Newspapers / The People’s Press and … / Jan. 14, 1835, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The People’s Press and Wilmington Advertiser / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
i-: if- u CD IE (DIP !(D)Er . AEDA7 .4- 9 A J i - ' i .i I4! ) -t ' i " . 1.- i" ISO 106. MiiVGTOiv n g. Wednesday; January 14, 1835. VOL. 3. JVO. 2 it H'i'i ! v -i j- ' Vubliibed every Wednesday Slornlng, by THOMAS JLOR1JTG. TEiirio; throiagfa some of its officers, .of the names I is brouglit forward with, imposing gravity and; residences of the active citizens in j by the Committee. ; and no one is at a Toss everv toart of the State : and to these, and 1 to understand what is meant I rne ?hbee Dollars per annum, in advaSce. Kot exceeding a t)quaiinserted al ONE DOLLAR, the flnt, and TWEXTY FIVB CEJTS for eachubse- i .qUentlnaertion .":.' :--'r - v':'' - i ; No Subscribers tiken Yor less than One year ; : ixhd all who peniUtjthi&ir subscription to, ; run over j a. year, without giving ' notice,: are considered 1 bound for the second year,, audjso tiin fof iill sucT cceding years. -;.' ' . lYearl advertisers,: who will agree to pay $10 pt year, will be aifowed 30 per cent, discount, on' I all ove that bum and that sum 'included,: so as - , toot to reduce yieir yearly bill below -i fe-OFPlCEon tfe BottliSiUe-of larkct Street, be- r r wua t r - j . I vBANK OF TflE UNITED STATES. XU Mr. Tyler 6f the Finance Committee of . ti the Senate, winch had been authorized to V to theirpteat astonishment at the familiar ity;and condescension of the highTdi recto ry in Philadelphia, myriads of Bank doc uments wereent;vith a minute descrip-" tion of name and pfece; postage free. At the Presidential election of 1832, the State was deluged with these"' la vors. . At his own re-elections'; to the Senate, thetwo last, the branch. bank, was inthe field a gainst him every where,. J anohje very ro rrn :. its a 1 rectors traversing tne T&taxe, goirjg to the houses of the members of the General Assembly after they were elected, in almost every Jcounty Over a State of sixtv thousand feaiiare miles : and thenat tending the legisiaturevajsJobby members; to jopposo nim ui tnese imngs xr o The Bank, as all America knows, (said Mr. H.) filled ithe whole country with the endless cry which had -been cch- charge has been ; made too often riot to oed and re-echoed from this" chamber, suggest the whole story as often, as it is that the removal of the deposites had laid XllUlCU. X UC X I laiUClll UTLUUIC UWUIC W KUCl "1C lltvtooiij vuiwiiiug the President oTj, the Bank because he could not manage him. . and make him use tne institution ior poiiucai purposes! and hence his revenge, hia vindicti veness, .his. hatred to Mr. feiddle, and his. change of sentiment' tovvards Ithei institution.- This is theqaarge which has run through trie Bank presses for three years and is alleged 10 take-date from 1829, when, an application was made to change the Bres iderj of the Porismonth Branch But how standihe truth, recorded Kon our own journalsltjdstands thus vl'hat for three consecuti vft veo rs altei t?e - harbor sit in the, recess on the Bank of the Uni ted States, made a report, which occupied uuwuiua 01 twoiiours 111 me reauing. A motion being made-to - print it. Mr. Benton rose, not ;to object to the printing, nor to go into ati argumipnt in . answer to the' report, which Would come more pro perly at another time, but to correct some 1 1 - 't 1 1 ' ' : . f errors wnicn ciaunea nis attention, ,111s Jown name was made to figure in that re port, in very good company to ! be sure, tliat of President Jackson, Vice President y " Bureri, and' ; Senato r G run d y. It s"eefirstTint we haVe all, said Mr. B , been detected in something that deserves exposure,- in the offence