it'aJfc - -'Vv- ; "VS'-'V- tr:-'-'. -"::jai .".25?.;?" NEVt SERIES. GUEENSBOUOUGII, N. C FitiDAY MUHNLNG, SEPmII)Kll l4Tlb3Sl VOL, II NO. 22. imf&m " " v- - f ,T - frreffinnrxre ; "f MR. LEi.RE'.S 1 JITTER, TO TilE COVERXOI: OF S. CAROLINA. (CflflilHUtl!.) So far, then, i iiiiiu 1 a. ii qmic pnlc in gayintf lliatnu cuac vviiaU v r o.ii btxu uimh out by ibuso wlio ' would have hi btll. ihat tbe South is pjrticulai ly inti rested in this change. Just the revtrso. We are less concerned in it than any oilier jiurl ol the country. Undoubtedly, it a desirable for us, an for all well regulated butt, thai our currency thuuld be us blable at jio.-si-Lle ; but that vc aie naiticularly called uj on toefltct tliat result, by requiring' pjy. meiit ol Iliopubic uucs, that ib, lroni one third to one quarter of the whole idusb ol dutiable commodities, tn gold and silver, I utu rly deny. 1 thiukon the co;i:r..rv, j ii'u Will admit thai we aru eji;iiiig o'.irelvos; ia a more- or lets. serious tleree, uecordiny to the vcribtiofM-ol'-the revenue and the di -posiles on hand, io a fall of prices, wlneii niuit bo tiwJ etLet ol nar, owing tho siKcif fcuitaof the circulatioii in England; and t hatpin fact, common prudence would nuke us, of all others, ado;i any such change wiLh extreme hcsitaliun and; reluctance. This is a matter of so inucri iin)orlance thai 1 will dwell upoa ii a lutle Jouger, in another point of new. -There, is no prautical problem, in 'politi cal economy -o dilluult to solve with pre cision, as t!ie tjiieslio i !iuv iar i!il- dii. inns'. -ed supply of the prt-cio'J-i iiiel.ils fru n the iMexieaii and South Aitiei'.eui mines hii'.ec 1H1U hasafl'ected Ih.uir.Vuluy or, t Ijk.1i u tin; same thing, Ua4 alfeiffuj thv pnet s .ol uther CBiAodaies, 'i'jc failing yll Ins been erroneous considerably nior tliau one-tiulfoii an avenge, of the yearly ;io duce of the same niuins Jroui lsdt) to llt), and upwards ol iwte'y tn:i.;oris of doliata per (tiiiiuin, aiii iii'iti i.' m ih w hoi.- p..rio.l liien'.i.ini-d, to 1 ully nt, t.),,)i) ). 'f i j v. ear and tear ol th- un tai.-, !os by ca-iiMi-tr,"tS;c., innst also Ire t4ci-- into- the ae oiiiit, and the ;iiiu.i tJ.n.iiuliuii Iroui 'these c'aniic'sis-isttiiiirtetl at o.ic per 'cent, linking en the whole- btiek of gold and -il-TeT, a- verv Jar'g aiuauut. fco in Jeh for ihe supply, "Vhile this has been so npid'y cltiitiHtsliitig, tho demand to them has been just as rujn;ly irrcrt-asing. 1 First, frcm lue "iuCtc-aiS "io'nf6pva1atroIi;''''actrrHinytofan--iRj UKttf'd priiiple. t.Jreat liiitaui, which-ui 10;) ccu.itod only fift'-eii unliions ofinlt .- Lit w,i. li.id in 1 ",;jJ, no le.-s t.iaa twe.it." ty.!i' iir.llions. J'rus.-ia, v.hirh at the i :ie-e i f I 15, rout iiiK 'l 3 i.iu-lhi.ig niuic tThill tt ii millions, I tiiiuk) nun' bjuls ol herlhu-n in:li;-.n . Ku--.ii Ii is iro u at least. .jNtapulli. 4 o ol -y,:. o: n-.tio.i-. W i tli our hvu exir toidi iary pr.it; r-. h t.. tlr.l v. it V von ari? tauiiitar. Tn-n, as i pio4ucuve j o.vrr, another niiporf-int .-.w-vrt hi ttrt fiHiimig t4ie valui- uf gold and silver, 1 mVd'nni in. u'fo:i lint it ii.is been every whi r.1 ninnc s ly au ,'i'n. uted, ami uiill it, ofeOJ.-se, the in is.t of commodities to be ircultlerl by nsoney. hook at the. r,. it. in t rati,: fn r r..iu:pl( . h.s-tly, the co:i- suniptia:i of the io is metals in lur.n- lUM.aiu! r.'.anul'ac lures ii iieeouie iiinnt'iise, and is rvery dv o:i th inrr.'.ise ; not, a has becti said, in i!t- course ol t!i;J dien--6ioii, because they Jiavc been depreciated and so driven out of circulation by .paper ; but as a necessary consequence of tho pro gress of commerce and rich, s, and the e. ivation ef the standard of comfort 'among1 all classes of so'.'iety. The uietils are t.i demand as commodities, pnrisHv b-mur they arc .precious. Wo it ill ha.e til in a any price, because th. use ol tiicui im re quired by the existing nte of m-il:zitinrr, and bucausc t!iu nnli'y fortunes arq i-ad by industry or transiiiittrdliy tnlicritaurc, put it in the power o tbo'jvi.ids and tens ol' thousands to ohtain thei now wherr ' tens or hundreds formerly could. Com pare EiYghti4 vytth Frnf i: -this -espel, and you will, bp stt tick with tins apparently singular hut really natural and instiuctr.i result '. J-Vance has in circulation nm.