.J" . - - " . CHARACTER IS AS IMPORTANT TO STATES AS IT IS TO INDIVIDUALS; AND THE GLORY OF THE STATE IS THE COMMON PROPERTY OF ITS CITIZENS.' HOLMES & BAYNE, Editors and Proprietors. FAYETTEVILLE, SATURDAY, APRIL 10, 1841. Volume 3T. Number III.' TERMS OF THE NORTH CAROLINIAN. Per annum, if paid in advance, $2 5u Do if paid at the end of 6 months, 3 00 Do if paid at the end of the year, 3 50 Rates of Advertising : Sixty cents per square, for the firet, and thiry cents a iiC 8bsequent insertion. A libera! deduction will be made to advertisers by the year. V Court advertisements and Sheriff's sales, will be . charged 25 per cent, higher than the usual rates. au advertisements sent for publication should have inenumber of insertions intended, marked upon them, otherwise they will be inserted until forbid, and charged accordingly. Papef continued until arrearages are paid, except at the option. of th Editor. .iu"ubscriptlon "reived for less than twelve months. ICLetters on business connected with this estab va -ment mu8t be addressed Holmes &Batne, Editors of the NorthCarolinian, and in all cases post-paid. , SCJ Subscribers wishing to make remittances 3 man, will remember lhat they can do so free of yuBLage, as Jf oatmasters are authorized by law to t. 'xl,VTa ""Closing remittances, it wntten themselves, or the contents known to them. by Prices of Job Work i HAND BILLS, printed on a medium, royal, or super royal sheet, for 30 copies, 92 r or su copies, And for every additional 100 copies, tlORSE BILLS, on a sheet from 12 to 18 inches square, 3' copies, Over 18 inches, and not exceeding 30, CARDS, large si-e, single pack, And for every additional park, Smaller sizes in proportion. BLA-NKS, when printed to order, for 1 quire, And for every additional quire, under 5, iAuceumg o quires, O C! Miff 11 A rrTT rri iii- lii y ti.i i iiye. i , ant. all kinds of BOOK & JOB PRINTING, executed cheap for CASH. THE FOLLOWING BLANKS! Kept constantlyon hand AND FOR SALE AT THE CAROUHrZAZO- 3 1 3 5 3 1 2 1 I smess ENTERTAINMENT. lArvb this method friends and the public for former success in bu- f Say' niy house a stiU open for the re l of Travellers, and is the Stae Office, where and accommodations read for ception seats are secured r ..i . . JTdSiBUiiirers, Wltn Continued iiirtmni to onv snMc- faction. E. SMITH. Fayelteville, March 13, 1841. 108tf. My House is on the corner of Gillispie and Mum ford Streets, convenient to the Market, and near the State Bank. e. S. PRESIDENT HOTEL, litlttO 50 00 00 00 00 00 25 00 00 75 FIT No. 142 Broadway, New York. npiilS Splendid Establishment is now open and. ready to receive those who may be pleas ed to favor it with their patronage. The House is in excellent order, the furniture new and elegant. The ladies' parlours are furnished in a style no? sur passed by any in the Union. The ceila.-s are well stocked with the best of wines and liquors. The larder wiil be constantly supplied with every deli cacy the markets can afford. One of the proprietors, has been lor", r-llt ne trusts, tavoiably known, as a Hotel Keeper - the other; as a Captain of Steam Boats, to Charleston, New Orleans, Galv&et'Vn, -c, T. B. REDMOND, JAMES PENNOYER. ProDnetom. New York, February n, 1841. 103-3mo I Raisins the growth lljllFTY Boxfs Malaga Figs. Bunch -U. in Boxes, halves and quarter, all 1840. Also, 1 OO TIERCES TIIOM A S TON LIME, for sale to-day bv WILLIAM Fob. 13, 1841. McINTYRE. 103-tf ISlank Warrants, State and Civil, with and without judgments, just printed and for sale at the Carolinian Office, where all kinds of Blanks arc kept for sale. Will our friends give us a c ill ? Cape orncD : CHECKS, on Bank of the State, and Fear Bank. PROSECUTION BONDS, Supr. Ct. MARRIAGE LICENSES VENDI EXPO., constables levy COMMISSIONS to take depositions in cqui ty, and Supr. court APPEARANCE BONDS WRIT8, Superior and Co. Ct. CA. SA. Supr. Ct. INDICTMENTS for Affray, end Assault anu rwiery, Co. and Sup. Ct. CERTIFICATES, Clk. Co. Ct. JURY TICKETS ORDERS to overseers of Roads BASTARDY BONDS TAX RECEIPTS WITNESS TICKETS KJECTMHNTS PATROL NOTICES LETTERS of ADMINISTRATION Bonds Deeds, common, Sheriff's Deeds, Constables Ca. Sa. Bonds, Do Delivery do Appeal Bonds, Equity Subpoenas, Superior Court Fi. County Court Sci. vive judgment. County Court Subpoenas, Superior Court Warrants, Bonds for Col'rd. Apprentices. J. & J. KYLE HAVE just received by the last arrivals from the North, a large and splendid assortment ot STAPLE & FAXCY GOODS. .lmong which are Cloths, Cassimeres, Sattinets, Kentucky Janes, Flannels, Blankets, French and English Mennos' vJialleys, and Mouuns d'Lains, (some of whnh are very fine) Irish Linens, Lawns, and Diapers, Calicoes, Swiss and oth-r Muslins, Silks and Sat ins. Black and Blue Black Bombazines, Anker Bolt inr Cloths, &., &c, with many other articl All of which being bought at the lowest package price is offered at REDUCED PRICES, by whole sale or retail. 