o TO. THE NORTH CAROLINIAN. HE FRIENDS WE tQYED IN CHILDHOOD. AH 0I6IMAI.'AM.i) BT E . " Tbe friends we loved in childhood, Oh, whither have they fled Beneath the Tillage churchyard, , They slumber with the dead ! Jn peace they rest beneath the sod, Their earthly labors o'er; - On, the friends that we lov'd in our early youth, We shall meet on earth no morec The friends we loved in childhood, When life was young and gay How blithesome were their bosoms, Throuebout the joyous day; " And iisrhtly tripped their merry feet Across the flowery plain; But the friends that we lov'd in our early youth, We ne'er shall meet again ! The friends we loved in childhood, How fond their memory seems; They haunt us in our slumbers, They whisper in our dreams ! And then we wake with saddened heart, To find our bliss in vain: For the friends that we lov'd in our early youth, We ne'er shall meet again ! The friends" we loved in childhood, Oh, peaceful be their rest; And green may be the willow, That siehs above their breast! And when in death we lowly sleep, Secure from all our pain; Oh, the friends that we loVd in our early youth, May we meet in peace again ! m ORTH-C AROLINIAN. FJtVJETTEVII.Z.Es Saturday Morning, July T, 1839. REPUBLICAN NOMINATION. for congress: William A. Morris. Independent Treasury System. It seems much desired by his enemies, that ie President should stand before the public, Illy committed in favor of this System.- I eil, tney certainty wui oe grauueu; mas iuch as Mr. Tan Buren, has, on all proper ccasions, since the failure of the scheme of sing the State Banks as depositories of the iblic monies, frankly and unequivocally de ared himself in favor of separating the fi ances of the government from all Banks, nd of permitting the government to exact jecie for its dues, whenever it shall be neces iry for the safety of the people's money. On the eve of the elections, we should ad tert a little to this much talked of, and much Jbused, and much misunderstood Sub-Trea-Ltry System, as it is called: And we should ive it a careful examination, as it is certain r the most important political matter which low separates the contending parties. The greatest objection to the Independent lYeasury System is, to that part of it,- which ve think the most advantageous feature; we nean, that part of it which shall authorize the Joverument by law, to exact specie for its lues, wheuever the Secretary cf the Treasury nail think it requisite to do so. If a law were passed denying to an indi- idual the right todemaud specie for the pay- peut of his debts, every one would say at Ince, this is unconstitutional. It would yeak down at oace, and render useless the full and through examination and comparison of their charges and the Journal, and also with my statements herein contained, but they de clined examining any more than the first page referred to by the letter of the Hon. member, which failed to show the yeas and nays, and thus ended their examination, though it was earnesly invited." We beg every one who reads this, to at tend particularly to the statements contained in this letter; and if we do not shew, that this letter of itself and by itself convicts Mr. Deberry,"of a deliberate purpose to keep his late constituents uninformed of his votes, then we confess that a careful perusal of the letter has not enabled us to understand the writer's meaning. Mr. Deberry says, the charges against him were in relation "to his vote3 on the appropriation bills passed for the year I83S, at the first and second sessions of the last Congress." The two sesions of the last Congress, were held during the winters of 1S37 and 1538. The appropriation bills "for the year 1838" were passed at the first of these sessions, in the winter of 1837. To prove that it could not have been the appropriation bills at both sessions of the last Congress, with voting for which, Mr. Morris charged Mr. Deberry; let us only observe what Mr. Deberry says in another part of his letter. These are Ids words: "Though I had the Journal of Congress re ferred to, delivered to me last winter at Washington, it had not yet come to hand, and I did not obtain possession of it until Monday evening