I' II . ,i. i. n m -r?TE5 rM,,iwtgi Whole JVo. 911. Tarborough, (Edgecombe County, JV. ..) Saluvilty, August 1 9, 1843. VOL XiX. Xo. 33 Tic Tarbo rough l9rcss, BY G GORGE HOWARD, Is published weekly at Two fltlfar and Fifly Vents per year, if paid in advance or,. Three t)ollars at the expiration of the subscription year, for any period less than a year, Twenty-Jive Vents per month. Subscribers are at liberty to discontinue at any time, on giving notice thereof fcnd paying arrears thoe residing at a distance irliist invariably pay in advance, or give a respon sible reference in this vicinity. Advertisements not exceeding a square will Ife inserted at One Dollar the first insertion, ami 25 tents for every continuance. Longer advertise ments at that rate per square. Court Orders and Judicial advertisements 05 per cent, higher. Ad vertisements must be marked tne number of in sertions required, or they will be continued until otherwise ordered and charged accordingly. Letters addressed to the Hditor must be post paid, or they may not be attended to. From the Mississippi Guard. THE GRAVE, fty Robe kt Josselyv. Why should trre good go there? 'Tis a cold and dark anode, For the holy men of praise and prayer; Who have dwell so long in the pleasant air And sunshine of their Cod. Why go the learned and wise To a house so close and damp? They can gaze not thre at the myotic skies. Nor watch the stars as they fll and rise. Nor read by ihe midnight lamp. Why go the rich and gay To a hut, so mean and small? No chance is there for a proud display; There is scarcely room in the walls of clay For the busy worms to crawl! But for him who is struggling, on In wild ambition's race, Who feels that the coal cannot be won That his spirit droops and his strength 'Tisa quiet resting place. As for him who has weary grown, Of a world that loves him not, Whose joys have vanished and hopes have flown, Whose only wish is to be alone, Indeed, 'tis an envied spot! From the Madisonian. MR. CALHOUN'S LETTER. We copy from the Intelligencer an inter- i esting letter from Mr. Calhoun, in renj i ' to some strictures by the editor on a re" cently published volume of hi speeches ' which we commend to the reader: Fori Hill, July 2S, 1S43 Messrs. Gales & Seaton: 1 have just received from a friend the National Intel, liVencer of the 12th and 15th instant mn. ' taining your remarks on a volume recently ! published by the Harners of New York, entitled ''Speeches of Mr. Calhoun, deliv-;a ered in the-Congress of the United States from lsll to the present lime." Your remarks are headed, '-Political History Suppressed Speeches of M r. Calhoun." "Suppressed" is a strong word. The highest authorities define it to be, put down, destroyed, concealed; and your re marks leave no doubt that you imended to use it in the strongest and most offensive sense that is, that the)- have been inten tionally omitted in the compilation in or der to give a partial and false view of my opinions; and, for that purpose, a false ti tle was given to the volume. To the truth of this you pledge indirectly your wor d by heading your remarks "Political History." The charge is a grave one, and made in an imposing manner, and if true the imposi'ion would deserve the public reprobation. The question, then, is, Is it true? Lei facts an swer. The title is, indeed, false false every way. It covers much not included in the volume, and omits much that is reports, letters, and other writings. You have no ticed the former, and called public atten to it, but not the latter, though -equally ob vious and very material in determining whether the falsity of the title is a mere er ror or a fraudulent attempt at imposition. The one might, with some plausibility, be construed to be an attempt at imposition; ut it is impossible for any ingenuity so to construe the other. It is impossible to as Slgn to it a fraudulent object. LJut if the one is an error why not the other? In fact the very grossness of both can leave no doubt that they are merely errors. It is not possible to open the volume without de tecting them. The title covers all the speeches of Mr. Calhoun from 1811, when he entered Congress, till the present time, while the volume contains but one speech prior to 183S. gain: it omits to mention anything but speeches, when of the first four of his productions of which the com pilation is composed, only one is a speech To make its grossness more palpable, all these are headed "Speeches. " Has fraud ever been known to do its work in so clum sy a manner? It is idle to waste words on a thing so plain. The whole title is a grass blunder, of which I h ive much greater rea son to complain than any one else, li looks much more like an attempt to injure me than to impose on the public. I, how ever, can suspect nothing of the kind How ii hippened 1 know not; nor is it ma terial. so far as it relates to the object of thi communication: but I deem it due to my self lo state all that 1 know about it. It so happens 1 have never yet seen the volume. I saw the title and the advertise ment not long since for the first time. I was. as may be imagined, indignant at lh' blunder. I wrote immediately to a friend, who took an interest in the publication and corresponded with the publishers, and poin ted out the blunders in the title and the objections to the advertisement, and sag sted the corrections that .