Newspapers / Newbern Sentinel (New Bern, … / May 29, 1830, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of Newbern Sentinel (New Bern, 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
e 4 TTTR.D AT MIT 29. (l 330. I yzqptvci of FEPERALisMIf, the dar cheme Qf ; V eaerausis, inai 91 ugi aumj UtfV Governments, into mere municipal! Lre carried into effect, the generous emu- between the States which has hitherto roductive olj so much goodj, wutd be gone ber. .aneyi wv. nt sel6sb and disunited, and f rtn all the they would contend for the patronage of Sam. j Yes! the contest between them be, who by false representations and beg nrtUioni should sup the largest share of r ' i : i 1 ; T r i-.l. Lrv vav .'If such a state of tuning should r J . I I' i - i .'i . . carSe the country, it would notibe long be- lur dollars would bear the impress of Hen- BT THE GKACK OF ,GoD, EMPBROR OF . Indeed an empire wnn even Vb Amsric v Clay at its head would"be,a less evil than ktuda Republic; the Federalists ere plotting jing shout. r -1 SSI3TIKCT. If it consistency tj oppose the ITanu anvocaie me cause 01 one ui 111 inven 9' .. nf the foremost of its panegyrists, He tfRr t Yet. how many pursue this course. But endeavor to back out. by saying that 11 ei tiiir leader, nor themselves, approve of the ! Lif Ta iff. They want a shaft protect American manufactures; this ... .'it l ! - J J -L! own. wen men wny ao '"j pojeci 10 Irestnt Tariff? They answer, it fotoo heavy but if you want to protect American man Lres from British competition j you should he Tariff Aearirr than it is and thmforcc vltib eroods out of the market.! A heavier '. they own, would jbe a ,ciire to the whole Slates a heavier (Tariff is the: only thing S I J it 11 can protect our manufactures from being sold by the British consequently any at- on the oart of the Government, to protect Industry! which is not worth 'protecting, if '( protect itself, would bring a; Curse on the ry, according to their own shewing. And ey wishrto make Presidenta man who ad - . " j . :i if-s uqvernmeniai interference vj hiubio e tactures! What consistency ! out oftheii jnouths, do we condemn them ELATED FROM MONTSSQUEIU's ?NRIT the Likw's for the Sentinel. . EXTRACT 1 1 1 f . ie ureeK uouitcian wno uvea unuer a po govf-rnroent, acknowledged that no .other culd sustain it, save that of virtue. Tin- tlaus of the present day only speak to us of ifaclures; .of commerce ; of finances; of ; and eveiof luxury " 1 I. EXTRACT 2d ormprly the wealth of individuals const)'- Tariff, nevertheless, Manufacturers; namely ders, papet" makers, printers and book binders. But say you and you tell the truth for dnce if . Ii ;.i S . I I II'. , 1 Che book's a; good! one, U will gelf without any encouragement from Congress, Yes, Gales, and to make ase of your own argument jlso would all other good American Manufactures sell without encouragement from Congress. . . 1 1 1 ' The! lyeiobern Spectator, one ofth most in dependent, ably edited and well conducted prints the Union, heartily coincides wah hs, in lhe etvs whifch we expressed in relatloh to the strange doctrines avowed by Generfel Speight in his recent Wort on the Tariff." Kaltigh Keg, ; " You praise me and I'll praise you and then they won't find us out." We all kjnow who and what j Gales is we shouldn't jlikfe him to praise the Sentinel. :.r; 1 . -t Economy in the Post Office Department. ThU department, under every preceding! administra tion, has not only defrayed its' own expenses, but been a source of revenue ; under the present re forrning administration, however, if bids fair to be a burthen to the treasury. Mi Barry,! the fhe advantages to the public would unqu tionrably be very greari Individual tfccomm'dda tion would be promoted. Business would be fa cilitated. Intelligence would lie more extensively diffused. , The bonds of affection between distant i ; in) ii i 1 parts Mould be strengthened by the more speec y and frequent intercourse. j V " But whether these benefi g would be sufJBcient to countervail the) expense, tl e Legislative autho rity will determine" jj Speaking of the present state of the Depart ment, Mr. Barrysays:; , 5 j ' It is not, hoyeveri:appre lended, that the ex isting state of theDepartmem , and a continuation of the accommodation already in operation, though its expenses, for the present, greatly ex ceed its current income, will require any assist rost lViasKr general, uemanos ot uoneress, the mndeat annronriatinn nf F.!.'hti' ThnnelanH i r ; ir- r j r T " J Dollars, to? sustain his department, j This is the consequence 01 removing omcers, sRinui ana ex periencedjand substituting mre par ti insi Had Mr. M'Lean continued in office, and been per mitted to retain his experienced offlcei Sj the re venue of this department would nof doubt" have continu :d adequate to its support.