of aiding out re spective constituents, or fellow-citizens, in owaining brjanchj banks to be located in' our respective States ; and upon this de tection, the, assertion is made that these branches weje not extended to these States for political efTect, when the charter was nearly run out,! but in good faith, and up on our application, to aid the business of thecountry. Wit B. said it was true that he had forwarded a petition frpmthe me.T pliants of St. Louis, about 1820 or '27, scr iiciting a branch - at that place ; and he had accompanied it by a letter, as he had t ' : j'J). Ji. .'::..: -j ..... i ijeeiv requeaieu u tto, busiuiuiuj anu sup-. porting ineir request y ana peanngvne tes timony to their characters as men of bu siness and prpperiy; which the occasion ' and the truth required. He did this Tor merchants! whp were his political enemies, and he did - it readily and cordially, as a representative, ouht to act for his constit- uents -whether tbeyi are- fpr hirrt, or a gainst him; in the --elections. So fat so good; but the allegation of the report is. that the, branch at St. Loins, was estab lished upon thii petition; and this, letter, ;'jwid therefore wisnot estnblisired with po - lilical views, but purely and simply for J "business purposes! Now Said Mr. B. 1 ' have a question to: put'to the Senator frOrn : Virginia, (Mr. Tyler.) who has made the N report for" the! Committee: It is. this : wlie- ( ther ;the Presideht or-directors )f the A Bank had informed him that Gen. Cad- . wall ad er had beeri sent as an agent to St ;l Louis, .to examine the place, and to repor upon its ability to sustain a branch ? .' . 'Mr. Tyler rose; and said, that he had heard. nothing at ihe Bank unon the sub j ( jeet 1,61' Gen., Cadwallader haiing been '.. cnt to.St. Louis; or ny report upon , the place being made,' j' -Then, said) Mr.: Benton, -resuming his speech, the cftinmittee has. been treated uri worthily.- scuryilv. basely, by. the , roanKi . 11 nas oeen maue tne instrument I to ''report an untruth to the Senate, and 16 the -American; People; and neither the Senate, nor that part of the American Peo- , pie who chance io be in this .'-chamber. BhOuld be : permittyd to leave their places Until that falsehood was exposed.; ' 1 Bir, saiq iur. ts? . auuressmg tne - vice had never spoken - in public befcfe, nor ing of this deadly malice against Mr. Bid- i.V..l,l - 1 'J li f 4 Vli frr nn .Mnnnirtnu.ttta .'nslltiltinn . In si uuiu lie 11 live, uuue - n iiu vv. uuu -jt uu vt uuk. lMtna4Illl-vrJ"'v""" been: for the falsehood attempted to be suit the President's politieiLwjshes for 'palmed upon'the Senate' through the. in- threeyears, one after another, -vitlv this strumentality of its committee. But ha v- "vindictive" hate in hisfcosom, and his mg been driven into it, he would mention uia,uuiicui,aierminaiioHyo rum me ru&iir nnnthtr rirriimtnmp whir.h nlso he had tution, he nominates this same Mr. Bid- never juimed in nublic before, but which die. to the Senate, as, one of the Govern would, throw light upon the establishment ment directors, and at the head of those ofthe'branch in St Louis, and the kind directors! Mr. Biddle,: aod some of his of business which jt had to perforui: An mends with him came in, upon every immense edition o a review of his speech nomination for three successive years, af- 011 th4 veto message, was circulated ter vengeance had been sworn against fWrnnrrit K'.o Qtoa:nti th o v- . S K la Inst t. him Juiikor thte. ' var3: atter.wards-ihe . is fectioni It bore the im Dress of the Bank L not only: named a director, but indicated foundrf in Philadelphia, and was intend- for theiPresidecyj of tlie Bank, by being ed to let the oeonle of Missouri see that put at the head of those who came rccom- hefMe Ri was a Verv unfit nerson to re- mended by tha- nomination ,of the Presi nresent them : and afterwards it was seen dent, and the sanction of the Senate ! Thus from the report of the Government Direc- was he nom mated for the year 1830, tors to the President of the United States. 