ft A L &IO H 8 T Aft, A N 1) N o it rii C Aft aja:Ni-iiT-t-4-:. :
MESSRS. HAYWOOD & MONTGOMERY
It appean that these gentlemen met at Chap
el Hill on Thursday last, and expressed .their
views on the inleregting-topics of a public nature
wkich are now agitating the.publie mind to a
very eonsiderable length. And we Mart it,
moreover, on the authority of a correspondent,
in whose statements we can repose the most im
plicit reliance, that the Doctor was completely
jerked out of joint, by Mr. Haywood, on almost
every subject which they touched. ' So sensible
were the good people present, of the certainty of
this fact, that a very powerful and vivid impress
ion was produced in favor of Mr. Haywood.
- There has been for some time past a respectable
majority of the good people in the vicinity of
Chapel Hill in favor of sound principles and
salutary measures; and it is supposed that this
majority, at the ensuing election, will be
greater than ever. They had a ' -'pted the bel ef,
previous to having luard Mr, Haywood, from
the representations which had been industriously
circulated by liis enemies, that he was a dull &
insipid man, equally destitute of sound informa
ation and sound views, of practical talents arid
enlightened experience. But the scene was
completely changed, when they had an opportuni
ty of hearing him; and, from what we can learn,
there has been rarely a moie favorable impress
ion made upon the minda of the people, during
our congressional discussions, than was made
upon the minds of the people near the Uui mai
lt is said that he drove the Doctor from one
position after another, in quick succession, until
iei most willingly parted with one custom which
I16 has almost universally put in practice hare-
lofore, that of making the last speech.
On the question ol the sub-treasury, the only
arguments which the Doctor could bring p to
ward off and weaken the effect of the powerful
uaftcry which was directed against him by Mr.
Haywood, were drawn from the demagogical
sources upon which he has so long resorted
for succour and relief. He appealed to the low
est passions of the people endeavored to fas
ten upon them tho conviction, that the public
money, as it has been hitherto kept, was merely t
usea ny Danuing corporators lor tho pur
pose ol building up large and splendid fortunes
' tor themselves at the expense of the pepplebi.
Jected to the depoaitariesof the public monies re
ceiving interest (or the hasard whieh thry encoun
tered in keeping the public funds; and also expa
tiated at length npon the monstrous abuse wh:ch
was-hrvohred in permitting these orparatonr to
usa the public treasure in their ordiuary commer
cial speculations; and represented the sub-tras-ury
scheme ts be a real popular machine, which
would constitute a sovereign corrective for these
crying and glaring eaomiiti2U -. lie also alluded
I to the inconsistency of the Whigs in supporiinon
Whig, and in now opposing it when pressed up
on the attention of Congress by a democratic
President. We are informed that the views and
remarks of the Doctor, on all these points, were
so -loathsomely demagougical as to turn the
strrnget stomach; and we are informed, with an
eqnal degree of gratification, that the untenable
nessand vulgarity of his views were subjected
toaglaring exposure by Mr. Haywood.
On the subject of the Publie Lands, the Dor
tor, it is said, too, was driven to the most mis
erable and desperate expedients for the purpose
of extricating himself from the very awkward
and unpopular position in which his shuffling,
double-faced, and time-serving policy has placed
him before the people. He endeavored, for a ve
ry considerable length of time, to make it appear
that his vote in favor of the division of the sur
plus revenue among the States, in 183C, was in
effect voting for an equal division of the public
domain among all the Slates of the Utaion, agreea
bly to theirlederal population; and also endeavor
ed to make it appear that Mr. Van Buren, on the
subject of dividing the public lands amon? the
J es, was equally as acceptable to the South
ern Slates with Mr. Clii'y,if not more so; for that
Mr. Clay's celebrated land bill, was a proposi
tion to graduate the public lands much mere ob
noxious in principle and In effect than any nystero
-of graduation which was advocated by Mr. Van
Buren, simply because Mr. Clay's land bill con
tained a clause in it, proposing lo concede to the
SjU.teiio,Mich, Ilia land. jniEhlboiluafedrten,
fer cent, "upon their value." From all these posi
tions, we understand, he was most signallv re-
t that the latter gentleman completely sewed
him up in his sheets and blnnketr, in regard to a
resolution which was introduced by the Doctor
at the last session of Congress, declaring in bar-
irn terms turn ine puirittj -tymnnrn T?mHuttnetj
a species of property which belonged equally
to all the States in the confederacy, (or' some
thing lo that effect;) and that they ought to be e
qnally distributed among all the States. Mr.
- Hay wood made the inconsistency of this feaoliP
tion, when compared with all the Doctor's pre
vious votes, perfectly apparent; and demonstra
ted to the people that the resolution was merely
intended to effect the election at home, and that
the Doctor had not the slightest idea of the res
olution ever being acted on, or that he would
. be compelled to exhibit his hand upon it. The
Doctor, we are intormed, got along opon this sub
ject with a degree of clumsiness, which was cal
culated to inspire his political adversaries with a
depercpTivictiontf hi devotion to party and of
his trimming course in Congress, (ban they had
hitherto cherished; and that his frionuxwereJ
most painfully afflicted by. the exhibition of
political imbecility, which passed in review be-
" ffe tttem.
