Newspapers / Western Carolinian (Salisbury, N.C.) / April 15, 1828, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Western Carolinian (Salisbury, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
i V I . th v. n if I I '4 y I m '. ' I Jl'.,.v. k "congressional summahy.-"- 7 ueidau, March 2 J. In senate, the bill i relative to the settlement of land claim, wss some time under1 con'-idcration. and wu finally laid on the table t the bill lor rn.duating the price of. public lands, w taken vpi and Mr. Barton spoke at great .r..h .jint the bill and an amendment lo it. In the house of representatives, Mr. J. S. Barbour's resolution relative to the aDDointmehts in the power of the Via U- S. was n short time VimlM dietission J a resolution was adop 7 ted, on notion r Mrniairronhii Wiiei Mu,i tn the taWooiJ disease which ex- i -WmMtifriBh -eft s "the rest of the mmmut;, , ,t ntn, in ,n,ifmof the tariff Y M k-Ubjecu l I .' -DllU 1UCI- """- i ni iiAHmftn aiwi limp. aiicganiM : r Iteannaoy, Marti In ene, tlte . .1 - . . ..1 -. f I. -J '.? Dul relative w inn ssr.iienicns ui mou claims was -mucnueu sum ,u' "su third reading i the bill Teiatiied ifadu- tincr the price of nablie lands, was dis- CUSSeo- ai great- icnm Boino-tiiii w apent in the cbnaideration of executive business. In the bouse of represents i lives, Mr. Tucker, of S, Carolina, laid a resolution on the tabe relative to the ad journment of .Congress! the house was then enRiped till its adjournment on the v tariff bill, Mr. Uatesi of Maasachusetls, and Mr. Forward, occupyini the floor : "the" house adopted Wsotu'tlon" 110 meet at It o'clock, instead of 13. heretofore, 1 ; TAurtday, March 2T In senate, the hill giving the year's salary of the late Gen. Brown, amounting to g5,3O0,io his wife, was passed lo a third rcudiag s the remainder of the day was spent in consid eration of the bills for the relief of certain revolutionary' officers and soldiers j and the bill to graduate the price of- public ' lands. The house of representatives re- fused "to consider Mr. Tucker's resolu- lion to fix a tirm for the adjournment of ncoogress Mhe.jtarif.hill was .then taken. "TbiTind Messrs. ForwardrStorrs, Burges, Anderson, and Randolph, apokc at some I ? f iaaAahen.,jrt.ftctedtll01.io. ..7 8ilMrI.MV' ' then moved another amendment ind Mrr Buchanan moved -to amend -the - amend ' "rnnnr" arhrn fha hnnu artinnm(4. - i jii iVtJliVA.28.IasenethaJiUl was passed : the bitl granting a township -of land to Kenyon College, in Ohio, was ordered to a third reading: the rest of tae day wai fpent,ln consideration of executive business, in the bouse of rep resentatives, after . the presentation of divers petitions, reports of committees, ' &C- the tariff bill was taken up, and occu pied theMi ouse the remainder of the . day,' Messrs. Buchanan, D wight, Mallary, Storrs, S. Wright, Davis and Miller, occu pying the floor s Adjourned over till Mon- . ..dyv in .order that ihe ball . ight be 'Cleansed and ventilated-. . . 7 ' Mtttdajft AorcA 31. In senate, Uie bill . for the encoursKement of vaccination was rejected i. the bill relative to the com me r cIU inttrcourse between, the. U;.S. and the .irehcb West India Islands', was discussed, r; ; . - and ordered to a third reading In the ..' ; house of epresenutives, the bill relativo .... . : to. the public lands was passed i some --lime.jris.spcnLinjonsiderliunoJU)c: tariff bill t the house refused, by a vote of y tdTJrre-consider Wf.