-Acw5crn Sec The nan who wrote the above quo ed para graph must be either utterly shameless , 01 let us more :chartably suppose, utterly igorint of the subject, upon which he has wasted time, pen, ink and j3aper-to say nothing of the war and tear of type, and ' the weary, bones of printers devils.' Read the following article, and thence learn ho Complete must he the ignorance of him 1 rho wrote i 1 1 1 , 1 this precious paragraph for the fpelctator! Had MtMcLean continued in ojfie.j says he, "the rtveriue of his department woutdklave conti- nued adequate to its support." llr McLean the late P st Master General, in speaking of this subject saidr that the existing ekoagemknts af the time he left! the department, uouhl require an expenditureMof 550.000 per annum, bfyond Just compare what isj said for the hat he satr? for himself i, whle I ance beyond what. will hrise from its progressive increase of revenue ; but, as before stated, with adequate, vigilante; the resources ot the j Depart ment are believed lo b equtii to its present exi gencies." -' -J j ' : j ttJ" "I'he same repor shous that the I current expenditures of llhe last year were mor than its receipts: but it will also be recollected that Mr. McLean, the late Postmaster General, in speak- ! I. it t lit . I ' I ! i ihg of this subject, said, that the existing engage- he left the Deiartnieiy, diturte ot du.uuu dollars that! ie tn 4 ex its receipts ' late Post Master, with w then, cat Up your eyes. read tite Sjtec and ejaculate, Lord, making mistakes .' world is given to THE POST OPFfCE DEPARTMENT. ; We to-dsy lay before our readers the the Post Office Committee, under color as I did rain ments at the tim would rt quite a per annum beyend its receipts. T make up that deficiency he relied unon the debts due the Oepnrtinent, andj; thejijincrease of revenue. Mr Barry says expressly , that, with adequate vigi lance, the resources of ie Department are bcliev id to be equal to its present exigencies The Statement of the Intelligencer is, therefore, un t ue, And the conductor's of t tat print, if actuated by, a proper regard for truth, will not hesitate to tract it. Mr. Barry has not asked fbr an additional afo on Post uuicet.tnd Post Koads. utteHy false H the statement, that the merit has been compelled to ask for aid from t treasury, in order to sustain itself. ! . -"It is not, hovvever, apprehended, that the ex isting state of the Department, ajnd a continua tiou of the accommodation already in operation, thouph its expenses, for the present, greatly ex ceed its current income, will require any asis; ance beyond what w ill arise from its progressive increaseof revenue; but, as before stated, with adequate vigilance) the resources of the Depart ment are believed to be equal to its present exi gencies. The teasons for this excels of i;pendi u.re over income, which has proceeded from causes grow ing up for several years nre thus L expressed by the Committee of the. H. of Representatives: " The demands on the Department foir the few last years, mary, have heen such as could hot be resisted. For additional accommodation, the Post Master General yielded, as your committee believe prudently,- bythe mure frequent running of the stag s ; and the iiscreasejj of, peed, the changing horse transportation into stase, where ver and whenever it could be done with proprie ty ; this additional and necessary expenditure, with ihe establishment by Congreft in 1828, f nany new routes, exhibits at once the true cause of tho expenditures exceeding the receipts of the last year. It is not apprehended but that the De partment will be perfectly able to sustain, and continue the existing acommodntion, without being obliged to make any material changes? nor i additional aid asked for by the Department But your com mittee are aware, if the bill now before Congress for the es'ablishmentof new routes, involving an estimated expenditure of anout so 0()0 should pass, and of which there one negro , j f okne, and she kees it,.! j rhe solution of this apparent inconsistent . 