Newspapers / The North Carolinian (Wilson, … / Jan. 16, 1841, edition 1 / Page 3
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tCJ We are iRfrinta' nv our agnf, that our subscribers at Duplin Oid Ct House, comp!ai:i that the Postmaster there, Mr BLACKMOGE, is such a hot Harrisonite, that he will not deliver the Caro linian to the subscribers", but gives them away or de stroys them in some way, so that they never get them. Very well, Mr Black more, we have laid this m ;t ter before the Postmaster General, and we now say to our subscribers there, or any w here else, if these dastardly acts are stdl continued, to forward to us a certificate of the fact, sworn to before a Justice of The Peace, or anv competent oflirrr nnA ;r ... . j J T UUIJl have-redress it will be because justice has fled the hrnd. Such conduct as this cannot and will not be borne we will have our paper to pass to our subscribers' Jiko all other papers, at all hazards; and if Govern ment will not protect us, in this respect, why, we will protect ourselves, in a way that will not be very agreeable to the offenders. Our Legislature Adjourned on Tuesday morning, the 12th, after a session of 57 days. In another part of this paper will be found a list of the acts passed, decidedly the most important of w hich, is the Common School Bill. This may be hailed by North Carolina as commencing a new era in her history. In fact it is the only measure of general importance that has been consummated. The bill lending the credit of the State to the Wilmington and Raleigh Railroad Company, is perhaps, next in importance ; and also the bill for the relief of the Raleigh and Gaston road Company. The Relief to the latter, however, the Register thinks u so restricted, that theCompany will hardly accept 1 taken,?? aPp'opriations for th patent vice; and, looking to these and other respon-mTtiSSflr-:"-- "hy, he begged to inquire, iuth is The bill office was rri J- lit? nrp.omnt:A t-iil J'lH UI!1 Wnsthon tnlon v..,itendcn, Benton, and Linn. oomc considerable debo nmo , .. or Air Walker, to mstruct the committee on For e.gn relations to inquire intothe exnedienevnf,,. mgtobe procured nnA j , oKuiiuiieu lo me Senate, OI certain !rhntr.i i'r iV. Tt-.:. i -. .- .v UIU1S11 t-ariiamen:. News by Mails. copies in relation to tho TV-t -wnuoiciii imiinnnpv ... n,i..i 1... . . . ... ... .ang tne resolution upon the tahlp The Senate adjourned till Monday, Jan. 11, 1S41. The new Senator f.om Temiessee.Mr Ki.-h..! look his sr-at to-day. After the uual nrM.n.,tu. of petitions, the pre-emption bill was a-ain resumed and occumed the dnv jw Tuesdat, Jan. 12, 1841. A great numbrr of private bills wer nKA ...- L . - .cn me pre-emption bill wasa gain discussed til the hour of adjournment. ij , -. a - - ; i 1 V WfS callfd- ot treedom, persons so The Delaware The Ledger of yester k" U " - na,ve a te 1 , ce ot dy states lhat far af the eye can reach up he.r representatives? (Great cheering from and down the Delaware, and as far as has L7 T . "e repeaiea, mis siate oi been heard, the navigation is closed fast. nj.uga uau urougnt about political slave- -t-h.i- .r . . lHE Legislature or Delaware as- ".Muoui ireeaom wnat, ne must inquire sembled at Dover yesterday. a. ' '-"''-- I V UlXJ r ill III f--rri IK I IIMIIII I . -w V I IKnTTQTpr I t m -r lU. IV i 1 I r -1 -l . imnn n " ni. s n h:ch "c -ggressiouoi me Autocrat ot Russia funt w uu:.l .r i And yet emancipation of slavery was talk of! cesle7 c;tl "X," u s r j (Loud applause and some tumults Rt !?r Satu.rdaX e 12th lost., forged 150 come nearer th rnnrk. h, L UY?" snoes m nine hour, in succession, un- HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Wednesday, Jan. 6, 1841. after twenty millions of mmuv nf th Ttritich I ' wereProaounced by good judges to be nnl Koj k js j " " i maae in workmanlike manner. i rmw j ucuu vuicu away iu oroer IO pui After all iM h f..j f " . t . lttcLEm JjXamination. Xe learn !. , - 4 . , o-' " " a Jlcr.eod's examination before Jude Bowen ken a predominant part m order to defeat hadhwr. .ftnuj uuee iuweu emanrinatim, R., .'ii - i nas Deen concluded required to find bail in emancipation. But there still remained an- th snm f snnn 4.i. . , othrr kind Glr ,.,v:u i- u me sum ot .oUUU m two sureties, of $2500 omer Kina ot slavery to which English peo- eah or tm in r ; a j -n u pie were subiected hn ,ni m,!l 7 or go to