Newspapers / The Weekly Raleigh Register … / Aug. 25, 1852, edition 1 / Page 4
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- - - - - - U ; , ! V - - . ifFirom' the Republic -;The accompanying correspondence will com ;.mepd itself to public attention. It embraces a lettor from Goneral Pit&cs, exculpating himself from the charges founded upon the published .: reports of his New Boston speech, and giving ius w version 01 nis position before the conn Try on me slavery Question j - ,v Jt To: the Editor of tfe Republic: , ' . , ; r . Dsar Sir : T On the appearance in your paper ,;: of a charge intended, if not calculated, seriously & to impair and perchance to destroy the confi i 7 rdence of General Pierce's southern supporters - - in his soundness on the slavery question, I ad-i.X-r -dressed him a letter, "which, together .with his r "; reply, I now ask you; as an act of justice, to pubfish. . ;.;;. ":'tV,-"i'' "t ; I make this request, presuming your object, -VvS like mine, to have been the discovery of the : truth. - . ' ' ., Very respectfully,' f : ':'ir ''--H. EDWIN BE LEON. -Washisotow August 13, 1852. I . -" 1 Washington-, July 17, 1852. , --- r . v ' TtviR St TCnnlmaAil vnn will finff fin orfiln v " - in which, as one of the editors of the Soutliern - Vftw, of this city, I took issue With my col-'r.'- ,-s league in advocacy of your claims to southern H : support for"- the! Presidency. That action was . ' predicated upon my belief of your en tiro sound- mess upon the slavery ' question. ' Within the last week a speech, purporting to have been de ' ' f livered by you in January last, has been repub- " -. lisbed from two Democratic papers in your own ..: State, (which are said now to support you.); - ' ;.- On the truth on falsity of this, much depends. ' Neither those with whom I act, nor myself, canj consent that any doubt should rest on a matter f; .. of such importance ; but, placing full reliance f-'r on the fearless frankness of your character," on! r their behalf and my own, I respectfully ask of you whether that report, which your southern; p supporters believe to be without foundation as : " opposed to your previous course, is correct. j "--. The peculiar position which I occupy must nlead mv anolosnr for rrnnbHnir -vein vth M r : r j ., letter. Very respectfully, your obedient servant; EDWIN DE LEON. rv . ; General F Pierce, Concord, N. II. - . : Concord, N.' II., July 23. 1825. Mr Drab Siai Snrrniindnd w gagemcnts, I seize the earliest opportunity to reply to your letter of the 17th instant. I much regret that anything connected with my sef should havo been the; cause of disagree ment between yoq and gentlemen with whom you have been I associated in the editorial de partment of the Southern Press. I do not re- .' member ever to have seen what purports to be a report of a speech delivered by me at New ' . Boston, in this State, in January last, until my attention was called to it asf republished in the , BepubHc. The pretended report is, and I pre ' - sume was designed to be, an' entire misrepresen tation. It is not merely! untruthful, but is so ' . grossly and absurdly false as to render, in this vicinity, (any denial of its authenticity entirely unnecessary. The two papers quoted the In dependent Democrat, published in" this place, and the Democrat published in Manchester-rare thoroughly ! abolition journals ; and have been and are zealously opposed to the Demo cratic party. For a long time prior to the Meeting at New Boston, and ever since, they have been unsparing in their attacks upon me personally, and in their bitter denunciation of what they have been pleased to term my pro , slavery sentiments. But it would be something new for either of these papers to deny the con sistency of my opinions upon the subject of the constitutional rights of the South in relation to slavery. My opinions and the avowal of them have been everywhere the same. Ever mindful of the difficulties and dangers which so long ...brooded over the assemblage of wise men and pure patriots to whose spirit of concession and . earnest efforts we are indebted for the Constitu tion under which we have enjoyed such signal prosperity, advancement, and happiness, I have regarded the subjects as too vital and delicate to be used as an element of sectional appeal in party conflicts. My action and my language in A ew Hampshire, touching ' this matter, have been at all times and under all circumstances in accordance with my action and language at Washington. My votes' ia., the -Senate and - House of Representatives were not republished in tho Era for the first tim Tho Vw again and again paraded to arouse the passions and the prejudices of our people against me indmduallyrand against the party with which it has been my pride and pleasure to act. There has been no attempt to evade the force of the . record. It has been at all times freely admit , ted, and my position sustained upon grounds s satisfactory to my own mind. I am not sur , prised to know that the attempt to prove me an abolitionist provokes much merriment among . men of all parties here ; and this weak and un - truthful sketch of what purports to be my speech, is really too ridiculous to be considered : in any serious light. I am in the daily Toceipt of letters, propoun- ding the greatest variety of curious questions, upon all conceivable subjects. Letters of this l.rf na.ra.cler cannot be answered', of course. No inoiviauai cota command either the time or : strength the Herculean task would require. I may add, that such a correspondence would by - "Q means. comport with my views of duty. The " Democratic party sent its delegates to Baltimore - not alone to nominate candiditna Vn(- tn mffi, f principles and to present the leading issues up- . w. n...u tue vauiim aiiuuiu ue conauctefl. If I could deem mvself can-ahl the platform there adopted, it is quite certain that I should decline, either at the call of indi viduals or associations, 'to incur tho charge of arrogance to which any attempt to alter, amend .. ' or enlarge it, wp'uld in ;vitably subject me. . . ' Your letter is of an cntirelv different rknn . ter. It seeks truth in relation to an alleced , liM. oi nistory, to winch too search -nK-1u. n iijum cannoi DC maae. 1 nnnnimio tnO fevta Trill caam rt f . lf , tw directness ; and -beg you to accept tuanKs tor your ettorts to vindicate my claim to that trait, at least, before the public. " 1 n ith hiSh esteem, your most obedient l :;eW i UKAKK. PIERCE. Eiww De Leox, Esq., Washington, D. C. ' I GenernJ Pierce pronounces the report of the 1 ""; fJiuiependeiti Democrat and the Manchester Demo i crat "an entire misrepresentation," "not merely j untruthful" bnt "grossly and absurdly falsef i-,The issue upon this point, as one of veracity 4a .between General Pierce, the