-h morelTiaTTwiee of ThreTfi ilmra thrj aTntmnt of gold anil silver that England ha, csti-in-atirlg the specie cum njforHhe Idtler tt 3O,000,Htlifcltut,io plate furniture, &c, the tables aro exactly turned, snd Englan i possesses twice or thrice as inucti as franc. . Tliis ddcs not show that the aru tals are de preciated in i JLliO formcf country, but the very reverse. There is a greater demand for them, becauso there is incomparably greater Qpulcncc and juxury in the country of banks and paper money than in the country of an exclusive inctalic circulation. This is in the present condition of society, an inevitable effect of a great accumula tion capital, which can only bo perverted by sumptuary and agrarian laws a system ftl legislation familiar enough in antiquity, but quito inconsistent vvith our modern ids of individual liberty and peisoual ac commodation. 1 know no writer who Ins recently deni ed that the- fall of prir-es, so universal within the lifct twenty years, has been qwJ ing, in some degree to the diminished supply ol the, precious, metals, or, what comes to the snme thrtig, who pretends that those metals have boon-depreciated by tho paper currency substituted for them in soma countries, as some im in hers of Con gress has roundly asserted, without any means of ascertaining the slate of factsor even deigning ttf consider them at all.; McCulloch, who thinks that a very exige ratcd importance has been attached to the r trectsr of that d i m taction, stii I. admits "rfcatl die! so septal vesrs aga. that it may have operated to tho extent of tiom :i to 5 per cent.-f The author of a cievir little tre. use, to which 1 had occa s on frequently to refer in my apcich at tho evtr.i .?si()i , h. .-silales no lo'iiliiiii 111 .1, uilhiri too peiioi just liientioiieri," thou sands h ive, by this cause alone, .been pre-etp't-ited inio inextricable embarrassments of iht- se n t Kource of which, they had no suspicibii.'f Sly 'OWtF opniioi), if I miy venture to advance one on such a siihject, if, tint, notwithstanding all that has been s-aid on the cessation of the specie trade witlnueeas?, the breaking Up of hoards lu consequence of a long peace and establish ; ed social order, thj tcononiiiing of tlie; metals by means of a paper circulation, eke., such is the iiiunense deve-lopeiaent of eohmicrcc, industry, Hpulatio.i and richos, that the ilt-mnnd for - trold and silver, both for currency and for IndiHOfe and m.inu f .icturerf, w ill In fori n.any years, beeone 'greatly dimproporlibueil to the provable supply of tin in. Some other lucaus of conducting the i xehanges uf tho trading world w ill become iiide4-.u3iLde ; at least, the us of gold and sihei lor any other purpose, than us a standard for the ulti mate comparison of prices will be superse ded, and the great bulk of every circula tion, like that of Eugland and the Linttd State!, will co'isist of bank notes and pri vate pap -r. Far fr.mi think; ig that the credit sy: tern of Khese t wo great co'n.iier cKil natiotis, with their advauccd civ'iiika iion, is a mere accident, au anomoly, which if'to ;( ep!o.L'd in a few ears, in order io r. turii to the oi l Dutch plan, 1 consider it ns th natural fru't of tint civiliz.itio i, and expect to see them llourfsh. togifthcr, Tn tin. '-b-irsc of things, on o'.her and less ctineii-tl ro;ls. 'i'he bank note payable o.r .l.-mind was as gr.-ai an improvement t ho ne aa the lul! of exchange, wnen til l.o.ubardy inerchan.s tir-t leann-.l to d.s ; use -with -i--i-m hi-tlier r.-mittaMCos-iioin country to coiiutry ; and it were just s rat ibhal to :-(jh ftriiig octfst j? " hack to tho civilization of th.;- tenth or eleventh century, when payments between distant ptoes Were 'lliiiiW only ia spe cie, as to wish to tiplodn tlie money mud lalor-siv- ang contrivaiices ol ljniburu street, Dy whtrrrtrartcttos t the arrtowit of untold-lailion-i arc carried oil almost wi'.nout a show of rein. Commerce is art ef h.uige of commodities ; why eiu'uinber this sim ple ojtei.itioi, furUi. r lluu is absolutely ieros'iiv, f intro!uei:ig a thirJ commod ity, like the precious metals, of which the value or relit ton to all other product is I'ouu.iu.dly Huctuat;g, tn a great or less .! "re ? 