On the subject of abolition, too, the Doctor w
placer in an awkard predicament, in many par-
. liculara. He explained bis rote in favor of re-
- caiving a psiitioiv pray ing-the establishment, of
a commercial Intercourse between the United
States and Havti.in the most bumrlinu snd nn.
axtitfd'.'tnry manner which can welt be conceiv.
J; anJ on the subject of voting against the bill
which was introduced in thn Legislature in
133l,prrfhiMting the extension of Instruction to
learn that he was completely annihi-
lated. The reason which he gave for this vote,
must convince every unprejudiced mind that the
"Doctor ielt himself in an extremely tight place,
to say the least of it.
- Tim reason, which weafe,,credlhly informed,
.that the Doctor assigned, at 'Chapel Hill, for
voting against this salutary measuie, was, that
it would have been a violation of the Constitu
tion, inasmuch as it abridged the rights of the
master to uxc his slave property as he pleased! ! !
VVondeful ingenuity ! ! ! Inconceivable sagaci
ty ! Joseph S'ory, Chancellor Kent, or Dan
iel Webster would beseixed with'peroxysms of
fear and trembling should they come in contact
with this most profound constitutional lawyer of
the age. Why, I e might as well tell one that it
would be a violation of the constitution to pass
a law to hang one of the slaves of anindivil
ual who might prove sufficiently chivalrous to
take the life of another of his domestics.
On the subject of appointing the committee
of investigation in Congress, ton, the Doctor we
have been informed, appeared to be completely
at sea," without the benefit of map, chart, or com
pass lo guide him in his difficult and devious
courgp. The charge preferred against him, by
Mr. Haywood, was that. Instead of selecting the
committee by ballot agreeably to the long estab
lished and republican mode, or t'wj voce, that the
Doctor was in favor, of committing tho choice ol
this responsible body of men to the Speaker,
which was in effect, going for a packed jury, in-
asmWa
and servilo a partizan, as to hold the breath of
his nostrils and all worldly goods at the pleas
ure of li is great author and disposer, "the grea
test and best of men." This charge we aro in
formed, was ably sustained by Mr. Haywood,
who placed his accusation against him on the
ground that ho had voted against the salutary
mode of appointing the committee by ballot, and
voted in favor of choosing the committee rr
voce, which could not be effected, except by a
voto of too thirds of the house; and that neither
party having two thirds of the members, .there
was no possibility of effecting the choice in this
way; and that, consequently, the Doctor had no
"a1ternativeTeirTiTmTulTo"v6tc Tn Ta"v
piitting tlie choice into the hands of the Speaker.
The Doctor turned end twisted a good deal a
bont the matttr; Bii.l wi are informed got out ol
it altogether in a very obscure and unsatisfactory
manner. : - - -- -
In regard to the annual expenditures of the
government, we are alsoiufoimed that the Doc
tor appeared inTarher a barer eonditiom- Heen-
deavored to reduce tl.e expenditures of the pres
ent year, which Mr. Haywood put down at
$36,000,000 by deducting from the amount large
items of expenditure which had been applied to
fortifications, whieh he failed -to- prove -to-beei-
ther expedient or necessary; bv deducting items
airrotrnt 'of Mr. Adam's- ciptx&ttux, ai.f tttj
one year of his administraton; such items, as
vyog ILbareJjef n. Jrumpete.d ahrflaiLogaintt thfi
administration of that gifted but peculiar person,
intones of condemnation, which would have rent
the air. In regard to the expenditures of i838,
which Mr. Haywood put down at 833,000,
000, we. are infoimcd thnt the. Doc tor was not
able to budge at all, or, at all events, that he gave
such a wretched and unsatisfactory exposition
of the matter as failed to satisfy any person pres
ent, except his warmest partisans in the election.
He pretended to assign, as an excuse for tho in
crease of the public expenditures, that the wants
of tho government had been vastly multiplied
since the administration of Mr. Adams had ex
pired; but making all due allowance for the en.
largement of these wants, the Doctor must pos-.
sess a fund of ingenuity which we have failed
to meet with in any other member of his party,
or in a member of any other party, il he can
give any satisfactory explanation of the causes
which brought the expenses of the government,
by a sudden jerk, from the amount of $14,000,
000, which was the largest sum expended du
ring Mr. Adam'a administration, to $38,000,000.
which is the largert amount which has been ex
pended during the administration of Mr. Van
Buren.'
