Newspapers / The North-Carolina Star (Raleigh, … / May 23, 1838, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The North-Carolina Star (Raleigh, N.C.) / 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
n tlieacraiioa, wuicn way nut vc thought inappropriate. " In tin days of promts! reform, the 'two Senators frwaa tft stateof Missouri differed in polibcs; of them, the gre -reformer," Mr. Benton) the other, Mr. Bar- -ton. wsw thoaglu tlit promised- reform w it nan humbug. The first session "tf ltaotk Cuagricumj tOe stJ&S, 3.' of December, 1827, and ended on tlia Gtlt of Mar. 1823, These gentle men several! y attended the whole ses sion, their per diem allowance was 1,400 dollars each, beingiW darn it fight dollars per dajj bo t for mileage, reckoning eiht dollars iW every 20 miles, Mr. Bjrtolt charged 6339 20, whilst Mr. Benton charged 8 1,344 C6. Mr. Barton charged kit mileage by (he rreat mail route', over land: but Mr. Benton, who waa ratlins out and rondemninz all abuses, counted his mile bjr all the crooks and turns and tortuous windings of the Mississippi and Ohio liters. Mr. Barton was left at home because he did not believe in the propriety of professing one thing and practicing another; and Mr. Ben ton was retaiiu-u to correct abuses and carry out the great principles of his report on executive patronage, ten years have intervened since the session . . . ufUonzresa just reierreu lo; me re port sleeps unheeded; and. in the mean time. Mr. Benton continues to count his mile every vearbr war of the riv er, which has iriven him upwards of fiur i'.iousaml dollars more than Mr, liartoa felt authorized to charge under the same law. Another prtcepL'Yie committee rcpoi Uil that "the privilege of newspa pers to the members ought to be abro gated," and "that the practice ton of ten indulged in by the House of voting "" to fhpYselve I copiei'ivf uiiult," onwht to bo discontinued. The privilege and practice continue, and without re s', rain t. Prtetpt. The contingent expenses of this House were reported to be ex travagant. During the year 1828, the last of Mr. Adams's administration, the r amounted to 80,000. Practice. During the year 1836, the last year of the Jackson reform ad ministration, this item was 200,000 ilollarsi And, during the year 1837, being the first year of the Successor,' who promised to 'tread in the foot steps of his illustrious predecessor these- expenses are 210,000 , dollars! Tbia must be the 'magician way" of working in the rule of reduction it was certainly unknown to old Thomas Dil worth. -vr- " Precept.' Tt committee, on which, I again repeat, the gentleman from N. York (Mry Cainbreieiig was a mem ber, reported that the had obtained informatiuirty which the were satis fied "that by a Judicious system of re-: form. Instituted by the executiveom- ers themselves, at least one third of tee of wavs tad means, declared here,; during the last special session, that,' after Bfteenyears experience as a member ot this House, he found it dif ficult lo understand these Treasery ac counts, and the manner in which the Secretary's annual report on the fi nances is stated!! Trri-y COttttKESSIONAL. miniuiiiii i.ii't-'rvsw.jiy..-. Nothing important occared in the Senate. " ' " HOUSE OFREPRESKNTATIVES. The - Duel -Reports , ajain- M Graves moved the printing of 0,000 cobies fextrs) of the evidence anu Jnurnati'which was agreed to. Mr moved the printig an - equal ttm ftIinA nresent number of clerks in the departments might be reduced wifltfnmaT4o pauj in and can safety to the public interest ij cefled. rac?cnieumtw not be e n reduced in a hy on 6 of the de partments, but, on the contrary, there has been considerable increase. I will prove it. The State Department, in the year 1828, included the Patent Office, arid the whole number of clerks was sixteen: the salary and compensa- tion of the Secrerary and alThis clerks and messengers, amounted to 27,750 dollars. ' The, whole number of tlerks now employed in the State Department and thcPatnt Office is forty."The Joint saTarieTan!""compelsallon amount to 56,515 dollars! The Patent Office,' in 1828, was managed by Superintendent, with a salary -of -fllOOi-a-lwo-'rki-Anjl. a messenger, whose joint compensation was 3,700 dollars. It is now under the charge of one of the Reformers; the title of Superintendent is ex changed for that of -Commissioner;' au4 with the change of titles comes the change of salary from 1,500 to 3, 000 dollars! The, number of clerks is increased from two to twenty four, and the compensation from 1,800 to 21,. 