,by ^ns, t gea, to i>ra- I08e lach kuble uni- 1 form The tar. and |n« Jrincr. |/or.9. >\, ; t • the iCfc o no \> arc >thcr, )ach than H>eri- kl this 10 ihu le ilt- witU , fron» 5rcr [if the |Rt our ig tfb- uaiio’i IrsAM. iriMv. su*- [i valor lecri or thy . r Sv..- b wi.a- bcin-'- ^ut'. . lakui.; Hic^ ;d i.i COJ :e, i'i- c \)V a:- Inbscr:- 100 :• II a \ - lul tlifir are vc- icss Dcui'^- llxri:.' ' 111 in’Ai- a \v'n k lu \VCL*k ]anr-‘JTi- |oi‘ Sep* prip*^-’- life to ‘1.0 )pcr |*hc cn i an • -V jtancfs. [cipl* ’ Ito cr.-^ui ^€ry reu- Islablitii' of tliii [directed k* gCMll' ' loycd ti> Iheir aiil- Iroundii'i,' lere ap- Inporlant rerthrow red sincc slehwtcti the tnie Ibich [rics ncC'* gj-oiiniis he prini’i' 1 t'cdf’i"il id in ppiriiun ii‘ I us to tlic Biw jluctunti-'u that eer ie Kt’dcrul IpriiH-ipl^^’ Bstinod ■ Govern' lang arid then Jjrginia i-^ [ill, in the If the Con- fchcrisheil M who dC' IHe is o«'^ |e prove f- M estini3^ If Xhoioa** to the (>i' ,n. Oor the rest' |itor>) sal ne"'® papers Vtl^c JfVirgf*''^ lither, ^by i-'r*"- 0' JOSEPH W. HAMPTON, .“The powers granted under the Constitution, being derived from the People of the United i\e reeumed by thcin, whenever perverted to their injury or oppression.”—Madison. -Editor and Publisher. VOLUME I,! CHARLOTTE. N. C., NOVEMBER 23, 1841. NUMBER 37. TERMS The Mecklenburg JeJ^ersonian'' is published weeivly, at Tiro Dollars and Fifty Cents, if paid in advance; or T/iree Dollars, if not paid before the expiration of three months from the time of subscribing. Any person wlio will prt^ure A ix subscribers and become responsible for their subscriptions, shall have a copy of the paper gratisor, a club of ten sub scribers may have the paper one year for "I ircnty Dollars in advance. No paper will be discontinued while ihc subscriber owps any tlung, if he is able to payand a failure to notify the Editor of a wish to discontinue at least one month before the expira tion of the time paid for, will be considered a new engagement. Original Subscribers will not be allowed to discontinue the l^aper before the expiration of the first ycai without paying for a fiiii year’s subscription. Ad‘'{'.rtUehienta \v:ll bt' cotispicuouj^ly and correctly in|»«rr-. C ut Ont PollJ-rpGS squa?^ ftjr the first insertion, and Tir "^ i v-iito Cents ior iich cofttinuance—L-xcept Court and other . '.al advertisements, which will be chargtMl twcnfy-Jiveper nt. h’ehor than the above rates; (owing to the delay, g^nc- railv, attendant upon collections'). A liberal discount wul be Hiadu to those who advertise by the year. Advertisements sent ill lor publication, must bu marked with the number of inscr- tums desired, or they will be published until forbid a:id charg- fd accordingly. Letters to the Editor, unless conlauiing money in sums cf Fice Dollars, or over, must come free of postage, or the ainuuu* j'aid at the ofTice here will be charged to the writer, j!i ovt ry m>niice, and collected as other accounts. P O E T Y VVceklv Almanac for Xovcmber, 1S41. DA VS. ! .Si s RI.-E :i W-r^u'sd.>y, , 3 ■Jci ']'! M:>iiay, , ■« •,'3 /•■fi'Ti v, : t _7 Saturday, j t S’.miav, I 6 Mon.liiv. , -f D--' ! 1 57 ; t ;'6 i i 56 I 4 DO j 1 54 ' 4 54 i Mooy’s PHASES- Last (Quarter, Xew 3I00P. First liuarter. Full Moon, D. H. M. 5 10 53 E. i:i 0 14 M. 21 0 55 M. 25 I E. i j\e» Casli Stove. CHARLES E. MOSS & CO. AKK now KECKIVING and OI'KMNG a Sj'lc/ifU'l of In till" Brick Store tormorly occupied by Samuel A. llarri=. Their (roods were purchased in New-l ork nr.l Philadelphia for CASH ENTIRELY, by one , tlie firm. They Hatter themselves that their ^^*t.- k will be found cheaper than any ever oflered l >r acile in this place. As they intend to do an ex- clu>ive (’ASH BUSIXES.S, they hope that none ^vlU e:;ue.n to p’lrchaoc on Hr. i'h:ii\oUe. Xoveinb«;r 2. ISll. THE CHARLOTTE j Female Academy ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE OF Valuable Property ! AS Admiui.