speaker, and JVIr" t:r.oi,;thteirter, the latter supported by Mr I., . GooDAtE, edrfot. of the Manchester DemocraT i; ; and by tho statements. of otlicr local journals. ; , :WhetheMrv Pierce has forgotten words used ' 7 m the course of debate, or whether the reporter KwilluDyjniseprosented him andi now swears ; falsely to support the misrepresentation is a 'question m which wo have no direct concern. It must be settled in New Hampshire :v--f::Th.?ctended report" passed without con 5 tradition' at the time, apparently because it es- ?.:,-h.wIw - x itntE s ODsenation. That it at- ' tracted notico at the time, and on the spot, is evident from the letter of Mr. B. F. Ater who itat in hU letter to Mr.IIiBBARD that he saw i'the reports copied by the Republic when they rvf nret appeared," and conversed . in regard to themwith soveral persoHs": who heard the speech i In; The anomaly remain unexplained, that re ; - ports which are alleged to be scndalous fabri ; t enons were, allowed to circulate in the town in f. which the speaker lives without any attempt to ' correct their misrepresentations.. f - Passirig from thse particular reporte, General . : Pmk proceeds td; strengthenliis denial by a . reference to his general public conduct "Mi : v Pinions and the aVowjal of them," he says "have .been everywhere the same." "IMj action and C mylanpage in ftew Hampshire touching this matter have been aj all times and under all cir ' cumstances in entire accordance with jmy action 1fhand language at Washington.' Mr. PieRCE ig V W r"iu? lo ff?a f'y word ; and let us reca j ; , pitnlato certain facts connected ivith his 'Jaction i' ew Hampsire, that wenay I : 7, test th value of his present declaration. It is 1 rd iat Mr. Piekc, wa afmemr of the State Convention in June, 1846, and that in that capacity he was one of a committee "who repor ted a resolution realnrming the sentiments and opinions of the Northern Democracy in relation to slavery, and setting forth that ifcy deplored its existence, and regarded it "as a great moral and social evil." It is on record, again, that on the 20th November, 1850, General Pierce at tended a meeting at Manchester, New Hamp shire, and delivered a speech in which, he asked, " Who did not deplore slavery?' and in which, re plying to his own interrogatory, he said, "The men who vmiUi dissiive the Union did not hale or deplore slavery more than he did." And yet a gain it is on record that tho State Convention which sat late jn ; 1850 had General Pierce as! one of its members, 'and that the convention1 unanimously adopted a resolutiondeclaringf that the holding nf human beings in bondage is a curse to any country; that we are opposed to. slavery, black or white, in all its forms, and under what ever circumstances." Now here are three instan ces selected, not from journals personally hostile to General Pierce, but from quarters known to be personally friendly to Jam. And each in stance affords strong collateral testimony in favor of the accuraey of Mr. Foss's report of the New Boston speech, and against General ; Pierce's averment that his "opinions and the- ayqwal of them" have uniformly agreed with his opinions as expressed at Washington."' The presumption is that the General Pierce who "deplored" lOJJ! 3 . . 1 . in ... . - oiMjr .ui iow, ana -natea - it in leou, may "1 1 til . 1 1 lit ifwr. nave loainea u in imz. . The probabilities are' against General Pierce on another ground. ' Tho Manchester Union De mocrat friendly print, jn its outline of the New Boston speech, reports that he spoke of slavery as having been introduced into this country "against the moral sense of the world :" and the Nashua Gazette, which is also friendly, reports his vindication of the Fugitive law as restin" upon the fact that it "embraces no single princi ple more obnoxious to the North than the Fugitive Slave law of 1792." - To give full weight to his present letter, it is neeessary, then, that General Pierce should show that the records of the State Conventions have been falsified to his prejudice that his own organ, the New Hampshire Patriot, pub- . yuwiu, Has wmuiry misrepresented him and, that two other friendly journals en tered into a conspiracy with two abolition jour nals for the purpose of placing him in a false position before the country. Even this is not all that is necessary. The records of New Hampshire prove that for a se ries of years the Democracy of that State took advantage of every opportunity to re-affirm their hostility to slavery, and their nnabated deter mination to enforce the Wilmot proviso. They did this at their public meetings, in their State Conventions, in their Legislature, and through their delegations in Congress. So far as we know, it is not alleged that at any portion of this period General Pierce was at variance with his party in the State. On the contrary, it is known that he acted with them ; and though we admit that for the heresies of individual (mem bers of the party he is in no respect responsible, we are yet constrained to feel that he shares the responsibility of the action of the party in i its aggregate capacity, so far as he is known to have participated in it. oenerai fierce appeals to his votes in the Senate and House of Representatives to dis prove the charge of uttering Freesoil sentiments. We cannot be suspected of having done him in justice in reference to these portions of his pub lic life.; In our notice of his public character, written on he day after his nomination at Baltimore,- we expressed an onininn that ha sound upon the slavery question. We formed the opinion upon Congressional documents, and at once gave him the full benefit of it. It has since transpired that, in our hurried search, we omitted his vote against the act "authorizing Edmund Brooke to remove, in th T ,u r Columbia two slaves, owned by him prior to his icuiuvui irum Virginia. "Votes in the Senate and House of Represen tatives" are good as far as they go, but they are not sufficient to rebut evidence of contrary votes and speeches in another section of the country. The question just now is, not what General I ierce said and how he voted at Washinoton but what ho said and what he did in New Hampshire ; and on that question wo still con tend that the balance of testimony is against him. It is against him alike on the specriic is sue raised by the New Boston speech, and on the general issue touching his 'action and lan guage" in the Nonth. ; In saying this we have no intention to impugn the honor and sincerity of General Pierce. The apparent frankness of his letter is something in his favor, and we are willing to believe that his personal character as a man apart , from the politician is not less so. ' But private excel lence is not a reason for Btifling inquiry into public conduct nor is a letter that is apparent ly frank sufficient to overthrow a chain of rea soning based upon admitted facts and stren"lh ened by the every-day probabilities of life." It is more pasy, more rational, and not necessarily unjust to assume that the incidents on which re dwell as parts of the case, has escaped the recollection of one who daily suffers from "the herculean task" of a Presidential Candidate iu memory may iau out the records live ; and the records in this matter are at varJnn the letter. 