-hould be made, which I req jested himto have done forth with. It was too late. I received his an swer a few days since. He informed me thd he had perceived the blunders before he got my letter, and had prepared a cor rection, but, owing to some delay in the transmission, it was not received in lime. It may be proper to add, that the title I suggested (as well as I can recollect) was, "A selection Irom the speeches, reports, and other writings of Mr. Calhoun. sube quent to his election as Vice President of the United Slates, including h:s leading speech on the late war, delivered in 1611." It was drawn up to make it full and accu rate to cover the whole, anil no more. So much for the title. I come now to the selection or compila tion; and here I take all the responsibility. It was done by me, and if there be any fraud or concealment, I am charge tble. In order that your readers may judge, 1 shall state the reasons which governed me in ma king the selection. It is proper to premise that I have been urged from various quarters, in the last six or seven yeas, to have my speeches collected and published, and have during the same period received numerous appli cations for copies of my speeches in pa tri plet form, with which I could not comply, because I had not spare copies. Since my name Ins been presented to the people in connexion with the Presidency, application for copies have increased, and I have been more frequently urgtd to collect and pub lish my speeches, reports, and other writ ings on political subjects. 1 finally con sented to the publication, because I believ- fd it to be due to the pe ple, in the position I occupy, to afford them the means of as- cenaining, ine opinions ami senu'itenn i entertain on all political subjects, particu- Iarl v on those wh:ch have agitated the ennn- ,rv 0f ;lte and on uhieh the Presidential election will probably in a great measure turn. That 1 believed could best be done by publishing what 1 had said and written on those questions in a form whi.-h would make the wor k accessible to the People. It would give my opinions and sentiments in j the fullest and mo-t authentic form, and ini manner much more consonant to mv ; feelings than by popular speeches made for , the oceason, or a personal canvass. To effect the object, it was not only ne cessary that a selection should be made, but that it should be made from the later and not the earlier of my speeches and oth er discussions on political subjects. To publish all 1 have said or written in the long period of thirty-years, in which I have been without intermission in public life, would make the work too bulky and ex pensive to be accessible to t he great body of the community ; and to publish those of an early date instead of those of a late, would not give the information intended I accordingly fixed on the termination of Mr. Monroe's administration, when I be came Vice President, as the period from which to make the selection. That may be fairly regarded as the point of lime in our political history which marks the end of an old and the commencement of a new order of things, in the midst of which we still are. From that to the present time is a period of eighteen years, being mor e than half of that in which I have been in the service of the Union. During the whole I took a prominent and responsible part on all important questions. Such was my leading motive for selecting the period I did from which to make the compilation. There were oihers of a subordinate char acter which had their influence.