Newspapers / Western Carolinian (Salisbury, N.C.) / June 22, 1830, edition 1 / Page 2
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-vo,cy e cants, lot a bushel of fifty piundi i which, if there wh no duty, and lb tariff rrgnlatione of weight tr r.ia ' abolished, would be boujht h N, O .if ant im tl.. miii.tir.il h,..l..l ,.f at It.. eighi, f jr t er 9 cent a, and would bs rej,hl up th river at the rata cf 33 1-3 .enf per hur.dred'weigM. thui tp j tin Ht (he ! its fall heaviest upon the V.'es!. It U air error to tuppose t at the South i tho greatest ufTirer, The W(t wanttit far every purpose the South due end 19 great purple be iJr Hrlnj firovi$hnt Jur txfiart tnd tilting mei. The VVst uiei alum slt. nq on mis toe 1117. it oeaviest,-becue ,..tIvo,4xri er. 1 ventr cent on lait which cost 8 r.T er3 centi t aUihttii vrixc!rBetvSr ' dutf.iheafift-ihtt wJtc!fcc.ii.-cett in4-inennfte tier.mJlmtrf the jatrcnir bourttWe or ellowaoceit on account of the ettt duties : ThU may be fair in the South, where the imported aalt it not re eiported upon fih or provision! 1 but M it unfair in the Wtit, where the eiporta tion of beef, pork bacon, cheeae.end but ter, it prodigious, end the. foreign talt re exported upon the whole of it. . Mr. B. then erjjued with great warmth, that the provieion curera and eiportera vrere entitled to the tame bounties and lowancea wHhtheeiporteriof fub. . Toe . cfalmlof each ret'rd upon the time prin ciple of all drawbacks, that of reim burse raont of the duty which was paid on the imported lt when re exported, on . ih, end provision. The eme principle - lottrl the beef and pork ofth farmer, which covere the fish of the fisherman 1 endiuth wee. the law in the besinoin. The .first ect of Congress id the yeaf 7t9, which imposed 4 duty upon tall, Unwed' bounty in l!ea of drawback, on beef, and pork caponed at well as fish. The bounty was the tame in each case ; It was five centa a barrel on pickled fish, nd five on beef and pork. As tire duty S r' tatt" w i i" IncH i tc cl , 'lKebouriiTe?aftd llowMKet were increased, also- Fish, nd ashed beet and pork, fared alike for tho first twenty yeara. They fared alike till. the revival of the aalt tax at the com mencement of the late war. Then they parted company ; oounues and allowances r 1 ...m n .T.4. .TZaW: TZ.T.T. I. 4. g. . , A A A 4j4 I ACtUM 4UbU. Klin TT)tA ttUI Ik tin TIT. Hf fimr 111 111 J ,n man inf w,crpo .w0. ty, ffld thuMhi .yttemKpreiien and dimintihed ,n the were contined to the Cthers, and dropped , cent, cri Liverpool aali, an.I 400 upon al n beef ind pork; and this has been the utn salt ; and to this must be adiided. so ease ever since. The exporters of ftsh f.r as relates to alf the interior manure re now drawing at the rate cf gJsoy tori$, the protection arising from trns per annum, as a reirabursenitnt for their ( pot tatiun, frcjuently count 10 2 or 30q alt tax j. while expiTWrt of pToyiitons draw fiothiDj?. Tho asgre2ic of the fishing bounties sod allowances, actaaUy Orawo from the areascry erceed hveiand PJUallr for twenty rears lorn-Tir. millions of dollars; while the exporters of provisions, who get : nothing, would r5 oe0 wrauEaioflraw gTeaTr m .?lJh. xpo..in. alte4 .pi-oisionj ex ceeds the value of exported hU. Mr. B. could nst quit this part of his ibject, without endeavouViog to fix the tttftntion,otvaSeft4e trponrhe provi" ion trade of(the West. I ft took this - tfade iti it latest seneiinldm the - PM!!J"!xS$!t&. h.csj!j:.bee?o - ana DUttrr, 10 loreign coutUnes, esp ul ly the WisrtooTetr the ddmesiic trade 10 the lower Mississippi and the Southern Statet) the neighborhood trade, s aup J5lying the towns in the upper Statet, the Ttiinersin Missouri and the upper Missis sippi the army and the navy; and the various profetsiont, which, being other tvite employed, did not raise their own proTitiont. The amount of this trade, in thit Comprehensive view, was prodigious, nd annually increasing, and involving in jta current almost the entire population of the West, either as the grewert and ma Ve r a; cf the. ..fitavirianMbe urerr exwr- ttr or consubicrs. The amount could "'"r v .ininiucii. ,i tut was c- pwteHtfromNeir OiliaQi warahewn to be great; but it was only fraction cf the whole trade. He declared it to be enti tle! tolhe favorable consideration of Con- greta, and thartbe repeat of the salt duty waa the greatest favor, if an act of justice ought , to come iindenh,Bam otiaiojr, srftich could to rendtred it. ATcduttion ia the price of salt, next to a reduttioiv tn the price of land, was the greatett Wea ing which the Ftdetal Govertrment could ijosv confer upon the West? Mr. B: re- ferred to the example of England, who favored her provision curers, and permit ted 'hem to import alum.aalt, free of du ty, for the enc,ourgt:ment of thtf provis ioo trade.,ven when her own salt manu facturers were producing an abdridant lffiotwpplyWme-t He thawed that the did I inorej 0a1 ahj ; - CXtitidiilhria rTSeelieriftd effeouTrae lucot 10 nig nn 1 anu ne rcau iroin me - Brjtiht.ttttt hook. tt amtxrTjthe.Bfitish-1 Parliameot, pasted in 1 WT, entitled,1 an ' ttt tntsurege the txfiart BftHtcT letf end jiorl Jrtm Inland. which allowed bounty of ten pence sterling 6n every hundred weight of beef and pork so ex ported) in consideration of the duty paid eh the salt which wat ued in the curing of it. He Mated, that at later period, the duty had been entirely repealed, and the Irith, in common with other British tubjects, allowed free trade with all the erld, ifrt0ipdliip the West could nit obtain from the An erican Coogres the justice which the op pressed Iritis, hid frpeured fiom e Brit Uh Parliament, composed of hereditary nobles, end filled with representative of rotten boroughs, slavish retainer of the King' minister! Having how n the en ofroou amount of the tf,ltf unequl opention in different tecjorU of the Un ion, end the supsrior clalmt cf the West for iti foolilion, M 0. praceeJed to ex ni he the reason fur ' ktt piu. it up. These fjrew out of the American Sytttm i" for the duff wai pe (ongerwanted for re l?ou, wTh icclietcftui w,,i:uijDff by our own conduct. We had voted, two yTarrordTTitn on wlies, and were 1.0 voting to reduce IV UklIUIi VU 1.11'ICGl IC. illH ttnuc tta coipcflse.wu&a.pri.gtiheijL an? ttl)4 champions,, a reducing the moderate duties on champaiirne wine and imperial tea. whjr.h the rich Igxurlout alens die, and leaving- theenoruiou an ) dnecal djtie upon suit, without which the firmer cannot raise his stock or cure his provisions! without which the labor in man canndt eat his dinner, rror the oej; pa. boil his jjreens j thus this tys tern it presented as favouring the rich, and luxurious oppressing .'he poor and laborious! Bet - let c examine into it, and see wi'h what joiuee and with what conformity to its own declared principles, the Amtritan tyitem" hsa taeo the sI; x under its hher and protecyon. The principles of that system as f under etand