We have been also informed, by our corres
pondent, that the Doctor accounted as wretched
ly for Mr. Woodbury's neglect of his duties in
relation to the Swarlwout and other defaulting
jeajeM.h..didfof.iiny pttordelact of faithful-
ness in the administration. It is said,in fact,
else than a miserable patched up wen ol sopnis
try. It is well known that Swartwout had not
given any bond to the government during Urn
last three yeara in which he served the country,
or rather, served fiimSelf c his own-interestSrW
' the- wpaciTy o? 'jfy.
so equally known, that it the Comptroller ol the
Customs, had effectually and faithfully discharg
ed his duty, iu certifying tho amount of revenue
collected from time to time by Swartwout, that
bis fraud! upoft the government would have been
detected before the disease had reached auch a
state as -to be lilerally without remedy.. For all
these gross abuses of trust and official confidence,
however, he gave very little better reason, thsn
the son of the convict gave for the misdemeanor
which elevated his sire to lha gallows, to wit:
that'aecidenta will happen in the best of fami
lies." And he was.enuallv unsatisfactory on
the subject of the general government bringing
its immense patronage to bear npon the freedom
and lha purity of the elective franchise. -
But, from all accounts, be was in n. partica-
lar so completely destitute of grounds npon which
to placf his feet, as he waa in relation to those
public services pertorned dy MriViri Buren,
which f nulled" Mm to bia bresent "elevation
There trie arbfthy representative f Eaculapiua
was said to have been as good a mum. Mr.
Haywood stated at length, and that-in the moat
.emphatic, manner, thejtthejninenlelaima of Mr
Clay to themof flattering confidence of the pub
lie, and asked, in the most earnest manner, what
Mr "Van fiorsn "KaTever done (o catTtiiinTo
the Preaidencyl Tliis, of course, waa a hard, and
we think, a very unfair question to the Doctor,
inasmuch as Mr. Haywood had no earthly reason
to believe that the Doctor cpuld answer it; for
after having tortured and racked his inventive
power to v very considerable degree, the only
answer he was able to render to the inquiry was, j
that the publie services of Mr. Van Buren spoke
(jr themselves far more inleligibiy-aad impul
sively than he was able to apeak for them; that
be had been minister to Britain, Governor of
the great State of New York Vice President, and
finally President of the U. S.J end further, the
honorable deponent testified not respecting the
pretensions of Mr. Van Buren to the public
regard.
We have been Informed that ttie-Doctor, in
terlarded his speech with some of the most in
sufferable and abominable appeals to the passions
of the people, which were ever listened to in
this country. He was continually talking of
" you the people," and of all his acts being gui
ded by their will and pleasure; that he would do
nothing which was for their good, if their oppo
sition was manifested in relation to the set; and
it appeared that he was so subservient to lite
people, that he was almost willing to cut their
throats, burn their barns, or poison their springs
or they; cattle, if instructed to do ao by a ma
jority of the voters in this district.
He who now professes to be against all sorts
of banking institutions, escaped very badly from
the charge of having voted for various banking
institutions while a member of the State Legisla
ture. In "relation to having voted for Martin's
celebrated bill, which proposed to erect a bank
was commonly called a bill of abominations by
the ablest and most patriotic men in the State
he "said, we are Informed, that if this bill trad
become a law, the people would have been re
fie ve JTr7m e very Tpccies of taxafibn," So "asToii
shinj would have been the curative propcrities
of tho measure!! "Odds Dickens!" and has it
come to this, that a politician, whoso cranium
on the subject of banking is so opa pie that it
wo'uld split liko a pumpkin, woro a luminous ray
on that subject to enter its da:k chiiriihera, is ad
equate to the tjsk of discovering all the proper
ties of tlie finger of Midas in an institution which
the most enlightened, patriotic and candid states-
mW'eraiTft'lTggaruell aTbSiiTiOTglnwlTh-trll-
the ills which were fabulously ascribed to the box
of Pandora? , . V erily, this sago representative
of Chatham, ofBurke, of .the younger Pitt, aud
of Tlirailibri," deserves to" have Ms" w-Is"d6m-fiir-1
rowed browncirUd with a "wrealh of James
town weed, for his most astonishing, yea, unri
valled financial penetration. . We divine, if he
Was placed at the head -of tlw-banking -institti
tions of the State, that the sheriffs and constables
would hereafter fade from the face of the land,
and take up their abodes among the fastnesses of
the owl, the racoon aud the opossum; and that
land, a 'to make afrit as rare a spectacle in the
Lt.),w.'asWW5 Wslir-snwwrsfcA
We learn from every quarter, in this district
that tlie prospwta'of MF.IxajfwoeiyaUcTihgi
and tlie Whigs have, every thing to encourage
their exertion;. Let ALL goto the polls, pnd
let no one have, tho mortification to say after thn
election, "my vote would have-tumed the scale.',
07" We have received two or three numbers
of t!io Albemarle Sentinel, a spirited Whigpaper
jurt commenced in lidenlort, by J ltd ah Delando,
l'sq. We cordially extend to the Editor' the
right hand of fellowship, and wish him much
success.