'asy. Tere were 1.0 black slaves in r.,i ! iib-the excention of one. who orrnsioi.nt.. companied his master from the West Indies; hiw in the English colonies there was a million. The same questions offoterest, policy and humnitf oct:urred in this case as in the Unfted t.te a d the result has been precisely the j same 'in both countries. The blacks remain slaves fcbeca se it is impossible to find a rational a-id prarticahle' mode of frceiag them, without injustice to their masters, and Cruelty to themselves j We therefor repeat, asain let Bugham, and O'Co-.qell, look at MessrsV Pel bom-, and. t ke the beam from England's eye, before they vet t their splenetic cant upon the go"d people of the South Or, if .they will be meddling with our internal concerns, let fhem point out a pract cahle moHe ot getting rid of the evil of, slayerv and demonstrate their sincerity by setting us the ex ample. Courier Enquirer. propriation. He found the listing engagements fo a greater amount th;m L ifJ'i.-'H J. .ij.).).. its revenue He has given yond the -xisting contract mad how tl 11s enort of of which that that the public treasure. Now;the public trea h considered as the pattimon of individu- w applicable are these two extracts, to exist ircunistances. The American System which - - i . at making Manufacturers a qksocRA.CT7i ttrerated in the' first, and how Contempt ible the contrast in the second extract appears bnductof those who so loudly bew ailed the f the loaves and fi shes ; w!.!o so bitterly com fd against the cruelty which deprived them at they considered as their patrimony ! , r ml , I. .1 , " e vigor of a monarchy mav be vicious, and ' 1 111 ! " f " . : ;; ft government be firm.. The vigor of a Rej c must be virtuous, or its epitaph will soon Intten. the editors tof the Intelligencer assert Department has been brought upon the parish by trie present Postmaster General. Th is report, it is true, recommends an appropriation tof $ 86, 000, not lo lenable the Departmetit to continue its peratiolis, but for the purpose of putting the following new routes and additional accc mmoda tions into oberarion, viz J - 1 A niore freqtieni arid speedy communication between the Seat of Government of Vermont. . - 1 the other New England Stat and tbo: o A dxily stage communication between ore th es. ! the seat seat of The naner naviner eone to oresshefore the I . U.-IM - .-. 1 ' jor reached Newbern, it was found impossi- , I) send the Ntwi Subscriber their papers this , as but a few more han are wanted are '.I ! . p . . ! I t . Uruck off. The printer could not p ssibly anticipated the large , addition which has made to the Subscription list. U e hope fur friends in Newbern, yho, from the hard of the' timet, nave discontinued their sab tiuns, will send us their advertisements. f the increased and increasing 1 Government in Pennsylvania and the General (Government More direct and frequent communications be tween the Western parts ot' Pennsylvania and the Western parts of Virginia. 1 A daily communication, by stages, between Cake Erie, through the State 6f Ohio; andlWhee- lingy on the Ohio river ; land. also, an increased facility of intercourse between Chiilicotne and the mouth of the Sciota river, iri the State of j speedy and frequent communication, by stage., of the seat of Government of Indiana, with Columbia aiidiCinoinnati, m Ohio, Firankfort, in Kentucky, and Vaodalia, Ihe seat pf Government of Illinois, extending thence to St Louis, in Mis : .a . I - S. ' 'I .1 A regular and frequent stage cbrrjmunicatioh trom Lexingtori, in Kentucky, atidi from Knox ville. in Tenuessee, uniting at NelJoort, in geto this paper, it will be tb . , N! r . i Country pa their interest j?e Confess that we were opposed! to the ele- of the present Chief Magistrate ; but when pteit was over, and he was declared consti- NHy elected, we deemed it our duty, as good i ni to forget our hbstility to the individual, official acti, 8 fairly and candidly of his . -. J i i : , r i our aid, syah as Ujnaighbe, t all the nr of hUf administration which, in our Pnt, were calculated lo nromote the inter N honor of our Country. On the contrary, i they, at any tfme, prostitute hch the-are; invested, for the the powers i! . good of the lb e heard ; Amnliih man f rtrivnt trxAa nr l ' j jr-r"'i." t v ' irr .JM vo,ce V - fowd like careless v post i but up and ready watchmen, j to do battle, j 'Vttenost in the cause of the Republic." A forgoing is