000 dollars; and not content with one messenger, and his old salary of 400 dollars, they provide a salary of 840 , dollars fur messenger, and then give him an assistant, to whom is also paid 15 dollars per month. Thf, Secretary ot the Treasury, in vv thVyear 1828, employedight clerks atid'two messenger. His salary, anil the compensation of the clerks and Messengers, amounted to 18,600 dol , lrs. ., . . . ' ' ' , The present Secretary of that De partment Yand he was takeo from the body of reformers, who made procla matton from the Senate Chamber,) em ploys fifteen clerks and two messen gers. . His salary and their eompensa tionrnmount 1027,100 dollars! A similar result will be found in compar ing the present with the former state of the several subdivisions of the Trea sury Department But, by war of 'in troducing economy and despatch in the .Treasury Department, the committee proposed to 'simplify the forms of bu siness, and to re-organize its subordi nate tranches, so as to dispense with one-fourth, if not one- third of the offi cers of the, Treasury. ' Noisy sir, no reorganization of the department has - jet been attempted. Instead of redu cing, they have ineresaed the' number , of officer ape! the forms of business, under 'the tttcw mode of simplifying;, hive become to complicated, that the gentleman from New York, (Mr. Cam , reWrjy DOW pnirmnwi cmmK- nomberof the reports, Mr. Mason, of Ohio, a calm, cool, clear-headed lawyer, undertook to show, from the palpable partiality, and one sided ness of the majority report, that it ouht nut to be printed, lie described its labored attempts to ma nify Ciller, and depreciate Graves and his friends,-he contended that its publication could not do any good to the public morals, an more that it could dn justice to the parties concern ed ; anl he entered into a minute anal vsis of the features of that report, and deduced therefrom very conclusive ar guments against the proposed print- Much sensitiveness was shown by those who are lor making an unworthy party use of this matter, as Mr. Mason proceeded, Many attempts were made, and strenuously insisted upon by vari ous members of that stamp, to call him to order, on the ground that the ques tion was not now open fur a discussion upon its merits. But Mr. M. kept his ground, and showed clearly amidst tilt- the'tftn ot oppmtttoni ttiat he ttad a perfect right on the questio.i of print inir extra conies ol this tnaioritv re port, to show that it was a paper which, from its objectionable character, ought noi io oe. printed, lie maue a iucki, logical, and conclusive speech, and produced no little impression. Among other things, he adverted to the shamefal fact, that the shameless Eander to party, the Globe editor, had ad it printed, and franked for private circulation; by members of Congress. lie was just touching upon this ten der ground when' C. C. Cambreleng came lo his feet, and called for the or der of the day, on the ground that the morning hour had expired. Mr. Ma son, of course, ga ve way, and this ques tion of printing is now the unfinished business of each day's morning hour. Mr. M. is to proceed, of course to morrow. " "The House on motion of Mr Cam breleng, went into Committee of the Whole on the state of the Union, and took up the Bill to aolhorize the Sec retary of the Treasury to issue Treas ury notes in the place of those author- iz.ed by the act ol October last, which Cam himself. & bis frieolslad written an and pa fled up dais system el theirs so loog ana laoonoowyy tnsw wey adhere to it, kill or cure, i be wnoie rejoinder - was, as yon will see, when lha tvoare minted, a oertect reiu " 7.r .'