1831, and 1832 ; and it was only alter the that Seventy-five Thousand copies of that report of Mr. Clayion'scommittee of-1832 Teview was paid for by the Bank of the tnat President ceased to nominate Mr "United States !. That looked bad enough, Biddle for Government director U -Such said Mr. B -but it was1 not all. That was the frank, confiding, and friendly con- debts ; and thus to enable herself to stand the pressure, which the -hostility" of. the government ! was bringing upon her. .This was the assertion for - six - long months : and now let facts confront this assertion, and reveal the truth to an out raged and insulted community. The first fact (said Mr. B.) is the transfer of the moneys to London, to lie there idle, while squeezed out of the peo- ple here during the panic -and pressure. The ; .cry of distress was raised in Der Ceniber, at the meeting of Congress; and during that month the sum of $ 129,764, was transferred, by. the Bank, to its a gents the Barings- ' The- -cry waxed stronger tiirjaly, -and until that time the monhiy translers were, speech, ofl which the Bank thought it auct pi tne iresiaenr;. wnne .ur. uiuuie, worth while to set a Teview written; and conscious that he did not deserve, a nomi to Dublish m edi'tion of Stvcntv-fice Thou- nation at his hands, had himself also e- publish m edition of Seventy-ji sqnd copies, "was not thought .worthy to be put in tie Jlegister of Debates! Hhat Keofister tt whieh'Conorresstis a subscri ber, and f.iicb purports to4e a true: his tnrw nf nil Avlrvxivs LTVInr' l hp rpnlip.s tn it- were puDiisnea in tne same itegisier 1 ""s1- , v. V r 1 , -J V He si sas:e lected during each of these years, at th head ot the stockholders' tie ket tie knew that he was meditating and - hatch ing against the President, though'the Pre; sident did not ! What then becomes of 8 129,704 355,253 261.543 34,749 2,142.054 501,950 pokevjf the speech on;the veto mes- committee, and publicly and directly made ! Tiere was another,'on the final by the Banl and Us friends ? Rilse as passage d: the bank bul, not totally, sup- aMU w v, -" , v r " pressed, hit compressed into nothing; six finding thefcroof of its falsehood recorded fours' styakinff put into iaTrjaraKraph : m.our owtf journal,! , artd his 'imia, speech on the whole - bill.! Mr. B ."fnia not riow sroing into a srene- thus convted into whit an unfortunate 1 ral answer to the report; but he must do orator oi ijrKansas once saio oi owu justice tq an absent gentleman one oi in seeing tae 'jnarrowless skeleton of his the purest men on earth; bpcf in public oration in ?ne newspaper j 'a ammunve i ancj private hie, axiU who, after the raau- metamorpfiti" tAna as lorjatniru speecn, i ner he had been treated - in this Uhani- i user ted for him in, that same Kegaster, it ber, ought to be secure,, in his retire; was an lnfanous falsihcation; of the truth, mentj from Senatorial attack an'd injus Mr. B. had never mentioned! these thincrs 1 ; TVic nmmitUo Vi-vp ininwfl n rnn- publicly bbre, nor should he have done snicttbus issue with Mr! Tanev ; and it now, except to show that the falsehood they, have carried a glorious bank vitto of ivhich thy Senates committee has been ry over him, Iby turning 'ofl'the trial upon made the ofcan; is a partof the system of a falsoDointl Mr!lTanev arraigned the the Bank, pervading our Congressional history evea.' It was his intention, at some properlttme, to have a committee to report upon those pablications, called Re gisters of Debates, so-far as they have