1 GEN. SHIELD'S OPINION OF SCOTT. G?o. Shields, as is well known, ia a Demo cratic Senator from Illinois, and, as might be naturally supposed, is anxious that bis party should succeed at the next' Presidential Elec tion. But he is a brave soldier and a hio-h-minded and honorable man, who would scornto join his party organs in the ruthless crusade now waged by them against his brave old com mander. In a recent letter written by hiin and published in the Washington Union of Wed- V, ,;V iie iranKiy says that he admires Gen. ixou as much as that he considers , ne aoes any man hrina nn,i him entitled to tlie gratitude of his country. His mg Gen. Scott isj icason ior not support because he is a Democrat and Gen. Scott is a Whig. 11.. 1 .. O Here is tho extract from tne letter : It is my good fortn n n tn hn nn,nn.11 . - . - i 'w own ail y c- quainted with both the distinguished citizens whose names have been presented by their re spective parties as candidates for the highest office in the gift of the American people. Gen. Wmfield Scott is the candidate of the Whig party.. For him I entertain the highest pers( nal regard and esteem. I admire him as much AnJTman liing for his great military falentvand I consider him entitled to the grat itude of his country for his glorious military services. But Gen. Sjjbtfris no Democrat. His political convictions are different from mine. He is true to his convictions ; and for this he has my jrespect. I mean to be true to mine ; and such is my knowledge of his character that 1 know this will not lessen me in his estima tion. H the principles of the Democratic party are those that ought to prevail m the conduct of this government, then Gen. Scott himself would admit, with the frankness of a true sol dier, that he is not the man to represent these prinoiples as Chief Magistrate of this republic Be this as it may, however, I stand where I have always stood in the ranks of the Democracy. Evening News. Mr. Hale and the Free Soil Nomination A letter frond Hon. John P. Hale appears in tho Boston Comiipnwealth, in which he comes to the conclusion that he ought not, and cannot, ac cept the noniination for the Presidency if offered to him by ttje Pittsburg Convention. The Com monwealth finds fault with th SBnt. v.. i j . i IU1 UOAZKr mg out just ktthis time, when the delegates are on their wajf to Pittsburg, and insists that if nominated lie must serve. j Going it Strong. "In March last, three mcn(?) m the city of Springfield, Illinois, agreed together to drink themselves to death. The Register of that place, says the first died in April the second in May. The survivor, on the hap' pmng of the last event, showed Bigns of broi ling the contract, and kent days afterwards but honor, revived, and he died m the month of June, This is. literally true." EXTRACT From an eloquent Speech of the accomplished Irishman, W. E. Robinson, delivered in. the : Saloon of the North American Hotel, New York, on the 6th inst. ;, ; who for scott ? FellowHcitiaens, Gen. Scott commends himself to the support of all sects, sections and parties of our country. Since George Washington, no man has done so much for his country as Win field Scott. His blood, on our Northern borders, rescued Michigan and other portions of our Ter ritory from being what else it might have been British, Territory. The gold, the riches, and wide Territory of California, (millions of gold flowing monthly into our ports,) are the benefits he purchased, for us by his unparalleled military conquests in Mexico. That flag T of England which has waved, the emblem of tyranny over Ireland for seven centuries-pwhich now flaps Its sullen folds over O'Brien and Mitchell in Van Dieman's Land General Scott pulled down and trampled in the dust at Fort George. When the Irish soldiers under him were taken prison ers at Queenstowh, and were about to be sent to England to be hanged as traitors, he stood between them and destruction. When he march ed over Mexico, in a career of glorious achieve ments, his dispatches before tho battles, becom ing histories of the Victories. hi3 JionriiA wna marked with so much wise statesmanship, such enlarged and enlightened toleration to the opin ions and religious peculiarities of the people, that terror for the conqueror swelled into love for the benefactor, and a whole nation, whose fortresses, one by one, surrendered to his sword, finally yielded their hearts a tribute to his hu manity. . j' "How shall we rank thee npon glory's page, Thou more than conqueror 7" ! And shall this man be forgotten o left to die without some mark of the people's gratitude ? Shall he carry to his grave the British lead which he received at Lundy's Lane, and receive no weightier acknowledgement of a people's grati tude T Had America elected Aaron Burr over George Washington, as first President, or should Ireland become a Republic, and some Peter Brown or John Smith defeat John Mitchel or Smith O'Brien, in a contest for the Presidency, we would vent our indignation in lanuae which shall be but history's echo on us asa na tion, if we elect Franklin Pierce over Winfiold Scott. HIS ELECTION CERTAIN. But I have no fear of General Scott's trium phant election. My great anxiety is that the naturalized citizens should not be put in a posi tion now, similar to that which they were cheat ed into in 1844, by voting for Mr. Polk against Ue,nry Clay. I believe that at the next election will b polled about three millions of votes. The wSole naturalized vote throughout the States will be about a quarter of a million. Of the native born voters of the Cn"ted States, I believe Gen. Scott will get one million six hun dred thousand, so that he is sure of an election if the vote in the several States be distributed aa it has been heretofore ; but it is my desire that my countrymen should go for a great American, with a great majority, rather than to be eternal ly upholding little men for smaller factions. And why should yote for Franklin Pierce, the candidate of the London Times, which calls our Irish-people half civilized savages, their religion mummery, (as it is called by the Pierce party in New Hamp shire, ) and their priesthood Burpliced ruffians ? Why should naturalized citizens here bein to wear British manufactures, to enable the British Government to keep their country