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!; wrvrkR FPBLISHER, AND EDITOR, i '' . ' ' i j V't L ' '.i'vL:.'""' - -;. ., , KIS ! i " j V
" TTZ L. 1 ' - !' i mi. .. . . m n r., i,, I tin I i r i ii - i T - . 1 -j - - - - -. - . -. - . . ... "V v" -v 1 4
I
KEJWMVS DEFENCE.
I FROM THE GLOBS. ' 7 H-
I The purpose of Mr. Kendall to notice
sl)mc of the misrepresentations . of -the
'Jfelegraph arose, not so much from the
cbursu pursued4)y that paper, as from the
ektensive diffusion of statements in JUr.
tfun to siMHe-sages Tn TiTrH fepwhicfc
Have misled the minds of many honest
uien. As far as the Telegraph is con
cerned, he will content himsslf with ar
ising that paper against itself; and prov-jio-
by -the Editor's own language and
c'bntfucf, that he docs not 'believe-one of
those disparaging charges whjcL he is now
s6 ready to circulate!
i These charges are. that; Mr. Kehdall
w:as ungrateful to Mr. Clay,, and that he
was actuated, by mercenary motives in
naotiating with him about a; appoint
merit at Wkshingtoni and in afterwards
coming out against 4he administration of
Mr. Adams in consideration of loan of
SI 200 thereafter to. be made him by Mr.
Ureeni ..',,.. ;
iByomittinsdates Mr. Green has brought
th;e events oF three years to one point. '
xsiie ursi niiiig necessary is io give muse
evenis meir true dates.
The correspondence between MrJsClay
and Mr. Kendall relative to an appoint
ment at Washington waS .cjosed in Octo
,1825, by a letter from the latter, in
farming the former that he could accept
ho place which i't was in the power of
Mr Clay to offer untU he had fought
another campaign in the-Jocal politics ot
Kentucky.' '
Mrv Green was in Kentucky in Sep
tember, 1 82b, and it was then, as he al
leges, that he promised Mr. Kendall,
through Col. Johnson, the loan ot gl200,
Mr. JBar
thereto
as an inducement to come out for Gen.
Jackson.
Mr. Kendall was taken sick before the
end of August, 1826: his life was almost
despaired of for' three weeks, and he was
totally incapable of business for four or
five j before he was taken sick, his coarse
in relation to the administration of Mr
Adams was resolved on, and on the SOlh
September the first article indicating it,
vfritten by a friend, appeared in his pa
per ; his recovery was, announced on the
2)Tth, and a promise given . of his views
on. the Presidentrai question ; and on the
' 4th October they were set forth some
what at length." Brom that time the Pre--sidenttal
warfare became hot in Kentucky?
hitfought through the campaign of
arid n August of that year, the friends of
Xxjeni Jackson carried seven outo? the
- twelve Renresentatives in Congress; and,
Upon the death of one of the five Adams
i men in the fall, elected the eignuit f
lln TW0',W i on his return
i a jvisit to his father's'in New England, the
first for more than thirteen years, Mr.
Kendall came through Washington ; and
Avth the assistance of some of his friends
A r,niurrp.s?. borrowed 1200 dollars from
an individual, and 800 dollars from
Hank, making 2000 dollars. The 1200
dollars he borrowed of a creditor of Green
to whom it nad just been paid in par
Clay could be j advanced, !such was the
state of Kendall 8 inersonal foAli'tiiva fn.