-Tuckers reso lution to fix on the time for the adjourn BlCDtol coogiesi. JMrMf,-Th5.Boston Dullctio has given its readers an excellent ar ticle on this subject. The cooclasion i particularly good. ' Besides extraneous and impertinent Assaults, an editor must expect divers rebuffs, even from his professed pat rons. One condemns his taste j an other questions his competency) a third - dislikes his politics j a fourth doubts his religion j a fifth calls for more commercial-news a sixth: requires more extensive sketches of congress Ipnal or legislative proceedings j a sev enth objects to theatrical notices i an eighth demands a greater quantity of literary matter j and so on, ad in finite item3t as they say in latin. "Now, for an editor to lay any sort fclaim to ..nerves; or feelings, or sensibility, in such a predicament, is an absurdity of the most grotesque character." He must either regard these complaints as so much wiud, or make up his mind to enjoy all the rest of his life like an imprisoned hedge-hog. He must bear, without flinching, every species of mental tor- ture I whether it come in the shape of coonjJromjnembcra oi tho aame tribe if or whetherlt Tattle igainit hia ' cars in storms of disapprobation from hia spaying rtader;? Doo't ;ring ytfnr paper to me again, said a patron ' t'other day 16 due bf our carriers j it isn't worth a damn !" So, having no nerves, we comforted ourselves with , thp happy assurance that our labors were likely to escape a fate' that too often attends those of some others in the profeuioD !" NotmUwtanding these draw-backi, keeps one constautly ousy, anu wvv- pation is napptness. agreeable excitement oi ur-js-iuk -bcincr dressed by him, is the very pepper oi exisicu.j - , . -- - ' ... Kew Iforl. Dr., Howe, Surgeon in Ae Greek service, now tn Boston, . . .. Wi: ,U ' . It llicrr.fi-al IS BOOUl lO puuusii : Sketch of the Greek Rrevolotion." rhU will be deemed i valuable work, if the sketch be drawn with fidelity. The word Aiiforfcdbewga part of the title, would seem to ,imply tnat - tne work will berfaithfully .sketched. ;-,v c Some Kotrlish peas, brought out' by the English brig Catharine McDon ald Jtonx Li verpool. were p antea dv (Geogia) on the 10th,oi January, ana othe.A7mpi man presented the captain of the with a peck of fine green peas from the samd seed. It is calculated, says the Loridpn Morn ing Herald, that the various acknowl edged profcusorl of the law, absorb in in come. nearly . nine Diiuor.s per annum and that in three generations of thirjy years each, the whole sum of the property of the kingdom passes through their hands. Mecca, the " holy cify,' has been taken by the Wechabites, who put 4000 of the inhabitants to the sword. 1 he pacha o Egypt has thus new work cut out for him hearer home than Greece- and the " hclv cityn must not remain in the hands of infidel dogs I IXDHA -ARITHMETIC Their manner -of numbering cvi- detKe-yhCftxtrcii language. We have asked of all " tKe tribes, with which we met, their nu merTcalt e r msa s" far m a hndrttf .ln others, six is five-onei sevenr five-two, and io otiriieTidTeirte iy count oy reaupncaiion oi inc icns; This they perform with great dexteri ty by a mechanical arithmetic, intricate to explain, hUt readily apprehended by the eye. 'The principal operations are bringing the open palms together, and then crossing the hands, which tells as far as a hundred. Same of the tribes are said to be perplexed in their at tempts to number beyond a hundred. When the question turned upon - any point, that involved great numbers, vc have generally heard them avail them selves or an hnglish word, the iirst, we believe, and the. most universally understood by savages .'.heap P 77 An Indian Chief of the Nova Scotia tribe has, in person, presented a petition to the legislature of that province praying that the telling cf Rum to tht Indium may jjcptohibiiiid-,--.