in misery, and their patriots in chains ? Why not vote for the Whigs, with Protection to Home Industry against British Capital ? For Internal Improve ments, where honest poverty may get from the Treasury a part of the hoarded Locofocoism watches with a miser's care, or ex pends only on aristocratic office holders ? j OPPOSITION NO C8E. Gentlemen Locofocos, your appeals to the na turalized citizens are in vain. If you wish to i06!11 Scott 70U mu8t aPPcal to jour friends of Lngland, and not the republican naturalized citizens of this country.Scott, the only man living who, with his own hands, in a fair stand up fight tore down the British flag, is to be Land ed to appease the offended wrath of England vou must appeal to some other nation than W land. Irishmen would rather furnish other vic tims to the scaffold than become the executioner. lou cannot tear from the popular breast the maternal love for the children of its pride. Nor can you get the people to support the idols set up by the Uerods of the Baltimore Convention, whose hands are j-et reeking with the blood, of the slaughtered Locofoco innocents. Michigan is leaning on her broken sword ; Pennsylvania is pouring from her veins the last drop of De mocratic blood ; Illinois is straining her eyes through the magnifying glass by which she had fondly man ufactuied a giant out of a Douglass ; New York is covered with sack cloth and patches' at ber un-Marcy-ful condition. All these, joined with Kentucky, Indiana, and other disconsolate mothers, are shedding tears sufficient to create a freshet in Salt RiKer, weeping for their chil dren, and refusing to be comforted becauso they are not. J No, gentlemen, no, you cannot defeat Gen. V infield Scott. Nay, all the leaders of all the parties in the Union, combined against him, could not defeat him. Your Hulls may surren der, and your Casses may break their swords Zn A jhr.a.n 8tumP in Place of Englishman, rw PVPPewa" is . onward and upward, like the flight of our eagle, and the destiny of our Republic. Your Pillows may throw up for tifications on the wrong side of the ditch, and your Pierces may faint or fall, (I charge no man with cowardice,) I repeat, they may faint or fall whether from the nature of the horse or the tault of the hanimal on his back, but the hand that tore down the British flag at Fort Georcre whose finger was the index to glory at Lund's Lane and Clmrubuscq, will gather from tho field of American gratitude a rich harvest of honor. .Leaders and organs may falter or betray, but the People, all of whom can think as well as auyiWOuli leaders reposing confidence in the hero of three wars, and the statesman in three great epochs in, our history, will carry them in their arms to political victory. He has turned civil strifes into new incentives of union and from the fields where defeat and disgrace lorewia aestruction, at his command the bird of victory has risen, Phamix-like, for a nobler light. His victories have been like those of the hcipio Africanus all won outside of our bor ders.,, Before the enemy could invade our terri tory he strewed their bones upon their own Along our Northern frontier he made the ene my s own soil the scenes of American victory And southward, under the blaze of a tropical sun, the shining track! of his ! victorious sword is a flaming euardiah mitoirlA An. G! Al border,, telling to eveiry foe that every foot of tlCCi, viuppewa ana UhepultaDee are sacred to union and happiness, and Tee from invasion and deseeration. His isthe mil itary glory of a Caesari and the ""d -idom of nif lRi-iin x ,rr 8 wnicn rendered the name aTw B0mhime a" expression capable of the double meaning of surpassing military ge nius and unequalled civic sagacity g .Ji? clDCti?latio,n8 thrownlrom his glittering sword have given light to the beam of battlf military achievements as those ever won by a Pierce or a Pillow. While the men who are now opposing him, with or without the Presi dency, shall sink into hisfr, r- ... 1C x icomeucj, snau shine as a sun m the perpetual firmament of his country's glo ry. And whether in victory or defeat anihi tion enough shall it be fome, (eTshmdd my advocacy of Gen. Scott forfeit thefriendsWp of some who would befriend me but for ml .V1 whic 5 , , """" OI m oppressor of mv native land on,. j a. X?.r.'Y:Wl2K for me to see rise along the vista of the future the monuments which all future generations of American citizens will gaze upon with X " to 6 unpnae to ...a . iu srUwi uverms nctoof t know that it is not my fanlt if they shall not read upon that pure and lofty shaft,5 which 'will yet rise to his memory : - - President WINFIELP SCQTT4V ' v MOST EXTRAORDINARY LOGIC ! The Enquirer and Union, not being able to take MrT Whit's ground in Chesterfield, that General Pierce did not vote against , permission to a Virginian to carry slaves into tne District of Columbia admit the fact, and pfferthe most enrious of reasons for it.,1 We would stake our existence that nobody in this world would ever Siess the reason; that influenced General Pierce, e wished' to "prevent the reduction in tlie value of slave labor, which, it'wai. believed would en sue, if Maryland f became overstocked with slaves from other States M" "Wonderful, is'nt it? ' .- . . But we copy from the Enquirer of yesterday, both the confession that he did give the vote we have charged, and the' reason for it : s Another HciiBoa shown up. The Scott jour nals have sought to make capital against Gen. Pierce, because in the House he voted to prevent Edmund Brooke of Georgetown, from bringing slaves into the District of Columbia against the provisions of the law of Maryland, of 1796, which placed certain restrictions upon the intro duction of slaves, and which was adopted by Congress as the law for the government of that portion of the District of Columbia, ceded to the United States of Maryland. That law was passed at the instancof slaveholders, and for their benefit in other words, to prevent the re duction in the value of slave labor which, it was believed, would ensue if Maryland became overstocked with slaves from other States, as it was feared she might be. The particular vote to which we refer was given on the 12th of June, 1834, while General Pierce was a member of the House of Repre sentatives. In 1834, one Edmund Brooke, a resident of Georgetown, wished to have a private act passed for his benefit, by which he might bo permitted to introduce two slaves from Virginia into that por tion of the District ceded by Maryland. The slave owners of. the District were in favor of the Maryland law, f and did not desire any relaxa tion of it. They wished to prevent a reduction in the value of slave labor by limiting Ithe sup ply and preventing competition; and at this moment they would resist the repeal of the law of 