jrioJe JYY. 740. i Tjc Trti&orough Z9rcss, I BY fiBORiSK HOWAKI), J Is published weekly at Two llithtrs and Ff'; i CVW.v per year, if p.i'ul in a Ivaac r, 7"nv thillttrs at the expiration of the subscription year. J iVr anj period les? thm a year, 7 V- i r.'z.s per month. Subscribers are at liberty to discontinue at anytime, 0:1 giving notice thereof ?.nd paying arrr'ars those residing at a di-staure '. Inust invariably pay in ;! v.iace,'or give a raspou- sille reference in this vicinity. Advertisements not exceeding a square will he. inserted at One DuHur the first insertion, and 0") rents tor every continuance. IjO-.Krer advertise- merits in like proportion. Court Orders and .lu - dioial advertisements 25 per cent, higher. .-VI- j serttons required, or they will he continued until otherwise ordered and charged accordingly Letters addressed to theditnr nuia be post! paid or they may not bo attended to. Doctor Tm. EVA'' SOOTHING SYRUP For children Teething, PREPARED BY HIMSELF. To .Mothers and Nursrs. flllh passage ot Hie Uetti through the arums produces troublesome and dan- gerous symptoms It is known by moth- ; ers thai there is great irritation in the I 111 vi u 1 1 ruiu ..... o . . . j j v . v. . i ..v gums swell, the secretion of saliva is in i .i ..i.m.i : i r. i. i .i.,-...... i ,,, ..........., rrp:isi'n i h ii.iiii is sci.cu wim iicu icin . . V . . - . . - - I ' and sudden lits nl crying, watchuigs start I hut in ilie sleen. nod siiasms oi oeen bai D I r, .i i . i i . i. i. - .. : . i. : . i pans, l He L in hi Miiirivs viih i-.Mciiir: V ll'il.r..-r nraiMircrirV l'inutilllK :irp 1 1 1 I enpp. I UlCSt IM 1.1111 I .r ... . ..... . ..v. i f 1 1 1 v n pv ; p . MJiiMiiiujii: iihivuimiins in - i i ii ... i : .. I : t versallv supervene, and soon cause the v... , , , have their little babes aillicled with these If lllltllll I J lino o v . u i . . ' ....... I I I Syrup, whicb has preserved hundreds o! infants when thought past recovery, from being suddenly attacked with that fatal malady, convulsions. This infallible remedy lias preserved hundreds of Children, w hen thought pr.st recovery, from convulsions. As soon as the Syrup is rubbed on the gums, the child will recover. This preparation is so in nocent, so efficacious, and so pleasant, that no child will refuse to let its gums be rubbed with it. When infants are at the age of four months, though there is no ap pearance of teeth, one bottle of the Syrup should be used on the gums, to open the pores. Parents should never be without the Syrup in the nursery where there are young children; for if a child wakes in the night with pain in the gums, the Syrup irnmediaiely gives ease by open ing the pores and healing the gums; there- by preventing Convulsions, Fevers. Si'-. i To the Agent of Dr. Ivans' Soothing I 5.,rr,. n.. ,r ; r Thp nm-it Iwol ! afforded to my suffering infant by your Soothing Syrup i,i.a case of prJtracted j ilion, must convince every ! , , J ov essential an early ap- I,. : i and painful dent ICCIIIli; Li. 11 till ihi rjjniMiu ..ii c.iiiy 'ilJ-ji .. . r , . til i- plication oi sueu an invamaoie ineuieiuei IS HJ I CMC V K I 1 1 iw i ui i sci y mm mi 1111 c .m i J ' . . . p , M . . I nuant, vv.n.e teei.ung, eiper.enrec, suet, . ,.,.nc Suc...,s, .ma! ,i c ,,..i .xyi .u.ip;lI,y lrom an ijnesiig.uon of their mis- convulsion my , e ami .am, .y sup- , posed that death would soon release the babe from anguish till we procured a bot tle of your Syrup; whi( h as soon as ap plied to the gums a woiidenu! change iva produced, and alter a lew applications the j child displayed obvious relief, and by run- tinuing in its use. lam glad lo intorm j you, the child has completely recovered, and no recurrence of that awful complaint lias since occurred; the teeth are emana ting daily and the child enjoys perfect health. I giveyou my cheerful permission to make this acknowledgment pnblhyand will gladly give any iuformuiun on this circumstance. When children begin to be in pain with their teeth, shooting in their gums, put a little of the Syrup in a tea-spoon, and i. r... ii it.., t. ; i i ' . i vini i iiuci ici iiu,- viuiu s gums oe rubbed for two or three minutes, three times a day. It must not be put to the hrcast immediately, for the milk would take the syrup off too soon. When the teeth are just coming through their gums, mothers should immediately apply the sy vup; it will prevent the children having fever, and undergoing that painful opera tion of lancing the gums, which always Wakes the tooth much harder to come through, and sometimes causes death. fcf'Caurion. Be particular in pun ha sing to obtain it at 100 Chatham st.. New York, or from the REGULAR AGENTS. J- M. Redmond, ) m t Geo. Howakd, J Tarboro . M. Russel, Elizabeth City. January, IS 10. -i.