them, and practise upon them, are to tax thiough the .custom hoane, the fordjn rivals of our own esseoiiil pro ductions, when, by that taxation, an ad equate supply of tho same article, as (food, and at cheap, cn be made at home. Thrt-ie were the principles of the system, Mr. B. tald, when he vat initiated, and if they had changed sii.ee, he had not changed with them, and ho ynprehtKlod apfcHrtttTj;iioirnrtho chj:ijo woultfpro duce a schism amunst its followers -Taking these to be the principles of tho system, let the salt tax. be brought to i'.s tea. In tS tf n plute, the domeitic maoafacture had enpyed ul! poiiiulc pro tection. The duty Wit near 300 per 1 per cent. ni.ri. This great and exces-1 cive proteciion has been enjoyed, wi?hout iaienup'tjn, for the laat cisrhteen years. This surely is tijtjie enough for the trial 1 of a ihnuufacture which reauiies tiut lit- J 10 carry ii qtu n:a. for the result. I we the ilonaesiic mxo- 1 u fa claric t prudi.ee d . aaadcUiae auppl y iur the countr 1 I hey haye not 1 ho hulf enough. The proJuciion of the last ...J'ett.l.l l2I).ajui.lM) hreurm trrrtte- Secretary of the I reasnry, is about five .millions of bush. K ; the iirportation of foreign satt for Th c a m 0 period, as shown h r t h g c u sTo 547. bushels. This, showy thc.com&ump lion to be eleven ir.illions of bushcS, of which FVe are ttor.iestic. ITere the fail ure, in the esser.tiil p6rucr:Ut of an ade puate aupply, is m -re than ore halt. In the next place, how y it in point of price ? Is the domestic article furnuhed as cheap as the foreign Far from it, as already thown... The piico of the domestic, along the const of the Atlantic Sutes, va ries at the wffrks from 371 2 to 50 rents ; in the interior, the usual prices at the works are from 331 3 cents 10 one dollar for the busficfof 50 lbs. which can year ly be put irfto a half bushel measjre. The prices of the foreign suit, at the im pott cities, as shown in the custom house returns for 1829, are, for the Liverpool blown, about IS cents for the bushel of 56 lbs ; for THtk'a fsland and other West India stlt, about 9 cents ; for Spanish salt. Bay of btscay, and Oibrblter, about 7 cents; from the Island of Malta, 6'cents. Learing; ::outttwi'l;irerpo'ot satr. bichit made by boiling, and therefore contains iarinTtd itew, r seprirmigredient w bicH promotes put re faction, and renders that aalt unfit for curing provisions, and which tl not OsediimrWesl a'n(nhelfage price of the strong, pure, alum salt, made by solar evaporation in hot climates, is about 0 cent to the bushel. Here then ia another lamentable failure. Instead of beiftR aoJd aa cheap at the foreign, the .fe,rJ,fi4st h U. JOlhtlilialilylof ih-do4iaeatk .- ar tki U U d 'V!t iarrrriirrThti l ,t?)ejrn.pl eascntiaj application of the test, and her? again the failure is decis ive- 1 he domestic talr -will -not cure 4 provislof.t for exportation, (the Httle ex cepted which is made by solar evapora tion) nor for consumption in the South, nor for long keeping at the army posts, nor for voyage with the bavy. For all these purpose it is worthless and use less ; and the provisions which are put in it ere lost, or have to be repacked at a great expense, in alum salt. This fact is tl X. - Y . . teJUaoyu rwgeut $t whprf too mtnv cidttnt pt!d the pttJaliy of trustinz to domestic salt, to be duped or injured by it nt longer. In proof of this, Mr. B. read ttatf rnenl from citi zen of Indiana. Mr. J. 0. Read, whose respectability