-5trator on the estate of the late Wil liam Cook, deceased, the subscriber will expose at public auction, at the late residence of said de ceased. on Fj'iday, the lOtk (lay of Dtccmber 7it\vt, die foliownig property, to wit : Elve or six valuable {/ichi a vcrif lihehj young Blacksmith ;) A SET OF ^lSfarli5mitlv\ 9*ccf^ ; Horses, Cattle, ANO Hogs; A quantity of Seed CoUon; Com, Hay. and Fodiler, With numerous other articles not here named. ALSO, Will be offered for sale at the above time and placc, A valuable Plantation, C ONTAL\L\G 170 Acres of Ijaiid, Or therenbouts. Said PIcntation lie.s immediately on the Camden road, eiglit miles below Charlotte, and adjoins the lands ot Col. Aujruslus Alexaiuh*r. Charles G. Alexander, Esq., and others. There arc BUILDINGS on it, and a Spring of excellent wa- ] ter. Persons desirous of piirchasiiif^ the Plantation, | halrhet, and etccit^ra b .Knie^n.” ON THE DEATH OF 4n INFANT. “ Suffer little children tn comc nn^ofne, and forbid them, not, for of such 'S the Kinguhn of Heaven How calm aro thy slumbers, thoo sweet httle stranger, Unmindful of sorrow—regardless'f danger i Thy mild spirit left thee as pure as it found thee, Ere the cold cared of life spread tl*ir darkness around thee! Thy spirit owned not this world of confusion, Its joys deign’d no rcli‘4h for “fancy's illusion I'hine eye clos’d upon them, thy pilgrimage ended, Thy soul mounted upwardj by angels attended. Sleep on, lovely cherub! No more slialt thou waken, Thy body lits tenant lens, cold and forsaken. Nu more shall tha arms of a parent enfold the^', No more shall the eye of afTection behold tliee. Though now the frad body in death is rechning, Thy brigljt, spotless spirit with ingels s shining : I'or our Savior to us an assurance has given. That "of Kuct;” as thou art ‘ is the K-ngdom of H-nvcn’* Politics of the Day. A Hoositr Cvstnrntr.—Tlie Picayune gives a queer account of an uncouth look.n^ Hoosier who wont into an ironmon^rer’s .‘?tore in Chatres street, whist- linji, on somewhat a low key, ‘‘Yankee Doodle,” and seeming as independent as an eagle m his eye. He threw his eye down alone the well arranged store, as a captain of nulitia w»uld look along the lines oTa training day, and then addressed the clerk, who, with well combed hair, stood impatient to know what tlie Iloosier wanted, tJnt he might at once sup p!y him, and return to peru^■ n; James’ last novel. ‘ Stranger, you fro it raytl, *r cxtensiv’e here in the are invited to go on it and examine lor themselves. Tcrnitt of the Sale—Six months credit, purt'luvsers ‘’•IvhifT bond with approved sccuritv. LKNJ. MORROW, Admr. Mecklenburg county. Xov. 10, 1S4L -Iw N. B. All persons indebted to the above estate are once more, andjor the last time, called upon to come forward and make payments. It this call is not complied \Mlh in a .«liorl time, debtors will have to settle with an officer ‘*to a dead certainty. — Those holdins” claims on the estate ^re also tincc roorc rc«vxo«u.:i to present them lor paymonL w iii - in the time presciibed by law', legally authenticat’ d, or their payuicnt will be barred. BE\J. MORROW, Admr. Nov. 10,1'^n. w ILL be re-opened on the 1st day of Octo ber next. Pupils c an be ac commodated with board, ei ther in respectable tainilies in the village, or in the Aca demy with the Teachers, at ^9 per month. Terms of Tuition per Session. THIRD CLASS. ^vc:ldinL^ Spelling, with the Elements ^ q. g -q of Gc'Vgruphy and Arithmetic, S '■* SKCOM) CLASS. Reading. Writing, English Clrammar, J Emerson's second part Arithmetic and > SIO 50 Olney-s CJeography, ' FHIST CLASS. Inchiding the studies ol the second, wi^^ larger sj’stems of Arithmetic and Geci^j graphy, Algebra, Composition, Bota- ^ nv, History—Natural, IVloral and Men- j* oO tal Philosophy. Astronomy, Chemis- \ try, Rhetoric, &c., &c. J EXTRA BRANCHES. Instruction in Music on the Piano, per Session. S25 The French Language per session, .... 10 Drawing and painting in water colors, per sess, 10 Oriental Teinting, per course, 10 Wax Fruit or Flowers, do. ti Embroidery in Silk and Chenille, \\ orsted ^ Lamp Mats, Ottomans, &c. vScc S Frciich Sachets, Screens, and Work Baskets, ^ - per course, S S. D. NYE HUTCHISON. Principal. Charlotte. Sept. l-k 1S41. 