J Mr Cky,4hMHHefergiivo
open gmu6 gainilktheEadmims
trationir i-y -s,!'j ii''f----'-
uiu go io juexineton. I saw
ry atlcl Air. Pne. i u broBshtt
"""""""i a j wenuvtnn iiHcwy
y v.;. juuusoir. vDe jquuence
0Terith.-Ari;u.iitaiW
our .yiewsMtplnJoilaithai Ken-
uaii would require at les twelve hun
dred dollars, -anil l authnrited him'tia say
iu A.ciiuttii tuai a wuuiq BUfaoce xuai sum
in a short time after L reached Washing
ton. lie gave that; assur'aniie ta Kendal I
r
Kendall did take ground 'against the ad-
ministration, ne came ow to vvasnine-
ton. I advanced him. the money, and was
the means of obtaining eighteen hundred
more for him.?' . - ". I ! i
I . . : - - 1 , . f
Let us pause for a moment, and look
upon these, facts. W-hitet Kendall was
persecuting Mr. Clay forlti situation at
Washington, worth S130Q per annum,
and pledging himself to defend Mr. Clay
against Gen. Jackson?s chlrgel of .'bar-
gain, inirigue, anu corruption," ne was
pretending to others, that he was only
restrained frbm assailing Mi. Clay by the
pecuniary obligation that he was under to
him. Little did 1 think, when I nleds-ed
myself to advance hjm (as a loan) the sum
necessary to discharge his debt to Mr
Clay, that he might be enabled to say, I
have paid you what I owed you, and my
press is free to assail you.t' t say, little
did I think that he was atithafjfame mo
ment begging Mr. Clay for an office, and
pledging himself that he would not, be the
means or ihe occasion of casting any
imputation on his honor orintegntr.'7
riere ine events or three ; years are
brought together the negotiation with
Mr. Clay, which terminated fn October,
1825 , Green's visit to Kentucky in Sep
iember, 1826 , and Mr. Kendall's visit to
Washington in December j J 827 J
That this man could nof, and did not,
lend Mr. Kendall a dollarof this money,
will now be proved by his dwn testimony.
It will be observed thau this grac-tous
promise is said to have been made in Sep
tember 182o. About that time Mr. Green
was himself charged withi being a bank
rupt adventurer, without character or pro-
uerir. xui was so iar vrue, inai ai ine
moment ne saya ne promisea to lena Air.
Kendall 1200 dollars, he was on his way
from Nashville,' where he ,nad induced his
rriertdsrttrrnis ' representations that he
cpuiu not get aiong wunout u, to oorrow
torlhimjSftciituespra
wards dmOothniBrWtB
in his nofcket. A sbortitime after he
reached Washington," instead of ad van -
cinsr Mr. Kendall 1200 dollars, he set
about explaining the cause-of his own
bankruptcy, and in his paper ot Novem
ber 8th, 182b, had a lon article upon the
Find i rig i t d i ffi cul t 1 to borrow the mon e y
in KentuckyifiMr. Kendall visited the;
and or nis nativity, and oDtained.tne mor
neyon cdndttioa that, several gentlenlen.
members of Congress, from KlehtuckT,
would become, his security To this they
cujarnxeu, ujn;4:uuuiuon toa v e .ww-nw-
tract or landand milt, the.value ot which
they knew, to indemnify thenf. . ;
Ttiis, theii, is the simple statemeit of.
tacts. Mr. u i ay, what pocketed twenty
thousand, dollars of taf Morrison : legacy
at a time when Mr. Klenrfall waaopposihs:
Mr. Adams for Mr." Clay's benefit, loan
ed him fteen hundred dollars of paper
worth seven hundred and titty. rind-
: i . n m" T- t ii matt v tv - rwr Tltll
in uat mr. Aenaaii uuulli jnu i:
PURCHASED OR INTIMIDATED ik-
to the sitpport of Mr. Adams, when it let
came Mr. Clay's intetest to change Ms
politics, Mr. Clay enforced theTjayment
oi ims QcjUt ip specie,-ciC, -
u The money, which Mr. Kendall bor
rowed,, wds obtained roTOPiERSONS
WHO LEND MONEY -FOR THE
PROFIT, i They DID NOT KNOW
THE USE HE INTENDED TOM AKE
U 11. -lJiere is nothing in the trans
action that Mr. Kendall or his friends
should "feel any unwil)ing:ness to lay be
fore the public," &c. ,
Here is a direct contradiction of the
whole storv this man; now tells. Now,
this transaction is altogether degrading
then, it was ' highly creditable" , Now,
it is asserted that Mr. Kendall was a
commodity in market : then, he " could
not be purchased or intimidated." Now,
he borrowed the 81200 on condition that
he should come but against Mr. Adams's
administration; then he got it "Ow cow.