--.-v..-. 7?l 2& ? .Tj From the Raleigh Standard. Raleigh, 2-th My, IS 10. TO THE PEOPLE OF NORTH CA ROLINA. In November last I was cntlcl oit to ad dress a Demo.-ratio meeting in Wake count', and from somii erne JliQ speech J I made Ins !)C m much spoken against in difieren' sections of the Stale. Mv neigh bors and lYi.-nds have tir g-ntl v deman ded its publication. It is contrary to y habit to publish political speeches i nave uccn some years engage;! m poli tics, and this is the only time I ever yielded to such a request, and it ii now done reluctantly. My apology to the public for this in- i lrusio:i, will be found in the solicitation of my friends and also in what, st ems to me to have ben an extraordinary mis int.erpivtation of my remarks. I am not Swilling to appear ad' cted by resisting the i l' ... ...... ! I . " 1 ! , I. . h;st anv !o:i-er. I am mil. Willi 11 II I! Ml a I. siMirt; member ofthe Wilis pa.lv of Norll C),t mtino !i,mU l,f.li.v. iSvit I ..-..- .den- r North e l him with biMiig an .ih:)!itioiisf, wit!)-1 out shewing hnn wh'tt I (tut say. it any such inference can bo made trom the speech, I on sincerely disavow it. It i their PA !TY wh.)sc inconsistency I have at tempted to expose, and although I believe that they are deceiving themselves and the South on an important matter, s;ill I have no interest, or let ding that could prompt me to say lh.it they are doing this upon any worse impulses than the vory m ulness of party spirit. Tint I do think, and i doubt no many of their own party must soon open their eyes to it. As the course of the whig party in North Carolina appears to me alike ineomi.itcnl and injurious to my country. I owe no anoloy for resisting i:. Thc"speceh that follows is thai which : 1 made omitting only those paits of it which were local, and others that were personal to myself. In these, the public it large cannot feel interested. Respectfully, WILL. If. HAYWOOD, Jr. MR. II AY WOOD'S SPEECH. At a Democratic meeting in Wake coun ty, held during the 3rd week in Novem ber, 1839, Wm. Ii. Haywood, Jr., was present, and after the Committee to prepare resolutions for the meeting had retired, and b.'fore their report, Mr. Haywood, was. invite I to address the people who were pitsen', and he did so, as follows: Fellow-citizens: The party oppo cd to is have borrowed i name to which they no crclttsicc right, and even their tit le to .share it has bee.i questioned by many. They call theirs "Liie "Hitr HI. I COniCSS lliatSO ifes far as m v feeling' are concerned. am wiIlillS to lci , .trio.!s of the Opposition !!,:mc tn;n!S ,-s .a,or t'vir own taste. I tie conduct u! tlieir purlu is sj b.;d thai , , . , . . 1 .. , 1 (ion l won'i'i' at this solicitude on then i , ., ,. . , 1 uu" 1 wu;j ir,u mis smieiuuie on j part to catch up a good name i -'.....--.. j jj.v.i ii.iiiiv. will Ulimi I-. 4 1,,,., 1 1 i i . i, , tllPV Oi'i :i 'iiifii mime lii.l mhvih K I i if lhc n;ime t.f Whi ,! not screen this ! lleeds. ,m))n!ift l(J l.,v deforc von some among'tie multipiien pt oolsol mcmMstency in this Whig party. Their later eiTorts to take absolute control of this State, and to diive us into a retreat from trie lomr ciicrished principles ot iNorth Laroim i, give me this right. Republicms are nevt-r lefeatcd w-nen tnc people are warned ! I ellow-citi- zens, the conduct of the W?hig leaders has b'jen so exceedingly inconsistent, that I have thought it might seem incredible to many of you, and therefore I have deemed it safer to bring with me the recorded ev idence of their falsified piofessions. To these records I will re'er, and to nothing else except it nny be to a few past inci dents, which (though not recorded) every voter in the State recollects, and no decent man will venture to contradict under the sanction of his name. You shall be the judges whether they do not falsely charge us with their own practices. Nothing is more common than for them to clamor against Republicans in out State, and charge us with faults which a little examination jnlo the facts will re move from tho'C they accuse, and fix upon our whig accusers. How unmanly! How inconsistent! They say, for instance and they have been repeating it for years that it" is the practice of our party to n;ize upon all the public offices and give them to paitizans: and that acting upon a selush maxim, "to the victors belong the spoils," we have habitually proscribed political opponents. You read these charges upon us in their party press in their party proceedings at caucus at conventions, and at all other soits of Whig associations. 