JUDGE BARBOUR'S REPLY To the Warren County Resolutions. ; Frescati, Sept. 9th, 1832. f oEtfTLEMEtf, I have received your letter of the 25th ultimo, enclosing certain resolutions adopted at a political meeting, held on that 4ayj at Snocco Springs, in Warren county, North Carolina. In conformity with one of those resolutions, You ask me to state my sentiments in relation to Hh'e Protective System, Internal Improvement, the Bank of the United States, and Nullification. Whilst.1 should be altogether unwilling to ob tr.ude my opinions in regard to political ques lions upon the public, I am equally loath to withhold them, when thus publicly and expli citly called upon to express them. I therefore, without hesitancy, proceed to answer the in quiry. ! I understand the committee to ask what ray opinions are not bv what process of reasoning 1 have been led to adopt them. . j First, then, as to the protective System, by which I mean the laying of an impost, not to raise revenuq, for the sake! of revenue, but to . support' domestic manufactures against foreign competition. I am decidedly and utterly oppo sed to the whole system, upon the various grounds of its being in violation of the spirit of the Constitution, and being unjust, unequal and oppressive in its operation. I enclose two speeches delivered by me on this subject in the House of Representatives, the first in 1820, and the other in 1834; in which you will see my views, at length on all theseSgrounds. Next in order is the subject of Internal Im provement. 1 consider that whole system, when attempted to be executed by Congress, whether in the form of construction, or appro priation by way of subscription, to what is to be constructed by others, as unconstitutional, as highly inexpedient, and as calculated to un dermine the independence of the States, and the iirture of the people, in a struggle for the spoils of the Treasury. My views at large upon this subject, will bo exhibited in two speeches now enclosed, delivered, by rne in the House o Representatives, the one in 1818, the other in 1830. The Bank of the United States is the next subject. Besides the objection to thisuponthe score of expediency, particularly the mighty power arising from, the concentration in an or anized form of countless millions of dollars, 1 consider this as beiiifr altogether bevond the institutional competency of Congress . The latitude of 'construction, which' would bring this within the pale of the constitution, would, in my estimation, utterly destroy al those restrictions and reservations which make the Federal Government a limited one. And 4 feel that I do not state the case too strongly, when- I say, that it resolves itself into a ques tion between a supposed convenience to the - public ill the administration 'of the finances, . and the character of the circulating medium, and the creation of a power by the government, which may sooner or later become stronger than the government itself. The Journals of Congress will show that when the present bank was chartered in 1816, I voted against it. The last subject embraced in the resolution is ihat of Nullification. , ' - I understand this term as meant to import the right of the several States, by interposing uieir sovereign power, to ueciare voiu, wiimn their respective borders, any law which they may think unconstitutional. Thus understan ding it, I am opposed to it. I will endeavour briefly to state my doctrine upon the subject. In general, when a question arises, whether an act of Congress is constitutional or not, it be longs to the Judicial Department to decide it, because in general the question arises in a case, either in law, or equity, that is, in a controver , i sy between parties, which had taken a shape for judicial decision. - Bat when the question is one of political power, that is, between the Federal Govern ment and the States whether the former has uuVaded the reserved rights of the latter, I hold that questions of this kind do not belong to ju- dicial cognizance; that the people of the States are parties to the federal compact, in their , Character of States; that the constitution has not conferred upon the Judicial Department - any political power whatever; tnat, therefore, l in relation to questions of this character, there is no common umpire. And that, consequently, the