-.. . - , - A lady named Mrs. Vortline, lately in London, presented her husband with three female twins as Pddy would say) : ni k- birth. "I his is a striking proof of tiie old adage "Miss Fortuues'htldoWconie siuglc. Fence Pasts. ..Mr. Preston, of Stock port, Pennsylvania, recommends set ting posts with the top part placed in the ground t and intimates that they will in that position, last three or four times as lone as when the butts are placed down. The same judicious! and experienced agriculturist advises, in makiog fences, always to place the rails with the heart side up. The posts should be set at least two feet in the ground. If those parts of the posts which are to be placed in the ground'' are burnt tn a hot fire till quite black, they would last much longer than they would otherwise. Some farmers cut their posts so long, and mortise them in such a manner, that when the lower i i a . turn mem upsiuc uown ; gnu it is saia that they will last nearly as long again when managed in that manner. Correction of t'xme.-Ax may not. perhaps, be generally known, that those who were born before the 20th" Feb ruary, -1800, should, after that day, before. 1 hose who were living before the alteration of the." style Jq . 1731, may recollect that alter that alteration, their birth days were reckoned 11 days later.' A further ' alteration ' of one day took place in 1800) a child born on the 31st December, 1796, was not 4 year old till the 1st of Jan. 1801 ) and a man born 1st Jan. 1751, was 10 years old on the 18th of Jan. 1761; and was 50 on the 13th Jan. IB01. leredsn Paper. enas nave Dtrcome. rotten, they canjUntly ,,tained the Cwof GeneraUtn vViunjtos.i c.torcf a r.cs- paper in Penwlvanta, thus speaks on the subject ot tnni camera isaing newspa pers to subsc ibers t x 'Mail carrirrs have only been prohibi ted from carrying newspapers out of the mail In cases where their delivery is fa- quired in the Immediate vicinity of post offices. Where tber are lobe delivered at a distance from offices so great, as to render it inconvenient for subenbers to receive them through the offices, car. riers are po'tnitted to distribute them." GieenvilU College lUnvy Hoss, Esq. of Washington county , hssbeen appointed President of Greenville College, l ennes- smTsiwII ent first Moirday in Way next. Tuition 810 per sesdoo bjard.l 30 or;; ! 6'i'J;.3 per weik. 'TheCihcT that nere were fewer executions lor de- senUh during the Javt wariiHWWtJSen Jackon, in proportion to the number of his roops than under any other comman dindGeneral of that period : and, in sup- porfof the assertion, brings forwsrd the futkwing factsi '-Gen. Harrison while iA eoimand durinK the last war, caused thea soldiers to be shot at Seneca, for deUrtion ; and one at Put in-Bay, or in thit neighborhood a short tune after Fer n's victory on Lake Erie, for the same ofence. In July, 1914, soon alter uen I'arrison resigned his command in the rm v. Gen. M 'Arthur, on whom the com hand then devolved, caused five soldiers Lobe shot in one day, at ChiUicothe, for desertion. Alt' these executions, it will be remarked, were for dettrtion only while the six Tennessee militia suffered fur both muflny and detertion." Star. On the Slit ultimo, an election took place- aUarisrg,P,aorBttrcsJ. councilmeo aw constables t which resul ted in the-sutcessof the-whoU Jackson Extract of a .4'. jiw": A.m. letter from the Hem. Wflnirh in "Xiiwibfd.'dat4-....-SV - iy tod Uumrlth -March 1121.--u I think wiib you, that the people have ikiermined wlKuhouldbe'.Eresidenu.anjj I should be the last man in the U. S. who would wish to unsettle that determina tion; for 1 am one of tbe people, and ap prove tbeir choice." 