We have said na such thine. -The Edi
ad i e nost inaaentiat for; 0f the KentuckT ReperorMrtCK
world. I am resolved tolibrAnA i.;m ' W.ca'is i,orn.aA iv,f t:
I
andsiuerdenary, he wrote to Mr. Kendall
as follows, vi2.t : ,
pon'thesuDjecfc of my note I am
atitl desirous to avail myself of yourer-
jas aa aiststaht editor. I hope that
jinx ah eligible salary and place
ntoe- he
press 4htthfc
make the Telegraph what the press, ac
pledged as the organ ol U en. Jack-
sonp administration oucht to be."
Was it possible that Mr. Green could
ilk so 111 of Mr. Kendall as he now
preendS, when he expected to elevate
theiTeleVraph by his aid and place him
at the mad of the most influential press
in tie woild ?" Mr. Kendall, however
not; appreciating the honor so highly as
perhaps he) ought, declmed the proposi
tion. He Itated to Col. Johnson in writ
ing and hil note was forwarded to Green,
tha he woilM not place himself in a stete
of dependence on : any, man, and would
not consent to be placed i at the head of
the;most lnluential press in the world"
on such a condition. Was this mercena.
ry Green iowever, did not give.tip the
hofce of eflfecting-an arrangement with
tlxiLt ungrateful -and bad man. and on
theJ 10th September, 1820, wrote Mr.
Kedall anotjiir letter, of which the fol
lowng are extracts, viz4 1
f 1 fully appreciate the suggestion
maje in your.letter to Col. Johnson which
he iad forwarded during my,, absence to
thejeast. You niust be aware that I give
thelhighest evidence of my confidence in
yotirjmega ty as well as talents, -when j
prdrpost to place you in my editoria
chair. l :.. "" : - . f
C For myself. I cannot well conceive
of a situation more jicceptable to a l.ttera
On the 26th August, 1829, Green fur
ther remarked on this same, point; -
f The Journal asserts, that we have ad
mitted that Mr. Kendall would be con
victed of perjury by a Lexington jury.
. T. The same, year, it violated itsjehar-"
ter, in illegally interferJngjsrithuW -p,
lie debt. , . -
8. The sameyear its ptizans:1begaii!
the proscriptive policy of discharcina eve-'
Iry poor manTrom their employ, who would
notyotene;uanjUCKef. j-jr
9tThe same year it Van ,iJt..two; attor. .
dali with perjury and to give that charge E.eJs tor tne othc?? ot f resident and Yce-
rorce cnauengeu wir, ivenuaii wonngan v-" vuvu j;o w-y
action for damages. It was to this pro- : 'a 1833 t fit excluded the peo-,
position, that we asked what chance ot ptc "um Farpipa;ion in me
iitirA TTftitdflll had he W a t.exinton important business of the board of direc-"
jury the distinction between bur state- torscalled the.m spies, " andsoughUa.
ment and the assertion t the journal, is coerce en to rpi mightbe un-
obvious. If Mr. Clay and his partizans wanea in w worKs oiviniquity
beHeve that Mr. Kendall was guilty, why . V; re sae-yer waeietf the pen-:
did they not indict, him for the offence? on fund, and refused to permit the gov-,
testimony was given in presence pt ""J'V" HaJ u" V-t "8 U rJ-
many witnesses. :ne cnarge is a. das vt " ; ,
r a t TTitrivt-ir . 1, 1. ii . I 12. 4 ihe same vear it set an its claims .
fare which Mr. Clay hat mgtd'mm
ime who had the virtue or independence w?i V"1" "fcukuy
to refuse their-support to his schemes oA ?er.Wld ":
i- i pressure and panic? tothe ruin:o thous-
- . J lands,-under the Tata-hope of ruling the
personal aggrandizement."