1 have hilhorlo caiisidured . this Questiou t.i what may be culled its external apeet, m relerence, namely, to the effect which tho projcrtctl rt-fortii to our JiHTiicy. is like ly to liavj on the distribihtion of precious uv-trtls throtigliout the whole commercial world. 1 '.vi.ili now to look at it in anoth er point ol view , in rt I', ren te to our own r.rruli'.iioii exclusively. 1 think it will be ijip.tre.it Ilia', lie re," to., we arc nut only a leinntnisT loslt in a stro.iir and s- lUeil ctr relit of practice- and opinion, bDt arj e.': ging a war, fn tiers of coin...', as such a, u .ii inu.-t always be, A':tti the nature of ilyngs, 'i t. . re h a question which I have- f;?n propounded to the adotMics of a intalic c'.rculatioit, "and which i would bu glad to hive answered in a satiolactory r.i-mucr. .low e- .in. s it tliat, at no ptxiod of our ins torv, ins this couinrv had a supply of gold a;ei ilver at all ad. qualo to the wants ol i!jv community, even for the most ordinary p-irposes ol circulation ? The answer us u. l gi vcii, though tiot unplausibl.:, is by th meh a Mtftcwnt one, .via. .that.. all the. channels of-circulation hiving been kept piur;vJijl!) .cnoked. up with .pqr, .there wis no fd.u-e for a meiallic currency, iv nch v.; thus expi ed the country. JJ Jt it is, e.oovioiis to ohs -rvo that rrrn- wrre-ths tac-t -aum-tma, it wouta be itself an effect to be accounted for, and the dillieulty would only be removed one M. p further.' Hoi .comes it, would oe ine nexi inquiry, that paper-thould, in all parts of tne coMiitn, a.id at all penod.9 tM Mi, Histo ry, h ivi circulated saawchtnorCexclusivH ly than iexcepu.ig a few very, rare snd tx. iraordmary dcinifrtftOt'-TJi "fc-vHxffC'n" known to do elsewhere ? To what peculi arity tt' eiiaracter or conJitioti is this to be asciibtd ! "v '"-. ' ' Hut in the1 next place, it is not historical ly true that ihe precious itijuIs have been kept out, of circulation in the U. Stares by paper. It can be shown clearly on the contrary, 'hat, at certain periods of our ntslory,' ihere his been a press.ng and uni versal waul of a circulating medium ; and vet, contrary to the general principle that gold and silver will, like other commodi. tieSj go wherever there is a demand for them, tin y have not made their appearance among us. I Cited, on a former -nccasion, Die1 tV'is'i ngf..i Pi i.rs, to slmw , that, durim' that p-nod of our history, when we weru more nearly reduced ih.ni at arty other to a metallic currency from'; I to '8 1) -'1)0 there were perpetual complaints ol a want of money for the most. ordinary business ot life. The dollar was not unfrequently cut on into fivw parts, eash assing lor a quar - i " I . T I . . lur, 1 axes were p.nu ; "coihmutables." .Many of the domestic tCjuitncrcial Dictionary precious ine lals . ... . " Monev ana !t3 nClSallUaS in .vautv-- exchanges wcrecatricd on by barter, as in the earliest stag?1 of ) society. General Hamilton, in his report on the bank in 1790 ay s tlio same thing. There was a loud cry, from all quarters, for an issue of papor money by the .Slates, and it required all tlie wisdom and firmness of tho great men of that day, schooled as they had been by a severe experience, to resist the de.ui ind. Here, as well u elsewhere iu our early h.stonv, we were- deeply indebted to the sago and admirable conduct of the com monwealth of Virgin taT"" NY'WtEhglahu was in a stale of frightful anarchy ; thousands of her young men, the most vigorous, ac tive, and enterprising part of her popula tion, openly revolted against the laws, which, by refusing them an adequate sup ple of the means of exchange, denied them as they conceived, those of laboring and living by their labor. Mr.' CJallatiu is a uolher witness of the then state of things, and lie happen to have favored u with a true ac;ount of it, as ho saw and felt it in the State of Peunsiylvania. "We may aver," saith he, "from our know ledge, that the western counties, of iMiiu sylvaina