104-tf Loco Foco FRICTION MATCHES. (illUSS, HULilYiKa- improved ric- just STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. By His Excellency, John JSI. JKlorehead, Governor, Captain General and Commander-in-Chief, in and over the State afore said. WHEREAS, I have been duly informed by the Proclamation of His ' Excellency, William Henry Harrison, President of the United Stales, that the last Monday of May next, (being the 31st day thereof,) has been fixed upon by him for the meeting of the first Sessiou of the twenty-seventh Congress of the United States: an event which renders it expedient and necessary that the Elections for the Representatives from this State in the next Congress should be held at an earlier day than the usual time of holding said Elec tions: Now, therefore, by virtue of the authority in me vested, by an Act of the General As sembly of this State entitled " An Act Con cerning the mode of choosing Senators and Representatives in the CoVigress of the Unit ed States," Revised Statutes of JV. C. Chapter 7'2a,) and to the end, that the Free wt'a of this State may be duly reptesented in j the next Congress, at its first session com mencing as aforesaid, I do issue this my Proclamation, hereby commanding and re quiring all Sheriffs and other Returning offi cers of the several Counties composing each Congressional District, to cause Polls to be opened and kept, and Elections to be held, for Representatives to the next Congress of the United States, on Ihursday, the thirteemh day of May next, at the place established by law in their respective Counties, for holding said Eleciions. And I do further command and require said Sheriffs, and other Return ing Officers, to meet for the purpose of com paring the Polls, at the times and places pre scribed by law for that purpose. And I do, by this, my Proclamation, further " require the Freemen of this State, to meet in their respective Counties, at the time " aforesaid, and ' 4 at the places established by law, then and there to give their votes for Representa tives," in the next Congress. In testimony whereof I have caused the Great Seal of the State to be hereunto affixed, and signed the same with my hand. and, as the confederation was dissolved in that very act, a readjustment was necessarily made of their relative rights and interests, equally in the lands as in every thing else. For these reasons it was that Congress, by an express grant in the constitution, was authorized to " dispose of the public lands," a graDt amounting, in itself, to a cession anew to a constitutional cession of whatever right or reversion, title, or trust, in the lands, the states might have held prior to, or during the confederation. And, sir, this new cession, if not old, is, upou the face of it, incontesta bly absolute. For, if not so if, as i3 pre tended, upon the contingency of having dis charged the public debt, the remaining lands, vr. U.V..1 p.viccus. were to oe uivenea to a particular object, (as to distribution among the States,) and tjiat object, too, not other wise within the power of Congress, why was not such object declared? Why was the grant of power not made commensurate with it: W hy were the lands the whole of the lands confounded with all other public pro perty, and made subject expressly to the same power, as they certainly are by these words of the Constitution : " The Congress shall have power to dispose of, and make all need ful rules and regulations respecting the terri tory, or other property, belonging to the United Estates." This is the single ciause by which Congress has power over the lands and equally applicable is it to all public property. Yet, sir, such has been the purpose, the single purpose, of all the reasoning of the Senator from Massachusetts. He claims for Congress the power to distribute the fund de rived from the lands, for the sole reason that