Yet that which Green has so d
t i.. :n.it..
oenounceu, lie now revivts, wiui ui v.cW n, thpnnw fp
junng i ie cnaracier oi mr. iveuuaiu f tn ittQVned Saul Alley, one
il . I " I . .i " v4
mus mauciousiy rupeais a iaiciuciw.i wK wx,-r:nw K
which he has himself publicly proclaimed r,nvotmtknt ;n uu UnH
tone 'A JDADJei UAiiUJnai r-
Let
echo answer.
.. Mr. .Kendall deems it necessary for the
present only to add, Wiat he is not and
never was "under personar. obligation to
Mr. Clav for any aid. or assistance, 'in
private business or public Advancement.-
He owes nothing to Mr. Clay's chanties,
tor ne never neeueu or ictei?u i
dition tKat several gentlemen members ofH ihan t be. P,?Ped. the he7..f
15. It contemptuously refused to sub
mit its books amfcpapersta a committee of
the People's representatives for fnvestiga
tion, . ' ;' : , . ' :
16. It seized against jtisticey lawj and
comrooaj-ight SJ5800j0 4frtfare People's
money, upon thohadow of k claim it had
set up the year before, V .. , -
IT T- triraafanarl fn eainra 4Ua ama
nothing to his friendship, to his justice, or inftmUHoa that had remained in its vaults.
w uiCWiuv.,r--.-r. I of the neonle s in
money and then dividends
Congress from .Kentucky, would become
his security" Now he obtained $1200
of Duff" Green, an acknowledged bank
rupt : then he borrowed it ' of persons
who lend money ' for profit." Now, the
man who lent it k new that it was to pay
off his debt to Mr. Clay ; then the persons
of whom Mr. K. borrowed it did not
Jmow ihe use he intended to make of it.n
Let Mr. Green reconcile all this, if he
can, with his present assertions, not for
getting that the evidence of Mr. Kendall
in the Senate of ; Kentucky, now quoted
by him, had been publihed in the Tele
graph six weeks before I I
Out At many passages- in the Telegraph
in which Mr. Green evinces his total dis
belief in the charges be now presents, one
oniy .wiu oe auuucea on mis noini. ii is
trom his paper ot bth August, lby, while
Mr. Kendall was absent
nt from thetU:yUDQnefina
and more than a yeart ajter lW&J&-XoiLti&Ufa ,t
it USnthe power of such a man, aided by
thel party, to eive it Should youtake the
Editorial dek, I propose to announce your
naine as one ol the Editors, and thus se
cure to you all the respect and influence
wlych an association with me as partner
could give you. That control of the pa
i i iti .... i - -...., i
pursooum oe retained m my own nanas,
would follow as matter of course tinder
anr arrangement; for in all matters where
difference of choice or opinion arises, it
is fiot to be expected that I should rehh
quish the vantange ground, which I have
purchased with so much, labor and risk.
Your power over, the press will be th
sanie. whether - you be an Editor or par
bw, wwajrs. reguiaieu ny our own good
sense w,hich I anv confident, would sel-
uAtin,-ii cici, lause a voiiision wlUl me
Upo the whole, I think it best to vpost
come
to his Honor.
the aerverest
. - .11 ,. i i.i 4.:
sprung irora mn man s ucai u had been removed from its custody,
lode, ana miusuce. out ncr nas Tt?&ieu -t o r tuu 1.1.
subject, of which the following is an ex-
payment of a larger debt. .
tin June orJuly, 1825, Mr. Kendal
had borrowed of Mr. Clay, as Executor
L of! Morrison's estate. 1500 dollars in notes
of the Commonwealth's Bank j in 1826
interest was paid, and the loan extended
for a year 5 this debt did not become fi-
.' nally due until about July, 1827.
! His evidence in the Senate of Kep-
t! tUcky, now quoted by Green, was pub
lished in the Telegraph of 25th Februa
ry 1828," and all the letters now referred
i te, for the purpose of sustaining the
; charees of the Telegraph, were published
in that paper of the 19th and 21st July of
the same year.
I Now let us see the charges and then
hear the evidence which Green himself
s has heretofore civen as to their truth or
falsehood.