had not, during more than lwent years alter their liist settlement, tho specie necessary for their own internal trade and usual transactions. The want of comwu nicalibn, and the great bulk of their usual pro.lu-tis, reduced their exports, to a inost inconsiderable amount. Tliotwe indisptn. sable arliclej of iron and salt, and a few others almost equally necessary, consumed all their resources. The principle, almost uuiwrstilly true, that jrach country will be naturally supplied with the precious metals according'to Us wants, did not apply to thetr'situiliori. llousenoi.i mannt acturoo ; supplieJ the inhabitants with their ordina j rv clothiiiL', and the internal traile and ex-! changes were alnost exclusivi iy carried on by baiter. This effectually checked any advaact, even in the most nee sa-ry man- ul.ieturcs. Lvtrry specj' s ol business re quired the utmost fcautiott, M any failure in the perform nice of engagements, in the way of barter, became, under th general law of the land, an obligation to pay money and might involve the party in complete ru in. Under these ctrcustancc?, even a pi p ir eurreTiey-, kept -within proper bounds, might Iiava proved useful-" I beg leave, in passing, just to call your attention to this vivid, though . simple pic ture of the condition even of th" most in- dintriwid rM-ople, straitened for want of: sullieient circulation Vou sea how a enteiprtsef is p :ralyed ; all labor arrested; all the springs and principles of social im provement weakened and relaxed, by want of the means of exchtng th products of labor as soon as they are produced, ,ind I n - 1ia -. fM.i.ibr . mdal . i.uKrnirnl trt tltt Ptiicef.- - Thete -is --rro - frcater- mi.ia that soft of fi i?; 4a cap.tal, the ubj .-t take, as his been well remarked bf a sen K ahsur'! 1 enunciation here a:..T sibh writer, than to consider a certain quanaty of capital and s certain numbi r ol labor rs- as nroductivc in?trumpnts of u- " j in form power, or oprr.-.ling with a cert ii " j niiifnnii inieiisily. Miuy cncurnHtances, :v quickening the activity wiin vrtiicn iin-y (hi y nr.- applied, may add immensely to the re.-ults fleet, d by them. Amouf the eausi s, rione is, p-'thaps more promi ient than an abundant, and cspccialt a pro gressive currency. Men labor only to aei! and become rich; deprive them of a mark and they sink into, npathy and idleness ; make the market dull, diminish th chance of exchanging the products of industry, and j you discourage it proportion inly. Hence afi lun-ir.cHS isnt.a standstill, as soon as n want of money to circulate rmrnrxlities is felt, and, by diminishing gradually the cur rency, you would reduce society, inri po- 'if;'ti''frrtt(rrner?-perf-n4 barlafiaaa.t In this generally progressivecouutrv, alwve irltMTfrr,,-'we-rf.qitire-an eqaUy p-gres-sive currency, or nil the effects of a de creasing on.-' 'ii older countries would en sue, though leas.dtsastgpittii). a'ppp irancv because of the counteracting influences of our youth and vigor. But to return to our imtn diate topic. Here, then, vve hive a state of facts entire ly peculiar, to which the general principle, as to the cerlaiuty of procuring all the spe cif -WiBte'dy it a country lor the purposes of eiruUtjoaodxyny docs, not pj?(j. , - J A is one of tho phenomejriiwhich a philoso phical inquirer will bo most anxious to ex .plain his pwiVsatisJaction I etlrotir attention to it, and that of thsdrbcates 67 this measure, who seem to think thejt hafe nothing to do but to break down banks and explode their paper, in order to flood tho country with the prcciou.- metals. I appeal to our own experience to show the dangerous character of their projects. I cite a fact, to bo accounted for on tho principles of a sober, inductive philosophy, rjot by metaphysical abstractions and theo ries, a priori. The modern world has a bandoned that sort of thing, and it is not asking loo much of our great men, I hope to expect that they Will tread in the foot steps of B.tcou snJ Galileo. Ft t a, fact, then, that during long periods, this coun- Thoughts on Currency and Banking in the U. States, p. 63. fA full, afld even a redundant currency, whitcver disorders might aocompanv it has fii.i,.m (...uj io r,roIuce some ffootl. Law's . ,h , tlsas,erous instance of an excess.iii this wav, anv wherpjo be met with-,-, was-ttemkd "with pcrroaneolt bcucflT tot Friric.