remedies to effect a cure. W here is that country which the mistaken confidence of the people in. trusted to them five years ago? Where that overflowing Treasury, that cornucopia of commerce, that abounding agriculture T Did you give them back to ns as you re ceived them, or in their stead chaff and husks V"' k One thing at least Is clear, that the wretched system of Government paper, which has now terminated, as all systems of Government paper must terminate inevit ably, in depreciation and bankruptcy j-was of their begetting and nourishing. They beganit they instituted the system of Trea sury notes. The late Administration is the first in the history of our Government that in time of profound peace, was compelled to resort to borrowing, and chote that most fallacious, dangerous, and ruinous mode of borrowing by the issue of 1 rcasuay notes. They destroyed the equilibrium between expenditures and income, and thus derang. ed the whole financial order. From the beginning, they have lived and had Iheir being on Treasury notes. Touse tlie word of the Senator from Now Hampshire, more expressive perhaps than pure, they fed their spend thnAness throughout On this paper. Session after session they rushed into this hall, proclaiming that the country was in danger, that the Treasury was empty, that credit would fail, and begging and sup. 5 Heating for a few more Treasury note. 'hey were always in debtt and paid bygiv;" ing their notes. - After the first terrific explosion in 1837, the Treasury was a there Crater, which no man might look into, throwing up at irreg. ular periods masses of J Treasury notes, with flaalie of Ulrid light from the agonised Secretary, who writlied bdow like the gianjr under jEmft, ! ,.-. This crippled. Jbrokefk down, and now- utterly discredited paper, was the financial wisdow and the sole financial policy of our predecessors, and is an evil which we have inherited from them. Uut senators say that they were frugal and we have been prodigal. There is something grand lit this contempt of history in this reversing of the inexorable past- They frugal! There is not one who has denied that they spent every year more than they received ; that every year they borrowed to pay the debt of the preceding ; and - at length that they went out, leaving, by tneir own-ac knowledgment, five millions of debtwith no provision made to meet it, and no re commendation but that it should bo paid by the economy of their successors a novel mode of payment one which certainly they had never tried. The sum stated is unques tionably far short of their indebtedness ; but the five millions they plead guilty to. But. Mr. President, 1 hold in my hand the official reports of his frugality, made by the Senator from New Hampshire when he was Secretary. I read from it the ag. gregato amounts 1837 : ; ; : J ja,xuu,uj 1838 ; : : : : 4 - 89,455,438 1839 -i-i : : : 37,129,300 1840 : : : : s f 23,220,533 4)152,076,391 $38,019,000 Giving an average of From this aggregate, I know it is Baid, in tho first place, the public debt is to be de ducted. What public debt?. It was tho boast and glory of Gen. Jackson's Admin, istration that the public debt was entirely discharged by him, and that he tcrncd over. to his successor an ample revenue and a Treasury absolutely disencumbered. With the payment of what public debt, then, docs -the Secretary credit himself? Why, with the debt of his own creation, and expects, by the financial legerdemain of giving tho year 1840crcdit for tho debt of 1839,'and throwing tho debt of 1840 upon 1811 , not only to keep a clear balance sheet for his own term, but to throw an accumulated burden upon his successors, which ho charges upon tliem as extravagance. That I may not fail to do justice to tho fiugality of tho late Administration, and the equally conspicuous financial abilities of the then Secretary and ndw honorable Sen ator, it is proper to state that, In the" re port from whieh I read, he sets forth that, for the permanent and ordinary purposes ef Govcrnment, the annual average expendU -hires were between thirteen and fourteen millions, while the large difference is made up of extraordinary cJxponscs. Extraordi nary expenses, indeed, they are! Hero Mr. Woodbuiy said the- distinctlon was" called for by the Senate To be sure it was by a resolution drawn by a confidential. , friend of the Secretary and of tho Admini stration, and with a view to explain away, and justify, and mistify ( at an . approaching trial before the people : a bill of particulars is drawn up, which the Secretary himself designated as other than ordinary and per manent expenses.A alrMci) and more op propriate designation might have been found in the word jobs, and the account, properly stated, would then be thirteen million for the Government and twenty-eight fur jobs. The report was fashioned with tho solo purpose of putting tho frugality of tho ad ministration in the most favorable point of view before tho public. It was the best that the hard-tasked ingenuity of the Secretary and his friends could devise at thanime. " It has since been explained s nd re-exr by a-roultiUKte-of glowecs, serviBg -oftly-t- lliustrato the obscure by the obscurer, until tho Secretary is like to escape like tho ink-fish;tn a darkness of bis own creation. The obvious intention of the account, as stated, wastrrshow that the necessary ex- , penses bad not increased ; and, intent upon this great object, h did not occur to the $a gacious maker of the report that ho roust . unavoidable at the same time show that tho vnnecessary expenses had inecased. Tbo only disguise attempted (more simple than that of the ostrich) was to classify the great mass of expenditure under the vague and, as I will show presently, tnappropriate de signctinn of temporary and extraordinary. At the time this memorable documcLt was called jbtyand heralded as tip extinguisher of all charges of extravagance against the . Adrainfstratidn,"we were bringing the au thors of it to a fearful reckoning. The voice of the peoplo demanded an account, and the Executive came up to the examina. tiqn with the affected swagger and fright- , ened effrontery of a prodigal youth, cate. chised by his irritated father. 44 How is this, young gentlemen? what -means this extravagance? how dare you waste my . money in such enormous sums 44 Good father," says the youth f 44 be not in a pas sion; you are altogether mistaken; you , v