last, at Richmond Court." "I gave the Journal a critical examina tion," &c. He farther, says, that "the yeas and nays were taken on five others, which I voted against, including the appropriations made in the two bills for issuing Treasury notes of $20,000 each; at the first and second sessions, to pay the expense of their issue," and fur ther he says, "these make an aggregate of 37 millions of dollars, and other small bills, &c will make up the 39 millions." He further says, "now, sir, from these facts which the Journals faithfully shew," &c. and in another place, "I adverted to these facts, and produced the Journal." In the first place, recollect reader, that the State Legislation has effected the sound ness of our paper currency in this State; and can it not do the same thing elsewhere? It has been done here without the aid of Congress, or a United States Bank". Why may it not be done in every State? Nothing will do more in compelling all the States to make their Bank paper sound, thau this very Sub-Treasury plan of allowing the Government to collect its debt3 in hard mo ney, and keep it independently of Banks. But the Whigs say, it will break down the credit system, it will ruin large speculators, merchants, and stock dealers, who live by dealing in large amounts owed to Banks. We say in reply, the safety of the people's money requires it. We say that to secure the permanency and stability of the Govern ment over our heads, it is indispensible that a check should be given to the mania, the paper money madness which we have been cursed with, by following the example of England. The voters should be all told, that The Great Issue Yes, the great, all important issue, is between Mr. Van Buren's plan of a hard money Government, unconnected with Banks, and Mr.- Clay's plan of a great 50 million Bank, to overshaddow and corrupt the Government. .Harris for Van Buren. Itrberry for Clay. 0C5"Let the people look well to this, next Thursday week. We know they prefer a hard money Government, to a shin-plaster concern. Every man to his post! Mr. Deberry and his letter, (called by the Ob server his Circular.) Mr. Debet ry says in a letter dated July 18th, 1R39, and printed in the Observer of July 24th, "You have no doubt noticed the efforts recently made by my political enemies to mis lead the people in relation to my votes on the' appropriation bill passed for the year 1838, at the first and second sessions of the last Con gress. My competitor, in his speech deliv ered the 2nd day of June, at your County Court in Fayetteville, charged me with hav ing voted for nearly all the appropriations for 1S3S, which amounted to more than 38 mil lions of dollars, and with inconsistency in doiug so, after I had so often exclaimed against the prodigal expenditures of the ad ministration. "These charges were repeated and urged in his speeches at Montgomery county, and also at Anson county, during the last two weeks. To these charges so otten repeated I replied, that if I had voted for all these appropriations, I might still have been blameless, as the Ad ministration had not only called for that sum, but for a much larger amount than was actually granted; but I promptly denounced these charges as utterly untrue, knowing that I had voted ajjainst many of the appropriation billd. Jkly competitor attempted at all tnose places to 1 Deberry speaks of these ttwrgo. mm support tne charge by stating mat ne naa let- f me letter on me 2nd of ters in his possession from a member ot Con-1 .... . . . c .u:- u,. ua June, in this place, he describes them as nav- Kress ji una cue, suiiiu uiai uau mv. i lars! of their money; for which not one public act thai we have seen, has been pointed out by him, or hts friends, as originating with, him, for the benefit of the District or the country. In the next place, Mr. Deberry voted on the 15th of June 1839 for a resolution that the clerk be directed to supply such members of the House as have sot been provided un der former orders; (He himself being proba bly one of (hem) with the following books, (viz:) The Diplomatic Correspondence? The Documentary History of the U. States; The Land Laws; The American State Papers; The Register