Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Feb. 7, 1850, edition 1 / Page 1
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. ' . it At-- v ! - r j fl 1- r' .Vutoliman. u.i...;.J of the v kUnuopet ytrfrU Doi.LAf-payab,e in H n,.ii if not oa d in advance , iwo uoiwra '" Y y. iL.-rt,.,! at fll Tor the first. and 25 ctir. ,vSI V. .,,r.ir nt insrttioiiv. Court orders chirged . i. : r iKnti tKai rates -Jlll-l. HU H I III"" 1V " . r'.J.k,,.!. iho nJviriifrlbv the vear I N' ' - . . the. Editors tnnst be, P Pa,, A. liberal deduC- y pAGETIOUB SHERIFF. Nwly '.hjjlf a centjury ago, (says the ; Jtofpf the Washivgton-Jcwst who well ,mricmttie time, -place anu stcr. : .l, uweic in ine iowii oi i klaid,Vrcinarkablp oddity, in the per an Atorncy.at.lavv.wtio, a though ; upon. (Ir ae w m. . .e of;the homeliest Hpcciuic. " uu.u l.k-M K .tinrfHl man.) Was With- J . tl t '' 4 , I I m aM m t i a ft -h a .Votfncrt various jcnriiiiig, puei, a, Jt sfl liappcnca mai me aiorcsaiu gen m4. .'4 G PS(1- was -appointed ! " '' ,-. i ' . - . - . . - : ; I - i , THE CifiOlH A .. fATCHMffl. BRUNER & JAMES, Editors Proprietors. VIt-, . l RCLEKS. SAJlSpBURY, N. aighberi5cwn of iTiah; of fortune and had a kind prfsoner could tcjs- uftlnt ma,ny a poor ' 1 From the New York Journal of Coramercfei Arrival of the Steamer Niagara. Eleven Days Later from Earope. '', The Ni-agara arrived at Halifax at 1 o'clock yesterday morning. Our messenger immedi ately boarded her, and placed our, despatch in the Telergraph Office, in advance of all others; but, unfortunately could not communicate with Calais or Portland. The New Brunswick line was down tiU four o'clock )esterday afternoon. DO THIS, 15T IiTBERTV IS SAFE j Gen'l Jlarriton. , NEW SERIES. VOLUME VI NUMBER 39. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1850. Our enai!al 1 r ho partook of th good chctr with ! ,. ' T' "'""V ' , ' iii ...... :I II-.. 1 HH nearly 10 o'clock, last even n? and althmmh t.-Mi ur iMJiici s v us iiLriiiiiv mjiidi njii o o It . il: ..L r .v. i...L. : the niaht was verv dark, it reached IWtnn (rfttrx . iU6 J'1'1110 I'uiau ui iuo wuriiiy i a J ,brifi i '' ' who w v. icv, iv mis iiiuruinga r : ' hyas of course thd duty of; the" High The ne ws was then transmitted over Bain's Ur'$ to "timmon a drancland petit jury, ! and House's line to this city, and raincy as the wsiljwl at 'the quarter sessions, of which ! weather was, tbejMworked rapidly and atlmira Xm ffcorde, mayor; and aldermen of the Kjv r !5- a .u' r .1 &tncc n's 91C'' duty in simmon hi the jury our Higli Sheriff indulged in jornf the strangest and drollest freaks, thai Have probably eer be n heard of in arty'ojher'tpwu or country. In the first placcshc summoned fc r the October court, a jar consisting of twelve of the fattest cu-n ihc culd find in the borough, and whrtlthcyf came to ihe book to be sworn, it apnCArcd that only nine jurors could sit y wiitun ttie box s Alter a of sweating, squeezing, and te panel was literallv iammcd nto.tiitf hot, and whin seated, they pre texted to Jhe eye ct the court, the barns urs and aiudience, " the tightest fit" of a as ever seen in any court ro6m. Jjieralty ',tley becape, much to the a susefnentof the court and its robed ad wctps, a ! packed jjury, and no misv take 5 :j ; Pc the 1 January term, our facetious HlgbjShejriir (in coni equence, it was said of some hjJt from the recorder, that there liduy ua no more fyt panels summoned to hi court) went into the opposite ex irem u lie summoned twefvc ot the lean tst a id tallest men he could find in the - - T . A THE STATE OF OHIO, he Senate of Ohio1 Was finally organ- isep lor business on Friday last. On as sembling in the morning of that day, af. ter! some conversation among Senators, Mf. Blake resigned the station of Speak er! and the Senate elected Charles C. iCdnverse. to that post. Mrv Blake said he Jtodk'this step for the purpose of enabling ithf Senate to proced with its business. He did not resign till !Mr. Swift, in open Senate, pledged himself toi vote for Mr. Converse for Speaker, thus placing mat j tefs politically as they were before. pn the same day Governor Ford deliv ered his Annual Message t6 the