. -r . . tion of the sophisms and-ansa pretexts of the speech of Mr. Cambre nvr. The Chalrmnfr of the committee ol iWaiysand eaneHni opeaioghAft said that tins out was "a most simp" matter. Cushmz answered this posi tion with much point He said that the most despotic laws were always the most sitn4tV He could hate wish ed the bin Vera more explicit in its terms. He-snowed that this measure was nothing more or less thsn the es tablishment of a Government Curren cy. There wss no limitation in the bill. It authorised the. issuing of Treasury notes, in place of those al ready ordered, paid and cancelled. No time at which this re-issue is to stop. As fust as they come back to to the Treasury, they are to be again issued, and. what could this be, but the establishment of a Treasury Bank? But you must not expect any thing more than a mere notice of this master ly speech in a letter written as this ne cessarily is, cvrrente eelatno. Thompson of S. C. went on, upon the same, side, thoroughly and ably; silting the motives and intents of the administration, and the measure to the bottom. He contended that the pro posed measure was unconstional, & inexpedient and, on these two points was principally occupied throughout the whole of this very able and con vincing speech. Mr. Thompson was for having the administration come up to the nark, and acknowledge the truth, and con fess - that they have no -money,- and tell the people,- whom they are al ways slavering with their praise, as it is said that a man pats a wild horse that he may ride him, that they are bankrupts that they all have ex pec ta (ions which they cannot this moment realize,' but one day shall; he was for having the administration present itself in this, its true attitude, and bring for ward a proposition, at once, to pledge their credit lor a loi, to receive thei present necessities,--and not to estab lish this paper Treasury currency, iu coniraniction ei an ineir own pro feasion hitherto. To do this he prom ised to aid them with all his might, and insisted upon it that this was the the only true ground for thera to take at this crisis. Saturday. May 1, In the Senate, the proceedings were witnout general interest. In the House of Representatives a resolution offered by Mr. Hopkins of V irginia- for re-issue ot 2,000,000 dollars of the '.Treasury notes autho red by the act approved ttiitn Oc tober last, waaJost ayes 68. noes 107. r J Mr Bell submitted irresolution monstretea1 earnestly with M. Boon, ana nrgea mm noi io jroi - latioo.Mr. Boon,, insisted, however. and demand the yeas and nays on me notion to suspend, l hey were or dered, and the Tote was, yeas 95, naya 53. - Had there been four snore of our 30 or 40 absentees, the rules would have been suspended, and the Treasury note bill would have been l.ftod. - Aa it wasi there were not "two-thirds jpresenfr" j- " Mr. Cambrelens then succeeded in getting the rules suspended (1S to tooo; to taKeupine Trtasurv Aott Jaut alf, ! ngiiam resumed the chair, in committee of the whole. Mr. Harper, of Ohro, resumed and finished his speech, and Mr. Hawes, of Kentucky, followed a- Mr. Cambrelenz made the first min isterial move, of course, upon this bill, stated the causes of the present dif ficulty, almost in the very langage of the President's message of yesterday, deprecating a national debt denying that there was any necessity therefor, and denying that there was any kind of necessity, (if the House does its du ty, by issuing anew the old Treasury notes, that the Treasury should be bankrupted. He glorified "Van Buren and magnified his policy; and took a most toleur dt rote view of the prospect ahead, uuder. the benign operations of inia Benignant au ministration, inert we had the old sterotyped comparison of this crisis and this crash, with the $fjjilM.JPhes has cone through heretofore. There was much glorification of the firmness of this administration in resisting the counsels of fear and the denunciations of some of its own friends, and in actu "y IO" aidiko Trta Northern Banks im rkscmino speCir pay mkxis! JA If that be not brazen impudence, then was Mendez J'inlo the mirror of truth, and the adventures of Baron Munchauten are veritable chronicles! This administration tak ing to itself the glory of being the in strument of the resumption of specie payments: the force ot impudence can no further to! A large proportion of this carefully prepared manifesto consisted of the old predictions, the nonrealizations of which have tended to lower the pre tensions of our Ministers Finance as a prophet, already, not a little. An other proportion of it, of equal extent consisted of denunciations of the Ka-4 tional Bank, a national bank, Nick Biddle of Philadelphia, and all kinds of Phck 'Biddies every where. Then there was' much croWing an J cackling over rret lSanktng. Hard Money and Paper Currency. , i was, in reality a most characteristic effort. Mr.