J lln the Teleffranh of the 9th ult. after
-i adverting to a negotiation, opened with
31r,-Kendaii Dy Mr. uiay, in iat, reia
r tiye to Jan appointment at W ashington,
I Green says : f r -
i',Mr. Clay refused to give the price,
; when a new-tight sprung upon Mr. Ken
dal 5 he discovered that there must be
two parties to a bargain, and having first
made his own bargain,, turned States' ev
idence, became the most important wit
ness against his benefactor and friend.
Gen.-Jackson and Tom Moore lenew his
value'better, and instead of S 1500, they
gaye him 83000a year, and valliantly has
-lie fought tor them. Well mignt iir.
. Clay say that he had acted unwisely in
. withholding the bribe."
lathe Telegraph of the 9th uTt. the
editor, speaking of his visit to Frankfort
in September, 1826, &ci says i
f When I reached that place, Kendall
Was so sicjt fhat I could not see him. I
however consulted with judge Bibb,' now
of .the Senate, who told; me that Kendall
taa much dissatisfied with JMr. Clay,
chdrgep hini -witl ingratitude, and that he
believed thatbut for the circumstance
that he was indebted to Mr Clay i anid
so poor IkititeQ'Md'' niat payAhe debt, He
would not hesitateto'denounce him. As
I could not see Kendall.' he advised that
I should go to Lexington, and endeavor to
bring about a reconciliation between ;Mr.
Barry and my relative, Mr.:'John, Pope,
and'thus pave the way for a concert be-,
tweeti the Jackson ofd court nieri and the
relief party : assuring nievthat-if Barry
and Pope would act together,j and the um
tract, viz.
"It is true that the little property I
have saved from the wreck of what would
have been a large estate,! s pow unpro
ductive'; and that. am &t present chiefly
dependent upon this paper, not only for
support 10R my family," out for a remu
neration fpr those prospects of juture gam
and pohticat promotion, which would have
rexcarded my exertions inZMissouri."
Such Was the acknowledged condition
of this gene"0us man atlthe moment he
says he was to advance Mr. Kendall
gl200i I He was not only dependent on
a newspaper for the support of himself
ana lamuy, outtogetaiojig Mfitn tnat, was
egging ana oorrowing money irom one
enu 01 ice union tp tnejomer :
ims is conclusive tnat he had no mo
ney to leitd. It will now be proved, by
his ownltestimon v, that ne never did lend
the 120f dollars to Mr. Kendall. In
December 1827, Mr Kendall took nut
about 1300 dollars of the money he had
borrowed here, in a chckion the Bank
of the United States at Philadelphia, and
the negotiation ot this check brought up
on him numerous attacks from the Adams
papers, j Green came out in his defence.
In theTelesxaDh of 9th lAuril, 1828, he
undertook to give an account of the mat
ter ; and in an article of about a column,
made the following statements, viz
The facts in relation to this check
are highly creditable to. Mr. Kendall
and his friends through whom he was en
aDieu toDorrow t ne monev. cv ' .
They are sirtinlv these : Mr. Kendall
some years ago.purchased a tract 6f land
near rransiort, and ereetedg thereon a
paper mm. ine Durchase. and the ex
pense of improvement madejit necessary
ror mm to oorrow abouttwo thousand dot
lars.; Mr? Clay, as the Executor of Mr.
Morrison, came inlo possession of a sum
of Kentucky paper, then worth fifty per
cent, and loaned to Mtf. Kendall fifteen
hundred dollars equal to seven hundred
and. fifty dollars Although the Banks in
Kjentncky werehinder the control of Mr.
Clay's old Court friends!, ( which bv the bv.
yd onexauebf ;Mr; Clay'a change of p&l-
on mat question,; ;ino an means 01
uurrowing-trom them was cut off by the
proscriDtiim of partyi Mr, Kehdall had
tne independence to refuse to ratify the
transferipf his polUicalprinciples contem-
ptaiea 0 mr. viay. The payment of the
aeoi aue jvir. uiay lollpwed f as a Conge-
quenceM jwr. iiay retused to receive
payment m jentucKV paper and demand-
of character and honor had been publish
ed in the Telegraph. It is part ot An ar
ticle in reply to Col Stone, editor of the
New York Commercial Advertiserl who
had made a violent attack on Mr. K. and
is as follows : !