- It was the portion of my public life in regard to which information (as I believed) was most desired. I infer so, among other reasons, from the fact that the applications I have received for copies of my speeches were almost exclusively confined to it. There was another still stronger. Itisthe peri od in which my speeches and other publi cations contain my mature and settled opinions on the principles and policy ol the Government adopted afier long expe- rience and much reflection, which have modified, or changed, if you prefer, in ma ny particulars, my earlier and less matured ; impressions. About the commencement! of the period, my mind settled down the views of the principles and policy of the Government I now entertain, and to which I have ever since adhered, regard- j less td personal consequences and uninflu-! enced by party considerations; thus giving! the strongest proof possible of my deep conviction both of their truth and vital in put nice. By them I desire to be judged, and by them to stand or fall. Guided by these motives, 1 compiled the volume in the first instance exclusively torn that period; but afterwards yielded to the persuasion of friends, against my judg ment, lo include the speech already refer red to, delivered in 1811. They urged it upon the ground that it was my first eflott in Congress and on a subject of lasting inter est, it was desirable it should be inserted, although a departure from the principle on h' h the volume was compiled. li it even within this period a selection became necessary to effect the object in view. To publish all my productions on P'dit cal subjects during the period would make the volume still too bulky and ex pensive to be acceptable to the gcmral mass of readers. Here, again, the leading reason which governed me in selecting the period, governed also in making the selec tion lor the compilation. It is accordingly full on the subject of banks, sub-Treasury, curivney, tariff, distribution, State rights, and the principles ami policy which should control in the administration of the Gov ernment. Those which discussed subjects of a u.oro isolated character were for the most part omitted. Hut, after the compil ation was first made within these res ric tious, the work was thought to be still too bulky, and many were struck from it which it would have been desirable to re tain. Such are the facts in reference to the compilation. They show conclusively that the charge of suppresion against it, is entirely unfounded as that of fraudulent imposition against the title. The very charge is absurd. How could the speeches be destroyed or concealed? They are to be found not only in the files of the Intel ligencer, but in those of many other jour nals and publications of the day, where they are just as safe and as open to inspec lion as if placed among.the public records. To'altempt to keep them from the pubuc eye would only cause them to be more greedily sought alter. The very speeches you have published, as if they were new and unknown to the public, are the very ones which havtt been republished divers times, and have again and again been re p -atedly referred to in Congress, in politi cal harangues, and by newspapers; and that for l he very purpose for which you now republish them. They are the very last which any one who was base enough lo re suit to a fraud would think of concealing. Hut why spak of them as being suppress ed when they are referred to in the biogra phical sketch lo which you allude, and which it would seem from its index, was intended to be included in the work? A- gain, why speak of them as suppressed when all the speeches which I made du ring the war to rouse and animate the coun try to ihe defence of its rights and honor, and to sustain the burden and privations of the vvar wiih fortitude, and which are now unanimously applauded, are in the same predicament except one? Are they, too, suppressed or designedly concealed? Why, indeed, should I attempt to con ceal them, or any of my early speeches not contained in the volume, even those which contain opinions different from those I now entertain? What is there about them that 1 should repudiate them? Do they not breathe lofty sentiments and devoted at tachment to country, and evince foresight and firmness? Werethey not applauded by the Republican party at the time? And are they not now eulogized by you and other political opponents? Why, then, should I be ashamed of them, or cast them away because they contain opinions in sev eral particulars which now, after more than a quarter of a century, I do not approve? Should 1 be ashamed to acknowlege that I have lived to improve, and have had the sense to see and the firmness to corrrect errors? No; I am far from repudiating these, my more youthful efforts. Their ve ry errors lean to the side of the country. They belong to the times, and grew out of ardent feelings of patriotism. The danger which then threatened the country was from .tbroad. The overthrow of Napoleon was followed by a combination of the great sovereigns of Europe, called the Holy Al liance. Its object was hostile to popular Governments, and it threatened to turn its power against this continent in order to suppress the free states which had sprung out of the old Spanish