jail went to ,ail and will be Th u "r; . I r; w,eaMWIIIOgntt week otter next had been a system of slavp.rv nnrsnpH now for nearly two thousand years, and that The Troops at Madawaska. The The principal business before the House tadav vr C ."T "'."r !VJy. ntre? Gaz ays, that the Governor was the Pennsylvania contested election, between made to live X fchw general has most emphatically declared that Nay'or and Swoll, the latter gentleman that the people were insulted and thir pockets 7k i? rem0Ve4ay troPS rec.0Dt,Jr bemg allowed to appear at the bar of the House to picked to the nouirf 5M !SoOI o vL ' K. f j A,S orer? the Madawaska territory, advocate his claim to the seat now r.cmnlrH k TU. Pro I m ,a u u j y- , ' . umi ne consiaerea oir John Harvey too Naylor, concluded his argument from 3'esterday. Mr ere Ions the veil would h H the btiscgaboo which had frightened anrl alarm. Thursday, Jan. 7, 1841. ed them be done away with. ( Great cheers A considerable portion of to-day was occuDicd in rom he Chartist partyO Havinff said thus discussing a bill disposing of the Lunatics of the mu.c, he begged to move the following reso- District Columbia. Some 8 or 9 bills were received 'ut'on by way of amendment to that proposed from the Senate and referred to their appropriate bv. me R'gbt Rev. Prelate the Bishop of Nor- committees. The Speaker then called for reports wich It was as follows: "That this meet- of committees which were all rerorts on nrivMr ,ng views with deep regret the manv Droofs 1 1 . - 1 courteous by a great deal, in notifying bragga docio Governor of Maine that a detachment of British troops had taken up a position. Seventeen hundred hams cured, sold at Cincinnati on the 24th ult. at 6 1-4 cents; wagon hogs $3,75 per cwt. not appear to them to be clearlv rixtit. eame lime they will be found to be the last people on earth to submit to undeniable wron or outrage Justice between them and other nations, as be" twten individual, is all they ask a clear fie d and no especial favors; and in honorable competition, commercial and otherwise, they are willing to sinV or swim, succeed or fall, "survive or perish"' on the single ground of theirtntrinsic merits; and though they prefer the pursuit of peace to the horrors of war, yet when loreign injustice renders it neces sary that they shall stand ''Between their lov'd homes and the war'd desola tion ' they will be found, each at his post, whether lhat be in iront of the invading host, or in the support of hia country's more immediate defenders. 1 bat there is reason to apprehend tne event of a necessity for such a course on our part, that our spirit, our patriotism and our sense of jusiice, will be put to a m litarv test, becias to be still more evident No sooner ban the dawn of peace nonzon 01 our "north-eastern 01 despotic s self ij viae an lions 10 mil a nnai inn in 1 f i i .1 . -n - 1 hv rnr ( . . r viiiuc ui siaws iu mai siaie sixiv iwo minions 1 J slavery wherever it is found to exist." (Loud two hundred and ifrhtn thniinnn Hnllan.. supported by I 1 1 1 " . t I vv...w, 1 a muu general piauans irom the Uhartist par- the number as fol- The people of Fayettsville, and its vicinity, per haps, wish to know what has been done for their ''relief Why, the bill for a turnpike road from here to Salisbury, has been rejected. And so has every other measure that was the least calculated to fvor Faycttevillc. We dont believe that a single act can be found in the whole list, that even menfwns the name of Fayc tteville ! ! ! But instead of grumbling, perhaps we sliculd thank God t'.at Gov. Dudley did'nt recommend, and the Whig Legislature did'nt pass, a law strik ing out of existence, and erasing from the map, tie ICP" toco foco " 3i town of Fayctteville ; the town that dared give a majority of 40, against the Hero(l) of North Bend. We move a day of irencr- Secretaiy of the Treasury tor information in regard cheers, and general cries from the Chartists of Year's presents. reports on claims. j Friday, Jan. 8, 1841. Mr UnderwooJ, from a select committee, reported a bill to purchase Raub's patent self-acting saf ty valve to prevent the bursting of steam boat boilers, and several other bills fir the better security of the lives of passengers on boarJ steam boats. Mr Montgomery offered a resolution calling for KtNTiifirv s ivco Tim i.,..