States must decide for themselves. This is the right; but what is the remedy? My opinion is, that the only rightful remedy, is that of secession. The argument which at tempts to maintain the right of one State to nullity, and thus suspend the operation of a law parsed according to the forms. of the con stitution, until three fourths of the States act under the clause providing for amendments, - . l 1 I it! seems to me io De uaseu uuou uns error. l hat ill every case of a contested power, the ques tion is what does the constitution grant as it now is ; whereas, under an amendent proposed the question always is, not what the constitu tiorl now is but what it shall hereafter be. hive said, that I hold the right of the States to 1 secede. Btt this right I consider as the las resort. I would'sav in relation to it, as I here tofore have said, that as in cases of physica malady, arsenic is never administered but when the patient is otherwise utterly despaired of; so in those of a political, character, this remedy should be applied only in cases ol liopeless ex tremity. I cannot conclude this letter, without offer a fervent prayer to Him who rules the des ? tinies of nations, that he would save our be loved country from this sad catastrophe. For -come when it may, no tongue canladequately tell the evils hich will lie hid in the then mysterious future. With sentiments of esteem, ; Yours respectfully. . J; ' . p- P- BARBOUR. Messrs. Joseph H.Bryan, "1 Commits of political meeting f-at the Shocr.o Sprinors. Wfl . Memucan Hunt,. ' J county, N. C. The following communication from Gen. Jos 11. Bryauronc of the committee, to the Editors '"'of the Constitutionalist accompanied the above ' tetter. 1 . . Oxford,, Sep. 28, 1832. Sir: You will herewith receive the corres pondence between the committee appointed by tne onocco meeting and the Hon. P. P. Bar bour, also accompanying it two speeches deli vered by Mr. Barbour embracing more at large his views on the subiect of enauirv. I recei ved yesterday from a srentleman in Albany a letter informing me that the letter and inci sures directed to Mr. Van Buren had reached their destination, and had been opened by Mr. John Van Buren. Martin Van Briren Esq. be ing absent in the western part of the State tra velling that as soon as it could be ascertained at what point a letter could reach him, they would be forwarded, though it is not likely he thinks that any answer will be received in less than three weeks. Under such circumstances, in justice to Mr. Barbour we cannot longer withhold his answer lrom tne public. 1 have already had it in possession two weeks, waiting or the reply of Mr. Van Buren. You will publish it in your paper, and pro vide each of the other editors with a copy, and also furnish them with the speeches that thev may make such extracts as they may deem ma- enal. 1 have not seen Mr. Granberry, but Maj. Huntlconcurs in the opinion that we should publish without further delay. Very respect- ullv your obedient servants i JOS. H. BRYAN. THE ISSUE, OR GOLD vs. PATRIOTISM. The revolutionary struggle was between the i uemocracy on me one siae, ana ,ne ivnsiocra cy on the other the Tories were for uphold wv .1 i i :i 4 . i ing the aristocracy of the land. In lbOO, ano ther great conflict took place,betwecntheV nigs and the Aristocrats, which resulted in the ele vation of Mr. Jefferson, the great apostle of free principles. In 1828, the third great con flict took place between the Democracy and the Aristocracy; and although the will of the peo ple placed Andrew Jackson in the chair of state, the Aristocracy have protested against the decision, and are now making a mighty ef fort, by bribing the press, and corrupting the representatives of the people by loans and lar gesses, to undo what the people themselves have deliberately enacted, and to put down the man whom the voice of the people put up. The con stitution of the United Stated secures to the people the choice of their President; but the Bank of the United States has decreed that this article of the constitution shall become a dead letter, and that the Bank itself will make the President, and administer the government by its attorneys. This is the issue boldly made up and pronounced by the organ of the attor ney of the bank. The " Kentuckian and Com mentator." Mr. Clay's organ in