THE PROMISE & PltOFESSIOXTARTY.
" The greatest and best" of men was ushcr
c l into power with tlie most splendid professions
and promises playing upon his lips which were
ever yet pronounced by the tongue of mortal man,
or stamped npon the printed page. Every thing
was to be done fur the felicitation of the people
and for the purification and correction of our gov
ernment, which could be esteemed worthy the
hero's prowess or the sage's wisdom; and noth
ing was to be left undone which the dictates of
ardent patriotism could sanction, however simple
and unostentatious might be the act. But the
sceptre has been wielded and the royal purple
has been worn by thin self-styled Alfred; and how
many cf his magnificent promises has he re.
deemed! Had we not better propound the in.
quiry how many of his pledges have been left un-
violatedt And in giving an anawer to this ques
Imhh ve-4o ayf-without- ttto'-ahadow- of . aa ap.
prehension thatwe"iwni mbet with a just or
aucwssfukcpfltlffli
Jackson acted in fact, during the whole pf his
protracted administration, as if it had been his
studied determination io see how indefinitely far
he could travel in hi doings and measures from
the prinlad Jecord, of ilia promises; and if such-
had been bis deterrmnauony he most certainly
carried that determination into plenary execution.
Yet this' ia the great, and glorious, and well-do
ing chief in whose footstep Mr. Van Buren ha
taken a solemn, row to tread. . Is not ibis prom..,
ise of itself sufficient to cause the honest hearted
yeomanry of this country to regard him with a
supreme degree of execration and to stimulate
them to hurl him with loud acclaim at the next
election from hir present eleTationt Forit iain
substance a promise to do all the harm consistent
with hia power and aa little good as possible.
DEMOCRATIC DECENCY.
The Federal Van Buren party is eternally com
plaining of the rudeness and indecency of the
Whig- partys iWe -aheuld- like no know with
what show of jnstice the only genuine democrats
can complain of the want of forbearan e on the -part
of the Whig party. When Mr.Wise, a
distinguished, chivalrous, and patriotic states-
ruirr from the anetent and democratic coalmen.
wealth ot Virginia, ia honored, week after week
in many of the Van Buren journal, with the
dignified and nattering epitljet of murderer; and
whenthewhole vocabulary of Billingsgate
Tang and acrtndal ia daiTyTnd KourTy riacked
In qnest of the vilest and most insufferable epi
ihet of scandal and opprobrium, for the purpose
of being east upon such illustrious men aa Henry
Clay, Daniel Webster, and Wm. Henry Harri
son But to come to to the point, worthy neigh
bor of, lha Standard, wejhlnk Jou hlTtapplicid
the appellation of murderer to Mr. Wise on more
than one occasion. Well, we hope you will
mete out the same severe justice to the- distin
guished worthies of y&ur own party, which you
tomduLsito
of the Whig party. General, Jickson Once In
single combat with young Dickenson of Tennes
see, shot that y oQog man after his pistol had been
discharged, and when he stood perfectly disarm
ed and helpless before him. Mr, Wise only
wounded his antagonist in the arm. Now, if you
are not willing to dub General Jackson a mur
derer, when his guilt in matters of blood is ao
incomparably greater than that of Mr. Wise, we
will eeruyty conclude that you are aiming to
mhke flesH bf one person and fish of another.
HON. HENRY W. CONNOR.
From all accounts which have yet reached
ua on the subject, we are at liberty to infer that
the choice scrap of democratic republicanism
whose name is prefixed to this article. Is most
wofully harrassed by his Whig opponent, Gen.
Edney; not after the manner, lo be sure, in which
the Esgle is' teaxed by the Bee Martin or the
Mocking Bird: but in the same way in which
the Ciow or the Black bird may be worried by
the mocking bird, that is, taking him off and
and telling bad tales upon him. It ia said that
the General is invincibly tenacious, at every tax-
gathering at which they may chance to meetof
twitting Major Connor on the subject of his hav
ing been chairman of tlie committee on the post
oITicS Tor min "jr eariyind Ifial lit neWlnao'e i
report to the house but once, which was render
ed verbally. The Major having htiherte been
considered, too, one of the fairest samples of
modern democracy a
his constituents as such, the General takes care,
jre are informed, to remind him of having recent
ly returned from Washington in one of the most
flaming carriages which the mechanical ingenui
ty of the Northern chief could supply an arti
cle of use and luxury in relation to which tho
modern democrats profess, we believe, to enter
tain sentiments of frceaing horror, as one of the
most obnoxious emblems of Federalism; although
these good democrats, at .02Q?jiU! J? ifl5S
no peculiar feeling of opposition to owning car
riages and riding in them themselves. But we
suppose they are.on the subject of the luxuries of
;life,;af tire jat Ap
relative to the enbjeet of slavery tli'ey only bate
these luxuries ln the abstract, while thff ad
mire them most prodigonslyln practice.