it is so derived : thus making the power of appropriation depend not upon the object for which revenue may be raised, but upon the source whence it come. Well, sir, if this principle be sound if the source of revenue be not limited by the objects of appropriation if, on the contrary, the number of those ob- I jects depends upon that source if the power to appropriate does not limit, but rests upon, the power to tax then are both unbounded, the constitution impotent, and the iiovern- ment absolute. But why distribute the five millions yearly drawn from the lands ? Is it thought to be a from Massachusetts) is bound to uphold the credit of the States." And how ? By the payment or the assumption of their debts. There is no other way, but even this is in sufficient. For the Government, "to uphold their credit, must guaranty, likewise, all debts the btates may in future contract, or assume the power to restrain them from contracting any more. If it can do the latter, then are the States made powerless, and brought in subjection to its will. If it cannot restrain them, and yet is bound to uphold their credit, then must it tax the people as much as the States desire to spend ; whilst thus they are induced to spend as much as they can. For if this Government be bound to pay their present debts, so is it their future ; if one class of debts, then equally all ; if bound to pay those incurred for internal improvements or for banking capital, (as were most of these pel the payment, by myself taxing you for mat purpose. J. ne people rejoin. 07 sayiug. to Congress, You came here at first offering, us money as a favor, in the name of distribu tion, to pay our debt ; you have ended with an impeachment of our integrity ; with an. attempt to usurp the power of State taxation ; with an. impertinent interference in our af fairs; therefore, depart. . Thus are the forms of indirect taxation ana the name of the public domain sought to be. the means through which this Government may assume absolute power over the states and the peopie-r-over the wnoie property ana labor of the country. And who are to receive the fund distribut ed ? Not the people, who. in the first place,; paid it ; but the States the Legislatures of the States. In what would this result ? Ex travagance and waste. Not, indeed, because now contracted,) it is bound also, and for the legislative bodies are (for they are not) likely - n .u u r I . . v . ' - .t' to . be composed ot men less viquous man others, but because no body of men, however same reason, to defray an tne cnarges oi State administration. And where is Con gress to find means to satisiy a uemaua so honorable individually, ever could, or ever insatiate? In unbounded, interminable tax- caUf with safety, be charged with the conduct anon. of nnhlir nftairs. in the absence of all resoon- In this manner it is proposed to uphold sibilitv. ft was for this reason, drawn from ...a m . s- ..II J . . fctate credit : and this is called a favor to tne tue calamitous experience of the world, that States. As if the State and b ederal Govern- mc serious. the thoughtful, trie cautious neo- l-l .1 l .! I I . . . f ; - k' . - ments ciia not uom aenve meir oniy reteuuc pje ot- America imposed upon all the depart-. irom me same ana omy source mc putivcio ments ot power, as well as upon eacn puDiic of the same DeoDle. But in what does this l i favor result 1 Plainly in this : Congress, not the State Legislature, is in future to tax the people of the State for all objects of State ne cessity ; and may, for a reason equally good, prescribe, by law, what those objects shall be, when aud how to be executed. Thus would the State Governments, having become use less, be virtually abolished, and the people be deprived of the very benefits they obtained by the American revolution local government, local taxation, imposed by themselves for local objects. For the Federal Government is, to the people of a State, in reference to their local affairs, a foreign power ; and if, to raise revenue for State expenditure, it as- functionary, the most, positive restraints and highest sanctions, by their wanton organic. laws. The great, the only security the people of a State now have or. the economy of its T-etrislatum in the expenditure of the public money, is the responsibility under which the. Legislature acts, of haying, itself, hrst to. tax its own constituency, in order to raise it-.