V 4 'Jl is if 6 CHARACTER Is AS IMPORTANT TO STATES AS IT IS TO INDIVIDUALS; AND THE tiLORY OF THE STATE IS THE COMMON PROPERTY OP ITS CITIZENS.? HOLMES & 'BAYXE, Editors ami Proprietors. FAYETTEVILLE, SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1S41. VoluKte 3. Number 1 13. Do Do 3 I ft ". fl i rif. i I TERMS' OF THE NORTH CAROLINIAN. Per annum, if paid in advance, $2 50 11 paid at the end ot 6 months, 3 00 if paid at the end of the year, 3 50 Rates of Advertising: : Sixty cents per square, for the first, and thiry cents fhf for each subsequent insertion. A. liberal deduction will be made to advertisers by I the year. Pourt advertisements and Sheriff's sales, will hr i charged 25 percent, higher than the usual rates, ill advertisements sent for publication should have ,the number of insertions intended, marked upon Kthem, otherwise they will be inserted until forbid, : and charged accordingly. "No paper discontinued until arrearages are paid, veptat the option of the Edifor. No subscription received fir less than twelve Onths. iLetters on business connected with this estab lhment,'must be addressed Holm ks & Eayne, Jitora of the North-Carolinian, and in all cases Wrt-paid l JCJ Subscribers wishing to make remittanc s VJT mail, will remember lhat .they can do so free of stage, as Postmasters are authorized by law to rank letters enclosing remittances, if written by VjmscIves,or the contents known to them. Prices of Job "Work : JPTAND BILLS, printed on a medium or super royal sheet, for 30 copies, ; - jrorflu copies, And for every additional ICO copier, .HORSE BILLS, on a.shett from 12 to IS I inches square, 3 c pii 3, Over 18 in hes, and not exceeding 30, CARDS, large si-'e, single pack, And for every additional pa' k, Smaller sizus in proportion. BLANKS, when printed to order, for 1 quire, . And for every additional quiie, under 5, xvxceeaing o quire, uiuvuijau?, ii v 1 1 i 1 i ltj-rvri, 1 s, ant! nil kinds of BOOK & JOB PRINTING, executed cheap for CASH. royal, 82 3 1 3 5' 3 1 o 1 50 00 00 00 00 00 25 00 00 75 1 THE FOLLOWING B L A N IDS! Kept constantly on hand AND FOR SALE AT THE CAXiox.xrcxAxr office: : 1 CHECKS, on Bank of the State, and Cape Fear Bank. PROSECUTION BOND, Supr. Ct. MARRIAGE LICENSES VENDI EXt'O., constables levy COMMISSIONS to tak-.i depositions in equi ty, and Supr. court APPEARANCE BONDS WRIT 8, Superior and Co. Ct. CA. SA. Supr. Ct. INDICTMENTS for Affray, and Assault and Battery, Co. and Sup. Ct. CERTIFICATES, Clk. Co. Ct. JURY TICKETS ORDERS to overseers of Roada BASTARDY BONDS TAX RECEIPTS WITNESS TICKETS EJECTMENT S -PA TROL NOTICES LETTERS of ADMINISTRATION Bonds Deeds, common, Sheriff's Deeds, Constables Ca. Sa. Bonds, Do Delivery do . Appeal Bonds, Equity Subpoenas, Superior Court Fi. Fa. . County Court Sci. Fa, to re vive judgment. County Court Subpoenas, Superior Court Warrants, Bonds for Col'rd. Apprentices. Sew Tailoring Kstablislmient, I) D- KEELYN, &. C. rcspe tfullv inform the ) citizens of Fayettevillr, atid the surrounding r untrv, that they have commenced the Tailoring It.miness. in the store lately occupi'f d as a Jewelry S:iop. by Mr Bcasly, near Liberty Point, where they aie prepared to execute all wor' in their lin; . i- 1 1 T . I ..... in the . r iml mnst fashionable manner, and i.'poa rca- eoiiao c term. Feb. 25, 1841. 105-3 mo IMPORTED nrila tt it e n e a Will make the ensuing season in Kivetteviile, under the management of the subscriber. Terms, S5 O the sens .n, to comm nee lt of March, and endyvth of July 1841. Breeders m have patronised him two seasons wi 1 be allow flti a deduction twenty per cent., ami of tn per f for one season. A deduction ot twenty per vs..lt. will also be made to classes of six mares. M ires failing to Flatterer in the sprm, will be per-. Fruited to attend him in the fall (il d Hrcd) grat.s iil in tho following spring for half price. PEDIGREE. fi . iTTRRElt was ffot bv Mci.kt, (sue ct imp l.irialhan &c) his damClare, by Marmion i I .-11.1 lira bvGohanna c. S- d 1 J. is' ts J 1 1 i' jf I ENTERTAINMENT. 1 AlvE this method nrrtnrrir. ui, tnenfi.s and the nuMin rrrr x sine? s ; also to say, my house is still open for the re ception of Travellers, and ia the Stage Office, where seats are secured and accommodations ready for Passengers, with continued exertions to ive satis fac'ion. E. SMITH. Fayettevillo, March 13, 1841. lOStf. My House is on the corner of Gillispie and Mum ford Streets, convenient to the Market, and near the State Bank. fr g. PRESIDENT HOTEL, Jliil No. 14:8 Broadway, New York. P?nHI$ Splendid Establishment is now open and ready to receive those who may be p'ea cd to favor it with tiieir patronage. The House ia in excel!' nt order, the furniture new and levant . The ladies' parlours are furnished in a stv le not sur passed by any in the Union. The cellars are well stocked with the best of wines and liquors. The "ardor will be constantly supplied with every deli cacy the markets can