AnoLlur italanct of reward ftp Tar lizan serai
ee. William Selden, of Virginia, was brought
out by the Administration in opposition to the
Whigcandidate for Congress in the Richmond
District. He was defeated the people rejected
office-seeker his reward. He has appointed him
wW,,9:Mi-- i.V
patronage ot the Government into conflict with
iha frmsdoml
our liberties and republican institution will soon
be a wept away. Freemen, come to. the rescue!
A mil fir Ihote to rrack vht apprtve Dr.Mtnt
ftmerg'i xte tt receive the petititn (a open a
diplomatic intercturti with the black Republic
of llayti. -i
In 183G, tho Richmond Whig predicted thnt
in 1844 the following paragraph, would emanate
from the " tarn peur" of the Richmond Enqui
rer: " His Excellencv Don Cesario Pomnonio.
Minister from Hay ti, Was' presented to tlie Presi
dent yesterday, and received with great distinc
tion, it is reported that Ulhello Jonnson, esq.
a son of the Vice President, is to represent this
government at tlio court or Hayti."
The Richmond Enquirer will thank the Don
tor for voting to receive the Nantucket petition,
which contemplates the commencement of di
plomatic intercourse at a'much earlier period than
184 1 -to say nothing of the profound acknowl
edgments of Othello Johnson, Esq.
Mr, Van Buren' I Loyally io General Jackson.
When a publie man prfesse a warm degree
of devotion to the people and their rights, It gen
erally operate in his favour. It cannot be readily
believed that he will really desert the right of
the people immediately after they have elevat
ed him to power and place. He will have to
incur the combined odium of ingratitude and in
consistency, if he docs dese't the people after a
Ion succession or loud and splendid profes
sion bt devotion tothem7FlTira
ociat from necessity. But when a puhliri man,
nn the contrary, gets into power by continually
professing his devotion to any one great man,
and thi purely for the porpoae of advancing hia
own interest, the people hare not only a right
to aspect the purity of hi feeling in relation
to them and their ughtai "Kuf iTiey have cause
to spurn him from their confidence for his gross
contempt of their rights in preferring the favor
of any one man to them. Mr. Van Buren, previ
ous to hia election to the Presidency of the United
States, was continually nratincr about the glory
he enjoyed in eerving tinder soch a chief a Gen.
eral Jackson, 'mere wa no otner enjoyment
half ao exquisite and delee'able with him aa that
of beinir occasionally honored with a benevolent
amile from General Jackson.. The people ware
me"ra .vlle trash yes, Ignoble rermin, .when
compared with General Jackson: for he expect
ed lo operate upon their affections through the
influence of General Jickson; he expected to
conciliate the good will ef tbe people, not by
the value of hi aervtee and ottering 10 inem,
but by the power which another great man waa
to exert ever their will tor him. Thi species
of aervile devotion to the King in Eng'aad,
atampa an individual asatoryano a aycophanU
It would seem in this country, to indicate sorae-
thinrr arreatlv more abhorrent to the feelings of
the people than Federalism. It Intirrtateff .a dj
aire to concentrate a perfect 'degree of control o
verihe popular will in one man, which isesleu
lated to -ebllterate the- will f the people from
oor ytem of Government enrtrely.Thi
would of eourse convert this Government into
aa perfect a dr apotism a any on the face of thi
earth.- Yet this la a principle of political action
which I Mr. Van Buren ha evinced the pose
slonofln the fulnoa of Its vigoi; andlf etherj
nublie men ahcnld he condemned and vilified
pear, ought to be seornen ana conueraneu oj
every genuine republican in tha country for ear
rfing out in . practice one oj the mosj) odious
principles ef action which infest deapotie courts
ASTOUNDING DISCLOSURE.
VlerH lltnett-Jlleu! Read, and judge fir your
' . ... arW
rttt . . , . , . "
The auhjoined letter, ton by our late,
ty, has been funtished us by gentlemen who ! miaid end Jec;l his awn polincal frieoils
heard it read by Mr. Leake at several pub- 1,1 our Ui.trirj. and csined them ia become the un-
lie places. They assure- us that it ia the '?TloI,W",,",,, tll''',
r .u 1 -r- i which fact would not aoptMrt aorjuifv .
substance pf the origin if indeed it ia not, , -fc my ,h. 0(l 0 Tar
in its most important particulara, a literal ; nichmund Court, I driej to ihM and pro
transcript. Their notes, token during 4he i ducsdtha Journal, and chllnsrj full and thorouth
reading;, enabled them to recollect almost the
exact term used by the writer. We are 1
aisuretl that tlie original copy, if it can be !
- . - . B . . . fJ . . ...
forced from those enabled to furnish it,
III
ten J still more to arouse the indignation of
honest men of all parties, and will enpoae
in all its naked deformity, the unprincipled
character of the demagogue who now solicits
the Jtes of i virtuous and intelligent peo
ple) Albright store, UraXoe,
June,-1839. V
fTaUer F,. Leake, Eeq: s
Data Bia: Your letter haa bean recaivsd.