-r-. But, by the system of distribution, the respon- sibiiity of collecting revenue is to be pot;a(- ea irom the, power, to apply li; yqngres i to tax the people, the Legislature is.,tQ ex$tfjijl the tax. ... Each member of the latter borJyft" aware, therefore, as he would be, that, when the State .Treasury was exhausted, Congress, not he must. bear the odium ot laying a new Fa. Fa, to re- WfJJr tion Alatches, lust received, and tor sale by the Gross or Dozen, a superior article, and warrantea. ppiy 10 inn.. A constnntsupply of the above kept on hand, and will be sold low. to sell again. Fayetteville, September 5, 1840 80-tf tne twenty-second day ot March, in ivr c r : w i C,... n-Im;i - ' I 1 ft ta a till III (II 111 . k. )I,iIfllJI UU111 a Ld eight hundred and forty-one, and of the Independence of ihe United States the sixty-fifth. J. M. MOREHEAD. By the Governor: Ja: T. Little joiin, P. Sec'y. MOUNTAIN BUTTER. SO Firkins (assorted.) Some very superior, at prices from 5 to I cents per pound ! for sale by GEO. McNEILL. Nov. 24, 1840. Political. New Tailoring: Establishment, BD. KEELYN, & Co. respectfully inform the . citizens of Fayetteville, and the surrounding country, that they have commenced the Tailoring Riminess. in the store lately occupied as a Jewelry cu Kv Mr Reaslv. near Liberty Point, where they are prepared to execute all work in their line, in the mnii i:mn ona i mauueri . auu i'pvu UtBl v " conab!e term.'. Feb. 25, 1841- 0o-3 mo NEW GOODS. HE Subscriber has received his Fall and Win ter suddIv of Goods, embracing a eeneral as- ... j - rtment of DRY-GOODS, Shoes and Boots, Hats and Caps, Hardware ami Cntlerv. Crockerv and Glass Ware, Wines an. Liouors. Groceries of all kinds. Patent Medicines.. Paints and Dye Stuffs. Hatters materials, &.c. &c. The Stock is very heavy, Merchants are invited It call and examine for themselves. South Carolina tnoneu will be taken at oar if ftaid when thf Goods are bought. G. B. ATKINS, Oct. 26 1839. 35tf. Foot Hay-Mount Gardner and McKetlian, CARRIAGE MAKERS. IMPORTED IF II so, tt tt n & n Will make the ensuing season in a- .i iha management of the r aycuevinw, uuui o . rm tsicf th as in. to commence suDicnoer. iww, Tt aii r,..,!.., -m.t. i a tnth of Ju v 1841. Breeder3 L . .A him two seasons will be allow- J .ntv Der cent., and of ten per ntT for ona sea won. A deduction of twey per cent, will al.o- be made clas ofj x mares Mafes failing to Flatterer W ihe spring, wi" be per ied to atfend him in the fall (if desired) grafs orin the following spring for half price. PEDIGREE. FLATTERER. wa got by Mw-. (B,;'en L S" Leviathan &c.) his dam Clare by Mann-ej-g. d. Harpalice by Gohanna-g. g. d. AmAZL? Z. S. g d. Fractious by Meiuy Woodpecker mare-Everlasting by Eclipse Hycena by Snap Mi Belea by Regulus-Bartlett's Ch.lders--Honey wood'. Aabian-Mr Bowe's Byerly Turk rnare the dam of the two true Blues, &c. &c. Extended Pedigree and other particulars .n hand- W Mares from a distance will have good pasturage gratis and be well fed for thirty cents per day fiery eare win be taken to avoid, but no liability will be assumed tor, acc.dents. gLACK. Fayetteville, Feb'y. 3r t841. r-Pay the Printer MAVE now on hand, and for Sale at very Re duced Prices, 6 Carriages, 7 Barouches, 5 four-wheel Buggies, very light, 3 Buggy Gigs, do. 5 Sulkies, 6 Spring Wagons and 4 Chair Wagons. a lcn a vprv larsre assortment of work which we are daily finishing A 1 art n general assortment of Coach-Maker's materials kept constantly on hand and for sale. Persons wishing to buy, would do well to call and examine their work, as they feel confident they can make their work as well, and sell it a. low as it can be had from any tegular Northern Establish- m AH work made and sold by them is warranted 12 months, and will be repaired without charge, if they fail by bad workmanship or materials. Repairing neatly executed at short notice, and on reasonable terms. OrderB thankfully received, and promptly attend- Fayetteville, March? 