of Debates, including the two Volumes of the first Congress, published by Gales and Seaton, and the two volumes of the last Congress; Contested Elections; Com mercial Regulations; Secret Journal to 1778, and Elliott's Debates; and that the Committee of Ways and Means, be instructed to report a bill for the necessary appropriation to carry this resolution into effect. In the next place we say that Mr. Deberry, at the same session of Congress, voted against a Bill making further appropriations to carry into effect, the Treaty with the Cherokee Indians; whereby the necessary steps were to be taken to re move those Indians, beyond the Mississippi. We again call for all Mr. Deberry's votes in the two sessions of the last Congress. We hope the Editor of the Observer will at tend to this for Mr. Deberry, and where the yeas and nays were not taken, still we hope the member will not be dumb as to how he votes, if the Journal is. Come out! Come out, gendemen Whigs, shew us what your mem ber has done; give us a circular; we demand it as the right of one of the voters of the Dis trict, give us a full list of all Mr. Deberry's votes. Do not fight in the dark any longer; every man has not the Journals Mr. De berry has, and the people's money paid for them; will he not give them a peep, by only publishing his votes? Adams, Clay, Harrison, Webster, White,! The Heroes of Modern Whigery. The Knights Errant of the New order of grum blers and growlers in politics. What Her ald shall quarter their motley coats of arms on one ground? Who so skilled as to Chron icle in one harmonious field, the multiform mottoes on their adverse escutcheons? The varied hues of their nodding plumes, what object of this letter and the sole object is to heraid;c pencn Can paint, to decorate one prove that the charges as to Mr. Deberry's votes, mentioned iu Dr. Montgomery's let ter, "have been proved untrue by the authori ty to ichich he (Dr. Montgomery) referred."" In the next place, notice that when Mr. m C f .1 IT J. 1 . 1 gorgeous helmet tor me n.nigm erect wuo is to preside over this heterogeneous chivalry: Ob! for the pen of a Scott, to figure forth in phrase chivalric, their multitudinous coats of arms,' Ihelr tinged, screaked and apacUad ban ners, Acit mi; ml.i.iflnmnn o every rain bow die, the endless zig-zagery of their broad and narrow, round and ovel, square, oblong, journals of Congress before him, and that it ing relation "to his votes on the appropriation ano triangular shields! did not appear that 1 had voted against any ot bills, or the year 1838, at the first and second But why need a inidling sized an Buren the appropriation bills except oue of about a ions of last Congress. editor, pray for such gifts? Walter Scott, the .11. J -1 l in AnH rvri-i:inrr 1 I -mm lUllllOIl dUU a. UJU Ul -amicus auu vasuvw iu;: i I . Au " al. L C 1 I .h id, th.nt T haH votPrl for all the rest excent In the next place, observe that he after- immortal, the prince, the father of modern Congressional heats for that District? that and one other on which he said I had not wards speaks of "the Journal in the singular) writers, is dead. But then the whole class of A their 1 Whig stud, could not Bank, Anti-Bank 3rd New Light Whig candidate for the Presidency ; And one Har rison, the Federal, Bank 4th New Light, Whig candidate for the Presidency; And one White, the Jackson, wflntt-Jackson 5tli, lowest, last, least, New Light, Whig- candi date for the Presidency? All these, with their respective honors of signal defeat, fresh on thteir god-like brows; instead of seeking re tirement which alone can give dignity to the mortification of a great mind, at such defeats; are seen impudently,-unblushingly in the grea t Senate of this - great Union, struggling to harrass the Administration of the man whose talents had thrown their pretensions in the shade, and resorting to every device, to ren der that man unpopular; that one of them selves, yes! any one of these glorious five rejected candidates, might yet get into the Presidency. It is the motley politics of these file men originally differing toto eoelo the one from the other, that the opposition editors are working into one dirty batch of modern