Legisla- For the THE CAUFOUMA MpSAGE. All thoso who reaT to 'Uulon'' newspa per, says the National lotellige ncer of -Toes-day, and especially those who delight in its politics, roust hare been identified by the mre than usual violence with which it has assailed the late Message of the President to Congress on the subject of California and New Meijcu. The plan which h submits to the consideration I of Congress has been jironpuneed by the " (Ja- ion" to be 'de.petaie and flaitiout," aod;' i wicked expedient and the lreident himself ; entitled by his personal qualities at least to tie j respect and esteem of even the worst of his po. i litical opponent, has been stigmatized by tba sole organ on account of this Message, ;as j wanting in those rery qualities of a statesman5 by which he is in reality most distinguished. . vix: "courage, manliness, and true wisdom. "( Every one who has read these things in thn Democratic organ has also read its predictions as the consequence of the success of the lresi- Watchman. eomi3rtat rrcatl dca Koldipg. t ; boroegband when icro was hey took their seats la t4c hox, it appeared comparatively ndeed room enough for twelve more of the same sort and -di- incn.lon!(l;t- ; T r the April term of the court, our hu morous functionary summoned a jury Con listing of twelve bnrbers ! Now it so jiapnened that amor g the latter were the Veryiperruquiers wl o dressed the record er'4 4nd parristers' u'igs, and some of the lAtte'r, arriving late at the bar, had to ap-. pearithat morning' in court with -their wig$" undressed or naif dressed, so as to rut A vfitv ridiculous figure, amidst the t j r-i - - - t -srnlltis and. half suppressed laughter of the bystanders. The High Sheriff of course cnioed the. fun I itrhazingly, but looked crave as a judge- while he tried to "kef pi silence in the courfroom. : Uut inc crowning: jokc oi tins waggisn efltcirr occurred at tne summoning of his fodrth and lastjury at the July session. Fdrpat term of the court, the High Sher iff! not having the jfear of the recorder, aybr, and the aldermen, before his eye actually summoned a Squinting Ju ry ifc twelve as queer looking bipeds 'M Vepiok their scats in a jury bok a jtTy.!that j was probably more looked at anj )hun;hcd at. thn any of the appointed twelve that ever 'were, sworn to "well and truly try, and true deliverance rrjake, UtivbcH their sovereign lord the king; aatl;he! prisoner ut the bar." But the iccrc was so irresistibly droll, that- the lear.ncdTecordcr could not maintain bis traVjlvi The mayor and aldermen fol- . I ..I.: r . - . II.. tilt. .The barristers lautrheu wnue Halifax Telegraph Office, Thursday Morning, j' $ The Niagara has arrived.; The cotton mar ket buoyant. The sales last week were9,000 bales, of which speculators took 49,000i Pri ces are up all round a quarter of a penny per IK. ' V 1 ' " ;! BreadstufTs are dull, and slightly declined. Of provisions theprices and demand ire bet. ter. Sugar, coffee and lard decidedly advanc ed, j Money extremely abundant. -Consols 97 a, 97 1. Am. stocks are firm and in good demand U. S. sixes 2751 a 106. V England; Parliament meets for dispatch! of business on the 1st of February, whjjn it is expected that some important change, in the monetary system will be laid before the Legis lature. I . ' I President Taylor's Message, which reached England by the Hibernia, has been extensive-: ly published and largely commented upon by the English press. The general expression of public sentiment is very favorable. The Lon don Times says: -'The tone of the Message is pacific'and we; learn with pleasure that there is no disposition on the part of the American Cabinet tomagni fy the differences which were supposed at one moment to threaten its relations with the most liberal European powers. TbeN:ontention with France had originated in the impatience of Mi Poussin, and the irregular proceedings; of Mr Clayton. That with England has taken its rise from some misconception with reference to the views of the country of the Mosquito 'Gourk and the Nicaragua Canal, but there s every reason to anticipate that Sir H. Bulwef's mis sion will have tne ettect ot uniting both coun