Newspapers / Milton Gazette & Roanoke … / April 22, 1824, edition 1 / Page 1
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spy. 11 ...ta 'Si .wirflPiwnPVfT . . . . . . r... ., . .... .. , ArRlL,1824. 2 Thursday 3 Friday 4 Saturday Y' . 5 Sunday ; 6 Monday V I Tuesday Y 8 Wednesday SUIT RISES. SETS. ' . - m ." 5 21 6 39 5 ' 20 6 40 5 19 6 41, 518 6 42 5 . if 6 43 5 16 6 44 5 15 " 6:45 3tooii;s A PHASES. 5 13 r "3 'Mi I-.- OS 3:3 r 1 ' NATION Al. NOMINATION. At a meeting of 1)emocb atic JVembers of Songress, held in the Chamber of the House f Representatives, February 14t 1824; of rbicb BsirjAxiir ;Rceoi.ss, of Ohio, Was Chair nan,' and Eii ;CpiijrarsVpf eVor,; Seee-' jiryi tt vas Unanimously resoWed, Jtba ! V7ILLI AT,I H. CH f Georgia, ,be reconim ended to the People f the United States as a proper . Candidate1 br the office of Pbesideitt and , ALB33HT OAMiATirj, f Pennsylvania, for the Office of Vice Pkesi dist, of-the United States, for four years rom the 4th of March i825. ELECTORAL TICKET. ; At a meetirig I of REPUBLIC AN MEM 3EUS OF THE LEGISLATURE OF NORTH CAROLINA held at Raleigh on the 24th De- cember, 1823, of which Gen. Jame Wellborn, bfWilkes'Counly,was C(iairman and Robert JSL Janei, of Halifax xiounty ; 'Secretary," the following gentlemen were nominated on the Electoral Ticketi to vote for President and Vice President of the United States, at the ensuing election; iV ' s - John Paiton, of Rutherford. ' Meshack Franklin, of Surry . Rdliert Williamson, of Lincoln : . James Legrand, of Montgomery. Abraham Philips, of Rockingham. Alexander Gray, of Randolph.- I BenjaminH.boyingtorijO" Richmond. Thomas Ruffin, of Orange. Nathaniel Jones, of Wake. ' John Hall, of Warren. , George Outlaw, sen. of Bertie Charles E Johnson, of Chowan, Thomas V. Blackletlge, ofJJctmJbrt. ohn Owen, of Bladen t r William Biackledge,-sen. of Lenoir. signed them, are held responsible to the go vemment ; tor xne cnaracter and conduct ot immense multitude , resorted ta the ored person has been anrstcxl.chariN that commandi and it might as well be justi. ViloTWt-! AkF a i Ku t " - -7tV. v' .R - fied in an officer, senior in command to Vive I place -the lame, the.deaf, and the ed with being one of th ktttw Which a Fuard on dtv, without passing """dji lay prostrate ,on the earth ( murdered the cantaihi hlTte. and su ' ihTouffh, the officer of that sruardi neai in i them f were ; in a.ttendanc. I TAT.-,no,n vf 4K tti Jr ? r 4Uin '?-. N Department of War houldou n'o ' J - "a the arrangements of commandinff r- without giving their order through P prayers to neaven ior i tne pest; are as follows: y;bort timo channel, Tol acquiesce in such a recbverY of these' unfortunate indi-1 aftprfhiC orders to that order as that the termand. Generals the proper ( - - l -ii - t viduals. vThe moment theFrince 6f the Holkar hadmucd: whlch the established principles of subordination made his appearance the whole as- was in 1819,' a coloredlid, appa- f , and goM order.- tedience to the lawful semblage fell on ;their knecs-all rently l dr I6 years ocameinto .' SiEtm likedinjprofnsnce,eu.eyes tlm Police Office, and MfiA that be' v chain'ofmmiinaiothat b tllt,Vand TOU vn.v . vuiipact wnfi,.ij vroK.cn, .opens xnc i puiiiug .up door lo disobedienc-id4sipectf nd gives f tn t he midst loose to the turbulent spirits ..o7aw..eTef.a;ii readv to exc te mftf inv." i; m 1 aSKea, Ul a mUO, If Gen. Jackson ws dissatisfied lieve God can cure ymi?" A thou- cd; was bound to a We ia'porV : with this alleged breach of military ?a 70ces TePll,e ! 7ts ytr: and when within a dayy Jail of. the -: etiriuettel why did iie it ii,nt rii,i,i;n i 4.- ana uucreu wim a jouu rmK;moaipndnUonninnn I nse.youri of etiquette towards the Secretary "d tl,ey.aU s? up ?nS wcnt.a?vay- ried away money and c?JJung, and of War? Why did he not privately ne acclamation ox uie; mumxuue; that so public and marked an order " i1 JT' T: 1 captain, Klte, and su. muiiimui luttupjuu w uuic, 1 percargo; uiey took to poat,car- and respectfully offer a remonstrance 1C"; UWd" ! tMA iw " -j!