- rci lavery at home, and pledges it- tuck v. arnnno- nthr ;iem on.imomtoo o il.a supine to permit them. To the demand made 11 1- . . . 1 J ' o - " " I . . .1 . ... overnmeni on mat ot threat tsritain, evidence of the facts, no an heinrnnf h..nrW,l ond slviir.-I swer has yet ueen returned; in the mean thnnand. The tnta nf avaM nrnnor. Jr, time, oue ot the murderers ot one or more ot thn fitatA i ' A9.79.qro nnn iu M't,a our citizens has been arrested in the State $275,353. A Mr Hewitt, then addressed the meetin lows : Last week Mr Gurnev had at a meetini? at information in relation to the public lands, which which he was in the chair, described the State lies over one day. of slavery m America. He (the speaker) did been coined at the mint in Philadelphia with T ! . . . I .1 4- A 1 -rv . .1 1L 1 11 1 jreiuions were next in order. 1 uui warn 10 iravei so tar. J:le was content new ana oeauiuui ae vices, resemDiing tiie ia- Saturdat, Jan. 9, 1841. to 8 a ew yards from the spot in which he test halves and quarters. They have sold Air Lincoln offered a resolnti stood namely to the workhouse door, f Loud freely at three ner cent nremium for Xew ...j, i - 1 i . . r.l rr" . . . . .1 sVm-i,.a J I : c .1 m . . f I N ew Dollars. A few Dollars have just - .1 . ni Mil - . I I thanksgiving, for our miraculous escape Latest from Florida. we una in tne Uiobe, a letter from Gen. Arm- stead, commanding in Florida, which says : "a con siderable numbrr of the Seminolcs proper, are ex pected at ort Armistead in a fjw days. One of the delegation is sangmne that th3y will consent to emigrate.' A 1 . . fvuuaaia: "tolioulj the Semint.lL-s and Talla- hassees, generally, consent to emigrate, it will have a favorable effect on the Micasukics, and other hos tile bands." The prospect of the termination of the war, in- tfA (rrniro Kpinkl. .1 l. t. . . . . . & " " " "o"":i aiiu urigiiicr every day, "iving Iiopes of an early terminarion of the difficulty. 4 to the public lands, which was agreed to. Mr Jones from Committee of Ways and Means reported a bill to authorize the issue of Treasury Notes, which was referred to Committee of the whole. A long string of resolutions were offored, in re lation to removing officers, Executive patronage, &c. After considering and passing some private bills, djourned. Monday, Jan. 11, 1841. Mr Nay'.or replied to Mr Ingersoll, vindicat'ng bis claim to the scat as a Representative from Pennsvlvania, for several hours. Mr Jones reported the bill making appropriations for the civil and diplomatic expenses of the gov ernment for 1841, which was referred to the Com mittee of the whole. Tuesdat, Jan. 19, 1841. Mr Sergeant repotted a bill abolishing imprison ment for debt in certain cases, which was passed. "Look at the slavery and misery of the new poor-laws Emancipate the white slaves be- Good. An old settler, in remitting his fore you think of the blacks.") He should subscription to the Chicago Democrat says: 1 I .. . I . . W 1- 1 - .1 iiKe some ot the gentemen who stood on the nave uvea in tins country many years, platform to attend at the door of the workhouse, and, having withstood the Cholera and Black TOWN OFFICERS. At an Election held for Magistrate of Po lice and Cnmmiciiintionl C. fr V i j T". C L .mw.wmw ivi una luiru i ui uig present year, the following Gentlemen wereT elected: Dr. THOMAS N. CAMERON, t Magistrate of Police. James Kyle Joshua Carmon V Amos Jessup ninmon Taylor Commissioner' uosepn Arey Alfred McKethan George McNeill The new Board of Commissioners ace appeared above the the 13th of January, 1841, when, the follow ;rn boundary. than fresh ; T " . cause ofdifficu ty between us and the' Government " " '7 appomioa xown Utti- ot Ureat Britain, sprang np in another quarter.- -c,s "r ",e preseui year, VIZ : The arrest of McLeod in the State of N. JOSHUA CARMON, Town Treasurer Y., for murder and arson, committed in the GURDON DEMING, Collector of Taxes.' wellknown affair of the steamer Caroline, an E. J. CLARK, Clerk of the Marker unarmed ferry-boat, at Schlosser, in that L. A. NIXON, Town Constable State, has, as our readers already know, drawn WM. WILLIAMSON, StreetCommissioncr iruiumo uriiiMi miuisierai asnington, iur ji u. McLAUltlI, Sen., Director of Patrelo Fox, a recognition of that outrage by his gov- L. A, NIXON. do do for Cnmnhln ernment, as done by authority and deserving JOSEPH AREY, Special Justice oi approDauon. ai nas oeen pretty well un- HULMES & BAYNE, Town Printers: derstood by the people of this country, that AUo at Q ti following pcr- this outrage was approbated by the British sons were appointed the Board of Fire War- Government but it has not until recently be- dens for me different Wartl8 cf this Town: come officially known to either our people or John McRae. En.. Chif Fir Wsrdn our trovernment; and were it not for the ar- Sam xit jnMni, ti.L rest of McLeod, the Queen and her Minis- j0hn Coot n,. 