he vouched for, alleging that he (ltd tQstalned lost of near 8350 upon a cargo ofJOO barrel of porki at New Orleans, in the year IIJT, in conse quence of putting it up in domestic salt. The pork be,;snt'i spoil at 1000 at it arriv ed in the warm climate of the South.. To mv it, IUao htdyt in- ur tli expense of repacking inalo ra tail j proces which oot( bita'EI I' '-J on esch birrtl. hoop thitot broke In the operation, and to ad from the Dlace of reoacklnz. Mr- n."saiftfiViKTa wit lha' ciiie ona andHuT Ujlajas Jit.thc.. sa.3ie..expcaui.iJat. Jilr. itkTiidof sab- with duty. bushel bjr the tariff cannot preseot this picture of imposition to the Congres and ask in vain lor the relirf which the Irish, proverbial for oppressions, received from the British Parliament., And here he submitted to toe Senate that the Ameri can system, without a gross departure from its original principles, could not com thit duty any longer. It has had the lull benefit of that system in high duties, im, posed, for a long time, on foreign salt ; it had not produced ar adequate supply for the country, nor half a supply not at aa cheap a rate, by 300 or 100 per cent ; and what it did supply, o far from being equal in quantity, could not even be used at a substitute for the great and important business of the provision trade. The amount of ao much of that trade as went to foreign countries, Mr. B. shewed to be 66,000 barrela ol beef; 54,000 barrier, of pork ; 2,000,000 lbs. of baron ; 2,000,000 lbs. cf b'Hie'r, and 1. 000.000 n. of cheese; and he considered the supply for the ar my and navy, and for consumption io the South, 3 erceed the quantity exported- Mr. B examined another ground of ehirrrftjrttie mtfnuwcff of !he duties; founded on the amount oi capital which the manufacturers had embarked in iNe business. They had returned this capi tal at upwards of three million of dollais-j but when you ime to analyse the pjrtic ulars of this imposing sum, two millions of it are found to be taken up with wood en vart, and thrir scanning roofi, which must rot tn a few years, whether ,t j or not. Such items could no. be counted; asc.ptt.l.unkstwnnewiornearlyso; ttstrl 11 ia nAt f lm 'vreiinriai that unu r .VOUM.XV. ..... ...J Mm works have . bJeii erected since the prob lem ol.piyiog the public dbt has been discussed and solved and a great icduc lion of lases looked to as a coniiooce or arnrrrAnothef -portion of the ' w-V''-capual waOT.ttie"vj.i1p V. ,f W president to ;the item to" xfhtcli Tho same remark ex as to the wood in vats. A third larirc item in the estimate of capital nutuUwfwsaiKlfuTnHCBsrlrfrTrrsTa idle on fumoe, in uider to make less salt and demand hii-her prices for Deducting aft these he'n.s, or so 'much of eacteaa ought to bailaducicif, an J it oiiTd j-probably turn out that the boasted capita! ins-ncse worxs uta not exceed ctnount of one year's las upon the people to keep them up. That (ax has been bhewn to be lor 1829, g l,200,OJO of direct duty; merchants profit upon that sum at the rate of 50 per cent , miking 600,000 dol lars ; :d 350,000 dollars more for the loss of 30 lbs. in. every Uiithel. In all two millions and a quarger of dolhrs Toe realcapital, in ali humm probability, does not reach that sum. The capital to be affected by the repeal of tho duty can not be (he one half oi it ; for all the inter ior works ; hi those in upper Pentjsylva nia, in Western Virginia, in Ohio, in Kentucky, Indiana, lllHiois and Missouri, are beyoncTthe