Kentucky, says " Gen Jackson has vetoed the Bank it REMAINS FOR THE UiilV TO V li. 1 J illlU I Here is a distinct declaration, bv the author ised organ of the Aristocracy, that the man who was elevated to the presidency by the unpurcha sed suffrages of a great majority of the freemen of this nation, is to be vetoed by the Bank. To effect this object, one hundred and four thou sand dollars has already been paid to three edi tors, all of whom have turned traitors, and are now earning the wages of corruption, by abu sing the man who hazarded his life in protecting the frontier settlements from the incursions of the savages, who repulsed the conquerors of Europe at New-Orleans, and who put his veto upon the corrupt engine which is sapping the foundation of our liberties, and saving his coun try from a corroding and withering influence more subtile and dangerous than the savages of the western wilds, or the legions of Pack enham. Jacksbn deserves immortal honor for having ooked up the old landmarks which were estab- lshed by the AVhigs of the revolution, and for raving Drought the government "oacii. to tne republican track." Every farmcrho is not ully apprised of the value of his services in this particular, should procure the Veto and peruse it with attention. The immortal pen- man of the Declaration of Independence, might be proud'of such a document as the message against the bank. Let every elector read the document, and he will approve its principles. It shows the danger of giving exclusive privil eges to a mighty Monied Aristocracy, made up of the nobles of England and the nabobs of this country, and exhibits the distinctive lines be tween the Democracy and the Aristocracy, more clearly than anv executive document whirh i j las ever appeared in this country. It revives and reasserts the principles which actuated the Whigs of the Revolution. Boston Statesman. THE CITY OF THE BANK. The monied aristocracy has succcded in the choice of inspectors of election in the city of Ti:i,iiu:.. riM .1 t i .., . r. . x uuauuipuiu. x ne iuoiuemanK, witn its tnir- ty-jivc millions of capital aud seventy millions oi uebt, is located m that city: and it is not sur prising that the same measures used by the Bank to convert an editor there, viz. a douceur ofsf32,000, should turn the scale, and give the nationals the choice of inspectors; especially in a city where the democratic tickets so rare ly succeed. This result will only servo to quicken the zeal and nerve the arm' of the honest yeomanry of the country. It is only another evidence that the great contest which is at hand, is as emphatically a struggle between the Monied Aristocracy and the Democracy as was the struggle in 1800. When we see a Kent and a f au , imcu, me venerable leaders of the Black yoctaae pany ot "JS, and the inveterate oppo sers of the government during the late war, buckling on their armour to give a stab to a De mocrat and me ueiender of his f!nm ctu"" , unu luai ine old federal eaven ot rnuaaeipnia, quicKened by the Mammoth Bank, should arpuse itself to action. n,l sert the principles which sustained Sergeant so long in opposition to Jefferson and Madison and even up to the period of 1827. The city of Philadelphia was against Jefierson; and bv elected Sergeant may go against Jackson; but the democracy .of the country and state will sustain the honest old patriot who had the firmness to resist the speculating schemes of the aristocracy, and to act solely for the good of the country, and the great body of the peo ple? Albany Argus. The Veto in the; West. A meeting was re cently held in Indianna for the purpose of dis- i cussing and deciding upon the merits of the ! Veto upon the Bank Bill. Two weeks previous notice was given ofthe meeting, and when it ; was assembled the presiding officers were ap pointed from members of both political parties. Jbour persons spoke in favor of the Veto and three against it and continued the discussion for the principal part of the day; at the conclu sion of .which, the votes were 76 in favou and four againt the Veto; 76 in favour and four against approving the general course of policy pursued by the President, and 76 in favor and four against using their best efforts to secure the re-election of the President. We suppose the people of Indiana, when this meeting was held, had not been