1 p. Jas. Hooper Thos. L.Hybart, Esqs ' Committee oj Vigilance. Ward No. 1 E. Jessun. O. Hon stnn.nntl .Tn. " seph Hollingsworth. Do. No. 2 P. Tavlor. E. W. Wilkings. Do. No. S Joseph Arey, B. Rose, nd J.' D. Starr. Do. No. 4 L. S. Belden, James Martine, and Geo. McNeill. Do. No. 5 A. McKethan, W. McKay, and W. Mclntyre. . Do. No. 6 Joshua Carmon, R. C. Beldenj ,v and O. S Stark. Do. No7 James Kyle, Amos Kimball, and Chas. Benbow. TAKE NOTICE. ters, and her representatives here, would have kept their views of the matter to them selves, as long as might suit their own con venience, should our Government be enough in which his crime if he be guilty of it was committed, and handed over to the au thorities of this State, "to be dealt with ac cording to law." When some ofourdelud ed, though well meaning citizens, went into Canada, and committed onences against her Majesty's subjects and government, though in affirmation and defence ot human rights in the abstract, our Government left them to their fate: and what that was, "the tender mercies" of the Provincial authorities can testify. The prison, the gallows and the con vict colonies, can bear witness to the cruelty and see the poor girls driven, without hats or The norilipm papers bring accounts of heavy and continued rains, which have swollen all the rivers and streams to unusual heights, and in some places doing considerable damage to pro- Several other bills were read and referred to Com perty. There seems to have been a general ra:n all mi:tee of the whole. over the country ; our streams and swamps, below here, we are informed, are almost impasfb!e. The clouds seem disposed to break and clear off, but a permanent change of weather will hardly be effect shawls, thence to the factories! He would then ask what they called that but slavery? (Tremendous cheering.) This was not all, Fire-Proof linen. The editor of the however, for he had himself found a weaver ' London Mechanics Magazine" of a late in this city who, after working sixteen hours date, says that linen may be rendered incom a day, could only earn 9s a week. This was bustible by immersion in a solution of equal to support six children, his wife, and himself: parts of alum and borax, combined with a lit and, deducting the outgoings, those earnings I tie starch. The water of chrystallization in just left him 1 1 -2d. a day per head for that the alum protects the fabric at a low heat, and family to subsist unon. He could tro with the me Dorax wnen u uecomes more intense. bishop who had supported the new poor-law bill to-morrow and show him, not one individ- A Giant. A Hercules, and an Apollo mmw i t a t. Onereny cannon ami inrewarn ail persona " auua aw w a i UJUb J J mill conn McPherson lo mf dated Nov.. 1837, fV.-r S23, payaoie one Gay aiier aato, m iucii note he natishcd, sanil rv- xc a rfw nnp for tYtut tin A j-t hor kalnna. Hawk War I think I can endure four years of J computn au uKruia.a. ineretore x aecare saiu noie void and ot no t-neet. . - .. J I thou- mprpv vet nn snniipr is Ihft lnrendiarv I - DANIEL BAKER. Near Fayeltcville, Jan: 1, 1841. their mercy,- & yet no sooner is the incendiary and themutderer, who destroys the property and the lives of our unarmed anJ unoffending cit izens, brought by his own temerity and the vigilance of the States authorities ot JNew lork within the reach of her laws, than the British Minister here enterposes between him and that iustice, which rcoguizes no ditlerence . . . . -. - T T between him ana an American citizen. ,ne is charged with an offence, alleged to have I daily at 4 o'clock in the evenin j i iL Zr-vr V l. I 1hi SOIITHERM TVtAir. hfun .fmm inpn nmiiiiKi I iim ni:iiH ill l in h. " " " fc . . 1 Arrivals Sl Departures of ilie MAILS. l?ost Office, Fayctteville, X. C. The NORTHERN MAIL arrives daily by 9 o'clock in th morning, is closed at 3, and departs The SOUTHERN MAIL arrives daily by . 1 . . I I , . O I J I . , . 