You ask for mo' inf rmaiioo relative to the votes'
and conduct of Mr, Dobtrrv, bn in Congrats,
and refer to a latter I wrote Mr. Holmra laat month,
which, you Male, you bars aesn, occ I am vary
sorry our (Hand Morrla has read Uia latter publicfyi
Ha oui(bt to bav bad mora mom. It waa never
intended lo be thus read, but on the Contrary, air
ly and secretly. Then il would baa worked
wondera, and could not have been contradicted.
I am afraid now, Debrrry will produce hia Jour.
nahtai.dup tba whofe-of it Hoirat vbia may
ba, don t' giva up; Wl Mminue Wtarjfctin hh
having voted for all ih appropriations, except on
of about , a million Sud a quartan If you aasert
with eon ftdenoe, eome will guUetl, anJ yob Will
gain their votea, which ia all that wa. want. If De-
berry thould not. hehii Ju(.n!. JPU will jhwi
nava a oecitiea auvaniaga ovar mm, wnico you
must not fail to improve. You know that all the
appropriation billa era aettlad ganarally in "Com'
mine of the Whole," where Ihry ar fully debated,
compromixed . and placed in that abap by lha ma
jor iiy, which inturea their final paeaag after thry !
are reported to the Houae. where tliey are vary
wlJoni further debated; eonaequenlly, they paaa by
eilent vale. Well, I advias, that if Debrrry
should unfortunately have hia Journal, make bim
ahow where bia naineir reetrjed against any of
ihein, and intial that lha Jouinala ought to ahow if
aid dpp6Mny oTlheroTlbii 6Tcouraltry m
"not do, for lha raaaon already given.
It la a devilish good plan, and aomathing like the
j-ena I adopted whan I broke Barringer down in Ibra
PietncW. I jour the Journala, w$nl to. the vptera
hou,hovml theat hara the-appropriaiion biHi
had paaaed without any recorded eppoeilion, charged
Barringerwilh having voted for them, and wheal
found an v ehnexiousbiU had paaaad in hi abacenc
from the Hoote. I would read the -mm, and of
courca.not. finding Jn nam among them, charge
that ha bad voted for it; and in this way 1 gained
great manv vole. 1 charged him, loo, with hav
ing voted for all lha nteeiiarg apprpriatini of
liovernmrnt, and abowed bia votea lor them, with
out further explanation: and aa ihry . naturally
appear "vert . large lo ' our Backwoodemen, I made
Ilia lUPfll l iU M uw vuiicuui.- wm, vmm nm
rd, and down he want, and so will any hypocrite
it. Jb
eoheequenc "waaTT Wa elect-
Unk t -lU aurcacd. by ajdimmished majority.-
iW ihmg oujfrjend M
: j remain, :
Your obVserv't &e"; : ,
We publish the above thus early, that Dr. Mont'
gomery or hi friends may, if they ehooae, furniS
the eriginal leltoK Hhuul i il ba given up, and w
find w have done th Doctor any injuatiea, w
pledge oiiraelre to Ink much pain to correct
the error, aa w now take In diiaeminste wbat
from th character of our informant, we cannot but
believe to be true. Register. -
From th Fayattevill Observer,
Lawhrnckvillb, July 18, 1839.
Dear Sir. You bav no doubt noticed th f.
tat recently Blade by my politW Vneiniaa lo inie'
lead and deeieva the people in relation lo my volv
on lb appropriation billa paaaed for Ih year 1838,
t th firat aad eecond eemion of the laat Uongreu.
My ompatitor, in hie apeech dolivered on lb 21
day of June, at vour County Court in Fayatleville,
charged ma with having voted for nearly all tbe ap
propriation for 1833. which amounted to mora
than Ihirty.eight Millions of dollara, and with In
eonsUtency in doing ao after 1 had so often eiclaim-
ed against th prodigal eipaudilurca ol lha ad nun
ial ration.
The charges were .repealed and urged in hi
speecbea at Montgomery Court, and also at A neon
Court, during Uie laat Iwe waeke. To ibee cbarg-
se often repeated, I .replied that Iff bad voted
for all the appropriation, I might atill have been
blamalcaa, aa lb adminialralion bad not only
called for thai, aum, but for a much larger amount
than wa eelullly granted) but I promptly denounc
ed ihea charges a utterly antra, knowing thai I
bad voteJ again! many of ih appropriation bills.