" We are not a little astonished that
Colonel Stone, who, himself, was thrown
early in life on his own personal resources
as ins only fortune, who has had to con
tend deeply with adversity, and to sail as
near the wind as he could steer, should
taunt Mr. Kendall for the poverty of his
means, upon which ne entered into me.
No, Mr. Kertdall was not poor, if he had
but little of the pelf of this world j h
had a capital, and an enviable one, with
which he started he had the first honors
of a distinguished college; mind.educa
tion, and morals; and this capital ne
has improved, ahd HOLDS GOOD TO
THIS DAYi"
Up to August 6th 1829, therefore, ac
cordingto the testimony of Mr. Green,
Mr. Kendall. had retained his il enviable
capital,"" (lmind, education, and MO
RALS.'" althouffh all the evidence he
now quotes to prove the reverse, had
been published in the Telegraph more
than a year before !
isut it may be said that what Mr. Green
writes and publishes is no evidence b
what he thinks. I hat the columns of the
Telegraph afford a very uncertain index
to the editor's real opinions in relation to
men or principles; - is topbbvious to be
aoubted. But MfTKendall is hot obli
sed to rely upon ,this very uncertain evi
dence of the real? opinion entertained by
Mr. Green, atjter all the evidence now
adduced nad been republished in his own
paper, 1 He afterwardsirave Mr. Kendal
the highest evidence of his confidence'in
nis integrity, m such a manner ana un
der such circumstances, that his sinced
ty cannot be called-in question.
We have seen tfiat Mr. Kendall's evV
dence in the senate ot Kentucky was
published in the Telegraph of the 25th
Februarv, 1828, .and his private letters
now quoted in that paper of the 19th and
necessary to pay Kendall'a-debt ta Mr. ted specie, thus doubling the! original debt.
So hetafteraitl the evidence In the
Senate of Kentucky ; & the private lettersi
new quoted by Green, to prove Mr. Ken
dill ungrateful and mercenary, had been
published in the telegraph ; atter the Ed
itor had bought up this ungrateful and
nercenary man With a bankrupt's prom
iie of the loan of 1 2dQ dollars payable fif
teen months after date, we have hinu pri
vately assuring the object of his present
ibels, that he had the HIGHEST"
cinfidence in his " INTEGRITY, " seek
ng to place him in his Editorial Chair
t4give him all. ' the respect and influ
ence" he.aspired to himself, and expect-
ng to make the telegraph the most in-
2lst July following, . Yet onthe lUth ofWz.alf?l ZMp06
August, 1828, ne, iMr. ureen, wrote Mr. r' '"-r
Kendall a letter of which theiollowmg is
an extract, viz.
I wrote the other day to Colone
Johnson . and suggested to him a proposi
tion to you about which I bad a long and
confidential conversation. I would write
to you more at large, but prefer that "you
should see him and hope soon to hear
trom you. ' It you think that any induce
ment in my power to offer can locate you
at Washington as an assistant editor,
will write to you giving my views more
in detail. 7y
pangs he ever felt, , Mve on thepu1iVstbck, because the deposites
mt mn's heartless msrrati- ,1 r , v. . vT
and still rests with.confidehce, on a senti
ment uttered (he knows Bot hoff sincere-
lvi by Mr. Jiay ninvseii j.rum
mighty, and puo Lie justice certain
is
' IN TIIE MIDST OF REVOLUTION. "
Who does not ieinember the annuncia
tion last winter in the Senate chamber
that we' were in the midst of a revolution;
and who does not now perceive that the
orator was correct for nee? " The revo
lution then proclaimed, is completed to the
verv letter in Pennsylvania last win
ter the Pennsylvania Delegation in Con
press stood, seventeen for the Bank, and
e I even , against it. But wej have ; gone
th rough, a re vol utionary procgess, and .the
election just overy germinated, .in the
choice of seven teen" members" against the
Quential- press in the world, " with" the
aid of his character nd talents!!