afford. One of the proprietors, has been long, and he trusts, favorably known, as a Hotel Keeper; the other; as a Captain of" Steam Boats, to Charleston, New Orleans, Galveston, &c. T. B. REDMOND, JAMES PEN NO YE K. Proprietors. New York, February 1 1S41. I03-3tno MOUNTAIN BUTTER. Firkins (assorted.) Some very superior, at prices from 5 to J$ cents per pound! tor sale by GEO. McNEILL. v. 24, 1640. N A FOR SALE. TWQ STORY Frame Home, con taining four rooms. pas.o?e and Kitdien. situated on Hav Mount, and as a SUMMER. RE SIDENCE, uiiht be so improved, as not to be surpassed by any in the neighborhood. TERMS will be made known at this office. PIGS! SHIFTY Boxes Malaga Figs. Bunch Raisins in Boxes, halves and qnaiter, all the growth 1840. Also, 1 OO TIERCES TIIOMASTOX LI ME,, for sale to-day by WILLIAM McINTYRE. Feb. 13, 1S41. 103-tf Blank 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 salo. Will our friends give us a c i!I ? J. & J. KYLE HAVE just received by the last arrivals from the North, a large and splendid assortment of STAPLE & FAiVCY GOODS. mlmong tclsich are Cloths, Cassimrres, Satfinets, Kentucky Janes, Flannels, Blankets, French and English Merinoes' Challeys, arid MouIins d'Lains, (some of .which are very fine) Irish Linens, Lawns, and Diapers, Calicoes, Swiss and other Muslins, Silks and Sat ins, Black and Blue Black Bombazines, Anker Bolti:ir Cloths, &c, &c, with many other articles; All of wrvch beins bought at the lowest package; price is offered at REDUCED PRICES, by whole sale or retail. 104-tf Loco Foco FRICTION MATCHES. p $ k GROSS, HOLMES' Improved Fric- vm? 1 10:1 .Matches, 111st received, ami lor sale by the Gross or Dozen, a superior article, and warranted. Apply to JAMES MARTINE. Aconstantsnpply of the above kept on hand, and will be sold low. to sell asam. Fayettevillo, September 5, 1S10 SO-tf d. Amazon by Driver g. g. d. Fractious by Mercury Woodpecker - 1 1 . f-... T lirnn3 nV k"liIJ lis., Bdsea by Reguh.s-Ba-tictt's Ch.lde.s-- a ..Kiin ivir nmvp s rt riy uvwuju a I I on &c. -1 CiKi, tuTn trim Rlnoa &.C litcnded Pedigree and other particulars in nana will hve food nastu-age tills. TBM . f I A w - n.rtr Wit' ciutis. and be well lea ior ininy r- Ex 01 V care will be taken to avoid, but no liabi.ity JOHN Pavcttcville, Feb'y. 2, 1841. BLACK. lD2-tf. K5-Fay the Printer NEW GOODS. HE Subscriber has received his Fall and Win ter supply of Goods, embracing a general as- rtment of T Shoes and Boots, Hats and Caps, Hard Ware am Cutlery, Crockery and Glus Ware, vv ines an Limors, Groceries of all kinds, Patent Medicines Paints and Dye Stuffs, Hatters materials, &c. &c. The Stock is very heavy, Merchants are invited n cell and examine for them.itlces. South Carolina moneu tvill be taken at nar if nafd tvhen tht Goods are bought. G. B. ATKINS, Oct. 2G 1839. 35tf. Foot Huj-JVount Gardner ami McKethan, CARRIAGE MAKERS. LAMP OIL. First quality WINTER pressed. For sale by GEO. McNEILL. December, ISth. j; ELIZA BETHTOWN,N. C, April 1?, J841 . Mr DANIEL McdUEEN, Sir 1 Take notice that! shall appear at tho next Court of Pleas and Q.uarter Sessions, to be held at tho Court House in Eliza betbtown, Bladei county, on the first Monday in May next, to take the benelit of the act of Assembly made and provided, for the relief of insolvent debt ors, when and where you may attend if you think proper. RICHARD CADE. 112-3t ""CORN M E A L. r l!ie Grist Mill near the Lode, hag been put in JUL complete o der, and is now prepared to ffrind Ci.rn in any quantities, and at short notice. A skil ful and trusty Miller has been emploi ed. Those who prefer it, can hatre tHeir Corn exchanged. Eayetteviile, April 14, 1841. 112-3t Re- "BT"IT AVE now on hand, and for Sale at very jELjL duced Prices, 6 Carriages, 7 Barouches, 5 four-wheel Buggies, very light, 3 Buggy Gigs, do. 5 Sulkies, do. 6 Spring Wagons and 4 Chair Wagons. Also, a very large assortment of work which we are daily finishing. Also a general assortment of Coach-Maker's materials kept constantly on hand and for sale. Persons wis'dns; 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 as low as it can be had from any ie-u!ar Northern Establish ment. . All woik 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. Orders thankfully received, and promptlA attend ed to. .riC FaycttcviUc, March 12, 131!. 