bcen publishfd since "the Bank of the U riited States has undertaken tp wield the vas 'thaf of Messrs!' Gdles and nad a line press, hii eye Seaton. Mr. .13. said that if he had from' the Committee, (and he was-within their reach all the summer,) he could have turned them, to the inquiry which vvpujd have biought out the ; truth, with respect to. the establishment jot the St. Louis branch, and saved them from the imposition which the? bank directory had practised upon, them. As it war)te December' Febrnary March . . j May - i ; June . - S July 4 r - ' . I 8 3,425,313 Makingr the sum of near three millions and a half transferred to London to be idle ii the hanrts of an agent, While that . r c very money was squeezeu out pi a iew cities' here; and the' whole country, and the halls of Congress,! were filled with the deafeninsr ! din of the cry. that the Bank ..was forced to curtail, to supply the loss;in hex own coffers from. the" removal of the deposites f . And, worse yet ! 'The J3aik had, in the hands of the same a sreris, a large1 sum when the transfers of tlieie collections began, making m the whole, the sum of 8 4,261,201, on the first 'day of July Jast, which was lying i. dle in her ucreht's hands in London, draw ing little or 'no 'interest there, while! squeezed out of the halnds of those who were paying interest here; near seven per cent., and had afterwards to g into bro kers bands to borrow at one or two per per cent, per'morrth. ; Even now, at the last returns on the first day of this month, about two millions and a half of this mo ney (2,637,006) was still lying idle in, the hands of the Barings', waiting till foreign exchange can be put up again to eight orten per' 'cent. The enormity of this' conduct, Mr. B. said, was aggravated ,by the notorious fact, that the transfers of this money were made by sinking the price of exchange, as low as five percent. below par, when shippers and planters had bills to sell, and raising at eight per cent above par, when merchants and im porters had to buy; thus double taxing the commerce of the j country double taxing the producer and consumer "and making a 'fluctuation of thirteen per cent, in loreign exenan six months. , A Making near a million and a quarter of dollars, at the least Mr. B. repeated, at the least; for a monthly statement does not show the accumulation of the month, which might also be sent off; and the statement could only be ndied on for so much as appeared a month before the ar duction was made. ; Probably the sum was, upwards of a million and a quarter of, hard dollars, thus taken away from New Orleaus last-winter, by shopping ac comraodations, calling in loans, breaking up domestic exchange, creating panic and pressure, and sinking the price of all pro duce'; that the mother Bank might trans-, fer funds to London, sramble in foreijrn exchange, 'spread desolation and.terrorJ through the land; and then charge the whole upon the ? President of the United States; and end with the grand consumma tion of bringing.o. new. political party in to power, and perpetuating its own char ter. . -1 . - . . These, said Mr. B., are two, and onlyl two, out of multitudes, of the astounding inquests which have escaped the eyes'of the committees, while they have been so successful in their antiquarian researches into . .Andrew Jackson's , and Felix Grundy's letters ten or twenty years ago, andririto Marti Van Buren's and Thomas H. Benton's, six or eight years ago; letters which every public man is called upon to w-give to his neighbors, or constituents, which no public man ought to refuse, or, in all probability, ever did refuse: and which are so ostentatious-ly speedy and faithful execution. . cn lhw partof France," of the stipulations coiPj taiud in thjr Treaty. . Bat I cannot, and j ought not in candor to conceal my persua sion, that ht will feel great surprise .and regret, vrhra he Jooks in - vio in that commentation for a repethion of the as surances iren by MSerurier. to the; -time atwftch the law for executing, the treaty .willjbe sobmiUefc the Chambers: This disappointment will be the greater, because.