-. S'je f heifBtoa- - try, and every part of it, hav been in th-j I greatest etnbarrassmei.t fbr want of n cir .: l. .., ..... . i i i -i vuidtuig iiiuuiuiii , iiiiu jci goiu ami hiivei 1 to a fair share ia the common stock of which wo were clearly entitled, would cot come to our relief. .This apparent anomaly must, no doubt, be ascribed in a good degree, to the pecu liarity of our condition as a young au.i growing countrv,Jby far the greater amount of whose very inadequate capital and labor has been laid out jn cultivating a virgin soil and covering it with improvements of nil sorts. We have been .borrowers froiu the beginning, but our great profits have ena bled us to pay our debts, and t.i grow rich by them, Without any other uiconveui'-nce than tLis very scarcity uf the precious tu : tals, treated by a standing balance of pay. mruts against W, and that has been practi cally none, because their place h is been amply supplied by the use- of paper. itut something, or I should ruber say a great deal, is also due to out way of think ing on these subjects. Whether tt be ow ing to our peculiar s'tuatiou, which has ac customed us to the paper system, or whi leer it be that our people, in this as in so many other reforms have anticipated ttttr conclusions of philosophers and t&3 pro gres$ of society, certain it is tint th-y hive greater confidence in bank p( and have accomplished more by means of it, than any other nation in the worid. , J'ms confidence, as his been well retnar' rd by a very sensible French writer, who lately travelled through the U. States, an. I whoie inform it'on struck me at the time (for ins letters were publish -d in" the UfeWs-pap' rs at Paris) as, in general, remarkably exact, is lot a blind confidence it is the result of r. II ction and oXpei lenee.t It is fi ur iuilnrment, a most tnkui and houor.ih! trait ol our pi e.pi, ami an an index oisom of the highest excellencies of the nat loua I character, as well as of .the singujar hip piriess nt our e.omiuion. i u.iv.o iisieueu ith atrntishiiieiil to; tht) f ilsu and sitr-, lie:al declam itioti, so much in vogue, up on this subject. To her some persons talk, you Would taker us for a nation ol sharpers, suppose that the whole history of our currency and banking was dne issue of downright "knavery, aod impost ur." These geuttcfcaii totally misapprehend the casa oi I am sure they would not do so much in justiec of their country as to turn what rightly understood, is her glory into h r shame. WTv, eir, vt.y perceive that, as I the foreigner just quoted 'lias ohsi r.vcd in regard to the compilative IV sliglit sliock to credit oi'-asiom "d by the conrlagrtion at i'W 1'ork, W' Jh ive !iee.i trading, ill ell'eel upon ".i Uh'ral capita1, winch lire could not eousiim. :' iio, no: icoTti nr nut rur r.irt4 nor tiiu-Tcs tr ik in and steal. Tins elsewhere a capital made up of skill, c t picity, perseviranice, integrity, enterprise . Political economists have always appeiir.-d to nic to be guilty of one great cardi ia! er ror, which wis pree.ibrdy ihls of not attach ing, by any means, sufficient, importance. mortil criMiis.ccuisidered unproductive paw i rs li'. r r, ly, The first heads it every well formed ta ble of statistics ought lo be the national character the Constituttiou and laws of h People the lib- rty thev enjoy the race H witch they belong the education lrnv r. CCtve their Conduct, pujfiinl, a .d pn c.ples, ; In com iariso i of thce, great fi a tures of the f eg p v. phvsic d and tnitur- .dot a country, us soil, eliii.atv' situ. ton, rivers harbors, iStc. are really unimportant Had some other People been planted on rockv shores of New England, they might liavo sunk into the condittoit of obscure fi.-lnrmTlt7'perh plijgi, instead of inheriting, as they have ifone in' their giganticihcreSe,"direcliv'r indirectly, half of this fair continent. ' Tim mii'lit which slumbers in a peasant's arm" in on.