-Cushing of Massachusetts fol lowed this titrade, in a most appropri ate manner. He did not know wheth er to be more surprised or amusrd with it. He was quite severe and caustic upon that part of it which arrogated jo much glory to this administration, and exposed the lolly od tallaey of1 this most ridiculous pretext-- lie likened it to the prescrnilions .of Doctor San grado in 'Gil Bias, who always ad ministered bleeding and; hot water; and who, being remonstrated with for killing oflTmll his patients by such treatment, replied that he could not rive it over, because he hid srntten a book-in iU fa vor, r .' ff .. . authorising theTreMureOorraise Ty loan or Treasury notes, to supply demands on the Treasury. Mr. Cam breleng objected to its introduction, snd a motion to suspend the rules -was lost. The Treasury note bill was then taken up and discussed at length. Mr. Robertson at a late hour offered ao amendment for the ho!e bill, em powering the President of. the Uni ted States tomorrow, on the credit of the United States, the sum of 10,000, 000 dollars, at a rate of; interest of 6 per cent payable quarterly, and re iraburseable at the will of the Govern ment; to be applied in addition to the moneys now in the Treasury, or which may be received therein from other sourcM, to defray the expenses of the Uovernment, and to be transferable by stock. . The House remained in session un til half after one o'clock, Sunday morning discussing the Treasury Note Bill. Various amendments were of fered, dsscussed and rejected. A mongst them were propositions to au thorize the issue of Treasury notes lp the amount of two and three millions to meet present emergencies. At liate hour after it had been stated that the Government immediately required the money to meet its engagements, Mr. Cambrejetig was called upon to to inform the House whether the Gov ernment could not continue its pay ments until Monday night without the passage ot this mil. lie declined to uive the assurance, and the House nally adjourned, without effecting any thing. iiondau May 14, , AorA Eatltrn Boundary. The tirst ten hours ol this day in the Sen ate was spent in this discussion, by Mr. Williams ot Me., who asked leave to oring in his bill lor running the line anew, and who made a long speech upon tne subject, Mr. Webster is hereafter to address the Senate upon this interesting ques tion. The bill was laid on the table at his request. fc" The DiUricl Bank Z?7. This sub ject came up again, in order, and was further debated by several senators. In the House of Representatives, as soon aj the journal was read, Mr. Boon asked to offer the resolution of the Legislature of Indiana, authoris ing the Secretary of Treasury to make no discrimination in the kind of mo ney received in paymentpf publie dues hereafter. - Obiection havinff been made hv some one, Mr. Bronson moved to ' suspend gainst the bill. time, when he He had spoken some sank exhausted and taint into the arms of a colleague, and could not finish his remarks. " So much for nizht sessions. Dunn of Indiana next spoke, ably, azainst the bill, the Goode ol uin then John Sergeant, and several other gentlemen. Adiourued without ade- o, . f cision. Tiietday, May 15 The debate in the Senate, on the bill to coutinue the corporate existence of the banks in the Dtstnct of Colum bia, was continued to-day. Messsrs, lien ton and Pules spoke at some length. No question was taken. The Senate went into Executive aes sion at an early hour.. - In the House of Representatives, Mr. Boon again moved the resolution which he offered yesterday, to repea the specie circular. The Chair deci ded it was out ol onier, as there was already a resolution on the table, on the same subject, offered by Mr. Vil- ,;8m$ of Ken.J which he could move to be taken up, The following resolution, moved 4by Mr. S. Williams on the 16th of April last, was then read "KewTred, Thst the Committee ofWkyi and Metnt be instructed to report a bill nuking it unlawful lor the Secretary of (he Treasury or any other officer of this Govern, menu to continue in force or make any gen eral or special order making; a distinction or discrimination in the