an extract from tle Washing ffN. 0 Timesa paper which promises to goo-one. We hop the Public will not be tppoied of th; excellence, which, judging tbfirst number, theywill necessarily ex tcistinguisli the Times; aoci'emporaries all seem to h in the dark, oe nature of the netition presented bv Mrs y to Congress. -7-We have jaken Up the idea re wisues ior an approprmiion, 10 nurcuase ie number of copies of her Black Book to ijited in the Congressional Library, as i ' bought of public documents '12. keg. 1 . not . frien irit of you Gales! It would j be in the American. System intricn ) If Congress buy I Mrs. Royall's bouk ill thereby foui broocbts of 17 souru nessee, and continuling'to AshVilln rolina ; thence branching to the seats of Govern ments of the States of North Carolina and Sjouih Carolina, thus connecting the Sou Ijern and Wes tern States by in easy and Certain intercourse. O A stage communication between places of business in the j Eastern parts of North Carolina, especially between Newbern and Wilmington, and thence tb Georgetown, in Soiith Carolina. iri Nortf by his tirede- ssor, whicii will require the funds bfjthe De partment jf and -he does not ask an apprppriati4n w to learn that the revenue of the Department is in- 1 - unless Congress,! by jte es abjishmen .of ne routes, mtkes it necessary. WV are gratified creasing greatlyj bouiliwest it averages about previous revenue the extension of cihties of trans and that Department under tw accommodations in the South and the nine per cent on the This, nd doubt, arises from the riew routes and the new fa- -4 ; i i I sorting the mail. These facts are an appropriate answer lo the declaration of an honorable Senator,' who, ih hi- tirade against the Department, 'declared that it had lost the co i nd nee of tue people. We have before; us the leply of the Postmaster Gfeneral lo the call of that Senatar which we will soon lay be fine niir readers, who will Jhen see hdw much the oppos tion have been deceived. Ul S. Tel. Read the following article, all the opposition ed and chuckled 'you rem rnher ho prints in the Union have crow oVer faul Hoover's detterttj. F rom the following statement of rACT5, you will perceive that the. whole affairi was a Coautio Mitceuvre, and like the rest ot their m n.ceuv es, it was clumsily devued. and unsuccessful lYhat a restless; i.itrigding set tlJ opp sitionists arJ one cunnot help laughitig at their fretfulness, and yet poor devils how can they ijelp it the galled jade will wince." j ! I j I . RODNEY POST OFFICE MISSISSIPPI I An attempt has been made in a Mississippi paper, reiterated in the aiional Intelligencer o yesterday, t create a belief that the IWmaster of Rodney, Missi-sippi, was rem ved upoti a fic titioiis letter, sfgned by. the naibe of J Paul Hoo ver." This stoy turns; out on exHmination, to b of a character with the many bther fabrications arid exaggerations that have been devised and circuited against; the;!Post Office Department. The late change in the Rodney! Post Office, was induced bv statement received from a highly respectable quarter,; having a local and personal kiblege of the ease; and chpracier and res ponsibility to the people interested, that coalman ded the utmost confidence They were from General Hinds, thpirj representative. The charge related to the private character ol the incumbent, who was not, as is alleged, remoVed on political grounds : for the gentleman who J 1. was appointed, was of the same political character with the one e at the time of to add that the removed, and so represented to bj his appointment It may be well! A communication by stage, thVough the gold region, -beLween Salem, btatesville, Morganton. and Ruther ford ton, in N. Carolina, and Green ville, in South Carolina. j . More frequent and expeditious commutflra tions by stage, between Charleston in south Ca- rolina, and the Northwestern parts of that State A communication, bv stares, between Athens. in Tennessee, and Athens, in Georgia, to render the connexion more complete between Georgia and the Western States. An extension of the regular stage communica- tion between the seats or Government- oi unio, : - i J' - .i L Kentnckv. and Tennessee, throiksrb Huntsvi Ie, to T ------J . T I I ' - 1" . i the seat of Government of Alabama, and through Florence to the" seat , of Government ol - - it i ' i -A . . Jr L L . ; sioni and to Natchez, on the Mississippi river. . 