-in mv note of the 29th, L - drew the attention of, your Excellency . to that subject, by a quotation from the letter of MySerorier to the Secretary of State, yhich. the Prexident will Batural.ly think: required particular- notice. A . the ex . . ,., fit!." wit c tent .i mi? engagemrni oi ins i Miciiur at WahKirnon da? not seem to . J De cuiy appreciaieu, ana ipp euecis ii pro duced may not W fully knii, it will"be proper that I srfould enUr. intv some de velopement o! both. Your pxiNllency is doubtless awareof the cicumstahev, that roy. despatches announcins the rtWtion of the law arrived in the United Statvs.ia the first week in May, but those desj aVb- es also slated, that a last mailing-vef VI would bo sent with instructions 0 i - - m r.4J p. Serurier, to make 'some explanations. pa I ii the subject ' In ordinary cases, it woflM V j j ' U;i have been doomed a duty inthetPf. y V ' . .U; ' dent, to haw ioforjfled Conifft sa iot The j ; '. . change, wiiich tins refusal vf "the Chan- 1 . 5-v ber was calculated to rTdute in the .te- J. Jr. r.rodute latious betwe n the two cofintrles. IJut he'wus nnxiuiie to prever.t. anyt nieattro 1 V n.iraded iii thi-renort. and so emnhaiicul- th.it miTbt incre.iso the irritation ri;rta ly reau, in this cnamoer, wun pause anu raly let by tne uar.on, anaiur itunibiri of Fraroe was as ired that no messjce would le fent to (Siugress untjl th- ar'ri; val of his'instructioiis. Rv aa unMsuftlly . i . i gesture; and witn sucna -sympathetic look" for the expected smile from the' friends of the bank r letters, which so far he was concerned, had been used to make Johpr pasa, these hJ not arrive until" a the committee the. organ of a falsehood, j month alter ihe rt jtction of the law hnd And now. Mr. B. would be glad to know I i:t.n knovin in the C'( States ; and who put the cnmmittee upon the sf ent pi finally the W. ui juih-, oeruf ier iimp .1 ... I . i . tl,.,.A iinci.l I A ..'t ..V. rt-. nothinjr in the resolution. .under which they acted, to conduct their footsteps to the silent covert of that small game. '&xs ' a - . 1 : . He was done for the present, but not for i . - J the promUed ex pin nation, and. gayc p assurance to which," I once mojCi prTy. vour ExcelleKcy's 'articitUr.-atUntbA : -Le GiHiicmuieufdu Uo, (he -satsj ..y But. Mr.. B. was done for the present u-ra, Moniieur, lout.jjua loy il et Cirl ; i lionnereifort, et toaU e,que sa persevcrfn the future. .Justice cannot be done iiOjr! te persuasion de. la, justice et tits avana this Teport of tire 'committee until it is ! gV9 mutuels du trahe oiis crbenUA printed. -The only object which he noxv j attehdre de lui. Son Juff.vtioa ' vtlf.Tv had in view was to vindicate solne gen- outre, de faire tout ce quv- no(re Oip',iuU tlemen, including himself, w ho were most uniustlv treated: and to show the true charucter'of the entireVepo'rt, by exhibit tion pvrnitt, pour rap;aclirr au.Uri rj--; possible l'epoque ia prcsei.aUJrt ucu--ellt;de ia Wi 'ri j.ttee." It cannot, have mg tne mmute aiiigenee, anu nuracuiuus . escapt u youraueuu in. sii. y: -success of thet eommitRe in hunting out JirtiUiiioii desiicna'.t d f r th.ajep-'" things of'Aollungi lo be turned to' the ac- uf t'.tr'hw, is that pWaj-lld ay iht. Cloq pount of thp Rank, and to the tireiudice oft suimfon. -Thtf ww:rs r; r: Ey its adversaries; while'Stone blind to such ' .