medium or kind of cur rency in which the different branches of the revenue (either from the aaln of the public lands or from any other source) of the United States shall be collected.' The question on suspending thf rules (o take up the resolution of Mr, Williams was then put, and decided by yeas and nays a as the negative, yeas 94, navs 76, (not two thirds. J Ihe vote ol the INorth Carolina dele g&tion, was, for suspending, Messrs, Deberry, Montgomery, A. II. Shep penl, C. Shepsrd,, Stanly, and Wil liams. Against suspending, Messrs. Bynum, Hawkins, M'Kay. On motion of Mr. Cambreleng, the House resolved- Itself into Committe nT me thevrnoie on the state of the Union, CMr- Ingham in the chair,) and resumea me consiueranon oi tne Dili authorizing the issue of notes. " . - .1 " . ..-S.-H us may use tne expression; unucr hich - it now labors But such- a " aisS. measure, to he proper ana anvisaoie, shul4 be ne only ntlitgil4e but aW so definite, - practicable, and business like." .. . The measure now before the House is, inihe opinion of those who so perse- venngly resisted the attempt to lurce the bill through the" House in its pres ent shape, neither intelligible, defin-ttav-norMisjiimdikfU, m. i,. The bill is entitled, in the first place, a bill to carry into effect the act of October last, trom this title no one could possibly arrive at a right con jecture as to the object oi tne oui. I he act ot tiqtoper proposed an issue of ten millions of dollars of Treasury notes; w hich notes having been issued, that act has been fully executed as to the tt sue of Treasury notes, and is for that purpose functus officii, retaining only so much vitality as will suffice to punish the counterfeiting and. provide for the redemption of such ot the notes as are yet afloat. In the next place, the bill proposes to accomplish by indirection what ought to bo be done openly and without any attempt aTConcealment. The Treasu ry wants money, and must have it. We all know that. Let our Chancel lor of the Kxcheqiier, instead of, a bill to carry into effect a law which has ex pired by its own limitation, and is withal one ol the most detective and vexatious laws that ever deformed a Btatute-oooK, come forward and pro pose a loan lo the amount ot the exi gencies of tin! Government. Our word tor it he had better have dune so at first with a good grace, than be oblidg- d to do it at last with an ill one. Further, this bill is part and parcel of the system of expedients which have brought the treasury to its present de ' - - - if- issue of Treasury The administration,), the rules and. Mf Cambreleng re- a mii a Air. iniingnast concluded lus re marks in opposition to ..the- measure, ss reported by the chairman pf the Committee of Ways and Means, and was followed in an extended debate. Wtdnetday May 18. Mr. Wright, from the Committee on Finance, to which the resolution in troduced some days ago, by Mr. Clay ordering the receiptor bank paper in payment or dues to the government, was relerred, made a report. ; ' SO.000 copies were ordered to be printed for the use of the senate. Mr. Clay's resolution was made the order of ihe day for Monday next , In the House, Mr. Boon renewrJ his motion to take up the resolution of Mr. Williams, of Kentucky, to re scind the'Tf eaStify". CfrCulaif, " which' was rejected. The question being taken on suspending the rule, was de cided in the negative: Yeas 111, nays 70, The bill to issue 110,000,000 Treas ury notes passed Us third reading, 106 to 99. Thmsdaxi.Minl 17. In the Senate, nothing of general interest took place. In the House, the motion of Mr. Raiiden to reconsider the vote by which the Treasury note bill was passed yesterday, was lost by the cas ting vote of the "bpeaker. Friday, At ay 1 8. The Senate was engaged all tlsyi in an animated debate on the 1 reasury note bill, or rather an amendment of fered to it. These were all ultimate ly rejected, and the bill, about seven o'clock, was passed Ayes 27, noes 13. Jn the House of Representatives, after some usual morning business, Mr. E. Whittlesey succeeded in pro curing an observance of the rule which devotes Friday and Saturday to pnvate bills, and business of that natifre wss contracted. THE WAYS AND MEANS. The reader viii perceive, on refer ence to the account of Saturday's Pro ceedings in the House of