27...t ].at Notice. The subscriber hereby notities all persons in debted to the laie lirm of lle.cand r^ ihoth-^ crs. that the business of that concern must be clo.sei* forthwith. All wlio do not comply with this notice between this time and the 1st ot January next, bj a settlement of their notes or accounts, may rest red of having to settle them with an oHicer. 1 ms is positively the hist iwtice we shall give on this sub- ADAM ALEXANDER, One of the Surviving Partners of the firm of Alexander & Brotiiers. ject. Rather.” said the clerk, .:.^umin£r a bland tone, but w.^'hlng the lioosier on b «ard his Hat boat; do any thing tor you, sir ^'' Well, I guess you can, young feller,” said the Hoobier, ‘-you sefin to be a right kind of a nice man. Wiiy, your hair is jisl as greasy and as glos sy as if you eat nothing but bar meat, you raccoon- looking crittur you. Why -m*. airtli don’t you make a clt\77'inr on your chin ? (tj.c clerk w'ore an imperi al.) Out west, we ne ver le ivo a sttnnp standing that vve don't cut down. ^ “S:. /’ i^aid tlie clerk, pe ni:/, !y, ‘*do YOU v.'idh to buy '• t • ‘ ' ‘* Haint you got locks'?" said the Hoosier, perlect- Iv composed. ■ ‘‘ Yes,” said the clerk, “ we liave locks of every desf'ription, padlocks, spring locks, patent locks, and double shooting locks.*’ “Yes, stranirer,'' said the Hoosier, “but I .lo all my shooting with a ritle. I don’t want none of them locks. I want a lockjaw, for Pve tried every means to stop my old woman's tongue, and 1 believe noth- iiitf '•Ise will silence her.’’ ‘‘ Don't deal in the article,'’ faid the clerk gruffly, returning to read the ‘“Ancient Regime.’ ‘‘And. darn you, couldn’t you say so at first,-’ re plied the Hoosier, you half-leathered, lialf-starved looking prairie chicken.” The Hoobter left the store whistling Hai! Colum bia : EXTRACTS FROM THE SPEECH OF Tlie lion. Levi Woodbury, Delivered at the Democratic Meeting at Fanieul Hall, Boston, October 19, 1641, Speaking of the last Presidential Election,. Mr. Woodbury said; The scenes of degradation and demoralization which preceded that election, were not of Ameri can growth; there were basely foreign in character. They must have bc^en imported by our opponents from countries where the lower ranks are ignorant and inexperienced, and accustomed to debauchery, and where votes are bought and sold like sheep in the shambles. Their influence must be short-lived, where intulLigence and virtue among the electors are not utterly exterminated. Never can results thus produced, or results attempted to be perpetua ted by means such as those proposed at the late ex tra session, triumph long here. Indeed, it is a part of the providenco of God every where, that vnlanful means can no more be used with safety or durable success, than unlawful ends. Hence they have, in this instance, already proved the seeds of overthrow to those who used them. The profli gate engineers have befn blown sky high by their own shells. The revulsion is not only begun, but adtranced. The people are not merely awaking, but awakened. And overwhelming vuin is W’ril- ten on the walls of the political palaces of our op ponents. in warning as legible and deep as ever dismayed tyrants m days of miraculous interposi tion. [Applause.] Let us devote a few momr‘nts to a consideration of some of their means and measures, as a memento for our children to shun, and as an excitement for us and all "vvho value virtue or liberty, to punish such outrages on them at the polls, by the most sigiial reprobation. Look tirst at some of the reckless charges they truinpcd against their predecessors. In tiie front rank was a host of fabrications; and w’hat was worse, after bemg proved on ihe floor of Con gress, bv one of his own jx>litical friends—even by one of your own E’^-Governors and present collec tor, to be fuil of exaggeration and h\-pocrisy, t’aou- sands, calUng themselves honorable men, aided in disseminating those falsehoods in every section of the Union. Next came the convulsive horror at the use of bloodhounds, though employed to detect the ferocious savage, who had spared neither sex nor infancy, and had for years covered an exposed frontier with conflagration and butchery. But W’hat is w'orse, the very territorial Govci\uir who iC'.'oai.ii'. iiutt*,' ana w—them, was a Wl.i.:.. addressing whig conventions—and has, by a whig administration, been rc-appoinled to the office from which the abused democratic one removed him.