Whiggery: It is the ever varying hues and phases of the prejudiced and changing opinionsof these very five intriguing aspirants after power, that must constitute the ground work and co lorings, the lights and shades, the bright tints and ornaments of the gorgeous political paint ing, which the Whig prints are employed in executing. Verily, if these wotthies are linguists, they had better attempt to write down all the tongues of Babel. How can any man vote for any one of their candidates, if he pretends to consistency? If you are a Federalist and vote their ticket, they say Mr. Clay is a Democrat, and Noah calls them "Democratic Whigs." If you are a Democrat and vote their ticket, Mr. Webster's and Gen. Harrison's party, and Mr. Adams' parry all swear, it is a tri umph of Federalism. If you are a Tariff man, and vote their ticket, Mr. Clay's State Rights friends in the South, vow it is proof positive that the people decide against a Tariff! If you are a Nullifier, and vote their ticket, Mr. Webster's Federal friends take h for granted, that you support the "Southern man (Clay) with Northern principles" and look upon it as settled that the compromise' act does not settle the Tariff question-. WILMINGTON DISTRICT. After all the Whig meetings and Whig Conventions, and grand magniloquent Whig flourishes, in the two Whig prints, of the Whig town of Wilmington, is it possible they Jo m- nm at candidate in that District?- What has become of tht -staunch W hlgge ry of "Old Brunswick" and the "debatable ground of Sampson and Duplin," so much talked of by the Advertiser? Where is the charger, with which the Advertiser threaten ed to run us "to the throat-latch," in the The barn of N. McLmaw, ef Tyson's, Moore County, was consumed by fire, on the night of the 16th inst. with its contents, about 400 bushehr of wheat, a tftreshing machine, cotton gib, cotton screw, ahd: fa mily carriage, tc. supposed to be the: work of air meentliary; the loss is estimated at about two5 thousand dollars.- 1 WHOLESALE PRICES CURRENT. Corrected meekly for the Wurih Carolinian. Brandy, peach. " PPIY Bacon, Beeswax, Bale Rope,. Coffee, Cotton, Ootton Bagging, Oom, Candles, F. F. Flaxseed, Flour, Feathers, Iron, bar, Molasaes, Nails, cut, Suar, brown, " lurrp, " loaf, $ 1 00 00 60 00 18 00 so 00 8 CO 12 00 13 00 16 I 00 00 18 1 00 6 00 OO 45 00 51 00 36 . 00 07 CO 03 00 16 00 18 $00 60 00 70 00 13 00 23 OO J CO 13 00 iU 00 so' 1 10 00 SO I 95 50 00 00 00 6 00 40 0O OS 00 12 00 00 00 20 scarce. dull. dull, Bacon, " Batter, Beeswax, Bale Rope. Brandy, apple, Corn, per bushel, Coffee, scarce. Cotton, per 100 lbs. Cotton Bagging, Flour, per bbl. Gin, American, Lime, cask, Molaeses, Pitch, at the Stills, Rice, per 100 lbs. Rum, N. E. Rosin, scarce Sugar, brown; . ?prpenone, soft,i per Bbf. nrpentine, hard Tar, per bbL Pitdr ov Rosin, do Flooring boards, is.' Wide do do Scantting do Timber, nvcr rafts,' Statks. W. O. hhd. rough, m. Do do drawn, do W. O. bbl. ao R. O. hhds. rough, . do Do do dressed do Shingles. Country," do Contract,' c'o whmirgtoh. - $00 12 25 23 63 85 11 13 . 20 6 50 55 1 25 30 2 00 4 50 40 1 SO - 8 800 I2bi a or a 28 24 8 65 100 7 50 1 50 40 25 0O 43- 16 8 00 half price 2 00 5 50 12 50 28 OOc 18 00 a .9 0O II 00 a 1 50 a J 06 I 7tf 2 25 1 50 i s6 7 00 5 00 7 0O 16 00 30 Off 16 09 1 Off 16 00 2 00 4 00 voted; referrinsr also to pages on the journal, for proof of niv having so voted, and I was challenged to produce the journal, that refer uly standard of value which has been so I ence might be had to it- These letters from Visftlv ordained bv the framers of the izreat the member of Congress to which he referred, barter of our liberties. Is it not the same thing when Congress re- . . . 