possessions. There was then no knowing at what moment we might be involved in a contest far more ter rific than that which had just terminated. It was in this state of things that Congress was called.on to settle the peace establish- menij on the termination of the late war with England. My attention was intently : turned to what I believed to be the point ol danger; and I was anxious to put the coun try in a condition lo meet whatever might come. The opinions I expressed in refer ence to mauufatuies, internal improve ments, and a permanent system of revenue, kept co!isia;itl y in view my leading object prep ira ion for defence s much so as what I then said in reference, to ihe army the military academy, and the; navy, aslh speeches themselves show. The danger from without fortunately pass- cl away, and tli.it from within began to discloe ilseif. I was not slow to see the strong tendency the Government was ta king towards consolidati tn, and that many of the means which I had regarded as ne cessary to defend against extern! danger, outrihti ed not a little to increie the dan ger within. That led lo a reinvestigation, and that to the modification or change of opinion which look piace. So far from casting away or desiring to conceal or kee, out of view m eaily sp e dies, 1 have long intended to colle t and publisn them. I ee you promise to pub lidi freely from them. You cannot do me a greater favor, and I hope you will not halt till yon have r -published all. I was so careless as to negle-t to preserve copies of my speeches or ntner publications prior to my election as Vice President Since then I have been more careful. Your re publication will giee me copies in a much more convenient' form than that of manu sci ipts, and save me much time and trouble in collecting and some little expense for co pying. I shall preset ve carefully the two contained in the Intelligencer sent by my friend, and I shall take care to get such others as you may publish. Let me. in conclusion, say, I wish you to understand that I make no complaint So far from it, I fed rather obliged to you than otherwise, lie your motives what they may, you have afforded me an opportuni ty of giving an explanation made necessa ry by the awkward manner in which the volume has been introduced to the public, and in which I have been conpelled to state much that ought to have appeared in a preface to the volume. With respect, I am, &c. J. C. CALHOUN. The armed occupation of Florida. The Florida Herald of the 1 7th insatnt says: The whole number of permits ta ken out at the Land Officeat St Augustine up lo the I4th instant, was 217: and from the late-t information received from the office at Newnanville, the number taken was near 700, and about 100 applications were then pending, it is, therefore, proba ble that the number now actually issued from that office mut be near, if not more than S00. The applications have actively increased at the St Angust'n e office, with in a few days, and the same must have been the case at Newnansville; so that we may now estimate ihe number of permits taken at 1.000; a sudiciehtly clear indica tion that the whole 200.000 acres of hnd will be taken up and that the law itself need not remain long in force or require the suspension of the law by the President East Florida will, under this law, acquire a permanent population, ere the expiration of the present year, of upwards of six thou sand to be added to that which existed pie vious to t lie pas-age of the act." Arrest of an English Forger. The Philadelphia Chronicles siys, that William G. Knight, a member of the London Bar, who, in January. 1841, forged several bills of exchange, amounting to $27,000, for which he obtained the money, and fled to Scotland and subsequently to this country, has been arrested in Iowa, by officer Young, of Philadelphia. Ninety-one of the forged bills of exchange, uttered and passed by Knight, are in this country, and it be hooves the public to be on their guard against any future action of one of the most adroit and consumma'e swindlers that ever landed on our shores. j9 Converted Seminole Husti-coluc-ehee, a converted Seminole Indian, is pre ching at Heading. Pa., to large audiences, in the German Reformed Church. Tha Gazette states that he is a nephew of Osce ola, the late celebrated Florida warrior, whom he is said to resemble very striking ly; is about 19 years of age: tall, stout, and altogether of a fine appearance. He speaks English well, uses simple language, and is graceful in his gestures. It is his intention to return to his ttibe, as a Missionary of the Gospel. Another Washington Monument. The New York papers speak of a monu ment to be erected in that city to the mem ory of Washington. --A