- i)i7 ie xu. I JNeverttieiess most of the rest would, from neces- graphical researches u soon as the Genera! day, to the extensive area in the vi s.tyj have Wcompellea; to eWisS: cinity of the .cathedral, and tcper- in me regular army unaer uenerai ?Wilknson. iln this situation he determined i to disregard; the Secre- tary's prder.--The necessity of his troops would have excused the res ponsibility which be assumedbut it was the manner of the act which constitutes: the objection. Had he 'civilly : and respectfully communi cated his disobedience, Avith therea sons of it," to the Wareparent, he must have stood fully justified be fore hisQaytvButths strict rules . of discipline are not sufiiciently kin- uerstoott ov Uren. J .-itcsnect.to a superior officer is; among the most .essential rules of an army. He lost m time (says his biographer) in tnakiner known tor the Secrctarv of War. the resolution hehad adopted, to disregard the order he had given, and- return his army to the place he had received it He painted in strong terms the evils it was calculated to Droduce. and exbrtesed the astonishment he felt that it shoiM have originated with' the famout author vjrtne jjvewourg jaettfrty the ne& re -. However justly GenV Armstrong might have deserved the taunt from any other quarter f yet J he "was ; at that time Secretary 'of, War, and Gen. Jackson's ought to have been . the last hand to inflict such a blow. We. pass over 1 the earlier scenes that were exhibited at New-Orleans in December and January, iai415. We shall not enter into an examina- tion of the question whether martial law ought to have been proclaimed, or the Legislative body put in. a state of trmnceTheseextraordina ry measures, however harsh, might bave been necessary, and : there are crises when the safety of the peo ple is the supreme Iav.But why so rigorously maintain martial law when this necessity seemed to van ish?. The B ritish ; arniy had with drawn. ' Mr. Livingston had ar rived . on the 10th (of March) from the British .fleet, whither he had gone to effect a general cartel; thio' h i m A flmj rf1 PiOr.hranftiiad anntu" cif the arrival of a vessel from Ja maica, with news of peace having been agreed on by the two countries.!' The-same intelligence had reached Ne: Orleans from another quarter. On the 7th of March, Gen. J.rcceiv- edl an express; sent by: the Postm as- . ; jTrom the New-Torki4procte. The case of the J7oJ5v&i-IThft rnU iorm nis cures in uie open air. - An persJtiave already stalthat a col H .it.-'" lUlli: 111 tX LA A uU W I I Tl T 51 r"I IV iniafia 1710011 " -T 1 I "T il.. of the'SuT)DlidantsJ ahdlfaffTP ; e.i' '. tpneJ'Divydu be- tialmanineiv--The Vessfcii annear i .scuttled the brig; the bwas spar- aaes ot private liter , : 5- " 7, s? ' T r&- kUO WCI1UM-' luo rtti Tio tw vt 10 -iio t I directed, to folio w the Prince and to magistrates of the debbi tibh he had addresses a letter to rMr' feabuni m,ak? Hst ' tPfl9 wh?m he made Jn8l9, which lfatjthis day n :,r? should cure of; their infirmities. reiieated almost without vnrifttinn the following RpntPnrp . i Tese commissioners have prepared the clerk reading to himselfhis orfc ; an actqtth g5Psition -Heffh tated the right to make war against an Indian tribe, three pereonswho had declared that black man engat4ja tbemui in perfect peace with, and under the protec- themselves cured by the Prince, and tiny 'and murder was ri&fy In the ci- Shlfl'SS?JtSM. ' turi,s"out theirjailments have'jwt tyj and he iame. to havfeSim arrest. SCar, totjM?dtarfl ed, AfterconsidembMculty ho- towhichyou will nave to answer, znd through further enquiry ithas been found, was arrested; butdeiiA1d',iplumpIy' which ihatif so recently passed, promising that the story of