1790. Surpassing strange are the shifts to which Southern Democrats are driven to uphold their Yankee candidate. But this beats all we ever heard or dreamed of J " To prevent a reduction in the value of slave labor," he would not permit a lrgmian to carry two slaves into the Dis trict of Columbia!! Watchful guardian of slave interests that, bevond all question ! But is it not a little remarkable that it did not occur to him, if the removal of two negroes to the District would reduce the value of slave labor there, it would have a corresponding effect in appreciating the value of slave labor in Virgin ia, whence they were removed ? Did " tlie Youn Franklin" have no consideration for the pother of statesmen? Were -all his affcetions limited to the slaveholders in the District of Columbia? But in all seriousness, is there a man in all the South so stupid as to be imposed upon by so shallow a device as this ? Does any human be ing believe that the value of slave labor prompt ed Pierce in the vote he gave ? It is by such Yankee logic as this, that South ern Locofocos expect to cram a New Hampshire Freesoiler down the throats of th nPonl P(.ran. m-Krt i , T L I " ..vio , nnu C11III11IV HI It'll I lliri I tT- pose tneir own ignorance or insincerity, and demonstrate their un worthiness of Southern con fidence. A party convicted of disingenuousness or fraud in a single instance, are entitled to no creuit in any case. It every man is satisfied in his own mind that Pierce did not vote agaitist two negroes being carried to Washington, lest it should reduce the value of slave labor, the other arguments, advanced by the same men who attempt this ; deception, should receive no more weight than this. Misrepresentation and delusion are the weapotW relied on for his sup port ; and distrust and) incredulity are the shields by which they shield be encountered. From the Columbus (Ga.) Enquirer. A gentleman from Virginia Rome years a"o moved to the District of Columbia. He some time afterwards wished to remove thither two valuable servants, which he could not do with out an act of Congress. He applied to Congress j ..i fiermisBion io uo so. r kaxkli.v Pierce was then a member of tlie House, and. with all his southern Jeelings, "his heart revolted so much at the sight of a human being in bondage," that he voted against tlie law that allowed die Vir ginian to take his slaves, not for sale, but for his own use, to the city of Washington. We give the law below : ''All flif. "EM. J T 1 v l,(1ujuiiu nrooKe to re move io uie district ot Columbia two slaves "j KXJ reuio;aitrom Virgin ia : lie it enacted, dc, That Edmund Brooke, of Georgetown, in tho District of Columbia, I thorized, and permission is hereby granted to bring from the State of Virginia into thi District of Columbia two nerro slaves, na .jn u, m iuc kismet ot Columbia, bo au tea nini. the said John and Alfred.lhe property of the said Brooke, anu to nave ana to exercise the same rights of C" lrcuJ 01 worsnip over the said slaves as 11 mey naa Deen brought by the said Brooke in 10 me saici district at the time of his removal to me saia district ot Columbia, anv law. or usage to tne Contrary notwithstanding. This act shall be in force from its passage." Approv ed June 30, 1834. (Vide Little & Brown's nri- . , ....f This bill came up in the House of Represen lauves June lzth, 1!34. when Mr. Wardwell moved to lay it on the table, which failed, yeas u j, nays yo, t raxklix Pierce voting in the afir- ""-"f"" wis oui passed, yeas lOo. "aTy? 4l Frankux Pierre vUing in the negative. v 1. xx. our., 1st sess., Z6a Cong., p. 743.) x.i, Bay our southern Kights friends to this vote of their "creation and choice ?" What sav r v, PP10 to " 7 "e voted first to lay the bill on the table, and failing, he then voted s.u ils .passage. i,he bill became a law, but there stood Pierce, with his1 fortv-ai nnm voting against, the right of a Southern citizen to bring his slaves to his home, and eniov his pro perty as his own. If biddings or Hale ever gave a worse yote, we should like to have it riow win this vote be excused and who will t1 ,as eclulvalcnt to vote to abolish rIavm-w ,ti tka n;t.:.i , . . .. j v idhicij ui uoiumbia : tor if a man is not allowed to carry slaves to that district and enjoy the proceeds of their labor, he it ?vl a hl? ,PrPer1tJ slavery is virtual ly abolished so far as the District is coneem J Again. What; is the difference, in principle' ' " r voung against the Hght of a slaveholder Z J 1 PiyPer,t0 waainngton City, and denying the same right to ;a citizen of Georgia to carry his negroes to Alabama ? : Is th D tfut precious little. What would you think of L;;rrr iA".v"nsress. would dare ,i - "wC, lami congress 11 the power, and ought to exercise it, to thus i vent the citiiens Af,m..nf It. ,?.' El ZZZZL' Congress has e,,. c . w " " eiavfaoiainsr states from moving to another or to the federal city with his negroes ? , You would regard bim as aniabol tionist,. V, I him 'cuk tne citizens ntnna u -1 1 if.; ; 1, uPon mmjas - T- "-.juu ore aooutto dn y ) jur Bunrages for the Presi dency who, when in Congress, gave such alvote and struck a blow thus deep and deadly the interests of out citidens and the integrity of our peculiar institution Remember Van Xren - 5 6 laet ffibnths of dM remen8.! Th? murders caused by f T" Un thousand fiTy commit! ments for drunkenness during the saine time! . . 7 -"miuii uereuns oipii ,n IV. T uiu toe -rights and interests fclSouth ouglt not to be trust! mux limil WfMl irhol: HOW LONG WILL THE SOUTH STAND CHEATING ? It is amusing, as well aa instructive, to con template the number of times the people of - the South have been deluded, cajoled and humbug ged, by the self-styled Democracy . of the Union, on the subject of slavery. If they allow them selves to be again deceived, this fall, their con duct; cab only be accounted for by consulting the principle laid down in the old couplet : " ' Doubtless the pleasure is as great Of being cheated as to cheat." Let us investigate a little, and brings forward a few instances. In 1836, Martin Van Buren was represented by the Democrats of the South as the' Northern inan with Southern princi ples" -as the. devoted upholder of our rights and institutions, f This will do for Humbug No. 1. . -' J . . , 6 In 1839, when it was generally supposed that Mr. Clay would be) nominated for the Presiden cy, ho was denounced as inimical to the South, if not an absolute Abolitionist. This was Cheat No.. 2. , . ; . J ( . In 1840, when I General Harrison was tho Whig candidate, tie same men who had stigma tized Clay as a .deadly enemy of slavery, pro claimed Harrison io be a rank Abolitionist. This was Cheat Ne. 3. In 1844 they again denounced Clay as an Abolitionist, and glorified Polk, who made the Wilmot Proviso a law of the