— (Many cheers.) Next came the really laughable charge of usurpation intended by a standing ar- A standing army, composed only of citizen holders through the United States Bank alone. Even now, after all the tirades against the last ad ministration on account of Swartwout’s default, we are told by the very last whig papers themselves that all the vituperation has been groundless, the defalcation trifling, and the whole well secured. In fine, without being too tedious, the past administra tions were falsely charged with ruin—ruin—gen eral RUIN—every year since General Jackson’s election, as well as since Mr. Van Buren’s. Ruin, from imputed harshness to the Indians in Georgia, where civilizaMon and Christianity w^ere only then attempted to be extended—ruin., from the veto of the bank in 1832, which veto their own President has repeated in 1841—ruin., from the removal of the deposites, which the law expressly authorized, and from an institution that has since failed, and been pronounced even by some of the Whig parti sans VL^hlic ?iuisance. But enough of charges so groundless and absurd. Well calculated to be sure to mislead foratinr>e, but yet, after detection, and full exposure, calculated al so to recoil and overwhelm, as they are now doing, with shame, desertion, and defeat, their heedless au thors. Look next a moment at the reprobate character of the other practices and principles under wdiich they November 2, IStl. Charlotte Journal insert until the 1st of January. DR. C. J. FOX Has just received a large and general assortment of MEDICINES, Srussi, Otis, Dye-Stuffs, Perfumery, Thompsonian Medicines, Wine.s and Spirits for medical use, Living T*\^fihiovy.~ should hate to be counsel in a case like the ibllowin?. A member of the So ciety of Friends was called to give testimony in a case of assault, & ('. Coumel: You were present during the attray,and iiave heard the preceding witness account ? 7ny _ _ . militia ! Yes, a citizen militia converted into an j political debauchery, fr r voluntarily to destroy their own liberlics, and ; ^adgeri^m and Glenrwcrthis army sought and procured power. Their course, as a party, was to promise nothing, but abuse every thing. At the same time, fragments of the party ia particular places promised every thing, and in oth ers resisted every thing. In one place the frag ments were l.’nited Slates Bank, in another anti, bank—in one high tarilV, in another anti-!arifl^—in one abolition, in another nnti-abolition—in one pledging all offices to old incumbents, in another all to new ones. But as a party, and a whole party, when asked for their joint common principles for administering the government, they referred you to nothing, but their philosphical and argumentative, coonskins and hard cidi-r. If you inquired tor their plan s of re form, you were answered only by log cabins or gold spoons. In fine, the loftiest among them tif. mitted that their re.«olutiori wastu oppose ever^t/ thing j.nd propose tioihing. Even at Harrisburg, where the magnates of then* cause assembled, you could obtain no opinions on the Constiiution, the Currency, the Distribution, much less A bolicion, or the Unued States Bank — All was concealiiient, noncommittalisin, inglorious secresy—nothing, in short, about any great princi ple cr question of constitutional liberty, or public policy, but simply “ Tippecanoe and I’yler too,' It was l^ppecanoe and Tyler too,'' morning, noon, and night, at taverns, pipe-layings, log-cabins, InUi: ian pivl it Jiot iu churchy. ^ least in aristoci itic dia’ving