informed of the important fart that the prices of blind horses, rotten eggs and brick bats had fallen in consequence of the Veto. When the news reaches them we cannot tell what will be the consequence. Boston Statesman. From the Albany Argus. CHARTER ELECTION. To those who live in Albany and understand tlic means by which the Coalition succeeded in the late Charter election, the boasting of the two anti-masonic national papers in this city, pnnaffnnl nnthinfrhutmatterof amusement. Our ODDonents understand perfectly well that this election affords no test of the strength of the republican partv in this city. Their object manifestly is to deceive and mislead the people in distunt parts of the state and in other por tions of the union, and to induce the belief, which they do not themselves for a moment entertain, that this city and state may by pos sibility desert Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren in the approaching contest. All such expectations will prove vain and delusive. From all parts of the state our intelligence is of the most cheering character, and he deceives moment indulges the 4 at, vri- wiii ,lrtt hnrHntv ' PENNSYLVANIA. The late Elections. The opponents of the demo- cratic party, in tneir extmvagam exuiuutou uu ao- . r . x . - L fin L nljlil .T conn i oi a leu Dorarv mumou uuiamcu uu rnuuy , " r , . j j ,uot nrmioti; last, have fallen into their old error tnat of mistak- MnrlplnhJn fnv the. stntft of Pennsvl-1 vania. Bv miexamnled exertions, and the exerciso of every species of influence, they brought upwards of four" thousand votes, very nearly their whole force to the polls. 1 lie democrats, a majority oi wnom consist oi mechanics ana artizans ana wi o never canoe orouenioiuou me uuyoi ui 7." were taken bv surprise, and suffered an unexpected deieat in three or lour wards where they are ordina- rilv pucccssfull. In the other wards, our opponents generally succeed, or thn difference in the strength of the two parties, is so trifliug as to render them, at all times doubtful. Beyond the limits of the city democrats have lost no ground. and districts, the In the city of Lancaster, in Harrisburg, Easton, Carlisle, Norristovvn, Mauch Chunk, Milton, and rottsville, the democrats have carried their mspec- tors. It is reported that wc have lost Kcadinc, but ' . . . to balance that loss, it it be true, we nave fcucceeaeu in West Chester. ' The returns from Northampton, Wayne and Pike 1 m r arC ail 111 OUT laVOUr. .... , , , , , 1 1 M..ilM!l(.0fnr InenMft wnrpnlwlml. In Delaware County, domocratic Inspector?, were elected in the townships of Chester, Ridley, Lower Chichester, Darby, Upper Darby, liidgmont, Astou, and Thornbury, by considerable majorities. lu Chester County, where the Anti-masons ex- peeled to carry all before them, we have heard of the result in nueen lownsnij s, in nine oi wihcji uenio cratic Inspectors have been elected ; and there is rea son to believe, that in a majority of the townships in Chester County, the democrats have been suc cess! ui. The opposition papers in this city are exulting ex- ceeumgiy at tne glorious victory oouiuieu uy iii-ui ui i i " " . .i i . I i : 11 4. u .7 : Tinicum township, Delaware County. 1 he entire vote of this township amounts, we believe to len or fifteen votes. -Our opponents were boasting on tounuay, that they had carried the city of Lancaster by a majority of between eiffht and nine hundred. It turns out that the domocratic ticket succeeded there by a majority of several hundred. Phila. Sent. Maine Election. Governor Smith is re-elec ted by a plurality of above 4,000 votes. The Senate will consist ot u jacKsonians, and iu ... -t mw m 1 1 -a s-v Clayites. The House of Representatives of 128 Jacksonians, and 68 Clayites. Every County in the fetate with the excep- tion of Kennebec, Lincoln and Somerset, have given Jackson majorities. And every County has given a larger. vote for the Jackson candi- date than it did last year. The following wiil show the majorities in the several Counties. Jackson Majorities, Clay Majorities. York, Cumberland, Oxford, Waldo, Penobscot, Hancock, Washington, 1101 1035 1098 20(54 1038 226 86 C648 Kennebec, Lincoln, Somerset, 9(v?f aha 2058 Natural Wonders. It is very surprising; that two of the greatest natural curiosities in the world, are within the United fetates, and yet scarcely known to the best informed ofgco- graphers and naturalists. 