land, by signing the Oregon bill, in which it was incorporated. This was Cheat No. 4. In 1848 they pronounced Zachary Taylor to be tn Abolitionist, o.lthouo'li lie was the owner of some hundreds of negroes in Mississippi, and lauded General Cass to the skies, who, on a certain occasion, publicly announced that he "prayed for the, abolition of slavery every where." This was Cheat No. 5. I At the same time they slandered Millard Fillmore, our present able and irreproachable President as a Freesoiler of the darkest hue. This was Cheat No. 6. I A .4 In December, 1849, , they nominated W. J. Brown as a candidate fot Speaker of, the House .Representatives a man who had entered in to written bonds' with Freesoilers, as regarded tha construction" of certain committees. This was Cheat Nol--C jy,, , ... In 1852 many'olfentiupported Buchanan, m the DemoMlMniitv'yentioQil though he was, atlhfeMetlie most determin ed enemy of slavery in tha whole land. This was CheaTNo..J8f-si ; . ' " I , i , v .. Unable to gat Buchanan, they came into the support Franklin Pierca, ofNew Hampshire, a?nan -frho regards slayerjr Tal'flocia $ioral and ppUtieal eviI"-wjMr satdis JanuaTi taathi" loathed" tlie Fugitive Slave laW that no haopthe " mostvTevoltingeeling ftfrhe"gif ing.up of iaslare-,'' and thatrtLa law was "Sp pbsedtohjimanity." This wasjQheat No. - fit capstone to the pyramid,of 'deception we have; exposed 0s. .- " w Jsnt we must cease our enumeration of cheats. humbbggcries and deceptkm practiced uponKf k li theqple of the South' by the Democrat lead: fct'f S era, jor-tne last twenty years. We mijrht pro- Ion the list almostindefinitelyv Buttiiwhat we have given doea lnot produce an impression npoaha Southern mttwtjaa,.JistrJiowever lon- ana lorcible coul(LA.Qcw Iort Valley, Gal, August 5th, 1852. To the Editors of the Smdhern Recorder . Gentlemen- The whigs of Georgia occupy an unenvuible position before their brothers o"f tne Union, and before the country. Was there ever a tune before when the uress. the wholo press in a large State abandoned the support of . . S umaie nominee ot its party? I t-hmlv U X" 1 ,1 1 . - has the like heftn tnrnrn VV hat does all this moan ? Can any sane mind give a sumcient reason tounaeU in fact. It can not be done. You gentlemen, have not indulged in tne amise ot Ueneral Scott, which some of tne whig presses have, yet you might have pre sented to the numerous readers of the veteran and popular old Recorder evidence that would have gone a great way in reconciling the whigs to Gen. Scott's nomination. He is upon a sound conservative nattorm, the workmanship of southern fctatesmen. He is a native of the South, was educated in the South, married in tne ooutn, a Known friend of the Compromise measures, ere those measures passed, and while uiejr nung in aou&ttui scales." He has pledged v, ,ni,,..lc i mo jxvesoiuuous 01 tne con vention, and to discoiadenance "all nolitical agitation injurious to thb interests of society or """o""1" 10 me union 1 - is not Ueu. Scott an American citizen, a soldier, a patriot, the great eso military cnieitiin ot this acre or anv othnr lou admit all this. Ilijis he not illustrated the prowess and skill of American Arms, not onjy upon American soil, but also in a foreign capitol ? lou admit all this. Has he not on sundry oc- v.vniiu8 exmuuea nigu qualifications lor civil Administrative talents ? He has, whether you admit it or not. Now gentlemen, I am not go ing to have any quarrel with my whig friends who uecune to vote tor Ucn. Scott, yet I say to you, and through you to them, also, if vou have a mina to publish this letter, that the Scott whigs are consistent, conservative, natiohal, in their principles, feelings and action. Can the third candidate men say this in truth? Is not their ; course 1 leading towards sectionalism 1 I ask hub in a spirit 01 kindness, and not reproach auxjj. xvei. wuoever can answer the question respond to it. ; But gentlemen, I did not intend to write an article when I commenced. The Scott men are without any whig Organ. They want Gen. Scott's true principles made known tueltionPeI)Ie f GPorgia UPQ Soiitheijn I Thejr o n!? con?e io P8 inthe Empire State of tlie country the greatest public service of any man living in It. is to be: 1-ennr.niWJ off.J . "To wu"out measure, and that toofor naught? The Scott W higs (for Whigs they are indeed) it has hnan f . 1 . . 1 . ,1 -. Ti i . . . .""lT- wniien, ana printed in Ueor- gia Whig presses, would havo as readily voted tor Wm II. Seward, had he been the nominee. as they do lor Gen. Scott. I repel with contempt yute uuujom sianaer. The Scott VV higs are as good pro-slavery men, as the au- mux-B oi xnis vue imputation, Gentlemen. I wish von tn i ). r-x j r r c . xxreuuo ui ' , - .' ' miuoeu, ana tne whole people the justice to publish in your next issue, the letter of the Hon. Tien rW TT,ii;..j of Ala., to the people of the State. Mr. Hilliard is a distinguished Son of the South. A member of the late Congress, who has himself rendered the countrv no mohnairWaKl.. rr j mvuuiiiuriauit! servicei lie is a Keiiueman wnose i talents and devotion to the oouth is uneaualed hv knows Gen Scott well-tW with him on the very day the compromise measitres passed, and . ww.. cu, repress mgn satisfaction at the aZfr 7"", " Iair PIay iswhat lard's letter. It is in the Nation,; n:""- t" want, puDU8n nextweet Mr ir.-n cer of 20th July, 1852. 1 lQ'o uKiugi;ii. xour inena, ; JAIMfiS J. SCARBOROUGH. X 1 1 Ti , . vmcii i, vy ine Lica into error, as wp - 6...,, xciiuiia 01 oistant elections, we. in Common tntb nni- n.mkW , . ' ".uumuer.Me election ot two Whig Represen tatives to Congress and of a Whig Legislature in the State of Iowa. Such a success in that state could not have been ct. j 1 . . , , . , 0 iu our . , , . vkvv, null was naraiy creaible. . ,We could not h ,uo.u.n, iHwiuem receiyea tnrough several u...i.0, uu o gave tne news as us. Subsequent accounts, tin,,' it came to the same cuannei, now represent that the Democrate .1 1 i ' . fS" o.c cTOiwuuu oi me itenresentatives in f ma.fl 1 1 1 , t w- . 1. .1. ,, n. . t . ""jvuii ui me ,.oo, 11.U. xixaa. ana also n ma..:. c n xae.uwr, OI tne 5 otate Legislature.-wno nJr,rilL8?nee?ome geutlemenwere X CJ ,. . .7 . "vjs " uiversion 01 coursing-, and having ost sight of the hare, one of the f Jy rodl uf to a boy, when the foUowing dialou en 7avly :-stih8re r?.zM " . 1-1 iut,urj rriiNiiPti j xxu.u ib xuug ears 1 "A little white under the belly?" 