the paralytic wo- that he v ever shinned orl libard the the, aed that remained at home my protee- :n aa ilr oUUmWk t! n ' suJajPcu ijparu uio . tion,id.taking the warriors with me;in the man, andthetwo deaf and dumb Hplkar. - Enquiry wa3:thcn set on - campaign, is . as unaccountable as strange. who had fancied themselves cured foot to discover VhoYlifeped the) - SSy w;r BISrfherecod y the Prince on ;the first day of his crew of that brig, and a homan wai , nsteSu arrival,,isve jiroducedbf Aectablcbaracter, , the sanctity of a flag, when borne by any per- reports that nave got into circula- whose husband (since4 - dead,) had son, but more particularly when in Hie hands tion.COMriCf FfanCdtS. ' ,: ; shipped the crew of the Golkar, and 01 a superannuated Indian chief, worn down - .' ---i-'WK- n-!iAA . r: liu 1. with age. such base cowardice, and mur- l t ' the prisoner among tbem thom she? deroua conduct, as this transaction affords, 1 singmar circumsiance ouuurruu weil Knew. ;; Un reterrJn 0 the pa- To'which Gov RaQ reniied on was viewing" with mtense interest that he was one of; the persons . ? J4?? eD1!e( the countenance of Cam, painted by ndf makes out to sv th6 least; 1 e 1st of June: ; ? ? v : , i.- -i i,.tA.j xtU tLaa tUZ engageu, makes qui, to svne leasi, the 1st Sib: 1 have latelv had the honor to re ceive yours of the 7th of May, founded on a com municai ion irum to the attack recen that celedratea Artist, uavia, wnen . Rtronffasft. . Thft farts&rftsnertinrf - ,r a..c.... or . a I me iate 01 tne Dng in an arfi known! n Gen. Glascock, relative shriek and fell senseless in the arms the underwriters have loVig since "' fntnSS of hermpamnsron he mid the loss and all almost V by that Divine , which Isooii&n or later ; fit. rhfi dw.dsrs flkrknessi' ... - . - . I 1nn4Vnlinn AvhihitaH t. hr- o mom nl I ! . . --m ; - - . . . I : . ' bleeding tronuer to you, andrequested you, ir acciih muiuuui , MJ v.w cult Uourt of the U nitetl states. ot tne Teyoiutionary coraiuiitcc, uc fore whom. herslf and parents were brought during a period of theFrenclt m respectful terms, to detach a part of your overwhelming force for our protection, or that you would furnish supplies, and I would order out more troops, to which you have never yet deigned to reply. You state, in a very haughty tone, that 1, as Governor of a State, within your military division, have no- Extract pf a letter from Wahihgton. j "The most accomplisbdl narlia- Revolution, that nature" could not mentary orator on thiar fti&t is Hen- - From the Richmond Enquirer. - W linvft een thatfronTthcourse I General. bearing communications of his pursuits,' Gen. Jackson can from ' the government, it is under scarcely be qualified as & statesman stood, that the treaty of peace had tn administer the hisch functions of been si en ed the 24th of December, Chief Magistrate of this nation. ! 1814. Was it not time then to close Is he calculated, in the 2d place, the odious scene pf military power? liy the habits of Jus mind, the cool- Did necessity require that Ir.Lou- ness of his temper; the sedateness of ailler, a member of the Legislature, U iiidffmeiit. to supply the place of should be arrested and confined! fivneriencfe arid I of study, to select That rrtnd ministers, to adopt measures, the and to administer the government Habeas Corpus on application of Mr. according to the principles of the L. should himself be seized, dragged Constitution anu lUC lniurcsis 01 uio to uie wnerai uauip, uci. , wiltvyour imperious doctrine be tamely sub- Inn, people. : ... . w ose.cs'ai,u rrA' . . :. - ; two dauehters, twins: they are so at tinies vervabhv OneoT.the keeni . Let u jdge.hmby acts 1 ii inin timm nmpnvii'viiiH ii tii inf fut in ill I .r; la i ecu- . . . r . , . a . . reader to draw his own conclusions, larly announced, or until the: BrP In the first scene, v in which this tish shall have 1 left the