room® il was of black spirits and wiiite, of ail hues, opinions and crecds, and ail not foi one single great specified ob ject, except “ Tippecanoe and Tyler too;” and that to be attained through all kinds of misrepresentation and delusion, all kinds of mummery and parade, all kinds of sensual and sordid appeals; indeed all kinds om treating down to rthism; and all kinds of m- that on a most dangerous plan, it was pretended— | consistency, from running two candidates to estab- but which had its origin in principle under Mash- • Y^tink of the United States, who had both uni- ingion, end had been particularly recommended by . opposed it; and two to enable them to seize Harrison himself (Applause.) Shame, shame on j office, who had uniformly de- ! thncn cruiils! nnrl nli rpmnvals for oninion’.si Shame, SUCH hypocrisy. But perhaps enough of this scru-1 jounced thos*e spoils, and ali removals for opinion’s tiny. (Cries of no, go on, go on.) Next then. came the charge of a forty million debt! Reiterated over the whole Union, and yet now admitted not to exceed tioelve; and half that twelve manifestly caused by tliemselves. This was done by^ them in one half a year, and near sixteen more was attemp ted to be created for a National Bank, while their predecessors were twenty-four half years in for ming as much as five or six million; and in the mean time saved and deposited with the States near And a variety of other articles, all of which he warrants genuine, and will sell low for cash. Charlotte, April 27, IS tO. 8....F Clock and Wateli REPAIRING. * -I repair Clocks and Watches in STILL continues tu .j. j-equested by the ow’n- the very best niannc ^yith all kinds o. er to do so. He is well s . jg^vellery Store of S materials. His Shop is in ti* A. ^ ^he Courthouse P. Alexander, situated South ^ c; charlotte between the ‘‘ Mansion House u work Hotel.” It will be his earnest luithluUy, so as to possible His price shall^ be as moderate u COACH MAKING. THE Subscribers having entered in to copartnership, will carry on the above business in all its various branches, at the old stand formerly owned by Mr. Carter Crittenden, opposite the Jail. All work WARRANTED and Re pairing done at the shortest notice, for moderate charges. CHARLES OVERMAN, JOSHUA TROTTER. Charlotte, June 15, 1841, ^^m for CASH. [Chailotte, July 6, 18^ .eiotfe ^ Matcft RESPECTFULLY informs the cit izens ofCharlotte and the public gene rally, that he has opened a shop in the town of Charlotte, nearly opposite the «p^^^nalnn ” where he will be glad to receive t Ws “e of brines.. Clocks, Watches, &c ^^^ill be repaired in the most substanUal manner, at short notice, on moderate terms, and warram^^ to perform well. A portion ol public p o -respectfuUv solicited. Charlotte, June 1,18tJ. ®o mnXftvtniLtVB* Proposals will be received by the Board of Wardens of the Poor for Mecklenburg County, until the 20th of December next, for a STEWARD to take charge of the Poor House for the term ot one year from the 1st of January, 1842. ^ Persons desirous of the situation, will address the^ bids to the subscriber through the Charlotte P^t-Onice, en dorsed, “Proposals for Steward of the Poor House. On the 20th December the Board will meet and make the election. ■ „ . BENJ. MORROW, Chairman. Charlotte, Nov. 16, 1841. 30...5 Charlotte Journal w’ill copy. WTT T TAM HUNTER would inform his custo m^rs and the public generally, that he still ^ontinSt the BOOK-BINDING BUSINESS at hie old stand, a few doors south-east of the Branch Mmt Hf will be happy to receive orders in his line, and “edges himseff to spare no pains to give complete satisfaction. _ . im=* Orders left at hie Shop, or at the Office of the Friend: Y ea. * , Coii7i!:el: You perceive the contradictory state- thirty millions, though their successors have notuepo- ment of the afl'air*, as testified by those who have al- j a dollar with them,and will not without the aid of ready been examined, both as regards the manner ju(.j.0ase(j taxation. Next came the complaint against of the assault, and the marner in which the plain- .. . . , j r tiff’s coat was torn. One siys it was torn horizon tally, another perpendicularly; others, again, trans versely, and diagonally, and some give it incisions and contusions. You will, therefore, have the good ness to represent to the Coif’t and Jury, the precise manner in which the assault was made, and the eoat torn. My client relies raaialy on your testimony for redress. “Step this way,’- said the witness, “and I Avill be brief and explicit.