1 T" - 1 1 were caiiea lor at Anson ana ivicnmouu Courts, and were reluctantly produced, and referred to," then of giving the Journal, (still whig editors are left in his stead to do the suppiy a courser. They evidently give the t the singular,) a critical examination" worK. ineir mousanu grey goose quuia are thin up for X)d and aH We thjs Dis again of facts which "the Journals faithfully this moment at it, might and main, to rival trict comes next on the South Carolina line, shew;" and lastly, (changing the expression a Scott in this descriptive Heraldry. Ardent between Hall's, Shepherd's and McKay's, fourth time,) he says, "I adverted to these n toeir enorts, connaent 01 success, tney pry on lhe and East. and Conner's facta, and nroduced the Journal." IN iow in "eir wors, ami c.c.y " Fv on the ISorth West. We shall see next Dubhclv read, lhey proved to have been r ... .... s to the Government the same right that and franked bv the Hon. Wm. Mont- this last instance, trA.ci oj the Journals Out - - - - i nursuay-weeic wnetner u is to oe any ion- 1 . . 1. -. . ... -. 1 mnui vnniHPiT npnnpfi coiiucai uuuai&icubv; I n j . . a i . i j mr i.i mUSl nave I - -- , I L uuutuuuuiwr ocmccu vm lumucu. and all the works of all these masters, are burg, and the. three sea shore Districts last headed Modern Whigery. J mentioned. We think the Democratic fire is Deberry (the real Scott (?) ) shows in his I ia be prairie, and Morris is setting it out letter of this week, how well he could, do ev.ery where in Anson, Montgomery and the great piece, if Morris did not keep him J Richmond, as it already flame3, and crackles, busy electioneering, and when lite Mttor I anj roars jn Robeson, Cumberland and makes his observations upon the letter, and Moore- Look out Messrs. Whigs, Whig Jets puts his pithy queries, the thing stands forth anj Deberryites, you will get your whiskers complete, the mighty, giant work is done; I singed. the picture of modern whiggery is exhibited, one harmoneous cluster of ineffable tints in e constitution secures to every citizen? somery ot the lialeisn Uistrict, one 01 mem ne proaucer iixosm mauutsuy u. Has Conress the power to say to a debtor addressed to Mr. Holmes, Editor of the North been the one which did not correspond with Vf the Government, paper money shall be a "".3 TZ ' Z. f-h rf SS WbM WC Ylaicful tender" for your debt to the Treasury WEre placed in the hands of mv competitor, e no doubt wlU found to correspond f the United Slates, when nothing but gold and their contents widely disseminated. with it whenever. Mr. Deberry shall be candid Five Dollars Reward LOST; A POCKET BOOK. On tbe 12 day of May I lost a yellow calf skin Docket book, contain ing' 815 dollars in cash, and sundrv notes. One nnf off George T. Barksdale, for 50 10; one other note eta John McNeill and James CarreH, for 9 1 5; on other note on John McMillan, for $2; one due brli 01 John McMillan tor ?3 80; one note on John- Me Donald and toward M alloy, for 85 with a credit of 83. Several notes in favor of John McMiuin. for collection; one note on John Evans, for $34 20; one note on u. x . jyi cArtnur, and Archibald .McDonald, for SI 1 5; one judgment against Daniel Evans ana Daniel trans, lor 611 I5j one note on ref!T MC Millan and Moses Patterson, for SfO 10: one aaukat Je3 McMfflarfanrf John McMillan, for 2 55, -with a credit ot ju cents. Uj I lorwarn all persons from trading for the above papers, as I have received no payment tor the same. I will eivc a reward of FIVE DOLLARS for tbe delivery of the same t m. DAN I F.I. MeMTLI.AN. Willis Creek, Cumberland County. North Caroli na, July 20th 1 639. S-tt nd silver shall be a "lauful tender" for a Though I had the journal of Congress referred enough to let the comparison be made. bt you may owe the Treasurer in his indi- ZlZ " V We have not received a copy of Dr. M's, obtain possession of it until Monday evening letter, and did not keep one; neither have we last, at Richmond Court. I the Journal or Journals alluded to, it we bad I gave the Journal a critical examination in fh(, Rlrt . ;mt)0ssible that tne course 01 mat eeniug auu ueii ujuiuiuk, 1 ... . , ... ;n f,n tn th nnnfnnrintlon bins, and Dr- Montgomery could have wntten a dehb- idual capacity? But if it were constitutional, is it expedi nt? Is h politick? Ought a citizen to have ilis rights of property and money better se- rured by law, than the Government under which he lives? Is one single man, in this in reference to the aoDroDriation bills, and found that a number of them, making appro- erate lie, and not only that, but rejer to pages . d brio.ht consistency. priations to me amount 01 iweniy-sa luiniuua ,o invite me prooi 01 11 against nimseu. ne regard, of more importance than the whole one hundred and eighty-eight thousand two Lay further , positively, that Mr. Debe rry, in the latex a principle tdiu uowu uy uie w ..j "" letter we re-print to-day from the Observer, iters, ujai is oetier mat an intanamw . - . - r.u-. hai nnt stated correctlv th rJiam mad . . , , ... 