My competitor attempted al all lhaa place io eup
port iba charge by ataling that be had taller in hi
poaceuion from a member of Congreaa of thi
HuiBVataiin hat he bad lb Jimrrtal of Congreaa
baMavii.hirBv.Md. tbai. it did. Aot s ppesr.that J had
voted agslnal any of lbs appropriation bi la csespt
one of shout udUioo, aiiiabaUof dolUra, ajid
conveying, lb idea that I kad voted for all Ih rt
eicejit that and an olhortbu which b aaiu I had
nol voted, referring alo 'to page on the Journal,
lor jiroor or my having ao voted, and 1 waa chal
lenged to produce th Journal, that reference might
be had lo it, " 1
Tbe letters from the member of Congress to
which h"rtferred, weT called fir at Anaon and
Kichmoud Court, and were reluctantly produced,
and publicly read. I bey proved to have been
written and franked by th Hon. Wm. Montgom
ery ef the Raleigh District, on eilhem add meed lo
Mr. ..Hounea, editor of Hi North Carouniea, and
lb other lo Walter T- Leak, Can ef Richmond
county, bulb of which were placed in lb bands of
my competitor, and their content widely dieeemi
anted. Though 1 had III Journal of Congreaa re
ferred to, delivered to m latt winter al Washing
ton, It bad riot yeteomcte band, and I did not oo-
tain poetemon of il until Monday evening laat, tt
Richmond Court.
I gave th Journal critical elimination In tha
eourae of that evening and nasi morning, in refer-
nee to tbe appropriation bills, and found that a
number ol ihein, making appropriations to thee
mount ef twenlv-eil milliona on hundred and
eighty eight- iheaeand Iwa hundred and IhirtyoM
dollara, had paaaad" lha Houas without the yeas
and nays beio uasn on iotr paMaaa. i bal on
ih Minn of lb bill for which I did vole, th
yea and nay were laten on only one of IhemVof
one miiiion or dollar to auppraaa tha Indian boa-
tilitwa. lb yra and n a were taken op Ive
other, whrth 1 veied at ainat, lneludinc lha SPPro-
priatione mads in the two bill fur baning Trwaeary
note -of 120,000 each, at th first and eeoeod ea
aions, to pay ipna of their tasne. '
mar war Iwe other bill, en h pa(r
hich tbe vess and navs w(i taken, an4 on which
I did not vote, being bent on Sccount of indiipo,
ition, amounting to eight million and forty-aif
'thowaand four hundred and twant v doJlafars-.-a-.T
These make an aggregate of upwards of Ihlrly.
7
f U
even million of dollvr. tuner, amaii dims not
noticed, with private claims allowed, will make up
tha 88 million for that year. - -
Now. Sir. from the facta, which th Journal
faithfully show, yoa will (list every' atatrmrnt
made, Slid every chart eibihitcd etainct in by tha
Honorable rnmlr of Ciingr rtOrjred to. who o
t,:..ii i.: . j . it -t '
aiuuiv irtHH-mi turn per.irra locmimii in iona;r-
rwhn in thiite. have been prmeJ
aiaminatloa snJ eompsrUm at their charges and
ih afcw with my' tiemni. herein
"" :" t " 7 "7""7 "" J "
than Ins Brat nana Mrvrmt In K ilia I.mi. r iha
nay; t4 ton emlej their enmlnioatton, though
Il was earocull iiitiled. Re fclfutly.
. i ... ...... . . .
C. Uc.BrRKi -
BarBTalUfl! ItlinrnlnK! rnnrainiL
A, fIF. wibwi-iher oftViflor at hia
I OLD rSO, (htup r.oad.i e.m
aiSling IW every warg m,-j -7 ;
nVil.e mevahanta of ltii 'IV. vts. ay -Wc&Zm
Siapte Uiy Gw.lt, H.r4 Ware. Gro.
V -eeria. ke. among which r Cloths
Sifk Good, printed L'WBt, aud Mualina, lloa.
Uai(, snoa,- unnneii, M"""-Wr"
Yarn all of whieh he will sell al lha toWeM prlcaa.
artuMi or on a short aredillo pnmiaal daalera
. lie pnuitai Pi pww'" " ...j-.- - - -t
vamia fee themvelveir-weluv rvUaMg -
tltewhen -
BUrflJI TCCKRW.
8 6w
Raleigh, July Si, I8SX
Ueaeral Agency ond Joiumliou
.: . Uimineaa.
' Th tabsaribavaflwa Wa arvia la lha public,.
Hligh, July 3lt, t3.
83 6
ri'HK anilersign'il, K"t for ihe aal or Fwooa
I annulaatwrcd by MeisH It. Nnnna k Clark,
Wrw TorH,"Wtit wipwmttv-lflleviir h
ol Italt tgh.aa wall a i.l lha a.tjieenlaoitia, lhal
of Ihote liixrument ha juM bn rivd, muali
altnir'd lor maincaa ol Knithing and fulncsi of lona.
Persona rietaiton ol being Dipped are invited lo
eiaiMiu H, at Mr.Jno. U. mtiiii .
Y, Wi.WKiSOJnir-i.
