M 'J K Tar bore ugh, ( Edgecombe Coun ty,X. C ) bdhirdayXtn nury 18,: iS-lo - Vol. XVI fro 3 The Tarborough Press, BY G KOn3 E li0WA!!D, 13 published weekly at Two Dollars andF'fhjy vents per year, if paid m aavance or oar at the expiration of the subscription year. For an j period les than a ypar, Ttosily-JiM Cents per month. Subscribers are at liberty to discontinue at anr time, on giving notice thereof and paying arrears those reaidm at a distance must invariably pay i advance, or givearespon- T,iree sioie reierence in una viv,iiiivy. Advertisements nut excesdinfr a srpiare will be inserted at One Dollar the first insertion, and 25. cents for every continuance. Longer adverti ie ments in like proportion. Court Orders and Ju dicial advertisements '25 per cent, higher. Ad vertisements must be marked the number of in sertions required, or they will be continued until otherwise ordered and charged accordingly. Letters addressed to the' Editor must be post paid or they may not be attended to. REMARKS OF MR. BYNUM, Of North Carolina, In the House of Representatives, Decem ber 24, 1839 On the resolution of Mr. Dawson of Georgia to suspend the order of the House to go into an election of Printer to the House of Representatives for the Twenty-sixth Congress. Mr. BYNUM s Tid, if the liaise would co into an election of Printer at this time. hn w.vihl forbear making anv remarks. If not, he would go on and say what lie was ;iVU! !o s;iy. Cries of '-Go on." Sir, .VII' Mr. B. if tht Am nean people could e assembled in this hall, and oul I e wi ;e-ed the proceedings of this. :i?e for th" last three weeks, they, with . h o:'a s?"j2;'e nan e, would have V e h : CXCi .!:: O- Vi'f, 4 ' ... J'ttrf ? S i !: t,M-. .'.!.;.. i ii.tio'u h spcakii:i rv. If I .pni o o' the Komaii ; tu::!em )buiere Co- occ :. : he read in the quo- ielVC o, when 01 tne t'ataiiiw;ii t on-pl'a- v.priran r 0"!e had been Trp.sf-nt in o m eai!( ries Sieee tne CO en- menem. nt of our ss-io ihev i!i!ht ry this qiiola'i. n, and sa , how long 0! Whig nn:':, will y-u com nine to abue our natiem e? How loi g shall our madness outbrave our justice, and eontmu' to insult our undcrs'auciings. and prooratin ate this j i.'te lei'a'e, at an expanse ot hundreds ol j the prtntingof the Houe upon the joint re 1:i s;n is of d.)ll us to the Government; at j solution of 1S19, until the first Monday in i -criiice of every interest that is near j December next." and s.ear 10 us as American freemen. This was a direct proposition, but it Why. .sir, I would be willing to stake alljcould not be carried, because some gentle- Ih -vein this world, ay, sir, 1 would be be as j willing to take my salvation, that theic h been more money .-pentby the paity which nrofesses to desire a retrenchment in the expenses of the public printing, in idle, unnecessary debate, and in motions after motions to delay, procrastinate, and em barrass the business of this House this ses sion, than the whole profits of the printing of Congress will be in the next five years. These debates have already cost the people of this country more than 100,000, if not S500,000. We are here in the fourth week of the session of the Twenty-sixth Congress, and there has not yet been lb;? j first step taken towards proceeding to the discharge of the high duties for which we assembled. The House has as yet been but partially organized. Wre have not jet elected a Printer, and the .standing commit tees have not yet been appointed; and, sir, whose fault is it that this has not been done? What party in this House has prevented the action and organization of the body? What is it that has been struggling, day after day, to stave off the action of this House upon the matters which the majority desired to decide? And who is it that h.s introduced propositions time and again, which the House had previously decided, and called upon the House again lo decide these questions? These questions will all be examined into by the people, and they will be able to point to the party which has oc casioned all this delay and embarrassment to the business of the nation. Do gentlemen suppose that the people are to be duped and misled? Do they suppose that the freemen of this country are too ignorant to discov er who it is lhat. has piled motion upon motion in this House, in order and out of order, and consumed week aficr week in useless debate, when the business of the country was left untouched and the public service suffering? Do gentlemen suppose that by their superior talents they can dupe and impose upon the people of this country by their, cry of retrenchment, while they are thus squandering the pub lie money in worse than useless debate, and leaving the public business untouch ed? Does the gentleman from Ohio, the gentleman from Chillicothe district, I mean Mr. Bond, suppose that the people of this country are so easily imposed upon? Sir, even the people of that unfortunate district cannot be imposed upon by that gentlemen long, for the Administration b last gaining