'Voo "Yes," xxau a snort taur' "Yes." "And long; as it did nt see it," ; - t4t; j -.' f-. pause) "I "VllY, BLESS HER, LET HER GO ! Sometime ago I fell in love, ' With pretty Mary Jane, , " And I did hope that by and by -4 : She'd love me back again. Alas 1 my hope, a dawning bright, ' Were all at once made dim ; "' She saw' a chap I don't know where, And fell in love with him 1 Next time I went (Now how it was I don't pretend to say) But when my chair moved up to her'a, iWhy, her's would move away. ; ' Before, I always got a kiss, 1 I (I own with soma small fuss. ) . But how, forsooth, for love nor fun, ! "Tis non come-at &-bass ?" Well, there we sat and when we spoke, ' Our conversation dwelt On every thing beneath the sun, , ! Except what most we"felt. Enjoying this delightful mood, i Who, then should just step in, But he of all the world whom I Had rather see than him. And he could sit down by her side ; And she could all the while Hipressed her hand within his own Upon him sweetly smile ; And she could pluck a rose! for him, So fresh, and bright, and red, ' And gave me one, which hours before Was shrunk, and pale, and dead. And she could freely, gladly sing, The song he did request ; The ones I asked, were just the ones She always did detest. I rose to leave sh,e'd be glad To have me longer stay ! No doubt of it ! No doubt they wept, To see me go away. I set me down I thought profound, ' This maxim wise I drew ; 'Tis easier far to like a girl, Than to make a girl like you. But after all, I don't believe My heart will break with woe ; If she's a mind to love "that chap," Why, bless her, let her go ! TERRIBLE TRAGEDY. We have been furnished by a gentleman from the scene of tlje .horrible tragedy with the par ticulars of theinijrder which took place at Trux ton, Cortlandiounly. on Tuesday. The mur derer is an Irishman, Patrick Donogue by name. The victim were the wjife and1 child of Dan'l Kinney, wo resides near th sash factory, just south otthe village ofTriixton. A daughter of Donogbue's ,had beenmissing for several days, and, he pretended to believe that Mrs. Kin ney had stolen the child. Tuesday afternoon, Mrs. K. addh thtget near lus repidencp, and ; remarked to turn tcfafeshe dKr itot believe hfl-wnnld PVflf AAA tis girl .Again. ' Upon this!, D. went into the miufS, ana immediately catne out with a shot gun, aiJCmnnaniod by his wife, witli a rifle. He followedaftek Mrs. K. and struck her a blow with thebutf of his guh km the back of the head, which felled her to the ground ; and as she fell he struck her another blow, which broke her neck. Mrs. K's daughter ran from the murderer, when he snatched the rifle from his wife and shot the girl dead.; D. then re-loaded his rifle, and went to the sash factory, saying that there were two men there whom h n-nnU shoot. A man then arrived from, the soono mi,,. derf, and D. was secured, and. conveyed to the Cwrtland county jail. i L pon the discovery of tho murder of Mrs. Kinney and. daughter, suspicion was aroused that Donnghue was also the mnrderer nf ha own daughter. Some of the citizens repaired to his residence, where they found his boy, and questioned him regarding tlie whereabouts of hi sister. He said he dared not tell Yrf1.1t bo knew for fear his father would kill him. Thev told him that"his father was in nnmn Tl could not injure him ; upon which tlie boy led Lucm mil, ana pointed out a large stone, under which he said thev ivould find b? aUtor They raised the stone, and found the girl. She was not dead ; but had been confined under the stone, with scarcely room to move a miiw!i nearly two whole days and. nislits. SIia "l,l scarcely stand upon her feet, when delivered from her place of confinement, she stated that she had been thu puuished .on account of a remark she made that djispleased her father. Donoghue affected great sorrow' at tbn lni .f his daughter, and charged her abduction upon Mrs. McKinney. When! his daughter was brought into his presence.jthe unnatural father gave way to a savage nassion and ,b.mfi that his hands be untied that he might kill her. Syracuse Journal, 6th inst. For the Northern Cities. BY THE SEABOARD AND ROANOKE RAIL ROin rpHE PUBLIC are informed that the Seaboard 1 and Roanoke Rail Road flnmnon j . . - - : , U4vc 1.IHH Pja the"; uew bridge across Roanoke River at are now preparea to transport passen gers and freight from Weldon to Portsmouth and Norfolk and the Northernfcitie nmmntu a :u dispatch. ;,ffc"? i-v--u 1 he Cars leave Weldon dailv at Si vit t u and arrive at Portsmouth by 7 o'clock, P. M in Same0nneCt with on? ?f th? Chesapeake Bay HERALD, GEORGIA. OS NORTR ripmre.. p y-, - ' T v.xxivyiiiAi tor Balfamore, and arrive at Baltimore earlv next TTl fll-n l n n- in !.A i ... . . s, ... liuuuwv wiin tne mornmtt train that iuiisd Tu:i. J i . 6 " iuuaucijiaix ana jew l ork. By this comfortable and aereeable rnnt. p.. sengers leaving Wilmington in the moraine train. Will nrrivo orl r U a.' . ... P . .. v- . . v wic ucn i inminrr ot lossnf !, A -i. v.ix : ouvi reacu new XOTK the; RUTtlA OVAmn t-X. a. and hnu n Ww w-u j .n? person . -ee6- n cnwii ana uaitiniore. and v-.uCV m8Ul irnremng on Kail Koads To r,ender rout worthy Of the travellinir public the compaiiv have emnlnl af.,t "e b?Sage agents, who check all baegage at Wel- don tgli to Baltimote;; consequently the travel- ler ha8Jao T troubta: with his baggage until be reaches Baltimore.. e6 b The Chesapeake Bav Steam POTNTT n SA " a" IcL:: x. , ifassengers, and Pas- bo miu jcave n eiaon ao 34 o'clock P M arrive at Old Point the Bame dvening. a x ? , a8 wea entered into, by the " "I nau AOJ ana Steamboat Companies, by which the same Through jTicliet issued at Charles- .A0PonarJ ion wui leave it optionary with the traveller to M chum ruuw ii n eiuon An accommodation T.,. ti . . f every voui, xxiuiouav una narnrrinrtr x viwmuum, ionoiK ana ULU POINT COAIFORT Passengers by either traiu for Old Point, will reach vt tr 1 , : 11 mure ana New York and any other information desired en- AHW17VUH llt.Kh tA Knu;MA 1 ' ; J54 .! PETERSON, Agent. Oflice Seaboard & R. Ksn rv ' g l- "Weldon, N. C jay 31st. 1852. ? Ai 1 , j " wax n NEW BOOKS. TT.ET?'tHirto?r of the United Stat4 6th -AX deluding volunie , Z ' w'toUP of the Superaaturar containing accounts of the Salem Witchcraft ; ' Stratford Mysteries. liott ; ivc,, tve, ; py Charles Vf. El- Pierre, or the Amhisriiitio tt yillg. . - . v xxuiman Jieil- A Buck E ve Abroad. and inthedrient; by Samuels. Cox VOU. Svstm PoXC. x7" J .. "U !llna' A. er- and Diseases; by B. BS wW:Z,aTcn W mjf VUUIU" V . Ill NirilOTI 2m ' sm. Ihe Mother at Home : bv .1nhn c very greatly improved and eulged, Wkb nZer ous engravmgs. Forlsal by T uuxaer- li' II. D. TURNER, I, At. .ha V n T-.1. . ' 1 Raleigh, Aug. 11, 18S2; :r "wsl0";. FRANKLIN INST'ttitt CEDAR ROCK, FRANKLIN, COUxn ' D- S. RICHARDSON, Principal. ' CASTALIA FEMALE INSTITUTE Castalia, Nash Cousty n v ' Mrs. M. C. RICHARDSON,' P THE FALL TERMS WIT T rmr the first Monday wSiff r i-may in December. : v "u we Mr. Richardson has purchased a , 1 considers himself as pennanent.y lS vision of himself anduXr:;:?!! loeschnn k will Ko body of Trustees. UB 1 The Female School three milea from tho fi- j- rr-nkli 151 Tinn ti Lin 1; wiocumsion ana success of both In-tit,,- ul"o Mrs. R., who has latterly tiuabt at p T' a celebrity which no comment of our A large, neat edifice similar to that of 1,, stituteiscontratedfor, and will be erect?,? -tli-ately. Meanwhile students will be aXn? intheold Academy, known formerff r8 YlT The healthfulness of the nciKhboihoVrt Ba bial. In short, the Trustees would as "urMi rons that they will carefully consid and deem nothing unimportant, which will 5 ute effectually to the consummation of tional enterpise, rendering the Institntm , enlightened and chri.tiauparentsS their children. 