Representa tives, that the House was engaged on that day in what miy with truth be called "a struggle," of fourteen mor tal hours, upon a bill to provide means for meeting unsatisfied and current de mands jupon the Treasury, in the form of a-new issue of Treasury Notes. That the faith of the Government ought to be held with all (hose who it employs ordeals with, no bnedebies. Nor will any person object 4o a proper measure , of immediate relief to the ranged and impoverished condition, from which it never can be effectually releived but by a recurrence, on the, part of the Administration, to business habits, to the dictates of common sense, and to the practice ot the Gov ernment belore its disastrous "experi ments" were undertaken. To liken tho machinery of our Government to to that of a rail-road locomotive, the conductor has run the engine off the track; and all that he has to do now is with the help of the passengers, to get it back to where it was, and take a Iresh start. Every other scheme fo regaining his lost ground must fall through. 1 lip 1 rpnrv la hnrl ten miliums 1 - " , ' - " - w. " oi uoiiars. iet it, like a practical merchant, . borrow the money for twelve- months which it can do upon advantageous terms instead of put ting Bankbonds into market for six millions of the money, and issuing a gain for four millions of it own notes. which it has taken on and cancelled. and which, if issued must be again tak en up and cancelled before any sub stantial relief to the Treasruy cat have been afforded by them. .... -. A'o. Int. Ihe Alexandria Gazette says: A letter from Washington received yes tcrday, says "Mr. Rives has latelv been gracious with the President has dined with him.,&c. Some say he is on the stool of repentance." We know nothing of these things, but, we are inclined to think that "between the two stools he will come to the ground." . Ffomtlie National Intelligencer. It having been proposed by various meetings tjj'the opponents ol the pre sent 'Administration, Th different parts of the United States, that theie should be a General Meeting of Delegates from all the States, for the purpose of agreeing on - anil recommending Suitable "PWohTSTSfimdaTMTor'lfiS offices of President and Vice President at the next election; nml a detiirc hav ing been expressed by several of said meetings that the time and nlace of holding such meeting should be filed by the Opposition Members of Con gress, those Members have authorized us to announce that, in compliance with what thus appears to b& the general wish, they have met & consulted on the subject, and, after due consecration and reflection, they aie of opinion that the Borough of Harrisburg. in (he Slate of Pennsylvania, is a suitable nlace. and the first Wednesday in December, icciy, a proper lime tor holdintr'a General Meeting for the purposes a- bovc mentioned, to be comoosed of Delegates from all the Ststes in pro portion to their representation in the two Houses of Congress. 3" The Opposition press through out the United States are desired to give the above authorized notice a conspicuous insertion in their respec tive papers. It gives us great pleasure to .state on the authority of the Richmond Whir that Col. Watkins was not on board the Mosellj wt the period of her explosion, and that he and his family were safe and well at Fulton, Missou ri, since the dreadful accident allu ded to. two weeks previous, fouva ;,. noedtobehung?4;5 iAt.th-:aa.m.- n-tT.r..-:-""- . r . " 'iitam 8 I was convicira oi the murder uf ! Kallum. and aentenc.l i.7.Dl the-aame day with the negroes, T" council took an anneal . ' - . a i uiibu . ot law, and the case will t6 -TJ Supreme Court H;ut. : JL " U. Th. ..FEDERAL COURT- I The eonviclion of Andrew J. Unj, Uj. J Tot rolUii4U jnail, waaauui i, Jv Th videncM againat bmVwn, Ui unlary eoofauions, mule la th permo a"1 preheiulcd him. II was aealeocedt,, iinpriaonment. Mr. levrut1thDi-,irr torney, appeared for th. United But, Mr. Badger for (he primmer, The ca. of Sheridan. (nui,,) er. on. of ib. crew, charge! .iUl th. Schooner Aurora off Die en. j.