- country is awakened revealed, brought out into mighty ..rid efficient exer tions under the moral -influence of another ind overs ih.- soil it cultivates with nig mo.Timpnts of its power. It is this high morality intelligeiicc, arum ited with flic spirit of improvement, protected by e q ial laws full of confidence in a future, which the peftflliar circumstances most happy situation could not fail to make better th n the past it is these high qu d kics, thse is-tnrguishe-d privileges, that havo constituted the capital of a People that had hardly any other : or in other words have enabled them to anticipate, by means of credit thfr abundant fruits of a few years of woll-directed industry. We live trpon the r sources of. to-morrow, became they are sure io be better than ibofr to-day. This is the magic under whtch a new and fettib: country starts up, almost '.-instantly, into life and beauty. Failure and disappoint ment are not in our vocabulary, and though they sometimes occur, .thoy are compari tiveiv, so rare amidst the dazzling successes of the great majority of adventurers, in our wonderful career of improvement, as to be scarcely Worth taking into thn. . account. Thn Americans have the utmost faith in paper money. It is not a blind -ronfi-dence, for, if wo' have hd our assign its, they haye had. their co jtincnUl money: and it would not be necessary ioirace their history far to find their banks failing, ch mane. It is a corifid, nee., founded 'upon r....diiu--ra cfturaj:..', t lu'regul t of iv Jieetiy.i I (.Imvaiier, L. iif p. 1 17 , .. ... .. One of jhc most extraordinary exampfes of iho confidenco which all these circum stances havo en.ililed and disposed us to r pose in each other, is as h is been remark ed b1' one of our writers iho ctedit of i w. lv - .r i-ighieen moillhi htb'tuajly jjivn by i roh ants in the At I auticcnn s to llios' ol i In- n.terior, at a distance of twclv hi dr-d w fifteen huii.li ed miles, whom Ih v do no' expect to see before the exni ration of that hinj period, in such easy terms as are the best evidence of the gen eral punctually and integrity of their cus tomers. This tcni'-r may lead to occa sion;.! excesses : and yet, I confess there is some thing in this mutul co ifiJe-nce, iliu-i pervading all class s of society and all part of the country, SO full of a high morality, of a refined hum i.iity, of a broth erly union, cT a sense of all our happy pri vileges as a People, that affect mo fx tremely in contemplating-it. And the more so when I come to ' compare it with the Inh'ts and conditiou of other nations, in this particular.! Take France, for ex ample, with a pillule exception tho most renowned of modem Siates, and, in tome points of social refinement, porhajii thA most civalizcd. rvr . . ' I am fortuuatdy alle to vouch here, too, a wifncsH -vhoKe testimony may be. rdiod b i. " A long tiiuc must chpae, (s ys -Mr. Chcvalici.) bufore we cia enjoy in Ffiuce n system of credit as extensive as that Which pxUt in Engli td and the Cfiited Stites. We are in this reap-ct in a staL o( bartHrinm." He gives m.viy instances which fully justify- this strong' langiisg". Tin; j6ciure In; pfesLiifs of the urn versal wan! of conli leiic. in pecuniary niatteis, ul th - iniiunr in which it embarrasses and retards all sorts of business, is a per il M contrast lo the happy condition of our own -con itry. . For instance, after stating i... .i .1.,' r.. ...... ..r I.1. .,,.... i &an;i . ii j i im i u'li i uv j ill a ii u Kiwii' j i H),0.H, lie goes on to say that " a (wrt ol tin immense capital is out of circulation, a id rests liuri-d iitlllC Cufli ri -.! individ uals or biMir.ltiJ hy thc. pior, unwilling to -onfi le to any one their litUe savings." A id tra remarks els; win re, that "if we bad irr France the habit of Eagland the people of the United States, it is prohibits that 1, ODd.OOJ.OOO.ofcirculalicnaa.OtiO.OOO,) tiiff fH-'p'ipc'if and half li' caih, ':":wdtdd suf fice for our transaction. Allowing for our 'commercial inferiority, let 113 admit 1? 500,OUO,0m $:$0(,00 ,0i)t)j would be re quiredand thit it should be coevioed tif ' Wo-thirds luo'nls, and onc-tliird p iier, t ''lows that wo might usefully dispose of i i0,00,iK)t, or at leant l.