06-tf. From the Democratic Review. SOCIAL DESTINY OF MAN. The question of a Social Reform or a re organization of Society, is beginning to at tract the atteution of some of the leading meu of our country. Vague hints, incomplete proposals only have heretofore been put forth; but Mr Brisbane in his work has undertaken to make known to his countrymen a plan complete in all its details. The coctnue advocated in the work of Mr Brisbane is that a social reform or a funda mental re-organization of society as the only means of ameliorating in an effectual manner the condition of that vast majority, of the hitinan race, whose existence is a dreary pilgrimage on earth, darkened by evils and - r-W mm miseries ot every Kind, xo these evils. political and administrative reforms anofd no remedy; they are caused by a bad organiza tion of society, and a social reform only can eradicate them. Defects of the present system of Industry. To discover a true social organization, we must comprehend the fundamental defects of our present false system of society. Among its leading practical defects are, first, its system of separate or isolated house- I holds, a system which is productive of waste, complication and discord ; aud, second, its system of repulsive, repugnant industry, which disgust the mass with the exercise. The remedy for these evils is Association and Attractive industry. We must discover means of associating our separate and isolated fami lies, who are now acting without concert or unity, and in opposition to each other; and of replacing tho present system of hired la bor (which in a thick population with reduc tive competition among the working classes for employment, reduces them to poverty and the severest drudgery) by a well organized system of industry, the exercise of which will be induced by more noble stimulants than poverty and fear of starvation. The error which philosophers and legisla tors have committed is to have ovei looked the vast and important question of labor and its organization. Attractive Industry is the first remedy to be applied to Social evils ; it would replace the present poverty and aexiety by riches and contentment, and relieve the mass from those harassing cares and physical wants, which deaden the intellect, and smother or pervert all the higher sympathies and feelings. It would open also a new aud vast career to the genius and ambition of man, and em ploy usefully the passions, whose restless ac tivity is now perverted in our societies, with their monotonous idleness, and their conflicts and discords. It is time, no matter from what source it comes, that somethiug should be done for the laboring multitude. As politics and legisla tion can do nothing, we must seek for the means in a social and industrial reform. In a" true system of Association, industry must be rendered attractive : so long as it is left in its present tate, dishonorable and re pugnant, all those who can avoid it, will of course do so. If we examine the number of idlers and non-producers in society, we will be surprised to find that they comprise at least tico-lhirds of the population. One-third alone is engaged in production or the creation of riches. (Commerce, banking, the law, &c, produce nothing, and add nothing to the riches last fifty years dpost exclusively occupied with commerce, batiks, the law, and their in terests, to the entire neglect of productive in dustry, particularly agriculture, which is its most important branch. For the last eight years, political parties have been waging a war about the currency, without hav ing yet per ceived that it is a question; of minor import ance, and one which is entirely secondary to that ot Production. " The poor are increasing fearfully in our capitals, and the signs of the formation of an unruly rabble are evident. Hovr long will it be before Ithe elections in our large cities will be held with the cannon and bayonet as peace-keepers ? The mass with us have not become inured to suffering as they have hi Europe. When misery grows too intense, we may expect some fearful protests against the false order of things which engenders it. We will point out some of the defects of the present organization of the township, and ex plain a few of the leading features of the sys tem, which should replace it. We will take for convenience sake a town ship containing three or four hundred families, which, with five or seven persons to a family,' will give us the number of persons composing an Association. ; V' :; v?r . Under the present system, three hundred families require three hundred separate houses; three hundred kitchens, three - hundred fires, three hundred sets of cooking utensils," three hundred women to prepare three hundred separate meals, and if they are farming fam ilies, three hundred farms, three hundred teams, a thousand fences, and everything else as complicated. They cultivate three hundred little farms, nineteen-twentieths of them most ignorantly and miserably. V ; 7 These three hundred families make all their purchases separately and by retail: They go each fifty or more times1 a year to the neigh boring town, makiutr fifteen thousand little trades, losing their time and that often of their teams, which are so expensive. They pay the country merchant double what the goods would cost, if bought at wholesale, as they would be in Association. A more per fect system of complication and waste cannot well be imagined. ;- Where is the origin of the present system of isolated households ? It has its origin in he savage period. Rude nature assembles Individuals