Italeijb, July 30th, 1830, ..... 3
' UJ' ll-g'er. . '
F Oil SAIE. " u
riHAT deaiiabla taniily relea, susaieo
I. Iowa of Piuaboqrgh, lonuarly owned by .
Mcwui n.r. ppij w ....
Halcigh, July 30th, t$39. ST.
Itcinter and Wilntiiigtoa Ailvaftlaev will rnaert
the biv lime. J. . M.
auccasaoaa Tobtivaa"AiDiHnsoit, ,
liititicifJlrrrAiLousr
FaYBTTK YIIXM 8t.'," RalKjOff N. Or,-'"J
. One door aboit tht Cup Fear Dank, '
I KFOM Ihaif frUiul awl lb polilia, that I bey
have esuiaiateit ihcmtelvea in Ilia above buina, -and
tolend aarryirtg a on In all il various branch, .
la a style aotto aarpasa in AeTW ha -on
hand a large and wtll-eeleeied astortiueat a
Uooil la owe line, which will ba men up lo order
at abort notice, and m tbe aantt lahiuobl i
weev-
I J,y gn 1839
I I ' . . ,
34 3
oriviTla irjroitsiSN. I - -
B uTi-bllied by lha 'aWalb o1 IhalaltaiT't bewnder " -
igned i deafroutotslatioi the betmaea t
aara Immediately and W abalul-lv neeeiwry ia a
edy adiutimeid of ki aflaira, iht h will aom.
pelled, however reluctantly, lo place alt acaoanl m
a immediate train wr aolleati thai ac prompt.
lylietaeVv.. v i.1AUV.)VCB. ' '
i riu a . j
, ,t' : -
Ralvhh Jul TO I ISO. "
GET LOOK HEBE!!! jS3
BUNG anshMi to lojcaai, 1 offer for ante
my fins'
Morns nuUlcanlla Orchard,
PI Ihm iluiunnd TliM. TheV Br el OWB. IWA
tad llir yr arr growth; and will be trees sis malghl.,
Ivl hi(h Ih: Saan. "parulaioira and Rilk-grow-rt
arc invited In Innk at ihvaai aa they w ill have
8eopporiuhyt0el abargaiai. ' -
Kear Raleigh, July S, 131. . -W f
State of Worth Coroliua,
j
County of frunkluu
Court of Pleat and Quarter Soaiona
June Term, 1939.
John Pi area
va
The Heir at law ol 'I homa Paee, ilea. ,
"5
Sams
I
I. ' '
.
"3 8
' Tiliuoa Rrlfila
va
Same
frt
Reuben Carpcntve
- - va - - -
Safnt
5-
?r.s
J
35 -
i
ae ''Wl'la4'sassHf
" Saa
Natbanirl Dunn "
va
Solumoa rcadergrtii
vs
Santa
It appearing lo the aatUfaotWiu of ih court, that
Mary Perry, wH f Manuel ferry ftaaa Paaa, ami.
Rseoa Burnett, wifa et James UorneU, heir al. law .
ot Tbewa Pace, dea'd, and defendant in the above
Mated aaae, ratida beyond tha limit of Ih Stales
il li Ibertfor ordered that publication ba made lor
ait week In lb Kaleiah Star, lhal I hey be and ap
pear before Ih Justices ef ear Cowrf ef Ph-a and
Quarter Sections, si lha net I court lo ba held (or Iba
county of Franklin, at tha court tineas b -luie
barg, en lha teeoad Monday ef Seplanber erst, ,
then aad ther to show teats, M any they have,
wherefore judgment final should tot be entered ap
again! Ihcea, and Iba land levied apoa mad aul.jrel .
te the pi nun recovery.
Auart, B. PATTERSOJJ, Cllt
Prica d. go to aaw
State ( Worth Carolina,
""7 Cuti$ 'sfTnklinm'
Court of Pleat and Quarter Sesiioni
-.- .; Jane Term. 1859. c ,i - ;
Janwf D- Xwaot Original attachment levied eaj
.?:: rth lollowint ; aegro alavea,
VjlMam Horlea. - 3 witr Paany, Joceph,. 8iij (k
' - . v t David, the propwty ot defev-
datrt.
ll annearint to ibe sathfaetion ef lbs eoarl. that
lha defendant ia Ih above aaa ha removed bim
aclf beyond lha limit of thi Stalei il is tharefore
erdtrvd thai publication be mailt for i week lai
tht Raleigh Star, lhal unlet he apear bt-forw the
Jucticesef er Covltef 'leand Quarlav Sataioa.
it Ih acsl anurt, Iq be held for the aouaty ol
Pianklin, tt lha aonrt hona le Loauburg, on lha.
second Monday W 8utmbar teal, than and ther
to replevy tad plead, Ibat final Judgment will be
rendered ap againtt bim, and lha property levied om
be condemned aubjret 10 plmtn reeovrry,
'Alwtl, S. PAT1KUSON. Ct
Pries sdv. f S W 94 8w
'"". I-
-
V
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