12, 184t, 56-tf. Done at the City orRalejgh. this surplus beyond the wants of Government ? ; twenty-second day of March, in ivr c r., r., u tu .v, oov ortmUe . I r -- - . I XT k7U ItU . I KJYIX Al. L11UI HIV a-r V W w. . V a uuiuttw u e year oi our j.ora one mousana . -tU,xval rrntn lhf, rManrv w;ii rnuire the imposition pf a new tax upon the people; and actually proposes the levy of the tax, to an equal amount, as tne nrst step in ine dis tribution. Why, then, this circuitous legisla tion ? Why not advance directly to the end in view ? Why not distribute the tax to be raised, and retain the money derived from the lands ? The reason is manifest : the one process may conceal, the other would expose, the real object to the people taxation tor dis tribution. For in what, at last, does this pro cess end, if not in a distribution of revenue generally in the levying of taxes upon the people lor that purpose ; and, in releience to the annual income from the lands, only as fixing, for the present, the sum to be imposed for distribution ? In the spectacle of starving millions, En gland that England so often commended to our imitation here affords an example of this unbounded power of taxation. Never, in any Dart of the globe, have an equal number of human beings produced, by -their toil, in a single year, an amount so great ot the ueceS' saries and comforts of life, as are annually wrought by the laboring English. Upon every principle of justice, then, their own mi m r comforts should be proportionably great their social condition happy. Yet, is this the fact ? Are they who toil so incessantly- whose labor produces so much are they even fed, clothed, sheltered from the storm, themselves, or families ? Have they hope, for the future, of relief this side the grave ? No ! One-half of the entire nation 1 speak it not from rumor, but upon the authority of British statistics one-half of the entire nation are reduced to absolute pauperism. One- fourth dependent, through the year, on the pau per fund alone for support ; another, tea oc casionally from it, whenever they are brought, a3 often they are, to the alternative of charity or death. And why this misery, mis aegraaa tion. of the most laborious people ever known? .- .i - rr c .1 I. Tl . U hy tnis sunering oi uie muss, wuiiai uie Government and the ruling orders are noto riously the richest in the world ? But is the evil temporary ? will it soon pass away did it arise from natural or trom fortuitous causes from a dearth the failure of a crop, or the ravages of a pestilence ? IS ever ! the cause and the misery are alike human and perma nent. No wonder that such a government the sumes the right to tax them, they are taxed, to replenisrY it, would very naturally seek without their consent a condition which no obtain for all objects i'u his particular, dis- other word than tyranny can describe. Jut trict or country ,he largest appropriations pos- for illustration, I put the case. I he people sible coft3jdering, as he would, every.. dollar ot Ohio, acting through tneir local legisia- thus Stained a clear gain, to that extent, out ture, now judge of their own wants as a tstatg, f tbe common SDOii . f this manner: tho and tax themselves to meet those wants. It - Jes:re no.v a atronr with the renresen- a canal is desired, they determine when, t-t:vp. .,n(i i,.,.!,, nn (n nip..A hi iWiniediate where, how, and by what agents, u shall be conrtituen'ts y his .economy of the ptiblic executed. If a tax be necessary, they decide mnnAV Wrt'iJi iKrn i,r,m rnnn niiWllv i - i . i -j . r i j in wnax manner, wnen, ana 10 wuai aniuuui, stron for its Droflieate waste Where; in it shall be; levied, 'lhese questions, so such a case, would be the limit to expendi- portant, are settled by a majority oi mat peo- tnr ? ,uPO tn iavatnn Me.MMrv iAt ?? EXTRACTS FROM THE SPEECH OF MR ALLEN OF OHIO, On the proposition of JVfr Crittenden to dis tribute the proceeds of the Public Lands to the States, submitted as an amendment, to the pre-emption bill, then under consideration. In Senate, January 25, 1S41. If, Mr President, a British miuister were, upon this floor to propose measures for our adoption measures most beneficial to his own country and ruinous to ours he would, I presume, in the hist place, advise this Gov ernment to mortgage its whole domain to the bankers of England, in security for the debts of the States. Next, he would insist that the five millions of dollars, now annually brought to the Treasury from the sale of this domain, should be paid to those bankers through the agency of the States :they being constituted thus British factors to receive and to remit the amount. To supply the consequent de ficiency in the national income, he would further recommend the imposition of a new tax, equivalent to that sum, upon the Ameri can people, and