tries in the prosecution of a common object of so much importance to the commerce of the world ; the more recent occurrences which are. said to have taken place on the Pacific coast of the isthmus, by the alleged seizure of the Island of Tiger, in ibe Bay of Fonsica, by order of Mr. ChatneoVthe linlish Consul General in Guatal mala are imperfectly known in this country, and we are satisfied that it any unseemly - alterca lion has occurred between British and: Ameri can agents in Central America, it wilt not dis turb the friendly relation of the two f Govern. ments. It seems that whilst a treaty has beet) concluded between the United States? and the Republic of Nicaragua for the promotion of the Canal, all other states are invited to enter in to some treaty stipulation, and, as Presiden Tayloi observes, the work constructed under these guarantees wrll become a bond bt peace instead of contention and strife between the na lions of the earth. In other respects the rela lions of America with Great Britain are of the ALCOHOL IS A POISON. Having shown already some of the rea sons for believing tht Alcohol is itself a virulent poison ; we now proceed another tue. This document shows that the total step, to show that most, if not all the li amount of payments into the State Trea- quorssold in the country, of which alco suryduringtheyear!849, wasS2,511,119; i hoi is the basis, have other poisons min tW amount of expenditures 82 170.631. j led with them. if one poison was ihe total amount of domestic bonds re- fe . .e - 1 . deemed and cancelled during the year nct "Si-nt as if rhen were not swept 1849, was 8199.386, leaving a balance ! off; fast enough by taking one serpent in applicable to the payment of the State delbt of $433,365. row, near the neck. They occasion a general rigidity and convulsions. The effects on some are not continual, but give rise to fits from time to time, in the inter vals of which the person annears little af- I A I . i -I I fected. Another writer says that these;""'1'" ' TT P . J i in every oiaie ot the Union, unheard of carnage adulterations of wine with substances de- of men who should be brothers, confl igratioa. leterious to health, are practised oftcner ! desolations of cities aud fields, and all the hor than is exnected. That the most dAner. rors u ltich CVl'r attended civil strife." To re. ' j..t. .: r t heve our Democratic readers from the terror ! ous adulterations of wine are by some , . . . r, , , .f . ... J which such awru! and horrifying vaticinations j preparation of lead. And wine with the j mui have filled ihe breast of all who rely upon i least quantity of lead in it is a slow poi- the authoiity of the " Unioo," vre now prctnt son. One bottle of wine analyzed in the en wilb ,lhe Vcws uPon ,he "m,e uVjed!of i .t r i e . A . ' the late Administration, uttered lime more than , city of Aew lork was found to contain , w . . . i I twelve months ago. We can imagine the real j a quarter .of an ounce of sugar of lead ! horror into whirh our venerable neighbor 'wit! j The merchant who prepares such po- he thrown upon discovering that ihe gruud ! tions for his customers, adds the crime of ken by President Polk (the " Union's" Ma?. nus Apoio; id i i iai Annual Message to toil The receipts from the Canals and Pub lic Works during the year ending Novem bfr 15, 1848, were ; f 773,554 37. The receipts from the same source during the yarending November 15, 1849, are 8731, 173 50. Making a difference of 842, 30 87 ; which is attributed to the de pression of business caused by the preva lence of the cholera. 