-ry tliiii pcrRiittec uy recent, and such enormous misconduct ro b the Kank as he had ,iust .detailec lo u-e , v-!4:in t!i? Cos.itci:- i J . a . th. whatvvi r d..:bj" 4. i Us ii h. : 'Senate, and which'' came withui tl.f pre-1 miiitexi i tt;...e.p:r.n .r..or. i J V ?.i cis letter of the resolutions u4J.r A-hiclf: T-av.-, at the t.r.j .ir.ttc r 'irs-r.. rf .n; r. A 1 j .jt: j ihry acted. ' , ! it would appear, are cr.:cTtui!;ea tb;.t tT,; . Mr T.l.ir cfiiri hp 3S nerh'PtJV .Wll- 1 li:iilpr wullul LcTUUl Hie U- -i.. t.-l 4in tli .t rpnnrt should iro back to the i of the Chambers, at a day early t-out: . , mere, in the brief space .of committee, and that the honorab nd" all this to make mo- man (Mr, Benton) should be pla Q ..rUilA hMrcr ihat the committee-. I .here- was not bie ice upon ney scarce at home, while charging that the committee, i nere wa, . - . scarcity upon the President! Thus com- assertion m, the report winch, -did. a single not legality of the conduct of the Exchange Coiimittee, which. bverlvaping the busi- nes$ oi sucn a committee, w men. is w ouy scarcity upon mex rc.siue-ui : uujwiu' - :ntrv n"rnnf ..h-l: .u:.u. u! k ; . ' i - ; ? - 1 honora ttiiHaaciuiu uiai uu&iuvsa vvijivxj, is) iui iu iuic n. tntie- tQ CeiiveV lh riS"U ol.Hirir. wvi";-"' to the President Ufe the meeting Ct i . i . . t 1 ?jt Congress. - It was thus tnnx me prorate of W. Serurier was understood at Wash i no inn si ri d ihe President ucU d upon tl JS understanding of it. uht'n he made it the 5 $A There charter, could only be done by the board of directors, and by a board -of . not less1 duction of an immense amount of than seven, and which they could not del frorn New Orleans, at the raomi shown bv the reDort of the covernment! ; nTritiio nnH tlitrprv ainkiho its ble gentleman's attention" to .it.- basis of his resolution to forbear an corn was sufficient in the report to sat- fnunication to Coni;retst4lir- then Vs- - ; . The next fact, Mr. B. said, was the ao- . f . . lin thp snh;.rt of the cur- iioh. This resolution and specie) .-, L,i,a -n-nU whpthpr it was tnr t nre uiuHuivocallv exn ew ;vrieaiis, ny .iue iputucm nettsarv or not eg!e. Yot this- committee of three, serj westen proce was arrivirfg thefe and f al)J the were submitted to the Sou leded by - the Prudent h.mseK wps thus disabling the merchant, from buy hether there was necessity for otherwise directors to transact the most important pHcnearIy one half; and all underjhe Jfeouri had looked to both the state business; suchas making immense loans,! Kl of .supplying the.losfui itsi" lh reDOrthe surelv would not upon long credits,.apa upon questipnaoie coflfeT3 occasioned by.the removal oi the . Dronounc itan exparte report -."J ' -T - - -r--, ueposues. . , - Mr. T. said his deliberate opinion was, tions under the simulated garb, and falsi-; . ,1.tLnA(i;'!1IMi ;,yn of this u u..u a... i.uliUmun. irectojry had .fid pretext, appear if ronvthe fact that at thp Rank was rinht.in its contro- wa r suu sometimes usmg no disguise at withlhe Governm- dthat its no President,! the President and Directors of the Bank of the United States, upon re ceiving the merchants', petition, and myi letter, did not send a branch to St Louis 1 They sent an aeerit there, in the .person Of .General Cadwallader to examine the place, and to report upon its mercantile ca- i -' ! .' ... i . - . I . . pamuties ana wants, ana upon tnai report itne aecisum was maaei ana maae arramst the request of the mere hunts, and that up- ' ori the ground that the business of the place would n6t ! justify the. establishment j must be content to see hisiname .figure in j but him had arraigned the illegal .acts of 1. ot:a orancn. . i nei petition irom ine mer-1 me myriaa oi copies oi jtne repon irae 1 mis commiuee . ana men ne is Titaue 10 nd this motive ru'j'ed in Mr. Mr line's answer to Serurier i note. I am directed by my instiuctions to bo ramlid and ejcplicit in all rny communi cations. This courseVannot I am sure, but be as agreeably to hi Uis M iji'StyJa Government as it is io my oivn inclina tions. I am bound tin rrfore, in. this spi rit of frankness to decjar. tliat. although the utmost reliance ii plarttroh the as of His Moicstv's rammers, and that no 4 diuU i entertained of the sin i .1 u: i 1 -i 1 u iiif ir p n inn cish - which vvlis 1 whs niiiiwii 11 v. int? siiMits 1 cihii t. uj .11a c 1 - . ... , 1 : . 