4i . c nnv. .nj o cioca in me an -rnoon, is ciosa ai a, anu uonni and which that State punishes with death; and . .. , 9 . . - fi ' " --k'" i it, i o.- i 4 :.. i ual case, but a hundred such instances of des- Belvidere combined in one person. There . " ine. a young Goliah, by ttie H". u , , . j7 i dde'i Mi Naylor aain took the floor in reply to Mr Ingerso'l, and spoke till arlj iiirnment. Slavery in England: ed before the change of the moon, on the 22d inst. Twenty-Sixtli Congress, SECOND" SESSION- IN SENATE, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 1841. To-day the bill for the bene fit of the Howard In stitution, at Washington, occupied considerable time,and being dispose ! of, the prospective pre-emp tion bill was taken upopposed at length by Air Clay f Kentucky, and supported by Messrs. "Wright and Linn. Thursday, Jan. 7, 1S41. Several bills were read a third lime and rasped The Pre-emption Bill was then taken up and dis mussed until the Senate adjourned. Friday, Jan. 8, 1341 Several petitions and memorials wi re presented, in favor of, and against, a general Bankrupt Law, Borne of the latter, from merchanis in New York. Mr LINN asked leave t introduce a joint reso Trutwn to authorize the adoption of measures for the occupation and settlement cf Oregon Territory, upon which be made a few remarks, from whii:h we ex tract the following : His opinion was that it would be better to Showing that the Slaves of the South are but what was the sort ot pic-nic the laborers better of than the Laboring Classes in had at nome to panaKe oi i ivny, it amounted England after all their exertions, to one of Mr John " I tt i e ii : .1 The Washington Globs conies an article from the " f" lu. .... I f 1 1 rn-i t fnntnairkn . hissfe. nnri nrnans.l T A fl Kc. ,,nr.r. n ciiKl n t tlllldl.inrp nf IV , & , I a . titution. He could take the right reverend is now exhibiting prelate to houses where the husband worked name of Charles Freeman, who stands some as a weaver for 16 hours a day, and had no- seven feet four in his stockings lifts a dead thing but a lock of straw for his wife, himself, weight of fifteen hundred pounds, and is the and his children to lie upon. (Great ap- most perfectly proportioned being emagina plause.) Mr Gurney, on Friday last, had ble. The best of the joke is, that the young described a pic-nic party of the negroes varmint is not yet out of his teens, and ex he had been at, in the West Indies. pects to grow a foot or two taller yet. Globe, which we feel ine'ined to acquaint the public with. Thshigh Sheriff of Norfolk, (Engl in 1) promul gated a requisition fjr a county mnermg, at Nor wich, " to consider the propriety of forming an aux iliary soeiety in connection with the one lately farm ed in London) ihe World's Convention for the suppression of the slave trade and the civilization of I 0jner, Africa. ' The arrangements for the meeting were no sooner made than a Chartist leader, circulated a handbill calling upon the Chartists to attend with their lamilics o.i the day ol the meeting, at St. An drews Hall, and accordingly some 60 or 70 families appeared. The Bishop of Norwich addressed the meeting, and expatiated upon the evils of slavery, being in terrupted every ten or a dozen words by cries c f "Why don't you look at the new poor laws," " Look at home before you go abroad, " and finally took his seat by moving the first resolution, which in substance was that slavery ought to be abolished The Boundary Question. The Hon. John Holmes, of Maine, has published in the Kennebec Journal a review of the Report of But Messrs Mudge and r eatherstonhaugh, in with 386,000 given to the Queen for pocket which he effectually uses up those gentlemen, money, and 14,000 parsons, how could En- and very clearly proves upon them a delibe land expect things to be otherwise? (Loud ate design to make a favorable case for their shouts from the Chartists.') Priestcraft and jrovernment, at ine expense oi irum. Irino-rrnfr must be done awav with: he was wiMlTrnr tr work to snnnort himself, but starve. Murder. A number of Irishmen assem .... .0 - rt , , r.nmxvhnt irtifrht he would not. tosuDiiort bled at a groggery in Syracuse, on Christmas o ' i ... . j i - i; others. This country had now three kings nigni, aua aiier ariuKing ana wrangling a anA nnoons tn maintain. There was Queen while, began fighting. Before they