5 MISSISSIPPI. The Legislature of Mississippi conven ed at Jackson on the 7th instant. Dab- ney Lipscomb was chosen President of he Senate, and John J. Mcllae was re elected Speaker of the House of Representatives. Governor Quitman, in his message, states the receipts of the past year to have been 8437,018; the j expenditures 8317,- 428. The amount of sinkin&r fund receiv ed is 8147,915, of which 872,893 has been applied to the payment of the non-repu diated portion of thd State debt, (included) On the subject of Repudiation, the Go vernor Preserves a silence that is anv thins: but commendable in one who has i been in past times its avowed adversary, j He denounces the National Govern ment for its interference with the threat ened foray on Cuba ; and, speaking in defence of the " peculiar institution" of the South, says : In the event of the adoption of the Wlmot proviso by Congress, or the ad mission of California into the Union by yirtuef her late pretended Constitution, the abolition of the commerce in slaves between the States, I recommend that the Governor bevauthorized Jo order an elec to -their stomachs, t6 eat out their vitals, others must be added. We have heard of men, not far distant, wibo boasted that for; thirty cents worth of arsenic, they could sell whiskey out of the same barrel, from this part of the country to ' Charleston, and perhaps back again. As fast as they drew out the liquor, they replaced the same quantity of water, and a little of the drug. In a Northern paper, March 1846, we have the following account : A man who had been a retailer for 20 years, noticed the dregs and filth remainingat the bottom of every cask of liquor drawn off. Gen erally of a black, brown or reddish cast ; throwing off a noxious eflluyia, very of fensive, and apparently composed of poi sonous drugs. A short time since, when removing his standing liquor cask, he took down a large whiskey hogshead, that had stood on the head for several years without being dis turbed. He found at the bottom a black noxious, and very offensive sediment sev eral inches in depth. This was collected from ordinary whiskey as it came from tbe still, without the addition of anything to it afterwards. And it shows (it adds) that ardent spirits is not only poisonous in itself, but that poisonous substances are Used in its manufacture. There are many drugs which are known to be used to poi son wine and ardent spirits, and among Lhese are sugar of lead, white lead, nux vomiea, henbane, oil of vitriol, grains of paradise, arsenic and copperas. It is known that a large proportion of the li- murder to that of fraud. One such on his death bed, confessed that he had often ; seen his customers wasting away around ; him, poisoned by that he had meted out ! to them ; and that same wine which was j the cause of their decline was often pre- j scribed to them by their physicians as a means of their recovery I A liquor dealer purchased recipes for making French Brandy, Holland Gin, Ja maica Rum, and wine out of whiskey. He went into the business largely ; and made a great deal of money ; and boast ed of it to his physician. The latter ask ed to see the recipes, and told him that the man who would put such drugs into liquor and sell it to be drunk, was guilty of murder. But it was so profitable he could not cive up the business : so ho gress is essentially the same. and in almas) bs same terms, as that taken in General Ta)or' late Message, for which he has Ik en snvtiliitn ously abused by this same journal. That soch is the (act wilt be seen upon a careful pcfuu.l of the following extract Irom the Message of . Mr. Polk to Congess of the 8:h of DccetiiicV, 1 1S4S : ' i "The question is believed to be raj he f ah- . tract than practical, whether slavery ever can J or would exist in any portion of the acquired territory, even if it were left to the option of the Slaveholding States themselves. From the nature of ihe climate and productions, in much : the larger portion of it, it is certain it icould never exist ; and in the remainder thw proa." ( bilities are it would not. But, however ithik may be, the question, involving as it does & principle of equal co-partners in the Confedr acy should not be disregarded. ,., t. j "In organizing Governments over these I Territories, no duly imiosed pn Congress ly Ihe Constitution requires that they should.iegis. tion of delegates from all the counties in the State to take ipto consideration the ! ouors and wines drank in the country, are moae ana measureo! redress, and to a flopt such measures for our future securi ty as the crisis may detnand." Gov. Quitman urgesthe abolition of all Common law forms ofLegal Proce dure, so that hereafter alt suits shall be instituted by petition, and pleaded to by Ian answer, after the manner of pleading now in use in the Chancery Court. singular scene in jne llaltoj tne ilousp pf Representatives.