1 1111 Jc3lrc for Board,including washing and fuel $f,j For further particulars address the JNO. ADAMS HARR,soC becretarv of the T!nu,i . m. ' U 1 ! ' ""vc HVnKJ 1 srnnnn r At the Female Tnit M. V Jrusts. Adams Harrison are prepared to .'ivoaia. .1 inind anj jM boarders. Board can also be obtained of Zp the cominc airn 'fl cipal, after the coining session June IU, 1853. wtf THE COLLEGE OF ST. JAME.S. Washington County, lYIaryianfl XV1LMUUT, 1). D.. RrrT. rillHK F.IAvanfl. lnniInl c : . . II iiuuuiu ocssion 01 the r,n JK. will open on Monday. October it. . , 'eS' tinue till Auonist Tinu;.it.u. '.. m -o v.co me continuous ; struction of the resident Professors there T each year, several courses of Lecture's bv IV f a statedly yisiting the College for the Pur,J3f Sa0rs The Grammar School resumes its duties ',, same day with the College, and, besides iunr tutors, it has the personal supervision of tbeT? ofsti Profesr3- The disciPiine of the two departments arc quite distinct, bffi are under the; direct supervision of cue Rector Annual sli..i-r-k i t. 'n "'-i-iur. oo- iT . e -"ege or tiraminar S School. vu. ior register, sc., apply to the Rector college fct. James P. O., Maryland Augustl311852. 6-w2b AGENTS rpo sell the LIFE OF WANTED GUN. SCOTT : niwi mo., handsoinelv and ilm tr.trl wifl, . u t7. "u "'US- Esq., many years Elit4.ofthe Cincinnati l)i Chronicle. The Subscriber will shortly rccei,! au x,aiiion ot the above valiuM. .v, 1U nxruisu w uiose wno wish to becoai) Agents to circulate the same, on the most fi,vw. terms. For further particulars and all necessarj "'JIB miormation, aonhcants will nl-nsB iitxs m me ouoscriDer, H. MANSFIELD, 7VV,,,,,- July 19, 1852. J oric oireet, cw Javtn, V(. otpJ fill Wines and Brandies. fl AtlO f Jill..! , ......... T " 1 1 i T0 4V. "ur. . 7 " ""'r,0"1 H w..-w vwuoitujugULS. I Will GO o hn.,.. . ' of 90 days, or four months, viz : 6 Baskets Champaigne Wine, 1 Cask Maderia d0 1 do Sherry uo 2 Barrels French Brandy, 4 Barrels of nlrl Voi, i!..,.,!- 1... ,- luc luimwiuK nines ami Kram u .,.,1:, Hilliard. j 7 ji. ut July 27, K. L. STITH. 1852. i READ THIS! I . 7, JSitiUBOK THAT LLOYD 0ryL: "ENERAL AGESTi, n.vjnuuuw urn, JJ. C, wiU attend to 11 kinds, ot Claims or business to be prosecuted in '""""'f' Al1 soiaiers, heirs, or persons wkt ve.r' 7S may or.,miSht have a claim against tho United States, or jrsons of any kiml ,10 nell to forwai-d their papers or whatever evidence they can get, to us, post paid, and wc will insUnct them iurtner. Claims that have been abandoned by other agenti j .o -wuura nave oeen obtained by us. Cashsd- vuaceu on gooa claims. Land Warrants bought and sold. Collections made and promptly remittei -luuicM a aoove. July 29, 1852. . iW-wSw. Haydock, Clay, ife Evans, Successors of Hathock, Cormes & Clay. No. 218 Pearl Street, New York. 1 Alr-UKlJiliS of Foreign DniM and Wholes! I Dealers in Select Mmlw-inee v,.;,.c n;i v... nish, Dye Stuffs, Brushes, Surgical and' Dental Is- struments, Perfumery. &e. Dr. Alex. Evans, late of Wilmington, hing is- j sociated himself with the above Firm, respectMr invites the attention of Dealers and merchants visit ing tne ixortli to their large Stock of Goods, wl will give particular attention to the orders of M) menus m iorth Carolina. Feb. 23, 1852. 6mM M Academw "Wani-aA BY a Clergyman, who has had many years ciperi-1 ence m teaching all the branches of an aceun-1 pushed English and Classical education. The id- vertiser is a graduate of an Eastern Colkge sni Princeton Theological Seminary, and WOulJ h willing to take charge of any institution, promoti viiuiauuncuucauon, or act as Tutor in a print family and take the entire supervision of the chil dren, lie would enter upon his duties immedia I ly, 11 acsired. Kecommendations satisfactory. Please address ENQUIRER, Petersburg, Virgin. """"B uuuipcBsauon, etc., July 12, 1852." 3mo35 UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND I riWE FORTY-FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION M X begin on Thursday, October 14tb, 1852, ik enu on tne nrst of March, 1853. Principles and Practice of Surgerv and Clink' I ouxgery. a ax aAn it. SMITH, M. D. Chemistry and Pharmacy, WILLIAM. E AIKIN, M. D. Principles and Practice of Medicine and Clicicii aieoicme, SAMUEL CHEW, M. D. Anatomy and Physiology, JOSEPH ROB!'. M -I-1 Obstetrics, RICHARD H. THOMAS. M. D. Materia Medica, Therapeutics & rathologr, G Practical Anatomy. BERWICK R. SMITH. M Fees for the full Course, $00; Demonstrator'1 1 ree, ciu; Matriculation, $5 ; Graduation, For purposes of Clinical Instruction the Facial nave at their command tlie " Balti more IufirM'J' I on the same street with the University, and in immediate neighborhood, contiiuina a hundred eighty beds, belonging to the University, aart f'f I aged and attended entirely by the Faculty. Institution is devoted to the reception and treatnietf of those forms of disoase which furnish the useful and profitable subjects for clinical ibP I tion. An addition ia tn Ka mmlo iliuntitr the prcs I summer, which will materially increase its art I moaaUons and advantages. It is open to au triculatns of thn Snlim.l th nrtiirrKniit tllP VC3J ' I out fee. Anatomical Material is abundant and Expenses of living in Baltimore, as low as in Atlantic city. WM. E. A. AIKIN, M. Baltimore, July 29, 1852. NOTICE. XARROT BOWLING, late of the I O Rockingham, and State of North L'lU"u1" having at his death left a last Will and Tests5 which has been duly proved and ordered to w , l I l , ,,1 1 l.,..,,.r SiSillW for the Kiiiii rnnnt.v nf Unrkinu-li.-im. and liaML? RftiH Will rtiVoz-fo.! tl,, unrlnrciTiin, tlie ti1" : . 1 !?...!. ,.rif-t is ll1-1 by given, that I shall present to the j 01 me superior court ot law ior uw -. T?.t;rfii.. 4 k., l.i.i Ux...tu,,ifli on Xktv . n. . . ,.1 xi ..I i-'illUU " Monday, after the 4th Monday in September c t onvincinaie said slave Joseph, according to the cc"" . saidWilL JNO. KOBEKTS0V a vcuuihi pruviu"; uermisiuu ' . . s July 29th, 1852. ' r 1:1 v. ; f v
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 25, 1852, edition 1
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