1 he one is a beauti ful water-fall in Franklin county, Georgia; the other a stupendous precipice m Pendleton dis rtict, South Carolina;-they are both faintly men tioned in the late edition of Moise's geogra phv but not as they merit. The Tuccoa Falls is much higher than the falls of Niagara. The column of water is propelled beautifully over a perpendicular rock, and when the stream IU1I, 11 paSSco UUHH rimvM uiiig uruni;ila the prismatic effect seen at Niagara, illustrates the spray of Tuccor. " The Table Mountain in Pendleton district, South Carolina, is an awful precipice of 900 feet.' Many persons reside within nve, seven, or ten mues oi mis grana ing to rany rounu me iniet iSngineer, in des spectacle', who have never had curiosity or taste pite of the cries of halt, halt, stopstop. come eiiousn to visit it. n iiuwcver, occa sionally visited by curious travellers, and some- times by men of science. Very few persons who have once cast a glimpse in the almost bound 1 i v m . c . : . i cs aDyss, can againexercise suuiciciinuriiiuue to approach the margin of the chasm. Almost j m iuoMugucii ... me ground, senseless, nerveless, and helpless; and would inevitably be precipitated and dashed iu umr, rp re it not tor measures ot caution and security, that have always been deemed in- dispensible to the safe indulgence of the visitor or spectator. Every one on proceeding to the spot whence it is usual to gaze over the won- derful deep, has in nis imagination, a limita tion, graduated by a reference to instances with which his eye nas Deen laminar, uui in a mo ment, eternitv as it were, is presented to his as- tonished senses; and ne is msiantiy over whelmed. His system is no longer subject to his volition or his reason, and he falls like a mass of mere matter. He then revives, and in a wild delirium surveys a scene, which, lor while, he is unable to define by description or iinnrnnntion. " fe . . . . rr T7ll 1 How strange it is tnat tne mctua ran uuu Table Mountain, are not more laminar 10 r !ir a-i Americans! Either of them would distinguish a State or an Empire in Europe. V. S. Tele graph. Thr Comet. The appearance of Biela's Co met has been announced in various shapes by almost every Daoer in the United States, and very probably, incorrectly. Many people have evidently mistaken the planet Mars for the comet. Mars is now very near the Pleiades, and rises in the N. E. about 10 o'clock f. M. ntV.i-c havp hppn mislpd hv the Nebula in the birdie of Andromeda, which certainly has some thing of the appearance of a comet, and has caused similar mistakes on former occasions. Some notices of Biela's Comet have evidently been manufactured from Bartletts Planisphere map, which appears to have been made up ironi that very creditable publication the American Almanac, and Repository. It is presumed that this comet which is looked for with grea interest both by the learned and unlearned, wil be seen with a tolerable telescope, at least a week before it can be visible to the naked eye. When it does appear, it is toi)ehopedthatsome scientific gentlemen, will give to the publicjts apparent place in the heavens, in order that it may be identified by every one. The position of an object in the heavens is usually expressed in declination and right ascension, which bear the same relation to the celestial eauator that iatitude and longitude dVto the terrestial. The j h . . mcasured eastward in time I - , P v r . . & t 4 or degress from the first point, of Aries but, o i . almost every scnool boy ot the present day, understands the use of the Globes, and on this I subiect we need not say more. Should the comet pass its Perihelion later tnan thc calculations state, or appear to the wcslwani 0f its computed place, it will come nearer. . to the earth than fifty one millions of .. , . . J . ... . wicwi muiuuuwui.i-n a 1 " win come aimosi in coniaci wun me carin. A scientific friend, who has a'telescope capable of observing the eclipses of Jupiter s Satelite has not been able to see the comet up to the 27th ult. Its apparent path in the heavens will be eastward, but owing to the diurnal motion of the earth, and the acceleration of the fixed stars, it will appear to many to have a different I iv' .1 r a. a. - ; mouou. e may inereiuro cxpeci 10 receive many riuicuious accounts 01 tnis comet. Mer. Adv. I 1M rrun Tnn t? 4 n t XT-r Tnn T T r Tr 1 1 1 11 1 ij iv m. v w u a iv x nun i vu in, x l,. i t v. " v lM,s wcl ICtUlUCU ill UUI CUIUIilHD HIU narriages of two indiv idlltlls ol07?C lvilTlllVj W llO began to flourish at periods more than half a century remote lrom each other. 