by couples in the savage hut or wigwam ; this is the simplest household or domestic organization : it is devoid of econo- ly and combination, and is full of discord and waste-? Why nas not tm defective sys tem been "reformed, and means found of as sociating isolated couples ? It is because the leaders of society have been exclusively en gaged m administrative and political reforms. Details relative to the organization of Jlsso ciation. If the above defects, which are inseparable from the system of isolated families, convince the reader of the necessity of a reform in that system., be will be more inclined to examine the question of Association, and the means of effecting a change in the present domestic of society. They live upon, and draw their profits from productive industry, which is the sole and only source of wealth.) Where so small a poition of society is engaged in pro duction, and the labor of that portion is bad ly applied, a state of geueral poverty must ne cessarily exist.'With poverty, come ignorance and degradation of the mass, and w ith ignor ance and degradation, follow vice, crime and a train of other evils. A system of attractive industry, which would induce the present host of non-producers to take part in productiori, would increase tho wealth of society six or eight fold. Legislation in this country has been for the organization. - We of course can give i J the present arti cle but a very imperfect idea of the system of Association, which is advocated in the work of Mr Brisbane. Those wishing to under stand the details of the system, must read the work itself. For an Association of two thousand per sons, a tract of land about three miles square, say six thousand acres, is necessary. This tract would form a domain which could be overseen and cultivated with the uuity, intel ligence and skill of the farm of an experienced and opulent agriculturist. Instead of three hundred little houses of the present order, which vie with each other only in dirt aud inconvenience, the Association would construct a large and elegant edifice in the centre of its domain, adapted to all the social relations of man, and to the wants and requirements of his nature. We must observe that the square form must be avoided ; the edifice should be composed of a centre, wings and sub-wings, so as to prevent uniformity of any kind, to which human nature is strongly opposed. i To organize a true system of society, we must possess a knoicledge of Jlan, of his Passions. What we want is a knowledge of the pas sions, of their tendencies and 1 equipments. Possessing this knowledge, we caii organize a society suited to them, and in which they would receive a true and harmonious de velopemenf. The lands, edifices, flocks, implements, &c, of the Association, will be represented by stock, divided into shares, as is the capital of banks at present. The members of the association will own stock according to their means, and to own stock is the same as to own the lands and edifices themselves, for they are mortgaged to secure it. A quarter or third of the total product of the association will go to pay the. iuterest on the shares ; the balance to labour and skill. An iuveutory will be taken at the end of each year, when the annual profits are ascertained, aud divided among the members according to their Labor, Capital arid Skill. With the aid of a scientific system of culti vation, a judicious application of the labor of sexes and ages t-. industry, and of cultivation to localities, the product of the association' would be enormous ; as a consequence the interest which capital would receive would be ample. This would conciliate the feelings of capitalists, and render them the partizans of Association, to which, no doubt they will at first be opposed. In a true system of Asso ciation, vrc must satisfy every body; if wc increase ten-fold the fortune or "means of the pocrer classes, wc must double at least the fortune of the rich.;t ,Wre must not abase the small minority of the Rich to elevate the vast majority of Poor : we must elevate all classes far above the condition of the most favored in society at present. ; f A person on entering the Association, could invest his money, or, if, he. had none, his savings, in stock, which will be the best kind of property. If he wished to leave the Association, be could do so, sejhng his shares or retaining them at his option ; if he retaj ti ed them, he would receive interest on them as before. In a true system of Association, we must not only respect individual rights and inivid- ual liberty, but greatly extend them. Writh a system 1 sharehold property, we restrict none of the .rights ot the individual as regards pro perty ; let us show how we will respect his liberty in domestic relations, in the mode of ng and lodging, which are two important. branches of those relations. The private apartments of the edifice should vary greatly in price and size, so as to suit