finished, Victoria with her German husband, who cost one among them, named Michael ilson, eo' n the people 30,000 a year; there was the King ysy- JanL. greater than that whicl of Belgium and his wife; and lastly there was the bloor'y King ot Hanover and his spouse. (Tremendous yells.) This was a true state of slavery, which could only be abolished by the adoption of the people's charter. Taxation without representation was tyranny, productive of slavery; and with these views, he cordially seconded the amendment. groans The meeting was then ad derate old gentleman who seem things to suit all parties, after light. Pat Moran, are now in jail for the offence. ish subject about to be tried for murder, or any .i - - l J rr'i other crime, in xuugiauu. j.h wueiui Government can do no act, that will have the effect to abrogate any constitutional law of the State of New York; therefore, as far as it is concerned, McLeod must be left in the hands of that State, to be dealt with according to law, and there is no reason to doubt, that he will receive as fair and impaitiala trial as would be given to any of her own citizens, with committing a similar offence- If found guilty, he will be executed, of this we have no doubt, and it will then be for the British Government to determine whether or not they are ready and willing to drive us into a war; and risk all its ill consequences to themselves that his death may be avenged. The'attempt to avenge his death would cost them both blood and treasure, and for them to hope for success, would be evidence of a degree of fatuity greater than they have ever yet exhib ited; hence there is some chance that a degree the court of ot. greater than that which is dictated tne course of its minister at Washington. CHARLESTON MAIL arrives at 5 o'clock- Wednesday and Friday mornings, is closed , departs at 2 o'clock, Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons. The CARTHAGE & SALISBURY MAIL ar rives at ' 12 o'clock on Mondays and Thursday is closed and departs at I o'clock, on Mondays and Thursdays. The ELIZABETHTOWN MAIL arrives by 9 o'clock on Sunday, Wednesday, and Friday morn ings, is closed and departs at 10 o'clock, on Mon day, Wednesday and Friday mornings. The WILMINGTON AND CHARLESTON MAIL, via. CLINTON and WARSAW," arrives daily by 4 o'clock in the morning, is closed and-le- parts daily at 9 o'clock at night. The LAURENCEV1LLE MAIL arrives by. 6? o'clock on 'Saturday evening, 4.4 closed and .departs at 6 o'clock on Wednesday morning. The MAIL by McNEILL'S FERRY, BLACK'S STORE and DRAUGHAN'S STORE, arrives at 9 o'clock Monday night, is closed and departs at -5 o'clock on Friday morning. flBBasaBBBBBBaBaaaaaaaaaaaBBBBaBBBBTaaBBaaBBBBTBtwBTBTBTBTBB PRICES CURRENT. Corrected weekly for Ihe JfJrik Carolinian. James River is frozen so as to prevent the passage of the boats to Richmond. A Murdered Man Found. Our readers (Loud cheers and may not have forgotten a paragraph which went tne rouuos oi uie papers iai wiuicr, about the supposed murder of an Ohio mer- Navae. The U. S. sloop of war Levant, commander Fitzbush, bound to the West In dies, dropped down to the bite of Craney Island yesterday. The N. Y. Express of Wednesday week remarks: We have never known a period Great uproar and confusion then prevailed, and put'lhe whole of their claims on Great Britain the sheriff inquired if any one present wished to . . jn .reat disorder and confusion withou -Jl 1 TLa. 11 1 ?.aL I . . mt 1 I r& lOgeuier, ana see wnat couid De aone wun move an amendment, when tne onanist leaaer accomn'isbin any thin? prepared to move . one who has been an observer of the move monfa f th Chariists of En eland, and knows their iMittsn "government anorded nun satistactory reinarks : evidence on this subject, lie believed that dressed by a very mo- about the supposed murder or an vnio mer- . takento Liy , at as low emed to take a view of ant named nar Wheeling, Va., by J Jen go ter which the meeting a young man named Long. Cooper and storeg at 18d sterling, a ratethat them; but he never expected that they would 9tarted up and said that he was r. be am'ica'bly adjusted. The history of the an amc ldment, and the fullowing m m art t would hardly have oeen demed sutn- cient to pay for loading and unloading. earlv. on the pretence of doing some busi- Outrage of the Caroline. Theanni- the town. Alter a snon aosence i versary meenug