1 see some of our whig friends are present, and I hope they will stay and hear me out. They may answer whether this charge has not been Tarborough, ( Edgecombe County, JV 6TJ LuiLMfwaMmf'nTraifOTiiii1ntT rung in the ears ofthe people of North Car olina for more than five years. Now then, suppose I shew that the Re publican party of North Carolina have not seiz.-d upon the public offices thit they liHve not proscribed the whig tint in fact the Whigs ire the office-holders. Then tell me what epithet will properly characterize these pirty accusations by modern whig? I will leave you to choose the language for condemning such inconsistency, mine shall be the task to prove' its existence. Here are the Journ ils of vour Legislature, beginning with 1S34 (the year I was cho sen to represent you) and coming down to the present time. 1 here can be no mis take about the facts. Read! Hear! Decide for yourselves! PROSCRIPTION ! The Republican pirty had a clear ma jority in 1S3I. In the Assembly of that year the Whigs were in a minority. This will not be denied, for it was the year in which we re-elected Mr. I3aow. to the s-Miato ami ins I rue fed Mr. Mangum. Yet thes Journals tell us that. Gov. Swain (i Whig) was not proscribed. He was re elected! Mr. Hill (a whig) Secretary of State was not proscribed. The office of Treasurer was vacated by Mr. Miioon's resignation, and the Re publican nvijority did not seize upon it as spoils. On the contrary, Gen. Patte it- son (a wh g) was elected over Republican competitor! good The office of Comptroller was also vacant by the death of Mr. Grant, and this same republic in rnaontv (iiu not seize upon 'J "spoils." On the contrary, Mr Stcdman (a whig) was elected over a sound republican opponent! As in these the chief offices, so also was it in the humbler offices. The repub lican majority proscribed nobody, but gave nearly ail the offices to their political op- P'JCiiLs. r I I r i .. it u ii...i 1 i r i . I'll. ii. licit; illlllliui lij MJIIIU Ul LI1U electioneering tricks of the Whig par ry, in the Wake election of 1S35, when an clfort was made to deprive him of the confidence of the Democrats because he had not been proscribing in his course to wards w hig State officers. Now turn to the Journals of 1S35! Again the Republicans had a majority, and although they had been irritated by the violence of the Whig parly and their unjust denunciations about "proscription," "spoils," "partizanship," &lc, they did not proscribe these whirr officers. The whig Secretary cf State was re-elected! Tnc w hig Treasurer was re-elected!! The whig Comptroller was re-elected!!! The humbler officers of that year exhibit no in stance of proscription! Not unci Aik much the larger share of them was given to if tins aspirants. True. Gov. Swain being no longer eligible to his office, Rich'( Dobbs Spaight was chosen Governor in his stead, and I need not remind you what party proscribed him, nor is it necessary I should shew that he was ousted for a tlifl" rence in politieal opinion, and for that alone! Now look at the Journals of 1S3G Tl.tc .,. I...ct A cjnmlilif .i.wIap fl,n mid uui inoi iio.-v.muiy uimv,i inu ii I ri i , 'Pi T i ttt n inf ,; I .inf , f it f ,ut I linen . nnrnnk- tell us h,w every member voted, and as the Whig had a majority in the Senate and the Reoublicans a ma oritv in the Lommons, we snail oe ante to compare their acts together. Here it is! Compare the one with the other, and then judge be twixt thern. This Whig Senate proscribed their Speaker (Mr. Moseley) because he was a Republican, and for that cause alone! They turned out an able and expeiienced officer, against whom thr.y had no charge except his politics, for he was personally a lavorite of both sides. J hey proscribed an upright and impartial Speaker merely for the sake of giving his place (spoils") lo a Whig! Look back to 1S34, and compare this Whig Senate of 1836 with the Republican Commons of 1S3-1. The latter re-elected Mr. Alexander (a whig) without a contest! Nay more! Although the Republican Commons of 1S3G were thus irritated afresh by this Whig proscription of the Senate and by an unsuccessful attempt of this whig party in the Commons to pro scribe the old Speaker there also, still the Republican party in the Commons did not proscribe any of their IVhig officers. But it may be said that the Republican party had a majority in Joint vote, and they proscribed the whig ollicers of State. No! What! not turn any of them out after this intolerance ofthe whig party towards the republicans? No not one of them On the contrary the old officers were re elected and nearly all the vacant places were filled with whig office-holders! Here arc the recorded facts. Listen! The whig Secretary of State was re-elected! The office of Comptroller was va cated by the resignation of Mr. Stedman, and Mr. Collins (another whig) was put in his place! Four Judges of the Su erior Court were elected JVhigs!! balurday, June 13 1840 - Ta-.