1 tvt 1 - j 1 . l. 1 r-- --r -1 ... . . , , . . 1 intAhn in nnniic npnnx lpx in Lilt iew 1 1 . wn ,r rr in rpirani lit liic i r 11 ir rii iuir uii 1 m uv. . v theirs, as well as his; r,it was to. aid the exclusive charge of conductrag .the n rlo c, r wfir fer less than'the a- ? . i :tf1J r.u iB had nf, tln.r the treatv. vet .it Jo w notaj- hiram exposingthe unworthy,the scur- curtailment last ,-winter ;Ta business of the . m0utafteircartaU. land sent off,' mde. The report expressly refer-' peir tjnt they appreciate the itnjorunca 7'T?ndh T-0?-Bn.k' post .important character-to the: eonntryj nnd that these deposited were not.eutirely red t0 lhe argUmcht of Mr Taney, who of th subj.t i- jnst value. n he. ot should submit t .resolution requiring he having no manner of affinity to the proper drawn.out for maVy months after the.cur-' contended that the exchange, committee Jl.ation.of the treity i arkniwlcdged; it committee to obtain from the! President of functions of an exchange committee; and -.i' -a v a -mnnptr - --i f th :r.,t iKr tk. r.uhfie fAfth. is Died 1 IV iwiivti - 1 a vwmvw, ..... j- - .. is L ' hiie a . I t l-;ii : : .i t-. . i . . 1,1 ,1 1 j ' .1 - i - 1 wimrem r VT J 1 Was .in lLStrll a LiuaikJ tneanK a cojiy ot uen v.aawiaaers wnicn they conaucxea m ine ; mosx pajj puUic-: dep6sites, ; iri ,Dctoher, charteYof the Bank.L AVith regard to.the repon aopy pi me answer io me mer- nai ana imquuous manner, anu wmwut , -. " . ; f,V-- : -i . l . -ffll. r" k- 1n-:nd- hants; and a-copy of theseconoV leUe even reportmgta the board Allthisthe nan o(u nor'did bethink it of any con- announcing me,cnange or aetermination; government aireciors cominumcaieu.-- nited States. - V Tl ?- : ' 6294,228 62 -eeL The branch however, was 76 64 establishedlit St Louis-,whetber l came and the imedjateestablishment.f :the: iAU this Was commented W on' thjs InthJ name of-public' o&ccts,';!; branch. Until Ihose copies came in, he floor j yet Mr. Taney is selected ! "He . v V :X' "'--"" 'T : " ' "' should say no more bri that poiat but is the one pitched lupon ; 'astif nobody" V .; 1 "v ' ; '.'' -; "'-'. 8467 must be content to see hisiname .figure in but him had arraigned the illegalacts of . . 'K-'- - '' ' ''':'. .' - Aron "oUhefe by means of the honorable gentle; lilil? f mans influenceor his btows, He.knew - chants came to Mr B. while he was here, I more.the beUer) which would' be printed, arraign the existence of theVcomrnittee, ! hirs In all, less than half a million "in his' seat: it vaa forwarded from this and .which would trite the villaoe orators I and not its misconduct ! ' Is this rierht? In March. therewas' still on hand; ll.at tn Jhe name of the Treasurer . " ? J S40.266 28 r . 1 i . j. .L - - - . 