-’ (Placing his hands on the law yer’s collar.) The manner was thus: Friend 1 at- rick seized the coat of friend Andrew in this way, nd, according to my apprehension, being in a mind not savoring of peace. After various w'ords of va nity spoken by Patrick, which it w”ould be unseemly to repeat, he shook him af^er this manner. And as to the coat, (suiting the action to the word,) he rent it grievously !—Pennsylvania paper. Qt-ii.p tells a good story of a Newburyport Dea con, who, upon returning from preaching one Sun day, perceived that his boys had been making *egg nogg.” After lecturing them on the impropriety of doing such things at any time, and particularly on “ Sabba’ days,” he w^hispered to the eldest— • Is there any left, John 7 ”—Bostmi Post. “Say, uncle Ben, what sort o’ animals are them ere punkins that are all over black, a most blue, and a little redish ? ” Them, Jonathan, are called egg plants—wegetable eggs.” “ Eggs ! well, I swan, I should like to see one of ’em hatched, to see ^\h.lt sort o' crittur a wegetable am. Ijcarning how to the following good story: “ One of the Washin^o nian teetotallers served his time at the gMcery bu siness, with a Deacon who was in the habit of ma king his owm port w’ine, from whom he often had or ders to “go up stairs andgriwd some logicood^s the port wine w’as most out.” One Sunday the Deacon was hard at v/ork over a large cask with a pole in his hand, stirring up the home-made port wine, when a member of the same church entered unobserved. After looking with astonishment for some minutes, he exclaimed, “ Halloo! Deacon, what are you do ing ? ” The Deacon jumped round m great^confu- sion, and, after a little hesitation, replied, * y “Xj * was afraid I might get ofl in a boat some of these times, and I w’as learning how to scull / “ CufTy, go to the meadow aiid catch my hors^ Hif^h Olympus.” “Yes, sar—don’t know so much ’bout de hiOj but he’s limpiis nufT, dat’s sartin. “ Excuse haste and a bad pew,” as the hog said to the butcher when he escaped.'-^A’l O. Crescent. sake. What could common sense philosophy (^r cool re flection anticipate to happen, ere long, when the mask was sripped off from such a chaos and prof ligacy of principles? Nothing less than what ex perience soon verified. Those who sow the wind must expect to reap the whirlwind. TJie end in one sense came more quickly than any anticipated —in less than one short month. In less than one short month—ore the baked meats of the inauguration, with all its senseless pa geantry and “glorification,” were cold, they had falsified most of their pledges against removals, and the use of treasury notes, which saved froni two to importimities and bickerings, not only embittered three per cent., on the average, compared with their hurried to a painful grave the gray hairs twelve million loan. The notes allowed all the ^ (;;'hief Magistrate. middling classes to participate, while the loan bene- jt is a singular ccincidence, that the cold blooded fits only banks and nabob capitalists; and the notes, | p^x-secutcrs for the spoils of office were allowing however derided, did not, on the 4th of March last, timbers of the last log cabin in the capitol, the e([ual six millions, w'hile our opponents have since emblem of their cause, to be pulled down and authorized loans equalling more than twenty-hve the dust beside his ashes—w’hen these millions, and resorted to treasury notes also, when- ‘ ever able, imder former laws. (Loud cheers.) Next extravagance of expend.iture—being, the last year, but twenty-three