1 Let Mr. Green, if he can, reconcile all
lis with the opinions he now expresses of
Ilr. Kendall, predicated on tacts as well
known to him then as they are now.
I But no exploded libel upon Mr. Ken
dall is too foul for Green to receive and
csirrnlafp. In a note trv his nrtir.lp nf
9th ult. he makes the following remark
viz. :
He fMr. KV was charged with perf
jyry by the Kentucky Reporter, and chal-
lenged to test the issue before' a Ken
fpcKy jury, and reiused to do so."
ureen, shall answer himself on this
point also. In reference to this identical
lhallehgeof the Reporter, he remarked,
in his Telegraph ol Auguit22d, 1829, as
follows, viz.
w From the notice frequently taken of
r. Clay, the amliated presses argue that
the republican party stand in great fear
of the war, pestilence, and famine,' po-
titician; by its own showing, how prodi
giously fearful must the coalition be of
A.moa Kendall or a man who, by the
fame of his 'talents alone, stands before
htttblic, aid who prostrated the Goliah
f the West by the simple sling and stone
of trpth! But it see.ns there is one spot
n thia tree country where Amos Kendall
may be aisailed with impunity. Can
iron conceire where this spot is? It is the
Identical place where murder, oy a par-
act revolution a perfect turnings the r ta
bles.
But a short time is passed since the
government of Pennsylvania expressed it-
.-4 mm - -to-.
self in tavorof the re-charter ot the Kank;
and her delegation in Congress voted for
the measure. ; We were however in the
midst of a revolution : and last winter the
Governor and Legislature of Pennsylvan
ia proclaimed in a voice ot thunder their
hostility to the monster. ?
The revolution however was not confi
ned to this state. It has gained its one
member of Congress fsom Lousiana, where
we never had a vote: one additional from
Illinois, six additional from Georgia: and
many more will be added by the coming
elections; 1'
It has revolutionized Senators Bell, of
New Hampshire, Sprague of3Iaine, Fre
rmghuysen of ew Jersey, and doubtless
Southard of the same jstate.... Poindexter,
Leigh and others wilt also undergo the
searching operation, j ' '
Connecticut too hasi been' .within two
hundred votes of a complete : revolution.
18. it authorized its President to aDnlr
to Congress for a re -charter, and places
119 011UIUCJ3 aUU 91UVM1UIUCI3 Oil lllCjeV-
eral Congressional tickets jp the country,
tor election ny the people.
19 To secure their election, it is now
spending'thousands, arid hundreds of thou
sands of dollars, one seventh of which is
the people's money. - v ' . -
20. It has, from, the commencement of
its charter to the present: time, opposed a
gold and silver currency, the only curren
cy known to the constitution; substituting
in lieu thereof, paper prornis.es to pay. ,
Fellow Freemen I these Jare facts thai
have been proved to the world,. . '1 v
; FOMEiGNi JTEMSu t ! ' " ' 'X
..Whfen on Miguel jraV at Palhma, he
aiirnieu ac uie .
cbmpamed
Alartd-Feraricriedibutiin thwrf.
such, 4 mpnstert sayinaf whicht Cfce f
urauc lunaius mc c-wng, aim Uoapietl.,
his fist in hil face, at which JDon Jiguel '
was much, en raged. In passing out or the "
city, the Don was hissed and besnatter-
ed with mud. ; f 5 I -
Professor Gantuj well known py is His
tory of Cojroa, is deadanotherj polftical
victim in the dungeoiiir Austria Al
so another has shared the same fate, Pro
fessor Bianchi,; rector of the coilece of
VJ.119.1em ut rnvia.
Arrests increase JnLombardjv- y7
.The whole number dead rchblefa in
Gottenburg is 20CfA It has reached Stock
holm, ard the PrincelRoyalv as waa done
at Paris in 1832, has enacted ih6'Mdicii
lousTarce of walking throught the wrd
of Jbe; hospital to encourage the siek.
jpsepn nona parte nas made a handsome
nation to a person,- wilo rendered r him
essential service at Kochefort, in his flight
in 1815. - ;, ; .; - v. -'
Jif anteaui Berge wine merchant
showing neaiTylxnthiiatamr voters- re-tg; T11
yotutio5iedOT iheort
vT.- eJiX-!s4; 1 ktlMnff those SO-OllO tniYlha fnr il .T fonltalv
e . JZ
months.