oi mx-cua T.onw arrived at Wheeling tosether from Ma- klnS - .. nt- j - i . . once rletta, VUIU, auu eiuppcu ui uic wrciu v " Mr Mosier, which they left one morning .o in n mwn . . determined courage, their indomitable spirit, their , without beinsr able to I mm mem orate and act upon the means of re Mr Dover said he was just coming to his feei;n29 of bitter hatred toward the government that rpason for the absence of his com- dress for the outrage of the burning of th V.r . . -. i v " i ... - - i iriup anv rHHHUii iui uic au0dJL wi u.o i n caa ivi n every one there, would he numhered with the t f (Renewed laughter.) He begged to rindins them to the dust, can perceive through . ' Slianirirtns at lenir.h ot afloat that American steamer Caroline, was held on the dead betore the British Government would k n t was siaVerv? He called that slavery . . vUt. nf futr,ritv. a storm brewinir in En2- 5-, ia anA AA h.,rlv. oo.h u nnd n number of snirited resolutions Maa -wl m-- w . - I v 9 J I . lf- r w a? lllUl S va ua-au h mu x.-m. i iui Ma 1 amicably settle a question ot this nature. lvhprP. a man did not get an equivalent for the t, . nn, tn i,llrst w!l, . vi0!enCc that . - V :. 0., tn ho (.; hnvino- TK two follow ins? are among the . j 1 - . 1 j I - . I iuwvi nun o J - I WnlCll HIS II ICU'U ouppvra. u, . . wuu. O - his memory served him correctly, England ,abof he performed. (Loud cheers from the the mag-c wand of monarchy win never quel!. . found these suspicious were deemed al- number: Sun. We give the above extract, as containing matter most certainty, and public opinion pointed I Resolved, That we will commemorate this hi.r with fate to the English people, ominous of ruin, I ,,1 T.nncr as the murderer. He was arres- dav henceforth, as a gross violation of the laws downfall, and extinction of English monarchy. tej and after lying three months in jail, was of neutrality existing between the American We have noticed the doings of these people for some discharged for want of sufficient legal proof government and Great Britain, until the blood time, and we watch their movements with an inter- to convict him, but without any change of of the murdered Durfee and his fellow citi- . :tA i,r thn onria fhotr havA in view. Thev ..ui: An;nnn in his favor. It is now ascer- 7pns be atoned for. ' - a I -". A . 1 W w iiuu .aBiv u- , tw . aiaaaaauM m mm - - tieentcd to the world a claim of great impor- guch thig. The productions of nS,and are men of daring spirits driven almost to despera- ained beyond a doubt that Cooper was not Resolved, That this meeting consider the tance where she had not even the shadow of weC 300,000,000 annually. This was pro- t of the government under which J murdered at all, and that he is now living in burning of the steamboat Caroline in .Ameri- right; and suck would be the case at every duced by the labor ot 5,UUU,OUU 01 me popuw- 1 th an(I whose downfall they have no doubt Illinois. He was very much embarrassed in can waters, as a national tnsuu 01 me uigu- point of the contest with Gt. Britain. The for the remaining 25,000,000 toenjoy. This to acc ompiish. Uis circumstances, and, having collected what est degree, and which calls loudly for a na- " money he could, he decampea witnout sei- tionai intenerence. Charter Election. tfinfr with h;s creditors, leaving poor Long to DIED. , See in another column, list of officers for this Town, W? - g'nce. the great injustice to which At the residence ofT. Bethea, Esq Marlborough, for present year. 1 ney are mucn aoou, me same unfounded suspicions Ot his tellOW men MtffamiN; a native and resident of Richmond county, North Carolina, aged years. 1 ; . nA ltrht amall children, many re- 1 a r,:r,.iu orhn will Ions lament his niimelv.nd sudden death. Yet they ahould be j pending the negotiations at Ghent, had been ('hartist nartv.") A man that did not receive willing rto -purchase that territory; he did not that -ajr equivalent for bis labor was a slave mean to say there was any formal offer made, ii intents aud purposes. (Renewed ap- fcat, finding that no such arrangement could i,,,,,, rrnm the same quarter.) He begged le entered into, she had, step by step, made tQ ask whether a man in thiscountry obtained progress in territorial encroachment, until she a fajf equivalent for what he produced? No British had extended their possessions, step was a fact which he defied the gentleman