Southern officer appeared during the late War Coast?" That the District Attorney, with Great Britain, we find him dis- Mr. Dick, who applied to Judge reffardins the orders of the Secreta- Lewis for a habeas corpus to liberate &w O, - : -r i.. Trill -L....1.1 - support Vtherecoliebtfontsp;''cp- bt Cult, and the most iSiflbentialsv. fully renewed to her senses. always self-possessed, prepared foi rouison uaiiy auv. the occasion, adroit; persuasive, ve . hement. severe cbricuiatol'Vi iust as TJ1-. ttnn ntnf! in nip it I Si tn 4 ntn m fan ' nmn cia shall have been prostrated at fhe feet of I " J'A' i.vi-'i"." . t. i vi wuiuatuvva - j. v ; , A4."v. f military despotism; then; and not till then, Smart, who keeps the Wynstay Arras wcstok atters himself wiailliciH at itutnin, ijenuigiisiiu iiaa ty, out aoounus in gooa .loeas; ana is Mr. Hall, District Judge of i right to give a military order whilst you are UCi.nxAn ;Dmi;n Yir; Afi in me neio." v w reicnea ana coniempiiote .' States, lor issuing a writ oi.,,m,-;w .-tKU j: fh. fact: when the liberties of the people of Geor ry ax v ai. Under these acts, authorising the Presi dent to accept, the services of-50,000 volun teers, her addressed; the citizens of his divi sion, and twentvfive hundred flocked to his standard. A tender orthem having been mail e. in November, he received ordersto Judcre Hall, should' himself be ar rested?; Arid that an order should be issued ' also for the arrest of Judge Lewis? Were these high-handed measures rendered necessary by the circumstances of the case? or do descend the Mississippi, for the defence of tney not rather bespeak that species SriwSiS; oftemper in Gen. Jackson, ichis p. ik -r-;s,.:vt. .- T' v disposed; to make his own will the lie arrived and halted at Natehezaerft sole rule of his actions cGen.;Jacks6n was instructed to remain until 4 ,imVf hnwpWr that he is riffbt he should receive further orders. Having . Aum", However, tliat ne is rigot chosen a healthy site tr tne encampment 01 i, in ail uiesu procccuiiigs, vviiai, suan his troops, about tea miles trom wasningroir, we thinkof some subsequent events ed frontier, I shall think and act for myself in 1 stranffers, but even1 their own pa-belohss to PiiiLtrP BA.iBduR.who ; that respect."; 4 V X 'f, J r rents, find it difficult to name them seldom speaks, and is alvf$ heard J ; What would be tbe 'sHuatmn of when aprt. il Htb profouridttentionl.to the Southern states." if. in the midst nnc!M hut. nnft mind: are verv un- rwt? nnccpfisp.a wnnfTprfiiV'nnditv of an irisiirredion they were com- easy if not dressed exactly: alike to of utterance, displays a ; grlat i deal pelled to wait, until the command- j the smallest minutiae; have each one in e officer of the U. States, ' should j Particular tooth that stands forward please to issue his order for ensuring more than the rest: arid a few years beard his speaking compart to that their safety? Or where is the: res- hack one had a tooth extracted, and Qf a verv well bred, but Trouble, wo- pect, Jn which the States of this Un- on examination, the other was found mari in a drawing rcom: M speaks 0 luit snouiu uc . uciu, ii iicii- uuici i to nave tnesamexooiu in nca.njr; spiers cive-t more enienajmisent tnaii of research bufn as not !a g;oid Voice, of a very forcible manriefe 5 1 1 bavo '; ri. "devoted his ftmelxwith the utmost indus- try to training and preparing them for ac tive service The clouds of war, however, in that quarter, having blown over.