7' pret'cnf &rwt betnj tea ltd it FTt Take two or three small hand Ml of walnut leaves, upon which pour two or three quarts of soft cold waterlet it infuse one night and pour the whote the next night into a kettle, and let it boil for quarter. of an hour: when cold, it will be fit for use. No more is required than to moisten it sponge, and before the horse goes out of the stable, let those parts which' are most irrit'jple be smeared over with liquor, viz 'between and upon the ears, tbe flank, Cic. JNTot only the lady or gen tleei an who rides out -for pleasure, will derive benefit from the walnut leaves, thus prepared, but the coach to no j the wagoner, and alt -other a. who I use horses daring the hot months,- Farma't Receipt Sok. Lietrrensnt-'Gov'ernor Pitcher has re commended to? the Legislature' of e w York, the appointment of a commission, with competent power to investigate the case of WiHUm Morgan, supposed to have been murdered in 1136; to examine wit nesses, enier complaints, bind over wit nesses and parties to appear at Court, to conduct cnmlnsl prosecutions, and lo per form all other duties necessary to a full and fair investigation of the alleged of fences, respecting that affair. Another Revolutionary Hero jne....Died, it his residence in Pouehkeepsie, Nuw Vork, on the 29th ult- Henry Liv'uigston, tork, on tsq- in tl we have liion, a the 80th year of his age. In hint lost' another soldier of tbe revo patriot, and as-erter of American Intependence- In 1773, he accompanied the American forces to Canada, as Major of aregiment commanded by Co). James Clirion, (afterwards general) and father of Excellency De Witt Clinton, late Cot tnor of tha stata of e'w-YbrhT' He Judgcin Dutchess county. TO PERFUME LINEN. n . ii : i 1 i r doves btat.to a powder, and mace scraped y mix them together,, and put the composition into little bags. - rata ni niuiiunt slant. MAktmuu. Three months p'J by. and the rose'a leaf, In the wwnnrht'a atrenfth has faded t - Three month's pMd by and the maiden's grief naa ner ststlrht beauir shtded The-ebWis&TrW W soft Wae'ti--"- Ana ner cheeks that rases cherished. And her girlhood1, winning witchery, With her carmine lips have perUhcdV Alas ! that a form M young and fair. Ana a aoui so aright altould meet Oetpair I The Charleston City G alette establish merit is offered for sale, bv its woDrietor. Jstaei HaigjEi. APRIL 15, 1823. BURKE COUNTY. The followin? is the Address adopted at the meeting of the friends of Gen. Jackson, in Mor. ganton, on the 26th ultimo, and which was pre. pared by Hugh M, Stokes, Esq. at tne requesx ot a lormerTneeting. TUa peno la approaching, wnen H Becomes our duty, in common witn the citizens oi me United States, to select S suitable penon as the Chief Magistrate of HhU country. Whilst the oublie mind is airitated from one end of the continent .to the other, with this momentous question, a "decent respect fur the options of tnosa wno iner wiin u- unpen ui i wn the. reasons of otir preference for one of the di tintruished individual now in nomination. It ! allelted,: )tf ihSfoM V administration, that John CL Adams noMetsea, In a high degree, every reotiisrte ijumiifieation for me eiewea wauon -o wnicn w- jnrTT ,nm. he wm bred a scholar t that he is an able niplo- ntifr"tht h it-s-stmnd- epbiost"aiid-tht. hlUsTcaifth since hui elevation, with ability and sncces;--1 true, he h Itad the advantages of a liber, eral nd elMsicai edtfestiowi- whkh'fee fkriVed from a foreign institution, where the plain, re. publicin phnciples of our government have ever been treated- with contempt and ridicule, and looked upon as a -ytterji of anarchy and misrule, rather than a rational and well organi. -ed plan of civil and politienl compact. How far the prejudices and partialities of a foreign education have influenced the political opin. ions of Mr. Adami, we can only judge from' the publication of a seriea of leUetia, (aftcrlils re turn from Europe) under the signature of Publico!, avowing ami maintaining opinions in direct accordance with those which were, and still are, held by the ariatocracy of Kngland, but must ever be repugnant to the true principles upon which our government U founded. . Mr. Adama did ntrt, by minglinp In the legis lative councils of his country, awst in the de--elopement of those political principles which have to eminently liaiiwi-hed this country from the free governments of antiquity. He waa nrst appointed