description of it is given: The upper lookout will be 400 feet from the base, making the whole height from the top of the crotch of the pinnacle 425 feet. The estimated cost ol this magnificent structure is not to exceed 400,000. This sum is to be raised by contribution of one dollar .nd upward f.om fie people of the United Stales." Extraordinary LonGevit?. Mrs. -lizabeth Housp. died ai her lesidence in Tradclphia, Virginia, on' the 27th ulL having .iit-ined the extraordinary Re f 1 10 years. Sh was born near Annapolis, Md.. were she resided until 178, when she removed to Jeffrson count, Virginia where she remained tii.til the spitngof 1804. Sue then,- in company with her son-in-law, Mr L'i nford. removed to Kentucky, and in the fall of the same year went to Ohio County, Virgiiva, were she has resided ever since until the day of her death. Iron HtfiLD'NGs A correspon dent of the London Times, says buildings of cast iron are daily increasing, at a pro digious rate in England. A whole house i to be heated by a single stove in the kitchen. A three s'ory house containing; twelve rooms is to cosl only about $5000. It may be taken to piec s a;id temoved io another place ai an expense of ab ut ?2 Dkath for want ok Food The Mo bile Register has a report of a coroner's ju ry upon the death of a female, named Mrs Ann Land. She was a poor widow, in bad health, having a sickly child of five of six years of ag; both at them, it is suppo rt d. having suff-red from the want of pro per food, as well as from exposure The noor woman, it applied, had slept tha flight previous in an old mill in the lower part ol the city, and het stomach wa found, on examination, quite empty. When she reached the house at which she died, w.ii unable to articulate distinctly, and had been there -but a short time before she fell from i.er seal and expired. From Upper Mississippi. The editor of the St. Louis New Era has been shown a let'erfrom Mr. Miller, agent fr the li nked Statts at Council Bluffs, giving a full detail of the battle bet ween several hundred of the Sioux and the Pawnee Loups at the village of the latter. The battle commenc ed early in the morning and lasted until 12 M. the great object of the assailing party to get possession of the horses bVh.na ing to the Pawnees, and of the latter to protect them". It is said that 300 horses were taken by the Sioux, and about 40 were shot down. The Pawnees are said to have lost many lives by venturing from their lodges for the purpose of securing scalps whenever. they saw a Sioux Indian fail. They thus became marks for theif enemies, and were shot down whenever they appeared in view. The number of Sioux Indians killed is not known; the Pawnees represent that then were "plen ty." Both parties carried off their dead. The official despatch does not state how many of the Pawnees were killed, but it is ascertained that the number was forty six Had it not been fr assistances rendeied by another band of Pawnees, the loss of life would have been greater. It is said that the several bands of the Pawnees were lo meet in council, to deter mine what should be done in order to pro tt-ct themselves from their enemies. The Sioux manifested a hostile disposition to all ih tribes in that quarter; and they can on ly be secured against their incursions by; the locations of one or two military posts to keep diem in check. Exemplary Damages. In the case of Maria F. Swank vs John B Zimmerman, tried in the Supreme Court of this county on the 25th inst., the jury, after an absence of about two hour, returned a verdict of S54,00o damages for the plantiff; it was an action of slander. - In the Common Pleas the plaintiff recovered $5,000 damages, from which the Defendant appealed to the Supreme Conrt. The Plaintiff is a young lady about 15 years of age, arid the Defen dant a wealthy man residing in Hocking: county. Upon the bringing in the verdict the Plaintiffby her counsel remitted $2,000 the amount s e had put in the bill. It is the most extraordinary case of exemplary damages for defamation of character ever tried iu Northwestern Ohio. Sandusky Democrat. Melancholy Occident We learn from the Advertiser tht on Monday last, at Swan Island, in Maine, Francis, a son of Thomas H Perkins, Jr., E-q , of this cify lost his life, instantly, by the accidental ,i;hrre of a ffun while he was setting in- .... n- - - . lo a boat. He was a promising youth, ana his premature death is most deeply lamen ted. Boston paper. CTV'O, you are not beyond wet," as the wight said to his better half." when she had just fallen head and ears iu the swamp from the footway. :6: fQ3tThey should paint it a sound co or m a's the youth said when asked what color they intended painting the churcii tower.