particularly upon those of the south and West. Then, would he advise that this additional burden should be levied as as a duty upon the silks and wines received by us from 1 ranee, in exchange tor our cot ton; and upon this latter would he more es pecially insist, because the imposition of such a duty would inevitably divert our whole trade in cotton from that country to England ; and by giving a monopoly to her of this great product of our soil, comprehending, as it does, one-half of our entire exports, enable the En glish purchaser to fix his own prices upon it. Such would be the counsels of a British minister: but, sir, there is no British minister on this floor. And yet we have heard these very measures, one and all, urged upon us urged with zeal and with passion and that, too, by the Senator from Massachusetts, (Mr Webster,) the very man who is soon to be come the organ of intercourse between his own and the British Government. Ihe Constitution was not, as many sup pose, the recogoization of a previously exist ing system but an original a first govern ment within itself; the old confederation hav possessed not one not even thejfirst facul ty of a government: acting as it did, never on men, but States; and dependent, as it was, on volition solely for obedience. The ceding States the States to which the ces sions were made all the parties to the ces sions, were alike parties to the constitution Their objects, in its adoption, were the same; natural enemy of ours yes, sir, I say the natural enemy, regardless of the federal cant so often heard about " our affinity of interests with the mother country regardless of the studied efforts daily made to justify here every abuse, usurpation, corruption, and fraud upou the authority of British example ; no wonder that such a government, with a view to its great object of our humiliation and ruin, should have violated our territory, fired our vessels, murdered our citizens ; and, by its stocks, its corporations, its capital, and its mercenaries among us, should have deranged our affairs, reduced our prices, distressed our people, forced thousands to cry out for relief, and seek it in the expulsion from our coun cils of those who dared to resist British domi nation. No, sir nor is it wonderful that now, when these things are done, Englaud's bankers should demand a mortgage on Ame rican soil, or that men should be found here ready to give it. Yes, to give it ; because " the Federal Government (says the Senator pie, none others interposing ; and in this fact they find the benefits . of the State .Govern ment. But, if, instead of this,' Congress, in whqse power the people of Ohio have but a limited narticiuation-r -if Congress, whose action they cannot, therefore,' control should assume to j udge for them of their local wanfs to tax them for distribution to meet those wants that is to say, decide for them when and in what part of the State a canal shall be cut, and tax them to defray the charges of the work ; if Congress should act thus,, would not that people receive their local laws, and pay local taxes imposed against their consent, by the will of others as much so as did our fathers of the colonies before the revolution ? For is it not evident that a people are " taxed without their consent, when as in this case, the disapprobation of a majority cannot pre vent it ? Nor does the fact that the State is represented in Congress affect the principle, so long as the tax and objects are local. This illustration would seem sufficient ; yet I will push it still farther. The people of Ohio owe a debt ; and, to pay it, propose to tax themselves, at their own time, in their own way, to the amount of a million, through their own legislature. Congress comes forth, and says to them, Keep your money ; I will give you enough to discharge your ob ligation. The people reply by asking, Where will 3'ou get it ? Congress answers, I will give you the million I have just received from j the sale of my lands. The people then ask, If you give us that million, will you not your self want another, to discharge your own obli gations ; and, if so, where will you get that other? Congress replies, Yes, that is true; and I shall indeed be compelled to tax you for this last million, before I can agree to give you the first. The people answer, If that be the case, what make we by it ? You give us one million, wc give you another ; and we, moreover, have to pay you the cost of collec tion. Better, then, that we should keep our own million and pay our own debt ; for viat you propose is nothing more than to tx us a million to pay it, if, in addition to .Vis, we will revard your trouble. Congress replies, That is even so ; I am aware I must first take tho million from you, by taxation, before I can re turn it in the Way of distribution ; but still, you had better submit to this, than to tax yourselves for the payment of the debt ; be cause, when taxed by yourselves, yon know it ; the tax is paid directly, and eacn man sees what he pays ; but when I tax ydti, though you pay even more, you do not exactly see the process : as you pay to me, not through the collector, but the merchant, in the in creased price of every thing you buy; and this I call my indirect tax or tariff duty, which the merchant had, in the first place, to pay, when he purchased the goods at New York. To this the people answer, It is not the man ner of paying, but the payment itself, which takes money from our pocket; and your reasons are, therefore, insufficient. Congress again replies, That, likewise, is true ; but the fact is, you, the people of Ohio, owe the British bankers a debt, and will not, I fear, tax yourselves to pay it ; and I wish to com" taxation necessary Nowhere,' until Government had consumed the whqfe Substance of the toiling multitude, and left them, here, as in England, clad in the ragged livery of pauperism breadless ttfld hopeless. .. , ,. What with us has been the fact, and what its results, in the very first instance of dis tribution? To all it is known that 23,101, 645 dollars, then called its surplus revenue, were, in the year ,-. 1837," distributed by this Government, in tfje name of it dfcpofiik with the States. , Where, .jyenj that mony? To the people? to the men by whom it had been edvanced? No; not the fifth dollar of it; but to the Legislature first ; and then? chiefly, to banking or to other corporate companies, and to the rich, for trie very reasotf mat they were so. And now, that I may the more clearly ex pose this the flagrant injustice inflicted by the practical operation of the distribution principle upon the tax-paying mass of the people I shall trace briefly, yet with all the accuracy of which a matter .so confused and complicated admits, tho progress of this sur plus fund, from the Nationa! Treasury to it last known destination. Bui here, before proceeding further, it is important to remark, that I speak in reference only to the $25. 234,131 received by the : twenty out of the twenty-six tates, by which alone reports, have been made to this Government: th ck- er six, to whom $2,867,512 were distributed, having made no returns. So is it likewise material to observe, that fractions axe,, in all instances discarded; because, anxio lo present merely the geneiai truth, I desire not to obscure it by immii particulars. In the first pla.e then, out of the last in stalment, paii as h was in trie notes of sus pended ba.nks, (worth on an average, at ihe time, bVc about ninety cents .id the dollar,) those, institutions thus manifestly gained VUhout an equivalent, near one million of dollars. To this, and next id order, are to be added $S,554,000, which inured to the benefit of the banks, in the form of loans made to stock invested, a,nd deposrtes mode, in them. Then, as recipients of this fund1, come the . private companies, incorporated mainly with a view to infernal improvements, and to whom $969,000 went as stock and loans. And finally, of the total sum, $10, 033,000 were distributed to the towns and counties of the States, to be loaned by thorrr (as was generally the fact) to banks, to other corporations, and to the wealthy few among the citizens who were able to pledge property' for its payment. Thus, from an analysis of the reports made by twenty of the States, does it incontestably appear, that, of the twenty-five million two' hundred and thirty-four thousand dollars', drawn first by the taxing power of this Gov v eminent from the whole body of the pecle twentymillionjive hundred and fifty-si thou sand inured, in its distribution, to tKe benefit pf the bankiiig and other chartered ssocia tions, and to the favored few not the, jpeedy; . but the rich in the towns and counties ,' "whilst, on the other hand, but about Jive init Uons (one-fifth of the great aggregate) wa " 1