0 i . . w . I . - . - r . . S . . . . I : (.... . I T ,V.o nsniD nf miKli rrViira .. bi.Uil DU ' . inx visil 111 ni. 1 jiiik iiHiiirn iik tir: n 1 t mih nail cs . wmi im rnn in immt miriiciius ! ueiiticuian. auu lu iiu rsut- 111111--11111 uau w . returned; and when he got home; in the of the treeks and the gorges of the moun- Can the vengeance of the Bank never be spring, or summery the mercnaoisiniorm-Jiains, witn snowing mem waai an. mcou-1 appeaseu wane aeiiveso& moves on eanu ed him of what had ' occ u r red, and that hsistent knd uri principled fello wilhis Mr. r 4 Mr." Bhad performed a duty, wh ich taey nao. receivea a leiier irom me oirec-i tje.monusana loyaamire me tieucacy-jai i ougni uov uu ue ueiayeuaa xiour, ia t 4:: In all. unwards of one hundred thousand dollars; "and making the actual withdraw- j. i i - " m " - av AAA ai of deposites.i at that brancli. but $ dou, ! t, i .t" . - lav j ii.. "r .u - , I (W- Rnt" hnrt nnrft'roonf Ireouent Te- i ot dot- - a..?.... .k-. viewsJby that: gentleman. au iu.u. had ren sent into all parts of the country nd no ddubt they had their due influence, -.. -. i - - m l l k turiinea auuin? anv iuiue wuic, onrl i-oncladedbv raovine that the report anJ.docaments.be printed, which was fc greed to--and then '9 . , The Senate adjoarned over to Iopday ged lor "th? payment cf stint s; m .iey dufc how frr nearly three years; it is nol denied that tEe Uuited Suitrs have, wiUt , fidelity and prdmptneM. ejtecnttd; their part of the. treaty, ana. mm mev -.- j tortwarance knd mccru-. w - . S ration, under circumstances ol a nature io rnte irrcat excliemrnt. In ihis state, vl S 103,938 03 next.- Vv-- merchants was; that another letter had! to the Bank, which, V.on receiced from the Bankwithout any 1 sure in that report .www. - - . i I . I .., . I . n . . " . V netit on having been sent, ana wimoui a- j ot tne i iTesutent, -the ny new rpo upon' the business of the President, wai oflen pi nlace. inlorrping tnem tnat tne orancn i vice oi mat report, s an ; nnnrnrp'.npipnrFi i-nmm forward; two: facts; detected in mazes of the monthly suttements. to exclude him (Mr B.) from re-election The quotation from Mt Duarie was made whichwould fixavqhee botthe-charac- i net p out tne argument ot tne Ajommit-1 ter o: me oanjc anu uie cnaracier ui mc i. ... ll . j .. v. things something more wpuiu seem w oc required than 'the general, aisurancrt. thai the earliest day would be taken lo sa lisfy lhe demands of justice, and redeepi the pledgeti laitn onn nawuu. . n be expected that the personal cnorcnicacc oi the members oi tne iisiaiure. or ven sone degree of national interest, onghUp givd ay lo the't strong exigen ces of tuch.a Case. It cannot escapv the observation bf.youy Excellf ncy, ibat, in a certain solution of the question, ".ulterior, coniiderations may arise, which will give additional gravity tpthe subject . ; f- I have submit'! these reflfClionVa btder that nothing inay oe vomuuru, yt mv nait to shew the; light' in. which this. Matter is vVweo1 by; my GoverDment; ai 4 : 5 : t t -'f l1 - ! . - !r J J i i . r , t. ... a . n - T A i wnen tnis.commuoviv . ,T ?rS3.UC47;-i ttfkarfI nxittedT ia the President,: b will doutaiess .t Rnnntft. and tO 0Dnnf evrv cafldi-1 tO date frorri Governor to constablew.ho wa tee to sustain, their position and there- report; the Hank tor its"! audacity, wicicea-1 l,0itjtV6Iar5 808,0d4, at Oe Udst. j .ratified at the renewed - assurancef u notibr-tho Bank- J The brah had even byJ)ecorae tbeir own, ;The ?tUdiciw nes5ndsebood,;thef rert.fbrits - " rj."lx.. W-rt" ' lconuins oi kincerc dciiie -to.rocare-4 furmshed- a list to the mother ; Bank, of the President towards th Bank, jb ; -; t r '':: contains ol r j p ;. V nd in the linpe-that aiecoideranon o4.; , ; . . w the cinmrnstahces may produce flinT- ent result and tnable- me to inform the , , -President, that Jilts: Msiy's &V 'rV- J -W meht hafet deefded that the finpoftance of( f f;. this cafe will juiufyjhent in- v : . j pi exception : in it., flvor to : the ordinary , , v ; J course -of proceedinr. and.that jt sabnittra lothe tf- r ttsilT day. as may""'. '"'". H - -- ,t - ..-,:.-.. a. I - : f i u It 1'
The People’s Press and Wilmington Advertiser
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 14, 1835, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75