-, Three Solicitors were elected, and two of them whigs! I do not overlook the fact that Gen. Patterson resigne I his office of Treasurer in 1S.33, and that Mr. Couits a R?pn!)Ii cit-, w a in ins piace. it is also true, that Mr. Courts got a large number of whig votes. Candor however, com pels me to v ithold from that pirtv anv credit fortius instance of apparent liber ality. Mr. Courts' republican friends, were unwilling to see him quit his post in the Legislature, as it might destroy our republican majority in the Commons, and therefore, many of them preferred to no minate some other person. Nobody distrusted him, all .vere willing to confide in him, and he Was worthy ol that confidence. But I leave it with you to decide how far the whigs who suppor ted him were inllueneed or not by the very same reasons which kept oil' his re publican associates. Take it however, that they were, in this instance, disin teresteland free of party-spirit, and yet., it is no more than a solitary example! it those wh ) are accustomed to rely upon thee general denunciations of our whig opponents, ag un look at these Jour nals of 1S3G! They begin with whig proscription. They continue, and end with it! Thev begin with Republican liberality to oppo nents. They continue, and end with the same ! If there be one incredulous man amongst you after hearing the language of facts like these, I ask him to turn to the Jour nals of 1S33. Here the whig party had a majority in both houses of the Assembly, and recollecting, if you please, how they have professed to contemn the "spoils of office," come and see their con sistency. These Journals will answer whether they did not lake 'the Lion's share." Hear!! In the Legislative Department. Both the Speakers whigs! AW the Clerks but two are whigs! 5 whigs and 2 Democrats. Even an Engrossing Clerk is proscribed and not allowed to labor for his "Whig Masters," because forsooth, he was a Democrat!! Major Thomas, lately a citizen of Wake, and a good Clerk too, was the victim of this pariy malice! In the Executive Depart ??ienl. The Governor a whig, and his Secre tary "Ditto." The Secretary of State, a whig. The Comptroller of State, Ditto. Seven Councellors of State, all whigs. The Treasurer of State, was the only Republican amongst them, and since that period he has resigned, and his place is now filled by another whig! So it seems that the office-holders in this Department, arc whigs ull! Demo crats none!! In the Judicial Department. There are 7 Superior Court Judges 5 wliigs, and only 2 Democrats. There are G Solicitors 5 whigs! 1 De mocrat ! There is an Attorney General, and he is Democrat. Who then are "the Office holders?" Who "seize the spoils?" Who abuse office and hold it themselves? The people who are honest, want no answer to such questions, except that which these RE CORDED PACTS furnish. Iiayners Resolutions. But the inconsistency (not to say more) of this party does not stop here. Indeed it isdifiieuit to look back upon any past political event in our Stale, since this modern whig party cast oil oilier names and assumed their present one, without seeing some evidence of their inconsis tency. Who docs not recollect, how this whig party every where in our Mate, surrcu up hostility to the Assembly of 1S34, (the republican majority) for instructing Mr. juangum, our senator in v,ougruss.r It was called persecution and proscription a pirty attempt to put down a gentleman of distinction, and ask him to degrade himself. Such was the substance if these were not the words of their accusations against the Legislature of 1S34. Such is their reproof against us still. I wish that my strength and jour patience could allow me to review that matter ot the "Instruc tions to Mr. Mangum.'7 It has been great- y misunderstood if not misrepresented, will do it, should a lit opportunity offer. Jut at present: Let it be admitted, that the whig party are all sincere in their con- lemnalion ofthe ISIangum instructions; Let it be admitted, that they (the whigs) are rbdit in this and that the whole was ndecd proscribing and wrong altogether, and then what will they make out of their own t'lluyner llesolulions?" Will any candid man amongthem, tell us what the "Rayr.cr Resolutions" deserve to be cal led, if the Instructions to Mr. Mangum were any persecution and proscription of the man. If it "was illliberal, persecu ting and proscribing to instruct Mr. Man- To. ATI Xo 24. gum to strike out a censure which he had gone out of his way and out of the Consti- j Union, to affix to Jackson, when all the world knows,'h it Mr. Mangum was elected h the Senate as a JACKSON MAN, What epithet should honest politicians ap ply to the "Rayncr Resolutions," which were intended to force Mr. Brown, and Mr..Vrr?