7 ., 1 IT" I - A communication, by stages, from the seat of Government in Alabama, to Montgomery, and by f MISSIS- ! person first appointed was not recommended by Paul.Hoorpr, and that his refusa on account ot its pecuniary disad he says, in his letter declining it, From the Charleston City Gazette. Mr Broughamin the speech published in this paf er ast wek. when commenting upon theai of Georgia, adverted to the criminal code of Bar bae oe. by which a fine only is imposed for the kimng of a slave by a white man: and a,dded- Now he should boldly take ti on himself ta say, that in alt Northern 'America no such' law can be little doubt, it will not only subject the disgraced their Statute Book a law produced Deparlm-nt to inconvenience, but to serious em- ahr tho,e most unfortunate of all cirenmstan barras mnt.9' . j "i , . ... Ti, , ' , r . I n' ""eu passion 01 iear masiereu uenoeraiivo ine new routes proposed are Howards of fico 1 . 1 . . .. hundred in iait.-.cer, some of them of great im- Ld-f1-1 ai,on- I. . ! ; portance. Congress establishes them. Iprovids Te wre rry o say Mr. isrougnam was quite the means, and directs the, expenditure and the mintakenj lo ihe. Statute -bbokvof one of our opposition .forthwith charge the Post Master .. ithern States will be found the following pro General with profusion and mal administration, vis on in obeying the law. This is exquisite logic. ., .V " . Bait Republican. -I ., L : v r- J """'6 " . I forfeit 700 pounds currency.; and if any person The Impartial Compiler contains the following j shall on a sudden heat of passion, or by undue extract from one of the electioneering handbills' 1 correction, kill his own slave, or the slave of ai.o put lorth during the campaign of 1827i by the .a IIArcnn h.i,.ii :. n ..-.. on. and Rev Thomas t hilton, now the zealous I L, r tlie far tv pui supporter oi Mr. Clay for the Presidency , and the " oracle -ff the Coalition nartv at Washing ton. A few gnch reminiscences will set right the honesty of Thomas's recantation and the value f i. is services t any nartv i As has Often been substantially said, I again repeat that bad must be the cause which requires i. i -i i 4i. fc'icu uegraup g ana unnaitoweu means ior ns support. In ihe first place, they ran three can didates against General Jackson for tb Presi dency Adonis, Crawford and Clay. Jackson. Upon the electoral colleges conquers their cham- pion jiams. a little " intnguef and manage tneht ?" must now be resorted to. else the whole fi Id of eastern highflyers, and western jugglers, must be distanced the last heat. To this end, we e a speedy and unexpected reconciliation taken Coknty Wharftr. when we see a majorily of the iciwccii ATI I .- UOII19 II II mi Vnj . w IMI lints . . been previously swofn enemies : and in a few t,,a' ,e n re-ioenis oi ine county n naru PPn ' 1-1 . days, Mr lay is announced in the public news- jded o it, it shall be published not before. We are happy to say that Mr. Brougham is t and the Commercial Advertiser, frjam which above extract is made, is wrong at least, so as the belief must go abroad from his asser tion, that the law to wh'ch he refers is still of f iree That law has Ion sincebeen stinerseded. k- CT " " i 7 (hers which allow Of no distinction in the ishment of murder, whether the vklim be white or black. The Commercial will do our Southern rountrv the justice to cor ect this errdiy TO CORRESPONDEATS. rkmmiimat inn AiMAfl f We have received rather a querulous comma papers As a firm supporter of Adams, who had previously been considered, bv him. worse than an " nnotatc This was strange.! But Mr. Clav I nicaUon written in a beautiful. lady-like, Italian iiaijd, touching the piece addressed to. (be tadiea which anDeaied in our lastV What vould the lady who wrote it think! if she knew hai Cmlebs, is an old Athenian. For our owri pnri, we have gazed Ui on ine goodry displav of Athenian loveliness, as admiringly and as y istful the boy gazed upon the ake thoueht half a loaf better than no bread, for as u ! - mf firmly as i believe in the plainest proposition ever presented to mind, do I believe that Air. Clay did aisuneuy unaersiaua pretiovs lo Ms turning over the vote of Kentucky to Mr. Adams, that he (Clay ) was on:that condition, and that alone, to be mail- Secretary of the United States. I further believe. that no other condition could or would have n ductd him to vote for 4rfown'-" lb. WELL SAID, THULvlAS. . 