pitat-f-e de Aftaire ai me Hsgue i transferred from tlience to Lwbon i and from thence to the imperial Court of Barlin. At none of which fid he add to his own repu- UWkm "aai ulplbaiatiiCor :M lh interesis oTJini country, by negotiation r tit' his absence iiVom the United States,- his father (the elder Adams) was endesvoring to ertibK" the" ilemei" WVSIffXtWXt feente which,- h-Tlerfge4 his-hi(fh-artlo-Uv and nia name, i lie ciuaeni oi :te country lyua the alarm, anTditpIacetl a chief magistrate whom tliey believed had abused their oonff- fdeweeWThe-alrj-(fl wa-MrLi Jiy-detfe-ft tton on the one hawk and rtrmncia-on tne other. The supporters of the elder Adama, though de- leaTen, were lar iruni cmisiucriiij; mcir muto u hopeless. Hie administration of Mr. JffTeron had rcarcelv been organized,, before John Quiney Atlanta, sppeareit . upon tho politiri! arena, leading the van of the oppo-itioti, in the Senate of the United States. The WsJiru; features of that administration were economy and retrenchment, the purchase of Looiaiana, and a firm reactance to the oppression and mo nnnohfinir commerciul policv of Great nritain, and the no lett'equivocal neutrality of France. Mr. Adtms sarmed to act with a firm conviction that Mr. Jefferson and his friend einild oritp. nate nothing that wmikl permanently Secure thei interest or happiness of ibeu eoninum country. Yet notwithstarling.,:he .untiring hostility Of Mr. Adsms and his coadjutor', they were able to introduce a system of economy and account, bility throughout every department of the. gov emment, and effectually to ckte the door pon peculation and shuse -ff ffiw 1'hey were able without sacrifice, to plare- a eenllnel over the piracies of the Mexican (iulf, at the month, of the Mitsusippi i to place the Itocky Moun tains as a barrier to invaion on the West ; and to pledge Ute high destinies of this country to the mainttiance of those principles which stbelrredWtiMir Oag'upoiitbegrcat htgh' way of iwrtKr8v-r'w,"iic;- Yet we find Mr. Adam, near the close of that administration which he has) laboured to pull rlown and destroy,- auiUenly rcmuuncing the political masim of hia youth and manhood, and beenmirtf at once a deserter of hi frietKl, and a servile supporter of the rvwsas tut aui It waa reserved tor he s-iccrssor of Mr. Jatlr. on to compensate this new proselyte to repub lican orthodoxy, lie was aent as Minister to London, to Uussia, temporal ily to (ottenbiirj-, and to tilient. Dut bis communications exhibi ting his resistance to the continental tfy-tcm of Europe, have unfortunately for him been lost or mislaid. His proposition at Client, to open the waters of the Mis-i'tippi tu tho vessels of foreign nation-, by ottering a free navigation of that mlfhty Ttivcr, and its thoua.J tributary stresms, for the freedom of tbe Northern fishe ries, which mut ever ha limited, discovered at least a want of foresight, and ability, in the dis charge of hi higU functions si the represent, lire of the nation. Mr. Clay and Mr. Ituwtl, his colleague, have plighted their candor and sincerity as wrll as their reputation, lo the American people, for tbe truth of Ihis allega tion. Nor s this proposition at all inconsis tent with Mr. Adams' determined opposition to the purchase of Lowisbna, during the admin istration of Mr. Jefferson t and it would be well here to remark, that Mr. Adam voted for the suspension of lhe Aaieai corKt act. in a im of profound peace, (when Mr. Jetlerton seised upon" the Battenr at ttrleans) and tor-which Gen. Jackson has been to often and so unjustly censured for suspending, in a time of war. Thst Mr. Adams sanctioned and countenanced tan-proceedings of the CmsrjgOndJfguhx ttvn council of his native state, during the late war, resisting the call upon the patriotism -of ner alliens, made by Mr. Madison, tor 'lie de. fence of the country, there rsnnot, at