all tastes and fortunes. Individuals and families in renting apartments will consult freely their inclinations, making their selections accord ing to price, location, &c. A hundred objections will of course be urged against this system, but they who will take the trouble to read the work of Mr Bris bane, will find them answered. Association has means of harmonizing and conciliating interests and feelings of which men at present can have no idea. The mode of living above described would guarantee the most perfect liberty in domestic relations, which is the great problem associa tion has to solve. If we can fulfil the three following conditions, 1st. Economy, 2d. Uni ty of Action, and 3d. Individual Liberty, there can exist no objection against association. The system of association which wc advo cate is based upon the goodness of the Pas sions, upon the doctrine that they are capable of Harmony, and that Man is destined to happiness on this earth. Such a doctrine, it strikes us, is consistent with the dignity ot man aud the Wisdom of the Diviuity. lo sustain it, let us enter into some further con sideration of the mode of action of the pas sions. To comprehend the nature of the Passions, we must be careful to separate the false and perverted developements which they receive. in our societies from their line nature, their real essence. We must not take the bad effects of the passions ichen perverted for the pas sions themselves, iiove, tor example, may, 11 thwarted and disappointed, turn to jealousy, envy or despair : ambition to hatred or re venge. We must not commit the error to mistake these false developements or perver sions of passions for true and original pas sions ; if we do, we misconceive entirely human nature. The Passions are the most perfect work of the Divinity, but like any other active power in the universe, they may be rightly or falsely directed. If rightly directed they produce Harmony and Concord ; if falsely directed they produce Discord, Vice and Crime. In-the rude and defective societies which man has established, the Passions have been' universally perverted ; so that up to the pre sent time, we have only seen their false de velopement. But they are capable of a true and harmonious action ; and the great aim of science should be to discover a social Order adapted to their nature, aud which will develope them rightly. To illustrate in a familiar manner tho mode of action . of the Passions, we will compare them to the notes of music. The notes of music are in themselves perfect. No fault can be found with them, and no musician would wish to change them. Still the notes of music can produce discord as well as har monies : that is, they are capable of two modes of action. If played upon falsely, they produce discords : if rightly, harmonies. The same is true with regard to the Pas sions ; they are in themselves perfect, but are capable of this two-fold action ; and however much philosophers and moralists may blame them, they could not, if they had to make them over, improve upon or change them in any way. If a false society deranges their natural action, they tend to Discord, and pro duce all those bad effects, which we at pre sent see ; but in a true society, they will, on the contrary, tend to Harmony, Order and Virtue. If an unskillful musician produces discords, we do not blame the music : tde separate the discords from the (rue nature of the notes, ana blame ine musician, uei us exercise the same impartiality towards the Passions; if a defective system of society violates all their demands and requirements, and misdirects them, tee should seperate their false developements xchtn thus misdirected from their real Essence, and blame the society which ven-erts them. The social mechanism holds to thn Psrssiona the same relation that the musician holds to the notes of music. -:;&Destiiiy oj Alan. - ;;;V' What is the DESTINY OF MAN? Why was he created and placed upon the earth, and what taction is assigned him by the Creator in the scale of universal existence! Man is the OVERS EER. of the globe, which is a vast domain confufcTto his care. In this high and noble trust are comprised a general rultivanon and embellishment of .it surfcse, the government of the vast scale of creation,, which extends from him down through fib many orders of existence to inert matter. Has man performed-his trust of Overseer t Has he fulfilled his Destiny ? No ; he hast ravaged and devastated "the earth, rendered it a scene of desolation and misery, warred with his fellow man and oppressed bim, abused the creations over which. he preside, spread suffering wherever suffering could be felt, degraded his own nature, and marked hi career by every variety of vice, crime and outrage..