reach of foreign salt, ex cept at an advance of 2 to 300 per cent, upon its cost. They are protected with out a tariff, by locality, by c'istance, and by the expense of transporting foreign aalt into the fair and legitimate sphere ot iheif supply and consumption. - 4)Qhi less it would be better for the consumers .usJjeyaltthe-.wti..MdLlftpAiiwutim logo on paying the present . .enormous duty, and its accumulated burthens, to kp-them sjp lUU-thi altg rnariv not be necessary. The people cannot be driven to this resort. After reduciiiKthc duties on tea, coffee, wines and chocolate, the duty upon salt must fair- The Amer ican system cannot keep it up. it can I01 conlinoe to tax the Erat Dcccisary.xd life after untaxing its luxuries. Tbedu ty was reapcnled fa tatoj under the adinin 'kufiasul MiMxoiu .XhVphbk exiociwn'bTlhc'puTlfrcre enabled "the Govern iient "if that Tira fc " to dispc n se. wit h certain laxcf, and salt took precedence then of tees, coffee, chocolate and wine. It cannot be necessary here to dilate up on the uses of salt but ia repealing that duty id England, it wa thought wbrhty of notice that salt was necessary to the health, growth and fattening of hogs, cat tie, sheep aodnqseti thaf it waaa pre-! tervative of hay and clover, and restored! mouldy and flooded hay to its good and wholesome state and. made evea auaw '---- -iisf 1 auu! JaiU lilsjlt BMW Ijpd chiff, arailable food for; cattle - Tht domestic tall mskeri need not spea of protection against eium taJt. quan tity of duty will keep If out. The peo pie mutt havt it for the provision trade; and the duty upon that kind of talt it grievoue burthen upon them without be ing of the leat advantage to the tali ma kera. (Concluded, in eur jS'txt.) Mi H tht Ft tf tht Tvt'fih CtngtAtitnal DtttHdtfXmk CariUna. Fitiow CiTiSiNii It hat alwtyt af forded me pleasure to communicate to my constituent the result of our delibsratioliS In the National Leehlaiurr. and the' atate and condition if our countty. At Hull. eT-r-thtrtcmrntrrpwtrrtniTWr . . j 1 ' . ,t j... ..1.1.!. . 'rntt noevcr, 1 noo inystu worn oon """j, .Htxuniier.1 selfupjit the indulgence of try (tllo riiixent, irp!jn this occasion, and ak that thay may not fee) disappfiinted in not re !..! j . ; a ' ce.v.ng a ocaiteo accouni or our proc Jlnv. thrntiirn llii medium nf a irrillnfl r- - odol communicating at tne erid of every IC IC 1. L.I. II . m 11 fl IT. tlllll 11 I IClll seiion of Coniress tn which I havi , ' , . . , , served Fom tiv present arranfl'neiis, ! do not expect to e home nt fre the month of August. My intentiu 1 1., to visit the different counties of t rv rlistrict 'u ringihe fall, Feprrior Court Ciicuit,hen I hope to have it in nty power to see my const,iitentt generally, and to rendu a satisfacjory account of the manner in which 1 have tUschaigcd the U li! con!) ded to me by tn cm- I will conclude by fayinp, that the course which our present illustrious Chief Magistrate has purs-Je and pariiculanly his firmness 'and moral courage displayed b opposing yttem, the corrupting in fluence of which must ere long have sap ped the foundation nf our Uovernment, revives the hopes of the friends of1 the Constitution and rortect principles ; am! the anticipation of a lasting continuation of our happy form of Civernnient, ad- ministered accordi.u (o the nuntv of i s .. . . . .1 princlpies, my beiV' ,'elicd n The I '"proi brilliancy of General Jaoksor.'s railiur j J" mc" v'e 'Vt.thn moment, tdik4 career, in my opnnor, sinks into in&igni-1 ,t'1 "tt'. to. tl; estinguishment if ficancc when compared with his resisting huli " he fr;-!u. revenue Aould be sijpliect ag influence which tiisMnme many men j Vm nt'i t .