-VM.Ma.'H), (francs) now uiiro luclive hi ih form of coin, added nothing to our comforts, to our enjoyments, rr tit -our jrt-oduetws 00 w er." 'I ria mural e.ffects of this want of confidence are fully as disastrous.. as tlie e '(in i-TiicaT "-' especially in regard r. t'her poor-- r classes, whose condition is ren.leri-d o n;virttivelv hopeless. N'.mody is trust . I vuthout smiriti) ; and what security h ive thi poor to give f " In France (:;v :h.t Hume Vriiit-r,) it you want credit, you cannot obtain it ; but if you do not want it, it is offend." I think what I hare hitherto said s ilTi cientlv accounts for the grc it peculiantv of our: banking system .vlnch is, the very small proportion of specie to deposites and cirCulaiirfn. This has hardly ever amount od to the half f what Ins been thought ue c -ssiry in England, tint is to sny, one to taree. Our circulation was t:vcr in so'indcr condition than in IS')!) ; ind. ed, th never was, in my opinion, s more pt-r-fv.ct circulation in any country. Accord ing to Mr. (Jallatin'seStiinate of it4 it stoo I then. v B. ik notes - - D-posMtc .... Sp ie'T.i; circulatibn Sol.O'iOtOi) 1,0(0,MM si it.to;t t) ?jccio in thc vaults of b'uks. . a2,0i)tJJ00 You seo that the basis of 1 19n l!;o is of issues and credit was only, 'J'i,'l )(l,00i) dollars; yet it is i'mjvxsilde.to iiiiiaiii- a currency answering hILiIs h gitimite ends morejiprcctly, and at th -'same time, in i.-v- cry. respect, nwro safe, and stable. It is uii'iifest that evry dollar ad'fiNl to the k-rtf-gold- and wdv-fr- thutr oa ,-htd4M tne vaults of biiiks wouul hivo- bii-.i jtisjjt so much dead loss to the cornmu.aily, b--side slowerifig r)rices,nud, so far, discour aging industry.. And here I will take no tice of another fallacy very gem ral hrre. It is, to suppose that the proportion of one to three maintained, or rather aimed at (for it is-seldom effected) by the. IJeik of I in land, is a fundairieittal, univcrsi! ml. of sound banking. - Not at all. Whit this pronortiot) ought to lv is iner" mi'ti-r of loritl exp -iimiit, a id cannot be s. tiled a priori. In this country tin- on r ..r Carey. Credit syt. ;r; cS Franc .u . 'I Britain and the 1'nitrd fci! itos. tll-re is a beautiful illustration of wlnat is stated in the text. Chevalier t i, 1 1 ... ; Society says to lhfta'i,i in (m r i"s, labor 'v and if business sho 1 i ' e against you and you shouWf ill, you wi.i ). -dilv raise sgainfor hure failure is considered :s a'wouotdreecived in battle; 1' will .tot cause vo'u to lose esteem orooj'ifi I. 'uoc, provided vou h 1 ve .atavi beTfii ternprrntirid - rogw lar, i good Christian, and, a faithful lu-r- iiaud. , . . . fThojjjh'j on curryQSy aJ Banlj'nj, half a, century has, ostablishod beyond doubt that nothing appro ichuig to a third is required a'sixth, or l.-ss has been abun dantly sufficient. Our peculiar sitiualion out h.Jitsof bu.iuesi), a ii the ch tractor of liie pi ojde have in idtt it s. In Englaiul, were it not lliat ths banfi J o'atig d to keep 01 hind specie oneugh to support not nnlv its own circulitio.'t, but that of the country and even the Scotch banks to.) (fr, in case of a run upon them, t!i y -M lavo recourse ft) Uifa less pr-riortiori woifd be required. Mr. Ilorsely Palmar says expressly in his exstniuation b -f oro a com mittee of the House of Commons i n 1332. While 011 this subject, I will slate that I have been very rooetiil brought to do iht fie soundness of some of my former ojin nus on th;; history of American laiikint, taken us a whole. -X littlo volumu alrea dy referred to') seems to show that, in New K igland especially, the systejn ha been safe!, cheapest, most effective, and, in all rcspe.us, the most Useful and beneficial that could have been devised- This being; merely a practical question, lo be settled by experiment, every thing depends upo i 'tlie truo stale of facts. Scotch banking has boon an immense blossing to that eoanln , whatever may be thought of it as np;fib birt toothers. I take this occasiou ofc-ii;. ing public attention th the South to a vol ume, whi.th, if its statements should bu found to be quitu accurate, will have piae cd tins whole subje'ct in a new