- -T 'he Washington cor- either adulterated with (drugs, or manu factured out of them. ; A chemist in New York was for some weeks employed in making a careful analysis of various specimens of beer. When he began he was an habitual drink er Dfahat article ; now he declares, that henceforth he will never drink it. Why ? I Because he found on examination, allum, icopperas, and other drugs in it, unfit for made an experiment by giving a gallon lale on !he Bllct of their pow to a drunkard in his vicinity, and as it did not immediately kill him, he concluded he would go on with the business. Who then in looking at such facts as these, well known all over the land, can defend the use of ardent spirits as a bev erage ? Though there may be some hon orable exceptions, in general, the liquor trade, is the trade of' death. There is no way to escape destruction, but to ceas? the use of such poisons. To talk of their temperate moderate use is absurd. Many men do not know what filthy compounds, not to say poisonous, they take into their stomachs. In former times 75 or 100 years ago, men who drank ardent spirits were seldom drunk ; and what they used did not injure them to that degree that liquor does how ; and here is the secret of it, what is now sold and drank is drugged. And it is not strange that men who drink excessively, die off in a few years. MEDICUS. er to do so is not onlv senouslv uueiioued. denied by many of the soundest exjxjuujer of that instrument. Whether Congress hall legislate or not, the people of the acquired Ter ritories, when assembled in convention to form j State constitutions, will possess the sole and exclusive power to determine for themselres whether slavery shall or shall not exist xvithin their limits. If Congress shall abstain from interfering wiih ihe question, the people of these Territories will be left free to adjust it as they may think proper when they apply for admission into ihe Union. No enactment of Congress could restrain ihe people of any of ihe sovereign States of ihe Union, old lor nw North or South, slaveholding or non slavehold ing, from determining the character of their own domestic institutions as they may deem wise and proper. Any and all the Slates fwis sess this right and Congress cannot deprive them of it. The people ol Georgia might, if they choose, so alter their constitution us to abolish slavery within its limits; und the peo ple of Vermont might so alter their constitution as to admit slavery within its limits. BothStates would possess the right ; though, as all know it is not probable that either would exert iu " It is fortunate for the peace and harmony of the Union that this question is in its nature temporary ; and can only continue for the brief period which will intervene lelore California, and New Mexico may be admitted a States into ihe Union- From the lido ot population SIR JOHN FRANKLIN. T , fl r n . j t ! now flowing into them, it is highly prob.vblo In the House of Representatives, Monday, . , ... .7. ' 0 3 '; n O IU O VUU OVtUI 1 fallowing message. from the President of laid before the House . most friendly character, and by the removal of j 'respondent of the Baltimore Sun thus de- l Re ban stomach. In nine cases out ot Navigation by both .. t - 1. - u -ten. what is called the the United States, was by the Speaker : To the Senate and House of Representatives of the U. States : I hjercwith submit to you copies of a corres restrictions in the laws of Navigation by parties, both countries arejutly convinced is an era in their common commercial intercourse. Upon the whole, 4hLs message is creditable to the American Government, and should prove satisfactory to the country, for the state of their scribes a scene which occurred in the Hall Tn-what is called champaigne wine is their wlp hreamc.bald and powderless ; i finances is encumbered with outstanding habtl I F t ' k ' " thp nnof prisoners in the dock, ities. ' That evil is the result of former excess- pondqnee with the Lady of Sir John Franklin I j. X. a 1U1 tall Liks-v