1 he lust was on Monday evening last. A voung gentlc- man between eighteen and nineteen years of age, was married to a young lady after a court ship of five years the first impressions having been formed at school. The second marriaee took place on Wednesday evening; it was the grandfather oi the young gentleman mentioned above. He is seventy four years of aire. f N. I -.7- , . " - Jom. Adv. W c copy the following recital from the Lon don Morning Herald, where il is credited to the London Globe. The editor of the latter Jour- nal, in presenting the account to his reader, remarks that.it comes from a source above all suspicion How many such cases may not have heppened during the progress of the cholera in America and Europe? Premature Interment. A distressing in- stance of premature interment occurred last ot premature week in the neighbourhhod of Old street St. Luke's. A poor woman and her son violently attacked with cholera, which in the case of the latter very soon terminated as it was supposed tatally: and alter having laid apparently life ess fr a ew hours, the body was buried. The poor woman also shortly after got worse, and " I M 1 1 i t -r oecame insensiDie ana motionless, flavins: 14RlDeen kept as long as was considered sale, she was put into a comn to oe Dimeu; out just as the undertakers were about to screw it down, she revive, pushed off the lid, and very soon recovered. Having anxiously inqurcd about her son, she was informed that he had been bu ried for several hours, which made her very uneasy, and she insisted on his being: exhu- med. Her desires were after a short delav, complied with, and the horror of the spectators can scarcely he imagined, when on opening the coffin it was found the child had turned round, - and torn its face almost to pieces with agony, having, it must of course be supposed, come - to life in this dreadful situation? - The Boston Transcript, in describing a mili tia muster on the Common, last week, says Onecompany was composed almost entirely of firemen. They heard the bells, listened na- is tiently for a while to the cry of fire, but when WIG ijllglllo uu iiwsc VyarnagCS rattled through Tremont street, they could stand to th eir arms no longer. One dropped his mus- ket and ran, another and another followed, un- til the whole company was in motion, all flv- - ouck, tumu uaca,ot,c. vocnerated bv their mili- tary commander and re-echoed by a host of boys and men, who loved the fun and rent the air - with their boisterous cachinations. The alarm I i i. . prucu iu ue laise, ana the deserters returned to their duty when they had fully ascertained u i ...v a ii , uuiuuv until men, could anv persuasion bring them back to their allegiance, notwithstanding their captain frowned and looKen unutterable things. MaMM- " - Disease. A disease, called the Onlrf Pi,.,. from the jcy coldness which soon seizes onW n J 1 r a1 ... . witS arm auu ui me pauent, nas been very pre valent und fatal at Donaldson, (Lou.) Lorenzo Dow has published a book, entitled x hi, viium w s:u9UU, UUMSlSllIlg Ol SIX llnKS vo hooks, tind one swivel.' ' t Emigration. Since the opening of the mr igation this year, at Quebec, fifty-n ine thou sand five hundred and sixty-nine emigrants iiu.i; urriveu ai inai pon. The Malays. We learn from the Salem P gister, that the Neptune, from Padang, brings the following report: The barque Matilda of Batavia, belong to Fitz William Pavne. Pc arnveu at radang d May, lrom Troumond Sumatra, where she had been for arn-n Pepper, but was compelled to leave th u.i.v. t viuiuiuj; in luld Via A I LH Only PlCUls of Ponncr. on arronnt nf ihn rM'Mii' the Malays. She was atacked by one of them and after an action ol half an hour succeeded i ' beating her off. The Matilda was well manned1 and had 8 guns; she received several shothihcr hull, and considerable other damage. Many of the natives were killed they shewed much skill and tact and fought dcsparately. The next morning the fleet consisting of 