this day, a doubt be raited. In 1817 he was appointed Secretary of State by Mr. Monroe, in which office he wrote a celebrated letter to tbe Senate of -thn-Unhet! States rFtfqmrttev-allm; npon them to ape the ostentatious ceremonies of foreign -courts which" letter did no credit cither to. hit .head or his priocjpW , U U19 ks firmed, under the drrections of Mr. Mrmroe,lhe Tlorlua, treaty, MclWSiliid id the. tuUed SUtes on account ti Hi locality, but desirable for no other reason In 1825 he was elevated to tbe rresidential Clisir, by tlie provisions of the coq. stitution, in tbe last report i and in the aame rear, he disturbed the harmony of a sister stste. I by abrogating a solemn treaty, made under the auspices n nis pr-aicccs-or, wiin oe an itce a no eonsent of the senate. He sent Mr. fling upon what he knew to, we a fruitless mission to Lon deni Msuhsettetitlv conaisiaaj SI,",Cfla i'a t'r 1 t ? sr",' y. In I. "a tr.cr-ajje ' Congreai upon the Panama question, he oprnly assuinr. the right to commission Ambassador, when and where he pleated, Without the con. sent or advice of bis constitutional counsellors, He caused large sums to be expended in that mission, which has produced a rupture between Mr. Poinsett, our Miniate? to Mexico, and tho authoririea of Vera Crux, and finally eitded in disappointment if not disgrace. Hut we hsv done with this tissue of official acts, that hav reflected so little credit upon the functionary, and turn with the same feelings of impartiality to ihe picture of his rival and competitor, Andrew Jackson, litis personage wu brought to notice in the wsr of the revolution, exhibiting a youthful, bOt patriotic interest in the fate of b's country. At an early age be obtained aji limited education, St S country' adademyj Ha acquired the, study of the law.in North-Carolina, and removed shortly afer to thn Slate of Ten. nessee, and a-ited"ln the formation of her pititart .ctvystatisttee,: aitdi Wnd??., which fee; aub sequently held the office of Judge of the SQpe nor Court of that State. - In 1791 he was i reiK resentative in Con jrresi a4 voted against the e address to Gen. Washington, with other firm 'Wns- formed and -wgaw-ed, the. atatesmen; of that day looked to' the mother'countrv fer such, parliamentary rules and usages as it' be. VauliQ ' iiSH-vpam y iw smivus -va ssatsr icgiillllV guidance i consequently, it became a part of their proceeding; upon the receipt of the Pres.. dent's Message, for. the twotlotise of Congress, with their Speaker at their head, to wait in form upon tbe President with an-address, eon. prising hia praises and their thanks, and a pledge of co-operation with his views of policy, before. they had renectea upon tne eonieqiienees.. This absurd formality was continued during the administration of Gernt Washington, more out of persona) reapect to Lim, than a sense of Us pro priety j during the administration of the elder Adama, it came into disuse, and wu entirely abolished by Mr: Jefferson. In 1798 General Jackson was in the Senate of the United States, and acted with the republicans of -that day, In resitting the encroachments oT Executive pow. er, snd such acts. as seemed to trespass upon the liberties of tbe people. From that period to the commencement of the late war, he con tinued to enjoy the confidence of Kis adopted State, and or the general government, by fulfij. ling various eivil - offreea, ami repelling the savage and hostile irruption of the border Indi. sim. Dunne 'the late war. he eoncruerrd tho. Beret'ifpbs 'troublesome' ana merciless Creeki., overran the.ir country, entered 4h territory of M.! I.. L -1 u f I !5 i ... Florida, where the Moody aborigines had hith erto sous-lit and found protection i excu'ed Arbithrmt!ar4,iin sitiaens of a christian con ntrv t but wearinr the - castomarr badges of their btrbsmos allies, rho '" " tomahawk and