- Carolina, occupied th. aitentia of dj, -.. . . cxciu-u a good 9i,4 L eat. Tbfir ohject Wat to get poa bout $4,000 in .pecie sent from Ha," th. 8pni,b Coiuul at Se Tirt , i purpow, lh teaarl wa, ron opoa ih. LJT th. ,.JI' u . . " unurraa, ilia ku.. ,., out and cmbexzled by the CaDtaL, JlT ceededio New York, and informed th, C(T , t, . i. ..... i . . onen aooie,and tbtav .V had been itolcn frnm 1.:. l., , --'" wdiud, York lax. ichieni upon -which tta n were arretted and.aont to I hi. City ferik Several legal quMlions were raued tad tdh gued by their counsel . h eoBtende i noi rommuteU oa th eo, aa charged in the indiclmcBLJiiiL 1 ter within lh liiuila of North fJimi!.. ' f which the United Stale had no jurudiai, 2ndly, If otherwiae-, tlion Ih act Cw required that the priaonera should U Utri j tho State where they were firet rarrM H reated, to win New York; 3rd, thai tim not an actual tuttinr awov, ei th ,m I i. again act afloat in condition to perbfafc-l royae, i he only queation for llie jurj k cid. was that of fact, a to th cm mL upon which the could not agree, atid a &: of acquittal vra nttred for lb pruonm t, W. tj. Morton, (a nremUr of tb K ' Bar,) who conducted th. eiamiaaiios afe 1 comuiitnient, appeared with Mr-BaJgwfa priaonera, aud Mr. Der f IW ih fib,' State. ". . ;;"':; '-. - On Monday, beriJit waa pol laoa aia al for Larceny, and cond hi gaik 'Ailt bad reatored th. money, th. Conmd tmum ed him to the marry of tb. Court E n manded to prison, to await JudgaMM s i aeal terra. - , a C7- JOHN TYLE'K,-, Ef. in a letter to the Editors of the RichmonJ Whig, denies the allegation that he , is in favor of the Sub-Treasury bill. ' There is no confirmation of the des truction of the Brandon Bank at Vicks- burg. ' : At Rockingham Superior C"ort,a three Negroes belonging to Mr. Abuer Webster, were tried for the murder of Treasury from the. state of collapse (if 'Mr.Wro. C. Comerjcoramitted some SOOTf IER,LITEKARY; ME38E.vCEi Th. Mar nnmbrr at il.U .(...Li. -l - tractie work baa bean aetataldaj, ou bte: but w hava liMn Janiail ik Um i peroarng h by othar ngf gqmenla, hi lwf article, ar wpwaantej to t. af wwftst orden and a, a wholt. it i. tirMnoaul W mm , ' I - W7 juUgu to b fully .qaal to any of it (nuke aora. It i eiukelluUrd with a haadaMsta- graving, preaanting a view of th fimtJ luu- iuw ii vuiminu, i tnn. , KNICKERBOCKER. ; Th. April number of lha Kakkerbwiaiv fVl V..lf M.n!n ha. .Un llMIl Wlitd Thi ia on. among th. able! and rooiw .sting periodicat puhliahed in ik I'sW Htatea. an! we lt nlMaiir in laraaumSt: t to th patrouag of th. public . ; THE TREASURY, s.; Th. Trnilfd Kl.lo. Hank hi mflrrri m- ni the paymmt of it bond to gotaraaei to the amount of $6,000,000, Tni. oa" it i bliJ, alTord very aonabl M th. Tiwaaurr. and entirely obviat. ttBS neriMailv of in, rmuinto n rnrr, nw, However, pameo rat mm-i will doubtlesa pass the Senate, sut6oiIill, laau. of ten million, allegrd o b tw' becenary to keep lb. wheel of gotrnl motion. I it not astonishing that ootwilhlasi ing tiitf enorinoua revenue which i dJ Irawn from th. Docket of th. VOf't T a ' ahoold be disgraclv by a baskrut M) Wor. w. not lold by I h. leader of'"" tw.lvo or eighteen months .go, that lb " nu. waa nior. than .uflicienl to answw tU mand f Government! And did VJ thia pretextTor wishing to dirtuik promise, under jnneWncof rwliiring"" .l i i- iki.i . Cit was it S aw era ,uey viitccrn . -: - r A. .-!.k ,1,. whnl obit atiiitiw iu tin o?t i parpo. of aain Imngiag th. www4 " iff ayatem into operation lo orport f their extravagance! W. than feru thai. i, ',,.( .n,l .nnn.lrit ih alarm. ' th. fact now prov. that oor TlaAMT were well founded! Tb. twin mes""- . PrsidDt and hia.appl. lord rfthe Tj published last week, hoth eontaia J" account of National bankraptcy. B"; .k i,'.. .1...;! iha derraJirig t' they h.v., now oily been forced to VwC light, because their .opph areaooe ofT. They ar. forced to .dnjit U, W T th.mtoak for tnor.1 They bT 1 , aquandewdth. peopl.' money at xhm thirty-two minion, a Jjear, but w forced to lovolv. them si 0tK keep th. wheeh of govemme .f ill th. peopl. keep .och fallM their service! ' . . , j -: ...:. .u. u'k; ..d all dlV it.. naLailniiniatratloa MO th. Federal Exeeuliv., .nd !n,-fjTr principUwof Loeo-Focoiam, ."""11- J if eommendl ss KtZZSr?; iourt nay, wr-in. 'r" ia candidates for th. lloU. jf ,T,bhVt .pproKhinf .n a. car. unanimity r and praveni J .1
The North-Carolina Star (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 23, 1838, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75