1 Messrs. Peel, Brougham Sf 0Cbnnell. Ther is something exceedinglydisingenuos, if nothy pocritu-al, In the rant of these gentlemen, which has been republished iri certain of our newspa pers with such complacency, on the suNieet . f Woman sortmerit, while he felt blithe misery of centless-nsh-a pretty word 'haf, ladies, for a n w coin age BAPTIST CHURCH. THE PEWS in the Baptist ( j u rlt will be the political incapacities of ur s'ave population. rented for one year, thts afternoon at 4 o'clock. Votiie will he civeri by rintinsj the bill Mny 29th, 1830 i B.i ARRIVED, y : g Han-ah- Jerkin's, us atia- isuga and j mail betiweeh way of Cahawba; to Mobile. The establishment a steam Memphis., in Tennessee, and New Orleans, In r.n.usinnn to iuDOIv all the intermediate Post T . . - - -- . i ill Offices on not It side s of the Mississippi 1A Communication, by stages, between. Mobile, in Alabama, and Pensacola, in F orida, and be iween Pensacola and Tallahassee, j , j A more freouent and direct clommanicalion be tween the seat of Government in Georgli, and Tallahassee, the seat of Government in Udnda I A 'more fre4-ent and direct communication, by nil .. '. r.. eJ-i-i' Jakl-LU : fk.A stages; between ejbuu hhi u, r-" i i . - . f :! In reply tophe inquiry oi 10 Barry says. A. I fait these imprdvements were taddi toge ther with sonft f tnittor, consideration, sis to e .n.. .Itirh! are' neVenhelesk, quite imowtaut. 'he expense $,35,000, would amourit, hi citima committee, Mr. to abeut to accept was vantages. For it would rest; I Ii. ih - - - . ! in a considerable loss to, him. nmrually." j Th letters signed Paul Hoover, ( and there is more, than that one' of which the Mississippi pa per speaks, as being addressed to the President and as containing, with much adulation ol him many censures upon his political friends and icon Stitutioiial advisers,) bore evident marks of hav ng been got tip on behalf of the Postmaster, to' thwart any application forhis removal. This was the design of the imposition, proceeding, as is now avowed, lioraa friend ofthefincumbent. The trick, however, failed.:. And equally unsuccessful we think, must be: the impudent deception now palmed upon the public, of imputing the removal to the onwdrthy means resorted to to prevent it. I The Post Office Department. he introduction by the Committee prtj Post OCceS arid Post Koads, of a bill, appropriating the sum of 86,000 dollars, fori the service iof the department, has been made a subject of much ' misrepresentation against the Postmaster, Get eral. A brief refer ence to the bill and its objects, wll shew the true state of the facts and correct the unfounded state ments which have been so industriously circula ted , -; ' f '. ij' . ", ' , . . jj-.. : The first section of the law establishes a large number of nev routes,! and the second section makes an appropriation for the purpose of provi ding the means of carrying the first into effect, in ihe following terms : '! j 1 ; u jni be it further enacted, That, for the pur pose tif carry itfg into effect the routes embraced in the first section of this bill, the sum of eighty Six thousand dollars is hereby: appropriated,! to be paid out of any money in the Treasury, not otherwise appropriated; which said sum shall be paid upon the draught or order of the Postmaster General of the United States,' at such time.or times as shall be necessary for the purposes afore said.' . ;- i ; i; !;!(:- , .i . Thus the sUm called for is not to sustain the Establishment as the opposition ' have most un- j iairly stated but to extend it, under the provis J tons of an lei 6f Congress. Tfe (AWowtof - Brig M . CLEARED. arv. Wallace IN w Y'rK HAyfNG been appointed at th la t Cravtf Ccuntv Court. Insnecior of Naval Stores Pork, Beef, Pish and Lard, is at present p'rer-i- red to lenterl on the duties of his abDointmencV Nexcberh, MaiJ 29, 1830 4 If they are sincere in their comraisseration for the supposed misery of a class of beings, which even tneir ow n v riters, prejudiced as they are, ac- knowledge tb be happier than the laboring clases of England and Ireland let thtm look at home it is vain for them tb talk at.out the oppressions f these people in the United States, or to hoast f their superior humanity, with the (act of the qaolasbs to M JaVis ahd master Passenger Mr. xistence of slavery in all the English Colonies, Nichols; ' ! 1 m . I . . I .1. where a slave population formed a part ot the 1 9thr Ann Maria, Huhter, St. B-vts.War. mcu property of the Colonists, staring fhem full in the llasses and coffee to J. r,ii, Tnt--n-,rt ir. 