sctlpihg "knife. In cpnsuUlnff .... . j. - . Ai . tne 'merest ana tarety tx mi snnenng count!y. roeiu.be sanctioned the novel, hut just principle - : 'that the only sanctuary jr i savage 'enemyv ' should be hia graver and that a belligerent nation may, without violating the laws of nations, pursue his enemy into s neutral country, when that country forgets the obligations of her tres tie, hy fostering and supplying that enemy with the meant of stibsistenoe and annoyance. Before 12 months more had elapsed, his military services were required to repel the invasion of Lrvtiitinna, and encounter a more formidable, and hitherto invincible soldiery. . The veterans of Europe, flushed with victory, and elated with sanguine hope of conquest and plunder, landed . upon the banks of the Mississippi with the de termination of reacting upon the plains of N Orleans, the brutal scenes of Hampton. 'Tbeir watch word of Mmutg nnd-Jfafy, indicated too., clearly the parlbey were to ytj in the grant drama of blood and carnage," which waa to ensue, to leave a doubt of the alternative that was left . . Cen, Jackson, with all the ardor and alacrity of the Patriot and 8oUlierN repaired tethe-eie- of .action, and by a signal victory - ave.i tiie ci-tv trom pmnoer, and the chastity of American wivss snd. nacoaTsas from pollu tion t"He established unvtiat "km for: the pre. tection aid security of his country,, until the stor.n had pu ted over, when he suhmitted with becumim humifity te the law of his country. tlc-pontimrwt -frnm- tn.it- riMnnrt 4n lifkl.l -tWm.. omcewf stijorUencrarof thr Smrrhern nhip ion of the at my of the Pnited States nnril the peace establishment, when he retired for a acquired by treaty, he was appointed by the Eu-Ml'iv f th 11. R. CiMwntnpni fha iMiilaw ... ha had . been instrumental in securing. Hit stern but energetic cotiduct upon that occaloi, tuvii'h harsh and grating to the representative of Spain, was attended with salutary effect, snd countenanced, though not commended, by the PreaWietf. He was subsequently appoinea Minister to Slexlco, wMrh h (teenne piotivea highly hoiMirable to hi disinterested patriotism i alWgiiig iliat the unsettled ststa n( tliat eonntry, precluded any hope of arnica b!e or iiteful relations bring ettabuahed at that time, lie then went in o the Senate of the I'niti-d Slates, wss placed by his friends befor the A merirao People as a eandilate far the Presiib-ncy i and suttained hia high claims le . that ofliee, bv receiving tbe largest number of electoral votes that were given upon that oc casion. That there exists an American ritieen nfliT held up fir public eenwfre or applause, who pissesnea more energv and firmness as a soldier and patriot, a grnter ili vot'mn to the true in-U-rrsts of his country, or a higher sense of the obligations of private friendship (with deference to the opinions of others) a do not believe, lie poftcaa llut plain, couim on sense, which gave celebrity to a Franklin, snd which in the complicated operations of Government, mast ever supersede the Icaraing and sophistry of tie spools. .. .. aJS"' We have lxven favored, bfThrilonr Saml. V. Carson, with a natnnhlet con laining the luroinons and interesting re port made to the house of representative) by Mr. McDuQie, tUirnmn of the com mittee nf ways end mrsns,' on the state make some ettracts from this able docu nieni. as aoonas we.cao feet through with-diveri- article witfc--e are -trnder-sv- pletJgeTp pbl!sir,orl;h veahalUiv pose of as soon as possible. Cat-nierciur 1'r.och Klnrlielo of Tennessee, has been srrcned agd put 1 jail iu Ralegh, for passing Ncwbrro cotinterfeit hills. A good many of inert counterfeits have gel iato circulation to thrs part of flic sta'r. V 14 r: v
Western Carolinian (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 15, 1828, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75