am n v rxrl it 1 An iiiIap Klc of the House of Representatives Satur- common whiskey, passed through char- . comnd io the arctic region9t for ,he discov. day, immediately after the adjournment : ;coa, to"render it limpid, and to deprive it j ery fa northwest passage. On the rec it of After the adiourhmerit. and before the I 01 olIy anUextractiye matter, upon wnicu ner nrsi .euer, npiuiix mB a.u 0 .,,0 members had left the Hall, a man hv the its peculiar taste depends, and then fla- can uovernrneni in a searcu ior me missii 1 ed all Civilized nations, I anxiously sought the ing under mental aberration, Irom some Hs Dften one j means'of afTordina that assistance, but was pre- In 1826, 38 pipes of wine were import- j vented Irom accomplishing the object I had in durinnr ihe nasi week in debating theoolicv :!of i: anu commenceu auuressing tne crowa in 0 .. . . . lttnAo view in consequence bfthe want ot vessels suit- sending out more troops 10 me Kiver i'latte, ' f""- m j . , ,. . , , , ; aum 10 encounter mo pus ui a nw,n-i cpiw- and alstj with the provisions of a newducation to address to thi nation. (Cries, hear j 111 tne rngiisn cnannei, out mere were j rat;onftne lateness of the session, and the want bill It has been decided that no more troons him. hear him, and much loughter.) He Jsent the same year from those Islands to ( 0f an appropriation by Congress to enable me ihall be sent to the-PIatte. Various proclama- i, had been here fori several long weeks. j London, of the same kind of wine, 290 to furnish and eq.iip an eflicient squadron for . a T f a i 1 ';' 1 1 av n nl t it a r t r r rC I ri a i e 1 1 ta vif nr!a Whq wcrc to ne put upon tneir ina.s, anu ; - " 'ZLZ : u"X ? part of Maryland, took the Speaker's chair I HA IN UK. 1 UB Assemui UCCU UCCUUICU .1. , . . . , - - a-k a fit -m m a h w k-. vA-a lomo ql tliem undergo transportation, could not refrain from joining in the; gen eral' cachinnation And when the recor- . wcr bommanded tle High Sheriff to bring ! lhc'cbqrt room to order, and intimated, ! ni!..a;i Hall suppfessed laugti. 1 ,ions hae been issued against all kinds of club. (Order ! order !) wurr ougni to oe awiamcuoi uhiimju ior and secret jniical associations. sbrrirnoning such h jury, the drollery of j q'Qe National announces that 25,0p0 meri of IhiH Coqrt scene wihs heightened consider- j the army employed in restoring the Pope to his throne, are to remain at uome tne govern- Itblylby the quick, ready, and sonorous response' of the High Sheriff, who, looking ftt ; the same time waggishly at the iqqj ht ing jury exclaimed" All good and la w f u I m e n , y o u r o 11 o r !" ;lut our humorous functionary has long siri4e shrilled off his mortal coil." Where lie your gibes now T yourj gam bosJ your songs your flashes of merri- were wiotu to set the table in a me roar vquitj3 ebabfallen to remain ment having concluded contracts for f be main tenance of that force in the Pontifical domin ion during the first quarter of 1850. I s A new paper, called ihe Napoleoni and said to'be the organ of ihe President of trje Repoh lie, has just been started at Paris.' The fob lowing article trom its pages is supposed to In dicate the inclinations of the President :- . "Of two things, one, either the Republicans have deceived the public in preaching to itffbr forty years that the application of their pnnci a Hill Sh He had been here wait- that object. All that I could do,in compliance ing for his party to' give him something, f r , , A , z'rtliA ;mo m wi,h a re(ue?t wh,cb 1 wa8 depp,y ani'i?5 but they would notJ I am a lion from the I USe, bo' there Were ,mPrled lhe , gratify, was to cause the advertisements of re-West-4)neof theib'hoys. I have spent i Is,and of Guernsay 155 pipes and hogs-. ward, promulged by the Bnii.h Government, every thing but my life for the party. I heads of wine from Oporto; but in the , and the best information I could obtain as to the ,r -f u -i 1 . 1 . r iv 1 1 1 n . . ; meansof finding the vessels under the command (Cries a whig, a whig ! an ungrateful Y same year, and of the same kind of wine, gir John frMlkV to he Wldel cifcuated party.) I am willing to serve my country j there were exported from there to London ! am our Nvhulers and seafaring men, whose in any capacity. 