-here-ceived an order from the Secretary of Avar, dated the 5th of January, directing bimon the receipt thereof,' to dismiss those under iiis command, from service, and to take mea- eures for delivering over every articie-oi pud Magistrates should thus be bearded I same state of decav; if a question is by the military officers of the United sked one of them, they generally States? Or, where is the respect U0tb answer; their, friendships and which : these States might expect to dislikes are alwavs the same; if one receive from the hands of a Presi- -l8 struck, tlie other seems to feel it dent, who should entertain sucn sen-1 equally by the distress she. evinces; bid J udge LiVBMORE,!wse p1airi manly ana humorous rcmarKS go strait to the subject; andlare often all of force. His speecKrs, kre gt nerallyj ery short; 31r BB stbk sfieaks sense. : aims at tio anamentw. timents an express them in such a jf either of tliem is unvrelUrtheloth Isiieard lie property in his possess ion, to Major Gen- 1 IV.llr.n.Kn " in his military career? The folio w-r; ins is an extract from a Division Order of the General, dated Nash ville, April 22, 1817: ' TheeommandingGeneral considers itdue to theprinciples of subordination which ought & must exist in an army, to prohibit the obedience of any1 order cminaUng from the Department .of War to officers of this division', who have been lz X H- reportedid been assigned to duty, unless - tThe situation; Of his Volunteers I cominjj thrbuffh him as the proper orean of was at that time, most distressing.... communication. The object of this order it mi. . i en rtn t1i ciVfc rpnart to prevent the recurrence of a circumstance There were 150 on the sick report, whVch removed important officer from the 56 of - Whom Were unable. 10 raise j:v-.aion -without the knowledere of the com- their heads,' and almost the whole of I manding General, and indeed when he, sup. .. ' 1 ... jt . ! -I-" Jv. ' 1 a1 thnt nfRr.pr enaped in his official du- aywwv o O . ties: and anticipated hourly bis official re. consequence, , therefore, of a strict J command; and also to prevent the topograph manner? er sickens in a :day or two after wards: they are : inseparable com- ; Hambueo, July 7. 1 pariions--eat aliker--thinkalike- MIRACLES.;...The news that ant alike: in short, the svmnathy ex- Prince Alexander, of Hohenlobe, isting between these children lias was expected in this town, produced been Uie astonishment of the whole the' most lively sensationsall the neighborhood After r this the Come- innrm, enuowcu wnu . a nicauiaai, i au Of MfTOrs Will seem qu lie naiui iu; the moment of lavinsr his hand upon , ,,. ; ;W , - ... . A. ... 1 ' Iw... -.V'i " ' -.7.--. Ji:A mem. ' j - The Prince arrived on the 2d Ju- would ; obliffe us by furnishing us lyu-he performed his first j cure on witK more lefirible manuscripts, some inree leinais, wuo; lauuuiw unucx- 0fthe marks one would supposewere uaiAjAjoius va cuuir-tucu tuio nas - - , - 1 7 r i. -1 attested by only ope witness, a dis- " rr 7 witb tbe greatest deference iCiUing mTriurte'VJiiOCe this: commencement of the ljcenturyv England and France Ha4ieen at war 2&G years, ana tneaui toss 01 men is estimated at 2b,ct(M0 ! compliance of the Secretary's order; ical reports frombeing made public througfa vuuipuait v , 4kA r iitt' the inedmni of the newspapers, as was done must have been,! that many ot, the, . tht ..fn.twbn the sick - would have perished whilst ; oeniy to obuia the benefit 01 ail our tope esca tributor of almsft ,He 1 restored the usq of limbs to a paralytic, and hear irig to two deaf women. rThe prince promise.i .to repair, on the following from the ink bottle, and ran oyer a sheet of jvrhite paper wittt tWa of his legs ixfiUcted with the palsy. . 7 ' Bait. Mora, CbronV IDLENESS .There! IS hp char acter, in society more despba&le than the idler. He is! not ai( iritiappy, but is in a fair way to bccbnti a cri minal being. Bishop TyrTobseryed to a lady, who neglected hi e'duca tioD of herson pn the plraj jthat ho was toa young to be con5r.(( 4 sttt dyMadam ifyou flqfill hxs head with something beUsVeme the ;DevUTOlte 1
Milton Gazette & Roanoke Advertiser (Milton, N.C.)
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April 22, 1824, edition 1
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