ground even there; and if the r.vv, wi viio.1, Mismv-t. iuuoi oe longer i imposed upon, how can the gentleman ex- Are gentlemen so deluded as to ihinkfor pect lo deceive the people at large? No ! a moment that these thingv are incompre snflemcn of understanding ran take aj h'uisble lo the people, or that the great . . . . . i r i . t.. i i a. j u view 01 una wiiuie irauM-uun,! and compare it with what has heretolorei taken place, without pronouncing it one of the most farcical and ludicrous exhibitions ever attempted to be played offon the A mc ri"a p"0-)le. I am not here permitted to speak of the motives of gentlemen, because . . . . . . r u. it is not m order: nut u u wa, i miii say that we would bear none of this cry of retrenchment, if the election of this omcer was to benelit a certain press, owned by a monster Bunk, which is o vaed, in a gre.it degree, by foreign capitalist, and which ha always been hostile to the i n teres' s and rights of the people of this country. The course of honorable gentlemen might be very different on this occasion, if we are to judge from what his transpired on a previ ous occasion of a similar mture. It has been again and again decided by the Ame rican people that this Biithh Rank was of the mos deadly hos ility to the rights and the liberties of the people of this country, and the people have elected a majority of Representatives to this House at cwryj session forinmy )Tears, who were opposed to this Bank; yet for the last two years, that Bmk has had the benefit of the printing of this House, through its agents Messrs Gjles and Sca'on. In fact, strange as it may appear, the Bank of the United Slates was the Printer of this House for the last t wo years; and no man could deny i his assertion, so far as its emoluments ate concerned. Sir, the p?ople have been humbugged too much on this subject to borrow a f t vorite expression fiom the Opposition and it i time that they knew the whoe truth in relation to this matter. Whi.-n fue e Section of Public Printer vas about to take place two years ago, the United; States Bank was not strong enough to ob tain the work without o'her aid, and a combination was filtered into here to se cure to it the benelit of this election. In the first phice, a resolution was submitted by a genilemau, whose name I will not ! mention, as my relations with that gentle- ti:an are of a delicate character, showing the va-Combination on its -face. The resolution was as fid lows: "Hesolved, That the Clerk ofthe House be, and he is hereby, authorized to employ the editois of the Intelligencer, and the ed- itor of the Madisonian, equally, toexecute men were ahaid tiiev might be called to men were afraid they might be called account by their consiituents for voting for such a proposition; yet precisely the Mime proposition was carried by a secret agi ce ment between these parlies, as every body thooght at the time. The Whigs and Con servatives, at the time, in cons-que.'tce of this agreement, united upon one Thomas Allen, and he was el c ed, nominally, pub lic Printer, for that Congress. I stated to this House then, that it would require an ou day of sonic thirty orfoity thousand dol lars to prepare a printing establishment to do the m inting of this House; and 1 stated further, thnt Mr. Alien, being a young m.-.n just, commencing business, was uti aide to purchase an e-tabli-l-me.it to do this printing, and ii was a i idicui.u pro position to elect him principal Printer for the House, lie, howevr r, as elected, and the people were deceived. The peo ple understood that a ceit.u'n Thomas Allen w.s elected, and was to do the printing of Congress. Well did he do it? No, sir, be never did the first page of printing for this House, virtu ally. It was all done by Messrs. Gales ami Scaton, with an establishment notori ously belonging to ihe United States Bank. I hese gentlemen cottid not he elected, be cause certain gentlemen could not vote for them and represent the wishes of their constituents; yet by an agreement, or, as the old story is, by whipping the devil around the stump, they enjoyed the benefit ot the punting ot the list Congress; while the people were in 'need to believe that Mr. Allen alone enjoyed the benefits and profits arising Irom the printing of Congress. Yes, sir, the whole history of that transaction is without a parallel in the proceedings of any legislative body in this nation, if not in the world. A bargain, proposed, consummated, and executed here in this body, toeffect the grossest! mposjtion on the Amerricxn people that ..had ever been attempted before to be perpetrated in this country; by which means the Bank ol the United States was made virtually the Printer to the American Congress, with all its foreign affinities and hostilities to the free institutions of our country; & this, too done by a party who have the boldness, I had like to have said effrontery, to stand stand op here dqw, and speak of corrup- tion. ' . : ? Offered by Mr. Wise of Virginia. See the iourr.als