13 Prows, bom down to renew the attack, which compelled her to leave the coast. The attack on vessels U urged on by the Rajah Boojah, who is attempt! ingto wrest the government from the reirnuirr king; SI per picul is exacted by him on the pep per taken from the coast, and all who do not comply with these terms are attacked IT 7 H. ir. Tr i . vaiuaoie voices. mr. uarumor, in his "Music of Nature,"' describes Braham as the first of tenor singers, and one whose voice for compass, power and quality, has, probably never been equalled ; he further states that he has realized 100,000. by it. OfCalalini, he observes, that though the most splendid vocal ist of the age, she was, as a musician, below mediocrity, possessing scarcely the knowledge, of a third rate performer ; but by a quick per ception she concealed these defects even from the learned. Her origin, he adds, was that of a match-girl, in Rome ; yet in her career she visited every court in Europe, where the most profuse presents were showered upon her. Hav ing amassed vast treasures in money and jew els, her voice and beauty gone, she has retired to her domain and palazzo in the country that gave her birtfl. He states of this lady, that p.f ter her first visit to England, in which she cleared more than ninety thousand pounds, she purchased a diamond necklace of the Queen of Portugal for sixteen thousand guineas, and, in addition, gave four thousand more for the tiara and ear nnrs. JYeiti Cheap Dry Goods. FTTHE subscriber has justarrived from New Ll York with a new and well selected as sortment of AMONG WHICH WILL BE TOUNP Blue, black, and mixM Cloths, Cassimcrc and 3attinets, Red, white, green, and yellow Flannels, Col'd, black, and blue black tiro dc Naps Figur'd, changeable and watered, do. tio. Black Sarsncts, Levantine & Saltin LcvantiiiC, Cashmere, Merino, & Thibet wool Shawls, Printed Merino, Gauze, & W. B. HliklV, Lace & .Muslin Capes & Chcmizettcs, Ladies' Cravats &. Tippets, Bobinet Laces, Insertings & Foetinge, Thread Laces, Edgings & Inser niyt 4-4, 5-4, 6-4 & 12-4 plain Bobinits, Linen Cambric, and Cambric Hhkfs. Iiish Linen, Lawns & Diapers, English 6c French Merino Cloth.-, Merino Circasians, Bombazelles, Very superior black Italian Silks, Cambric, Jaconet & Mull Muslin, Plain and figur'd Swiss and Book do. French Calico & Merino Ginghams, Calicoes, Ginghams, Vcstings, &c.. CoIorM Cambrics, Camblet Plaid, Bleached and brown Shirtings, Checks, Bedticking, And a variety of other articles all of which will be sold at the lowest cash prices, at hi Store nearly opposite the Bank of'Newbcrn. J. VAN SICKLE Newborn, Oct. 10, 1832. LETTERS Remaining in the Neitbern Post-Office Oct. 1, 1$ G. W. Avant, Amos Amyett. Mrs. Eunice Arch bell. ., B. W. H. Bowne, Silvester Brown, Abner Brick house, Wm. A. Baker, Mrs. Mary liackie?, Jacob Burch, Joseph Berry, Mr Nam y Buriilinm,Steplien Butler, NVUon Brown, E.G. Bellamie, Bricc Battle C H. B. Croom, Rebecca Cadet, John CarmalN John Collins-, George Cooper, Moses Canaday, Mb Harriet Caswell, John Carroll. D. Dr. Ranholph Dick, Mrs. Rhoda-Davis, V ta. Dove, Wm. Dunn. E. Miss Sally Ellis, Mrs. Aecenith EdmonsoiK F. Stephen B. Forbes, 2, Bennett Planner, Franklin. , H. James Hamontree. ShadracHataway,ucorbc A. tiall, Fredrick Handcock, Mrs. E. Holiday, U 1 T 1 T Tl tl - T Uo cPV. II m.J- Huchins, John Hayward. Juno Hamilton, U- Hawks, Mrs Eunice Hunt. David Harrison. J. John T. Jancau. K. John G. Kincey. ,f .. M. Wm. Muse, Rich'd Mcllnaisc, John 3lerru . H. M.Miller, Alex'r Miller, Mrs. Lydia iev" n Moore, Mrs. T. Manning, Wm. McCloud, Benjaoi Mason. Ephriam Milson, Wm. S. Morris. . N. Miss Susan F. Nelson, Thos. H. cIon, n O. Newton, R. N. Nailer. r n,,..c. O. Mrs. A Ormsbee, John 0!iver,John3l.U John J. Oliver. Joseph Oliver 5, Miss Caroline UU" P. Levi Porter. u,r R.-Mrs. Eliz. Richardson, John H. R'ch! James P. Ryall, James G. Rou e, Isaac C. Kuc, ry Rains, George Reid. c.-.mrjc'. S.Wr,h Shnfp- Jeremiah MasUn, or r , ------ n sniii Msher; Sheriff ol uraven uoumy, jon --Q ffart Fred. Smith, Sec'y. St. John's Lodge, R. & Co., Wm. Stephens, C. V. Swan, James na . T. R. Treadway, James Taylor, Mies112' ner, James B. Turner. , gJe. VV. Rev. Sain'I. Wait, John S. Whi ehead, -phen Willis, Levi Wright, Jas. WeddeU, Eph"3C1 Willis. Rigdon Wilson, Nelson B. White. THOMAS WAT80N, P. M