1 on meir passage. iihi ou me uia;c w mc j o- sunec an injury, tnan tnat tne public f - h r did yot Ae nd avg airist him by Mr. Morris on the 2nd of ,. . . I ' 4. I o o suner an iwonrentence. r were taken on only one of them, of one mil- I T1n rhis Dlace. We sav further, that no Apply this wise rule, to the matter of the lion of dollars to suppress Indian hostilities, j - . ,,t ,Uo Ktk - - - 1 - - m , I OUU31UU waa hwiviv. iuu vuaigj vvr wam &&r- liovernmenrs right to demand bard money ADf yea3 ana uajs were iaeu uu uc oujcis, or itsdues, as compared with a citizen's right wn,CQ 1 fPF- 1 I tmns maHp in thf l-n nillii titr is.smncr I rea- o do the same thing, and who will doubt tor n., ne mn Mrh. at the first and moment that the Government's right should j second sessions, to pay the expense of their at least equal to the citizen's? I issue. Inere were two other bills, on tne passage Vhould C-We receiTe cheering intelligence from the whole District, all our friends speak with entire confidence of Morris, receiving 500 votes in Anson and 270 in Montgomery. We think, that that vote in those two counties wDl ensure his election, if the Democrats ai full sions of the last Congress, but only to one of them. Oh, Hogarth! oh, Praxiteles! oh, Scott! oh, painters, sculptors, poets, writers! masters of your arts! Drop your pencils, chisels and i Pnnm vmir nunv rtaims to immortal fame. All Whig editors who paint, or sculp- the polls in the other counties will give a ture, or describe their party, throw you in J attendance. the shade- I The farmers of this country sell their crops Let U3 ive you some idea reader, of the of cotten at the hard-money prices, regulated ture that these men draw. A cat may y w "T "I":-.-. pic I j 1 w:P artuIos aT r-rwuanmntion at Drices And although we would 1 , ;a.j ...i V-"- J M M yernment this right, every day before our j count of indisposition, amounting to eight Fyes. 1 he .Tost Master in rayetlevuie, is And now what aspect does this whole mat- I at a king ter present? The Observer asks if we still nt attemot to draw, we can look at it, after I T .vm nnnder on this, and ask the cues- I S - mmm-vmmm , nronncA tit write a circular far VIr. Deberrv? I : ;a o waII Hrn. and attemDt a descriDtion. I rmn. whether they will -permit such estate ot aTlwisnrir -5 nA mcrfl-o nf lliTT-;n 1 . . . A . .. I J I I IwJHIv in faVOT OI 8A Anuepenueiil - j . uvnu, i which I did not vote, hemir absent on ac- I cKoll k nhlw! tn infnnn miroolcM rwf hu I i :-i.tw.o vrm know.) but Jenerson I "TV . - j- 1. r . . ' -. 1 " " . . I Treasury, and thus limn tnai morumaio y cyuui ot inaisposiuou, amounune ro eiftui v . k; loMAr f Cm I j T nrannaH. and he became I i- u i mrtir hmnnri million and forty-six thousand four hundred - .. . r- ta: . r j . . . . -. t , x I . - iJTw.;n .! maerv on i i . . -l it isnewiDgmRTnms of me uisina lunr. idu nnnumimairr imasiviK'aic vwuiu twir mrn. nira . -a- ii- r n - . i ana iweniv aouars. i ' i f - i , w"tnuneBl "nicer, nr u iu m:u , , rA. fl rJainlv. what Mr. TVhrTv has been doimy in ,untr ..tles. in Democratic diplomacy, their country. woe. m , - IT 1 m- aa HU JtfeJat' '-i&a- Sim VIVVU WS I a-- J - " J O I fmmmmm -. I r-t mmmr-m. . mw. . . hirtv.s!orftn millions of dollars. Othr small I pAnmnca rnriKamAnaviKavhin Mtiri i A.MtHl.. K aiidMi the HlffMSt ClUir OI - , ... a a . - I J . I wafea-5 w mm uivuvT " v l"' I AIW - I mf. VifhHa S taUF tsaMtlfflsgr OI UK H1C IWHr eatable right by law, to exact specie pay- bills not noticed, with private claims allowed, Ant nnt m . . . vnte for fvehUr Clay held the ladder, re- . ;ZiThnL iust before ats at his office, for letters, &c This is will make up the 38 millions for that year. . . , . . a c rrmier's otic, trtacinff lrL iB. with evident deairt more than the me gentleman has a I Now, Sir, from these facts, which the Joorn-1 -"- - , - ; - .per. in the ItAfnrhUn., J.m,n I MHIlIUUy snow, your wiu seen , r " I mAm inJnr r-lvartro oThlKltx1 I -r fmrit mwtm T Hui U. Umolf Sn tbe IlM OI WC PUXCUCOia. I 1 ouuc r . I""""' & - I mmmmmm W m - . mwtA nUTllCiOrJS IMS. U IKBOW Ul wauw - .. -n ... a manifest 1 moa, aoes not every one see, that it is a di- -j.