(our two Senators) into direct treachery against their own party against their own opinions and agiiust the people of i he State, who, (light or wrong) Ind thrice aporoved of the Course which the Rayner Resolutions" denounce and ask our Senators to reveise? I see hov men may differ about tho Mangum Instructions, and 1 underhand how some men honestly approve and others have honestly condemned them. I do not mean to complain, of this. But, how any man of ordinary intelligence can con demn the Mangum-Intruciions in such terms as I h ive alluded to, and then turn round and advocate the Rayner Resolu tions," does indeed excite my special won der. When a whole nartv do it. thev must expect that public intelligence will put this and that together and judge accordingly. Is the e no reason to apprehend that such inconsistency would be practised only for the sake of vacating places, so as to make room for others to fill them? For you see that our review of the last five years has already shown us, how, with our whig assembly men, in any scramble for office, "Every whig does his duy." The IVhig Convention. But, I must hasten, to a review of the political doings of a later assemblage of whigs! I mean the whig Convention, which met and adjourned in our City last week. It may or may rot, be a CaucuSy but no matter about that, if it is only con ceded to me, (as must be,) that this was "The whig party of North Carolina, by their Representatives met together" This highly respectable body of politicians have just promulgated their conclusions, and al though the grounds of them are yet un published, it is at once our right and our duty to look into their resolutions. The "whereas" will no doubt be made known in good time. The "Resolutions" arc before the world, and they exhibit a de gree of inconsistency in their leaders which no ingenuity can defend and.no so phistry excuse. I will compare some of their past professions with their present proceedings and I doubt, if the people of their own ranks can ever sanction the latter. They cannot do it, without con demning the past. This w hig Convention then, have nomi nated Henry Clay or President! John M. Morehead for Governor! I And though there is a little obscurity about it, the party may be regarded as pledged for N. P. Tallmadgc for Vice President!!! Henry Clay for President! Wlro, I ak, hive heretofore charged Mr Clay with bribery and corruption? Have you forgot'en the accusation or the accusers? And do the accusers of Mr. Clay, who are now become leaders of the whig party, intend to confess that they slander ed Mr. Clay and persevered in it for years, and si ill count upon being credited by you for their more recent imputations a gainst our President and his supporters? If they calumniated Mr. Clay then, how are we to know how can the people know, that they are not now also libelling Mr. Van Butcn? What a spectacle is here! Politicians! North Carolinans! who stand amongst the most prominent par tisans of the whig ranks, who take lead at their meetings, who manage at their Caucuses, and who aspire to the chief pla ces in the gift of their part-, doing homage to a statesman whom they have so lately denounced as a Traitor lo the people another Judas who sold his vole for the spoils of office! Where is any apology for this change of position? Further yet: When Henry Clay was thus assailed (w hether the accusation Was true or false, it docs not now concei n me lo inquire) when his present admirers, but so lately his bitter accusers, Called upon the people of North Carolina to come to the polls and rogister their dctes'ation of Mr. Clay and his bargain with Mr. J. Q. Adams, and to shew their love and gratitude to Gen. Jackson, who was chosen as their agent and instrument to record this condemna tion of Mr. Clay? I have here the Central address and the names of t lie Jackson Electors of 182h! 1 find amongst the Elec tors' names, that of Mr. John M. Alore hcad of Guilford. lie was elected. He and his associates, met in this City, and recorded the vote of North Carolina a gainst Mr.Clav and ibis bargain. And now what is it we st ? The whig parly of ilie State have presented us a Ticket with Uenry Clay fur President and this same Mr. Morehead for Governor! Even so, these party leaders have coupled on the whig ticket of IS40, the names of Henry Clay and John M- Morehead! This is ex traordinary enough. I suppose they will ask the people to re verse their former decision, & to falsify this