We might stretch out our list of the par
ticulars of this revolution; but enough is
shewn to exhibit the foresight of Mr. Clay
in his formidable annunciation ot the e-
vents to be brought about by himself and
his friends, fonto their exertions we must
attribute many of the changes which have
strengthened the bands of the democratic
party, ihe revolution was not entirely
bloodless either, and the panic orator, told
us it would not be.
WHAT HAS THE BANK DONE.
Here is a catalogue of its meritorious
deeds! Read, ad wonder that such an
institution should ask for a charter from
freemen!
1. In 1819, it nearly ruined the coun
try byfthe excessive overtrading it had in
duced through its extensive loans
2. In 1828, it first assumed the charac
iizan of tk$ coalition, has been committed terot ' a great electioneering machine."
Aftr;4U0.ting he charg he Report
ter, Green proceeds:
I Generous offer! What chance, think
ye, would. Amos Kendall stand for ob
taining justice before a Court and a ju-
Wj t Lexington, with. Clay and Wickliffe
m& counsel lor nis enemies i wovca tus-
micein this case be any more likely io be
Obtained from a Lexington jury than it
oas in the case of the murder of Benning?
If a. Jackson editor may be wantonly and
Imaliciousl v murdered and the murderer
lacauitted bv a Lexington jury how much
On the 2d of September, 18218, still jless chance of obtaining justice shall a
anxious to secure a close connexion with Uate Jackson editor have when prosecuting
the man he now aeiounces:as ungrateful line murder of his reputation:'
3. In 1831, it authorised its President
to spend as, much money out of its vaults
as he chose, although one seventh of its
whole stock belongs to the People of the
United States: to bribe presses and issue
such publications as wouia prejuaice uie
n: ' Jl - ' rJ '.f iLl T 1, ' -
reopie in lavur ui iue jiau.
4. It then aUo began to lavish its trea
suresupon members of Congress.
5. In 1832,11 denounced the President
of the United States, as a violator ot, law,
and assimilated mm to counierieiung lei
ons. - - -
, 6. The same year it expended, thous-
andsand tens of tjiousands ot the People s
money, in endeavors tp corrupt the eiec
t.ve franchise"' M i
aci jc, was auerwaras mcicea - un.: c
pretended to have picked up, tlTe cord the,'
man uau useu io nana; niinseu.: and was
making money hand over hand by exhib
iting it along the Boulevards, selling it
in small bits to the gaping gulls, who did
not perceive that the cord, would prove as
interminable in length as their credulity,
j O'Connel l has addressed a long tetter
to Lord Duncannon, enumerating the
grievances of Ireland, andj pledging his
co-operation with the ministry to reform
the House of Lords, and render the peer
age elective 1 f?-"
The Procuradores deputies : of the
Spanish cortes have demanded, of Queen
Christine, a Bill of rights. f ,'
The high ranks of the clergy possess
one fourth, or fifty roil Hons of dollars of
the public property in Spain, while the
poor . cu rites, as in England, are: left to
starve. ,5." ' 'V : : T
I Ah Dear Our friends on the other.
side of the question, are endeavoring to!:
give the rhys and wherefores that they arc .
minus in the Sutev Qe says the Hicksitea
deceived them to the tune of, lOOCTbr aoi
another, that the Orthedai commenced
exationsHsuit, x few ksgo, against :
Ihe Hicksites, and that iade all the dif
ference another cries, u U' because for
eisners were permirte4tdrbte layinthfe
sin at their door i bat the sase editor
on a right; reason j, he says It was wrtftis
bis jrienna, me rann xorie;MBaa'nTyQiesjt
enough'? fiPtypfiiMffJ.
mucUthe toi&H&sonXQt pot tfarry ing the - J ;
Sta'in ihtfMck Spiceha'd tov&ijig'Ze$Ji
it.
1