and strikg point of view. Now, sir, wo come to tho question : What will be tho ffcct of the sub-Treasury schciao with tho ''hard money feature" upon the business of a country, bottomed upon a L-yitcnt 6f banking thus 'conducted ' Suppose it should require only ciuht ur t:i:i additional millions of specie. This wo have seen, is as much as the whole aino i it circulated throughout this vast couairy i.i , 1S:JJ. It would aluorb every cent if it. It is nearly half tin: treasurer of all tin; bank's at jhu same ftiine. Is i not obvious that ire should bi violently rdistnrbt:n'3: nfl the settled proportion of things, and threaten ing the business of tho country with perpe tual disorder '( But what guaranty have you that the amount will be only what lias, been "stated ? Tliu couutry is iniMcosr 1 progresiirc," twenty-fire- years--doW--tta--population and ressuices, and, consequent ly, its revenue, levied a it ia, almost ex clusively on commerce and tlie pubii- la 1 Is whicti. must co.iti.iue to be a favorite ino.lu of investioecit 111 prosperous times. It is absurd to lay any stress uinur present eiu-barraii-uenis j ihy uri inoreU ttuuporar) , and, what 1 more, any thing but us serious as has been thought", llicy will ass a., ay hs -though they hud- t;ver - befit, in- tho coursoofa few years, if the fiovernmciit wilt only (as I now think it shows a dispei srtion "to do) irrf?pirt; the- community-- -tfrtfr-confidence 011 this great subject of finance. The reduction of the tariff in 11 1 is just as insufficient a guaranty against an nbun-, di.it tevenuo and iarjo gurptases in thfj I'reasury or, should these Ix; taken opfhy proportionally largy expenditures, rur 'they probibly will, against high averrge bil a ices on hand. Every boly lifiows tliat low duties increase cousumptipiri, and con sequently revenue, and I should not at all bo surprised to see ours iirynensely aug.ueii t.'d in a few. years. Should it prove so, and s inuld surpluses of thirty" or forty millions aecunrnlate in thelVcastiry, ns in 1M3-J, the der-uigi'm:iily of our whole b a lines?, both by tha ffect of tho withdrawal n, home and abroad, would be frightful. Kit even without any such extraordinary ac cumulation, a:;d supposing future apprapri ati jtis.ftl ways equal to the revenue raised, siiljfhu effects of this scheme of hoarding are likely to be quite bad enough. It must Lfcc remembered, that, it is not merely what -wttt w lying-m -the -Hd stwes h,4 th custom-house's, and the hands of dishing, ing.oflners, that would bo abstracted from etreuUhon. . The morch int and . p:ifoh ers of I .ituh. would br; co npell.-d tu de. mind of tho banks an amount of specie sul fi.Ment to m et currant dishursem ;nt,s ; and thn amount, whatever it w re, would bo. just as completely lot to th; uses of. cut - Tuucy, as if locked up in one" of l!u s.iis described la the bill. The qUittity.of . uolit ud .iJxcc.wjtkh WOUl.l i r. "j air.nl by this change of p oh lo in in ey would l.- iiiuoli greater here .Euglaiiil, for instance, whero slmost all pay uieit3 r j ultiinately rnado " in llriiidon. The- VjsI extent of our country ; the inde pendent exi-te-ncf and o'gaitiz'ittori of stito insiilutions ; iho great dtspmpotiito. -KiT-iweeu th:i rev-.-nue rais.'d, and the disburse mi nts made by ihr Oovernui nt at differ ont points of collection ; the ckvus quera u essity of frequent tranVrs-.f lie. pub. lie money fro m o.ic pTt of the L'.:i . 1 to ... not her, would oxos.: u?, in a -v;.iv n.-ci;!,-ar iiu'ini;, to dor.iiigctncrtls of bus ;i s3 & circitsuea i'.oni such a system. As tot.'io rncquubfy e-r cxp. liditur-is it his been, :is yo i koiO'V, a theme of eloquent ce.nplaint and denunciation to your Ueprcse natives ere for years past. O.ic of colleagues i i the House,. VIr, Thompson, .ha?, in .a. v r.y able and argumentative sp.ch at tins ve ry session, treated tliat tu;iic so fully as t surierlsede the necessity el tn- s i, i;w a -.ltlii.ng:.mQre uf it In-rc, It is nti-.. W.'ll' it t h is'. mention tin r.-mv ll ' It o.if Vim iitc of- .'.. i f -., Vo. v; -Sr- .i re m ., -1 -in .i t rvi-jo r. iiauj anl the" Ciited, taT-, T7 M.'f ligr v " '" " s k ! 1- (t X t n i. .1 - -ji I