- f . , We will extract a few passages from the work before us, which will show the views of the Author with regard to the imaorUuce of n. general cultivation of the eartbj which is a part of the function assigned the human race. " 11 we cast a glance, over the Earth a sur face, (p. 263,) we find extensive deserU; scattered here and there upon it, ,)ike ulcers, upon a human body, The rays of a tropical sun beating down eternally upon avast waste of heated sand like that,, for example, of. Sahara must necessarily vitiate, the a tmoa-v phere, produce pestilential winds, like the" deadly simoon, and cau?e terrible atmospheric derangements. The influence of such af de-; sert extends far beyond its borders ; its Hot: and relaxing wind parches vegetable life, and enervates man and beast. The aclionof this desert is strongly felt in the southern parts of Spain, Italy, Sicily . and Greece, and it?, deleterious influence upon their climates is gradually increasing. , . .; ; : ,., While these wastes are increasing on two vast continents, none have been reclaimed and fertilized. f -: By neglecting a proper cultivation of the soil, man leaves around him these generators 01 disease, wnicn intcct tne aimospnero ne breathes, and visit him with epidemics of va rious kinds, with plague, cholera, yellow and typhus fevers, agues,' etc. The cholera of India, for example was generated over twen ty years since bymiasmatic exhalations. This pestilence, after travelling eastward to China, turned its course westward, and has since visited almost every region of tho. .in habited globe. Is not this a conciusffeV proof that every part of the earth is interested in an integral cultivation of its entire surface I ,. - , There are- other causes connected with them, however, which should hot be over looked The uncultivated state or yie earth -towards- the' North pole, produced an ejxees; ot cold much beyond what is in the natural order of things, causing those vast accumula tions bTieeX wnicn iiave arrowed itw pumrra gtons to extend their frigid domain far south; of their"natural limits. On the other and? the vast deserts near the equator, and the ab sense of forests and refreshing streams create an unnatural degree' of heat. It is evident that these excesses, t acting together on trie atmosphere, mast derange the system'of winds" and cause the greatest fluctuations and irreg ularities of climate. It is also easy to conceive that the warm winds of the tropics, succeeded by the cold blasts of the icy regions of the north, causing continual, and excessive variations .of temper ature, must increase fearfully in the form of colds, consumptions, pleurisy and rheuma tisms, the list of Diseases artificially pro duced. . . . These observations are sufficient to show that man has deviated from his . Destiny as Overseer, and that he has neglected entirely a wise, well combined and general cultivation of his globe. Charles F ottrier to whom is due the dis covery of the system some slight idea only of which we have been able to give in the present article was born at Besancon, in France, in 1772, and died at Paris, in 1S37. Sinco Fourier's death, his doctrine has been propagated with great activity, and it is now spreading to all parts of the civilized world ; it has gained warm advocates t in Wsinf ftto ITnltrxrl Stataa fA.m. m Ttfl'. Spain and South America. There are In France three or four newspapers devoted ex"- clusively to the cause, besides a large number ot independent papers which advocate Asso ciation aud a reorganization of industry.' without declaring for any definite system. t The principal paper in France is published at Paris; it is called " La Phalange," ; and. is issued three times a week. , It is edited', vyhfc great talent, and is under the direction of V. Considcrant, one of the first disciples of Fourier. We will take occasion to state that a paper will soon be established in the City of New York, devoted to this great and important, subject. We recommend it to the friends of social progress, and to all those who take ah interest in the social improvement of Man. ,It will appear weekly, and is to be called ' t HtE FUTURE." cultivation and the developement of its.' material resources, the tertiiizioa 01 jus-uw5, uidmiug w sis j swamps and morasses,regulating of its streams perteciIEg oi- ine itiugviuma ui aiuic, Mr Tyler, and his friends. It is the remark of a distinguished British writer that Mr Madison was the mere "she-" dow of Mr Jefferson A faded copy and no mere ; Of something better we had hd before," rit'Vt'lfimuch literary talent and general abili- ty'Mr i-Tadis6n never could rill up the bold: outTTnecf his predecessors policy, and by all' his fri1 ' Ijbis week surrender of constitution when I &!gned the old Bauk charter was iiwlipilatal error of his life. It was the act 'C s which stamped his i charac ter with m mbecility, and shewed that from him, c. shrinking might have been apprehended Eti, be ever been called upon for deeisidiv; uc1 the soul trying circum stances under wLich fceVithor of the declara tion' and champion,:the elder Adamsr and

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