'A- n . i i i ..- i h : i,, . r r, i l . iace. nai nave inev Qone, oi wnicn we oia not oonnome, son. ana erv ant. sfet them the example We had our manumis-1 Schr T. Pickering. Hail, Alexanderia, mdz. fdt . , e - . . . . . , . .. I . cnri aneii castle, lugals, Baltimore; nd. to v. ... ... ..... WT.,UCTr. WhitelorU. StrP-t. tnthnnv .'n,l tl.nn story ot that gentleman, will trace clearly and Schr. Ariel, Scotf, N w fork, mdx. W Moran; nequivocany ine origin ox nis plans ana exer uca Lund, Key, and others. ns in the cause oi the blacks, to the Benezets apd Franklins of the United States: What have the "English statesmen and philan thropists done in the way of disinterested services in the cause of the blacks ?- We say disinterested, because that is the quality which gives character to the actions of mankind. It is easy to be hu mane and charitable, where it can be done with out any expense of sacrifice of our owri, of, what is still better, at the expense of other people Apply this principled human actions to the conduct pf England, in relation to the -blacks, and thenlwe ask again, what has England done that she should whiten herself by our side ? She has covenanted with all the European nations that would consent to the Arrangement, that ehher immediately, or at some futore period, they shall abandon Ihe traffic in slaves. The sacrifice cost her nothing, b.-cause her possessions in the West and East Indies were already overstocked with slaves. Besides, there was this evident ad vantage. connected With these arrangements, that they furnished England with a fine opportunity of reviewing the old doctrine of the right of search, under the cloak of humanity. It was for this reason; the United Strtes refused to concede the right af mutual search, in the'treaty conclu ded by Mr. Rush for the belter suppression of f he slave trade. Susptcttd Who does not see clearly, that under this pretence,' the old system of boarding, detaining arid insulting our vessels and flag miffht have renewed with the sanction of a solemn concession ? he United States ra jected this article of the treaty ; and who shall ..... r. J -T l say they were not rignt, tn reiusing 10 surreoucr their own independence on the ocean, for the sake of any nation or any color t But England plumes herself on having solemn ly decided that there shall exist ho btatk slaves, at least in the three kingdoms, or we believe it is now called the United Kingdom of Great Britain. " The moment they touch the sacred soil, he. as Mr Cm-ran has ft. the blacks are free. What does all this signify ? She has abolished slaver where there were no slaves, and where it could be done without any sactific of intmn-but she Dry Goods- Floui. j JUSTj received per Schr Ariel from New xork, a further supply of seasonable goods, and a small lot fresh i ground ROCHES ' Er! FLOUR, in barrels anil halt barrels,. for sale by I .. 1 p. BRADFORD U CO. Newbetn, May 2X. 1830 . ,. , I XT quishedl the She ABOARD. AVING been informed that a report is inr rculation, which states that I havtfrelin- my intention of being a Candidate for,. riffaltv. I think it neceisarv to itm iKu - such report is altogether unauthorized 1 knen e Pf neither the rierson Wifh whom it originated -,-- the motives which prompted him, and I srUl as pire to that honour. ;;i It hai likewise been said, tbat I have permitted? my natrie (o be Used, not with" a desire; of beingr elected, but the purpose of making adivisionr n favor1 of th present incumbent.- This wouldV be equally at variance with wht r ewe to mveir and to the public. t I cannot be made the instru ment or any party, or of any person, wliose views may be iuimicalto a Iree expression of tifr win ui uic ieopi"1.' i . t I notict; these rumours fhos pdlilicly, lest the currency which they have obtained. Should give them tfte appearance of reality, and fo prevent , Iheir tecomigg rrrejfrtlitial to my interest, by .in- ' uucing my irie.im iu hhuuoiu ineir support. THOMAS SPARROW Mw.i&h, tsso. I i DdCTOR mmuel e; CHAPMAN . ESPECTf ULLY offers hi services to the 3 inhabitants of Newbern, and Us tici;ty, irsj the various departments of his profession. At preSeht he may be found at Mr. BtlTf tiotet -X: eacocrsge il
Newbern Sentinel (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 29, 1830, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75