-.dmjont in relation to the into office, backed bv the delusive hope johjecit of this particular bill, with t)c jn of obtaining millions of money from tho j t:.cy ..C f--.s-ni;nP. ty thi'pwtronaie ctha. puulicfreaaurv, without taking into con- Jeneni Gov.n.n,, ' Uleution the far- that no m.nPv r..n hr r -- --- ---j , l)tt uku ffun th. of ni.o. who are . ((J bfi , ' l)f lhoip oJn ,Q ' support to a tysicia,lho tnd.uud obMtiU ot . which is to continue the oppressive taxes under which they are now sulcr ing, fjr the cKcltuive benefit . of few pQ- 1 1 lie a l s jwc uf Mors , z L 'Zi . ws vi .vuprescwativeSf-comBming rrrs reasons far rejecting thff-Maysvme roidt,mfw",wnVt is a great bli1, a,u3 "ing forth Lis objections to thc fJwMOeyeTBra ; cute it by the Oovcrnrrrtnt, liken 1,1 eon nexiun wh hw determined tcsisu,,, frWir .pproprtaitun bills, svhich lives on Sunday Wr(,f',. (.'fu'l dev.!-',, T im"m - opeaseut of wL, U., w,,! U V? deny t.b.to., due time,) H destined to aL.-t 1,., ,k.n,. on the Lfi'gliii-'ji pat;c in t,.e Amc-U-su-C histo y. lie tuust stan;!'' the ce.Tre ti';' turo in t he Atnr nc.m cai.viss, between the immortal father of hu countrv, nj lhr no less i-nmonj saeol ."'luniicuiiy Vour oWL'i'jnt serv'ni, bAMl'LL P. -CAIiSON. rao'i riiu nuns" rouMiC. T imniyi rm .3.i a,. W in , ,-, r ."w . ,i,ctt estct-ftt v ar0T" inian irivir.tr u:i in ih. un,.. .: ei n r "tajtmiiL- mi 01 1 reatrrst to-retire n.n S.urrse ot, ) 0., 1 Ir:.'J-U'l', for s;:ch nVeprest;btaM.)r.. 001 81,11 P ' ?2nr in that i tl III. 11' f!Tl Connecticut will hardly gj"v v,p freY ,' . ,,,u jcjis neuce, , ' oof- notti upon tnc aenate yet. M son was elected in ulare r,t' k., 1 . vi uiuc; Senator, who Wit ic over for the next six yeais. Connecticut is tolerably vedl repretented in hpth hbiilea f-.ir a" manufactutin State, and we hope nhe will get her Lll'i ikrihjtwiuik. rn t 11c. u.cr,-. iicr i.j member is a fellow of an old head in mattrVr-' 1T - - - r- , e4g vTt n 6.2Iiu:Vcx. T'5jl i hV-ti.vf'. ffw. - - .T , ..i.otTcr we pot-r duustsroti1 are to be fleeced; hut this lttei -jtrntle havt, rlnuo uha.w.. . . inin-wm say to us pe ..,p.J, . run ilur pro eedrm di-iicm. At this time, (says the nue-reville Recorder) there iano femalt ju our .Pen. iteniiary, but one, who was sentenced to 11 at the lite term of the Superior Court oi Burke county, oa for , ,;nguisr 0f. fence to have been cornTf.iee tn? wo- the times.. We had thought-' better of 1 7 " h'K1!,liJte ?qn ihjeel White than to seo him 'punning upon a of-lMer,,,"r0V';.t. in an, man'ner "f Connecticut Senator. Speaking of Mr. !,,lpe' CVcr was "Ht '..lished by the states to Tomlinson's elect ion h iava, j Mr. ftot ,lie 1 et?er:i1 i-n:''' J:?. The l'tesiderit in hit will have to men out of the Sena'te, ,M,a ""' " '""e degree that right to though he has connived to khk up aV''0,,Kr'M- retna. to a'gn this b;i did ncj T ' r 'Tt j vain uuar siui?"' " 'rtr JUXH lino.. , We are MUthariitd la Announce Mai fifjtihew I) iii tii as candidate to represent the CG'itiljTcf rJalenburg io the Stai aen.te. M,i,CJdate.torb UtKis tt onrf7rcrttr Wo are nuthorited to' ao'nounce va Atxantcr, E. as a candidate to -epre sent the county "of MecklenUrr in tfa 1IoQe of Q S mr . a. . . 