millions, when they con template twenty-seven or eight this year; being larger in former years only under large expenses in Indian wars and uncalled for appropriations for other purposes made by Congress, to the extent of thirty or forty millions. The average in Van Buren s administration did not exceed tw’enty-seven millions, instead of thirty-seven, as pretended often, and his last year, reduced to twenty-three millions, was leading the w’ay to only twenty in this year, that being only the amount of the average ordinary ex- jenditure of the whole last twelve years, pronounc ed so extravagant by those who have exceeded it seven or eight millions. (Many cheers.) I ought to pass over other topics of their groundless charg es, lest too great an encroachment should be made on your time. (More—more.) Look at the losses by Receivers, Collectors, &c., so falsely presented and exaggerated. A list of the whole from the foundation of the government, dur ing half a century, has been circulated and placard- ed°by these honest politicians on every post and cor ner as the amount lost during only the twelve ppt years of democratic rule. Much of it has also been aUributed to the sub-treasury system. When in truth the losses have not been a single dollar un der the sub-treasury, and when its whole expenses Yearly do not appear to have equahed thirty thou sand dollars; when all the losses by collectors and receivers under General .Tackson were not as much as in various former administrations, with a United States Bank, or as the losses yet unsettled to the Treasury by the United States Bank alone; and when all the losses under Mr. Van Buren—(inclu- dino- Swartwout himself—recommended to omce at his^econd term by whigs—voted for by whigs— chairman of the panic whigs, and once nominated as a candidate for Vice President by whigs) not ali equal to the losses in the last four years in more than twenty cases of broken banks; nor one-twen- L.lieth of the amount lost by the public and its sotck* ast were being conveyed from the city. What has been the fate also of his colleague—of Tyler too''—before the first half year of his Pre sidency closed? Burnt and shot in effigy over lalfthe Union-=-denounced in their conventions— jalckballed by their presses—and in fine proscribed in Congresfj itself by all the great leaders of the great Harrisburg piebald coalition. What sudden retribution! What changes be yond the romance of the wuldest Arabian tale! What a stupendous coalition sapped by its own bad principles—overthrown, scattered in fragments over the earth in only half a year! It was almost mira culous madness, which led them to persevere, a.s they began, in such an universal disregard for ail their solemn pledges against removals for mero onoinion’s sake, pledges given every where and m every form, and by almost every conspicuous poli tician. In this matter their wantonness almost ex ceeds credibility. Did they suppose the whole com munity had adopted a Paul Clifford rule of conduct and belief? Did they suppose that the people at iaro-e had neither memories nor morals ? Is breach of feith to be a part of the creed of our opponents =- Can they regard hypocrisy as a virtue? violation of pledges as honorable? ' Did they expect to re tain public confidence by breaking it, an to future trust by a profligate abuse of all past trust? If they did. it is fortunate that the false disguise has be n s^rlTp^ off so early, and that they now stand uLhiggfd-heiote the scorn of many of their own parTy and the sneers of the world.-(Cheers.) They have been equally unfortunate, if not per- fidious, in several other respects Thus, on tho ,rreat and absorbing question of the currency, they have accomplished little or nothing, except to get un a malignant family feud. Their magnificent doings have been chiefly undoings. The ^eposito act, as to the pet banks, which they had as indispensable to prevent a despotic purse and the sword, and to Executive discretion, they have rep haste, before any system had become a law in Us