in hy step, from the extreme branch of the Co- the orchestra or platform to deny. (Ap- fJumbia river to the Pacific ocean, liy a let- Diause.) Such, however, were me iacis, anu iter vw&iqh he had recently received, he learn- Ujouuh he did not presume and set nimseu up PAYETTEVILLC Brandy-, peach, " apple, Bacon, Beeswax; Butter, Bale Roper . Cotton Yarn, Coffee, Cotton, Cotton Bagging, Corn, Candles, F. F. Flaxseed, Flour, Feathers, Hides,- green dy Iron, bar, Lime, . Lard, Molasses; Nails, cut, Salt, per bushel Sack, Suar, brown, lurrny " loaf. Tobacco, leaf Wheat, VVh'wkey, Wool, 9 45 a- $00 5 00 40 00 4S 00 8 a 00 10' 00 25 a 00 XC 16 16' 09' 8 c 00 IO t a 29 OO I2 a' OO 13 1; OO 6) 00 9 00 2 00 20' 40 a M 00 17 a- 00 1 25" 1 15 4J 5J 00 37) a 00 40 00 4 00 5 00 12 a 00 14 5 a 5J 24 a- ll. 9 a t- 30 a 23 dthat the Hudson Bay Company was intro- as a legislator, still it was tor the legislature last year Cueing emigrants from great Britain Dy vape to provide a stop-gap ior iue & them on farms, they had erected British forts sumer (Cheers and hisses.) If wealth was on the Territory of Oregon, and had pushed not obtained without producing a fair equiva- i.Li! 1 a .1 iu "'i ;df nin . . r ii horo wrtuld be no slavery, it meir esiauiisumenis 011 iuesuuiuiuvainuiu. en( Ior 1IUji, . . and on the east to the Rocky mountains; and th slave drivers paid a imr by an act of Parliament, a portion ot the enm- wouid never he in uwm r"- ' mal law of Great Britain was extended up to slaves. (Loud applause iiw u r the very confines of the States of Arkansas and t Missouri. Now, if we have a just right and " j)over proceeded. Those who were claim to that property, he was not the man to reoresented were indeed political slaves, ciir it 1. I .1 1 . nn,.rAi rn 11 I ,1 j in nav tnVPS from 0d T Ah OLIUUIU UK .1 I 1.1 I II II 1 1 11 'I I III illlV 1 1 9 I I t. .1 A nn I I Oil llllllll ftU " j j i i cit tnev ucic r rlli 1T lllno- in, an "mJ ' Vl hn subjected him. From the Baltimore Sun. Oar Relations with. England. Trouble in Prospect. We believe no intelligent ..... -11 . ? i ..j t k ..ppt hnoe that tnev win oieei mm r i - i - .nrt inrrnv. nun and deatn. n wnerc bickucbb r a "a i Xews. There is but little of this aiticle starring at pres ent. Barring the wet papers we get occasionally, we . . 1 V rm A a Attest wr wrmm Atm in sr w';;::; on;r7.Tot ; "orful katastrophe" or an "orrid murder." We ted States and ot England, require me ex.. . . . eiMmhnt exnlosion" which are n.oifie and amicalde relations between the two nave mul " ir ... , .. becoming almost as numerous as orofc.n oar,ks. coun.riea; bat we J "" "7 .... tMUl nmericKU Llll.''. w. .ww.- ' MW --- . i : . TR eport not True. Thomas Earl, thol who would purchase such JYJ abolition candidate for the Vice Presidency. SZS ,mporUntof her righta, j wKrniicrh tho Ifltionat inteilUTencer, i r.C.htnr honor or anv memreroi me union. i caueu uiiuu i"- . .1 ueuics, ""fe" : . . i or w ... i r .u: earth. He was prepared and willing to go . I1"1. u-Li " TOSn to fifiht the battles of their the report that he voted the Van Buren rresi- Ther. is no disposinon .um .."1 Sit r V.. . . .. ... tneiruaiuv....&- - .1 :.,V, eor. I . iL.l.ia oUlun, trvto dcmatia Ol OWW lWUu.v GARDEN EEBS Bacon, Butter, Beeswax, Bale Ropo, dull, Brandy, apple, Corn, per bushel, Coffee, Cotton, per 100 lbs. Cotton Bagging, -Flour, per bbl. Gin, American, Lime, bbl.. Molasses, Pitch, at the Still, Rice, per 100 lbs. Rum, N. E. Sugar, brown, - Turpentine, soft. 1 urpentine, hard Tar, per bbl. Pitch' do Rosin, do Flooring board, m. Wide do do Shingles. Codntry, Contract. AVILMINOTOS. 800 dulU per bbl.' 6. o T 75 a' 21 a 21 9J 00 12 1G a 00- 00 18 a 00 20 5 41 c 85 30 15 a 20 8 a 900 9 17 2 26- f 25- 6 a 8 40 a 50 55 a 50 11 m 13 1- 50 9 20 m 5 25 6 40' tt- 35 1" ia a- 100 22 26 1 75 m 2 00 3 25 a 3 12 33 a 34 71 - 9J 2 OS - halfpriee 1 28 a t 75 a 2 00 V 25 a t SO 8 00 6 50 a do do 1 75 3 00 2 25 400 an assortment of Garden Seeds growth ot 840 war ra nted fresh . Atari door to Gee's. -TTTJST RECEIVED BUCKWHEAT FLOUR I For sale by GEO. McNElLL. Nov. i, 1840. into a discussion of the whole subject here in- m Jf called upon or pressed intothe ser- I ential ticket at tf late election, . r
The North Carolinian (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 16, 1841, edition 1
3
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