of the Exlra session of repeaien.j jwii, na uuv .uu'u v.ii$, to retain a just recollection ol the nistory of these transactions? And is it toactover ibis di reputable transaction to elect the Bank of the United States printer of thi Coigress, that this mo3t extraordinary coursi has b. -en resorted to by the Oppo sition to embarrass and delay the indispen sable business-of this country. I shall now read a few extracts from the journals of the proceedings of the House in relation to that election, for the benefit of the gentleman from Ohio and some other gentlemen on this floor. If I under stand the motion now before the House correctly, it is a motion of the honorable gent eman from Georgia Mr. Dawson lo suspend the election of a public Printer at the pres.-nf time, for the purpose of ins'i tuting an inquiry in relation to the prices of printing; and 1 intend to show what that gentleman's course was at the last session, when a similar motion was made. On the second day of the extra session of Con gers, two years ago, "Mr Ration of Vir ginia moved a resolution lhat the House proceed to the election of a public Printer for the Twent y -sixth Congi ess, which was agreed to. The. House then proceeded to ballot, aifd after five or six ballots were ta ken, it was found that there was no elec tion. Tha? House then adjourned to the next day, ( Wednesd ay,) when Mr. Bronson a gintlem m whose De nocracy had never been doubted in this House moved the fol lowing resolution: "That the further balloting under the resolution of the preceding day ...should be suspended until the third Monday in De cemher, and that the Clerk be directed to employ some person or persons to . do the necessary printing of the House on the same terms it had been done at former ses sions. " A motion was made by Mr. Grennell to l.y Mr. Bronson's resolution on the table, and very fortunately the yeas and nays happen to be recorded on that subject; and how do they stand? Why, sir, we find recorded, in favor of laying this resolu tion on the table, Mr. B. rtading from the journal. the names of Messrs. Adams, Allen, Aycrigg, Bond, Hoffman, Mason of Ohio, Dawson, &.c. It went through the whole Whig alphabet, from John Quincy Adams to Thomas Jones Yorke. Now, sir, (said Mr. B.) the resolution that I have just read, introduced by Mr. Bron son, a member from New York, was in substance identically such a resolution as is now proposed by the honoroble member from Georgia, Mr. Dawson. whose patriot ism has been so inflamed upon this occasion, and which has been advocated with so much warmth by his honorable friend from Ohio, Mr. Bond, against which stands recorded the names, for all time to come, of these two most honorable and consistent gfii'lemen. But, sir, why should they alone be rebuked, When, their names are accompanied with nine-tenths of their piry? Yes sir, the resolution of Mr. Bronson, identically the same in substance as Mr. Daf'vsonV, was voted down by a unanimous W hig vote; but Mr. Dawson's is now, by the same party, to be voted up under simi lar, if not precisely the same circumstances; displaying an inconsistency, the inevitable result of all parlies lhat act wihoutthe least regard to principle. These things should not be. No party C3n or should long endure, that would thus attempt to prac tise on the credulity of mankind. At that time,' Whig and Conservative parties in this House were thirsting for some of the spoils, as they now call it, and voteii to get nu oi every resolution or proposition to suspend the election of a pub lic Printer for any period. Now, however, the times are changed, and gentlemen ne cesarily change their action with them. If thee gentlemen had the same prospect, by any combination, of electing their Printer, which they had at the last Con gress, they would be the last men to post pone orth wart an election of public Printer; but now lhat there was a probability lhat another Printer would be elected, they used every means within their power to stave off the question by distracting and embar rassing the business of the House by every means that ingenuity could invent. But, sir, there was another favorite proposition of these gentlemen; submitted at the time Mr. Bronson's resolution was under consid eration. Mr. Pickens at that time moved an amendment, "that the printing of the House be given out by contract,", and on this proposition the names of the gentle man from Massachusetts, Mr. Adams, and of the gentleman from New York, f Mr. . Hoffmanl were recorded in the neg ative,, and others, now of the Opposition. fMr. Hoffman explained that he had voted againsl this amendment because he believed then as he now believed, that the House could notgtveout their printing by contract uniil the resolution of 1819 was Mr. BYNUM. The gentleman's expla - nill.in ia i-kiai-funi f ' :r u"...t ........ ia j;cucui) Ul ISIJC'Ory Olll llUv was it with .regard tosime ten or a dozin of his friends who voted in the same wlv with M r. John C. Clark at their bead? I ad mit th:t a majority; of the Administration pa- ty voted with, these gentlemen,1 and they did so because they b' lbved it impractica ble to enter into an inve.s ligation" of so im-i portint a matter;1 while'- the)'-' were in the act of balloting for a' PrihterJ and when the important business for which" they had been called together was pressing upon them. This was a matter which required time and careful scrutiny,- and the House was then unprepared to go into it, as it is now unprepared to do so. It was impos sible for the House how, after it had spent a month of the session in idle, useless de bate, to go into this matter and put off the important business ofthe country for anoth er month; ana it gentlemen are serious l regard to this matter, let them wait until thy House is organized in the regular and u Midway, and ihe elections gone through with, and then introduce this matter in the sh ipe of a resolution or bill direct - It is a question which requires time for investi gation and reflection. 1 myself am not now prep ired to say how I sh'outd vore on this question when it is properly brought up Several years ago, I voted for Mr. Pick ens's resolulion. 1 offered a similar one the other day, arid I did it as a kind of peaci ofi'ering. 1 would now, after the election is gone into, and carried out, renew that reso lution honestly and in good faith. As at pre sent impressed, 1 think I should vote for a separation of ihe Government from the poli tical press; but I have not examined the mat ter sufficiently in detail to enabie me to speak positively onlhe subject. Butl want a coo!, deliberate, an J honest investigation of the subject; and if it can be discovered that good will result from a separation ol the Government from the political press, 1 will go for it. But, sir, I do not desire lo intermix trilling with serious matter, because, not having the talents of some gentlemen on this floor, I am unable effec tually to mystify these questions before the public &.the world; and if I was to attempt to do so, I should be exposed, as I ought to be, to the indignant frowns of an honest people. Sir, my constituents are too honest and discerning to tolerate for a moment such an attempt. I shall now say a few words in reply to the gentleman from Ohio, Mr. Bond, with regard to the petition of Francis P. Blair. On that subject too, if I am not egregiously mistsken, I think I shall be able to show the most reckless want of ali regard for consistency, I will not say prin ciple, by that honorable member and his consistency-loving party. I will show lhat the Liter part of tne resoluiion, now pro posed by the honorable member Irom Ueoigia, was then en 131 t'ilniil nrrriTV'inrr out of the petiiiou of Mr. Blair, and a motion for a select committee, for a icfer eiice ef ihe whole matter, was rcsis;ed almost unanimously by the self-same party ; and 1 think that the journals will show that! these same gentlemen then resisted the reference of this House. He would read the ieso!utionas it was finally referred. i L' . solved, 'l hat so much of the memo rial of Francis P. Blair, as invites scruti ny of all his accounts for work executed jfor Congress and the public offices, be re ferred lo a select committee, with instruc tions to inquire into the manner in which the public printing for Congiess and the Executive Department has been executed; whether the same has been done conform ably to law, and whether any, and what, change can he made for the public good." That subject came before this House, not in a questionable shape, as the gentleman from Ohio would have it, but in the shape of a petition; and the humblest American free citizen, he trusted, would ever have the right to petition this body for a redress of grievance s, and to ask for such measures of legislation as would do ihem justice if they weie wronged. And would the gen tleman from Ohio spurn the right of peti tion on this floor, in the capitoi of this free Republic, and in defence of oneself for personal wrongs? But lo the votes upon the presentation of 'this memorial of Mr. Blair. A motion was made by the gentleman from North Carolina Mr. McKay to refer this n emorial,, together with a resoluiion to go into an examination ofthe whole matter of public printing, and alihough ihe yeasand nays' were not called on that question, all gentleman' on this floor that were hereMhen, knew that the Whigs voted againlt .this reference. The question was afterwards taken by yeas and nays directly on the reference of this petition to a select committee: we find the Democratic members voting for the refer ence, and the Whig members againstit. Yes, sir, we find recorded in trie negative on this question Mr. B here read from the journals the.names of ''Messrs. Ad ams, Allen, Bond, Dawson," &c. This was the course of these gentlemenat-.the last session, who are now so anxious mr an examination into the subject of the printing of the House and so desirous to have it Uivn out by contract. Oh, consistency, whit a