-. bv the Honorble member of Con-1 - r rwm 1 o "r--n. -uuuuu. i cress reaerTcu 10, nuu mv aunuj m j . nt w II toll! it rnriW 1. I AXubnl Ks flrtnoi mSoii1 alwtMMl I ' awwi r I. t-.- , - . t i i . i. I dMnMtfian to keeo dark tt to nu Totes. icie. it will withdraw it from the Banks I m OUT -Lusr-w nave oeen proveu uuuue j i r tTvri mi iptrs Kst. 1, Ithe authority to which he referred. They C We wDl give a smaB portion of rj ,. -, T , ,. 1 have not only done me great injustice, uk I eolar we promised to write for Mr. Deberry, currency sound. Let every orth Carolina I u ' j j :Za k: t 1-.1 1 . . . J ... .... 1 ucwhwi " I I z-a - ma hM nnwT. infl mnnv M " nrusf- I M. DIS JXUMMia w - I c . voter asit himselt this question, and let every friends ra our District, and caused them to lJ JT . . J' .v.,:. 4 AlHtion. New LurhU WW, XT. n Anas. Mr. Webeter'a organ, Bank Director who also votes, answer it can- I become the unenviable instruments of eiyine I C'S w I . . t- -?trl 1 - .w- AJlnvincr admicsKm: Q 0 didly. If all the Banks were in the condition currency to charges which facts would not In the first place then, let the people re- and ttus " Anti-Bank. New I whX the prospect certainly is, that Mr-Van supeort nor lustiiv. mamhw. ihaf Mr. Ethnond IJeberrv. has re-1 Aru -s ' i ;n Ktnin rh oresKJentiai rote lnmr MMmnln rumJ.iiii Inmb I . .... r- T.iohl WhliT UOOiailC 1U -"--. ay danger in allowing the Governnt ,0 i Iast. rUTh C17Za I " 8 lTi -L- W-War. the Federal. Hrh Tariff, 7-7 m-im CLTlir. JI dll 1 LJ tl I TUt 1 art Iff! iWIHTIirFfl ir tl 3 I 9 n al I IT1 DTn I C7 But Adams was beaten by oae Jack: the "line of sale precedents" tailed, aad his father's son goes back trf FederalismV ! AHolitionism and the Senate- Cr-(Thepay of Senator is something.) This Adams the Federo, Deowierataco, Abolition, Anti-Abolition, New Light, Whig; The tf- S. Gazette, an able federal paper, i r 4mm, Viroinm Section; wy-r 'r-JLZ i Zr wdo not meet oar expectations, and fallfiff dort Buren state. TOroon OUTS A FEW Cotton Gins, of my own manufacture, at reduced prices. at Messrs. Hall and Johnson's: store, FayeUeviRe. JOHN W. POWELL. Robeson County, July 27, 1839. Ss-3m PITTSBOROUGfl ACADEMY, THE exercises of this Institution will commence on tbe 8th July next, under tbe superintend ence of the former Instructor, -tf r. J. AT. Lottjog. TBHUSf CtasBfcsV $18 per session, English, 15 do The following are the brandies tauirfat ia Ibis In stitution, viz: Latin, Greek, French, Algebra, Arith metic. Geometry, History. Ensiish Grammar, -An cient and Modem Geography, Navigation aad Sur veying, Reading, W rrtmg aixl fepeUing'- In addition to the preparatory course in the Clas Mt. Mr. Loveiov will ffive unremitted attention to youns gentlemen in Algebra, Geometry, History. JUKKU ana mnero ueanpaj, ana wui jwimi mm Scholar to pas out of his hands without a compe tent knowledge of the above branches. Tbe Trustees of this- Instrmtion, under a deep sense of the ertfat erfl flowing from imperfect feack in in mome of oat Academies, hesitate not fa feeona- mendins this School to the public, having had am ple testimony, during a twelve months residence among us, of the ability, propriety and general in telligence of Mr. Lovejoy in atf matters eooneeted with teaching. . Fittsboroogn, Jane, lttsx. DIRECT IMPORTATION; rtpHE SuhMfibers bare tbe honor Mr mibrm the JLL pabbc that they have made nrangeoaeaU to keep a constant supply of WEST 1HDIA PIOOTJCB , which they woakl be happy to sell for cash, or on reasonable time for jood rPCT'JX' if not cheaper tnan can ne unporoa i" Tbey bae now jast receded and ra ore 100 Hhds. MUscovaaa ougr, 150 do. Molasses, 200 bags Cuba Coffee. BARRY & BRYANT. Wilmmston, C. Jane St. l7-t TO TtmtSTT on HiHo- TAUt-ES TO H1ZBT on Hfflj BLANKS 1c ot Sale at this Office-

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