1 stana up nere to pro-; 2fi07 nines ! 1 snirit f enterprise might lead them to the in- ! .1 pipes'. In another year by the custom. n rA 1 -f t r s.w V . I n Inro i cm wrtrlr rn nn i snn? doorkeepier that alt parties can rally upon.) " . b i 1 t ... t' . 1 . .1 - ' lnivino' farts an; laid down: 1 h; the fol- ' r . i 1 1 . ri . I come here to do something for my peo-? ott ,ng ,acis artJ ,aiu aown : nai wines pie at home. I am one of the b'hoys I . are adulterated with sugar of lead, al am the embodiment of free-soilism. I go? lum, sulphurious acid, logwood chips, oak for the largest liberty to the woolleys. bark sulphuric and nitric acid, and the But I go for a place against all isms.-;, alkaiieSt nux vomica, coclicus indicus, (Cries such is the spirit of the day.) 1M . c , ... , v 11 . , Vv -tr- . A. opium, &.c. The effects of these on the would rather support Queen Victoria than ' . submit longer to this delay. I must have i human system, are also mentioned ; pain a place.' (Order! order!) When I do ful digestions, vomiting, obstruction of the Boor- i p-et nlace when! come uoon the throne hnulc ? nnrl therft r snme that nroduee TTJm-.li;nAL.r lr.iV Tt, c pes would lead to the cessation of all evils, and Horscwfiippwir Affair. 1 he bnow 1 ' r n i-.- 1 i .- j . l ' e i 1 1 'dtU 1 v. .1 i of a 11 political complication made bjr them of Shied is, informed by a gentleman . 1 iL: l.u- j ; . .-i i. . . ' 11 -r i neir greai principles nave uuangeu nuimng in recenuv irom Accomac couniv. v a., mat j a.. " .u .u!i.i . thUIpn. Edward P. --Pitts, late State Se-1 The repabnean opposition to thefold Boor- i'lTri51cRunt U?- altacra hon. of their Vongs, of divine righfof Louis hereJ.(Cries he! means the doorkeeper's inflammation like cadstics Thev cause Hn C. Wise, Esq.. at a public vendue, on PhiHPPe, thatepresentative of Royal and Par- i olace aU the Nation will tremble. J ust 1"Hammaon ,,ke rustics, l hey cause k? 27lh ult..and horsewhipped by him, liamentary Usurpation, may be coneived,J but j J t, stage of his eloquent harrangaej; death m the same manner as burns : such ,anji Mr. P being rt' man of peace offered it cannot be' comprehended with respect to I A, Hnmp nf nnih Camlina stenDed RS the concentrated acids, and alka- icsiance. 1 ts smieu umi wise was "r,cu eirciw,ui.iuicu: r-tc vinirA nr .-rv rwi tP v inflaj d l.y some remark mad. , "be handed .heeXindwn mich to bis iuX ruts, at a pdhtical meeting during a , uepuonu. iu- run i wii me rrpuuncausn :. ..." t,J'pent campaignlut which the lion. JaJs. ; w 1 v.ws.a4,. wu.iuii . - ! HV - r .. '. .1 I .. rr .1 . . i ' ma r pnnviflinnt. and or U'ilh Mnrr nnrt if ia Ol me CTOWU. Illie '3 'V guslis knoctcra wise 011 tne stana -7 - " . '11 . : " VT;j: .V;: , .t liosniiable reyions where that heroic ofiirerand I his biave followers, who periled their lives in the cause of science and for the benefit of lhe j world, were supposed to be imprisoned among the iceburgs or wrecked upon a desert shore, i Congress being uow in session, the propria j lv and expediency of an appropriation for fitting ; out an expedition to proceed in search of the j missing -hips, wiih their officers and crews, is ' respectfully submitted to your consideration. Z. TAYLOR. ' Washington, January 4, 1S50. j On motion of Mr. Gentry', the message was j laid upon the table, and ordered to he printed. Con side rin j the several States and thecit izens of the several States as equals, and enti tled to equal rights under the Con(itti(ion. if this were an original question, it mighljwell be insisted on that the principle of non-interference is the true doctrine, and that Cmigres could not, in the absence of any express, grant of power, interfere with their relative righls." INSTRUCTING SENATOR5J . Some years ago, the doctrine thai the Slate Legilatures had a ri'ht to ive what insluc lions ihey pleaded to lhe Senators of tLicir re spective States concerning, ihe disc barge by them of their public duties, and, as a -nro!Iary, that the Senators were bound either to bey tho instructions or to resign, was a cardinal