'M. -WJf The pracl.mstW H me 1 reiitirnt a m snnge, refuninjr io .;,. iho Majavilla Uo.d b'sll and anting the ground 4 Ins objections to its pwsige, 115 mtted erable excitement ifl fcveral ngrtet tb L'nion. '-Ve intlmatej In our U& p,pcr wtfc contained th Mes.ge at full length, tbrt wetilJ fc'.ve o.t free md uiibied opinion io relaiii.11 to tl t document, which ,J , memorable eaample ut the frcs.dent'a firumea, ' and tisednesa of uffKo to root out all evil and LUrtial .'L'i.!ulliKl ail n mjuiive a-id :he.reck btsatui-. t uTi-nurn a ai,. 'mtjerctu. tvt-eJ0, highly appitudthtt ' ' at el' nubia r.t -in t10 Pa.,.,, f th f J i Lnbn, vstiicti yrompteJ hifn to u,y aide f i 1 hngs and , ciirrine inu, tii jTT i preatfeuoi. ft .Hii;in prt.,periiy, wbilw u i ortb taa: .t!, v, r uv continued U advsnec- 4;h ra;,:4 r,Jti to wtaltb, power I and ll.ijwlrcncc. f We agree" . f.e I'res-dent, that it i, ineSl f. JL.':11III -I i ' 1 u " 10 wid out to tl. i"""lm " ",r prt'rnt ti,ne to Wd I. Jr'"c", or 'Vernal niproveme'ii3 ul Vv.t 1 psiticnlac ieaon, and h urgina; n.mn Cm lIOUse, .hat af:er defraying tho nccessirv e xpi Ul kuvernmenf, nodr version nf the rcmi! nig i-nnppropriated reven. - .?hou,J .JiVito.the inejudice of tU- ! POIICV, IOlktll ?( !;;; pninrlncK.. . .-., meina of the wisdun,uritiieii,. . proptmtions.cf the. f Wsidenr, in rttttion to thli" " important an& wteCnfWeet-of f nterost - 'iihe CrmriilMj-fi4je sdvocat.: and ipport. W 4-wrsctvefia V ftltr Ji 1 1 1 anX ",c","lcni !u -.wrfa, Z - ';-"'"'vemcnts.l.ov.cerirre4r. it J' National unportiii-e imy h. 1 II Hit; .oi ."-iiineitt h..'-e ig')? t apply t!.e ?.iti.iil ti sutre to the purtK-3 i,f Ir.j ! tcrnal Imprnvcm-nt, ir fj'lnuj i,-, ()l.r conception. as clear tho day. the ni-t.f, that the right ordtr the cjni'-r.ic T.ii h" a canal would he eyw extensive with the ri.r!.1 to t-tt,tri-'r mon,u j fir i-s conjtructt jn. if the riKht to order, !cr j not within tiie emigrated auiUwritics vested in ingress n,e Tl&J-l 'TPf'pri-! .money, cats ! not rest with the (, -u-ra! H, 1 .... ... sm to rest "?tion, that :r."n any tkc.l and dcliberatt 1,'p ,"c"al Government bat no- ! fn M.u .0 the doctrine, t'..t Uc General ' ,n-lovrrnTOrrt c!,im;u,iicl-o.ertlia f rui .... .Z. - U WUi. ho'h"-7'' ' "pproprii.ie r.mnv for the purpoaea' oj" 15. to as-'rue thtix'l1) b,)t his rejection was, ia great degre-, the result of a persuasion that th il prosperity of a particular states sfidrCoflfer partial, iin.'ead of general alvantHges. Although we have n'o-syj sincerely 8d.r.ifeJ" I the character of the pwent chie f magistrate, t and Mf now frie'nJI grws, yet we have no four ta apeak out ouf Iioiieat convictions, not withstunJmg, with all bt - M..l'fc'"4ViwfW'v.v.iv.K!.a.nV.j,K " ' ' S. .r, but will strne P.j be.ia the. san wllii :3 upon M-ery -t urm ttutiorial conflict f t ' . . : . . : 1 urn. ,v,',' 1 tie n-;r.'; 01 iattcr spirit, tt i' . . t . . ... . . triepresc.it n!--.t:-;it,vt-t i'i not paustrW declare that we i, .ve 1 lerti .-Irrs'ood Hie president tt rrpu hi. L-..!,...-i:y cf the G.i;trat -'(Jnv. ercttieo. to muk l'.r'.jil Liip'rovcmenIan3 that be vtrjrtd aay ttetn of the kind, as for eign' to the -irit and pt,r,jy of our institutions; whilst, ho recom'iiended It as aa object of local . policy and stateTelrV&tlori. lie seems now, not r'f ' -gi9!a5o!Ji x-ii . f I: 4 tt:4s; m l- I flcsly t cWT3e 'the 'ptTcm
Western Carolinian (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 22, 1830, edition 1
2
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