jewel!" Wiih regard to this ma'ter of giving out the printing by contract, 1 beg gendemen to r collect this one fact," that there are but two establishments in this ciiy at present which could possibly" do the. piimihg of this Uou-e. It required, as he- had been informed, an expenditure of some thirty or forty thousand dollars to prepare a printing establishment to do the printing, of the House, anil no establishment can do ihe priming uf the House but one of the two extensive establishments in this city ; either it must be done by Messrs. Blair and Rivis, or by Messrs. Gales and Seaten, and he hoped in God the Bank of the United Stales would not again have ihe benefit" of Ihe printing of i his House. It was idle to talk in good faith of electing oth ers at Ibis time, whatever might be our feel ings of friendship towards them. If g nt lemon were disposed to go into ibis inve-tigition in good faith, after the House was organized, he was willing to go with them; but when he toured them turning and twisting about as they had been, he was unwilling to tru-t them. Their course has been so refractory and in practi cable, not to say fractious, lhat i cannot now think of acting with them. Their ef forts ali seem lo have "been to resist the majority ofthe House, and set at nought the Well established principle in this coun try that the majority shall rule. The princi ple lhat the majority shall rule is a well es tablished principle in this country; and I warn gentlemen not to carry too far their violent resistance to this principle. Sir, if gent Jensen carry out their resistance to this principle too far, they will find that the people will rise in their strength, and resist them. Tlie people will not, and cannot much longer bear ibis resistance of the ex press will ofthe majority ofthe nation, as we have daily witmsstd. But why this struggle for the existence of the U. States BdhK? .Dues the party with which it is identified depend upon ibis election-of Prinier of the House of Representatives, to sustain their dying, sinking fortunes? No, no, gentlemen, this would avail you but lit tle; your doom is fixed. Sir, there is another matter which I desire to notice. An appeal has been made lo a party in this House, called the Nullifiers. The W7higsare now under the necessity of appealing to that party, and their cry is, "help us, Cassius, or we sink." Sir, I make no appeal lo any high minded and honorable men, as 1 know the members of this party of Nullifiers to be, for I know they will treat with scorn and contempt ail such appeals to them. Tknow them to be a high minded and honorable set of men, and all these appeals are but instills to their understanding. I know the char acter ofthe constituents lhal they, repre sent, and their feelings would revolt at ihe idea of giving countenance to such appeals; they know their duty, and will dare do it. I he gentleman from Ohio has said that the petition of. Mr. Blair came into this House in a very questionable shape. In reply to this, 1 may say that this proposi tion of the Opposition has come into ibis House in a very questionable shape. Let us sir, go into a history of this thing. What has been the history of this country for the last two years? Have we not heard it proclaimed in every quarter of this Union, that the party denominated the Whig party, have been anticipating a tri umphant victory? Sir, have we noi seen thai for several years that party had a tri umphant majority in the Sena'e of the United States; yet during all lhat lime they never brought forward any of those measures just now attacked by the parly here. Sir, why did they not support these measures two years ago, when they were brought to the notice of this House? Why, they did net support them, because they all knew that, by a union of the Whigs nd Conservatives, vtheir party would have a majority in this House, and they could elect their favorite public Printer. If there war now the same chance of etecting the Uni ted States Bank, through its agents, Messrs. Gales and Seaton, Printer cf this House, you Would not hear, doubtless, ihe first whisper from them of ritrenrhment aud reform in this department, if. we are to judge from their conduct for the last two years. If there was a chance, by any com bination that ihey could eftect, to elect their candidates, all this loud vociferation Would be hushed up, and you would hear no more from them ol retrenchment in the expenditures with regard to the public printing. I julge so, sir, from wdiat has taken place here, before our eyes, within the last two years. Sir, I call the the attention oftheAmrr ican people to the condition of this Con gress and to the proceedings which have taken place here during ihe present s tion: Let ihe people examine for them selves', and see who it is that h:s delayed' the business of Congress by a ihoufand litle motions to stave off the public busi ness. Let the people 'examine, and see. who it is that has made motion after mo tion for adjournment, and repealed motions