Dem. ociatic" principle. It wa greatly relied upon in the times when Jackson's power was at its zenith, and particularly by the Southern l)e . mocrary, as a curb upon Whig Senalors.j It ', had a potent power iu Virginia, if indeed it bad not its birth in thai land ol vaatiesP Kven the Whigs there, or a considerable part of (hem, acknowledged its validity, and sutlered-them-j selves lo be governed bv its exactions. The i far greater part of ihe Whig of lhe Southern 1 Slates, and of the Union at large, contended against Jhq application of the docii inO (r Sena 1 tors, arguing that thoc functionarie should be left free lo exercise ilwir own judgment ; or Ct any rate, that Strife L-yi!aiure had jno riht to go beyond the line of coutielin and advis ing ihein. Gradually this'riht iij-lructin doctrine grew into diue and f?i-repi4r, uu'il at length, its very aect has an irf irange- ness alnxit it. But i i curiam to prceive In how unwelcome a shape the ihin" now conies up "loplague lhe inventors." General Cass has, in a speech made iat veek in t be Senate, , declared hiine If opposed to the Wilnioi Provi. so, holding its applicatiMi by Conre.4S to' the , 'territories to be uncouftilutional, but yet be is : precluded from rting against it, having been instructed by ih L.gilature f Michigart.io vote in favor of the measure. Thal,ihovoer, 1 : . .1 1:. 11.. 1.1 . t . v .. . ... i lies . nicy uiemiiv vui n uui tc maiuc ui t . lajsiuftk : tnrrn. Otbpre vuhnxf austie effects are ( rtc and Columbia dissatisfaction and to the disappointment intense, produce death in a more ra- Vy speaking, "natlc. .3 ?r a9nin -jocos are prepari ng : Mndthat they -l1fi tXamnl tiL V flying color s ,ra comrneneemUii nfttiA KttffA Imf t for some disrespectful ' nM w,!.ul Jrness nai iney j Ugmu ill me. n-'' .. Saturday last. 5 speaker, however; , manner becauge tfa are absorbedf the track to the plantation of J D. of old, continued tO' r . . , . 1. . , . ! anJ returned with 18 bales. The OCT The Columbia Telegraph of 14th inst., ho will not do, having made up his mind to ra the first loadof CottoQ by the GVfcn- ; wen VT ,'nt' irr.-. iiere men is a case wnere me wrncuru sjiriu of Legislative instruction caixe the loss to the South of a Senatorial rote. Wil. Chronicle. mixed with the blood, carried into the cir- hfemselTes will soon ice. sneftlc. whfthr in lhA nnlnit or UDOn the i floor, amongst hisjhearers. He declared f eolation, and so they destroy the vital pro- j j that be was the people's man and wasder I perties of the heart, lungs, brain, and ner- j 4 termined to have, things righted. vous system. Nux vomica, and coclicus ti : ' ! I "' '.I -" i ;nrt!fic i n t rnrt n rl ! n f r lh (trmnh fir we a 0-1 love my work ; but I have never seen ni-Soft Soap. -A. first rate article of thiskinfl y .... j. . . ZZ harder task than to get a mil. to Ico'i .Si. J2L iu abbdince, t, boiling j "PP1' ? woute repeatedly absorb- 1 church dandies. I i ? - j ca, auu auew wc uraiu iuoi mai Railroad, came down on Freight Car proceeded up Frost, Ksq., work is still down IS... 11 . l.l 1.. a.. h'M nVtu a I ' Xtn ITnlnnwvlhftt lh. ?.n. ' . 4ur- "irr. 01 .auviowu, , s... .c ' . J thus speaks of California ptetv : " l am hit 10 iiiiu tne ucii, cuiin-si , . r Their colors may fly" ! iry,nf preach, to tabor, ta pray ; ana through a lump of gold to eternfty.w lrl iron n!I I Hid as fat as possible." We hope it will not le long belUxe we shall have to make similar announcement relative to lit. Pko.l.lla ami Columbia road. Ve under- I I1C UUanvilb mm.M j - - - - A paper is about to be established in France, under the direction of two priest whose object is to popularize the ida that the celibacy of the clergy is an evil, nnj mav be thrown off bv conrnfon consent, as ft 1 if ia nnii nr AiiitLiciaLf iP m 1 I t 1 I r tH ft rtil stand that two Cars are on the track and used - v..o,r.. ...... for the purpose ol transporting materials for the not based upon principle or divine right, road. Charlotte Journal. of faith, or of morality. i -1 -t 4 T- t t 1 1 : 1- .5 A .1- 1 S
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 7, 1850, edition 1
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